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SPORTS TODAY
INSIDE TODAYCOMING SUNDAY
TEMPERS FLARE
Tempers flared, curses were muttered and racquets flew as court decorum crumbled at Wimbledon yesterday. (Page 13)THE LiOISLATUREN.C. Senate expected to enact limitations on high rise conetruction on mountain ridges today, just 3 months after its introduction. (Page 24) City Council candidates preview their plans for the November elections. A pictorial look at the demolition of the former First Presbyterian Church. Pitt County schools wrap up Project Exodus. a program for GT students.THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 132
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION GREENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 24, 1983
24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTSRoutine Return By Shuttle 'Challenger'
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE. Calif. (AP) - Space shuttle Challenger, rerouted on its %th orbit, went around the world two extra revolutions today and glided without fanfare to a sunrise landing on the familiar bed of Rogers Dry Lake.
Floridas overcast skies, and traditional agency caution, foiled NASAs plan to send the shuttle to its first Florida landing.
Challenger, wheels dovw," reported commander Robert Crippen as the 100-ton winged shuttle touched the centerline. After six days in space, four men and Americas first lady of space, Sally K. Ride, were back on Earth.
The good news is the beer Is very, very cold this morning. The bad news is that it is 3,000 miles away, ground
controller Guy Gardner told the (light crew as Challenger rolled to a stop.
Thats what I was afraid of," Crippen replied.
His crew included pilot Rick Hauck and mission specialists Ride, John Fabian and Dr. Norman Thagard. Their boss said Fli^it 7 was the shuttles best yet.
Challenger pierced clear skies onto runway 15, a hard-sand strip on the Mojave Desert, at 6:57 a.m. Pacific time. A small NASA team and a mini-convoy of "safing vehicles was ready and waiting The regulars were in Florida.
(Please turn to Page 12)
Tenfafive Budgef Cuts Iss*^ Of Access To Ayden
Retain Present Tax Rate School Going To Raleigh
By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners, in a final budget workshop session Thursday, gave tentative approval to cuts which will maintain the present 54-cent per $100 valuation tax rate while providing an across-the-board pay hike for county workers in the coming fiscal year.
Commissioners have, for several weeks, been reviewing the proposed 1983-1984 budget recommended by County Manager Reginald Gray.
The proposed budget had included $808,000 to establish a capital reserve fund. It also included money for incentive and longevity pay and funds for an across-the-board increase for county workers.
Gray had also recommended a 2-cent per $100 valuation lax increase, saying the last increase in taxes was in 1980.
Last week, commissioners trimmed $307,821 in school capital outlay funds from the proposed budget, a move that reduced the tax rate needed to fund Grays recommended list of expenditures by 1.43 cents.
Thursday, commissioners trimmed $244,300 from Grays recommended capital reserve fund. That move saved another 1.13 cents in the tax rate.
Grays recommendation for the reserve fund, designed to set aside money for county capital outlay needs, included $338,000 for landfill equipment, $150,000 for a new tax and land records mapping system, $300,000 for the purchase of land and $20,000 for a new bookmobile.
Given tentative approval by the board was $224,000 for landfill equipment, $25,000 for the mapping program, $300,000 for land and $15,000 for a bookmobile.
Commissioners also put a freeze on the countys incentive pay program and cut those funds - $91,363 from the proposed 1983-1984 budget.
However, the board agreed to continue the longevity pay
plan and approved a pay Increase program for county workers that will give all employees at least a one-step pay increase. One step on the coMiys pay plan ranges between 4.4 and 4.7 percent.
While all workers will receive at least a one-step increase, some lower paid employees who have joined the work force since July 1981 may receive a two-step hike.
The pay hike also includes cmmty-paid employees of Pitt Community College and the county and city school systems.-
Other than the cut in school capital outlay funds, the capital reserve fund and incastive pay allocation, the proposed budget for the coming year is essectially the same as recommended by Gray.
.Commissioners have schediM a meeting for June 29 for a final review and approval of the new budget.
Yosser Arafat Is Expeued By
Syrian Govm't
DAMASCUS, byna(AP)-The Syrian government expelled Yasser Arafat from Syria today, and aides said the beleaguered chairman of the Palestine Liberation Or-
Justice Requires Draft Registration Disclosure
By JAMES H. RUBIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Supreme Court justice today restored, at least for the weekend, the governments power to force male students applying for financial aid to disclose their draft registration status.
Justice Harry A. Blackmun issued a temporary stay that sets aside until
mid-day Monday a federal judges order invalidating the disclosure rule nationwide. Blackmun requested more information in the case before he decides whether the effect of the judges ruling should be suspended.
The Justice Department asked Blackmun on Thursday to set aside the judges order indefinitely.
RKFLKCrOK
OILlflS
752-i:m
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 7S2-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Dally Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and puWish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
TEEN DEVELOPMENT CX)URSE I am interested in enrolling my 15-year-old daughter in a personal development program. I hear theres one underway in Greenville now, but
no one has been able to tell me who to call. M.J.
So long as it remains in effect, the order Irretrievably will deprive the United States of a reasonable means selected by Congress to regulate the disbursement of federal funds for student grants and loans and of a valuable tool to promote maximum compliance with the draft registration law, the department said.
The government requested the stay to give the Supreme Court time to study a fobmal appeal of a June 17 ruling by U.S. District Judge Donald D. AlsopinSt. Paul, Minn.
Alsop barred the federal government from enforcing the disclosure rule, which he said is unconstitutional.
The judge also ordered the U.S. Department of Education to notify student financial aid administrators at colleges nationwide that they must, in turn, Inform students immediately that they need not supply information about their draft registration when applying for financial aid from the government.
Alsop also directed the department to eliminate any reference to a student's draft registration status on aid forms used and distributed after June 30.
The draft disclosure rule was signed into law by President Reagan last September.
It was challenged by six
ganization flew to Tunis, the PLOs headquarters since the Israeli army drove it from Beirut last summer.
The Syrians also barred the PLOs military chief, Khalil Wazir, who uses the code name Abu Jihad, from returning to Syria from the Bekaa valley, in eastern Lebanon, other PLO sources said.
The ouster came after Palestinian officials reiwrted that rebel Palestine Liberation Organization forces ambushed and killed an undetermined number of Arafats men during the night. The Syrian action marked an escalation of the dispute between Syrian President Hafez Assad and Abafat over charges that Syria was backing a rebellion in the ranks of Arafats A1 Fatah guerrilla organization.
One of the ambushes was intended for Arafat, a military source at Arafats office said. The PLO chief said he thought about a dozen Fatah figthers were killed or wounded in the ambushes.
They (the Syrians) have asked him to leave. They also said they were surprised he had come to Damascus in the first place. They dont want Abu Jihad to return either, said the official, who spoke on the condition he not be named.
Arafat returned to Damascus Thursday from Tripoli, in northeast Lebanon, and Abu Jihad was at his headquarters in the Bekaa valley Thursday night.
Arafat, looking grim but still managing a smile, was rushed into his bulletproof limousine at 1;45 p.m. (6:45 a.m. EDT) at the PLO headquarters in Damascus and was speedily driven away.
1 T
L J\
k ^
* , *
GROUNDBREAKING IN AYDEN Board of Education members Steve Tripp and Walter Gaskins (left and right), along with former board member Bill McLawhom (center), get work on the new Ayden Middle School started the projects official groundbreaking
Thursday. The $2.4 million facility is scheduled for completion in 420 days and will be the first school constructed in Pitt County since Wellcome Middle in 1977. (Reflector Photo By Mary Schulken)
at
Singleton Named, Dixon Reappointed To Trustees
Gov, Jim Hunt has appointed Louis Singleton of Greenville as a member of the Board of Trustees of East Carolina University and re-^inted James M. Dixon of Gmnstoro to the board.
Singleton, a Beaufort
County native, is a graduate of ECU ...... '
I and the University of
North Carolina law school. He has practiced law in Greenville since 1%1.
anonymous students repre-tav
There may be others open to teenagers, but one which is developed especially for teenagers is the TeenGrowth program presented by Charles Kavanaugh and Associates. You may contact Kavanau^ by phoning 758-4096 or writing Box 229, Greenville.
sented by UK Minnesota I Liberties Union and the Minnesota Pdblic Interest Research Group.
Law^ for the students said the law punished students who did not register for the draft without givmg them any trial first.
1 go now. A statement will be issued later, Arafat said before his car and a convoy carrying about a dozen bodyguanls sped off.
Syria had no immediate comment on the ouster, but the two government newspapers, Tishrin and A1 Thawra, wth attacked Arafat for the second day in a row.
LOUIS SINGLETON
The new four-year term will be Singletons second appointment as a university trustee. Singleton was first appointed to the ECU board in 1977 by Hunt and served until 1981.
Singleton is a member of St. James United Methodist Church, the Pirates Club and the Rotary Club First named to the ECU board in 1979 by Hunt, Dixon is president and owner of J.M. Dixon Inc and JMD Contractors Inc., real estate development and general contracting firms in Greensboro.
Dixon, who has a special interest in the ECU program for hearing-impaired students, served as chairman of the committee which established the Central Carolina School for the Deaf and has been a director of the N.C. Schools for the Deaf for 14 years.
He has established a permanently endowed $50,000 scholarship trust fund for deaf students and, in 1976, the James M. Dixon Jr. classroom building at the
Central North Carolina School for the Deaf was dedicated in his honor.
Dixon has served as chairman of the Greater Greensboro Open golf tournament and as chairman of the board of trustees of Christ United Methodist Church in Greensboro.
He is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
By MARY SCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer
The tangled question of access to the new Ayden Middle School will soon go to Gov. Jim Hunt with the hope, say county school and Ayden officials, that* he can convince state Department of Transportation officials to allow an entrance and exit (or the school intoN C 11 Shortly after the groundbreaking Thursday (or the new school, the Pitt County Board of Education passed a re.solution requesting that the governor consider permission for access to the school site, liK-ated on N.C. 11 near the intersection of N.C. 102. from N ( 11 and that the state provide re quired turn lanes from the four lane, divided highway The town of Ayden, ac cording to the re.solution, would provide a safety of ficer for the intersection State Rep Ed Warren said today he will make an ap pointment with Hunt and other state officials (or the request to be presented The meeting has not becm scheduled
DOT, which must give final approval to access, has in dicated to the Ayden board and the county school board that the highway cannot be opened," Pitt School Super intendenl Eddie West said West said DOT officials told him that, when the highway was constructed, or iginal landowners were compensated, partially from federal funds, for having no access to the roadway West said those funds tied up future access, according to DOT
* Traffic to and from the new school site was originally . planned through Edgewood and Stokes streets onto N.C.. 102. Citizens of the primarily residential streets objected to Increased traffic and in April the Ayden Board of Commissioners passed a resolution requesting the County Board of Education to consider alternate routes of entry to the property.
A letter received in May by West from Cato C. De Vane (Please turn to Page 12)
WEATHER
Fair tonight, lows In 60s. Mostly sunny Saturday with high temperatures near 90.
Looking Ahead
Generally (air Sunday les tly in
period with lows in the 60s.
Jy
through Tuesday with highs mostly in 80s during
Inside Reading
JAS. M. DIXON
Page 6-Area items Page 8-The churches Page 12-Obituaries Page 17-Pitts wheat
j-TI* DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Fridiy, June M, 1163
r, Greenville, N.C.-Fridiy, June M,iiB3 - ___ -
Special Camp Held For Kids With Cancer
By MARIAN G. CARSON PCMH Medical Writer All kids love summer camp, and kids with cancer are no exception. But
because of their need for medical supervision, children with cancer may not be able to attend regular summer camps.
To remedy this situation, the hematology/onocology section of the Department of Pediatrics at the East Carolina University School of
Medicine and the Department of Therapeutic Recreation at Pitt County Memorial Hospital sponsored Camp Rainbow, a twoHlay camp for
childrra with cancer and their families, recently at the Elm Street Recreational CentwandPait.
More than SO children along with their parents and siblings attended the camp. Four of the campers are outpatients at Duke University Medical Center and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sdvwl of Medicine, while others are patients at ECU and Pitt Memorial.
The camp allows patKnts to get away from all the needles and anxiety associated with their disease and to just enjoy themselves, said Dr. Tate Holbrook, assistant professor of pediatrics and head of the hematology/onocology section at the medical school. Not a day goes by that the child is not aware that he has cancer and that he is different from other children. At the camp, he is with other children with cancer, and he can better appreciate the fact that there are others like him.
Camp Rainbow is the only camp of its kind in the state, Holbrook added. Some of the larger medical centers in the country have camps for children with cancer, but
ours is the only one we know of that is planned for the whole family.
The children and their families ^loit the two days riding horses, making arts and crafts, ck^g aerobic exercises, learning to clog, and learning all about ca^ lore. The Eastern Carolina Vocatkmal Center provided its facilities to the campers for swimming in the afternoon.
During the morning parents participated in educational sessions dealing with cancer, chemotherapy, diet and nutrition, and stress reduction. In addition to providing needed information, the sessions gave parents the opportunity to share their problems and anxieties with others in similar situations. One of the topics discussed was the establishment of a parents support group which would meet on a regular basis.
In its second year, the summer camp is funded throu^ donations of both time and money. We have had overwhelming support from individuals and businesses in the Greenville area," said Holbrook. It costs approximately $40 per
CAMP RAINBOW PORTRAIT...Campers and staffers gathered on a hill at Elm Street Park for a
group photograph.
camper to cover the expenses of holding the canq), and we do not charge the campers. We hope to work with the American Cancer Society next year to help fund the can^).
The camp is staffed by volunteers from the medical school, the hospital and East Carolina University. The group included a doctor, a resident, a physicians assistant, nurses, recreation therapists, social workers, stu^nts and volunteers from the hospital and medical school. Many of the staff members have had contact with the children in the hospital setting and were, therefore, more comfortable with them than regula camp counselors who might be nervous about the health limitations of chUdren with cancer.
A special group of volunteers this year included six Boy Scouts from Greenvilles Troop 30. Josh Sheppard was looking for a service project to fulfill a requirement for his Life Badge when his father, Walter L. Sheppard, assistant dean at the medical school, told him about Camp Rainbow. Josh organized a group of volunteers and talked with Nancy Nobles, a recreation therapist at Pitt Memorial who helped plan the camp. The Scouts set up tents, displayed and demonstrated camping gear, and
cooked DKHre than 200 14^ dogs for the diildren.
This hi been a positivgl experience fn* these Scouts,>^; said Waltff 9wppard, ww' was on hand fw the araf-l The childm ho% have nqt* had and may oeva* have the! opportunities these Scoi^. have bad, and its great to* see them interact with each other. The Scouts would like-to be involved again next! year and to take the childrn: on an overnight campini! experience. *
The ttepartment of Pediaf- ' lies and the Dqiartment of Therapeutic Recreation hope to extend the camp next year to include an overnight. Last year the camp was for one day, said Holbrook. This year we extended it to two days. We would eventually like to have a full week of activities for these children to give them a summer camp experience just like other summer camps.
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BOY SCOUTS...of Troop 30 were volunteers who assisted with many of the Camp Rainbow activities. Rusty
Knott (left) helps Ronald Midgett of Washington, N.C. don a backpack.
HORSEBACK RIDING...was a new experience for many of the campers. P.O. Ennis, a School of Medicine
employee, leads the way for another ride.
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Joneses Honored With Reception Life Span Gap Said Growing
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones recently were honored on their golden anniversary with a reception in the Kings Crossroad Church Fellowship Hall.
The hosts were the couples children - Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Garris, Mr. and Mrs. James Peaden, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones Jr.
Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bundy, Mr. and Mrs. Kirby Tyson and the children of the honored couple. The hall was decorated with greenery, yellow daisies, potted mums, babys breath and white wicker loveseats. The white lace cloth-covered table was graced with two candlelabra and a four-tiered anniversary cake. Cake and punch-were served by sisters and nieces of the couple. Gifts were accepted and displayed by grandchildren of the couple. Mrs. Carl Heath and Mrs. Cecil Meeks said goodbyes to the approximately 12S guests.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The life-span age gap is growing between men and women. A life insurance industry newsletter says American women now outlive men by 7.6 years, on average, and the figure may rise to 8.5 years by the year
2050. The American Council of Life Insurance bases its prediction on the latest Census Bureau projections that assume womens life expectancy will rise from the 1981 figure of 78.3 to 81.3 years in 2005 and 83.6 years in 2050. Comparable ages for men are 70.7,73.3 and 83.6
SUPER SPECIAL!
MR. AND MRS. ROY JONES
Prior to the reception, the couple reneweed their wedding volews in a service attended by their immediate family. Their pastor, the Rev. Bruce Jones, officiated. Judy Jones rendered piano selections and sang Whither ThouGoest.
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Langleys Honored on 25th Anniversary
MR. AND MRS. JACK LANGLEY
Family members of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Langley honored them Sunday by holding a reception in honor of their 25th wedding anniversary at Hollywood Presbyterian Church near Greenville.
Mr. and Mrs. Langley are former Greenville residents now living in Fayetteville. They were married June 1, 1958 in the Hollywood Presbyterian Church. They have two sons, Patrick and Brad.
For the occasion, Mrs. Langley wore a formal ^wn of blue satin with a chiffon overlay. She was presented a corsage of yellow roses with silver ribbon.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Langley and Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Langley greeted guests.
The refreshment table was covered with a white linen cloth trimmed with lace. Mrs. P.D. Ennis and Mrs. Herbert Edwards served punch. The three-tiered anniversary cake was served by Mrs. Sheryl Gardner and Mrs. Mavis Brann. Others who assisted in serving were Mrs. Ricky Langley, Mrs. Michael Langley, Mrs William Nichols, Lisa Langley, Fraley Langley and Mrs. Charles Langley.
Thank you scrolls were passed to the guests by Leigh Langley and Amy Langley. Goodbyes were said to Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Edwards.
The DaUy ReOector, Greenville, N.C.-FrWj(y, June M, ISO-S
COMMON CAUSE LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) - Alcohol consumption is the most common cause of absence from work among Swiss men in their 20s and 30s, says k report released by the Swiss Center for Alcohol Problems.
I \
Queen Victoria was proclaimed Empress of India in 1876.
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Si
Births
Pros, Cons Sent Abby On Sons Addressing
: By Abigail Van Buren
' t983 by Universal Press Syndicate
^ DEAR ABBY: Whats the matter with you? Are you on yacation? I cant believe you wrote that answer to The Johnsons," who were hurt because their son consistently addressed his letters to The Johnsons" instead of to Mr. Jind Mrs. Johnson They thought it showed a lack of respect and asked you if they were wrong to feel that way.
> Instead of answering their question, you chastised them for complaining about such a petty problem! Then you went on to tell them that your mail that day included some really serious tragedies, such as an elderly couple who are now raising four grandchildren (all under 10) whose parents perished in a hotel fire away from home, a 12 year-old who was pregnant, and a 24-year-old woman who, after three miscarriages, finally had a healthy infant who became a victim of crib death, etc.
Then you closed, Imploring The Johnsons to thank God that they had a son who is able to write, and cared enough to do so!
- J enjoy your column, Abby, but this time your answer lacked your usual sensitivity and understanding. I think you owe The Johnsons an apology.
AN EDITOR IN OHIO
; tOEAR EDITOR: The Johnson letter and my in-Wnsitive reply unleashed an unexpected blizzard of jnail, pro and con mostly con. But youre right, I Ho owe Mr. and Mrs. Johnson an apology, and 1 hope they will forgive me. Read on:
: DEAR ABBY: I think you erred in your response to The Johnsons, who objected to the manner of address their sons letters. ^
I Respect is a social modality in and of itself, and should TU)t depend on the misfortunes of others, or proper appreciation that a son cared enough to write. His manner of iiddressing his parents was in my opinion disrespectful.
THE REV ROBERTG. EPPLER,
: LOUISVILLE, KY.
; DEAR ABBY: Shame on you for chewing out the Johnsons when they sought your help for what you consider to ^be a problem of relatively minor importance. They simply >sked whether or not their son was showing them the tespect due parents when he addressed their letters to The Johnsons instead of to "Mr. and Mrs. Johnson.
As an advice columnist you are expected to handle all ;problems, big and small, with equal compassion and understanding.
Had I been in your shoes I would have responded thusly: Dear Mr. and Mrs. Johnson: I agree, your sons manner of addressing you is disrespectful. Why not write him a little note pointing out his thoughtlessness? Assure him that you love him nonetheless, but would appreciate it greatly if in the future he would address you as Mr. and Mrs. Johnson.
1 We are never too old to learn, Abby. Even you.
^A GRANDMOTHER IN OREGON
.DEAR GRANDMOTHER: Thank you. However, I Hid get several letters in support of my stand. For 'example:
- DEAR ABBY: Wonderful! Wonderful! The best letter .youve written yet, and Iye been following you for years. (Which one? The one to The Johnsons, who thought their son was disrespectful in addressing his letters to The Johnsons instead of to Mr. and Mrs.
! -For years Ive wondered how you could contain yourself when readers presented you with such trivial problems (wbat color do I wear, should I give cash gifts, etc.) despite *tlic serious horrors of the modern world.
' I am a professional social scientist who thinks that 1 most of your crisp responses cut through much of the , -ponderous published malarkey on humn behavior. Just
iwie thing; You really lose with those god-awful puns!
G.C.F., LEWISTON, MAINE
. * * *
1 . Youre never too old (or too young) to learn how
to make friends and be popular. For Abbys booklet
on popularity, send $1, plus a long, self-addressed, '< stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. : Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
i Cooking f' Is Fun
: ByCECLYBROWNSTONE
* AawciitodPrenFoodEditor
: SUMMERLUNCmON : Asparagus Vinaigrette
i Gub Sandwiches
f Peaches Arabella
PEACHES ARABELLA I Quick and easy to make just ! before serving.
: Peel and slice enouA peaches ; to make 4 servings; fold in sugar to taste. Beat 1 large egg white
* until stiff; gradually beat in 1^ :tabteqwoos sugar. Beam cup I heavy cream imtil stiff. Beat V
* cup plain yogurt slightly; fold in ^ egg white and then cream; top
peaches with the mixture.
Strickland Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Graham Strickland Jr., Bethel, a son, Joe Graham III, on June 17, 1983, In Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Adams Born to Howard and Cynthia Adams, Farmville, a son, Thomas Wesley, on June 18, 1983, In Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
VICKI JO JORDAN...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jene Dewey Jordan of Wilmington, who announce her engagement to John Milton May Jr. of Leland, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Milton Mayof Winterville. An Oct. 1 wedding is planned.
Celebrating 94th Birthday
PANTEGO - The family of Mrs. Bertha Ensley will honor her on her 94th birthday this weekend.
Family and friends , including six dau^ters. a son, and grandchildren, are
expected from as far away as New York and New Jersey Mrs. Christine Ensley Jetter of Greenville, a dau^ter of the honoree, is planning the event and many of the guests wilt be slaying in Greenville.
The Wizard of Oz was written by L. Frank Baum. The childrens book was the basis for the 1939 classic film.
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UNSEASONABLY DRESSED...to show some of the latest in male fashions, these models participated in the Fall-Winter Press Preview held by the Mens Fashion Association in Philadelphia this week. Buffalo plaid woodsman jackets in bright colors on black complement wool ski caps. (AP Laserphoto)
i
Trip To Halifax Planned
The \own and Country Senior Citizens Club will sponsor a trip to Halifax July 7 to attend the drama, First for Freedom.
Members and friends of the club planning to take the trip are requested to make reservations by July 1 by calling Mrs. Sarah Ashton.
752-2912.
Other trips being planned by the club are to Disney World, the Pennsylvania Dutch country, and the New England states. The July 14 meeting will be held at Tar Landing Restaurant.
A SPECIAL INVITATION TO VISIT...
HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH
Meeting At: Carolina Country Day School
Greenvilles Newest Independent Baptist Church
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4-The DaUy Reflectw, Greenvilte, N.C.-Friday, June M, 1983
Editorials
Change Is Certain
Pope John Paul II is well aware of the political situation in Poland where his church faces a hostile communist government.
Nevertheless, the pope has shown no fear in returning to his homeland to offer hope and inspiration to his freedom-loving fellow countrymen.
The pope completed his visit Thursday following a tour in which he referred to solidarity and brought about an emotional outpK)uring from millions of Poles who yearn for the freedom to worship as they wish.
There were some demonstrations which were beaten down by riot police. And there was a response from Deputy Premier Mieczyslaw Rakowski who indicated the visiting pope was feeding Polish youth myths, legends and half-truths concerning Polish history.
There was emotion all along the way as joyful Poles turned out to welcome a pope who is one of their own. In the Polish tradition they scattered flowers in his path.
He in turn quoted the Beatitudes, Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for justice.
Living in the shadow of Moscow, as Poland does, it is not likely that great change will come immediately. Change will come, however. When people crave freedom and are aware that it can be theirs, they can change their destinies. That will happen in Poland.
Break In The Ties
It seems inevitable that you can chalk up another break in the ties between the Baptist State Convention and Wake Forest University.
A search committee at the WinstonSalem school chose Alabama educator Thomas K. Hearn Jr. as its nomin for the presidency of Wake Forest. Hearns academic and ad-minstrative credentials seemingly are excellent but, lo and behold, hes a Presbyterian. But, as the Winston-Salem newspapers point out, he has a strong Baptist background.
The ultimate choice was made Thursday when Wake Forests trustees, who have shown a growing tendency during the last few decades to break away from the ties that bind, elected Hearn as the institutions first non-Baptist leader in 149 years.
Now the Baptist State Convention, which partially funds the university, will have its chance. The convention has, somewhat reluctantly, gone along with dancing and such stuff, but this is a different matter. Pretty soon, you might say. Wake Forest could become a part-Baptist institution.
Paul T. O'Connor-^
A Fussy Mess Over Garbage
RALEIGH - Remember the days whra people used to try to get rid of tbeir garbage? Not today. Garbage has become so valuable in todays recycling economy that people now fi^t over It.
Burke Cmintys plans to build a garbageiJuming steam plant touched off a garbage rights fight in a legislative committee recently. One side said the county ought to have the right to bum all garbage produced within its borders. The other side said no government body should be able to moncpdize the local garbage. Honest Injun, thats what they argued about.
The Burke County Commissioners have decided that theres money in garbage. According to David Chapman, Burkes chief of maintenance and (Rations, the county will iq>nd $5.5 million to build a steam generation plant that uses garbage as fuel. The county hopes to produce 20,000 pounds of steam an hour and bum
llOtonsof waste a day. The steam will be sold to the state which has a number of facilities in Morganton.
If It works, it will be a win-win situation for local taxpayers. Theyll get thar initial investment back within seven or eight years and they wont have to buy another landfill site. After the payback, the county and state will i^Iit any profits from the sale of the steam.
There are a few catches, however, that stem from a clause that guarantees Burke County, and any other governmental unit which sets iq) a garbagel)uming energy plant, all the garbage generated within its boundaries.
If you collect garbage in Burke County, youll have to bring it to the county incinerator. You wont be able to dump it elsewhere. This clause is considered essential to the financial viability of the steam plant becuase it guarantees the county all the fuel it needs.
Paul Rankin, a lobbyist fw the National S(rild Waste Management Cwp., says the bill will unfairly treat sonne private garba^ haulers. Some will end up having to drive longer distances to the county facility than they might otherwise have to drive to a landfill in another county, nils extra driving will force them to charge higher rates than out-of-thecounty competitors who may be able to work on the countys border areas.
Rankin told the House Public Utilities Committee that an exclusive right to all garbage would breed inefficiency. The county can operate inefficiently and then pass along to garbage haulers, in the form of hi^r dumping fees, all the monetary losses the plant incurs.
The bill will also cut into the recycling industry, he said, by forbidding garbage haulers to separate recyclable items. Families and businesses \^1 still be able to hold onto their recyclable aluminum.
paper and other items. But once it is picked iq>, itll have to go to the county, Rankinsaid.
Rep. Marvin Mussdwhite, D-Wake, differed with Rankin on the impact m recycling. If the county thinks recycling will be wise, he said, then the com-missimers can make arrangements for it. The law is written the way it is, Musselwhite said, to assure that the garbage needed to ke^ the fires burning will be brought to the incinerator.
This is a statewide bill which sets up a state authority to build such garbage-burning plates. Already, New Hanover County has such a plant under construe ti(Mi. It will generate electricity.
Members of the committee feel that more counties will want to get into the garbage4)uming business. For now, theyve decided that a county ought to have the rights to all the garbage its people generate.
Public
Forum
8f WmfMiw SyMcM
To the editor:
It was gratifying to see democracy at work on Monday evening, June 20, when the Greenville City Board of Education met at Wahl-Coates School. Some 250 people were there to discuss primarily the extended school day and the extended school year proposal.
An explanation of the proposal was presented and the necessity of immediate action explained. The right to be heard was then made available to those who wished to speak either for or against the {iroposal.
After listening patiently to more than 20 speak, some of whom repeated what had been said before, the Greenville Board of Education voted against the proposal and in favor of the sentiments expressed by the great majority of those present.
At least two things were obvious at this meeting:
1. There are a lot of people concerned with the education and welfare of the students of Greenville City Schools.
2. The Greenville City School Board is responsive to the wishes and desires of the citizens of Greenville.
Kip West
114 N. Eastern St.
Letters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves ' the ri^t to cut Imger letters.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Adverse Reaction
Maxwell Glen and Cody ShearerHouston Schools Try Incentives
TOKYO - News photographs from the Williamsburg Summit, showing a smiling, self-assured Yasuhiro Nakasone always at Ronald Reagans side, stirred enough adverse reaction here to warn that the benefits to Japanese-American relations of a very un-Japanese premier can backfire.
A society valuing reticence and taciturnity in its leaders was startled by the idea of Prime Minister Nakasone pushing through fellow heads of government to reach President Reagan. His performance at Williamsburg, stylistic and substantive, Increased speculation among Tokyos political insiders that Nakasone will be just another face in the unmemorable succession of premiers.
No leader of Japan has been so responsive to Western security considerations and more willing to coax his nation toward higher defense spending. But Nakasones enemies within the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), the nations ruling conservative party, could push him from office. The possible result: regression to a pacifist security policy.
Actually, Nakasone always has been a nonconformist who LDP confidently predicted never would achieve power. A junior officer in the Imperial Navy from 1941 through 1945 (his detractors point out he was a non-combatant accounting officer), he wore his old naval officers cap around the house until recently. His call for higher defense spending as defenseThe Daily Reflector
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minister a dozen years ago completed his caricature as a throwback to Japanese nationalism and militarism.
That caricature was enhanced on Nakasones visit to Washington in January when he was quoted as referring to Japan as an unsinkable aircraft carrier. Although it was the interpreter who turned big into unsinkable, the prime ministers detractors harp on it. Pormer foreign minister Kiichi Miyazawa, most likelv to succeed Nakasone, his Imperial Navy heritage.
Even if Nakasones militaristic caricature once had a basis in truth, it no longer does in the opinion of Japanese defense experts, "Today, hes not a narrow-minded nationalist but a true strategist, Masamichi Inoki, a former Defense Ministry official now with a Japanese think-tank, told us. Inoki considers Nakasone the first premier to think in global terms since Shigeru Yoshida in the early postwar years.
The Foreign Office is delighted, approving of his statement to the Diet that warned the Soviet Union its bumptious Pacific fleet could find the narrows closed between Japanese islands. The prime ministers statement at Williamsburg associating Japan with NATO in theater nuclear arms talks, worked out in advance with the Foreign Office, showed awareness of possible Soviet transfer of SS-20s to Siberia.
This departure from the normal rhetoric of postwar Japanese statesmen triggered indignation from the mass media. But several critics seemed more concerned with Nakasones camera-hogging at Williamsburg, in contrast to the ability of his predecessor, Zenko Suzuki, to blend into the woodwork at the Versailles and Ottawa Summits.
Usually, we Japanese dont have to say a lot of things to each other to make ourselves understood, political rival Miyazawa told us. Maybe he (Nakasone) is too articulate. The concern here is that he is not mature enough.
What is most un-Japanese about Nakasone is his effort to guide public opinion, departing from his countrys traditional consensus method, without reaching a consensus, he is abandoning the longtime practice by^ LDP, the virtually permanent majority party, of assuming dovish postures to preempt the Socialist Partys call for an unarmed Japan.
To the surprise of politicians, polls show Nakasones popularity on the rise -possiblv reflecting a new generation discarding the pacifism of its elders. But that hardly impresses Nakasones critics. Political insiders laid out for us a scenario whereby Nakasone will miss his goal of 6 percent annual increases in Japanese defense spending and, having unwittingly given Washington cause for new anit-Japanese trade restrictions, will fall from office.
Copyright 198#Field Enterprises, Inc.
HOUSTON - While Ronald Reagan crisscrossed the country recently, touting merit pay for teachers, school officials here might have scratched their heads in amusement.
Its been three years since this city first tried financial incentives to alleviate its public school systems ills. And though the incentives have met with some success, merit pay hasnt been part of the arsenal.
In effect, Houston has addressed both short- and long-term problems. For one, a general salary hike, already in the works, is scheduled to raise starting pay to $21,000 by 1987.
Meanwhile, its teachers already can receive extra stipends - from $150 to $6,200 above salary - for filling shortages in certain disciplines and parts of the city. They can also win compensation for going back to school themselvee or accruing exceptional attendance records. The incentives have a way of not only meeting
students immediate but also of luring more people into the profession.
From what we could tell, in fact, Houstons plan has been popular with teachers. After three years, turnover is down 7 percent. Moreover, some instructor-short disciplines have benefited: More than 300 candidates have applied for 50 math and science positions, of which 34 have been filled.
After three years, school officiate here have reason to greet with skepticism presidential contenders' plans for improving education. They know theres no quick fix. And as for Reagans merit-pay plan, its unclear whether any formula could fairly rate teacher classroom performance without creating disgruntled teachers on one side and self-promoters on the other.
Yet theres clearly no time to lose. The Southern Regional Education Board reported that when beginning salaries offered to baccalaureates in business ad
ministration average $17,500, starting salaries at the $13,000 level are not going to attract many additional superior individuals into teaching. Nor, the board added, will the 50 percent decline in collegiate teacher training enrollment be reversed.
That may be sufficient incentive for Reagan and Congress to remain open to ideas tried here and elsewhere.
Success Story: No sooner had astronaut Sally Ride graced the covers of Newsweek, People and innumerable Living Sections tn the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced the selection of two more women for mission training. NASA officials must be kicking themselves for not making space ciml 20 years ago.
Ronald Reagan and the U.S. Civil Rights Commission have been sparring recently over the presidents record on
women appointees. Reagan says hes placed 1,000 women in federal jobs, but the commission counts only 72.
Whos correct?
According to the National womens Political Caucus, a bipartisan group headed by Republican Kathy Wilson, the commission is closer to the mark. By its own count, the NWPC cites 76 women in jobs requiring Senate confirmation and says that Reagans other 924 appointees sit on throwaway boards and federal commissions with little or no power.
For once, Ma Bell didnt get her way, and with good reason. Its opposition to a cable television deregulation bill, passed by the Senate June 14, focused on a clause that would have affected only 1 percent of its local revenues. Oddly enough, Ma Bell, otherwise known as the American Telephone and Telegraph Co. (AAT), was fretting publicly about bankruptcy. Luckily, senators didnt buy the claim.
Art Buchwald
Do You Really Want A Reunion?
News Item - Dr. Jack Sparacino, a psychologist, did a survey on high school and college class reunions and came to the conclusion the difference between people who attended them and those that did not return wasnt based on the status they hold today, but the past status they held in school.
Herman, darling, are you going to your high schools 30th-year reunion? Why should 1? Theyll only start calling meInky Squid.
Is that what they called you in school?
Yeh, except for George Hankoff. He called me Squishy Squid.
But that was years ago. You now own the largest land development company in the United States.
That wont cut any ice with Billy Mahler. Hell still step on my foot and say it was an accident.
You know youre exaggerating. Im sure theyd love to see you. After all,
ioure the chairman of the board of a lollywood motion picture company, and youre probably the only one who married a movie star.
Maybe so, but Ill bet you Susan Butler still wont dance with me.
Who is Susan BuUer?
She was our high schools leading pom pom girl. She used to snd on Bob Markays shoulders and yell DEEEEEEE FENSE whenever the other team was threatening to score. One time I asketHier to go to a prom with me and she said, I dont dance with Inky Squids.
Maybe shell change her tune when you arrive at the aimort in your private
Lear jet.
Milton Steiglitz will just laugh and say, Who would have thought that stupid Inky, with his shirttail always out, would own his own airplane? It shows you what a mess this country is really in!
Youre making those things up, Herman. After all, youre probably the only one in your class who has a university library named after him.
Milton never forgave me for dropping a fly ball in the ninth inning to rob him of a no-hit ^ame
I never knew you played baseball on the high school team.
1 didnt. It was a sandlot game in Hollis Woods, around the comer from wherel lived.
But now you own a National Baseball League team. Milton will certainly be impressed with that.
It wont give him back his no-hit ball game.
Well, its no big deal to me if you go or not. I wont know anyoody there anyway.
Elisha Douglass
Strength For Today
Are you merely interested in religion?
If so, you are unfortunate, for religion is not something to be interested in but something to be committed to. Many people today live the most meager lives because they are interested in religion and nothing more.
Some people are interested in religion as a study. The libraries are full of books whicfi~were written on religious subjects by people interested in religion as they would be in anv other
branch of knowledge. Paul found the Athenians of his day vastly interested in religion that is, they loved to discuss religious matters and argue about them in the market place.
But a personal God desires fellowship with the persons he has created, and fellowship demands similarity of purpose. This, in tuiTL demands surrender and *cbmniitment. This commitment leads us into friendship with the Most High.
Mere Interest Is nnt enniioh
Youre lucky. I wouldnt want you to meet Gunner Morgan. Every day hed go throu^ my lunch bag and take out anything that tickled his fancy. I dont think I ever ate one of my mothers brownies the whole time I was in high school.
It would be fun to spring on him that you now own 2,150 chocolate chip cookie franchises in the country.
Gunner would probably find some way of taking them away from me.
Isnt there anybody in the class that was nice?
Pero Haggerty never called me Squid..
Well, youll be glad to see her.
Yeh, but she was built like the Goodyear blimp, and everyone in the class thought because she didnt call me Squid, there was something serious going on between us. If I see her at the class reunion and Im nice to her, theyll think theres still something going on between us.
Maybe Fern went on weight watchers. After all, that was 30 years ago. She may be a very beautiful woman now.
If she is, she probably wont talk to me, and if she does, shell probably call me Squid.
So I take it youre not going to the reunion.
No if Arnie Krasner is going to be there.
All right, what was your relatkmsbhp with Arnie Krasner?
He was my best friend until he told everyone in class I slept on a rubber sheet.
(c) 1963, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
e-
Questions Over Briefing Book
By DAVID GOELLER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Reagan administration officials still have some questions to answer about how the presidents 1980 campaign obtained a black briefing book pr^ared for then-President Carter, a House subcommittee chairman says.
It got there somehow, it didnt have legs, Rep. Donald Albosta, D-Mich., said Thursday after receiving letters from the four officials, who were active in the Reagan campaign.
"Theres unanswered questions," stated Albosta, who said he would not comment further on the letters until he analyzes them "with a fine-tooth comb.
The letters were written by James A. Baker III, White House chief of staff; CIA Director William Casey; budget director David Stockman; and David Gergen, presidential assistant for communications.
The four were responding to tetters from Albosta, whose panel oversees the Ethics in Government Act, seeking comment on published reports that the Reagan camp had received documents filched" from the Carter W'hite House.
The material was produced by the White House, not the Carter campaign, to prepare
Carter for the debate against Reagan in Cleveland on Oct. 28,) 1980, according to two Carter aides, press secretary Jody Powell and pollster Patrick Caddell.
Baker said his best recollection was that Casey, the campaign manager, gave him a large looseleaf bound book (I believe in a black binder) that was thought to have been given to the Reagan camp by someone with the Carter campaign....
I did not know then, nor do I know now, how that book was obtained, Baker wrote.
As best I recall, the book I saw contained position papers on various issues, Baker said. I do not believe there was anything about it or its contents that would have identified it as coming from the White House. ... I had no reason to believe that the book was illegally acquired.
Casey said in his letter that he had no recollection of receiving or even hearing about any Carter materials.
In a statement released Thursday by the CIA, Casey said that a great many papers crossed his campaign desk and that papers relating to the debate would be pas;^ on to Jim Baker.
Baker said he recalls briefly thumbing through the book before giving it to Reagans debate briefing team headed by Gergen and
Frank Hodsoll, now chairman of the National Endowment fw the Arts.
Gergen, saying be did not remember receiving any Carter material, wrote that he did recall bearing that some material from the Carter campaign was present in the Reagan campaign but had no idea bow it may have arrived.
Stockman, then a Republican representative from Michigan, said the material was didivered to his office five days before the debate.
To the best of my recollection, none of these pages contained markings indicating that they were official government business, Stockman said.
Due to the advocacy character of these issue briefs, it was apparent to me at the time that they had in some way come from the Carter campaign," he wrote.
Stockman said he found the documents useful in his role as the Carter surrogate in pre-debate rehearsals with Reagan.
White House deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said Thursday that Reagan knew nothing of the Carter documents in 1980 and had told administration officials to cooperate fully with Albosta.
In their letters, Baker and Gergen said partisan politics may be behind the inquiry by
New SHP Commander
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt swore in Major David L. Matthews Thursday as a man equal to the task of commanding the North Carolina State Highway Patrol.
Matthews, 56, of Harnett County, becomes state Highway Patrol commander July 1 when current commander Colonel John Jenkins retires.
Matthews, a graduate of the FBI Academy in Quantico, Va. and the Traffic Institute at Northwestern University, joined the state Highway Patrol in 1948. He is currently Chief of Operations in the Patrols main office in Raleigh.
Hunt praised the Highway Patrol, saying
Some Bartenders Don't Like Prospect Of Suits
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Some Greensboro barkeepers didnt like it, but others thought it was inevitable that victims of alcohol-related accidents would be allowed to sue tavern operators for damages.
The state Court of Appeals this week overturned an earlier Rockingham County Superior Court decision against such suits. The plaintiffs in the case may now refile their $1.1 million suit.
"1 dont think its right, said Pete Howell, operator of the Camelot tavern on West Market Street. I think theyre trying' to shovel something in on everything else. 1 think theyre trying to drive everybody out of business.
At The Rhinoceros on South Greene Street, though, owner John Rudy said he had been expecting such action.
I just feel its what eventually is going to be nationwide, he said. Its been legally tested in several states and it has held up. I dont see any way of avoiding it.
The court ruling was requested by Shirley Hutchens, 35, of Reidsville whose husband was killed in a 1981 alcohol-related crash. Hutchens and their son were injured in the wreck. The driver of the other car, Donny R. Fletcher, blew a .16 on the Breathalyzer and
Pesticide Board Sets New Rules
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The North Carolina Pesticide Board has adopted more stringent requirements for commercial storage of re-stricted-use pesticides.
The new rules will affect every dealer and handler of pesticides in the state, according to officials of the N.C. Department of Agriculture. They go in effect Jan. 1,1984.
received a two-year prison sentence.
T. Jerry Williams, executive vice president of the N.C. Restaurants Association, said the court ruling is better than the recently proposed dramshop statute deleted from the recently enacted anti-drunken, driving legislation.
Williams complained, though, that there must be equal protection under the law.
If a tavern owner is liable for accidents resulting from drinks he sold, then so should a homeowner be responsible for accidents resulting from guests who get intoxicated at
Albosta, chairman of the human resources subcommittee of the Post Office and Civil Service Committee.
While there may conceivably be some legitimate basis for concern, there is obviously high political content in the efforts by some to foster press interest in this matter in the hopes of em
barrassing the Reagan administration, Baker said.
I dont think thats a fact at all, Albosta said.
He said his only purpose is to determine whether the revelations about the campaign material point out need for changes in the ethics law - a subject his panel has been studying this year.
that "to every North^arolinian, that black and silver car represents security and safety. He said that state troopers made over half of the 95,000 arrests in North Carolina, the third highest number of drunk driving arrests for any Highway Patrol in the nation.
The governor said that last year, North Carolina had a 12 percent drop in traffic fatalities from 1981. That translates into almost 200 lives saved.
Hunt said the state Highway Patrol is a part of that bright new future of Nortti Carolina.
With the changing of the guard today, Hunt said, the Patrol will continue a tradition of excellence and public service.
his home, he said. We believe 75 percent of the people in North Carolina dont feel a third party is responsible for someone elses consumption. Its the consumption, not the sale, that leads to DUI offenses and accidents.
Williams said his organization may push for limited liability in some cases.
Howell said the climate against drunken driving has slowed his business.
There are a lot of people now scared to get out on the highway after theyve had one or two beers, he said. Ive had people whove had one or two beers call a cab.
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6-The Daily ReOector, Greenville, N.C.-Frlday, June 24,1983
Congress Adopts Compromise Budget; Taxes, Spending Up
By CLIFF HAAS Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Congress has broker! step with President Reagans economic program, adopting a compromise $859 billion budget blueprint calling for more taxes, more domestic spending and less military spending than Reagan has insisted on for 1984.
The Democrat-controlled House, meanwhile, took a second slap at Reagan by voting to limit next months personal income tax cut to a maximum $720 - a move that is unlikely to ever become law In rapid succession on Thursday, both the House and Senate approved the
budget plan completed by congressional negotiators on Monday. The House tally was 239-186 while the Senate approved it 51-43. It does not require the presidents signature because it only serves as a guide for Congress as it drafts spending and tax legislation.
Reagan repeatedly has hammered at the compromise budget saying its mandate for $73 billion in higher taxes over the next three yearc, multibillion-dollar increases in domestic spending and half the military spending boost he wanted could stall the economic recovery and weaken national defense.
The president was
expected to have more to say today.
Legislators indicated the vote for the budget plan was as much a protest a^inst the president sitting out the congressional bud^t process this year as it was a vote against his economic policies.
The president has literally walked away from the budget process and now proposes a non-policy of vetoes, of chaos, of constant confrontation, said Rep. Leon Panetta, D-Calif., a key member of the House Budget Committee.
"His budget was dead on arrival here.... In that vacuum ... the Congress has a responsibility under the budget process to develop a
Eight Years In Prison Welfare Fraud
For Big
LOS ANGKLES (AP) A mother of 10 who used $:77.:M in fraudulent welfare payments to support a life of luxury, including an IH room mansion and a fleet of luxury cars, has been sentenced to eight years in prison
Dorothy Woods, 40, of Pasadena, got the maximum .sentence Thursday from Su-^ perior Court Judge Robert S Stevens in what the prosecution said may be the largest welfare fraud case in the nation.
New Sales Tax Bill To Senate
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, NC (AP)
The state House voted 67-29 today to approve and send to the .Senate a bill to let counties rai.se the local sales tax by one half cent and let some counties and cities to levy a sales tax on hotel and motel rooms Finance (Gimmittee Chairman Dwight yumn, DCaharrus, quickly moved to block debate today with the backing of most House members.
The bill, whose chances are not believed to be as strong in the Senate,as in the House, won tentative ap proval 75-33 Thursday after supporters beat back several attempts to rewrite it during an hour long debate.
"We have put together a lot of bad bills and come out with one bad bill, said Rep.' John Jordan, D-Alamance He said that between the sales tax and a $240.1 million tax package approved by the House recently, each North (arolinian will pay $62 more a year in taxes,
"This is not the right time in North Carolina to raise taxes, added Rep. Charles Hughes, R Henderson. "1 think we will hurt more people than we help.
But Rep, Vernon James, D-Pasquotank, said cities and counties desperately need additional funds.
"This may be the most important bill to local gov ernment you will consider this session, said James,
The measure would let Buncombe, Haywood, Mecklenburg and New Hanover counties as well as the towns of Ocean Isle and Topsail Beach levy a sales tax on hotel and motel room rentals. New Hanover Countv and the two coastal
towns were added to the bill 'Thursday at the request of Rep tom Rabon, D-Brunswick.
The House voted 65-34 not to let Guilford County charge a room tax after several delegation members warned the tax might hurt tourist trade associated with the furniture market.
Rep Allen Barbee, D-Na.sh, chairman of the House Finance Subcommittee that compiled the bill, said the sales tax increase would generate $134 million a year.
The money would be allocated on the basis of population, not according to the point of collection as the current 1 cent local sales tax IS distributed. Distribution according to where the sales tax was collected favors
large counties, where the retail centers are located.
All of the states 1 counties except Burke levy the 1 cent tax.
Barbee acknowledged the bill will force cities and
counties to pay the full cost of local law enforcement
officers retirement benefits. He said thats estimated to cost the counties $1 million and the cities $3 million
annually.
The state now pays for the retirement program but local governments may contribute more to improve the benefits.
Solar Fracfion
The solar fraction for this area Thursday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 82. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 82 percent of your hot water needs.
NOTICE
Pursuant to the General Statutes of North Carolina, Section 143-129, sealed proposals will be received by the Pitt County Board of Commissioners until 10:00 a.m., on Tuesday, July 5,1983, in the Auditorium of the Pitt County Office Building, 1717 W. Fifth Street, Greenville, N.C., for the purchase of office supplies.
A list of materials and their specifications are on file In the office of Margaret M. Roberts, Finance Officer, and copies of same may be obtained upon request.
No proposal shall be considered or accepted by said board or governing body unless at the time of its filing, the same shall be accompanied by a deposit with said board or governing body of cash, cashiers check, or certified check on some bank or trust company insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in an amount equal to, but not less than, five percent (5%) of the proposal.
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners reserves the right to reject any and all proposals and waiver any Informalities In bid.
PITT COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
Margaret M. Roberts Finance Officer
Stevens read from a probation report that said, "There is nothing to indicate that the defendant is remorseful for anything other than the fact that the fraud was detected.
Mrs. Woods pleaded guilty March 15 to 41 felony charges, including welfare fraud and perjury. Court records show that between 1971 and 1980, Mrs. Woods submitted welfare claims under 12 names seeking aid for 49 children.
She used addresses of rental units she and her husband, John, 51, owned in low-income areas of Los Angeles County to collect up to $5,162 in welfare payments monthly, police said. mWoods is currently on trial in Los Angeles Superior Court on 24 felony counts in the fraud case.
The couple owned at least nine properties around the county and several luxury automobiles, including a Rolls-Royce and a Cadillac.
A bankruptcy action filed by Woods has tied up the property, but Gray said the county counsels office has filed a civil suit to recover the welfare money.
We got the sentence we wanted and we were hoping to get, said Deputy District Attorney Judy Gray. We hope this will be a deterrent to the other people who might be contemplating getting involved in welfare fraud. It is a crime and will be treated as such.
"We havent heard of any bigger (case) in any other state, Ms. Gray said.
Mrs. Woods has been in custody in lieu of $250,000 bail since her arrest in, November 1981 in Jamaica* -Stevens cited the size of the fraud, the sophisticated and planned nature of the crime and Mrs. Woods prior criminal record in handing down the sentence, said Ms. Gray.
Mrs. Woods was convicted in Illinois of grand theft in 1981 in a $250,000 credit card swindle and served six months in prison.
budget framework, Panetta said.
After the budget vote. House Democratic leaders brought up the bill to limit the July I personal income tax rate cut to a maximum $720 per family and $637 for single people.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill., chairman of the Ways and Means Committee, noted that the proposed limitation would raise $6 billion next year and $21 billion over the next three years, and would be a statement that Congress has begun to grapple with the menace of federal deficits.
However, the 229-191 House vote for the tax cap was a clear political statement from Democratic leaders who have portrayed the measure as a move to restore fairness to Reagans tax policies, which Democrats argue favor the rich.
All 229 votes came from Democrats.
House Speaker Thomas P ONeill Jr., D-Mass., argued that the tax cap will place nearly all the burden on those with the greatest resources.
House Republican Leader Robert H, Michel of Illinois countered that the tax cap would hit taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes above $35,200 a year.
Its pure political spite because the president has so obviously been right while the Democratic leadership has been wrong about tax cuts, Michel said.
The Senate is expected to take up the tax limitation measure Tuesday and all indications are that the Republican-controlled chamber will kill the legislation. If it survives the Senate, Reagan said he is ready to veto it. In addition, the House vote was less than the two-thirds majority necessary to override a veto.
In the Senate, the budget vote presented Majority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., with a choice between backing Reagans opposition to the budget plan or sticking with Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M., chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, in support of the budget.
Baker, who made no comment Thursday on his action, was among the 19 Republicans who joined with 32 Democrats to pass the budget plan. An aide insisted that nonetheless Baker will vote with the president to sustain his vetoes.
In addition to the $73 billion in tax increases over the next three years, the budget directs congressional committees draft legislation for $12.3 billion in spending cuts in existing programs over the same period.
Before the final vote, the Senate rejected 51-41 a proposal by Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, to reduce from $73 billion to $59 billion the amount of taxes to raised.
After the final vote, Dole said, There is no possible way ... that our committee can come up with $73 billion in increased revenues.
Testimony Reveals Secret US Airfield Is Maintained In Egypt
By DON WATERS Associated Press Writor WASHINGTON (AP)-Although plans to build a major standby military base in Egypt recently fell through,
, the United States already has a secret airfield in the country manmd by about 100 personnel, newly released congressional testimony shows.
Air Force officials told the House military construction appropriations subcommittee on Feb. 16 that the base in certain contingencies could support up to two tactical fi^iter squadrons -about 48 planes - and was used during the 1979-81 Iranian hostage crisis.
Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) radar planes, used by the
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United States to monitor activities in the Middle East, have flown from the base as well, the declassified transcript of the closed-door hearing indicated.
Rep. W.G. Bill Hefner, D-N.C., noted in one exchange that over 400 (troops) were there on the last AW ACS deployment.
The name of the host nation was deleted from the testimony, but government soerces on Thur^ay identified it as Egypt. The exact location was not given, although it was said to be in a remote part of the country.
Maj. Gen. Richard V. Secord, who has since retired as a deputy assistant secretary of defense, told the subcommittee that it is a
secret base at the request of the (blank). It is a matter of great sensitivity with them because there is some continuing presence of U.S. troops there, about 100.
The Egyptian government, especially since President Anwar Sadat was assassinated in 1981, has been wary of publicly demonstrating its, military ties with the United States.
Sadats successor, Hosni Mubarak, has been unwilling to sign a formal pledge guaranteeing U S. forces access to Egyptian bases in case of a Mideast-Persian Gulf military crisis.
A few weeks ago, negotiations over the financing of a major standby military base at Ras Baas on the Red Sea collapsed. Egypt said it would build the project itself, and the House responded this week by rescinding $91 million that Congress already had appropriated for
The United States has obtained formal agreements from Oman, Kenya and Somalia to make sea and air bases available in case of a Soviet military threat to the oil-producing gulf states. No American forces are stationed there permanently.
After a visit to Washington this week, Somalias defense minister, Mohamed Ali Samantar, left behind what Pentagon officials called a wish list for $1.6 billion in military aid over the next 'five years - eight times more than is currently projected.
Regarding the Egypan facUity, Secord said, We have used the base in the past for a number of contingencies and training activities because we dont have any other locations to work from aside from the two bases (blank), and for political and other reasons those two bases are of very limited use to us.
The hearing also disclosed that the Air Force is spending $7.2 million to repair the runway at the secret base and wants to spend at least $10 million more for support facilities.
A subcommittee aide said this includes a $2.5-million dormitory to house 150 people. a dining hall, a medical center, water, sewerage and power plants, runway lights and maintenance buildings.
Hefner chastised the Pentagon witnesses for failing to tell his panel earlier about the project, which he said fell in the military construction area.
Secord and Brig. Gen. Joseph Ahearn, an Air Force engineering official, replied that because the runway had been damaged in use, its repair costs should come out of the operations and maintenance budget. They said the new buildings would come under the military construction account.
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LOOKING FOR STUDENTS - Superintendent of Leonia, N.J. public schools, Dr. Charles Murphy, holds a letter used to solicit students from nearby communities to attend the Leonia school system. Dwindling enrollment has caused this unusual recruitment drive. (AP Laserphoto)
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Come Join The Fun!
Ninth Annual Spring Flea Market On The
Downtown Ma
Saturday, June 25th, 8 A.M.-6 P.M.
Evans Mall Downtown Greenville will be full of Flea Market Bargains! A lot is going for a lot less in this annual affair!
Join the crowd, Saturday, June 25th, 8:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Downtown Greenville for a great day!
We will also feature Arts and Crafts people and while you are in town visit and say hello to the fine folks who operate our over sixty stores and shops and he sure to have lunch at one of our ten fine eating places.
Now over 1,000 FREE parking spaces available in the heart of ^ Downtown Greenville!
Sponsored by Downtown Greenville Association Inc,
CnBWOtd By Eugene Shefftr
FORECAST FOR SATURDAY. JUNE 25.1963
ACROSS 1 Facing the pitcher i Excavate f White lie
12 Act(r Dudley
13 Period
14 Coach Par-seghian
15 Roam li London
coppers 18 Big-billed bird 20 Actress Bancroft 21-rule (usually)
23 Butter unit 24Qiange 25 Congregation member 27 Set on fire anew 29 Attraction 31 Excuses 35 Loony
37 Inlet
38 Isaacs mother
41 Blushing
43Ta-ta 44P(tent 45 Church division 47 Olyn^ics vehicle 49 Purloined
52 Fury
53 Consumed
54 Makes do
55 Qot
58 Common answer 57 Throws out
DOWN
1 Docs group
2 Turkey type
3 Horse, d a sort
4 Woodys son
5 Prepare to start a round
8 Forensic event
7 Press
8 Talk it up
9 Pass out
Avg. solutioD tinti; 26 min.
mm Qsai mm 1^(2] iamm isagiiy
mmasxm
6-24
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
16 Actress Dunne
11 More despicable
17 Notable sea 19 Insertion sign
21 In the manner of
22 Actor Mineo 24 Feel sick
26 Havana residents 28 Tier 30(Theer
32 Famed comedian
33 College vine
34 Behold
36 Lines of work 38Ferberwork 39 Love, Italian-style 40-Without a Cause
42 Records
45 Rose of baseball
46 Halt
48 Place down
50 Actor Ayres
51 Road curve
6-24
CRYPTOQUIP
ONPMNGPU ENJA LQBJU WBOUA QB
ESQZ GMQ JUWNSIUA LQNQSBINJZ.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip SAID THE BEARDED SCULPTOR, OUR KIDS A CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK. Todays Cryptoquip clue: N equals A.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution ci|^r in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Sii^e letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
1913 King Feature Syndicite, Inc
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribuna Company Syndlcata. Inc
ENLISTING THE AID OF THE ENEMY
Both vulnerable. North deals.
NORTH
AKIO AJ4
OAI03
KI065 WEST EAST
542 #0983
^ 765 '^01098
OQ98 0 K652
Q982 J
SOUTH
J76 ?K32 0 J74
A743 The bidding:
North Eait South West 1 Pass 1 NT Pass 3 NT Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: Two of .
As you might guess from its name, an end play usually occurs late in the play of a hand, after considerable ...groundwork has been laid. But sometimes an opening leader might, in effect, be end played at trick one. Or declarer might even 'maneuver an end play at such an early stage.
' The auction was routine.
; North had intended jumping to two no trump had South . responded in a suit. So when I South chose one no trump as ;his initial action. North jumped to game.
I Wests choice of opening ! lead cannot be described as a si stroke of genius. While ] North might hold a four-card major suit, South had denied 'having one. East was ' therefore an odds-on favorite ! to have at least one four-card or longer major suit, and West might have tried to hit ' partners suit rather than at- tack a suit in which the op-, ponents had to have length. The careless declarer i might win the first trick and ! try finesses in both majors and in clubs for his contract. ; While the club finesse would I succeed and declarer would ! nuke three tricks in the suit, I both major-suit finesses would fail and declarer would ~ 4; end a trick short.
^ The thoughtful declarer
realizes that, if Wests lead is fourth best (and there is no reason to doubt it), he can claim his contract. All he need do is allow East's jack of clubs to win the first trick. East is end played there and then. If he returns a major suit, he gives declarer a free finesse and an extra trick in that suit. If he leads a dia mond, he gives declarer a second trick in diamonds. That, along with three clubs via a finesse, and two in each major suit, proves to be just enough to land the no trump game.
RULE NO GROUNDS VATICAN CITY (AP) -The Vaticans appeals court has ruled latent homosexuality at the time of marriage does not constitute grounds for annulment.
from the Ctrroll Rlghter Institute
Storing Waste At Site In N.C.
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Decide how you can best arrange your life and affairs so that you will not be concerned about the fundamentals. Organize your efforts for the coming week for successful results.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Plan how best to improve your financial and social status. Take steps in that direction. Tonight, home is your best bet.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Seek the company of persons of wisdom and gain a new philosophy of life more suitable for you. Relax with radio and TV.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Your intuition tells you what will most please the one you love. Follow it and get nice results. Relax at home tonight.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) If you are active with others, you find you can improve your relationships with them more easily.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Study your finest ulents today and know how best to express them. Get your wardrobe in fine order. Be charming at home.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Get busy at a recreation that is uppermost on your mind, but dont go in for anything that is extravagant.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Finish chores at home and know what it is that kin expect of you. Dont do any entertaining this evening. Relax with family.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Off to those lectures that can improve your philosophy of life but be sure to drive carefully. Visit friends later in the day.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Analyze your assets and know how to earn more in the future. Seek out the advice of a financial expert today.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) This is the day to get personal affairs in order so you can rest in the evening. Conununicate briefly with friends on the phone
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Schedule your new week's activities wisely. Listen to the suggestions of a good friend and follow through.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You can visit friends that are difficult to reach during the week. The daytime is best for this. Relax at home tonight.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be able to tackle problems easily and solve them wisely so give plenty of opportunity to express such ability early in life. The latter part of life may bring difficulties if the proper provisions have not been made. Teach to save money.
The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
A High-Tech Facility Set
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A large Japanese electronics firm will build a major high-technology research and development facility in the Research Triangle Park south of Durham, Gov. Jim Hunt announced Thursday.
The firm, Sumitomo Electric USA Inc., plans to locate the facility on 100 acres of land west of Alexander Drive.
Hunt said the firm, which will employ 100 people by 1985,1V will recruit engineers from universities and colleges across the state, including Duke University, North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Technicians trained at area community colleges will also be employed at the facility.
Sumitomo Electric, a subsidiary of Sumitomo Electric of Osaka, Japan, is the larg-est manufacturer of electrical wires and cables in Japan, with worldwide sales of over $2 billion last year.
The Sumitomo plant will concentrate on system engineering activities and software development for high-technology products such as fiber optics and opto-electronics.
Fiber optics are thin fiberglass strands that carry communications in the form
of light beams They are used in the telephone industry for replacement for copper wire.
HIKE OIL PRICE
LONDON (AP) - The Soviet Union has raised the price of its export crude oil by ,50 cents to $29 a barrel, effective July 1, oil Industry sources say.
, HAMPTON, Va. (AP) -Pe(^le forced to evacuate homes and businesses near a lot where about 3,000 chemical containers were stored may be allowed to return this weekend, says an Environmental Protection Agency official.
Phillip G. Retallick said Thursday, "We are pushing our crews. Their blood pre-, ssures are rising and their temperatures are up from working in the heat.
One worker got a little sick during the morning. A person can do crazy things when he gets too tired, so we have to use extreme caution.
Two truckloads of containers were hauled Wednesday for temporary storage in Reidsville, N.C. Six more left Thursday and four more truckloads were expected to leave today, said Hampton Fire Marshal Carl Wallace,
Retallick said North Carolina authorities have granted permission for storage of all the cylinders at Reidsville with several modifications. The facility, operated by Triangle Resource Industries of Baltimore, which is handling the cleanup here, must obtain a permit exemption and file contingency plans with local fire and police agencies.
They must let the authorities know what is being stored so they will know how to deal with them if there is a fire. Retallick said. The cylinders must be relocated after 14 days. The canisters will remain on the trucks during their temporary storage so they dont have to be unloaded and reloaded for shipment.
Retallick said inspectors had managed to identify the contents of 1.800 of the 3,000 chemical cylinders, and be-tv\een 700 and 800 contained hazardous chemicals.
"Were continuing to identify cylinders. Thats the slowest part of the process, he said
A spokesman for the North Carolina Solid and Hazardous Waste Management
Office in Raleigh said Thursday the Reidsville site can accept hazardous and non-hazardous containers from Hampton provided they are not leaking and the contents have been identified.
Retallick said the contents of all of the containers probably will be identified and any that cannot be labeled may be detonated at an undisclosed site.
He said inspectors found 25 gases and compounds in the containers, which range from the size of a hand to 500 pounds. Some of the contents are flammable, others are nonflammable and some are inert gases, he said..
The worst problem, Retallick said, was that incompatible materials were found dumped together, creating the potential for an explosion.
"The guy who owned this property stored them in a very haphazard manner. Retallick said.
The owner, businessman Gerald L. Moore, has been charged with violating two city ordinances, city officials said. The EPAs enforcement arm also is investigating the incident.
Three Dead As Car Hit Truck
LUMBERTON, N.C. lAP)
- A Florida woman and her two daughters, en route to a wedding, were killed early Wednesday when their car crashed into a parked truck off Interstate 95 near Lum-berton.
The victims were Jeanette Arlene Smith, 40. Pamela Smith, 21, and Shaun Smith, 16. all of St. Augustine, Fla. Lloyd Smith. 40, Mrs. Smith's husband, was admitted to Southeastern General Hospital in Lumberton where he was listed in critical condition, the state Highway Patrol said
Mrs Smith apparently fell asleep.
Close Encounters?
Thirty-six years ago today. Kenneth .-\rnold of Boise. Idaho, saw a mysterious flying ohjk'et over Mt. Rainier, Washington, and became the first person to report the sighting of a flying saucer Since then, more than Id.DDO I'FO sightings have heen reported in the U.S. alone. Most scientists remain skeptical, offering various explanations for these unusual phenomena: mirages, marsh gases, meteors, unconventional aircraft, ball lightning, "sundogs," bright stars, birds, large balloons, light reflections and the aurora borealis. One recent explan.ition is that UFOs are part of a Soviet satellite network that keeps track of U.S. rocket launches
1)0 YOU KNOW - What recent U S President reported a UFO sighting'
THURSDAY'S ANSWER - Lutherans make up the world's largest Protestant sect.
S 24 S,i
\ Kl' Im- ISS.i
WARNSOF FLOODS MEXICO CITGY lAP) -Ambassador John Gavin has warned the Mexican government the Colorado River, engorged by recent storms in the southwestern United States, may cause floods in northwestern Mexico, the American Embassy savs. -
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In The Area
Secretaries Plan Meeting
The Greenville chapter of Professional Secretaries International will meet Monday at Western Sizzlin on East 10th Street. Patsy Garzic, local color and line consultant, will present the program.
Dinner will be served at 6:15 p.m. and the program will follow at 7 p.m. Area secretaries interested in attending may contact Jo Gillin at 757-2814.
Senate Page Appointed
Christiana Black of Winterville was appointed to serve as a page in the North Carolina Senate during the nweek of June 13-17. She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. James Black.
Spain Completes Training
Ragan Spain of Winterville recently completed training sessions for state officers of the North Carolina Vocational Student Organizations in Charlotte. Spain is a rising senior at D H. Conley High School and is vice president of the North Carolina Future Business Leaders of America.
Hattie J. Blue, consultant for business and office edcuation for the N.C. Department of Public Instruction, instructed Spain and the five other state FBLA officers.
Deadline For Planting Nears
July 5 is the final planting date for insured grain sorghum and soybeans in Pitt County, according to James Taylor, local director of the Federal Crop Insurance Corp.
Acres of grain sorghum and soybeans planted by July 5 insured by FCIC or by a private company reinsured by FCIC must be reported by July 15 to receive full crop insurance coverage, Taylor said.
Acreage planted after July 5 must also be reported on July 15 as being planted too late for insurance.
Tobacco Forum Here Monday
A public forum on the status and future of the tobacco industry, Between Planting and Pulling," is scheduled in Greenville Monday at 3 p.m. in the American Legion Building on St. Andrews Drive.
Spokesmen from major toabcco-based agencies and institutions will join N.C. Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham and Rep. Charlie Rose, D-N.C., in a series of talks
Spon.sored jointly by the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and East Carolina University Regional Development Institute, the forum brings together various interest groups including growers, processors, exporters, warehousemen and agri-business interests to hear and participate in discussions on a wide range of tobacc^-jelated issues.
Among those scheduled to address the forum are: John Bankhead, area director of the Tobacco Institute of the United States; Dr. William Toussient, professor of economics and business, N.C. State University; Dr. Carlton Blalock, executive vice president of Tobacco Growers Association of North Carolina; Fred Bond, general manager of the Flue-Cured Tobacco Stabilization Corp.; and Atlas Wooten, board member of the N.C. Farm Bureau Federation.
Also on the program are Jim Oliver, master of the N.C. State Grange; Norfleet Sugg, board member of the Agri-Business Council of N.C.; Hugh Kiger, executive vice president of Leaf Exporters Association of the United States, and Dr. Kenneth R. Keller, managing director of the Bright Leaf Warehouse Corp.
Southern ^ Pawn Shop ^
JIM GRAHAM
Topics include the pre-^ valence of anti-tobacco" forces, the impact of technology on growing and marketing, the anti-smoking campaign, current legislation, stabilization and the status of the support system.
For further information about the forum contact the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce at 752-4101 or the Regional Development Institute at 757-6650.
ASSETS FROZEN MEXICO CITY (AP) -The Attorney Generals office has frozen $10 million in assets of former government officials under investigation for embezzlement during the administration of former President Jose Lopez Portillo, the newspaper Ei Nacional reports.
Students Make Dean's List
Several area students have been named to the deans list for the spring semester at North Carolina A&T University. They include:
Ronnie Carter, Michael Daniels, Gail Dillahunt, Annette Moore, Jacqueline Nicholson, Gwendolyn Payton, Michael Pearsall, Gifton Smith, Tammy Suggs, Sylvia Taylor, Gregory Whitener, John Wilson and Theodore Younger.
Council On Aging To Meet
The executive committee of Pitt County Council on Aging Inc. will hold its monthly meeting Monday at noon in the councils offices, 1717 W. Fifth St. The meeting will be open to the public.
Hillsdale Club To Meet
Hillsdale Community Club will meet Saturday at Carrie Lee Mercers home in Belvior at 4 p.m. Ms. Mercers home is located on the Belvior Road.
Collision Causes $ 1200 Damage
Cars driven by Marcia Dal Jones of Oakmont Square Apartments and Arleene Dixon Barrett of Route 2, Greenville, collided about 1:40 p.m. Thursday on Farmville Boulevard, 181 feet east of the Memorial Drive intersection.
Police said damage to the car driven by Jones was estimated at $800, while damage to the Barrett car was set at $400.
Social Services Board To Meet
The Pitt County Board of Social Services will meet Monday at noon at the Three Steers Restaurant on Memorial Drive. The meeting will be open to the public.
Youth Blamed For Fire
Greenville police said a child playing with matches set an apartment at 120 Manhattan Ave. on fire early Thursday night. * ,
Chief Glenn Gannon, who said the fire was reported to police at 6:45 p.m., said the apartment was heavily damaged.^ The fire, he said, started in a bed where the youth had been' playing.
Lodges Plan Annul Celebration
Pitt Lodge No. 234 and Golden Rod Temple No. 368 will have their third annual celebration Sunday at 4 p.m. The parade will begin at the Elks Home on Bonners Lane and Clark Street and will continue to Dickerson Avenue, to Grande Avenue, to Fleming Street, to 14th Street, to West 5th Street, to Albemarle Avenue and back to the Elks Home.
The dance will begin at 9 p.m. at the Elks Home. Food will be for sale. The proceeds will be used for the building fund. The events will be open to the public.
The district meeting will begin at 3 p.m.
Eddie Knox Speaks In Winterville
Eddie Knox, candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor, made an unscheduled speaking stop at the Winterville Kiwanis Club Thursday. Knox, mayor of Charlotte, announced in April he was in the race for governor.
Knox spoke to the group on jobs, honesty in government, urban and rural lifestyles and crime, which he listed as major concerns of the entire state. After the meeting Knox visited the towns 113 Pee Wee baseball leaguers, youngsters under 8 years old.
Rose Junior Wins Contest
Jacquette Gray recently earned first place In the oratorical contest of the Sunday School and Baptist Training Union Convention of the Old Eastern Missionary Baptist Association.
The topic of her presentation was Little Things That Count. She received a cash award of $50 and will represent the association in the state contest to be held in August in Durham.
She is a member of Triumph Missionary Baptist Church, Washington, and is a junior at J.H. Rose High School. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C.B. Gray of Greenville.
Budget Leaders Endors School Program Fundin
ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Wr!!-RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt and t(^ legislative budget leaders have endorsed spending $9 million over two years to gauge the effectiveness of a lengthier public school day and academic year.
Although the project isnt included in the base or expansion budgets endorsed by legislative committees, it was approved Thursday by the House-Senate Expansion Budget Committee on Education at the urging of Gov. Jim Hunt and influential lawmakers.
The proposal now goes before the full Joint Appropriations Committee along with other spending bills.
Rep. BUly Watkins, D-Granville, chairman of the House Expansion Budget Committee, declined in an interview to speculate on the programs chances for fun-
Eye Date On Ga. Market
MACON, Ga. (AP) - The Georgia Tobacco Advisory Board has recommended July 20 as opening day for the states flue-cured tobacco markets, subject'to the approval of U.S. Agriculture Secretary John Block.
Georgia Agriculture Commissioner Tommy Irvin made the announcement Thursday following the advisory boards meeting in Macon. The opening date was set after a survey of the Georgia crop.
Florida tobacco officials also have recommended the July 20 opening.
The date was expected to be approved today by the National Tobacco Advisory Committee which will recommend the Opening date to Block, Irvin said.
The Georgia advisory committee also asked if the opening were delayed that Block still provide a three-week spread between the Georgia market opening and the opening date of the northernmost tobacco markets in Virginia and North Carolina.
The market opening could be delayed unless Congress acts before July 20 on pending legislation to freeze the 1983 price support at 1982 levels and make ether changes In the tobacco program.
Georgias 1982 tobacco crop was valued at $189.5 million with 102.3 million pounds sold at a record average price of $179.39 per 100 pounds.
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ding in light of the uncertain financial Situation.
Id say it has a good chance if the money is available, but no one knows whether it will be at this point, he said.
Watkins also denied that the proposal was an attempt to compensate for the budgets lack of provisions for new public school projects, which drew heavy criticism last month.
This is no salve, said Watkins. "I dont use salve. I just recommend what I think is right.
Under the experiment, three public school systems would volunteer to have seven-hour school days instead of the normal six. The systems also would have academic years of 200 days instead of the current 180.
The program would last three years, during which the pupils would undergo estensive testing. Their performance would be compared with that of students in adjacent counties and other areas of the state and nation.
Thus far, only two school systems are known to have volunteered for the program and C D. "Dick Spangler, chairman of the State Board of Education, told the com-
Sunbird Mergr Completed
CHARLOTTE, N.C, (AP) - Sunbird Airlines has completed a previously announced merger with Atlanta Express Airlines and, reorganized top manage- ment, officials said Thursday.
The merger gives Sunbird 20 landing slots at Hartsfield-Atlanta International Airport, up from three, and turns Sunbird into a publicly held company.
Sunbird serves 13 cities and six southeastern states with 70 flights daily and 28 airplanes. Atlanta Express had decreased its service to one fli^t a day from a peak of 10 flights. Both companies are now headquartered near Charlotte and Atlanta Express has become the holding company for Sunbird and its sister cargo operation, Mountain Air Cargo Inc.
mittee he might be having a party where n^)ody comes.
Sources say the two systems are the Halifax County and Polk County systems.
Kay Oney, ^kesman for the D^artment of Public Instruction, said in an interview that Thursday was the deadline for systems to apply for the program. The state board plans to designate the three participants Monday.
Spangler told the committee that while nearly everyone agrees education needs to be improved, few steps have been taken toward doing so.
You may think that because our school children are from the United States that theyre graduating as the best engineers, the best scientists ... in the world, said Spangler. Thats'just not so.
I knqw thats not what you want to hear but ... somebody somewhere along the line is going to have to say we can do better.
Sen. Vernon White, D-Pitt, objected to the plan, saying many pupils must leave home in the dark to get to school. He said longer years would be harmful because even now students have trouble concentrating when the weather gets hot.
Were not dealing with machines; were dealing with human beings, said White.
Spangler countered students in other countries manage to attend school for longer periods. What yours saying is that American children cant do what other children do to get a better education, he said.
All of you are ... interested in making our schools the best we can as quickly as possible, said Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, chairman of the Senate' Appripriations Committee,^ We need strong, innovativip ideas like this.
In his weekly news conference Thursday, Hunt boosted the plan.
Its an idea worth try-; ing, said Hunt. We ho^ the Legislature will cooperate.
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Announces The Opening Of His Solo Practice In Gynecology, Infertility, And Reproductive Endocrinology On July 5, 1983 '
Sensitive Individual Care
Infertility Evaluation and Therapy, Including Microsurgical Repair of the Fallopian Tubes, Artificial Insemination, Menstrual Problems, Menopause, Excessive Hair Growth. Annual Exams. Pap Smears, Birth Control, Sterilization and Female Surgery. Dietary Counseling By Registered Dietitian Available.
By Appointment: Physicians Quadrangle, Bldg C 1705 W. 6th St.
Greenville. N.C. 278.^4 Phone 919-752-0973
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Our entire line of colorful, care-free novelty curtains is on sale Choose from a collection of tiers. Cape Cods, Priscillas, cafes, valances, swags, and more Everyone m a crisp, easy-care blend of polyester rayon or polyester,-cotton. All machine wash and dry, most take little or no ironing In pale to vibrant colors
25% off reg. prices of all window shades. 25% off regular prices of colorful metal mini blinds in a range of Standard, instock sizes. You can buy them and hng them the very same day,
40% off regular prices of our made-to-measure mini blinds and woven woods. Just tell us the dimensions and we'll make them to fit your windows perfectly.
Save on Jewel Tex draperies. AH our towels are on sale, too. Sa e 20.80 pr. 50x63"
Dramatize windows with the rich texture and shimmering colors of Jewel Tex draperies. Subtle dobby-weave of cotton/poly or rayon/poly/acrylic.
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other sizes available.
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Reg. $12. Super-rich, super-thick, supersized. 27x50 bath towel
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Our Quality enfiblenfis on Mens swimwear
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Reg. $18. Hunt Club 100% cotton square leg trunk with side vents. Fully elasticized waist with inside drawstring, Zippered pocket on the right side with Hunt Club' embroidery. 100% nylon supporter.
Mens casual pair-ups. Sale 11.99 Sale 5.99
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Save M 50 on to^ch control Microwave Sale 290.95
Reg. 449.95. Our full-size touch control microwave has serve-time feature that delays cook start up to 12 hours. Plus, 4-stage memory, 1-button recipe cooking for your most often prepared dish, 10 power levels. Cooks by time or temperature. Cookbook included. No. 5910
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Shop 9:30 to 9:30, Phone 756-1190, Pitt Plaza
10-The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C-Frtday, June H, 190
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THE HARD LIFE OF THE AAESSENGER
\\S5ENSERS IN BIBLICAL TIMES WERE IMPORTANT PERSONASES. TVEV CARRIED DICTATES OP KINSS, GENERALS, AND STATESMEN, WllVl GREAT DISPATCH Al1V40u6H THEIRS WAS NOT A JOB TO BE SOUGHT APTER. THEIR TRAVELS WERE HAZARDOUS, THEIR HOURS WERE LONG. AND VERV OFTEN THEIR WORK WENT UNAPPRECIATED. IN PACT, IF THEV HAPPENED TO BE BEARERS OP EVIL TIDINGS THEIR OWN LIVES COULD BE ENDANGERED DUE TO THE PACT THAT OFTEN THE RECPENTS OF THE BAD NEWS WOULD ORDER THE DEATH OF THE MESSENGER WHO BROJGHT SUCH UNPLEASANT TIDINGS. ALSO, IT WAS NOT UNCOMMON FOR GROUPS OP MEN TO IMPEDE THE PROGRESS OP A MESSENGER TO KEEP THE COMMUNICATIONS FROM BEING DELIVERED FOR PaiTlCAL REASONS. AORE than one HAPLESS COURIER FELL VICTIM TO A ROADSIDE AMBUSCADE RESULTING IN CONFIDENTIAL MISSIVES FALLING INTO THE WRONG HANDS.
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SAVE TMS POR VDUB 5UNCAV SCMOOl SCRAPBOOK
Sponsors 01 This Page. Along With Ministers ot All Faiths, Urge You to Attend Your House ot Worship This Week, To
Believe In God and to Trust In His Guidance For Your lite.
COZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC. 8U Dickinson Ave. 7U-3194 Banks Co/arl A Employees
Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO.
518 E. Greenville Blvd. 75^145
LESTER TURNAGE Real Estate A Insurance Agency Get More With Lea "
Corner Third A Cotanche SI. 752-2715
WHiniNGTON.INC. Charles St., Greenville, N.C. Ray Whittington 75AA537
Compliments of PHELPS CHEVROLET West End CIr. 756-2150
WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY
7560317
123 S. Railroad, Wlntervllle
JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hwy. 33, Chlcod Creek Bridge 752-2676, Grimealand James A Lynda Faulkner
VANS HARDWARE 1300 N. Qreerw St. 756-2420
QUALITY TIRE SERVICE andEmployeeaat N. Greenest, end2900. 10thSI. 752-7177 757-3792
COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905E. 5th
Take out only 752-6184 600S. W. GreenvUle avd.
Eel In or take out 7566434
BOND-HODQES SPORTING GOODS 218 ArUngton Blvd. lOth St. Greenville
BARWICKS HOUSE OF MEATS, INC. 758-2277 too Pollard St Greenville Allen Berwick, owner
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC 2201 Dickinson Ave. 756-4267
EARLS CONVENIENCE MART
Route 17566278
Earl Faulkner A Employees
ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS 7563500
228 Commerce St Greenville
EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS 75865881514 N Greene St ' A complete resfaurani A office coffee service''
ROBERTO. DUNN CO XI Ridgeway 7566278
HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO. Memorial Dr 752-4122 All employees
LQVEJOY AGENCY Daybreak records 7564774 IISOakmonlDr. Larry VWi/rt/npron
PARKERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT 7566368 S. Memorial Dr.
Doug Parker A Employeee
C.H. EDWARDS. INC. Hwy. 11 S. 7566900
OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS. INC. 211 S. Jarvis 752-5025 All Employees
TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222 E.SIh St 757-3558 Kate Phillips, Interior Designer Associate member ASID
Compliments of HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE
no.l 911 Dickinson Ave.
no. 2 Memorial Dr. A 6th St.
no. 3 Stantonsburg Rd. at Doctors Park
PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105 Dickinson Ave. 756-2444 Ricky Jackson A Employees
FARRI0R4S0NS.INC.
General Contractors
753-2005 Hwy. 264 ByPaas Farmvllle
LAUTARES JEWELERS 414 Evans 7526631
INAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS N. Memorial Dr. Ext 7526656 Management A Steff
Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 75268791506 N. Greene St Greenville, N.C.
HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charlea Ext 7566344
DAGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO.
2102 Dickinson Ave. 756-1345 Bobby Tripp A Employees
CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE 1405 Dickinson Ave. 7526776 Jerry Creech, Owner
PEPSI COLA BOnUNG CO. 758-21130reenvllle
Pin-QREENE PCA & FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOCIATION "Short, Intermedeles Long Term Agricultural Credit"
IXE.IatSt 756-1512
BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E 10th St Ext 7526228 "RoedA Wrecker Service"
Jartran Trucks Trailer Rentals
INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.
W.M. Scelea, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scelea, Rep.
ClerkeStokee,Rep.
7563738
PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 7526125
Comer of SthS Greene, GreenvUfe
Compliments of FRED WEBB. INC.
HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. ReeldentletS Commercial BulkUng
EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 27XE. 10th St P.O. 80x3795 752-4323 Greenville
REDI SUPPLY, INC.
Industrials Construction Supplies 1902 Chesnut 7596200
HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.
Where Shopping IsA Pleasure'' no.l Memorlel Dr. 7566110 no. 2 2612E 10th Ext 757-1880 no. 4 Bethel no. 5 N. Greene 752-4110 no. 6 Ayden no.7Terboro
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN 101 Hooker Rd. 7966115
JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC. "The FIneat In Manufectured Houaing"
319 W Greenville Blvd. 7566997 Johnny L. Jeckeon S Employeee
WESTERN SiZZLIN STEAK HOUSE Weputllontheplete"
900 W. GreenvUle Blvd. 7996040 2903E.10lh St 7966712
JIMMYS PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE All Types Minor Repsir Work Wrecker Service Comer 14th St S 264 ByPeae
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GUNOA DO LUTHERAN CHUSCB
UK WMBHi ciri). ai gtmb
PaifeRd
UK Rat. Rtctard A. Mffler FIhm: 7SMHI
9:9 aJi. Son. - Tte MoniBg WorMp Sartlce
jMJR REDEEMER LUTHERAN ISMS. Elm
R. Graham NalMWM ^
IODO a.m. Sim. - Holy Commu-nioa/Suaday School
ARLINGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH HNTW.Aiiln^Blvd.
Pastor, Rev. Harold Greene 9:4ta.m.Sim -SundaySchool 11 itO a.m. ^ Morning Worship 11:0O a.m. - Mission Friends 7:30p.m.-EveningWorship , , 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Worship Service |:30p.m-Choir
CEOR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision ' Greenville, N.C Paglor: Rev James Wright 7:30 p.m. Fri - The Senior Choir Qub wilt .meet at the borne of Ses. Hattie Pajrton
3:00 p.m Sat. - The Youth Training Gnup will meet at the home of Dec. and IfoUmr Robert Harrell 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School tl :00 a.m. - Morning Worship. Sermon by'the Pastor Music will be rendered by ^ Gospel Choras and Senior Choir will serv
7:00 p.m. - Program: Benefit of the PalnUgFund 7:30 p.m. Mon.-Jr Ushers will meet 7:30 p m Wed - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur - Young Adult Choir will have rehearsal
ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev. Lawrence P Houston, Jr., Rector
The Rev J. Dana Pecheles, Asst Rector The Fifth Sunday of Pentecost 7:30 a m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. - Moraing^ayer 7:30 p.m. - Al-anon, Friendly Hall 7:3Dp.m. Mon.-Vestry Meeting 7:i0 p.m Tue. - Greenville Parent Support Group, Parish Hall 7:00a.m. Wed - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m. - Holy Eucharist and L^ng-On of Hands 0:00 p.m Sat -AA Open Group Discus skm. Friendly Hall
SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E. 4th Street Greenville, N.C.
757-3259
Rev. William E Frost 5:30p.m Sat.-Vigil 8:00am. Sun - Liturgy 10:30 a.m.-Liturgy
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Streets 11:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11 00 a.m. - Sunday Service 7:45 p.m. Wed. - Wed Evening Meeting 2 00to4 00p.m.-ReadingRoom400S Meade Street
PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE Rev J M Bragg, Pastur 2001 W Greenville Blvd, Greenville, N.C. 27834
7:30 am Sun - Laymens Prayer Breakfast (ThreeSteers)
10:00a.m -Sunday School 11 ;00 a m. - Morning Worship i:30p m -Choir Practice 6:30 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:15 a.m. Mon Fri. - Radio Program "Together Again"-WBZQ 7:00pm Wed. - Hour of Power 8:00pm. - Choir Practice
THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 1286 Mumford Road.
James C . Brown Pastor 10:00 a m. Sun - Sunday School lUOOa.m. - Morning Worship Servtci 6:30p.m. - Young People Service 7:00p m .- Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m Wed - Prayer Meeting
THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baptist)
1510 Greenville Boulevard E. T. Vinson, Senior Minister: Hal Melton. Minister with Education/Youth 9:45 a m Sun. - Sunday School, Promotion
11:00 a m. - Morning Worship, Mini Church
5:30 p m - Long Range Planning Training Session 7:00 p.m. - Combined Youth Meetings
7:90 p m Tue - Evening Current Mission Group with Cynthia Wease, 1904 Fairview Way 7:30p.m Wed. - Mid Week Worship 8:00 p m Wed. - Chancel Choir, Youth Counselors. Baptist Men Council. Baptist Women Council
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Corner 14th and Elm Streets Richard R. Gammon and Gerald M Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music. E Robert Irwin, Organist 9:45a m Sun - ChdrchSchool 11:00a m - Worship 3:00 p.m. - Westminster Class Picnic
6;30p m. - Overeaters Anonymous 7:00 pm - Summer Youth Memorial Baptist Church 9:00a m Tue. - Park-A-Tot 6:30 p.m.-SoftbaU 7:30pm Wed -GalieryChoir 9:00 a m Thur. - Park-A Tot 7:30 p m - Overeaters Anonymous 10:00 a m Fri. - Pandoras Box 10:00 a m Sat - Pandoras Box
HOLY TEMPLE A.F.C.O.G (SalDtsville)
Routes, Greenville, NC ElderU Robinson 7:30 p m Fri. - 49th National Youth Convention 8:00p.mTue. - Midweek Service 10:00 a m. Sun - Sunday School Deacon L. Whitaker 11:30 a m. 1st Sun - Missionary A Youth Day 11:30 a m 2nd Sun. - Deacon Day (Speaker Elder Robinson) hlo a m 4th Sun. - 49th Nattooal Youth Convention 7:30p m 2ndSun - Worship Sendee 7:30p.m 4thSun. - Worship Service
HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South Minister-Rev. C. Wesley Jennings S.S.Supt.-Elsie Evans Music Director-Vivian MUIs Organist Leida McGowan Youth Leaderi-Debble and Steve AM-Inger
10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m.-Worship Service 7:00p.m. - Begins V B.S Classes 6:l5p.m Mon Tri-LightSigiper 7 00 p.m Mon-Fri - V BS. aasses
MORNING GLORY APOSTOUC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH 1012 West 5th Street, GreenvUle, N.C. EMress Irene G Epps . Every Sunday
10:00a.m Sun.-BibleSchool 12:00p.m. - WorshlpServlce 7:30 pm.-WorMilp Service 8:00p.m 'niur. - Revival rjOp.m Fri.-Revival 7:30 p.m. Sat. - Holy Communion A - Feetw/^lng
UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.
Minister, Rick Townsend 7504545
10:00a m Sun-SundaySdMMi llOOa.m-Morning WorMilp U:00a m -Jr Church 0:00 p.m. - Cbotr Rihearsal 7:00 pm - Evening Worship A Youth Meetlnis
CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTBTCHURCH SUtonburg Road at Allen Rond Reverend Ariee Griffin, Jr., Pastor' 1:15 a m Sun. - Church School . Kladergartan-lMi Grade) ll:IOa.m. - WorMdpServlee 7:30 p.m. Thur.-AdniunMel for Bl
^ ' hie Study A Prayer
' HOOORMBllORIALCIIRlSnAN CHURCH 111 GraenvIHe Blvd.
Greenville. North Carolina 17m
Ralph G. Messlck, MMMer Phone 750-2175 9:45 a.m. Sun.-Coffee 10:00 a.m. - Church School It :00 a.m. - Church at WorMtIp 4:30pjn. - Beginner Choir 5:00p.m.-Junior Choir
RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH 204 By-Pass West
Dr . Harold Dosier. Interim Ministor 9:4Sam.Sun.-Bihle School 11:00 a.m. - Dr Dan Hensley, Preachins 7:00 a m Moo. - Mens Prayer Breakfast Nursery Schod Monday thru Friday, 7:00a.m tilO OOp.m.
FIRST CHURCH W CHRIST SR1727 (Lake Glenwood Rd.)
Mr Melvin RawU Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Warship Service 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship and Youth ^Ice 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting and Blbk Service
OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Road E Gordon Conklin, Pastor TievaFidler. Min of Music 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Library Open 10:00 am
9:45a.m.-Sunday School I0:45a.m-Library Open 11:00 a.m.
11 00 a m. - Morning Worship, Childrens Church 6:00pm -BYF 9:l5a.m Wed -sunDevotional 8 00 p m. - Mid-Week MedlUtioo A Fellowship Hour 8:00 p.m. Thur. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 2611 East 10th St.
Robert H. Kerr, Pastor 757-3082 or 758-5717 1:00 p.m. Fri. - "Bible HighlighU" WBZQ 1550 9:30 a.m. Sat. - Church at Study, topic: "Jonathan-Loyal Sun and Friend
10:45 a.m.-Church Concerns 11:00 a m - Church at Worship, Robert H Kerr 5:30 p.m. - Share Your Faith 7:45 p. m.-Vespers A Prayer 7:00 a m Sun. - TV MinUtry Cable
#3
9:00p m.-T V MlnistiyCable*16 JUNIOR CAMP -K NOOCA PINES RANCH Ages 11-12 1:00 p.m Mon. - Bible Highlights WBZQ 1550 1 00 p.m. Tue. - Bible HighlighU WBZQ 1550
I 00 p.m. Wed. - Bible HighlighU WBZQ 1550
7:30 p m . - Prayer A Bible Study 1:00p m Thur - Bible HighlighU WBZQ 1550
PINEY GROVE FREE WHL BAPTIST
Rt.l Box 674 GreenvUle, N.C.
Bro Allan Sterbin, Pastor 7:00 p.m. Fri - Vacation Bible School
10:00 a . m. Sun. - Sunday School
II 00 a m . - Morning Worship
7:00 p m - Vacatton Bible School Program 7;30pm Wed.-BibleStudy
BROWNS CHAPEL APOL08TC FAITH CHURCH OF G4H) AND CHRIST
iBelvoirHwy.)
Rte 4, GreenvUle, North Carolina Bishop R A Griswould, Pastor 8:00 pm Thur - Bible Studies (Sister Ida SUton, Teacher)
8 00 p m Fri. - Prayer Meeting 10:30 a m Sun - Sunday School
I Deacon John Sharpe, Superlntendant) 8:00 p m. - July4-July 8 - Vacation Bible School 10:30 p.m. 2nd Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon John Shaipe, Superintendent)
11 30 a m 2iw Sun - Prison Ministry (Missionary Mary Sheppard)
8:00 p.m. 2nd Mon - Putor Aide Meeting (Deacon J Sheppard, PresI dent)
8:00 p.m. 3rd Mon. - Pastor Aide Meeting (Deacon J Sheppard, President
3:00 p.m 4Ui Sat. - Business Meeting 8:00p.m. 4thSat -1 Hour Prayer 10:30 a.m. 4th Sun. - Sunday School (Deacon J Sharpe, Superlntendant)
11:30 a m 4th Sun - Pastoral Day (BishopR.A Griswould)
8:00 p m 4lh Sun - Pastoral Day (BishipR A Griswould)
FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Corner of Brinkley Road and Plaza Drive Pastor, Frank Gentry 9:45 a m Sun. - Sunday School. Dickie Rook. Supt 11:00 a m.-Worship Service 6:00 p.m. - Choir Practice 7:00 p m . - Prayer A Praise Service 7:00 p.m. Mon - Mens Fellowship 7:30p.m -PrayerWarriors 8:00p.m - Board Meeting 7:00pm Wed-FamUyNight 7:00 a m Thur - Nursing Home Chocowinity 9:30 a.m. Frt< - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ 7:00 p.m - University Nursing Home
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East GreenvUle Boulevard 756-3138
Dr WUlR WaUace, Minister
9 45a mSun -ChurchSchool 11:00a m-Worship
12 Opm.- After-CnurchFellowship 7 30 p m Mon. - CWF Executive
Board Meeting
10 00 a m Tue - Newsletter Information Deadline
7:30 p m. - Oakmont Baptist vs FCC soRball, Evans II 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal 9:30 p m Thur. - Jarvis UMC vs FCC softball, Evans 12
SAINT TIMOTHYS EPSICOPAL 107 LoiUs Street
The Reverend John RandoM Price 8:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist Rite I
9:30 a.m. - Prelude Intergroera tkmal Fellowihgi and Singiim 10.00 a.m. - Morning Prayer and EucharM 7:30 p.m. Mon - Building Commit tee Meeting at the Church 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Craft Workshop and the Church
PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRBT 1610 Farmvllle Blvd.
Rev. Randy B. RoyaU, Pastor 9:45a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Prayer, Rev. Royal
3:00 p.m.-Homecoming Rev. WllUe RayAndenon 1:00 p.m Tue. - WUlIng Workers PrayerBoard 12:00 p.m. Wed. - Joy Hour at Church 8:00p.m.-Bible Study 1:00 p.m. Thur. - wUIIng Werken PrayerBoard
EVANGELISnCTABBRNACLE 284 Bypaii West at LautfUnghouae Drive
Rev S.J. Williams. MlnMcr MlnlaterofMuak .Mike Pollard 10:08 a.m. Sun - Sunday School. Lynwood Uwion, Stmt.
11 :00 a.m. - Moraing Wotonla 11:00 a.m. - Junior Wonjhy, Judy
Jennings A Debra Whaley 7:80p.m. - CeMNramn of PraMs 7:30 p.m. Wad. - Prayer A Sharhig 7:30 p.m. - Youth SHvlee, Gary A URee Maneas. Youth Ministers 7:00p.m. Sat. - Inleressnoty Prayer
GREENVILLB BDLB CHURCH Rotary BulhUng (4th Street and Rotary)
DlnoB Schulmoler 10:06 a.m. Sun. - WsriMp Service andChlldrtnaClmHS 6 00 p.m. - Pamly Worship Service
IMMANUEL BAPTVr CHURCH not S. Elm St.. GrssnvlUe, N.C. HlghBurUiMlon.PMlor Lynwood WaHars, Mlnlstar of Educa^ UonandYouth 9:45a.m.-Sundtw School II :08 a.m.-Mersiuig Worship 7:88 p.m. - Greenville Youth Failewalp at Msmsstal BsflM, David
Papal Visit Impact Seen
By VICTOR LSmPSON Assodated Press Writer VATICAN CITY (AP) -SevoRl Polisfa bishops reportedly opposed Pope John Paul Us meeting with Lech Walesa because they feared its secrecy would make the Solidarity chief look weak compared to Polands Communist rulers.
II Giomo, a conservative daily, said several Polish bishops were opposed to the meeting because they felt its secret atmosphere would make the labor leader look unimportant, especially since John Paul had two sessions with Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, Polands military ruler, including a nationaUy televised Kounter.
The popes private audience with Walesa was not a Go, Walesa, but rather a Goodbye, Walesa, II Giomo said.
In Poland today, however, senior government officials said the popes visit, which ended Thursday, could convince leaders to completely lift martial law as early as next month. But at least one
and Goliath
6:30pm Wed.-FellowshlpSupper 7:15 p m. - Family Worsip, nursery, preschool, RAs 8:00 p m - Adult Choir Practice
SELVU CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev Clifton Gardner, Pastor
7 30 p m Fri. - We will render service at Burney s Chapel FWB Church
9:45am Sun -SundaySchool 11:00 a m. - Worship Services 3 00 p.m. - The Youth Department will celebrate their 19th Anniversary, 'The Rev. L. Snuggs will be the guest speaker
6:30 pm July 1 - Senior Choir Rehearsal 3:00 p.m July 2 - C G Spiritual Choir rehearsal 6;00pm. - Male Chorus Rehearsal 3:00 p.m July 3 - The Womens Home Mission will observe their 28th Anniversary, Bishop R E; Worrell will be in charge of the service 3:00 p m. July 10 - We wUl render service at Elm Grove Church 4:00 p m. - The Gospel Choras wUl meet with Rs. Notre Early 4:00 p m. July 17 - The Gospel Chorus on Parade will present a Tom thumb Wedding and a play entlUed The Great While Throne
3:00 p m. July 24 - The Senior Choir will present 200 Women In White
JARVIS MEMORIAL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 510 South Washington Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ministers: Jim Bailey, Sushn Pate, Martin Armstrong, Adrian Brown Music Ministers: Jerry Jolley Organist: MarkGansor
8 45 a m Sun - Morning Worship 9:15 a.m. - Church Library Open
9 40a.m - ChurchSchool-Nursery 11 00 a.m. - Morning Worship
12:15 p.m. - Communion-Chapel 7 00 p.m - Youth at Memorial Bap tlst Church 7 30 p.m. - Young Adults meet In Church Parlor I0:45a m. Mon - Adult Handbells 8:00 p m - Sr Hi Bible Study, Parlor
7 00 p m Tue - Jr Hi Bible Study. 201 Harmony St 6:30b m -Softball at Evans I 10:00 am 12:00 pm Wed -Clothesline 10:30a m. - PrayerGroupCR 7:30p m -ChancelChoir 10:00 a m Thur - Adult Bible Study 7:30 p.m. - Family Film Series FH 9 30 p.m. - Softball at Evans Park 12 6 30 a m Fri - Mens Prayer Breakfast at Toms ResUurant
GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass and Emerson Road Brian Wbelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchlson. Campus Evangelist 8:00 a.m. Sun. - ^Amazing Grace" TV Bible Study Channel 12 10:00 a.m. - Bible Study Classes for all ages
11:00 am - Morning Worship: About Sin, Take CareP (l John
1:5-10)
6:00 pm - Evening Worship "Lessons From a Marriage Feast (Matt 22 114)
7:00 p m. Mon-Fri - Bible Study Classes lor all ages For information or transportation, please call 752-6367 or 75fr 7952
HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Bank Road. Greenville N C Rev Don Paul Lee 9:45 a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 6:30 p.m. - United Methodist Youth Fellowship 6:00p.m. Tue. - Troop 19 Brownies 7:30 p.m. - Womens Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Choir Practice 7:30 p.m. - Worship Service
I
UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST Meeting at Elm Street Park Optimist
Sidney Barnwell. President Telephone: 7524787 10:30 a.m. Sun. - Informal meeting 12:00 p.m. - Covered-Dish Lunch
GOOD HOPE FWB CHURCH 404 N Mill Street WlntervUle.NC 28500 Bishop W.H. Mitchell Pastor 5:00 p.m. Sat. - Choir II Meeting 9:45a.m Sun.-SundaySchool II :00 a m. - Morning worship Choir 11 rendering music 5:00 p.m. - Choir II Anniversary VartouschoirswUlslng 7:00p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Church Conference
NEW DEUVERENCE FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH OF AYDEN PresenUy worship at Grifton Chapel Free WUl Baptist Church. GrlRon Elder JL.WUaon
7:30 p.m. Fri,-The Chancelor Choir wUl be the sponsors for this month Pastors Aide Snrvlce The Speaker wUI he Mnlster KeUy Miller of Griflon Chapel Free WUl Baptist Church 9:45a.m. Sun.-Joint Sunday School II00 a.m. - Annual Mena bay Service wtth Uh Paalor Ektsr J.L. wUaon and ttw Male Chorus in charge of Uw service
3:00 p.m - The chancelor choir wUl honor their OrgafaUal Brother Roger Surgram wMh an Appreciation Service. A number of Choli^ve been Invlled
HARVEST BAPnSTCHURCH P O Box 8848 GreenvUle. NC
MeeU at Carallna Country Day School David JLeBlaoc. Paalor 10:00a.m. Ski. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m.-MoralngWorahlp 8:00 p.m. - Evening WotMUp 7:30 pm Wed^ednasday Prayer Service 7:00p.m Thur.-ViaMaUon 9:38a.m. Sat.-VWIattsn
Polish Communist Party source predicted that ti^t new controls on society would then be put into effect.
Walesa, saying be was wasnt ready to describe his meeting with the pope, cancelled a news conference scheduled for today. ,
John Paul, tanned and healthy-looking, got back to Rome Thursday night, prayed at the tomb of St. Peter and then ^e to a crowd of faithful who welcomed him home from a rigorous, stirring visit to his countrymen.
Thanks to God, I was able to make this apostolic visit and return to Rome, the pope said from his apartment window overlooking St. Peters Square.
He had begun the day in Krakow, Poland, and before finishing his eight-day pilgrimage he flew by helicopter to the mountain resort of Zakopane and met Walesa, leader of the banned independent trade union.
On the popes first full day back in the Vatican after the eight-day pilgrimage, Italian newspa^rs were divided about Uie consequences of the popes pilgrimage.
Both the pope and Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski seemed to obtain everything they hoped. Poland is no longer a desert. But we dont know if it is still a powder keg, said La Stampa, a Turin daily.
Italys leading daily. Cor- % riere Della Sera, said the pope encouraged the (Polish) people without making them explode
In sermons at Masses attended by as many as 2 million Poles, John Paul again and again praised Sol-idaritys struggle for workers rights and criticized the Communist governments imposition of martial law to try to crush the movement.
The time and location of the visit with Walesa and his family were kept secret until the last minute, and a Vatican statement about it gave no details.
The pope took a two-hour flight from Krakow to Rome.
But before leaving Poland for the second time since becoming pope in 1978, he said, I again wish and hope that good again will be triumphant over evil in the Polish land... This is my prayer.
Chants of Viva il Papa greeted him after he arrived at Romes Leonardo da Vinci airport Thursday night Waving both arms in appreciation, he strode by the cheering crowds.
The pope was met at the airport by several church officials, including Cardinal Carlo Confalonier!, dean of the college of cardinals, and Vatican Foreign Minister Archbishop Achille Silvestrini.
Also greeting the pontiff were Polands ambassador to Italy, Emil Wojtaszek, and Edward Kotowski, a Polish Embassy official who serves as the representative to the Vatican.
John Paul was then whisked away to the Vatican by helicopter.
The pope often has spoken to reporters accompanying him on the papal plane during his various trips abroad. However, the pontiff made no comments on the flight from Krakow and stayed in his compartment aboard the LOT Polish airlines jetliner.
Shortly after he returned to Rome, the Vatican released the text of a message the pontiff sent to Polish President Henryk Jablonski at the conclusion of the visit.
John Paul extended a respectful salute to Polish authorities, adding, I cherish hopes that my visit also aids further progress in the relations between church and state
John Pauls trip included two meetings with Jaruzelski.The Vatican had agreed to the wording of a government announcement which said church authorities sought the second meeting with Jaruzelski.
But a senior Polish bishop, speaking to reporters before the popes departure, said it was the government which had wanted the second meeting, on Wednesday, to try to bolster Jaruzelskis standing..
The bishop, who asked not to be named, said the pope was "very content with the crowds of Poles who raised their hands in the V-for-victory sign after the papal masses.
Area Church News
Army To Hold Biblo School
Vacation Bible School will begin Monday at the Salvation Army, 2337 Dickenson Ave., and ctmtinue through Friday from 7-9 p.m. each night.
The school is opm for children and adults of all ages. Children under 6 years old must be accompanied by a parent or gnndian. If transportation is needed, call 756-3388.
Ayden Church Plans Rocifal
David Kirk will be the featured performed for an organ recital Sunday at 3 p.m. at the Ayden Christian Church utilizing a new, two-manual, digital computerized organ given by Mrs. Johnnie Beland in meniory of her husband, JohnBeland.
\
Church To Have Homocoming
Philippi Church of Christ on Farmville Boulevard will observe homecoming Sunday. The 11 a.m. service will be conducted by the pastor, the Rev. Randy Royal. The Rev. Billy Ray Anderson and the Antioch Church choir of Kinston will conduct the 3 p.m. service.
Choir Sets Business Meeting
The Pitt-Greene Interdenominational Choir will have a business meeting Saturday. The choir will meet at 6 p.m. at the Morning Star Holiness Church in Ayden.
Youth To Observe Anniversary
The youth department of Selvia Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will celebrate its 19th anniversary Sunday, A special service will be held at 3 p.m.
St. Matthew To Open School
Vacation Bible School will be held Monday through Friday at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church, Farmville, from 10 a.m. until noon each day. Classes are being offered for children from age 3 through the eighth grade. The theme is "Jesus, Lordof Promises
A cookout will be held Friday at noon.
VBS Classes Start Sunday ,
Vacation Bible School will be held at/Hollywood Presbyterian Church, near D.H. Conley High School, Sunday through Friday. Classes for all ages will be held nightly from 7 p.m.-8:15 p.m. A light meal will be served at 6:15 p.m.
Haddock Chapel Plans Services
Services Sunday at Haddock Chapel Church will include Sunday school at 9;45 a.m. and worship service at 11 a.m. with the Rev. Billy Anderson and the young adult choir. The young adult choir will celebrate its anniversary Sunday at 3 p.m.
Youth Day Services Planned
Elder David Daniels will preach Youth Day services at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. The No. 2 choir will render music.
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. Eldress Marie Grimes will preach a building fund program.
Choir To Mark Anniversary
The senior choir at Allen Chapel Church will celebrate its first anniversary Sunday with a musical program at 5 p.m. Area choirs will participate.
At 7:30 p.m. Sunday, the Rev. Hue Walston and the congregation from St. Peters Free Will Baptist Church will conduct a service.
Church To Honor Minister
Little Creek Free Will Baptist Church will honor its associate pastor. Elder Joe Dixon, in an appreciation service Sunday at 3 p.m. at the church. Bishop J.N. Gilbert and Arthur s Chapel FWB Church will be the guests.
Allen Chapel Plans Revival
Revival services will be held at Allen Chapel Monday through Friday at 7:30 p.m. nightly. The speaker will be the Rev. James Vance from St. Mark Free Will Baptist Church in Kinston Different choirs will sing each night.
Men's Day Program Scheduled
Mount Olive Baptist Church in Ayden will celebrate its annual mens day program Sunday at 11 a.m. Raymond Reddrick Jr., principal of G.R. Whitfield School, will deliver the address.
Waterside Plans Men's Day
Waterside Free Will Baptist Church will observe its annual mens day services Sunday at 11 a.m. The sermon will be conducted by Bishop W.L. Phillips and the music will be rendered by the Holly Hill Male Chorus. Dinner will be served at 2 p.m.
At the 3 p.m. service, music will be provided by Happy Brothers of Crisp Chapel FWB Church. The service will include statements by several deacons.
Sees Threat Of 'Civil' Religion
neworu:ansiap)-a Baptist scholar says the country is threatened by a civil religion that sees its highest calling as service to the state.
The Rev. Frank Stagg, retired professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, linked civil religion' with right-
Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church
MaiyK. McNeill.
A Student At Union Theological Seminary In Richmond, Virginia,
Will Conduct Sunday Worship Services
At The Meadowbrook Pre*byterian Church
Through August.
The h Invited To Attend These Services
The DiUly Reflector, GreemrtUe. N.C.-Frlday, June >4.190-11 Youthful Evangelist To Speak
The Nazarene Church of Qirtet will observe regular Sunday morning worship with the Rev. E.B. Williams, delivering the sermon at 11a.m.
At 3 p.m., 8-year-old Evangelist Patricia Phillips will preach, accompanied by the Last Generation Choir from St. Matthew Church. At 6 p.m., a music program will be presented featuring the Dixie Land Gospei Singers of Kinston and the Gospel Specialists of Grimesiand.
Week Of Services Scheduled
Services will be held nightly next week at the Nazarene Church of Christ, 205 W. Skinner St. The Rev. Tyrone Turnage and the Rev. Willie Joyner will be in charge of the services, which will begin at 7;30 p.m.
The choirs for each night include the Circle of Faith, Monday; Choir No. 5 from Mount Calvary, Tuesday; the Hue Walston Traveling Choir, Wednesday; Roger Ingram and the New Deliverance Choir from Ayden, Thursday; and the Ruth Hill Gospel Chorus from Mount Calvary, Friday.
Membership Of Churches Rising
ByGEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Church membership is on the rise, outstripping population growth, but its a highly uneven trend, bolstered by some particular jumps and different ways of counting.
The new figures show 138,452,614 people are members of churches in the country, an increase of 3,635,671 or 2.69 percent, double the increase of the year before, and about twice the rate of population growth.
The church total now amounts to 59.7 percent of the U.S. population, up 1 percent.
The statistics are reported In the newly issued Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches 1983, as compiled by the research section of the National Council of Churches.
While the gain looks impressive, Constant H Jac-quet, the yearbook editor, says some elements contributing to to it resulted * from some erratic patterns of reporting from some denominations.
For instance, the Church of God in Christ, with headquarters in Memphis, reported new figures for the first time in 13 years, a surge of 3.3 million members above the previous 425,000 reported by that Pentecostal group Also, Jacquet notes that the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) for the first time included unbaptized youths - 650,000 of them - to brirfg that church's total to about 3.5 million.
Policies of denominations differ about reporting members, some countinjg only confirmed communi cants, some all baptized, and in some cases, unbaptized participants Whatever system a denomination uses, its figures are accepted
Most of the historic, mainline Protestant bodies, which for more than a decade have shown sharp declines in membership, are now holding almost steady, the figures show
Compared to past heavier drops, losses this time were a tiny trickle, or none, less than a fraction of percent for such groups as United Methodists, Episcopalians, the United Church of Christ and most Lutheran bodies
The figures, with the customary years time lag in their compilation, are from 1981, and they show North and South Presbyterian branches losing more than 1 percent each, but it also was less last year, the newly reunited Presbyterians report.
Southern Baptists, the nations largest Protestant body, showed a 1.3 percent gain to 13.8 milllion in 1981, and the figure is now past the 14 million mark. Roman Catholics were up 1.5 percent to 50.5 million.
Biggest percentage increases shown were among Pentecostal, evangelical or holiness churches. The Church of. God, based in Cleveland, Tenn., grew 5.01 percent, and the Assemblies of God added 3 23 percent Seventh day Adventists added 3.05 percent
Seminary enrollment surged to a record high of .52,620, with the percentage of women, blacks and His-panics among those students also at a record high, but the rate of increase among women and blacks has slowed from earlier upsurges.
Overall seminary enrollment was up 41 percent, but a rising proportion of that enrollment involved part-time students, older people entering seminary studies while still pursuing other careers
^ Greenville Church ' Of The Nazarene
Prssently Meeting In The First Federai Buiiding, Community Room, Qreenviiie Bouievard.
Cliff Jones, Pastor
Sunday Schooi..............................9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship ..................11:00 A.M.
Sunday Evening Service.....................6^00 P M-
355-6329 or 756-5872 .
wing religious movements, calling them secularism with a religious veneer.
The prophet in the old Testament was the voice of the voiceless, he told a conference on peacemaking. The false prophet was the court chaplain trying to, bring the people into submission.
GREAT THINGS ARE HAPPENING AT
RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH
264 Bypass West
9:45 a.m. Bible School. Come Grow With Us! 11:00 a.m. Dr. Dan Hensley preaching.
IF YOU ARF RtnuT with nOD YOU CANNOT BE WRONG WITH MAN
Nursery School Mon. thru Fri. 7:00 a.m. til 6:00 p.m. THE END OF YOUR SEARCH FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH
Q^ita[ ^oxiSiip. I Exjjii.xie.nct Can I
o xt cMtanin^fuH...
SUNDAY SCHCX)L......9 45 A M
WORSHIP.............11 (00 am'
A b T. Vinson. Ministor
\<JL
Cfiuxcfi 1510 Greenville Blvd I GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
* A SoiHhem Baptist Church"
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e
12-The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C-FrkUy, June UP
Stock And Market Reports
By The Associated Press SScSa Hoss
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the oSuA^ri^ North Carolina hog market ^^'Chem today was mostly 25 cents to Duke*pow 50 cents lower. Kinston 45.00,
Clinton, Elizabethtown, Eatoncp Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and FoniMot Benson 44.50, Wilson 45.25, K ind Salisbury 43.50, Rowland
45.00, Spiveys Corner 43.50.
Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 36.00, Fayetteville
35.00, Whiteville 37.00,
Wallace 36.00, Spiveys Cor- oS'h ner 36.00, Rowland 35.00,
Durham 37.00.
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KalstnPur RepubAIr Republic StI Revlon Reynldind Rockwl s SIReglsCp Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb .Shaklee s Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co Sperry Cp SldOilCar StdOlllnd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind tin Camp I In Carbide llniroyal liS Steel linocal Wachov Cp
tinuing its recent indecisive walSialrt wi pattern. westptpe
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 3.90
Poultry
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 47.50 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'/2 to 3 pound birds. Sixty percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a prelimnary weighted average'of 45.78 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a moderate to good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Friday was 1,814, 00, compared to 1,518,000 last Friday.
Hens
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday slaughter was 12 cents. One sale with buyer loading at 14 cents.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market showed some scattered losses today, con-
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354. 354. 35%
494, 49% 49%
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10% 10 10%
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45% 45% 45%
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55 554,
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37% 36% 38%
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115% 114 114%
554, 55% 554,
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354. 35%
29 29
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384. 384.
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23 23
74 74
35% 35%
62 62%
124. 124. 124.
77% 77% 77%
71% 71 71
DEAD - Osvaldo Dorticos, former president of Cuba, shot and tilled himself, the Cuban government news agency reported Thursday. The dispatch said Dorticos, who was still a member of the Citral Committee of the Cuban Communist Party was ailing and de-spondait. He was 64. (AP Laserphoto)
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Thursday, dropped 4.21 to 1,237.58 by noontime today.
Losers held an 8-7 lead over gainers in the broad tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Analysts said the market was taking a pause after its rise to record highs this month.
The news Thursday of a record $29.29 billion deficit in the federal budget during May gave some investors pause.
In addition, doubts persisted about the outlook for Federal Reserve credit policy and interest rates, given the recent rapid growth of the money supply.
National Gypsum led the active list, up % at 33^. An 832,-900-share block traded at
33.
Gulf & Western fell % to Wk It was reported that investor Carl Icahn was the seller of a 3.1 million-shabe block of G&W stock that changed hands Thursday, apparently signaling the end of any plans Icahn might have had regarding the company.
The NYSEs composite index lost .13 to 98.71. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index rose 2.18to490.27.
Volume on the Big Board came to 34.84 million shares at noontime, against 38.83 million at the same point Thursday.
AMR Corp Abblljibs Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer TliT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroHwLt Celanese Cent Soya Champ Inl
Westgh FH
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WinnDix
Wuolworth
Wrigley
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34 33% 33%
544, 54% 544.
49 48% 49
F'ollowing are selected II a m stock market quotations Ashland pK'
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TRW, Inc United Tel Dominion Resources Wachovia *
()VF;R THE COUNTER Aviation Branch Little Mint Planters Bank
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454.
35
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74
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Opine Marine 'Went Berserk'
26% 27
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36%
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47
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LOS ANGELES (AP) - A prosecutor says a two-month delay granted in automaker John Z. De Lorean's drug trafficking trial amounts to justice denied."
U.S. District Judge Robert Takasugi on Thursday postponed the scheduled Aug. 9 trial to Oct. 4 and set up a full schedule of pre-trial hearings through July, August and September.
Assistant U.S. Attorney James P. Walsh Jr., argued against the delay, saying the defense has had ample time for pre-trial investigations. DeLorean, 58, was indicted eight months ago on charges that he conspired to distribute $24 million worth of cocaine.
Doubt Bones Of Boone In Grave
Obituary Column
Ayden School...
(Continued from Pa^l)
Jr., northeast area school transportation coordinator, recommended the Edgewood-Stokes Street approach.
School board mernbers were divided on the subject of access. West said, and made no recommendation until Thursdays resolution.
Construction contracts for the Chicod Lunchroom project were also awarded Thursday to the following low bidders: R.L. Casey Inc., general contracting, $176,050; Kipco Piping Inc., plumbing contractors, W2.414; Larmar Inc., heating and air conditioning contractors, $45,650; Stuart Shinn Inc., electrical contractors, $31,200.
Bids were let twice on the project because all low bids orginally exceeded the amount budgeted, said West, who negotiated with contractors to reduce costs.
151. .4. 15% The bids total $335,314,
26 25% 25% West reported, and the total
G% ui project cost, including
80'4 794. 80% architects fees, will be
around $358,000. The board had budgeted $350,000 for the construction.
CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (AP) - A Marine who wounded another soldier in a random rifle attack and took three more hostage was in stable condition after being shot in the chest with a .38-caliber pistol, authorities said.
The gunman, identified as Lance Cpl. Jay D. Jackson, 18, of Indianapolis, apparently went berserk" during 24 24% target practice Thursday,
ijyv, % shooting wildly, said 1st Lt.
Russ Thurman.
Jackson tried to flee the Camp Pendleton Marine , Corps base in a government
Llaiins Olay is van after taking three
, , , hostages, but was stopped by
Just ICO Don 10(1 military police who con
verged on the van. He was
Blame Abuses By Rebel Forces
WASHINGTON (API - An American nun who spent 16 months working in Nicaragua says the leftist Sandinista government enjoys broad support because of the people's resentment over kidnappings and other abuses^rebel forces.
Lisa Fitzgerald, a lawyer and a member of the Roman Catholic order of Religious of the Sacred Heart, said Thursday that if elections were held today, the San-dinistas would win over-SATURDAY whelmlngly. The
overwhelming feeling is one Tw i.m - AA^in discussion of extreme hostility toward atst. Paul's Episcopal Church thecontras (rebels).
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)
- Whos buried in Daniel Boones grave?
Chances are its not Daniel Boone, says a doctor who looks at old bones for a . living.
Although the official grave of the pioneer explorer is in Frankfort, he may in fact be
buried in Missouri and the body that was brought back to Kentucky 138 years ago may be a black slave, said David Wolf, Kentuckys forensic anthropologist.
Wolf said Wednesday he has found several clues that a plaster cast of Boones skull in the Kentucky Histor-) ical Society Museum was that of a Negro. But he said the cast - made by the Rev. PhUip Slater Fall the night before Boones reburial on Sept. 13, 1845 - did not reveal enough of the persons head for him to make a conclusive decision.
Past Missouri historians such as Jesse P. Crump, a Boone descendent, have contended that a group of Kentuckians, led by Thomas L. Crittenden and Col. William Boone, retrieved the wrong body and that the remains returned to Frankfort were actually those of a slave.
Boones wife, Rebecca, died in 1813. When Boone died at the age of 85 in 1820, grave diggers found the remains of a stranger beside her in theMarthasville (Mo.) Cemetery, according to a 1921 newspaper article in
which Crump was quoted.
The dirt was placed back over the stranger and Daniel was buried at the foot of Rebeccas grave, because there was a hill on the other side of her, the story goes. And because of the confusion, say the Missourians, a monument was placed at the head of the strangers grave 16 years later, wr^y identifying it as Boones grave.
Bom Nov. 2, 1734 in a log cabin near Reading, Pa., Boone first came to Kentucky in 1767, and directed the building of Fort Boonesborough on the Kentucky River, the states first permanent settlement.
He surveyed and explored Kentucky after the American Revolution, and moved to Missouri in 1799. He died there while visiting his son Nathan on Sept. 26,1820.
Wolf, who examined the plaster cast Wednesday in the curators office of .the Kentucky Historical Society Museum, said an examination of the rest of the skeletal remains buried in Frankfort would probably determine the race of the person. He said it is likely there would still be enough bones to make the analysis.
Wolf normally examines human bones in criminal cases or to determine the a^ of unidentified remains. He said the forehead of the cast doesnt slope as much as the usual Caucasian male skull.
shot in the upper body in the struggle to wrest his weapon from him, Thurman said.
Army Chief Of Staff Named
WASHINGTON (API -General John A. Wickham Jr. is the Armys new Chief of Staff, and he says it would be wrong" for Congress to cut back the power of U.S. land forces.
Despite the fact that our Army today is the smallest in 30 years, efforts probably will continue to reduce the conventional capabilities of our land forces, Wickham said Thursday.
Such efforts would be wrong in my view, because what the Army needs most now is stability ... continuity of purpose, and solid congressional support
Wickham, the Armys 30th Chief of Staff, spoke at a ceremony in front of the Pentagon marking his assumption of leadership of the 779,000-man and woman Army.
Challenger...
(Continued from Pagel)
Nice and smooth on the way in," said Crippen. As I said once before, what a way to come to California.
He was pot on the first shuttle flight in 1981 when hundreds of thousands of sightseers viewed the landing here. This time, only 125 people made the trip on the chance that weather would force the detour.
By any measure, the flight had been a success and Ms. Rides performance - the first American woman to fly in space was a workhorse on scientific and mechanical tests had to be a powerful endorsement for female astronauts.
It was a superb mission in every way, and Sallys role was a history-making role, said NASAs shuttle director, James A. Abrahamsom. He said the mission was the best so far.
1 imagine the most disappointed person of all is Bob Crippen, he said. He had practiced long and hard to accomplish this (landing) milestone.
He said NASA caution forced the detour, explaining, If this werent the first landing at KSC we might have been a little bolder.
As they disembarked from Challenger, the astronauts were met by a tow-truck driver, four photographers and a few technicians. They did the traditional walk-around to inspect the shuttle. Fabian gave Ms. Ride a little hug.
It wasnt exactly what NASA had in mind. Originally, President Reagan was to have headed the Florida welcoming committee. He canceled due to landing uncertainty. Lesser brass and families faithfully expected a Cape Canaveral landing and were still there, watching the events on TV.
In the early hours after midnight today, NASA first postponed the Florida landing for 90 minutes, citing patches of fog and low clouds. Officials still hoped skies would clear to allow an 8:30 a.m. EDT touchdown.
But just after 7 a.m. EDT, as Crippen was to begin descent to Florida, Gardner radioed: The weather at the Cape is getting worse instead of better, so it looks like no go for KSC (Kennedy Space Center).
"You guys can sit back and relax a little bit; we will be going into Edwards on the following orbit. He added, KSC had a red carpet out for you.
Crippen, who practiced the KSC landing for months, said in resignation; We would have liked to go there very much, but if the weathers bad, thats the right thing to do and we understand. Later he said, Were ready to come down whenever and wherever.
On orbit 97, Crippen got the go-ahead to fire Challengers twin braking rockets. That slowed the shuttles 17,400-mph speed by 210 miles to start it from 180 miles hi^ on an hour-long, blazing descent to California.
The ship landed on orbit 98.'
Five of the previous six shuttle landings took place at Edwards, and conditions were so good today that a NASA spokesman called it a bad case of severely clear weather. The back-up recovery crew at Edwards, 30 people compared to 150 in Florida, will not have equipment to place electrical power on the shuttle, cool it down or purge its gases until they tow it to a hangar.
In case of a landing switch, 300 Florida technicians already had their bags packed. They headed for California to handle post-landing duties.
As their time in space drew to a close, the astronauts were in high spirits. They played a rousing recording of Gladiators Entry for ground controllers Thursday and Ms. Ride declared the classical rendition to be the theme song of the seventh shuttle flight.
But the detour was a major disappointment, portending certain delay in the shuttles eighth mission, scheduled for mid-August.
FRIDAY
7:30 p.m. - Red Men meet
INTERCEPTED LIMA, Peru (AP)-Police officials say a Peruvian guard intercepted a suspected guerrilla as he approached U.S. Ambassador Frank Ortizs residence with a shoebox full of dynamite.
Close Beaches To Swimmers
NAGS HEAD, N.C. (AP)-Beaches from Southern Shores to Nags Head on the Outer Banks were closed to swimming Thursday because of powerful rip currents.
Officials say two women were pulled from the surf Wednesday near Avalon after being knocked down by waves and pulled out to deeper water.
SERVICE Oak Grove Baptist Church will hold services at 11 a.m. Sunday.
YANKEES GO HOME ATHENS, Greece (AP) -More than 4,000 demonstrators marched yesterday to the port at Piraeus protesting a visit by the U.S. 6th Fleet carrier Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Card of Thanks
^The family of Mr. Grant Barnes would like to thank each and everyone for the food, flowers, sympathy cards and other kind deeds shown during the death of our dear loved one.
The Barnes, Dupree, Lee aMcPhedFemttlee
Hoptios
Funeral sm^vices for Mr. Augustus Hopkins will be ctmducted Sunday at 3 p.m. at Conetoe Baptist Church by the Rev. Walter Adkins. Burial will follow in the Conetoe Cemetery.
Mr. Hopkins was a native of Pitt County and attended the area sdxx^. He is survived by one sister, Mrs. Lucy Jackson of Bethel, and one brother, Anthony , 41opkinsof thehome.
The body will be at the Hemby-Willoughby Mortuary in Tarboro after 6 p.m. Saturday until one hour before the funeral. Family visitation will be Saturday from 7-8 p.m. at the funeral home.
J(es
CHESAPEAKE, Va. -Melba Grace Ayers Jones, 66, of 3027 Menands Drive, a native of Betbel, N.C., died Thursday in a Norfolk 1^1-tal. Funeral services'will be held Saturday 11 a.m. at the OakJette United Methodist Church, Chesap^e. Burial will follow in Riverside Memorial Park in Norfolk.
Surviving are her husband, Sam M. Jones Sr.; one dau^ter, Melba Chryl Jones of Chesapeake; two sons, S. Marvin Jones Jr. of Chesapeake and Charles L. Jones of Blacksburg, Va.; one sister, Mary A. Jenkins of Bethel, and two grandsons.
Memorial donations may be made to the church.
Padley
AYDEN - Funeral services for Mrs. Betty Vann Padley, 90, were conducted today at 3 p.m. in the Farmer Funeral Chapel here by the Rev. James Daily. Burial was in the Ayden Cemetery.
Surviving are a son, Joseph Lewis Padley Jr. of Ayden; two daughters, Mrs. Marjie Humbles of Greenville and Mrs. Helen Heath of Raleigh; six grand-
Urge Providing 'Combot Pay'
WASHINCTON (API -Rep. Pat Schroeder, D-Colo., and 34 other House members are asking President Reagan to provide combat pay for U.S. military and civilian personnel in El Salvador and Lebanon.
Ms. Schroeder made a similar request last month of Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who has the authority to grant the increases. The latest request was in a letter to Reagan.
The $65 per month stipend for military personnel and the allowances for the civilians would cost the government less than $2 million a year, she said.
Tun(-Up. - tir.ikp Jobs Gi'nr'.il Rpp.ius
Auto Specially Co.
91/ W bih St
children and six greatgrandchildren.
PbilUps AYDEN-Mr. John Oscar Phm^ of 803 Liberty St. died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial I^ital. Funeral services will be ctmducted Sunday at 3 p.m. in St. Paul Church of Christ Disciples of Christ Church, Aydea, by Bishop A.L. Matthew. Burial will follow in the Ayden Cemetery.
Mr. Philip was born and reared in tbe St. John community of Pitt County, but bad made his borne in Ayden for the past 25 years. He was a member of St. Paul Church of Christ Disciples of Christ Church in Ayden.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Beulah Bell Raspberry Phillips of tbe borne; one son, James Walter (Boots) Phillips of Raleigh; four daughters, Mrs. Mae Bell Phillips Gardner of Route 1, Grifton, Mrs. Catherine P. Blount of Ayden, Mrs. Melton P. Baxter of Washington, D.C., and Mrs. Florence Simmons of Troy, N.Y.; 25 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren.
The body will be in the Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden from 6 p.m. Saturday until carried to the church one hour before the funeral. Family visitation at the chapel will be from 8-9 p.m. Saturday.
Richardson TARBORO - Mrs. Ethel Raynor Richardson, 86, died Friday. Graveside services will be conducted at 11 a.m. Saturday by the Rev. Billy Wooten.
She is survived by three sons, Lloyd M. (Buddy) Richardson of Greenville, Willie (Tink) R. Richardson of Tarboro and Walter Grey Richardson of High Point; a brother, Herman Raymr of Tarboro; 12 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren and two great-great-grandchildren.
The family will be at the Carlisle Funeral Home today from 7-9 p.m.
Streeter Mrs. Bettie Jean Corey
Streeter, 42, of 208 Hudson St. died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Smxtey at 1:30 p.m. at the Mount Calvary Free WilJ B^Rist Quirch by Dr. W.L: Jones. Tbe cortege will leave the family borne with horse^lrawn carria^ at I p.m. going to the church.. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Streeter was a gra^ ate of C.M. Eppes High School and North Carolina Central University. She tau^t school at the S.W. Snowden High School, Aurora, and Betbel Union High School, Bethel, unUl she retired. She was a member of Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church, where she was affiliated with the Lilies of Calvary. She was a member of the Pitt County Unit of tbe North Carolina citral University Alumni Association, the Eppes Alumni Association, the NAACP and the Pitt County Black Assembly, and was an active community volunteer.
Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Geraldine Corey Woods of the home; her stepmother, Mrs. Marina Laughinghouse Harps of Philadelphia; two sisters, Mrs. Everiean Harris Harrigan of Isilip, N.Y., and Mrs. Floyd Mae Harris Whichard of Philadelphia; one brother, Shelton Brooks Wooten of Greenville; and a foster daughter, Deborah C. Joyner of the home.
The family will meet friends at tbe church from 7:30-9:30 p.m. Saturday. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Hardees Funeral Home, Greenville.
Card of Thanks
The Family of Matthew Van (Jiforcd, Jr. wishes to express their appreciation for the kindness shown during the sickness and death of their loved one The cards and prayers were greatly appreciated A special thanks to the DcKtors and Nurses in the ecu One at Pitt Memorial Hospital May God bless each one of you
The Vamliford Family
758-1131
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THE DAILY REFLECTORFRIDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 24, 1983
Court Decorum Crumbles
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - John McEnroes promise to behave at Wimbledon has begun to crumble, but the iiesty New Yorker was not alone in displaying temper. Players cursed, threw rackets and complained lowUy about the oHiciating.
McEnroes outbursts Thursday commanded the greatest attention from the officials and the crowd.
His troubles began in the ninth game of his opening set against Romanias Florin Segar-ceanu when he double-faulted one of 10 be had in the match. In disgust with himself.
McEnroe swung his racket and knocked a divot out of the billiard table-smooth court.
He replaced the divot and smoothed it with his shoe. Umpire Malcdm Huntington waited until McEnroe bad completed his task, then announced, Warning, Mr. McEnroe. Abuse of equipment.
Later, McEnroe requested and got tournament referee Alan Mills and Volvo Grand Prix supervisor Kurt Nielsen to come onto the court after be had been called for his third foot fault. Following a long argument the match was resumed.
Then, in the third set, after Segarceanu hit a
beautiful passing shot, McEnroe hit the ball intothenet.
Huntington assessed a penalty point against McEnroe for abuse of ball. Again Mills and Nielsen walked onto the court.
If you are going to penalize me on technicalities, IU walk off, McEnroe thieat ened. Lator be said, I was serious in wiet I said, in the sense that if they continue to make unfair decisions 1 will not continue in the match.
But it would have to go very far before 1 could do something like that. I dont want to become a martyr at this stage of my career.
This time, McEnroe emerged the winner.
I rescinded the penalty point because it is my perogative, Mills said.
McEnroe, fined and reprimanded for his abuse of officials here in 1981 when he won the title, said last week he would turn over a new leaf for this tournament. No bombs will fall on me,he said.
McEnroe defeated Segarceanu 4-6. 6-2, 6-3, 6-3, but said,I am not playing my best tennis, and 1 hope to improve. 1 want to concentrate on playing good tennis, and thats what the crowds come here to see."
Rumblings of discontent also were evident in the match between Australian Mark Edmondson and Vitas Gerulaitis - a match in which Edmondson upset the eighth-seeded American 7-6,7-5,7-5. Edmondson was warned for using obscenity when he questioned a call in the third set and, as the match ended. Gerulaitis, ousted for the second year in a row by Edmondson, threw his racket to the ground. It bounced into the crowd as the blond right-hander stormed from the court.
Hank Pfister was given a warning for racket abuse, had a point deducted for
uttering an audible obscenity" and lost the third set when he was guilty of a time violation during a tiebreaker.
Pfister, the I5th seed, was another upset victim, beaten by Ricardo Acuna of Chile 3-6. 7-6,4-6,6-4.
Fritz Budining demanded, and received, a change of umpires before his match against Pat Cash of Australia even started. Buehning was not around for long, losing 6-3,6-2.
Life was more peaceful in the womens bracket, where defending champion Martina Navratilova scored a hard-fought 7-6, 6-3 victory over lightly regarded Sherry Acker.
Today, it was to be old times for lOth-seeded Billie Jean King and Rosemary Casals. Once ranked one-two in the world, the two women were scheduled to play a third-round match.
In 1970, King and Casals were the leaders in the women establishing their own tour. Casal was the surprise winner in that first tournament, which was held in Houston, upsetting King in the final.
Besides McEnroe, who is seeded second behind defending champion Jimmy Connors, other seeded men moving into the third round in Thursdays play included No. 3 Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia. No. 5 Mats Wilander of Sweden. No. 11 Johan Kriek and No. 15 Bill Scanlon
In the womens draw, fifth-seeded Pam Shriver, who upset Navratilova in the U.S. Open last year, was herself upset Thursday by Iva Budarova of Czechoslovakia 2-6,7-6.6-4.
In the womens draw. Thursdays winners included No. 8 Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia, No. 9 Sylvia Hanika of West Germany, No. 12 Virginia Ruzici of Romania. No. 13 Jo Durie of Britain and No. 16 Claudia Kohde of West Germany.
Rangers Believe They Can Win
...
Nelson Follows Plan, Is Stroke Off Beck's Pace
Stretching A Point
Australias Mark Edmondson throws himself across court in an attempt to reach a shot from Vitas Gerulaitis of the United States during their mens
singles match at Wimbledon Thursday. Edmondson pulled off a surprise win, ousting the number 8 seed, 7-6, 7-5,7-5. (AP Laserphoto)
McEnr4>0 Feels Officials
Are Out To Get Him
ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Correspondent WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - John McEnroe is tip-toeing through a mine field in his quest for a second Wimbledon tennis championship.
A time bomb is ticking away in his pocket-tick, tick, tick.
One false step or one official jab at the sensitive mechanism hidden beneath that tempestuous facade and... Boom! Bam! Crash!
No one is aware of this more than McEnroe himself, a rare genius as a player but a young man with nerves like the frayed ends of a stick of dynamite.
Yes. I think theyre laying for me, the tempestuous, 24-year old New Yorker said after surviving a controversy-pocked second round match against a tough Romanian, Florin Segarceanu.
No question about it. Theyre after me for something I did two years ago. Lets get on with it. Lets make tennis a litUe more fun, a little more enjoyment.
Im willing to pay for my mistakes. Just because I make a lot of money doesnt mean I dont have a feeling for the game.
Every time McEnroe strolls on the court, tension escalates. Anticipation grips the crowd. Much of it is his fault. A lot of it is the fault of the officials and a goading press.
You can see the fire raging
inside him. His eyes glare. His forehead furrows. His lips become a vice. His gifted hands never sti^) running through his hair, tugging at his shirt, twirling his racket.
He is like a caged animal. He doesnt act like a man who likes his work.
'There are similarities between him and Billy Martin, the volatile New York Yankee manager each a genius in his own way, each very defensive, contentious, a time bomb just waiting the touch needed to explode.
Each, like a reformed alcoholic, repents periodically, swears to be good and then -at the slightest provocation -flies off into the ozone again.
Its the nature of the beast.
It happened to McEnroe again Thursday when he was playing his second round match on Wimbledons No. 1 court.
Umpires and linesmen had been warned to keep a ti^t rein on any form of misbehavior, directions aimed if not formally identified wi^h McEnroe.
Eaily in the week, the tabloids had splashed the warning in bold hieadlines, one of which said, Boot Out McEnroe and another, Bad Boys Are on the Brink.
This was the sort of cloud han^g over McEnroe when he began serving against the 22-year-old Segareeanu.
In the eighth game of the close opening set, McEnroe double-faulted and Jammed his racket into the ground.
Sports Cabndor
Editors Note: Schedules ire supplied by schools or spoaaoring agencies and are subject to chai^ without notice.
Todays Sporti
UtUe League Exchange vs. Moose Kiwanisvs.OpUmisU Babe Ruth League Planters Bank vs. Everette's Pe|t-Coia vs. Brown t Wood American Legion Snow HUl at Pitt County (I pjD.)
SoMmU aty League PTA vs. Pantana Bobs Pair Eiectroalcsva. Subway Sunnyside^E^pv^nnonds
ChurchLeague First Presbyterian vs. Faith St. James vs. Jarvis
Industrial League CIS vs. Vennont-Amertcan Cox Armature vs. Burrougbor Wellcome II
--------
East Carolina I2 vs Fire Fighters
TRW vs. WNCT-TV Burroughs-WeUcome #2 vs. Empire Brushes 12 Empire Brushes II vs. Coca-Cola
American Legion PIU County at Edenton (8 p.m.)
Little League Carroll 4 Aasoclata vs. PepsiCola
First Federal vs. WcUcome Sportsworld vs. UnloaCaitlde uonsvs.Jayeees
Sr . Babe Ruth Leagne AydenCmtOBatKtvtWi PiwLaapw Post-season ^Mrnament
raising a small divot. He dutifully took an ex^tionally long time replacing it.
Umpire Malcolm Huntingdon issued a warning. Subsequent warnings could cost point, game and default in order.
McEnroe raised no complaint but in the court changeover he stopped in front of the umpires stand and gave Huntingdon a withering stare.
Later, McEnroe was called for one of his six foot-faults. He strode to the umpires chair again. This time Alan Mills, the referee, and Kurt Nielsen, an ATP supervisor, were summoned to courtside.
Ive had about maybe three footfaults the last three years, McEnroe said. "Now six fo(rtfaults in one match -thats incredible. And a footfault was called on Florin on seccmd service at set point. It was ironical.
The biggest commotion came in t third game of the third set when McEnroe got a second warning for petulantly hitting the ball into the net.
McEnroe strode to the umpires chair in obvious anger and said, If youre going to pialize me on technicalPies Im going to walk off .
The referee and supervisor again were summoned to courtside. After a heated discussion, tl warning was rescind.
I didnt think I deserved it, McEnroe said later. They took it back. 1 made three trips to the umpires stand and one took 10 seconds, where did I do wrong?
The fiery left-hander, dubbed Superbrat several years ago by the British press, was fined and denied club membership because of tantrums when be won in 1961 (later restored), Indicated be was being singled out for past indiscretioos.
Im scrutinized more than anybody else, he said, even when I practice. I have a right to question officials. I shouldnl have to lose to be a
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -Larry Nelson, weak and weary following his record-setting triumph in the U.S. Open Golf Championship last Monday, feared a letdown coming into the $400,000 Danny Thomas-Memphis Classic.
1 knew 1 was very tired 1 was concerned about a letdown, he said.
1 didnt want to put myself in position to make a big number. I didnt want to get over par and maybe stop trying. Ive done that before after Ive won a tournament. I just wanted to hit a lot of greens and play it safe.
He followed that game-plan to perfection Thursday, shooting a no-bogey round of 6-under-par 66 that left him a
single shot back of first round leader Chip Beck.
1 played it very safe and very smart. Nelson said.
1 hit a lot of greens, and got it close a few times, made birdie on the last hole and almost got excited
Beck, who has yet to take a title in five years of PGA Tour activity, also escaped without a bogey over the 7,249-yard Colonial Country Club course, did not have a 5 on his card andone-putted 10 times He has won almost $60,000 in the last two months, more than in any previous full season, and said his improved play is a matter of desire, a matter of having played the Tour enough to become ad justed to life out here, to be able to play my own game and
Rested Okamoto
Takes LPGA Lead
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BabelluUiLMipM Port iMtton Tounuroetrt
They want to make eveiVbody rabota and have no peraonalltlea. Okay, fire the umpire. Fire the superviaor. Let every rule stand. Thoe will be no more TV broadcasts and people will kiae interest in
PITTSFORD. N Y. (AP) -Ayako Okamoto took a week off to peacefully sharpen her golf game while Lynn Adams tried the rowdy route.
Regardless of the method, however, the result was the same in Thursdays first round of the $200,000 LPGA Rochester International.
I had a few beers and a heart-to-heart talk with myself, Adams said after firing a 4-under-par 68 over the 6,162-yard, par-72 Locust Hill Country Club spread. After last Sunday, I decided I would do what It took to play better, and you see the payoff.
At last weeks Lady Keystone tour event, Adams finished tied for 29th.
Meanwhile, Okamoto, a 32-year-old Tokyo resident who hadnt seen a course or swung a club until she was 22, said through an interpreter that she needed the week off.
I was very tired before that, she said.
Although Okamoto teed off on the lOth hole and Adams on the first In a sUggered sUrt to accommodate the 125-player field, each covered the front nine in 33 strokes and the back nine in 35 - 2-under in each case.
Cathy Morse, who aced the 15th hole by knocking a 4-iron shot into the cup from the tee 129 yards away. Rose Jones and Alice Miller were a stroke back at 66. They were followed at 2Ainder-par 70 by Becky Pearson, Jane Blalock, Kathy Martin and defeiiding champion Sandra Haynie, who set a 72-hole tournament record last yearwithal2-under276.
Morse, a Rochester native, said the bole-iiHe made her round.
Whenever you dont have
to take your putter out on this course it is fun. 1 was putting so badly, she said after bogeying the 18th hole with two puits from 6 feet to drop out of the lead.
Ten players were bunched at 71 three shots off the pace - with another 10 at even-par 72. Among the latter group was Nancy Lopez, 4'- months pregnant but trying for her fourth title in seven years of Ladies Professional Golf Association events at Locust Hill.
Adams and Okamoto each have won one tournament -Okamoto in 1982 when she won more than $85,000 in her first lull season on the U.S. tour, and Adams few months ago in Orlando Okamoto, the early leader, sank birdie putts of seven and 10 feet on Nos. 10 and 11, bogeycd tlie l3th hole, but rolled In a 33-footer on No. 17
to make the turn at 2-under. On the front nine, she rollercoasted with bogeys on the first and eighth holes, bracketing a run of four birdies in five holes Adams made three birdies and one bogay In each half of her round
not be bothered by anything else.
Tom Purtzer, who scored an eagle-3 on his final hole. Bill Murchison and Fred Couples, who reeled off one string of five consecutive birdies, were two shots off the pace at 67.
Defending champion Ray Floyd and Fuzzy Zoeller, a winner earlier this season, topped the big group at 68.
Also at that figure, 4-under par, were Jim .Simons, Kd Fiori, John Fought, Jeff Sanders, Jim Dent, Jeff Sluman and Mark McCumber.
Play was held up for 25 minutes by a morning shower, and the last players on the course finished moments before a thunderstorm ripped over the course.
Nelson, who set an Open scoring record with scores of 65-67 over his last 36 holes, said "my adrenaline was pumping for three days That tires you 1 didnt get much sleep Sunday or Monday night, and 1 am very tired "It took me five holes to find out 1 was underclubbing myself. 1 dont know whether it was because 1 was so tired, or because of the wet condi tions
When he discovered his problem, he corrected it immediately He hit a 4-iron to within 18 inches of the cup and started a string of three, birdies on the next four holes, a burst that enabled him to reach the turn in 33 He scored a pair of 2s on the front side, one off a 5-iron shot inside of six feet and the other on a chip-in, and moved to within a single stroke of the top spot with an 8-iron shot to 2>7 feet for a birdie on his final hole
The Philadelphia Phillies set a National League record by playing in 43 double headers in 1943, winning 11, losing 14, and splitting 18.
iJoseph Si
! Hat Malntananca ContrKti. 9 With A Cleaning, For IBM !
I TwnAiAfrllArrt B
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP)
- Doug Rader, who has a reputation ss a zany prankster, is an unlikely faith healer.
Yet it is faith, the first-year Texas manager says, that has molded his Rangers into a winner.
The Rangers, who lost 98 games last season and were 134 games behind on June 23 last year. Now, they are four games above .500 and one game out of first place after taking two of three games with the first-place California Angels earlier this week.
First you have to convert yourself and make yourself believe you can do well. Then you have to make everyone else youre competing against believe it too, said Rader.
Hurler Rick Honeycutt is typical of the new Rangers With a 5-17 record and a 5.27 earned run average in 1982, many thought his career was finished.
But sometime, somehow during the off-season he re^ discovered his sinker ball and now owns a major league leading 1.45 ERA and a 10-3 mark.
He defeated the Angels Wednesday night 9-1 on five hits and 19 ground-ball outs.
"We came out and by far played heads above the Angels even though they had their injuries, Honeycutt said. Five starters were on the btmch Wednesday.
"I think it showed everyone we can play with the big boys, Honeycutt said.
through June last year, right fielder Larry Parrish was hitting 186 with 24 hits, one homer and two runs batted in. He's currently bat ting .297 with 58 hits, 12 homers and 32 KBls '
"Ive never sei'n Parrish
swing the bat like this. Never, said Rader. Ive never seen him hit with such strength.
Hes made some tremendous adjustments from day one of spring training to now Then theres centerfielder George Wright, who had 50 RBI last year but already has 38 this year. And Bucky Dent, who struggled at .193 at the plate last year but is now hitting .270 Dent, who has taken a commanding role in tightening the Texas defense, was hitting .311 earlier this month.
But no one has been more responsible for the turnaround than Rader, who played third base for Houston, San Diego and Toronto and managed three years for San Diego's AAA farm club in Hawaii.
There's still a touch of the zaniness, when hes on the lop step of the dugoul during the national anthem, howling at off-key versions of the na tional anthem or running around the infield scooping up ground balls during batting practice Theres the angry Rader, too - throwing his spikes against a clubhouse wall after a tough loss And theres the all business Rader - behind the batting cage giving tips to Parrish or taking nine-year Texas starting catcher Jim Sundberg out of the lineup because he is not producing, winning ;15 of his first 66 games.
General Manager Joe Klein likes what he sees.
I see more and more of Doug in this team every day, said Klein "Dougs a smart guy and were playing smart baseball. Doug's an ag gressive guy and we re play ing aggressive baseball"
Snow Hill Tops Wilson, 10-4
SNOW HILL - Snow Hills American Legion baseball team kept close on the heels of Area I East Division leader Pitt County with a 10^ romp over Wilson last night Tommy Goff sparked a first inning -eruption that scored three* runs with a home run, and Snow Hill added three each in the fifth and sixth innings to gam the victory.
The win left Snow Hill with an 8-4 record Pitt leads the way at 10-3 Wilson falls to 3-9 on the season.
Snow Hill got things under control early, scoring three times in the first frame. Anthony Russo led off with a walk and Jeff Ginn also re ceived a free trip to first. Goff then polished off the scoring with a three-run homer Wilson came up with its first run in the fourth inning, making it 3-1. Tony Boswell reached on a fielders choice that left two men away. Stevie Hinnant then doubled to drive in Boswell.
Snow Hill put the game out of reach with three more in the fifth Russo opened with a walk and Ginn reached on an error, only to go out at second on Goffs infield grounder. Russo scored on the play. Mike Sullivan reached on an error, allowing Goff to score, and Richie Chase doubled, scoring Sullivan.
Snow Hill added three more in the sixth and one in the
eight to account for its 10 runs Wilson picked up one in the sixth and two more in the ninth
Chase led the Snow Hill hitting with three in five trips, while Russo, Sullivan and Todd Grant each had two hits
Christy Rodri had three hits to pace Wilson
Snow Hill travels to, Pitt County for a key contest in the league standings Wilson plays host to Edenton tonight
In other league action last night. Rocky Mount defeated Edenton, 19-I2' and Wayne County downed Kinston, 6-4, in II innings.
Wilson 000 101 002- 4 7 4
Snow HUl 300 033 Olx-IO 14 5 InK-tor. Dorsey i7i and Hinnant, Hill i7),'Chase, Davis i9i and Frederick
When Gaylord Perry of the Seattle Mariners won his 300th game in 1982, he was the 15th major-league pitcher to soar as high as that.
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14-Tbe DiMy Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Fridey, Jime M, 1983Padres Sweep Front-Running Dodgers
By Tbe Associated Press The National League West may turn out to be more than a* two-team race after all.
The San Diego Padres, who were 13 games out and mired in fifth place just one week ago, saw to that Thursday by completing a four-game sweep of the front-running Los Angeles Dodgers with a 7-5 triumph.
That chop^ the Dodgers lead to four games over the idle Atlanta Braves and eight over the Padres and San Francisco
LHrtt Lflogue
Youth Baseball
The winners added four in the fourth and one in the sixth, while Edwards got two in the sixth.
Cox led the Computerland hitting with three, while Ronald Wilder had three for Edwards. Adam Stocks was credited with the win.
Corro I & Assoc.....4
TruoVoiuo........1
True Value Hardware, fresh from its upset of league-leading Wellcome on Tuesday, couldnt do it again yesterday, bowing to Carroll & Associates, 4-1, in the Tar Heel Little League.
Julius Smith limited True Value to only three hits on the afternoon, with the only run coming in the fourth.
However, that run did give True Value a temporary 1-0 lead.
Carrofl & Associates rallied in the fifth, scoring four times to account for all of its scoring - and to take the win. Travis Williams singled and stole second. With one away, Toure Claiborne walked and Smith reached on a fielders choice. Howard Moore then cracked a triple, allowing all three runners to score. Chad Adams singled to drive in Moore with the fourth and final run.
Adams led the C&A hitting with two, while no one had more than one for True Value
Coca-Colo.........9
Sportsworld 5
Walter Gatlin hit a grand-slam homer to help power Coca-Cola to a 9-4 victory over Sportsworld in the North State Little League yesterday.
The victory boosted Coke into sole possessin of first place in the league standings, one game up in the win column at 13-3. Sportsworld is now 12-3.
Sportsworld scored once in the top of the first, but Coke rallied for five in the second inning, four of those scoring on Gatlins homer. Sportsworld came back with three in the third and tied it up on two more in the top of the fourth.
But in the bottom of the fourth. Coke came up with four more to put the game away. Derrick Clark led off with a single and Derrick Hines walked as did Andy Miller, loading the bases. Gatlin reached on a fielders choice, scoring Clark, and Mike Smith walked to force over Hines. Kevin Jordan singled in Miller and Gatlin scored on a wild pitch with the final run.
Coke got only three hits off Sportsworld pitching, with no one having more than one. Dee Doc Williams had two hits to pace a four-hit attack by Sportsworld.
WintrviiiU
Thompson Ins 19
Ald.ftS'lond 12
WINTERVILLE -Thompson Insurance outlasted Aldridge and Southerland, 19-12, in the Winterville Little League last night.
Thompson scored once in the top of the first, but A&S came back with five in its half of the frame. Five by Thompson and one by A&S made it 6-6 after two. Thompson scored twice in the fourth and A&S, three times, to give the Realtors a 9-8 lead. But Thompson took the lead with six in the fifth and never trailed again, adding five in the sixth. A&S got one in the fifth and two in the sixth.
Jim Faulkner had a solo homer for A&S in the second, while Brian Ledford had a two-run homer in the fourth William Crandall and Terry Williams each hit solo shots for Thompson in the fourth, while Mark Smith had a homer in the sixth.
Williams led the Thompson hitting with three, while Ledford had three for A&S. Robbie Nichols was the winning pitcher.
Computerland 12 Edwards Auto 5
WINITERVILLE - Computerland scored six times in the third inning and gained a 12-5 victory over Edwards Auto in Winterville Little League play last night.
Edwards scored once in the first, but Computerland picked up one in the top of the second, only to see Edwards score twice in the bottom of the frame.
In the third, howver, Computerland moved ahead for good, scoring six times. A single and two walks loaded the bases and Daryle Phelps doubled in two runs. Michael Farmer singled to score the third run, putting Computerland ahead for good.
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Giants, who are tied for third place.
This definitely boosts us, said Dave Dravecky, who wasnt at his best in a six-inning stint but nonetheless became the first ll-game winner in the majors as the Padres won their sixth consecutive game. I dont know what this did to the Dodgers, but I do know weve devdoped our own momentum. The indications of this series are good.
It marked the third time over the years the Padres have swept a four-game series from the Dodgers, but the first time theyve done it in Dodger Stadium, where Los Angeles hadnt been swept in a four-game set since 1976.
The senior circuit is a league of hot and cold teams these days. In other action, the Montreal Expos made it 8K)f-lO with a 4-3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies (21-of 32 on the debit side); the New York Mets made it three in a row over
the St. Louis Cardinals, who have dropped six of eight, by a 7-5 score and the Pittsburg Pirates downed tbe Chkago Cubs 5-2 to complete a fivegame sweep.
Garry Templeton and ex-Dodger Steve Garvey bvMnered and Alan Wiggins drove in three runs to pace tbe Padres. Ron Roenicke drove in four Los Angeles runs with bis first two homers of tbe season.
His secvmd one, a three-run shot hi tbe fifth inning, pve the Dodgers a 4-3 lead, but Garveys 11th homer tied the score in the sixth and the Padres went on top to stay in the seventh, scoring thr^ times with tbe aid of an error by third baseman Pedro Guerrero - the Dodgers ninth in the series - and a two-run (kHible by Wiggins. Loser Fernando Valenzuela was tagged for all seven runs and nine hits in 61-3 innings.
This is another plateau for us, said Garvey. This was
Rolling In
Catcher Ernie Whitt of the Toronto Blue Jays barrels toward new Seattle second baseman Tony Bemazard in an attempt to break up a second-inning double play Thursday in the King dome. (AP Laserphoto)
something special, beating the Dodgers, and now weve got to keep it going in San Francisco.
Asked how much the Padres have improved. Dodger Manager Tom Lasorda replied: They must be improvecL They beat us four in a row. They came in here 12 games behind and now theyre eight behind. Yeah, Id say theyve improved. And were not playing to our capabilities. ExposiPhilliesS At Montreal, A1 Oliver had three hits, including a two-run sin^e in the first inning, as Montreal extended its lead in the NL East to lyi games over St. Louis. Olivers single off Charlie Hudson drove in Tim Raines and Brian Little, whd singled and walked, respectively, before executing a double steal.
Raines, who also had three hits, cracked an RBI double in the second and the Expos added another run in tbe third when Gary Carter doubled, took third when center fielder Bob Dernier fumbled the ball as it came off the wall and scored on a wild pitch. Winner Bill GuUickson lasted into the sixth inning.
Things are happening tbe ri^t way, said Montreal Manager Bill Virdon. Weve been getting good pitching, solid defense and timely hitting. When those things come together, you have good streaks.
Mets 7, Cardinals 5 At New York, Hubie Brooks drove in four runs, three with a tie-breaking homer that capped a four-run fourth inning. Trailing 4-0 - St. Louis rookie Andy Van Slyke had an RBI single in the first and a two-run homer in tbe third, his third in four games - the Mets scored three runs in tbe bottom of the third, started by Brooks RBI single.
They jumped on reliever Dave Von Ohlen in the fourth after Brian Giles led off with a double. Junior Ortiz tied the scoir with an RBI single, pinch hitter Dave Kingman singled and one out later Brooks slammed his fourth home run of the season. Carlos Diaz worked 11-3 inning in relief of starter Ed Lynch for the victoiy and Doug Sisk, who yielded one' unearned run over the final five innings, picked up his sixth save.
Pirates 5, Cubs 2 At Pittsburg, Larry McWilliams pitched a five-hitter and Tony Pena went 4-for-4 and drove in a run as Pittsburgh equaled its longest winning streak of the season. Keith Morelands two-run homer gave Chicago a 2-0 lead in the first inning after McWilliams twoout error.
Fleck Leads Senior Event
Fenway Not So Friendly
Prep Uogue
1st State Bank......8
Hendrix & Dali 5
First Slate Bank moved into the winners bracket of the Prep Leagues post season tournament last night with an 8-5 victory over Hendrix & Dail.
The game set up the second-round pairings for the tournament, which has two games scheduled for Saturday.
In the first of those, at 2 p.m. at Guy Smith Stadium, Shop-Eze Foodland and First State Bank meet in a winners bracket game, with the winner moving into the finals, set for next Thursday. In the losers bracket game, Garris-Evans, the regular season winner, meets Hendrix & Dail at 4 p.m. The loser is out bf the tourney "and the winner faces the first game loser on Tuesday for the right to advance to the finals.
The Bankers took the lead with two runs in the first inning, but H&D came back to tie it up with two of its own in the bottom of the frame. Three more crossed for First Slate in the third, while Hendrix & Dail came back with two.
The Bankers added what proved the difference in the fourth, scoring twice. Robert Holson led off with a walk and stole both second and third. With one out, Jason Lee doubled, scoring Holson. Tom Moye then got a two-out single, scoring Lee for a 7-4 lead.
The Bankers got one more in the seventh, while H&D got its other run in the sixth.
Lee and Moye each had two hits to lead First State, while H&D had Chris Bender with a pair of hits.
By The Associated Press Friendly Fenway Park hasnt been so friendly to the Boston Red Sox of late.
1 cant understand it, said Boston Manager Ralph Houk after a 5-4 loss to the Cleveland Indians Thursday night "We have a team made to order for Fenway.
Houks puzzlement is understandable. The Red Sox, usually tough to beat in their cozy park, have lost 10 of their last 12 games at home and 17 of 24 overall. Tied for first in the American Uague East as late as June 5, the Red Sox latest loss dropped them below the .500 mark (33-34) for the first time since April 20.
We have to gel some kind of a winning streak going, but before we can do that weve got to string some hits together, Houk said. Weve left an awful lot of men on base.
In other AL action, California defeated Kansas City 7-2, Chicago stopped Minnesota 8-6 and Toronto edged Seattle 5-4 The Red Sox were victimized this time by Rick Sutcliffe, Andre Thornton and Gorman Thomas. Sutcliffe held Boston to five hits in 7 1-3 innings for his ninth victory in 11 decisions and Thornton and Thomas hit consecutive homers in the first inning.
Sutcliffe struck out six and walked four before Dan Spillner came on following
Jim Rices double with one out in the eighth. Spillner was greeted by Tony Armas two-run homer, his 16th of the season and ninth in the last 16 games, cutting the Indians Ipad to one run.
After Spillner walked Darrell Evans, he was replaced by Neal Heaton, who notched his fifth save by retiring Gary Allenson on a foul pop and Glenn Hoffman on a fly ball with the bases loaded.
Sutcliffe did a super job, but he threw a lot of pitches (121) and I had to take him out when he tired in the heat, Cleveland Manager Mike Ferraro said.
Sutcliffe is a fine pitcher and showed me a lot of guts tonight, but that kid Heaton is also a good-looking pitcher, Houk said. We only needed an outfield fly to tie the score in the eighth, but he took the game from us.
Angels 7, Royals 2
Ken Forsch pitched a six-hitter and Ellis Valentine and Brian Downing hit home runs to lead California over Kansas City. The victory, only their fourth in the last 11 games, increased the Angels lead in the AL West to one game over idle Texas and 1/2 over the Royals.
Forsch, 7-3, struck out six and walked two and retired 14 straight batters in one stretch until Hal McRaes two-out single in the seventh. The veteran right hander was
struck on the left arm by Cesar Geronimos line drive on the final pitch of the fifth inning but returned to the mound in the sixth and struck out the first two batters.
Somebody said we looked flat, said Kansas City Manager Dick Howser. "When you get a game thrown at you like Forsch threw at us, youre bound to look flat. Hes been their best pitcher. Hes been their staff-saver.
They got a lead and Forsch shut us down. Thats the story of this game.
White Sox 8, Twins 6 Rookie Ron Kittle drove in three runs with a two-run homer and a sacrifice fly, and Greg Luzinski hit a solo honker to lead Chicago past Minnesota for the White Sox fifth straight victory. It marked the longest winning streak of the season for the White Sox as they rolled to their ninth triumph in the last 11 games.
The Twins smashed four home runs, all off winner Floyd Bannister, 3-8, before reliever Dennis Lamp came on in the sixth to stop the Twins and gain his first save.
My swing has been just so-so, said Kittle. I havent really been red-hot, but I have been consistent and thats what Im looking for.
Kittles homer was his 16th and put him in a tie with Jim Rice of Boston for first place in the AL. He also has 50 runs batted in and leads the league
in that department.
Blue Jays 5, Mariners 4
Cliff Johnsons tie-breaking RBI single highlighted a two-run eighth inning that lifted Toronto over Seattle.
Johnson singled off Seattle relief ace Bill Caudill to score Ranee Mulliniks, who opened the eighth with a double off loser Mike Stanton, 0-1. Stanton then intentionally walked Willie Upshaw.
Caudill took over and balked the runners to second and third. After Johnson singed, Lloyd Moseby followed with a single to score Upshaw with what proved to be the decisive run.
Winner Jim Clancy, 6-5, worked seven innings, giving up six hits while striking out four and walking three. Joey McLaughlin picked up his seventh save as the Blue Jays won for the ninth time in the Jast 12 games and climbed within one game of first-place Baltimore in the AL East. The Mariners, last in the AL West, have lost seven In a row and 14 of 17.
CALGARY, Alberta (AP) -A tree branch restricted Jack Flecks swinging motion and helped force a double bogey on the 18th hole in the opening round of the Professional Golfers Association Seniors tournament.
But Fleck, winner of only three regular PGA tournaments during 44 years on the tour, hung on for a 6-under-par 65 that left him first in the 72-hole contest.
Rod Funseth, who led the Peter Jackson-sponsored tournament for most of the day, is second at 66. Last years winner. Bob Goalby, is in a four-way tie for third with Roberto DeVicienzo, Bill Johnston and Charlie Sifford, at4-under67.
Fleck, after four birdies on the front nine and another four on the back nine, teed up on the 18th hole at 8 under and appeared destined to break the Earl Grey Golf Course record of 64.
But his second shot left him in the rough, the ball resting just under the shade of a pine tree to the left of the fairway.
I tried to hit a real flat swing and miss the tree limb, he said. I caught it a little and didnt get (the ball) airborne and out of the rough.
It took a fourth shot to reach the green and then a badly shaken Fleck three-putted before hitting the cup.
While agreeing his ei^t birdies and first-place finish were impressive. Fleck stressed that when you do stupid things you can never be pleased.
I putted really well, excluding the 18th hole.
Fleck acknowledged that other senior pros - aged 50 or older - at the southwest Calgary golf club this week, such as Sam Snead or Arnold Palmer app^red to be much more likely first-round leaders in the tournament.
But anybody can be lucky and I guess maybe I am.
Williams Wins Putt Event
Leslie Williams won the Thursday Night Amateur Tournament at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.
Williams put together rounds of 32 and 37 to finish at three-under-par.
Duane Grace finished second with a two-under 70, while Johnny Speight finished third with a one-over 73.
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SCOREBOARDme uaUy Reflector, Gieenvllte, N.C.-Friday, JiaeK 110-15
RkSoMmII
Kathy Allen 2.
Womens Lea^
PTA defeated Prep 12-4. No otho-details given.
Fred Webb 301 010 1-6
'Kettle 130 111 j-7
j scorers: CK - Smith 3-3, Blount 2-^3, Hardsofl 2-3; FW -S^^t 2-2, Everett 3^3.
Greenville Travel won by forfeit over Wachovia Bank.
Players Retreat 331 100 0-6
Pitt Memorial 711 000 x-9
Leading hitters: PM - F. Cianpi 2-4; PR-F. Atkinson 2-4.
Church League
Oakmont...............276 60-21
Mafanatha.............010 30- 4
Leading hitters: M - Milton Dilda 2-2, J.L. Gray 2-2; 0 -Ashley Ferrell 3-3, Mike Brown 3-3.
Arlington St 110 000 0-2
IstChristian 000 110 1-3
Leading hitters: FC - Jay Jester
2-2.
Memorial...........005 000 1-6
1st Free WUl 003 005 x-8
Leading hitters; FF Mike Tyson 2-3, Art Pittman 2-3; M Ted Peel 3-4, Glenn Sanders 3-3.
Immanuel..........202 040 1-9
Jarvis..............261 250 x-16
Leading hitters; J Bill Kuykenda,!! 3-4 (HR), Sam
McDonald 3-4:1- Bill Battles 3-4, Ken Haigler2-2
Blackjack..........(11)14 15-22
St. James...............003 01-4
Leading hitters: BJ - Junior
Hardee 3^ (HR), Carl Arnold 33 (2 HR), Keith Gould 34 (2 HR), Louie Dixon 34 (2 HR).
Unity...................573 02-17
Trinity.................010 01-2
Leading hitters: U - Richard Smith 44, Scott Stoll 44, Brace Bullock 44 (2 HR), Eddie Walker 34, Dwayne Baker HR; T - Otis Arp 2-2.
1st Presbyterian . 430 000 0-7
Church of God 221 050 x-10
Leading hitters: FP - Ken Rakestraw 2-3, Allen Hahn 2-3, Bobby Sasser 24, Brian Hart 24; CG - Ray Jernigan 3-3, Charlie Brown 2-3, Mel Boyd 24.
Peoples................000 00- 0
Grace.......... 585 3x-21
Leading hitters: G - Mike Holloman 34, Haywood Outland 44, Keith Jones 34, Sammy Pugh 34.
Mt. Pleasant.........500 000 0-5
1st Pentecostal......302 030 x-8
Leading hitters: MP - Paul
Tucker 2-3, Johnny Simpson 24; FP
- S. Keeter 44, Bill Pilgram 2-2.
City League
Whittington..........Oil 001 0-3
Calif. Concepts 103 210 x-7
Uading hitters: CC - Ed Wells 2-3, Chris Parisher 2-3.
WlntervUle Women Ayden Bombers defeated Uni-Worth, 23-1 Leading hitters: AB -Betty Little 4.
Coca-Cola defeated Auto Specialty, 1-0. Leading hitters: CC
- Angie Stewart 3; AS - Karen Kllphtrick2.
Roberson Jewelers defeated Keel's Warehouse, 12-7. Leading hitters: RJ - B.J. Mannina 2, Rhoda Jackson 2, Anw Carroll 2, Wendy Godley 2, Pam Evans 2; KW - Joanne Franke 2, Cindy Brown 2,
BqstboH Stondfaifls
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BASTMVBION
W LPct GB Baltimore > a .SB -
Torooto a S .S(7 I
Detroit 37 a SS2 1
New Yoit 3S 31 .Sa 3Vk
Boston 33 a .3 (
CleveUnd 32 a .471 7H
MUwaiAee a 35 40 I
WEST DIVISION Califoniia n 31 .544 -
Texas 35 31 .50 1
Kansas Ctty 33 a SM IW
Chicaao a a SO 34
Oakland a a 4B 4
MinoesoU S O 4M
Seattle a 46 at 13
Ttanday'sGaiBM Chicaflo I, MinoesoU (
OveUndS, Bastao4 CalUorma7.KansasCUy2 Toronto 5. Seattle 4 Only games sctwAiM
PrUay'sCaiMi Oakland (Underwood 44 and Young 00) at Texas (Smithson 5-5 and Hougn 50).2,(t-n)
Detroit (Petry 4-5) at Baltimore (D Martinet 4-10), (n)
New York (Rigbetti 1-3) at Boston (Tudor 44), (n)
Cleveland (Sorensen 44) at MUwaukee (Sutton 44), (n)
MinoesoU (Williams 30) at Chicago (Burns 34), (n)
CalifornU (John 4-3) at Kansas City (Blue 04), (n)
Toronto (Leal 40) at Seattle (Young 7-6), (n)
Saturdays Games New York at Boston Detroit St Baltimore, (0)
Cleveland at MUwaukee, (n)
MinnesoU at Chicago, (n)
CalifornU at Kansas Oty, (n)
Oakland at Texas. (HI Toronto at Seattle, (ni
Smiday'i Games New York at Boston Detroit at Baltimore MinnesoU at Chicago Cleveland at MUwaukee CalifornU at Kansas City Toronto at SeatUe Oakland at Texas. (ni
NAT10NALLEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W LPct. GB Montreal 38 3S 554 -
St Louis 34 32 515 Ih
Philadelphia 29 33 441 5
Chicago 30 37 44* 7
Pittstmr^ 28 36 434 I't
New Yoft 27 40 403 10
WESTDIVISION
Los Angeles 43 25 632 -
AtlanU 29 .574 4
San Francisco 35 33 515 8
San Diego 35 33 515 8
Houston 35 35 500 9
Cincinnati 30 39 435 13W
IlMiisdayi Games New York 7, St Louis 5 San Diego 7, Los Angeles 5 Montreal 4. PhUadeIphia3 PittstMirgh 5, Chicago 2 Only gamesscheduled
Fridays Games Chicago (Ruthven 44) at Montreal (Rogers 9-3)
Aflanta (Dayley 04 and McMurt^ 74) at Cincinnati (Pnce 54 and Berenyl 4-7), 2, (l-n)
Philadelphia (Christenson 24) at New York (Swan 1-3), (n)
Pittsburgh (Bibby 2 7) at St Louis (LaPoint 44), (ni Houston (J NIekro 4-5) at Los Angeles (Hooton6-2), (n)
San Diego (Hawkins 34) at San Francisco (Krukow 44), (n)
Saturday's Games Pittsburgh at St Louis PhUadelphIa at New York San Diego at San Francisco AtlanU at Cincinnati, (n)
Chicago at Montreal, ml Houston at Los Angeles. (n)
nesou, 4S; OeCsMCS, taiuonua. 45, RicerBastoa. 44; Murray. Baltlore. 43: Winfield. New York. 43 HITS Whitaker. Detroit, 81; Bogm. Boetoo. M; Carew, CalifornU, V; Castim. MUiieaoU. B. Ward, Minnesota. n;Yoimt.MlIwaUwe.ll.
boUBLES. McRae, Kansas Ctty. 33: Hrbek. Mlnneseta. 31; Parrish. Dstroit 28: BcU. Texas. 19; Boos. Boston. 19; SHendenoB, SeatUe. 19.
TRIPLES: Msory MUwaukee, 5: WUaon, Detroit, 5; Griffln. Toronto, 5; Herndon, Detroit. 5; Gibson, Detroit. 5;
Wihfl^NewYort.5
RUNS: Annas, Boston It; Kittle. Chlc^ It; Rice. Boston, It; DeClnc4 (Taiifornia, IS; Johnson. Torontojt.
STOLkN BASES: CriB, Chicano. 33;. WiUoit. Kansas City, 33; Hender*, Oakland, 31; R.Law, Chicago. 39; Sam-
It decisions): Flanagan. Baltimore. 4. 1 000. 3.73, KUon, CalifornU. t-I. B7. 3.33; Kooeman, Chicaao, t-I, 857.4.05, Jackson, Torooto. VI. %, 4.30, Sulcllfle, Cleveland, V3. .810,3.13
miKEOUTS: Stieb, Toronto. 101; Blyleven. Oveland, 87; Mo^ Detroit. 81; Sutcliffe. Cleveland. 67 Gott. Toronto, ft; Hoyt, Chicago,.
SAVES: QuisaheriylKamas City, It; Stanley. Boston. 14; CaudUl. SeatUe. 13. Lopes, Detroit II: DavU, MinneooU, 10
NATIOiZAGUR BATTING (170 at baUi: Hendrick. St LouU, 343; Knight Houston, 337, Murphy. Atlsnta. 337. Dawson. Mon^ m, Madlock. PltUburgh. 321 RUNS: Munhy, AUanta. 81; Garvey, San Diego, 53, Raines. Montreal. SI, Evans, w FrancUco, 50. Dawson, Montreal, 43 RBI: Dawson. Montreal. 54; Murphy, AUanU, 53; Hendrick. St Lotos, Sl. Evans. San Francisco. 40; Garner. Houston, 44.
HITS Dawson, Montreal, B, Thon. Houston.
Garvey.
78
DOUBLES Dawson. Montreal. 18.
) Dawson, Montreal, B, Thon. . B, Muiphy, Atlanta, 81, y. San Diego, n. (River. Montreal,
BLES Dawson. Montreal. 18. JRay, PittsburA. 18. Knight. Houston. 18; Buckner, Chicago, 17. Cim. Houston. 17, Oliver, MontreaT 17 TRIPLES: Moreno. Houston, 7; Dawson. Montreal. 5; Raines. Montreal. 5; Washington. AUanU. 5; 7 are tied wlUi 4
HOME RUNS Evans, San Francisco.
19: Murphy. AUanU, 19; Guerrero, Los Angeles. 14: Schmidt. PhUadel^i Clark, San Francisco. 13, D(
Montreal, 13.
STOLEN BASES Raines, Montreal, 30. Wilson. New York. 25. LeMaster. San Francisco, 24, Moreno. Houston, 22, S.Sax, Los Angeles. 22 PITCHING (6 decisions) Dawley. Houston, VI. 833,1.72, Falcone, AUanU, VI. 833, 2 48, Lavelle. San Francisco, VI, 833, 2 06, Montefusco, San Diego, VI. 833, 5 45, IUan,Houston. VI 833,5m STRIKEOUTS Cartton, Philadelphia, 111: Soto, (hicinnati. 107. McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 94, Berenyi, Cincinnati. 82, Rogers, Montreal. 76 SAVES Reardon. Montreal, 11, Lavelle, San Francisco, 10, Bedrosian, Atlanta, 9, Le Smith, Chicago. 9 Forster, Atlanta, 8; Minton, San Francisco, 8; Stewart. Los Angeles. 8
Golf Scores
Stmdays Games
hia at Nev
Philadelphia at New York, 2 Chicago at Montreal Atlanta at Cincinnati Pittsburg at St Louis San Diego at San Francisco. 2 Houston at Los Angles
leogue Ltoders
By The AmocUted Prem AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (170 at bats): Carew. CalifomU, 410; Boggs, Boston, 365, McRae. Mnsas City, Griffey, New York, 338. Thornton, Cleveland, .325 RUNS: Ripken, Baltimore, 48; Murray, Baltimore, 47, Yount, MUwaukee, 4(; Castino, MinnesoU, 45.4 are tied wlUi 43. RB! KltUe, Chicago. 50; Ward, Mln-
CALGARY, Alberta IAP) - First round scores Thursday In the $200.000 Peter Jackson Seniors golf tournament on the 5,90Vyard, par 71 Earl Grey Golf Club
Jack Fleck 31 34-65
Rod FunseUi 34 32-46
Roberto DeVlcenio 33-34-67
BobGoalby 3V34-67
Bill Johnston 33-34-67
Charles Sif ford 3136-67
Don January 34-3468
Billy Maxwell 34-35-69
Peter Thomson 34 35-69
Walter Burkemo 34-3670
Bill Collins 3V35-70
Ted Dorius 33-3770
Fred Hawkins 3V35-70
Arnold Palmer 3V35-70
Bert Weaver 3V35-70
BUIyCa^r 33 38-71
Auggie Navarro 3V36-71
GuyWolstenholme 32 39- 71
Jerry Barber 36-3672
George Bayer 33-39-72
Freddie Haas 37 35- 72
GeneLittler 3V36-72
Art Silvestrone 35-37 -72
A1 Besselink 3V37-73
A1 Balding 36-37- 73
Pete Cooper 34 39- 73
Doug Ford 37-3673
PauIHamey 37 36- 73
Howie Johnson 38-35-73
Moe Norman 34 39- 73
Jim Russell 38-35- 73
Miller Barber 3V39-74
Doug Bruton 37-37- 74
Jimmy Clark 37 37 - 74
Bob Erickson
Frank Fowler
DetosHutchtoson
BillKoiak
TcdKroU
BillMawhUney
Kel Nagle
SandyRoberiaao
Julius Bons
Marty FtoWsi
Samsneatf
Michael Fetchick
JohnHenrick
PeteHesaemer
EdFto^
Stan Leonard BobGoetx Art Lees
ROCHESTER N Y (AP) - Firri-round scares nwrsday to Uie 8300.000 Rot^ester Internatiooal Ladles Professional Golf AsaocUtioa tournament played over Use par-73, t,lt3-yard Locust Hill Country (Tub (a-denotes amateur): AyakoOkamoto 33-35-68
Lynn Adams 33-35-48
Rose Jones 33-37-69
Cathy Morse 32-37-69
AllcsMiller 3V36-69
Becky Pearson 32-38-70
Sandra Haynle 3V35-70
KathyMartin 3V35-70
JaneRlalock 3V34-70
Debbie Austin 3V3I-71
Donna White 3V36-7I
Cathy Duggan 33-38-71
UuraCole 34-37 -71
3V36-71 3338-71 34-r-71 34-37-71 3V36-71 34-37-71 3V36-72 34-38-72 3338-72 36-36- 72 38-34-72 33 39- 72 34-38- 72 3V36-72 3V37-72 36-36-n
36-37- 73 3837-73
3837-73 35 38-73
37 36 -73 3V38-73
38 35 -73
3261-73 3V38-73 37 36- 73 34-39- 73 37 36- 73
37-36- 73
3460-74
3935-74
3838-74
3838-74
3262-74 3V39-74
36-38-74 383874
3838 74 3V39-74
35 39- 74
36 39 - 75
3839-75
38-37 - 75 3839-75 3839-75
37 38-75
3936-75 3839-75
3461-75 3839- 75 37 38- 75
3936-75
36 39-75 3839-75
37-38- 75 3839-75
b38-37 - 75 3V60-75 37-38 - 75
37 38- 75
3462-76 3660-76 37 39- 76 37 39- 76
3937-76
37-39- 76 3561-76 3660-76
37 39- 76 3860-76
38 38- 76 3660^ 76 3660-76 3561-76
3660-76
38-38- 76 38-39- 77 38 39- 77
3661-77 38-39- 77 3661-77 37-40-77
. 38-39 - 77
39 - 39- 78 3761-78 3761 78 39:19 78 3761 78
TANKlFNANm
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Sandra Palmer HoUis Stacy Cathy Sheik Kathy Whitworth Kathryn Young Judy EIIU Brenda Goldsmith Cathy Mant Judy Clark JoAnne earner Nancy Lopes Beth Daniel KellllRlnker Lauri Peterson Vicki Tabor Myra Van Hoose Dot Germain Vicki Feraon (TuriotteMontgomery DaleEggeling Marianne Huning Karen Permeiel Kathy Hite Cindy HUI Vivian Brownlee Beverly Davis Murle Breer Lynn Stroney
Jerilyn Britx Pat Meyers SueErtl Pat Bradley Cathy Reynolds Kelly Fuiks Jane Crafler Vick) Singleton Bonnie Lauer Joyce Kaimlerski Janet Anderson Carole Charbonnier Peggy Conley Debbie Meisierlln Pia Nilsson Alison Sheard Betsy Barrett Chris Johnson Martha Nause Alice Ritzman Mary Dwyer Betsy King Debbie Massey Shelley Hamlin RobinWalton Connie Chillemi Patti Rizzo Amy Alcott Donna Caponi Stephanie Farwig Alexandra Reinhardt Sandra Spuzich Jo Ann Washam Marilyn Smith Beth Solomon Kathy Postlewait Saran LeVeque Marty Dickerson Holly Hartley Sharon Barrett Marga Stubblefield Sue Fogleman (.enoreMuraoka Barb Bunkowsky Beverly Class a Jamie DeWeese Lauri Rinker PamGietzen Gail HiraU Lori Huxhold Mindy Moore l^AnnCassad^ Muffin Spencer-Devlln Mary Hafeman M J Smith Janet Coles Barbara Riedl Mina Rodriguez Joan Joyce CarnlvnHill
McCormick Takes Gold
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) - As her famous mother looked on, diver Kelly MirCormick recorded one of the biggest victories of her career.
Liberty Takes Two In America's Cup
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Accused of sandbagging in early Americas Cup competition, Liberty skipper Dennis Conner took two of three races from Defender in the first strong winds of the week.
We do what we have to to win, Conner said Thursday, a rare smile creasing his tanned face. It takes a lot of maturity to stay with a plan. You havent seen a lot of 83 sails on our boat.
Conner was reacting to De-fender skipper Tom Blackallers taunt earlier in the week that the winner of the 1980 Cup was holding back by not showing sails prepared for this year.
Before the days races, the Freedom syndicates Liberty had won only one of three races since preliminary trials started Saturday and was using sails left over from stablemate Freedoms 1980 cup victory.
Using a mix of new and old sails Thursday, Libertys record improved to 34. Defender stood at 4^5.
While acknowledging the sweetness of victory, Conner suggested that winning is not his top priority in the early June trials, a warmup for the observation trials that start July 16.
Unlike the foreign challenger, whkh is dwaen for having the most wins, the New York Yacht Qubs choice of the boat to defend the 132-year-old winning streak is subjective.
Hungry for more points in its qu^ to be the sixth Australian boat in a row to challenge for the Cup, Australia II took its second win of the day and seventh without a loss in the aeries by sailing the course alone ato Canada 3 dropped out with roast problems.
France 3 bounced back with a 56-second win over the Italian boat Azzurra m the second race. Azzurra, with Slavio Scala at the helm, beat winless Advance of Australia by 1:28 in the first round.
The days heavy air favored British entry Victory 83, which won over Canada 1 and the Australian yacht Challenge 12.
After a day off. Courageous, the winner of the Americas cup in 1974 and 1977, meets Liberty today. Under skipper John Kolius, Coura^us has piled up four victories in six races.
Among the foreign challengers, the first race will pit Australia II (7-0) against Advance (04), Challenge 12 (3-2) against Canada 1 (34) and Victory 83 (4-3) against France 3 (2-5). In the second round. Advance meets Canada 1, Australia II meets Victory 83 and Azzurra goes against Challenged
Duke Hosts Jr. Olympics
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -About 800 athletes, representing each of the states 32 track clubs, will compete this weekend in the annual North Carolina Junior Olympics at Duke Universitys WaUace Wade Stadium.
Hiriding the event at Duke will give the Durham Striders track club a chance to show off in front of the home folks, said the teams publicity chairman Mahrin Mome.
The Striders last year set seven state records and one natkmal mark.
The state meet is being held in Durham as a trial run for the National Junior Olympics schedided at Duke July 26-31.
"It was great having Mom here, because it was the first time shes ever seen me win, said McCormick after capturing the gold medal in three-meter springboard competition Thursday night at the National Sports Festival.
Mom is Pat McCormick, winner of gold medals in diving at the 1952 and 1956 Olympics. Mrs. McCormick has seen her dauter compete on occasion, but often has been purposely away to avoid heaping extra pressure on 23-year-old Kelly.
Being compared with her mother has created identity problems for Kelly, who finally seems to have gained the maturity to succeed in her own ri^t.
The younger McCormick, a national champion at Ohio State University, scored high on two dives she had missed badly in the preliminaries to amass 514.86 points and edge runner-up Wendy Wyland of Mission Viejo, Calif., who had 508.44.
McCormicks sixth optional dive, a full twist with Vk somersaults, and her seventh, a front dive with 3*^ somersaults in the tuck position, allowed her to pull away from Wyland and third-place Chris Seufert of Ambler, Pa. McCormick and Wyland both earned spots on the U.S. Pan American team.
I did several new dives with a high degree of difficulty, and I hit on most of them, McCormick, of Columbus, Ohio, said. I was very consistent after I hit my first two on my head, and I just kept going.
'The result of the mens three-meter ^ringboard event wasnt nearly as surprising. World champion Greg Louganis earned four perfect scores of 10 en route to the gold medal.
Louganis, 23, of Mission Viejo, Calif., totaled 680.19 points in 11 dives to beat his teammate, David Burgering, who had the highest point total of his career - 658.68. Both will compete in the Pan Am Games. Taking the bronze medal was Mark Bradshaw of Springfield, Ore.
Im satisfied with my effort, but I have dived better in the past, said Louganis. I felt real nervous, this being the Pan Am trials and with only two qualifying and such a strong field.
Diving competition continues today with mens and womens platform prelims.
Finals in figure skatings pairs and dance competitions also were held Thurs^y night.
A brother-sister duo, Wayne and Natalie Seybold of Marion, Ind., won the pairs title. The Seybolds, aged 19 and 17, overcame several minor mistakes to hold off threats from sUver-medalists Kathryn Keeley and Gary Kemp of San Diego and bronze-medzdists Sandy Hurtubise of Haverford, Pa., and Karl Kurtz of Hershey, Pa.
We didnt expect to be first, said Natalie Seybold. We saw the festival as kind of a stei^ing stone, a chance to gain experience. One thing we did want to accomplish was to finish higher thmi the two teams who finished better than we did at the nationals, and we did that.
In the dance, favorites Carol Fox of Westland, Mich., and Richard Dailey of Wilmington, Del., won their second festival gold medal (they also won in 1978).
This is a great beginning iw next seasm, said Fox, who teamed with Dailey to finish third at this years nationals. This shows the judges were as strong as ever.
Rmee Roca of Allen Park, Mich., and Donald Adair of TrenUm, Mich., were second, followed by Susan Wynne of CamilluB, N.Y.,and Joseph Druar of Amherst, N.Y.
Sixteen-year-(rid Kelley Webster of Colorado Springs took the lead after the cmnpulsory phase of womens figure skating Thursday. Kathr^ Adams of Walnut Creek Calif., was second and Debbie Walls of Marietta, Ga., third.
Besides diving, todays agenda includes prelims in fencing. The official opening ceremonies are set for tonight, with a full slate of events over the weekend.
)
Dettorahletrtxtl Linda Hunt Jeanette Kerr RkaCofflstock Svdney Cunnlo|M Viderie Skinner TlteiWeHesaiOO 4260-82
Emilia Rorer 3963-82
Laura Hurlburt 3963-82
Debbie Hall 3864-82
Nancy Rubin 3963-82
Colleen Walker 4062 82
a-Patty Jordan 3767-84
Marloiie Jone* 4941-64
Jtoie Waldo 3945 84
Rene Powell 3965- 84
.Susan Stanley 4164 85
MEMPHIS. Tenn (,4Pi First round score Thuriday m the $400,'000 Danny Thomas-Mempbis Golf Classic on the 7,249yard par 36 J6 72 (olonial Country Club course
32 33 65
33 33 66 33 34 67
35 32 67 31 36 67
36 32 68
33 35 68
34 34 68
34 34 68
35 33 68
35-33 68 35 33 68 34 34 68 34 34 68
34 35 69 3933-69
37 32 69 39 33 69
35 34 69
34 35 69
35 34 69
34 35 69
35 34 69
3933 69 34 36 70
33 37 70
34 36 70
36-34 70
35 35- 70 38-32 70 37 33 - 70
35 15 70 33 ;t7 70
3934 70 33 37-70
36 34 - 70 35 35 - 70
3934 70 33 37 70
33 37 70
34 36 70
35 36 71 35 36 71 39 36 71 35 36 71
34 37 71
37 34 71
35 35 71 35 36 71
35 36 - 71 , 35 71
36 15 71 36 35 71
3935 71
35 36 71
34 37 71
36 35 71 37 34 71
35 S9 71 35 36 71 ,15:16 71
Chip Beck Larry Nelson Bill Murchiioa Tom Purtzer Fred Couple
Jim Simons Ed Floii John Fought Jeff Sanders JeffSluman Jim Dent Ray Floyd Fuzzy Zoeller Mark McCumber Jon Chaffee Buddy^Gardner DougTeyyell Ixw Nielsen Jay Cudd MlVe Donald Barry Jaeckel Bruc Lietzke Ron Streck Sammy Rachels Jeff Kern Rex Caldwell Pal McGowan Larrv Mize Jodie Mudd Greg Norman Mike Holland Mike Sullivan George Archer Tim Simnwn Gary McCord Hal Sutton J C Snead .Victor Regalado Jim Thorpe Wally Armstrong Phil Hancock Skeeter Heath Mark O'Meara Bruce Devlin Dave Elchelberger Scott Hoch Don Pooley lu Graham Orville Moody Tom Jenkins Gibby Gilbert Vance Heafner Buzz Fly Russ Cochran
Rav Stewart LariceTen Broeck Richard Zokol RodtTirl John Adams Tony Cerda Mike Gove
Bob Boyd
Jerrv Pate Scoti Simpson BUI Britton Tommy Valentine Bill Sander Wayne Player BillCalfee Tom l,ehman George Cad le Davw Peoples Dave Hallford Steve Melnyk l.ee Trevino Andy Bean JeffMitchell Lindy Miller Mike Brannan Mark McNulty Dan Halldorson Chi Chi Rodnguei Thomas Gray lAiren Roheris David Ogrin Steve Liebler Tony Sills Mike McCullough Tim Norris Pat Lindsey Terry Diehl Greg Powers Clarence Rose Rod Nuckolls Mick Soli l.ennie Clements l.yn Lott Allen Miller Forrest Feiler Darrell Kestner Robert Agee Rick Pearson Rick Dalpos Rafael Alarron Eric Batten Ken Kelley Eddie Jackson Jim Booros Boh Byman DenisWatson Paul Azinger Ed Dou^rty Blame McCallister Ijirs Meyerson p Black
Gaiy Koch Gil Morgan Wayne Levi
Ronnie Black Bobby Wadkms Tom Shaw Howard Twitty Woody Blackburn DeWi(l Weaver Steve Hart Bob Gollghlly Tze Chung Chen Jimmy Roy Ted Butler
John Mahaffey AlGenterger
Dan Forsman Mark Calcavecchia
3935-<1 rS5-72
35 37 - 72 3937-72 38 34- 72
3936- 72 3936-72
3936-72 38 34-72 33 39-n
3937-72
3936 72 33 39 72 38 34 - 72
36 36- 72
35 38 73
37 36 - 73
36 37 73
35 38 - 73 3934-73
3937 73
37 36 -73
36 37 73 33 49 73 35 38 - 73
3937 73
3938 73 3637-73 35 38 - 73
37 36 73 37 36 73
35 39 74 37 37 74
36 38 74
37 .37 74
36 38 - 74
37 37 74 3935 74
35 39 74
36 38 74
37 37 74
38 36 74 35 39 74
37 37 74
38 36 74 37 37 74
37 :n 74 :34 40 74 :)6:)9 75 :18 37 75 :r7 3 75 39: 75 .19:16 75 :: 75 . :19 75
38 37 75 37.38 75 ;18 37 75 38 37 75 :t9 ; 75 :i8 :t7 75 40;i5 75 :i7; 76 : 37 76
38 38 76
39 37 76 -49 76 37 39 76 3937 76 37 39 76
37 39 76 35-41 76 -40 76 3949 76 39 38 77 37-49 77 37-49 77 37-49 77
38 39 77
4937-77 A1 -77 41 -77 38 39- 77 37 41-78 35A3 78
4938-78 49 38 78 4939 79 3941 80
ByTbeAtoocUtodPreet BASEBALL NaUonal League
CHICAGO CIBS Optioned Tom Grant.outfielder. to Iowa of the American As.soiiation Activated l,eon Durham, outfielder NEW YORt( METS Signed William
Kelvin Page, pitcher, and assigned him to of the Gull Coast League pHIlJkDELPHIA PHILLIES- Signed
Sarasota(
^ston
10 6
0
625
349
307
New Jersey
5 11
0
313
283
389
Washington
2 14
0
5
248
407
Central
Chicago
II 5
0
688
408
230
Michigan
10 6
0
625
314
311
Tampa Bay
10 6
0
625
3
328
Birmingham
8 8
0
500
304
278
Padflc
Oakland
8 8
0
500
06
270
Denver
7 9
0
438
M7
257
IxM Angeles
7 9
0
438
254
328
Arizona
4 42
0
250
240
388
Michael Colpitt. shortsloo, Wayne Dannenberg and Steve Moses, out fielders, Aldo Baccala. Tony Evetts and John Mcljiman. pitchers, and Randy Maples, catcher, and assigned them to Bend (Ore ) of the Northwest League Signed Ken Lewis, shortstop. Prince Couisnard and Danny Gnifin. outfielders, Brian Householder. David Cram. Tom Newell. Randy Collier Stanley Strutz and Ken Ixingman. pitchers, and Tim Meert, catcher, and assigned them to Helena of the Pioneer (.ague
BiraCETBALL NaUoual Basketball Aaeoclatloa DALLAS MAVERICKS Signed Brad Davis, guard, to a four year contract FOTBlL NaUonal Football League DENVER BRONCOS Announced a verbal agreement with Mark Cooper, tackle, on a series of oneyear contracts HOCKEY American Hockey League .ST CATHARINES .s'Allvft Rehired Doug Carpenter, head coach
USFlStondingz
By The Aaaoclated Pran Atlantic W L T Pet PF PA X Philadelphia 14 2 0 875 334 173
X clinched divisional title
Saturday's Gamee Boston at Oakland, ini Arizona at New Jersw, i n i Sunday' Games Michigan at Chicago Birmingham at Philadelphia Us Angeles at Washington Monday'a Games Denver at Tampa Bay. i n >
N.C. Scofboord
By The AaaocUted Presa Carolina League
Winston Salem 5, Durham South Atlantic League Greensboro4. Spartanburg 3 Columbia 12. Gastonia 0
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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
CLASSIFIED ADS 752-6166
16-Tbe Dily Reflector, GreenvUk, N.C.-Frktoy, Juoe 24. 3
'Muit And Jeff Comic fifo Time Is Wosfed In 'Loving'
Strip At End Of Trail
ByEUSSAMcCRARY
Associated Press Writer
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)
- Artist George Breisacher says he feels like he will be losing two friends when the comic strip Mutt and Jeff dies on Sunday.
Mutt and Jeff, which celebrated its 75th birthday last year, is Americas oldest continuous dally comic strip.
Breisdcner oegan drawing the strip in November 1981.
Its disappointing for me to see the comic strip die, said Breisacher, 41, an artist for the Charlotte Observer. Ive put a year and a half of my life into drawing the strip. Not drawing Mutt and Jeff any more has taken some getting used to.
The comic strip will appear for the last time in the
Choir Concert Will Honor Sister Karen
LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Richard Carpenter, who sang with his sister Karen in a university choir in the 1960s, has been working with the choir again to prepare a concert in memory of her.
More than 50 members of the University Choir at California University-Long Beach will sing such favorites of The Carpenters as "Close to You, Weve Only Just Begun, and "For All We Know on Saturday night.
Miss Carpenter, a Grammy Award winner, died Feb. 4 at age 32 from an irregular heart beat brought on by chemical imbalances associated with anorexia nervosa, a disorder characterized by lack of eating.
Carpenter, 37, has been rehearsing the choir this week.
Frank Pooler, choral director at the university for 23 years, recalls the Carpenters as hard-working young people. "1 met Richard the summer before he
R, CARPENTER
entered school here in 1964, ' he said. Karen was still in high school then.
She used to come up on Saturdays with Richard, said Pooler, and 1 would give her singing lessons. 1 thought she was sensational even then, but her voice grew a lot and matured as she got older.
Check-Up For Burt Lancaster
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oscar-winning actor Burt Lancaster has been undergoing tests at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center where he had abdominal surgery in 1980.
He is here for tests and observation, hos,pital spokeswoman Tess Griffin said Thursday. His condition was decribed as good.
Lancaster, 69, was admitted Sunday night and was
expected to be discharged in the next few days. Its a regular physical. He does this every year, she said.
The nature of the 1980 surgery has been never been disclosed, although hospital officials stressed at the time that it did not involve cancer.
Lancaster won the Oscar as best actor in 1960 for his portrayal of a Depression-era huckster in Elmer Gantry.
countrys newspapers Sunday. Field Newspaper Syndicate will continue to offer foreign clients Mutt and Jeff strips from the past but no new ones will be drawn.
The syndicate was put up for sale recently, but company officials say that had no influence on their decision to drop Mutt and Jeff.
The strip made its debut in 1907 on the sports pages of the San Francisco Chronicle. It was considered a sports strip because Augustus Mutt bet on the horses.
The strip was the creation of the late Bub Fisher. A1 Smith succeeded Fisher in the 1930s and Breisacher took over in 1981.
Mutt and Jeff attracted national attention recently, with recognition of its 75th birthday and a commendatory resolution by the Newark, N.J., city council, after a joke appeared in the strip about the city.
Art Wood of Rockville, Md., past president of the Association of American Editorial Catoonists, said Breisacher was breathing new life into Mutt and Jeff. But some cartoonists, like Beetle Bailey creator Mort Walker, said the strip had an antique look and feel.
Breisacher said he tried to update the writing on the strip but purposely kept the original cartoon style.
, 1 think readers who had followed Mutt and Jeff for years wanted to see the characters stay the same, look the same, he said. But what the strip had to say was modern, it wasnt outdated.
Mutt and Jeff appeared in about 50 newspapers, 20 in the United States. Breisacher said he was told that in order to be successful, a strip has to appear in 100 newspapers, 75 at the least.
Syndicate officials told Breisacher earlier this year that the strip was losing money.
Breisacher said he expects to get some angry letters when the strip fails to appear next week from loyal Mut-t-and Jeff followers. He said he receives five or six letters every week from people all over the country who read the strip daily.
"It will be missed, he said. "Despite the decision to kill it, 1 think Mutt and Jeff was still pretty popular. A lot of people liked to read it. Theyre going to miss it.
ByFREDROTHENEERG Associated Press Writer LOS ANGELES (AP) - If you miss the first scene, the very first scene, of ABCs
TV Log
For coBiptoio TV progrwiwto to* coomH yow tieMy TV
SHOWTIME from Surntoy' 0^ Roltoctor.____
WNa-TV-Ch.9
FRIDAY 7 00 Joker's Wild 7 30 TkTac
I 00 Dukts
9 00 Dallas
10 00 Falcon Crtsi
II 00 Nws9
11 30 Movie
} 00 Nigtitwalch SATURDAY
6 X Rascals
7 00 Kangaroo I 00 Popeye
I 30 Pan 9 00 MeattMlls 9 X Bugs Bunny
10 00 Oukrs
11 00 Bugs Bunny 17 00 SoulTrain
I 00 Matinee 3 00 Sports Plus
3 X Goll
4 30 Sports 6 00 News
6 30 News
7 00 Solid Gold
I 00 Seven Brides 9 OO Movie
II 00 News
II 30 Dance Fever 17 00 Special 1 00 Solid Gold
WITN-TV-Ch.7
FRIDAY
7 00 Jellersons '0
7 30 Family Feud "
I 00 Matt Starr l>
9 00 Knight R. U
10 00 Bare Essence '
II 00 News
11 30 Tonight
17 30 Comedy
7 00 Overnight
3 00 News
SATURDAY
7 00 Better Way f 30 Treehouse I 00 Flinlslones
8 30 Shirt Tales
9 00 Smurfs
Kl Gary Coleman 00 Hulk 00 Thundarr 30 Flash Gordon 00 Baseball OO Tennis 30 News 00 Love Sidney 30 Family Ties 00 Dill Strokes 30 Silver Spoons 00 Pageant 00 News 30 Night Live 00 Closeup 30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
FRIDAY 7 00 Sanford A
7 30 B Miller
8 00 Benson
8 30 At Ease
9 00 Movie
11 00 Acfion News II 30 Nightline 17 30 Special 7 30 An E vening 3 30 Early Edition SATURDAY
5 30 Telestory
6 00 Great Space
6 30 Snuggles
7 00 Cartoon Time
8 00 Superlriends
8 30 Pac Man
10 00 Scooby
11 00 MorkA 17 00 Special
17 30 Bandstand I 30 Sports
3 30 USFL
4 00 Road To
6 30 In Search of
7 00 Wrestling
8 00 T J Hooker
9 00 Love Boat
10 00 Fantasy I
11 00 Action Ne*> Ills ABC Weekend II 30 Cinema
4 00 Edition
WUNK.TV-Ch.25
FRIDAY
7 00 Report
7 30 Stateline
8 00 Washington 8 30 Wall St
II 30 17 00 17 30 I 00 7 00
9 00 Commanders j 35
10 00 Chrysler
11 00 Doctor in II 30 Morecambe 17 00 Sign on SATURDAY 8 00 Spokesman
8 30 Under Sail
9 00 Business
9 30 Quilling
10 00 Oil Painting
10 30 Painting
11 00 Cooking
4 00
4 30
5 00
5 30
6 00 a 30 8 00
9 00
10 00 II 00 II 30 17 00
Great Chets
Computer
Sport Fishing
Soccer
Dr Who
Adventure
Victory G
Cooking
Woodwr'ghfs
Last Chance
Previews
Poseidon
Nature ol
Mystery
Avengers
Twilight Zone
Twilight Zone
SignOtt
Loving, youll miss the first smooch, the first hint of marital hanky-panky, the first glimpse of unrequited passion and - Da-da! - the first pregnant pause.
Geariy, they dont mess around getting right to the messing around in Loving, ABCs first new daytime serial in ight years.
We hope they get viewers interested right away, understates Agnes Nixon, the shows creator, who also was courted by NBC and CBS but finally decided to bring the project to ABC - home of Mrs. Nixons other soaps, All My Children and One Life to Live.
The Monday-through-Friday serial, and reruns of Too Close for Comfort, will replace repeats of The Love Boat on ABCs daytime schedule. While The Love Boat is fantasized romance, Loving is caricatured romance, treating relationships as one-dimensional flings. The bonds of the characters seem as lasting and deep as the actors latest 13-week contracts.
Although ABC is No. 2 to CBS in prime time, the network reaps greater over all profits because of its leadership in daytime television. The , stakes during daylight are enormous, which explains why ABC threw a promotional press bash, complete with heart-shaped pink cake, to hype Loving.
CBS is trying to blunt Mondays debut of Loving by showcasing its soap opera stars on The Price is Right all next week.
But ABC has an additional promotional trick. It has scheduled for Sunday night a two-hour movie called Loving to introduce the
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serials characters and give viewers a headstart on their miseiy in the morning. The Loving smal is scheduled forll;30a.m.EDT.
The prime-time launch was a stunt stKcessfully utilized by CBS Capitol, which followed an episode of Dallas before it was planted on the weekday schedule.
There are major differences between daytime and evening soaps, says Mrs. Nixon. Daytime has the ability for character growth. In daytime, we know why people are the way they are.
In contrast, she says, viewers know that J.R. Ewing of Dallas is a snake, but they dont know where he got his venom.
Sundays Loving movie is not a serial. It has a beginning, middle and end, says Mrs. Nixon. There will be a resolution to the one main story.
Lloyd Bridges and Geraldine Page star in the movie, but they wont be dropping by for coffee and anguished reaction shots during the series, which is billed as a contemporary drama set in a college town.
So many college students are viewers that we wanted them to feel more represented, says Mrs. Nixon.
Based on a screening of Mondays first episode, whats depicted in Loving bears little resemblance to Reality U. Its more of a sweatshirt version of the same, soap scenario: boy
meets girl, boy tempts girl (or vice versa) ... tboi one resists, vascillates, eventually succumbs.
The essential relationship involves Merrill Vochek (Patricia Kalember), a tele-viskm anchorwoman, and Roger Forbes (John Shearin), son of a self-made milliooaire, who has become the new president of Alden University.
Roger, a former congressman and ambassador, has national political ambitions and local designs on Merrill, even though he is married and has two children, who are described by ABC as Laura, a pretty
troublemaker, and Jack, a cleannnit athlete.
Merrill is dating a playwright and drama professtnr, wh<^ brother is a police officer and a Vietnam veteran suffering from delayed stress syndr^e.
Well be m(Me contemporary, move faster and keep up with the times, says Mrs. Nixon. She promises to examine socially relevant issues in the series.
In fact, one character will be a nurse working in a medical detection facility for AIDS. When a cure for AIDs is found, says Mrs. Nixon, well have a canvas for doing that story.
Men Run A Risk If Clean-Shaven
LOCK HAVEN, Pa. (API - Clean-shaven men risk a $3 fine and a pie in the face if they are caught on the streets of this old lumber town on Friday nights.
But even the bearded need to be wary of a mock ban on shaving that went into effect as part of this communitys 150th birthday fete.
If you have a beard, we still might pick you up because youre ugly or we just dont like you, said John Yost, the ses-quicentennial chairman.
Mayor William R. Eisemann is among those who sported new mustaches or beards Thursday. For those who must be cleanshaven, a $3 shaving permit
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The end of shaving in this town of 9,600 began the night of June 3, when a horse-drawn hearse trailed by Keystone Kops laid a rqplica of an oversized razor to rest.' i
The birthday celebration lasts through August. On Friday nights, residents caught without facial hair or permits might be snapped up by constables to stand trial in Kangaroo Kourt, where they could be fined, jailed for up to an hour, or get a pie in the face, Yost said.
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Pitt County Wheat Yield May Be Less Than 1982
POST HARVEST BURN-OFF ... A specUcular wall of flame and smoke race across straw stubble left behind after the harvest of a wheat field in Pitt County. Pitt County Extension Service Chairman Leroy James says indications are this years
Life As It's Lived
acreage and yield may not be up to 1982, when 12,000 acres were planted and yielded an overage of 60 bushels per acre. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)
There's No Winning If The Cards Are Stacked
By GAIL MICHAELS It always rains when Phillip goes out of town.
And if thats not proof enough that Someone up There has got it in for me, then consider this: Phillips last trip out of town coincided with Megs first week out of school.
Phillip left at 7 Monday morning At 7:15 my ba flew out of my coffee in response to a screech so
Airline Eyes R-D Airport
RALEIGH. NC (AP) -Trans World Airlines is looking at Raleigh-Durham Airport as a possible location for flight service, airport Director John C. Brantley told the Triangle J Council of Governments Wednesday.
We hope to know something in the next few months, he said.
The airport has added two new carriers, Ozark Airlines ^ and Pan American Airlines, both of which fill gaps in current flight services from the airport.
Ozark will begin service July 1 to serve the Midwest.
Pan Am will start flying out of Raleigh-Durham Aug.
1 to tie into international service from Kennedy International Airport in New York,
The completion of the 10,000-foot runway will enable carriers to offer non-stop flights to the West Coast.
;;The airport will become increasingly used as a commuter hub, Brantley said. When the runway is completed, were going to need more plane parking space because were filled now. This will probably occur in the late 80s."
Be told the delegates that over $25 million in work had been done at the airport over the past five years, and that the runway would cost about $40 million.
(^aham Hads Trade Ass'n
EALEICH, N.C, (AP) -Stete Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham was elected president of Uie Southern United States Trade Associatkm during the organizations annual meeting this week in Oklahoma Ciiy, Okla.
The group is an agricultural: export trade association ctgnprised of Puerto Rico aig 15 southern states, in-eliding North Carolina. Its gdU is to promote the sale of f^m commodities to foreign c(|intries by working with eiDort firms and trade in the states and r it represents.
violent that it could only be heralding disaster. I rushed from the den into the kitchen to witness Zachary, seated in front of a heaping bowl of Cheerios, shriek again.
She ate one of my Cheerios! he sobbed.
And so it went. Meg put her feet on him. She sat on his imaginary space friend. She knocked down the block building that had been sitting on his bedside table for two months.
It was an accident! she sputtered.
She locked him out of her room. Who could blame her? 1 have to admit that I thought about locking him out of the house.
She wouldnt even share the gum she had bought with last weeks allowance.
But lest it be assumed that she was the beseiged party, let us consider her contribution to the rising noise level in the house.
He was giving her a headache with all that kicking on her door.
Why couldnt she go out in the rain in her bathing suit? After all, the temperature
A SECOND CENTER CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - The South African government, which critics claim has developed a nuclear bomb, says it plans to build a second nuclear research center on the countrys southern coast.
outside must have been at least 63 degrees.
She was bored. Would I make Zachary take an early nap so that I could play Battle with her? It was almost 10 a.m.
Why did I have to be so stubborn and include him in everything. He would chew on her cards. (He offered to stop if she would just share her gum.)
Life at home was simply too tedious. No, she didnt want to read to me, to cross-stitch, to play dolls. Her legs, her whole body in fact, was itching to move, to go places, to run free, to take advantage of her vacation. The rain was not fair. She loathed it. Why didnt we at
lease have cable TV so that she could watch some kids shows before 4 p.m.
Eventually, she and Zachary formed a truce which proved worse than fighting. They ran screeching and hooting up and down stairs, around the dining room amd living room, under the kitchen table. Occasionally, they would stop momentarily to watch the rain pelting the front lawn.
I wish I could go out and make mud balls, Meg said wistfully. "A good mud ball will even bounce.
My relief that she couldnt was the high point of my day. By early afternoon 1 was standing at the window myself and chanting softly. Rain, rain go away; Gail wants to stay sane today '
It didnt help By 3:: 1 knew that I had cracked 1 was actually looking forward to Mr. Rogers.
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer As the final days of June come up, the harvest of wheat in Pitt County is drawing to a close. This year, according to Pitt County Extension Service Chairman Leroy James, the harvest period took place just a little behind the average time of early to mid-June. With the cool spring we had, the wheat did not get its best growth early on. James thinks the 1983 yield of wheat may also be less than that of 1982. which he termed a ver\ good wheat year.
Figures for the 1982 summer crop shows that more than 12.000 acres were planted in wheat The average production for last years crop was 60 bushels to the acre, and farmers received $3 a bushel for their wheat. ' James said One reason more farmers do not plant wheat. James pointed out', is because of the pa\ ment in kind, or as we call it. the PIK program. Under this program farmers receive amounts varying from about $1'35 to $150 an acre not to plant wheat, cotton and corn.
Letters Given To DA Office
JACKSONVILLK. N.C. lAP) ~ A correspondent for a Wilmington newspaper Thursday turned over to the Onslow County District Attorney's Office eight letters Delsenia Mae IXdgado wrote to her imprisoned ex lover, WillieJ. Gladden
Mrs. Delgado is facing a charge of perjury stemming from allegedly contradictory statements she made during her trial in the murder of her husband Gladden, a former Marine sergeant, was con victed of the kilting and was sentenced to death.
Gladden Thursday gave Wilmington Morning Star correspondent Donna Long pt'rmission to relinquish the letters to prosecutors Mrs. Long was given the letters by Gladden and used them as the basis for a story earlier this week
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A bonus in cultivating wheat in the local clime is that the growing season is long and warm enough to permit the cultivatkm of a second, fast-producing crop following the harvest of wheat. Wheat for summer harvest is planted in the fall, in October or November," James said. With a June harvest, farmers can turn around and immediately plant soybeans behind wheat.
Another factor prompting farmers to plant wheat is its a good rotation crop, one that farmers like to use
for rotation purposes.
There is (me minor problem. Wheat, like the cultivation of any grain crop, results in a fairiy heavy growth of weeds. Thats why you will find a number of farmers who bum the stubble off immediately after harvest.
Our recommendation is that when possible, the stubble be left and turned under. It helps to hold moisture in the land and the straw also enriches the land. Its a matter of individual choice, and this year because of the amount of rain weve
had, burning off the stubble does iK)t hurt as much as it would in a dry year.
Asked about the extent of cultivation of other grain crops, James said wheat is by far the most significant grain crop cultivated in Pitt County. A few farmers grow oats, mostly for livestock feed. But in contrast to more than 12,000 acres planted in wheat last year, there was only a total of about 800 acres planted in oats. The yield was good, about 95 bushels an acre. Those who sold their oats got a price of $1.40 a bushel.
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18-ThcDayReflector,GreenvUle,N.C.Friday, June 24,1983
There Is No Peace On Nicaraguan-Honauran Border
- . .... noim Miar horo cairl a nmee frpolv anH hac Ihraal.
By JOSEPH B. FRAZIER Associated Press Writer
SA.N JOSE. Corta Rica AP) - The twisting, unpaved mountain roads paralleling both sides of the tense Nicaragua-Honduras border can be .calm one minute and battlefields the next.
Despite their surface tranquility, violence and death often wait around the
next curve or over the next hill on either side of the frontier.
American journalists Dial Torgerson of the Los Angeles Times and Richard Cross, a free-lance photographer, wre killed on such a road on the Honduran side Tuesday when their white Toyota was split in half by shell fire.
Honduras accused San-
LONG, DUSTY ROAD Two people walk along the dusty dirt road which runs along the Honduran side of the Honduras-Nicaragua border in rugged jungle terrain. The border is about 100 yards to the left of the road. Two journalists were killed along the border on just such a road. (AP Laserphoto)
dinista troops of firing on the journalists car. but Nicaraguas leftist government denied the charge.
The attack came on an isolated stretch of dirt road between villages of Cifuentes and Las Trojas, about 75 miles east of Tegucigalpa but 215 miles by car because the route snakes around and over mountains.
The Honduran government said the car was only 15 feet from the border when it was hit by gunfire. A government communique said it had just passed a lumber truck and was climbing a hill when it was struck by a projectile and hurled into the air.
The automobile was then hit by a high-powered grenade and was also machine-gunned. All the shooting was done from Nicaraguan territory by Sandinista troops, it said.
The other side of the border can be equally dangerous.
In May, a dozen foreign journalists traveling in a military convoy survived a rebel ambush in northern Nicaragua that left 11 guerrillas and two government soldeirs dead. The ambush was north of Jalapa - 15 miles across the border from where Torgerson and Cross died.
That part of the border, 180 miles north of Managua, has been the scene of some of the fierciest fighting since rebels launched a major offensive in March to topple the San-- dinistas, who led a revolution ousting rightist President Anastasio Somoza in July 1979.
Rebel troops flow regularly from Honduras into Nicaragua, peasants on the Honduran side say. On the Nicaraguan side pitched battles are frequent as Nicaraguan troops try to cut them off.
"We dont sleep much'at night living so close. Its
quiet here now but we are still afraid. We are afraid for ourselves and we are afraid of losing what little we have, a store clerk in Cifuentes said recently.
In El Salvador today, and four years ago during the Nicaraguan civil war, journalists traveled with white flags on their cars and international press signs on the windshields.
Such precautions are not common in Honduras, but the Honduran government said the car rented by Torgerson and Cross carried a sign on the back identifying it as international press and also a small white banner.
'The roads zig-zag up steep hillsides, pass along ridgetops and drop through gullies, often requiring vehicles to ford streams and shallow rivers.
They are a bushwackers dream.
Many drivers honk their car horns at each curve to avoid surprising nervous soldiers on either side.
A recent two-day trip along the border found it calm, although peasants said they often heanl gunfire from the Nicaraguan side.
We consider that to be Nicaraguas problem. It is
Disclose Informant Led To Bid-Rigging Charges
calm over here. said a Honduran army major leading a patrol along the border.
The Honduran military presence is much smaller than the Nicaraguan presence on its side.
Nicaragua has assigned some of its best troops to the area to stem what it claims is an invasion sponsored by the United States and Honduras.
Honduras says it keeps only a minimum of troops on the border because it does not want to ^ark clashes with the Sandinista forces. Nicaragua contends the Honduran troop presence is small so the insurgents can
cross freely and has threatened war if Honduras does not halt the crossings.
Even farmers who havt ^nt their lives in the an^. disagree on where the border* runs in some areas. They argue over whether border is this streambed or that treeline or hilltop. ,
A teenager in Cifuent said, We have seen some Sandinista forces on this side, but it look^ like an accident. They looked lost. Hondurans in the villages near the border also say rebel bands move freely, sometimes by truckload, along the roads on the Honduras side.
ASHEVILLE, N.C(AP)-An informant provided the critical link which took state investigators from highway bid rigging cases to bid-rigging among electrical contractors, the deputy state attorney general in charge of the states construction bid rigging investigation said Thursday.
"The electrical bid-rigging was not a direct off shoot of the highway bid-rigging, H.A. "Al Cole Jr told a group of state attorneys general at a convention in Asheville. "But we had an informant who was in jail on worthless check charges and he contacted us. At first we did not pay a lot of attention, but later we did.
Following a similar complaint from what Cole called another employee, state investigators obtained search warrants in July 1981 for Watson Electric Co. in Wilson and "got reems and reems of material.
Cole told delegates attending the summer meeting of the National Association of Attorneys General that a few days later lawyers repre
senting electrical contracting companies started contacting the attorney generals office.
Since 1980 when bid-rigging investigations spilled over into North Carolina from adjoining states, the state has recovered some $12.5 million in restitution, Cole said.
So now when we settle with contractors, we now require them to tell not only about the project at hand, but also about all the projects they have been involved in and what their involvement was, Cole said. "And if other projects turn up, we go back to them again.
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WORTHY OF AN ARTIST S ATTENTION ... Throu^iout rural North Carolina, structures, trees, fences, and grasses offer a wealth of
photographic material at any time of day. This scene, with its strong contrast of colors, is ideal for a color photograph.
Summer Photographs
Summer photography has special rewards. Grasses and wildflowets are at their peak. Trees, dense with foliage, create deep pockets of light and shadows. Summer days provide opportunities to capture nature in eastern Carolina fullness for contrast, the same landscapes can be photographed in winter months when tree limbs are bare and grasses and flowers dormant for another season.
People too are more in evidence outdoors in summer months working in fields, tanning at the beach, or enjoying the pleasures of fishing.
The photographs on this page are a mere sampling of the variety of photographic subjects at hand in the warm months of summei. Amateurs and professionals alike can assemble a souvenir collection of summer pictures to bring back memories of happy summer treks.
Photogrophs By Jerry Raynor
PEOPLE ... are consistently fascinating photographic subjects. Here, Kurt Schaefer, a fisherman living near Bath, keeps a watchful
eye on his two-year-old son, Jeremiah, who was helping his parents in yard work on a Saturday afternoon.
mUlNGE TO PHOTOGRAPHERS ... tion
alMto of a Uttle rwult from a buildliig fire w the erosloo of
aff the fw"*- time and weather on old wood.
A Widespread Summer Flower
yWlLD FLOWERS . . of many varlties abound during the summer. A favorM lubject with photographers, they are
excellent for close up detail shots as well as photographs of massed bedding as in this group of orange day lilies.
)
.1
20-The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-FrWiiw
PEANUTS
NOu) REMEMBER, WE HAVEN'T COME All THE WAV TO "POINT L0BO5" JUST TO TAKE VACATION PiaURESi
I WANT EACH OF you TO LOOK AROUNP FOR P055I6LEPH0T06RAPHS TMATMAV HAVE REAL...
BC
FSCM uncle NCW?
Cntpfii(i Inc IMJ
PUTTiNi^faNrHc^D /^6C?PLANP INTC?rHe 5C>IL e>ANlC _
f
He WANTS iz?S2(?ew' rcvieTpuctr
6>IA
NUBBIN
I WMO'6 e&NDiN' F TH eiOWAue, UCrW ?
BLONDIE
Wl CAN'T DECIDE { WHAT TD ORDER j
TRY OUR SPECIAL TODAY-SWISS STEAK'S
I'? /'Tv
WHEN I BRING IT OUTTA TMB KITCHEN I YODEL
BEETLE BAILEY
>OME cOLLECT/OH, GAReel
y
I HAVE BEER CAMS FROM 62
PHANTOM
FRANK & ERNEST
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
AnEmPTbTDJW-sm THE MDCIHAR PLAM AT THREE/V)IL I5UTN0 UJITH AfORD UD RILED EARUER TDOAV.
0)HEM EMGINlEEf AT THE PLANT HOOKED PTHETmPER CABLES TD THE WKON& TERMINALS ON THE CAR'S BATTEKO/
HOOUEUER,NOHARM OJAS DONE TO THE REACTOR ITSELF./
WITH OORD ON THE ORBrTlND LTD, HERE'S ORSOENCE REPORTER,-
MONEY
InYottr
Pocket!
When you need money, cabh m on the items that are laying around tt\e nouse--'tems that you no longef use
Our Family Rates
3 Lines
4 Days
*4.00
Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of $200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.
Use Your VISA or MASTER CARO
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
Classified Ads 752-6166
-.
V
YOUR AD
COULD BE WORKING
FOR YOU IN THIS
SPACE e e
ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED
Cksi^ted
Adf
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of )e estafe of George Beverly Flem Ing late of Pitt County, North
Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to presant them to the
underslgrted Executrix on or before December 5, 193 or this notice or same will be pleaded In ber of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate pleese make Immediate iment.
. his 1st day of June. 1983.
Dorothy Augusta M. Fleming ) 208 Drexel Land Greenville, N C 27834 Executrix of the estate of George Beverly Fleming, deceased June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983
pe^r
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Annie Mills Stokes late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor on or before December 5, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment. This 18th day of May, 1983 Clarence Phelps Stokes Route 9, Box 3h Greenville, N C 27834 E xecutor of the estate of Annie Mills Stokes, deceased.
June 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983
.COURT
SUPERK
OF THE
varoiina, irusiee, eniereo foreclosure proceeding, the signed. William P. Mayo, Ti will expose tor sale at public i
jURT DIVISION 83SP217 NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER FORECLOSURE OF THE DEED OF TRUST OF ALVIN LEROY ELKS AND WIFE. TESSIE A ELKS,
GRANTORS
TO
WILLIAM P MAYO,
TRUSTEE
As recorded In Book P 4 at Page 592, of the PItt County Registry NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained In that cer tain Deed of Trust executed and delivered by Alvin Leroy Elks and wife, Tessle A Elks, dated March 15, 1978, and recorded In the Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina. In Book P 40 at Page 592 and because of default in the pay ment of the indebtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out or perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and pursuant to the demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, and pursuant to the Order of the Clerk of Superior Court of PlH County, North Carolina, Trustee, entered In this under Trustee,
[pose tor sale at public auction on the 4th DAY OF July 1983, at 12 00 O'CLOCK; Noon, at the door in the PITT County Courthouse, Green ville. North Carolina, the following described real property (including Improvements tnereon):
That tract of land situate In Switt Creek Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, on the North side of State Road Number 1152 which lead from Black Jack to Grimesland, bounded now or formerly on the North and East by the Caton land, on the South by the aforesaid road and the West by the McLawhorn land containing 68 acres, more or less, more par ticularly described as follows: BEGINNINGatacartaxle corner In the North edge of the said road at a ditch, a corner of the Caton land, and running thance North 6 9' East 1677.7 feet To a canal, thence with the canal North 84 14' West 556.7 feet, thence North 85 23' West 1094.5 feet to a railroad Iron corner, thence South 5 37' West 1849.4 feet to the North edge of said road; thence with the North edge of said road South 85 27' East 402 3feet; South 87 50' East 502 6 feel and North 85 59' East 746 7 feet to the cart axle corner at the beginning. property ADDRESS:
State Road Number 1152 Swift Creek Township Pitt County,
North Carolina 27834.
The sale will be made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, restrictions and easements of record and assessments. If any.
The record owners of the above described real property as reflected upon the records In the office ot the Pitt County Register ot Deeds' not more than ten (iO) days prior to the osting ot this Notice are Alvin eroy Elks and wife, TessieA. Elks. Pursuant to North Carolina General Statute 45-21.10(b), and the terms of the Deed of Trust, any sue cessful bidder may be required to deposit with the Trustee Immediate ly upon conclusion of the sale a cash posit ot five (5%) percent ot the bid plus (50.00. any successful bid der shall be required to tender the full balance purchase price so bid In cash or certified check at the time the Trustee tenders to him a Deed tor the property or attempts to tender such Deed, and should said successful bidder fail to pay the full balance purchase price so bid at that lime, he shell remain liable on his bid as provided tor In North Carolina General Statute 45-21.30(d) and (e).
This sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by law.
This the 3rd day ot June, 1983.
Wl LLIAM P AMYO. TRUSTEE ATTORNEY AT LAW 103 West Second Street P.O. Box 635
Washington. 27889
June
North Carolina
Telephone: (919 ) 946-2418
e 10.17, 34; July 1.1983
NOT
BY
Under and, by virtue of the^^wwer
_, - lien and
wife, Jean B. Allen, recorded In R46, Page 633. PIN County
ot sale contained In a certain_______
trust executed by Jim Bob Allan and 6 -----
Page 633, PIN County eglstry, the unwslgned SubstNute
rustee, having foraclosad and of _ __ for tale the described; and whereat within ten
farad
' lands hereinafter
(10) days an upset bid was filed with the Clerk of Superior Court and an Ordv llrectir -
r_________________
NO/100 DOLLARS ((45.303.00), the undersigned will offer for sale at public Mctlpn to the highest bidder lor cash at PIN C^ty (Courthouse door In the Cl^ of Greenville. North Carolina, at 13:00 Noon on tho 38th day of Juno, 1983, that cartain tract or parcol of land lying and being In Farmvllie Township, PIN County, North Carolina, and moro par ticularly descrlbod as follows: BEGINNING at an Iron located cm thf southorn rl^t of woy lino of Sb 1300. said Iron Ming tivo northwetf cornor of Lot No. 4 a tho AAarvIn V.
ssK,.i5srxsrfiW'8JSR
Roglstry; thienco from the point of
Rogistry; boginning 45 mln. E
thus dotormlnod s: 33 dog. 45 mln. E. 300 foot along tho lino of Lot No. 4 obovo ntonlToned to an Iron, cornoring; thonco S. 66 dog. 15 mln. \N. 100 foot to an Iron, cornor Ing; thonco N. 33 dog. 45 mln. W. 300 foot to tho southern right of way line ' SR 1300. cprnering; ttience N 66 . I5 mln. E^tOOfeettoNiepolntof Inning.
Id property Is to M told for cosh
i.
PUBLIC NOTICES
subiect to ad valorem property taxes, assessments, and I any rthw prior encumbrances of record. If
**Vfursuant to North Carolina General Statutes. Section 45-31.10(b), and the forms ot the deed of trust, any successful bidder may ^ raquircd to deposit with the Substitute Trustee immediately upon conclusion ot Nte sale a ,lt of ten percent (10%) of the
lM'siti.wr.'i.a!. 8lfrWo'5Tir!55t^
(0,000 00). Any^cewtul Wddw shall be required to tender Nw full balance purchase price so bid in cash or corf If led chock at the time the Substitute Trustee tenders to him a deed for the property or attempts to tender such deed, aM should said succassful bidder foil to pay the full balance purchase price so bid at that time, he shall remain liable on his bid as provided for In the North Carolina General Statutes. Section 4531.30(d) and (e).
This sale will be held open ten (10) days for upset bids as required by
*Thls 7th day of Juna, 1983.
James A. Hodges, Jr.,
Substitute T rustee 106 South McLeween Street P.O. Drawer 3169 Kinston, NC 38501 Tel.: (919) 537 8131 June 17, 34,1983
PILI IN THE!
DisTRir^^uSVi
3RTH CAROLINA
NO 83J13 ^NEsf^COURT
IIVISION
TO WILLIAM TETTERTON TAKE NOTICE Nat a petition
seeking to terminate your parental rights nas been tiled in the above titled action
pres ______,
having been born on or about July 1974, in Beaufort County,
The nature ot the relief being sought is the termination of any or all parental rights ot the father in and to the minor male child irescribed in the petition, said child or
........ lai
Washington. North Carolina
You are required to answer the petition within forty (40) days after June 17.1983, exclusive of such date, said date being the data of first publication of this notice, and upon your failure to answer the petition within the time prescribed, your parental rights to the said child will be terminafed.
You are hereby notified that you are entitled to be appointed counsel if you are indigent, provided you request counsel at or before the time of the hearing, and that you are entitled to attend any hearing effecting ir parental rights.
'his the 15th lay of June, 1983 EVERETT & CHEATHAM BY:
RyalW Tayloe Attorneys tor Petltlx>er P.O Box 1230 Greenville, NC 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 June 17, 24; July 1, 1983
yo^r
IN THE
FILE NO 83 J 12 FILM NO
EGENERAL COURT CTCOURT'OIVISIOt
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION north CAROLINA PITT COUNTY IN RE: WATERS, AMINOR CHILD SERVICE OF PROCESS BY
TO
PUBLICATION
THE FATHER OF
A MALE
CHILD BORN ON OR ABOUT July IB, 1974, IN BEAUFORT COUNTY. WASHINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA, RESPONDENT
TAKE NOTICE that a petition seeking to terminate your parental rights has been filed in the above en titled action.
The nature ot the relief being sought is the termination ot any and all parental rights ot the father in and to the minor child described In the petition, said child having been born on or about July IB. 1974. In Beaufort County, Washington. North Carolina.
You are required to answer the petition within forty (40) days after June 17, 1983, exclusive of such date, said date being the date of first publication ot this notice, and upon your failure to answer the petition within the time prescribe<], your
Parental rights to (he said child will e terminafed.
You are hereby notified that you are entitled to be appointed counsel if you are Indigent, provided you re quest counsel at or before the lime of the hearing, and that you are entitled to attend any hearing effecting your parental rights.
This the ISth lay of June, 1983 EVERETT 8.CHEATHAM
S/'t
P O Box 1 Greenville. NC 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 4257 June 17, 24, Julyl, 1983
Ryal W. Tayloe
torneys for Petitioner 20
IN THE GENERAL COURT
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY BESSIE LEE ANDREWS Plaintiff, vs.
FOREST ANDREWS Defendant
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been tiled in the above entitled action and the nature ot relief being sought is an absolute divorce on the grounds of one year continuous separation.
You are required to make defense to such pleadings not later than the 1st day of August, 1983 and upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.
This 15 day of June, 1983 JAMESE BROWN Attorney for the Plalntitt 123 West Third Street P.O Box 1356 Greenville. NC 27834 Telephone: (919) 758 7255 June 17, 24, July 1,8, 1983
ESTABLISH^^E^TE SERVICE
Notice is hereby given that the Branch Banking and Trust Com pany. 223 West Nash Street, Wilson. Wilson County. North Carolina, has made application to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation tor its written consent to establish a Remote Service Facility to be located at North Side ot Mendenhall Student Center on the Campus of East Carolina University, Green ville, Pitt County, North Carolina. The application was accepted for III Ing M (he Atlanta Regional Office of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation on June 9, 1983.
Any person wishing to comment on this application may file his or her comments In writing with the Regional Director of the FeMral Deposit Insurance Corporation at Its Regional Office located at 233 Peachtree Street, N.E., Peachtree Center Harris Tower, Suite 2400, Atlanta, Georgia 30043. It any person desires to profest the granting of this aoolication he or she files a written ice of his or her intent with the
Rejj^lM^^lrKtor on or tefor^ July app
Regional Office (at the above ad
9, 1b83. The nonconf Idential portions of the appMcation are on tile in the
dress) as part ot the public file main tained by the Corporation. This file
Is available for public Inspection buslna ce is pubi to part 303.14 (b) ot the RuLes and
during regular L. This notice is i
mess hours illshed pursuant
Regulations ot the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Branch Banking and Trust Company L. Vincant Lowe, Jr.
President 8i Chief Executive Officer June 17, 24,1983
ANDOF^AjjHEAR.NG
The public wIlTlake notice ttiat tha preliminary assessment roll for the street ^Improvement project on Jones Street lying Mtween North Street and Hammond Street, which was completed on the I3th day of June, 1983. has been prepared by the Town Clerk.
Street improvement will be curb ai^ guHer and stones.
The preliminary assessment roll will M evalleble W public Inspection In tho oftlco of the Town Clerk until the date set tor the public hear-1^ on the preliminary assessment
The Board of Aldormen will hold e public hearing at 7 00 p.m. on July 11, 1903 In the Board Room ot the Municipal Building, In the Town ot WIntervMle. North Carolina, for tho purpose of hoering objoctlons to the preliminary assessment roll from ell Interested pysons who appear.
TownGlerk June 24.1983
NOTICEtJFTRV UNDER
I SALE OF rURE OF
PUBLIC NOTICES sale in the tounfy Courthouse ot
NS?^(tar"oliM. a^ o'cl^,
on Friday. July 8, 983, all tain lot or parcel ot land situad ing and being in Green Township. Pitt County, Carolina, and more designated and described follows
Paris Avenue, Greenville, Caroline
Legal description: All oiM
Block^'J" ot the map of the r
Brothers property according plat thoreof which Is duly w'
In the office of th#_Regls^ ot ot Pitt County In Book M 9 *i 356 end 357, to which map r is hereby directed for a r.. curate description and being a the west side of Peris A veiwe h a frontage thereon ot 50 feet depth ofTSO teat. ^
Record owners ot property:
Lae Smith, Jr. ,
The sale will be mato subi^
and wiil remain open fen dey^ upset Wd as requfred by lew. J Substitute Trustee will requW cash de^it of five percett of amount ot the bid from the cesstui bidder at the sale.
This 10th day of June, 1983.
John B. Whittey Substitute Trustee 330 Law Building 730 East Trade Street Charlotte, North Carolina: June34, Julyl, 1983
UNDER AND BY VIRTUE Ol^ power and authority contain that certain Deed ot Trust exf and delivered M Elwood Glsjm I ron and wife, Deborah Sue Nar dated Atjgust 24, 1981, and raca in Book GSO at page 198 in the c ot the Register ot Deeds for County, North Carolina, because ot default in the payiw^ indebtedness thereby secured i failure to carry out and perto stipulations and agreements I contained and, pursuant to d ot the owner and holder ot debtednes secured by said
Trust, the undersigned Trustee will expose for
sale at i
auction to the highest bidder cash at the usual pTace of sale in I ty Courthouse ot Pitt CounF City of GreenvlMe,
Count
the
Carolina, at2:Mp.m. on Fr ly 8, 1983, all that certain parcel of land situate, lying i mg In Greenville Township. County, North Carolina, and particularlydesignatedand ''' ed as follows:
Type ot property and loci Residence and lot located at Re Box X 59, Forrest Acres. Gre North Carolina.
Legal description: Being Le 11 ot Forrest Acres SubdlvisN shown on map thereof William R. Harding, September, 1968, and reco Map Bck 17 at page 37 ot tMj County Registry, to which re* is made for a more complete curate description.
Record owners of prop Elwood Glenn Narron and Deborah Sue Narron The sale will be made sub|e<:}J all unpaid taxes and assess; and will remain open ten dayi upset bid as required by law. Substitute Trustee will re>uii cash deposit ot five per cenf amount ot the bid from fh cessful bidder at the sale This 10th day of June, 1983.
John B. Whitley Substitute Trustee 320 Law Building 730 East Trade Street Charlotte. North Carolina 3 June24; Julyl, 1983
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S i
REAL ESTATE
UNDERANDBY VIRTUE I power and authority contatM That certain Deed ot Trust ene and delivered by Elton Th Savage. Jr., and wife, Bevei, Savage, dated July 24, 1978, recorded in Book Z46 at paga , the office of the Register of ( _ for Pitt County, North Carolina, j because ot default in the payn the Indebtedness thereby and failure to carry out and | the stipulations and agrt therein contained and, purs demand of the owner and t the indebtedness secured Deed of Trust, the un<* Substitute Trustee will exp sale at public auction to the bidder for cash at the usual pla sale in the County Courthouse or ot Greem 00 o'clock I on Friday. July 8. 1983, all I tain lot or parcel of land siti ing and being in WInti Township. Pitt County, Carolina, and more partica designated and descrit follows:
Type ot pKCwerty and lOCBB Residence an<i lot located at Fairwood Lane, Greenville, Carolina.
Legal Description: Being allot I 7, Block 0, Section II, Oakdale T division, as shown on map th made by McDavId Associates, u April 5, 1971. and recorded in j Book 20. pages 173 and 173-A, r Pitt County Registry, to I. reference is made for a mora l plete and accurate description.. Record owners of property: ge, Jr., and , ige.
The sale will oe made subj< all unpaid taxes and assessn and will remain open ten day_ upset bid as required by law^ Substitute Trustee will rxiu cash deposit ot five per ceni < amount ot the bid from tti cessful bidder at the sale.
This 10th day of June, 1983.
John B Whitley Substitute Trustee 320 Law Building 730 East Trade street Charlotte, North Carolina June24; Julyl, 1983
sale in the County Coi County, in the City North Carolina, at 2:1
Thomas Savage, Beverly S. Savage.
1103 BROAD STREf
will receive bids for furnF labor, material, equipment, i
vices required tor modernii ling It located at
existing low-rent housing pro
Kearney Park, Project NC Ml Greenville, North Carolln, until 2:00 PM Local Current dard Time, on July 6, 1983 at < flees of the Local Housing Au At that time all bids recelvet publicly opened and read aloi The modernization prok PROJECT NC 22 2 consists 0 no limited to, ihe Work described as contained Id ^ec^tications and drawings i
Contract Work Project NC ;
of 500
eludes installation
If.
the power and auttwrlty contained In thafcartaln 0^ qt Truet executM and dallvared y Wlllla Laa Smith! Jr., datad Qctobw 13, INI. and lad In Bo^M at
lea of tf^
pm County, ______
and failure to carry out and parform tha stipulations and agroomonts therein contained and, pursuant to damand of tha ownar and holdor of tha indabtodnau secured by said Dead of Trust, tha undarslgnod Substituto Trustoa will axpoao for, sola at public auction to tha hlghalt biddar for gash at tha usual place at t
area lighting, exterior ctoors, dows, prefinished fascla/i system, attic ventilators, me cabinets, ceramic tile base, bars, grab bars, plumbing tit all fixtures, furnaces, water t and attic insulation. Rev chens In 23 units. Enclose and water heaters.
Proposed forms of bk Documents, Including Pla Specifications, are on file at flee of the Architect, Brad Associates Incorporated, 3025 T mont Road, tfE., (MAI_ DRESS: P O Box 52426, Zip I Atlanta. Georgia 30305;
Local Housing Authority.
Copies ot the documen obtained by prime contra, contractors, or material from the Architect, tocuments are obtainable <
par set, the cost of repr_____
documents will be Issued by I chitect until the cost of re has been received Rt documents shall be acco a street address and number.
Prim# Contractors who i documents within tan (10) i tha bid opening will be thair deposit, cost of i for tha first two (3) documents Issued. No i made on additional sets whether raturnad or not.
Prime Contractors tocuments and do not submW ( or do not notify tha seventy two (73) txtors | opening ot thaIr Intent f a^id. forfait thair ai regardless of whether are raturnad or not.
Subcontractors N pliars may purchaia , documents for the cost qt n tion. No portion of ttw reproduction Is rati _____ ,
A certified check irawn on J or trust company insuratt Federal Ooposit Insurance C tion, payabit to tho satisfactory bond oxocu.. coptablo suroty on tho form contolnod In tho r and In an amount i caiit (S%)oftho bMq|Mllbai
..iroS
and pay tor : '
tod with Mch bM. ^ biddar wlllba required ^ Ml pay tor satlstactont iM rmanco and Paymant Bonil Attontlon Is callad to tftgj ons for oqual omploMHN
slons
r-
oqual _ and paymant i minimum oil
vagas as sat lorth In tk loM must btpaWen Nik The Locar Hquolnil reserves ttw right to raf bm atnd to wiflva anvl inthabWdlno.
No bids may be ..
period ot torty-Hva (4S) i CHiant to th# oponing r * tho consent ot tho Authority.
THE HOUSING AUTHOAI
8F THE CITY OF REENVILLE ^ J.M. Lanqy.EMOcutN Juno 3A 38,1913
I
I'l
SPECIAL NOTICES
El Stop in and register at G Robinson Jewelers, Evans AAail tar free gift given away weekly. >lo r necessary.
hFETIME EMERGENCY Prch ction for your pef. Free defails, aturday Downtown Mall, outside iradWtaws._
ho
AUTOMOTIVE
RENTAWRECK bent dependable iwrt cars at low patei and save. 752 2277 _
Autos For Sle
|CARS$H)0!TRUCKS$75
Available at local government ^le. Call I-619-549 3M, extension h504 for your IW3 directory on how >purchase. 24 hours
SELL YOUR CAR the National kufoflnders Way! Authorized aler in Pitf County. Hastings . Call 7M 0114__
IT977 8UICK CENTURY V6, lautomatic, power steering and brakes, new radials Good condi Ition. SiaOO. 1974 Ford Truck re stored, $2595.. 757 3100 days. 758 6331 IniohtS.__
012
MAC
IaMC pacer 1977. air. power ' ig, am/fm stereo, low mile ^y good condition $1600.
1756 7841.
1974 AMERICAN MOTORS Hornet Stationwagon. Automatic, air. power steering. Good trans Dortation. $900 or best otter Call 1!^ 7157 after 6 p m_
1979 AMC Concord OL wagon $3395 nr best Otter Must sell 753^27
013
Buick
197$ LESABRE One owner, very I clean Excellent condition $1850 Call757 1836._,_
1978 BUICK SKYHAWK. all extras. 30 miles per gallon, new steel radials. low mileage. $3400 neoofiable. 756 8491
1981 BUICK SKYLARK 4 door. AM/FM stereo, air. low mileage 753 4303._~
014
Cadillac
1981 CADILLAC Coupe Deville Loaded with options Priced to sell Call BB8.T William Handley 753 6889_
01s Chevrolet
wSS^amar^TonvertTb^
Rebuilt motor and transmission, new paint, just like new $5350 Call 343 6439.
1974 CORVETTE 350 engine 4 speed, air, tilt, power steering and brakes. AM/FM stereo, white exte rior, tan interior. 80.000 original miles. 2nd owner, $5800 756 4044
032
Boats For Sale
1965 ir OMC inboard/outboard with tilt trailer. $950 or best otter. 7 3903
1981 16 HOBIE Cat and trailer. $3300. Call 756^._
034 Campers For Sale
APACHE TRAVEL TRAILER, 25', air, full bath. $3700. Call 746 3530 or
746 m
JAYCO POPUPS New Camptown RV Call 746 3530.__
ARCRAFT hardtop, popup Very good condition. $riXT
zes. c( Sport! O^ri
TRUCK COVERS Ail sizes, colors Leer Fibergla tops. 350 units in stock.
Raleioh. N C 834 3774.
USED JAYCO POPUP Sleeps 8 Excellent condition Call 746 3& or 746 4303.
15 TRAVEL TRAILER 3 double beds. Good condition. No bath $995 tirm. Shakespear trolling motor, 12 pound thrust, $50 753 5800.
1973 DODGE mini motor home. Excellent condition. Sleeps 4, com pletely self contained. 746-3407.
036
Cycles For Sale
KAWASAKI KZ 650 Excellent condition Touring saddle, matching trunk, fairing, saddle bags, other extras 756 5789 after 5 p m
1974 SPORTSTER 1000. AAag rims, lots of chrome, 4,000 miles, rebuilt engine, lots of new parts. $2800 or best otter Must sell. 757 1136 or after 5 p.m 753 0946._
1978 KAWASAKI KE175. Like brand new On and off road 500 miles.753 5003
1979 YAMAHA MC6S0 Special Excellent condition. $1300 Call
1980 HONDA CX 500. Excellent condition 758 7947or 757 1336.
1982 GS850L SUZUKI 2300 miles Shaft driven. Perfect condition Excellent buy Priced right Call 756 1643
039
Trucks For Sale
CLEAN 1970 PICKUP truck Air, heat, automatic transmission, and new tires. Call 756 0461._
WANTED: 1975 through 1977 Blazer in good condition 753 7645_
1962 3/4 TON GMC pick up truck 5 speed, full size bed $1000 Call 756 1697___
1972 DODGE Tradesman Van $400 negotiable Call 756 0407 or 752 0395 anytime
1974 RANCHERO 351 (Cleveland). 4 barrel, blue, 93,000 miles, air, power steering and brakes, automatic. $I5(X) 746 2294 after 7 p.m.
1975 JEEP J-10 pick up High mileage New paint, air condition, stereo cassette New wheels and tires $3500 753 3437_
1975 CHEVROLET Caprice, fully equipped 758 4736
1976 CHEVETTE, 4 speed, air, aM/FM radio, cassette player Black with white interior. 753 4131
1979 CHEVY CHEVETTE Metallic blue. Excellent condition. 4 speed with air, AM/FM $2395 758 4151
1979 IMPALA 4 door AM/FM, air, power windows, must sell! 753 5454 or 757 0223._
017
Dodge
1974 DART 3 door, air. power steering. 6 cylinder, 65,000 miles. radial tires. 746 6146
Want to sell livestock? Run a Classified ad tor quick response
018
Ford
FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON 1979. V8 engine, fully loaded, excellent condillon, one owner, low mueage. Creme with tan interior, $4800.00. Call 756 1549 evenings or 756'6336davs___
1973 PINTO, automatic with air, oood condition. 758 4736
1975 MUSTANG 4 cylinder, 4 speed. Qoed tires $800 753 5090_
1975 MUSTANG AAARK II Power steering and brakes, air. Call 756 5566 anytime
1978 FORD FAIRMONT FUTURA
Air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, power steering. Must sell! $2250 752 9716___
021
Oldsmobile
1970 98 OLDSMOBILE, price negotiable. Call 756 6994 after 5 30 pm., 756 5434 between 8:30 and 5 00
1979 4x4 SILVERADO Air condi tioning, power steering and brakes. 30,000 miles $5000. 753 5037_
1981 TOYOTA PICKUP truck Blue, long bed $5500 or best otter 752 0779or 758 4990.
040
Child Care
BONDED BABYSITTING service now ottering 24 hour, 7 days a week services lor infants, children, hand icaps, and elderly. Your home or the sitters. Rates are reasonable and we welcome spur of the moment contacts Mid Eastern 756 4254 days, 757 3539 nights.
048
PETS
AKC DACHSHUND PuPpy 355 6476 AKC REGISTERED Great Danes I male, 1 female, black and white 1' 3 years old, full grown Ears cropped, all shots. 753 3913 ____
AKC YORK SHIRE Terriors, Schnauzers. Cocker Spaniels, and Bassett Hounds Call 75 2681
BOXER PUPS tor sale AKC champion line. Males and tern lies, tails docked, dewclaws removed Wormed and healthy. 758 0975 anytime
DOG OBEDIENCE CLASSES 8 weeks. $25, begin June 30 Basic 6 30 to 7 :15. advanced 715 to 8 00 Call 756 1348 to register.
EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE
training and boarding. 758 5590 HIMALAYIAN KITTENS, 8 to 13 weeks, registered, 1st shots. .3 males $125 and $150. 3 temales $200 each Mavsville, 1 743 3731
PIT BULL PUPPIES tor sale 6 brendle, 6 fawn. Tails cut. wormed, and shots Call 757 0033. ask lor Kathy__
SIAMESE KITTENS 7 weeks old. $35 758 3032.
1976 CUTLASS Air, tilt steering, extra clean $3300.753 0033 anytime 1978 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass. 2 door Full^ equipped. Priced to sell Call
YELLOW MALE LAB 3 years old 100% full blooded No papers 756
7903atter6o m_
2 SIBERIAN HUSKIES Red with blue eyes. AKC registered Wormed and shots. 753 5333 $135___
1978 OLDS CUTLASS, 3 door Brougham. AM/FM stereo, tape player, tilt wheel, electric windows, real nice. 758 1650
051
Help Wanted
022
Plymouth
>1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER
Slant'6, Rally wheels, radial tires, Jensen AM/FM stereo cassette system. $1350 or best otter 756 4442 alter 5 30_
02i
Pontiac
PONTIAC, 1969 BONNEVILLE
90.000. Engine excellent, body fair Air condition 16/8 miles per gallon $580. 753 0613 after 5 pm
1966 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 door hard top. Excellent condition. 3n^ owner. 7 4903_
1920 LEMANS Sport convertible Power steering and brakes, air. Call 756 1697
ARE YOU INTERESTED in earn ing extra money? If you have a permanent full time job and would be interested in working evenings,
Rlease send following information ame. Address. Telephone number. Present employer, and three refer enees Send reply to Part time, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 37834
197S FIREBIRD ESPRIT 78,000 original miles, steel belted radials. $1^0.756 7303 _
ATTENTION REAL ESTATE AGENTS
We have one opening for an individ ual wifh a North Carolina Real Estate license. Must have a will ingness to work a minimum of 40 hours per week, enjoy working with people and a desire to continue your education in Real Estate. Training through Centurey 31 as well as inner office training to assure your success Sales aids, national refer rals. and local leads available. For >our confidenfial interview, call nn Bass at 756 3873
024
Foreign
DATSUN 340Z, 1972, red with black interior, 4 spee. good tires, runs goody needs paint |ob 12250. Call L09_____
AVON REPRESENTATIVES can
have summer fun wifh the money they make during working hours of Iheir choice!! work part time or full time and make up to 50%! Call 753 7006. ____
MAZDA 626. 1981. 4 door, luxury package, $6675. Call 355 3979
TOYOTA, 1976, Corolla Factory air. $1450. Gritton, 534 5414
VOLKSWAGEN DASHER 1975 $8()0. 746 3753
19: 1 DATSUN 510. Runs good $700 752 3547 anytime
1972 TOYOTA Good condition Call 756-5566 anytime
1974 MAZDA RX4 WAGON With rotary engine. Interior/exterior in excellent condition. Runs good, but
needs engine seals. $500.758-7045
1924 VOLKSWAGEN Bug Good co^ltion. Call 7M 5611 after 6 p.m. 1975 HONDA CIVIC 1 owner Good condition. Call 758 05l3after 5p.m
1975 VOLVO 164 E 4 door, loaded 756 7171._
756T 197 I
. 'MERCEDES 240 0 Dark blue, body and interior In very good condition. Call Washington, 946 3269 between 6 and 9 p. m
1977 SUBARU WAGON, automatic, guiar gas, extra clean. $1,595. 5gTter6pm
MAZDA GLC 4 door, air, FM cas
AM/FM cassette'"Good condition! Paceneootlable Call 756 7928,
19* FIAT SPIDER Only 30.000 lhMe$. Like new condition. Call 74A636I after 5
19f TR7 CONVERTIBLE, Briflsti grien. AM/FM cassette, $4300. Call
Istiw _
DATSUN 210 hatchback, natic, air, excellent condition. . gall 756 658t_
ITOYOTA CELICA ST 5 speed, steering and brakes. pFM, 45,000 miles One owner driver Excellent condition tneootiable Call 524 5975
I9W DATSUN 280ZX 2+2 Loaded, 5 ipioa $11,500 or best otter 757 1331 OrfOMi*
11|1 VOLKSWAGON SCIROCCO J0j0 miles, has everything, air, crblse, sunroof. Make otter. 757
DATSUN ,280 ZX T tops. rMth8gtC8ll7?4 71ftV-
030 BIcyciM For Salt
TAN 10 SPEED bike. $80.
BARBER/HAIR STYLIST Full time work Call for appointment 753 8855, The Head Hunter
USINESS ADMINISTRA
. lON/Data Processing Instructor Candidate must have Master's De
gree in Business Administration with documented strength in eco nomics, accounting, and E DP Knowleidge of COBOL, BASIC, RPG II Will Instruct day and/or night In business area. Usual duties of student advisor, etc. Minimum 3 years teaching and business experl ence preferred Position avaitable September 1st. Applications ac cepted through July 6fh to Employment Security Commission, Williamston, NC 27892 Martain Community College an Equal Op portunlty / Aft irmati ve Action Employer.
CARPENTER HELPERS wanted 752 6185.
EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Large corporatlori has outstanding sales opening for sales repre sentatlve. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambitious and show progress tor age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal in tervlew please submit resume stating personal history, education and business experience. Write Box 406. Greenville, NC 37835.
EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN
to work with established firm Excellent opportunity, good benefits. Please call 7M 334(1 (or interview
FULL TIME teller position. I 3 years previous experience neces sary. Apply at Branch Banking 8, Trust Co . third and Greene Street, Greenville Attention Juanice icott An Equal Opportunity molover
GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE and automatic transmission mechanic needed for automotive service de partment. Apply In person at Trent Oldsmobile Catfil' '
633 2213
(iliac and Buick Inc
agcr OT inv
partment who possesses skill quired to organize, staff, and r newly developed department.
0$ Boat For Sate
ir. Late 1982 model. Used 6 tequila sunrise, every itlon. trailer Included, 757 3939 anytime
s 75241400. nlohts 752 7646. II' sallboet. 5 hofse outboard. Fleet Cap
t9.WQ: mmi-
BIRD, 1973, ir Cox condition $1350. 756
RE CAT 15' with trailer.
TrI hull, 125 horse-OutbMrd. 81688.
AL
GENERAL SERVICES Administrator Young, progressive financial Institution requires man ager of the General Services De
---- iSasses skills re
run a
______^ Ma
jor functions include risk manage ment, real estate management, communications, purchasing, dis tribution, transportation, and central word processing. Salary commensurate with experience and qualifications. Send resume to Gen eral Services, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834
JOBOEVELOPERAVORKSITE MONITOR
Part time administrative poeition with a National Council on the Aging Senior Citizen Gmploynsent Program. Must be able to motivate older workers, "sell" the old^ worker to the business community, and provide supportive services to older workers. Perfect part tme position for retired business persons. Send resume by July I, Tinto:
/cMId f astJJtle V^Progratri^^
I East Title VPrograi
051
Help Wanted
AAARKETING
MANAGEMENT
Large, multi-line financial services company seeks bright person for marketing .
management.
nity otters 36 months ex training in financial marketing leading to career in first time management Outstanding benefits and bright career for right College background det expenence helpful. Submit resume to>0 Box a. Jacksonville. NC 28540
NEED MIDDLE AGED lady to spend nights with woman. 7 nights a week 746 3654
NEEDED EXPERIENCED pre ssman to run an A B Dick 360. Contact ScoM Bowen. Kinston Print Ino Company, 523 7654.
NURSING POSITIONS available RN and LPN. full lime and part time 75 bed ICF Competitive salary Please contact Oak Manor Nurstno Home. Snow Hill. 747 2868
PART TIME KENNEL help wanted Experienced only. Apply between 4 and 5 pm.. Helen's Groomlno World. 758
RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION
Supervisor Experienced required Send past experience summary Salary plus fringe benefits plus bonus available, mil to P O Box 859. Greenville, N C 27834
SALES MANAGER TRAINEE A
growing company with op
tortunifies tor advancement, xcellent income potential. Call tor application. GSC Products. 756-6386 between 10 am
SECRETARY For small chain of preschools. Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone calls please
SECRETARY NEEDED tor pro
(essional firm. Good typing skills required. Send resume to Pro tessional Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville. nC_
SERVICE WRITER needed. Good pay. excellent benefits Apply to Herbert Powell, Service Manager, Hastings Ford, E lOth Street
TEACHERS WANTED: 1 Social Studies position. Social Studies certification required, i Math posi tion. Math certification required 1 Secondary Choral Music, Music certification required. Persons in terested should call Director of Personnel at 823 3658 or write Director of Personnel, Tarboro City Schools, PO Box 370, Tarboro, NC 27886,^_____
TECHNICAL WRITER ROpidly expanding financial Institution has opportunity for technical writer who possesses experience in analyz ing and documenting functional processes to ensure performance optimization and uniformity of corporafe wide operations Ouali tying individual must have business or technical writing degree and several years of practical experience as technical writer -or In formation systems analyst Com petitive salary and benefits. Send resume to Technical Writer, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 37834.
TWO PART TIME sales ladles Must apply in person No phone calls Cato's, 423 Evans Street
WANTED: Top quality Oullters For more information, call Calico Square Quilt Shoo, 758 4317
ZALES JEWELERS Is looking lor sales pewle Experience is not required it you have the enthusiasm and are willing to learn Excellent
company benefits. So it you are looking for a career and not just a job, apply in person to Zales Jewelers. Carolina East Mall
059
Work Wanted
ABLE BODIED, responsible indi vidual would like to do odd jobs, yard work, gardening, etc in Pitt County 756 6913_
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE
Licensed and fully insured Trim ming, cutting ana removal Free estimates. J P Stancll, 752 6331
AN IMPRESSIVE SIGN is the
secret for impressive profits for your business We are masters of impressive signs Call Steve Atkins. The Siqnmaster, 757 3636._
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and rooting, 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm.
753 7765
BILLY BRILEY is now accepting painting work in Bethel area. Inte rior andexterior. Call 758 4559
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprises 756 9133 day, 756 1007 night_
CONSTRUCTION new. additions and remodeling. Call Dillon Watson after 6p m , 756 8333. __________
DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do vour housecleaninq 753 3758.
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood
and metal Equipment formally of p and Sfrip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques
Call for free estimate Days 756 9133, Night 756 1007
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable
prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583. GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341 __
MALE AIDE ASSISTANT seeking full time employment from 9 to 3 or from 11 to 7 in private home. Wiil do light housecleaning Call 757 3373 and ask (or Jerry
NEED AN EXPERIENCED carpenter to remodel or make additions to your home? Is there repair work needed? Call os now! Reasonable prices, guaranteed work, plus references. 752 8905.___
NEED LETTERHEADS, business cards, or any type of business forms orinfed at low cost. Call 355 6388
OUTSIDE mobile home cleaning, 5 years experience, materials furnished. Handicapped, diabetic. Greenville area. 752 M87._______
PROFESSIONAL TAILORING and
alterations. Men and women Call Giannette, 756 3993
WILL BABYSIT from 6 fo 10 p m for children from 1 year old. Dora Spell, 758 I043atter6p m_
060
FOR SALE
062
Auctions
20 FORKLIFTS, 15 45 foof trailers and 3 trucks will be sold at Auction. June 30 in Fayetteville For brochurecall919 483 1043._
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood (or sale. J P Stancil, 752 6331_
065 Farm Equipment
COMBINE GUARDS John Deere and Massey Ferguson I 4 $5.49 each 5 or more $4.99 each Allis Chalmers 1 4 $5.69 each 5 or more $5.19 Sickle secflons start at $13 95 per box of 25 Rivets and other supplies in stiKk AgrI Su 752 3999
____________ supp------------
AgrI Supply Co.. Greenville, NC,
FOR RENT Two 10,000 bushel grain bins 15< per bushel Located approximately 4 miles west of Wlnterville. Call 756 5097 or 756
RED TOBACCO harvester Field ready Call 756 0078 _
067 Garage Yard Sale
BIG SALE I Several families Ragland Acres, off Main Street. Wlnterville 8(0 12
BIG YARD SALE June 35 Infant, child, adult clothes. 10 speed bike, exerciser, miscellaneous household goods, electric curlers, etc. 4 miles from Hastings Ford, Highway 33 towards Grimesland In Country Place Rain or shine
BIG YARD SALE lurnilue. books, knick knacks, gem grind ino/polishing set. and morel Satur day, June 25 8 to II 30 a m 3410 Slay Drive. Greenville.
BIG YARD SALE Lamps, linens, rocking chair, mirror, fable, etc. June 25, 7 a.m.. to II a.m. 3006 Phllllp Road In Lake Ellsworth.
CARPORT SALE, 2710 Webb Street. Little boy's clothes, baby Items and miscellaneous item$
HERRY OAKS 310 Sumrell 3 families. 7 until 1._
CHEF
CLOTHES, ^ spreads and mis cellaneous Items 609 River Hills
^rlyq
067
GBragt-Yard Sate
EVERYTHING MUST GOI Furniture, stereo with speaker^ clothes, etc. Saturday, June 25. 8:M to 11 a.m. Bring a friend. 1013 B Brownlee Drive-
mattresses ai^ ^,.*Pftn9-sporting goo^ baby items, kitc^ enware. artd much more! 1108
Raosdale Road- _
GARAGE SALE at 102 Kilby Drive In Lynndale. Sa^^y. J^ 25 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Kitchen table and 4 chairs, reclining rocker, portable electric typewrlhK, Kirby vacuum, two stereo stands. 3 antique table lamps, floor lantp. school deM. antique chest, Avon products In eluding some collector Items, many brand new home and kitchen pro-ducts. Plus much mere!
GIANT MOVING SALE Ayden "The Pines" 705 Willow Drive. Furniture, kitchenware, boy's clothes, toys, yard equipment, de humidifier, books, draperies, fans, and much, much more! Saturday. June25.8a.m. to3p.m.
INDOOR YARD SALE Saturday. June 25.9 to 2.411 East 4th Street. LADIES CLOTHES, size U. 8 piece dining room suite and miscella neous Items. 106 Brinkley Road. Brentwood. I till Saturday
LARGE DUAL FAMILY Yard Sale Featuring baby clothes, baby items, small appliances, toys, and clothing. Saturday. June 25. 7 a m to 12 noon. 110 Kimberley Drive, (Brentwood Subdivision. jreqnyl!.llL
MOVING. MUST SELL I Clothes, furniture, luggage, jewelry, plants 138 Anoe Street, Wlnterville 8 until.
NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market open Saturday 8 til 5 Sunday I til 5 Outside dealer spaces $3 00 Inside spaces $6.00. Call Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550, Fair Grounds 758-6916.
air Grounds 758 6916_
RAYNOR FORBES AND CLARK
Flea Market open Saturdays 7 til across from oose Lodge. 756
CATIIortAV IllUC 94 J tn O
7 til 1. 4090
SATURDAY, JUNE 25. 7 to 9 Name brand clothes, toys, etc 205 Greenbrier Drive
SATURDAY, JUNE 25, 8 a m until 409 Perkins Street Men s, ladies and children's clothes plus many miscellaneous items.
_..^_.J)AY, JUNE 25. Yard Sale at the Old Fairgrounds. 7 until. SATURDAY Furniture, lamps, baby clothes, toys, dolls, and more 611 West 2nd Street, Ayden 8 until
SATURDAY MORNING AT 7.
Kitchen chairs, tools, building ma terials. furniture, clothes, and toys 517 Crestline Boulevard.
SATURDAY, JUNE 25. 7 to 12 Cheap prices. 244 Circle Drive. Hardee Acrev___
SATURDAY, JUNE 25. 103 Sloan Drive. River Hills Many childrens books, toys, and clothing. 8 to 1.
YARD SALE 8 to 12 Some baby things, womens designer clothes, larger sizes, miscellaneous. 114 Fletcher Place (Twin Oaks Sub division)
YARD SALE Saturday, June 25 7 until 1 Large and small size clothes, crib, and lots of miscella neous items 313 Belvedere Drive
YARD SALE, Saturday. 6 35 83. 110 Hardee Circle, Eastwood "Lots of goodies " Books, furnifure. toys, apoliances and fixtures 8 to 13
YARD SALE Tools, furniture, etc 107 Tanglewood Drive, RIverhills Subdivision. 8 until 3
YARD SALE - 2 families moving! 7 to 12 noon Yard equipment, kitchen items, vacuum cleaner, children's sand box, toys, clothes, duck de coys, pictures, rugs, window shades, and much much more! 401 Aztec Lane
YARD SALE Saturday, June 35 8 to 12. 133 Antler Road, Club Pines Freezer, and much more.
YARD SALE Clothes, furniture, pictures, plates, bowls, and books. 8 until 13. Iil3 East Wright Road. YARD SALE Saturday, June 25 5 miles from PItf Plaza on New Bern Highway Turn on Road 1733
YARD SALE, Saturday, June 25. 104 Hardee Circle, (Easfwood) 8 12, audio equipment, child car seat, baby back pack, high chair, toddler and other toys, material, kitchen items, screen door, vases, hair dryers, suitcase, ladies clothes 7 10. shoes 6, mixture of other Items.
YARD SALE Many Items to choose, also lots of clothes 10< each Turn off of Greene Street of Pactolus Highway about 3 blocks 8 tl 1 Easy parking
YARD SALE Saturday, 8 a m to I p.m. Clothing, boating equipment, athletic equipment, TV antenna. Ice cream maker, and much more 302 Allendale Drive (RedOak)
YARD SALE Saturday morning 514 East 1st Street, across from Avery Street
YARD SALE 347 Lockview Drive In Brook Valley Saturday, June 35. 9 to 12 No early birds please Children's toys, games, clothes, large rocking horse, and Avon articles.
4 FAMILY YARD Sale Ladies and mens clothes (all sizes), childrens clothes, games, bike, jewelry 3818 Jackson Drive 8 to 12. Saturday. June 25_______
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables. 753 5237
HORSESHOW, Sunday, June 36, 1 p m. Griffon Stables Pleasure and fun classes for beginners and advanced Trophy and 6 ribbons 524 3116__
NEWLY FRESH CUT Timothy and Alfalfa hay Buy by the ball or by the ton Call Mr Gentile at 752 1370 or 752 9914____
073 Fruits and Vegetables
PEACHES!I Excellent tor pickling, cooking, preserving and fresh eat Ing. Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard 3 miles North of Bailey.
Highway 581 North. Open 7_a._m to 8
?.m. Mo 35 4664
Monday through Saturday.
SNAP BEANS, $4 50, Squash, $4 00, Collards & salad. 35< lb . Cabbage. 15c lb , Hot pepper. 60c lb B 8, ET U Pick, Hassefls 795 4646 _____
074
Miscellaneous
AIR CONDITIONER Gotta condi
AIR CONDITIONERS, ranges, freezers, refrigerators, washers and dryers Rebuilt, guaranteed, and all like new Call B J Mills at Black Jack. 746 3446.
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air condltoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale Call B J Mills. Aufhorized Appliance Service. 746 3446 af Black Jack
ANTIQUES: Mahogany hutch, ma hogany sideboard. Maple gun rack, oak swivel desk chair 756 8793 after
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $32 46 on a 6 piece Wesfern living room suif Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World. 757 0451
BABY CARRIAGE/STROLLER
combination by Sears. Like new. 756 7038 ___
BEDDING &WATERBEDS
Why pay retail whan you can save up to V] and more on bedding and waterbeds Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaia). 355 2626
BEST OFFER, must sell! Sleeper sofa, rocker, swivel oak desk chair, oak drop leaf table, bookstand.
I' le bed ngs, lai
chest of drawers, single bed wifh I springs, lamps, china, breakfast table and chairs.
mattress and box
T shirts size AAedlum, blouses size 10 and 13. ladles pants size 7 and 9. Call Ginger af 756 9175 or
THJia
BLUE BEDROOM suit with bookcase, headboard, dresser, chest of drawers. $75. Aaple dreu-er, $45.752 7683after 5p m
COMMUNITY YARD SALE
Furniture, lawn mower, clofhes.
odds and ends. Rood 1415 beside Welcome Middle School. Go 3 miles. brick houseon fherlflhf. 8(012
T MISS THIS one! Safurtey, 25. 8 to 13. Mulll family Yard
^ia. Rain or shine. Color fv,
furniture, clofhas infant lo adult, collectibles, many new and unusual items. Including cowboy hats, rock and roll buttons. Incense and theat rical makeup, l^mlle past CIKts Oyster Bar on Highway 13 East. Turn right at the big Robert's Sign. 7S2\nf.
EVERYTHING OUT of the aHIc and around the house. Saturday. June 35. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 17U Beaumont (|ust off North
SrJfififci:-
BRAND NEW loose back pillow, sofa, and chair By Thomasvllle. Still in shipping Plastic 752 5002
BRAND NEW 3 drawer maple desk Never been used $45.00 756 8466 anytime
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation 919 763 9734
CALL CHARLES TICE. 758 3013. tor small loads of sand, fopsoll and stone Also driveway work
CASH REGISTER Electronic Victor 511. Used 6 months. $630 new. will sell $350 Call 757 1534 after 6 RJZL
CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions. Savings up to 35% Goodyear Tire center. West End Shopping Center And Dickinson AYfnyti.
COFFEE MACHINE, $50 Call
COLOR TV, $95; and other appll
DESPE dresser 1200rNi
SPERATION SALE I Antique
' mix.
_ _ and vanity dark wood m $200, New solid pine roil top desk, hand carved chair. $300.756 W73,
DOMESTIC RABBITS Call 746 2137The Daily KeOector, Greenville, N.C.-f noay, Je M, IIO-M
074
MiscBlteMous
GLENFIELO 3^ rltte scope and case, $125 Paeef'c ^/Fm stereo cassette Bliafl''''.corder and turn table, $l57 wf clubs, 2
5sasi".u'ss-.ffl'c?,isu
attefS_ ^
GRADUATION jPf A? Aottitt's ^navox has
TVs tor only nd.9$l 7803 Evans
Street ExtensW7$8J444_
HOOVER upright cleaner with anachiwts, s4o. mho cherry coffee tabla, 756 8156_
rlalDrive, 756 l4l7. _
)ARD, cherry
----------------Call 752 2619
LADIES 10 spe^ bicycle, lawn mower and waWrBed All in good condition Call 786^
LARGE LOADS ot und and top soil, lot cleaning.. backhoe also available 756 474ra(ter 6 pm. Jim Hudson
LIKE NEW 300 gallon tank and stand, $40 758 04te
LOOKING FOR a triplet! or twin baby stroller at a reasonable price. 752 ?603 .__
AAGIC SHELF 30' range, good condition. $135. Re A XLiOO TV, like
lition. $135. RCA XLTOO c'olor , $195 Kelvinator refrigerator, trost free, $145. AM/FM 8 track stereo and
MAYTAG washer and dryer. 3 years old queen size mattress and springs. 7 drawer desk and chair, over stuffed chair; decorative con Crete blocks tor shelves 756 196?
METAL DETECTORS Call or write for tree catalog. Baker's Sgy^Equipment, P O Box 3)06
METAL GARAGE DOOR You take down. $35 Will deliver It desired 758 5107
MOVING! Western House 30 electric range wifh center glass oven door and much more Like new only $175. Solid State 19" portable color TV with simulated
woodgrain design, has sharp
ticture, works like new, only $165. ears energy saver frost free, side by side refrigerator and deep freezer combination Designed tor automatic ice maker installation. You must see to appreciate it at this price. $350 Call 756 0493
NEW KENMORE air conditioner. $200. Call 753 6162 4 to 7p m
CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue
OAK grandfather CLOCK, $475 355 6335
ONE SLIGHTLY used Sears Ken more portable dishwasher, $150 3 Kelvinator deluxe energy saver window air conditioners, 6.000 BTU's. used I season. $175 each 758 0253 from 9 to 5 30__
PAPA BEAR Fisher wood stove Free standing. 4 years old. $450 Call 756 1697
PRICED TO SALE Twin mattress, springs, and rails Couch, picnic table and benches 758 4898
QUEEN SIZE WATER BED with best quality mattress and wood frame $30<). Good condition. 756
QUEEN SIZE sota bed Excellent condition $300 756 3049
QUEEN SIZE sofa sleeper Brown and rust Like new $70() retail will sacrifice (or $200 756 8760 ______
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company
SQUIRE WOOD STOVE Used two winters Excellent condition! $495 Call 758 3798
SUPER SUMMER SALE
continuing with GE 19 4 cubic toot side by side refrigerator with ice maker, $730 95. Also see our new line of Command Performance TVs Tyson's Electrical 4 Appliance,
I yson s tieciricai Winterville. 756 3929
THEATRE SEATS, $2 00 each Some with cushions Can be used in boats, churches or recreational
facilities 756 5400 or 758 4031 ___
TWO WAY RADIO base, Sitex Loran 767. Motorcycle trailer (or one bike. Complete welding and torch set with gauges Small air compressor Metal detector, and camper awning 758 1444 days, 753 1076 nights____________
ROYCE 2 WAY CB RADIO base station with antenna Call 753 376X
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
074
Miscellaneous
SAVE UP TO $1.000 a year by cutting your food bills 10% to 30%
I sASE Langston Park 038.
reenvllle.
075 Mobile Homes For Sate
TWO 50 watt Lyric speakers. Good condition. $50 or best offer. Days 756 9371 or niohts 756 7887.
USED COPY MACHINES IBM II, 35 copies per minute. Best otter! 756 6167 or 758 7808 after 6._
^O.ORYER $60 or best offer
USED GE washer and dryer. Very condition $200 752 537 after
^ood
USED KIRBY CLASSIC vacuum cleaner Complete with shampooer, and all other attachments. Used very little. Excellent condition. $350 negotiable. Call Chris 756 8037.
WHIRLPOOL 19' refrigerator. Harvest gold Almost like new, $325 4 hori
Sears $65 5' igggy
sepower lawn mower. . $$0. 355 6235
WOULD LIKE to buy used refrIg erators, air conditioners, freezers, ranges, and clothes dryers that need repair 746 2446
YOUTH BiO, spring, coll mattress, 2 sheets, pilowcase all like new (or $80 Phone 752 5580
1 RED VINYL CHAIR with mat ching stool. $65 l brown vinyl wing back chair with matching stool. $75 Excellent condition Nice (or stu dents in apartments. 825 7131
10 STEEL WINDOWS. 40" x 50' sioeach. 758 157Q.
110 VOLT ELECTRIC rudder for sale. $75 Fish cookers, $30 753 1488 after 5 30. _
15X15 wall to wall caroet Light rust sculptured shao. $200. tall 75i 1025. 17' REFRIGERATOR, washer dryer. In good working condition 756 7755. 9 to 5 Monday throgh f^tiday
19" COLOR TV Rent to own $33 11 >er month Furniture World 757 1451___
30.000 BTU air conditioner. $50 35 " Magnavox color TV console. $40 Both need some work Call between 4pm and 7 30 p.m. 756 4016
9x13 GRASS MAT, 1 9x13 orange braided rug, 1 couch. Call 756 6438 _
075 Mobile Homes For Sate
BRAND NEW 1983 top ot the line double wide 3 bedrooms. 3 lull baths, many extras including masonite siding, shingle root, trost free refrigerator, garden tub. cathedral celling and much, much more.
Limited Time Only
$15,995
VA, 100% financing No money down Also FHA Convenflonal fl
nancln^qOSSLAND HOMES (formerly Mobile Home Brokers) 630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191
FOR SALE 1979 Taylor, 14x70, 3 bedrooms. 3 full baths
derskirted. new carpet, new furniture new 35" color TV Sharpe, utility building, sun deck, located Lot 133. Shady Knoll $19,500 757
0374 or 752 2366'Mr Carraway___
GOOD SELECTION ot used homes Low down payments and monthly payments All homes guaranteed Tommy Williams, Azalea Mobile
Homes, 756 7815 _____
LIMITED TIME ONLYIH 1983 70x14 3 bedrooms, 3 baths To see is to believe! Need to sell immediate ly 10% above wholesale plus set up (Jnly 1 home, so hurry and call! 756 0131______
LONGEST MOBILE HOME in North Carolina Is at Azalea Mobile Homes, 364 Bypass West,756 7815 _
MOBILE HOME tor sale 1974 13x55 $300 down and take up
payments 756 6444.___________
NEW QUALITY built Marshfield 3 bedrooms, I'z baths Payments under $300 per month Only 1 home left! Call 756 0131.................
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across From Wichovta Compuler Center Memorial Dr 756-6331
TrWW
FAMILY HOUSING
Stop In and $ee why we are the fastest growing Mobile Home dealer in North Carolina
ST*
^ (C>o vent Iona L VA, FHA)
TRAffEWm?) Family HOUSING 70S West Greenville Blvd.
?56<W3
RANELL Over 1300 square feet, central air, dishwasher, woodstove. perfect condition, already set up in Azalea Gardens. Sales price $23.500. Contact Tommy, 756 7815 or 758 8733
REPO'S DOWN and take up
payments. Call John Moore. 756 7815. Azalea Mobile Homes
12X50, 1967 1 bedroom, appliances, carpet, urtaerpinning. air condition
752 8019_
14 WIDES (or as low as $170 per month Call or come by Art Oellano Homes. 756 9841
1971 HOMETTE 12x60 3 bedrooms, mostly furnished Also washer, dryer, under pinning, covered deck, excellenf condition *58 3696_
1973 VALIANT, 13x60 3 bedrobms, 1 bath, set up in Oakwood Acres Trailer Park This one has lots ot extras $6580 758 4021 atter 4 30 weekdays, weekends anytime
1979 14x70 REDMAN SHERATON 3 bedrooms. 3 lull baths, total electric Located at Branches Trailer Park $500 and take up payments ot $195 756 8358 alter 5
1980 CONNOR 14 X 60 Fully turnlshed. porch underpinning, central air I500 and assume loan Call 758 l9l4or 753 5006
1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $148 91 At Greenville s volume dealer T.omas A^bile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 753 6068
077 MusIcbI Instrumgnte
BABY GRAND Kuwai plane, walnut, excellent condition, $5300 or best offer 756 9878
FENDER PRECISION bate with jazz neck. Oemarzio P and jazz pick UPS. $300. 752 8905.
PIANO FOR SALE
Wanted: Responsible party to
assume small monthly payments on splnet/console piano Can be seen locally. Write (include phone number) Credit Manager. PO Box 521, BeckemeVer. IL 622)9.
RANDOLPH WURLITZER Spinet with bench and microcone Like new $995 756 3830 days, atter 7 p m 752 5319
USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Yamahas. Wurlitzers. etc. The Music Shop. Greenville Square Shopping Center, 756 0007_
USED PIANOS ^aht and sold piano 8i Organ Distributors 355
6003
WURLITZER SUPER SPRITE
organ with bench 3 keyboards, automatic rhythms, 2' i years old. Sold new for $1900. will fake $700
YAMAHA GUITAR for sale with case Excellent condition Call 758 4867 atter 6
15" ROAD SCOOP cabinet. S100 7?iy>gL_
085 Loans And AAortgages
LOAN PLACEMENT $50.000 and up We plan, structure, package, present and place business, (arm ing and commercial real estate development loanv Short and long term business purpose loans C J Harris & Co , Financial and Mar keting Consultants 757 0001, mlght, 753 4(315
091
Business Services
ACCOUNTING/BOOKKEEPING Full line services priced for fhe small fo medium sized business Mid Eastern. 14 Pitt Plaza Shop ping Center 756 4354 __
076 Mobi ie Home i nsurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage lor less money Smith Insurance and Realty 752
3754_______________
077 Musical Instruments
ALVAREZ ACUSTIC guitar $300 752.8905_____ _ _
Top quality, tuel economical cars can be found at low prices In Classified
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
093 OPPORTUNITY
LIST Op BUY your business with C J Harris 8i Co , Inc Financial & Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United Stales Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015 ___
POTENTIAL $50,000 to 0,000 PER YEAR
Are you bored with your job? Tired ot working tor the other person? National Company based In Lex ingtoii. KY looxlng tor qualified full and part lime distributors in 4 county area Investment covered by inytntgry CaM I 800 354 9594
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ThSmXtaXSinei ^
1982 GS850GL Suzuki
2300 Miles Shah Driven Perfect Condition. Excellent Buy Priced RightI
Call 756-1643
ASSISTANT SERVICE MANAGER NEEDED
Experience preferred. Excellent opportunity with local company. Apply to;
Assistant Service Manager P.O. Box 1967 Greenville, N.C. 27835-1967
STEEL BUILDINGS
BY
Riverside Iron Works
Toll Free 1-800-682-3705
An Authorized Dealer for Mitchell Steel Buildings for over 15 years
SWIMMING POOL CHEMICALS
In-Ground Above Ground
PARTS MAINTENANCE ACCESSORIES CONSTRUCTION FREE WATER ANALYSIS
758-6131 Greenville Pool & Supply Inc.
2725 E. 10th St. Greenville, N.C.
WEEK DAYS9 5:30 SATURDAYS9 12
SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR
Immediate need for qualified screw machine operator with at least 2 years experience on Acme Gridley type machines or equivalent.
Please send resume to:
Human Relations Department
TRW, INC.
P.O. Box 8088 Greenville, N. C. 27834 Or Call 919-758-7411
Or make application through the Employment Security Commission. 3101 Bismarck St.. Greenville, N C.
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F
DOUBLE BED with frama HI (I steroo, tablas, othar mitcallanoout Itam. 758 0048affar 5p.m.
FOR SALE Konmora alacfric drvar, wtilta. In good caneltlon. $M. Call 7MM9L_
AT
HOLT OLDSMOBtLE-DATSUN
We Are Overstocked With The Sporty Datsun 280-ZX T-Top And 2 Plus 2
Save Up To ^2500.00
During Our Spring Clearance Sale Ovev 16 In Slock To Choose Prom
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker __ 756-3115
T
093 OPPORTUNITY
fertilizer and hardware
business for sale. Complefe farm supply Esfablithad 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 751 0702._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
093 OPPORTUNITY
NIGHT CLUB - store and trailer, Stxi2 for sale.. 2S4 By Pi
Farmvllle. 2>1-7W>.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIAL
1979 Pontiac Bonneville Safari Wagon 3 Mats. Cream with woodgrain, fully equipped, 47.000 miles.
$4995.00
Plus Tax
BROWNIE MOTOR SALES
Corner of 14th StrMt And Farmvllle Blvd. Phone 752-0117
Morris Blueberry Farm
LOCATED: 1 mile North of New Bern On US 17 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Bring Your Own Container
637-6630
637-3709
SHOP THE BEST SHOP HOLT
QUALITY USED CARS
1983 Oldsmobile Firenza
4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.
1982 Lincoln Continental
Loaded with digital dash. One owner, 26,000 miles. Metallic green, dark green leather Interior.
1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup
Beige, with beige vinyl interior, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 11,000 actual miles.
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon
Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo
1981 Subaru
2 door, burgundy with tan vinyl interior, 5 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, 19,000 miles. Looks new.
1981 Datsun4X4Truck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior
1981 Plymouth TC-3
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.
1981 Mercury Marquis
4 door, tan and brown, beige cloth Interior, loaded, 22,000 miles, one owner.
1981 Datsun 210 Coupe
2 door, 5 speed, AM-FM radio, silver with black interior.
1980 Ford Fairmont
Two tone blue, blue vinyl interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, one owner, 40,000 miles.
1980 Buick Skylark Limited
Yellow with light brown velour interior.
1980 Pontiac Sunbird
Silver, burgundy vinyl interior, 4 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, 34,000 miles, looks new
1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior
1980 Honda Civic 1500 DX
Silver with burgundy velour interior, automatic transmission, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 24,000 actual miles.
1980 Olds Cutlass LS
4 door. Dove gray with dark blue velour interior, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo.
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix
Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control. Dark green with saddle landau roof, saddle vinyl interior, 42,000 miles, one owner.
1979 Olds Delta 88
2 door. Blue with white landau top, white interior, 44,000 actual miles, looks new.
1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale
4 door. White with blue velour interior, 58,000 miles, one owner, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks, looks new.
1978 Olds Delta 88
4 door. Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.
1977 Olds Cutlass Supreme Brougham
2 door, blue with blue velour interior, white lan(^u roof,
owner, 26,000 actual miles.
DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators All Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty
1983 Olds 98 Regency
4 door, loaded, moon roof, silver with beige top
1983 Olds 98
4 door, diesel. Load< blue interior.
1983 Olds 98 Regency Brougham
4 door, diesel. Loaded. Beige with maroon top with matching maroon interior
1983 Olds 98 Regency
4 door Loaded. White with sable brown top with matching sable Interior
1983 Olds Custom Cruiser Wagon
Loaded. Silver sandstone with woodgrain.
1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera Brougham
4 door, diesel. Loaded. White with tan top and matching tan interior.
1983 Olds Cutlass Calais'
Loaded. Light gray fern, bucket seats.
HDLT DLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
093 OPPORTUNITY
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT
for Ml* owrwr. Downtown
Gr**nvlll. 75 Mf r*st*urant, 30
Mt cocktail
large screen
some owner financing. Call Gary ISl54aff*rl
Quintard 75a 5154 afftr
TO BUY OR SELL a tMSirm.
sfiKii^N ASsiSfTAlft, Lice!^
Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752
3575
UNIQUE BUSINESS opportunity Local profitable furniture business for Ml* due fo relocaflon
uusina >v m.w ww. ,w r*locaflon of owner. Call 7M^^2S14 after 4 o.m
095 PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP GId .Holloman. North Carolina's original chlin^My sweep. 25 years exp^enc* workino on chimneys and fireplaces. Can
on chimneys ana rirwiaces. day or nlohf. 753 3503, Farmvllle
JOHNSON&THIELECO
RENOVATIONS
TOPSOIL AND SAND for Mie. Septic tank Installed. RoMrs Con structlon Company, 746 4780, Ayden, NC
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
104 Condominiuffis For SbIb
FIREPLACE In living room mafcas
It cozy, yet It's ^loos wHh 3 bedrooms. 2W baths, patla with storaga, adfacant to pool islay area at Windy Ridge 858,000.
J L Harris Sons, Inc., ^1
liters.
LEXINGTON SQUARE,^ badrooms. 1 yaar old. FHA 235
assvmabla loan. Phone 754 7W5,
109
Housts For Salt
ASSUMABLE 8Vi%
FmHALowPaynMnt Thraa badroom brick.. 1/2 acra.
Sacrifica by owner Low down payment. Call 415-672 8551
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick homa In the country. 3 biedrooms, 2 iMths,
formal living room and dining room, hug* family room witn fireplace. Heat pump. Locatad on over 1 acre (also svallaDi* for
purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank financing. Call Juna Wyrick. Aldrldga A Southerland, 756-3500; nights 756-5716:_
siict!sa.sa,
Call 752 6166.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
M&HMOTORS
We Buy, Sell & Trade
USED CARS
746-3804
JOHNNY MERRITT
THURMAN STOCKS
100 HousBsForSBle
belvedere Thraa badrooms
and two baths, boaufltutly landscaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Savaral quality faaturas. 860's. Call 756-a037 after S
BETHEL Roberson Sfrset. Three badroom brick homa, l<^ baths, nice sattlng, only 4 years old. Call Jamas A AAanning Agency. 825-
5l
BETHEL Thraa^ badrqpm, FHA noma. 7lO AAoor* Drive. Call Jamas A /ytoninflAfltnat
BETHEL FARMERS HOME loan. 3 bedrooms, m bal
_______ Jths, brickad with
fenced In yard. Mint condition. 834,900. SpqMf Roolty 754-3220,
BRAND NEW HOME In Camalot Subdivision with light croam siding and soft Mua trim. Wall planned living area Includas 3 badrooms. 1'/^ baths, kitchen, separate dining room, custom built caMnats, great room with fireplace. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs. 899,400. The Evans ConiM^, 752-2814. Winnie Evans, 753-4224 or Faya Bowon. 754 5258
BY OWNER In Tuckalioa Subdivision on a pulet Culdasac. 1.742 heated square teat and garepa. 4 badrooms, 2 baths, living, dining, dan, eat in kitchen, heat pump.Extra large back and side yards. Shown by sppolntmant only.
BY OWNER 4 room houM and tot. 2 miles from Wallcoma Middle School. Lass than 820,000. 752 4247. BY OWNER ll'/>% auumable 3 badr
loan.
drooms, 2 baths, formal
living and dining room, den with
tpi<
el air, gas
patio, 1 block from
firapiaca, carpeted throughout Central air, ^jgas heat, fenced
Ayclxk'^**junlor High, 107 Azalea
?Y OWNER IN Club Pinas. 534 restline Blvd. 2 story brick Williamsburg, 2400 square faat, 3-4 IS. Gr
rg,
badrooms, 2Vi baths' GrMt room with firapiaca. large spacious kitchen. Double carport with storage. Fence. All aiactric
Assumable 9>/i% VA loan. Reduced f Safur-
to 899,500 Open House every day and Sunday, 1 to 5, or call
ihll
day and S 754 8953 for
appointment.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
111 South Lee St., Ayden. NC
WANTID
aUCINtID
COSMETOLOGISTS
756-7547
GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.
603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.d.
Great Buys On Young Used Cars
1983 Buick Electra Limited Every option available. Demo. Save thousands.
1982 Chrysler Cordoba Only 9,000 miles. New car!
1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wagon Like new. Lots of options.
1982 Pontiac Bonneville4 door, beautiful white and burgundy. Like new!
(3)1982 Buick Regis 2 door, power windows, tilt, stereo. Very nice!
1981 Buick Century Cruise, stereo, beige with matching root, wire wheels.
1981 Pontiac Bonneville Safari Wagon Loaded with options.
1980 Chevrolet Camaro Low miles and nice equipment. Sharp car!
1980 Buick Electra Coupe 2 door, white with blue landau roof, loaded, very
sharp!
1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic 4 door. Every option Offered! 27,000 miles. 1979 Buick LeSabre4 door, light blue, white roof, 25,000 miles, local car.
1979 Buick Electra Limited Dark blue, light blue roof, local car.
1979 Buick Century Wagon Light blue, local car. Good solid wagon!
GASSIPPERS
1982 Mazda GLC-4 door, air condition, 22,000 miles, local car,
1982 Mazda GLC 2 door, 12,000 miles, new radials, sharp!
1981 Honda Accord 2 door, 5 speed, low miles, burgundy.
1981 Mazda 626 2 door, power windows, cruise, 5 speed, 34,000 miles.
1979 Mazda 626-4 door, automatic, stereo, local car,
1978 Datsun 510 2 door, beige, low miles, automatic transmission.
1978 Datsun 5105 speed, new tires, very sharp.
SUPER SHARPTRUCKS
1982 Chevrolet El Camino 20,000 miles, local trade-in. Sharp!
1982 Datsun MVP 20,000 miles, Immaculate!
1979 Chevrolet El Camino Royal Knight 29.000 miles. Very nice!
GRANTS SPORTS DEPARTMENT
1983 Chevrolet Custom Van Brand new and ready for those vacation trips.
1980 Ford Custom Van 25,000 miles. Brand new, one of a kind conversion!
1980 Ford Custom Van 32,000 miles, new conversion. Jet black, sharp!
1979 Chevrolet Customized Van Winnebago conversion, tilt wheel, cruise control
Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00
Phone:756-1877
106
HoubbbFotSbIb
ment^ end parks. Fireplace,
ment^ and parks. Firapiaca, large kitchen, dan end dinlM room, privacy tencad back yard
------ d back yi______
and dack. 899,999.99. 758-13S5_____
7:30 am after 9:15 pm anytima Sunday
Attractiva 3 ba^oom rustic contemporary. <^lity faaturas In-ctuoe; Jenn-Air Ri
Jenn-Air ________
baths, Pella windows, 4 panal
Icangt, caramk
MPrWI
woodan doors, custom cabinats in roomy kitchan, spacious woodad lot. i7^ or 753-3^
BY OWNER Assumabit 9>/i% loan. 3 badrooms, )Vi baths, firapiaca in d9ft,mZ50. NortaltersDlaaM.
BY O^ER Assumabla P/ySfc loan 3 batfroom, ivy bath brick ranch
Larga kitchan, living room with fb-aolaca, saparato dining room, at pump and oas furnaca, da-
haat pump and gas fu tachad doubi* garage, backyard, 'A acre Tot.
tenced In _ Elmhurst area, naar university. Low 840's. 754 4907.
CHARA^ING centrally air condi-tlonad, carpatad 4 badroom housa. naar univarsity. Has 3 full baths, 2 patios. Comparlvely prksd for Ml* by owner. Shown by 9tt!Y^Bll7?4l9
appointment
CHERRY OAKS This 3 bedroom. 2 betn home was built with quality in
mind. From the state entr^ay to baautlfufold
tha many built In's and w
brick firapiaca. It'S a spacial houM. Add to this tha 9% assumabla loan with a balanca of 847,000 and you've
got a very'i'ttrartlv* <74,500. -----
Shown exclusively by Aldridge A Southerland. For more information call Alita Carroll at 754 3500 or 754 8278.
COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East 1740 square feet living area, plus 440
ra^, i^bja^loL Too many exjras
^ lisTi! 874.500. BiM Wiiilams Raal g^ltat^ 752 2415.
CUSTOM FEATURES In this 3 badroom. 2 bath home. Workshop, oatio, and fanced In back. CEN TURY 21 -
B Forbes Agency, 754 2121 or 758-9549. _
DRASTICALLY REDUCED for quick Ml* - Conveniently located brick house in Farmvllle: - within walking distance of downtown and all schools; 19M square feet with extra large den/recreetion room (over 27 feet long), 3 bedrooms and baths, tulTy carpatsd with cantral haat and 2 firsplacas. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348 or 757 1798.
ENTERTAINMENT will be fun in this 2 bedroom, 2 bath contem
porary home. Lott with wet bar, family
family room with fireplace, and
garage. CENTURY 2) B Forbes AoencY
koenCY. 754 2121 or 754 7424.
FOR SALE IN AYDEN 3 bedroom. 2 bath, two story house. Living room, dining room, sewing room, carpeted. sSi.OOb. 10% down and 10% financing. 744-6394.
FOR SALE OR LEASE, large 4 bedroom brick house, 2 baths, detached garage 922 East I4th Street across from campus Call 758 4228 after 5.
GRAYLEIGH Under construction. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, possibility of Sth badroom or gameroom, garage. Located on a corner lot. Can choose
m HmiMForSaM
JEANNETTE COX AGENCY, INC.
WILD ABOUT THE BtVEBT Thw. see this and go overboard with |oy. Haava ancW and make tor Btor* or plar. Entey tha private sandy beach with Dulkhaa& boat housa. and basin. A wondartui home with spacious rooms and floor plan oarmitting gracatui antertalning. This four Moroom, two bath homa has I well
as hug* graatroom with firapiaca, *11 equipped kitchan, graat scraanad porch and riggad from Stem to Stem for Fun. Sun and
Enjoymant. 814M0.M
MAKE YOU
URSELF In Brook
AT HOME
Graciously m Brook Valtey. Con vaniant two story with formal artas, tramandous dan. country nd bath
kitchan, ona badroom and downstairs and four badrooms and two baths upstairs. t119,aM.OO
BROOKGREEN IS THE SETTING This contemporary ranch has over
3000 square faet of IIvIim " ' Tilly I
ottering formal araas, family room with firapiaca, and scraanad porch, 4 bedrooms. 2W baths, sun room, and doublo carport. All on i beautifully landscapad lot 8100,000.00
SAY "HELLO"TO A GREAT BUY
in Club PlgppT New listing with many extras Including hardwood floors, trash paint, 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, formal arMS. playroom. 873,000.00.
don and
756-1322 Anytime!
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
David Nichols..............752-7666
THIS HOME IS T(X> GOOD a deal to let pass by. You couldn't begin to jctTonln
match the quality of constru this home ar today's
______________today's pricas. Locatad
at 104 Ragland Roao^in Wintervllla, this fina homa features almost 1800
square feet of heated area with
foyer, large formal living and ^ 1 lots of
dining room, kitchen with cabinets and eating area, family room with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, extra
large garage with good
area, enormous corner lot, ^ fenced in with room for a garden this summer. Priced to Mil at 865,900
PEOPLE KNOW THAT this Is a good buy. That's why there's so much activiW. Locatad at 300 Westhaven Road in convenient Westhaven Subdivision, this houM has appraised for more than tha asking price, but owner has transferred and needs to Mil. Almost 1600 square feet of heated area plus a garage. Floor plan
features foyer, formal'living and formal dining room, large kTti with eating area, family room
rtchan
three bedrooms, two full baths, nice corner lot with fenced in beck yard. Priced to sell at 899,900.
your own colors and decorate to your own taste. Call W G Blount & Associates, 756 3000, for price and
dfiML.
GRAYLEIGH Beautiful Williamsburg featuring 3 bedrooms. 2'/} baths, living room, formal dining room, den with fireplace.
deck and garage. $110,500. Call W G Blount A Associates. 756 3000.
HIS A HERS baths, dan
corner _ _
Aoencv. 756 2121 or 756 7008
HERS garage, 3 bedrooms. 2 den with liraplace. Large lot. CENTURY 21 B Forbes
HOMEBUYER'S JUNCTION With
the right direction you won't get lost. Ca" " -
all us for financing informa tion and prequalitkatlon. Member of the Greenville Pitt County Multiple Listing Service. CECO Realty, Inc., 355 6889 or Elaine Trolflno. Realtor 756 6346.
IF YOU HAVE been looking for a ith, brick
well kept 3 bedroom. iVi bal ______
ranch with central air in the 40's, call Aldridge A Southerland, 756-3500 or Sue Ounn, 355 2588._
LAKE GLENWOOO Bryant Circle 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home with fireplace. Large lot ( 88 acres), 1692
fireplace. Large lot ( 88 acres), 1692 square feet living space, deck. FHA assumption. $69,0()6. Echo Realty, Inc., 514 4148or 524 5042
LOVELY NEW CUSTOM solar, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths on 5 secluded acres in charming small town ot Scotland Neck. Formal rooms, plus library, designer kitchen, breakfast area, screened porch. Owner re located. Only 81100,000. Call Les Rtley Real Estate, (9i9 ) 798 7461
LOVELY OLDER HOME, Unlversi
ty area. 855.000. Call Jo* Bowen, East Cl
7194.
.arollna Builders, Inc. 752-
MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY Make offer on this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick home with approximately 1800 heated square feet, plus oouble car garage, office, neat
pump Located on Va acre. Low 60's. Lily Richardson Realty 752
NEW BRICK HOME in Cherry Oaks suMiylsion. Features large
master bedrooms with adL dressing area. Nice size great room with fireplace, foyer and separate dining room, all accented with crown molding and chair rail. Energy efficient. Low 870's. The Evans Company, 752-2814. Winnie Evans, 752 4224 or Faye Bowen, 756 5258.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
ATHOLTOLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
We Are Overstocked With The New 19831/2 Nissan Trucks
4 X 4s, Deluxe, MPGs, Standards A Variety Of Colors And Over 25 To Choose From
Up To $1500.00 Discounts And An Unbelievable 8.8% Financing Available On All Units
Hurry, While The Selection Is Good!
HOLTOLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
i
L-
iv
NEW LISTING near the University, schools, churches and college all nearby this one owner home at 882 Forest Hills Circle. Many features such as a separate den or study with fireplace, large foyer and formal living room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Nice hardwood floors throughout Located on a wooded corner lot. Nearly 2888 square feet of heated area priced at l72X)e8.
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
David Nichols..............752 7666
I WO NEW HOMES under con structlon In Orchard HIM Subdivision. Just being started, you may still pick out colors, etc. for these floor plans which feature walk
around fireplace, dining area, great
ekr
room, nice kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Seller pays all discount points and closing costs on FHA VA financing plans. Prices start at 854,988. Call tor more Information.
THE PRICE HAS BEEN ______
reduced on this great buy at 118: Courtland Road In Orchard HIM Subdivision. A real bonus Is tha extra large lot (most ot which is
tenced in), lots ot room for pets or a garden. Good floor plan with living
room with fireplace, kitchen eating area opening onto a deck, three bedrooms, two full baths. Garage. Possible VA loan assumption with balance of approximately 845,580. Priced at 851,900.
YOU JUST CAN'T find a buy as lood as this home at 264 Circle
jrlv* In poDular Hardee Acres n. Owi
.ubdlvislon. Owner wants to sell and he's priced it accordingly. Plan features living room, large kitchen dining area, three bedrooms. V/i baths, garage, nice lot. Another plus Is a possible 8% fixed rate FHA loan assurr^tlon with payments of $262,12 PITI and loan balance of
agtroxlmatley 827,800. Priced at
IN A CLASS BY ITSELF I This custom built home has lots of extra's worth paying extra tor. Like a kitchen skyOght, wood stove insert, ceiling fan, extra large deck and many other features. Great room with fireplace, dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, large heated utility room. 843,500.
D G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
David Nichols.............. 752 7444
?ROOK VALLEY Located at 218 hurchill Drive on the 17th Fairway. Over 3400 square feet of heated area alone. In addition there Is a basement area downstairs for hobby or rec room. Floor plan offers formal living and dining rooms, large kitchen with big eating
area, family ror with fireplacaT
' " - Kir
four bedrooms, three full baths, double garage. Other extra's too numerous to mention. 8175,000.
VISIT
Right
COLONIAL Williamsburg.
this
Ight here In Greenville sits _____
lovely two story modeled after a Williamsburg homa. Locatad at 105 Windemere Court on a lovely wooded lot this home offers over 2500 square feet ot heated ere* plus
a big double garage Large foyer, formal living arxf dining rooms.
family room with fireplace, nice kitchen with eating area, four bedrooms. 2Vi baths, large deck. 8114,000.
GOOD STARTER HOME at 202 Harvey g^9_ln Hillsdale Sub
division.
FHA fixed rat* loan
assumption with payoff ot approximately 824,400 at 9% and payments of 8244 PITI Home rents for 8285.
Plan offers living room, kltchm-dinlng area, three bedrooms, on* full bath, located on a private street with park in front. 83S,(i00
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
HouBBS For Salt
up to 4 poi^ plus ckMing cost*. Low 850Y Tha Evane CSnw^y. 752-2814. Winnie Evans. 752-4H4 or
FavaBowan, 754-5258
NEW HOMES $41000
Racantly C:omplat*d
3 Bedrooms. Vh Battis
$1400 Down $43S Per A6onth Total
Call
East Carolina Builders 752-7194
brkk ranch with on* car garoe*-
with ona car garoe*-32.500. Call Aldridge A Southerland, 754-3500 or Sue^nn,
mSSL
NEW LISTING Balvoir. Tastefully
ranch
decorated 3 badroom, 2 bath i with graatroom and kitchan with many convanioncas. 845,000. Call Aldrldga A Southarland. 754 3500 or $V9Pynn,?55rm
NEW LISTING Shaded lot, 3 bedroom. t'/S Mth brick ranch. Larga family room, also features approximately 400 square feet da.
tached ^arjj^ a^d^ workshop.
axcallant -
this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge A Southerland. 754-3500, nighls
NEW LISTING 848.900 Spacious 3 badroom, bath home, format
living and dining room. Convenient location. Call June Wyrick,
Aldridge A Southerland, 754 3500; ifS
NEW LISTING 201 SunMt Avenu*. vine, NC '
____ aqu_ ___
neighborhood. 2249 square feet of
Farmvllle, located In
This lovely homa Is beautiful
elegant living is yours In the 3 bedroom, 2'/? betn home. Two
fireplaces, 9' ceilings, hardwood
floors and much more. Give us a 1, 754-
call, Aldridge A Southerland.
PICTURE YOUR HOME here If you're thinking of selling your home give us a call. We'll be nappy to do
a market analysis ot yoi^prop*^^
and talk to you about your particular neeos. CECO Realty, Inc.. 355-4889 or Elaine Troiano,
POSSIBLE Farmers Home loan assumption on this 3 bedroom home. LarjO* yard with garden space. CENTURY 21 B Forbes ^9WY,T?8 ?2!9r 754 7424,
RIVER HILLS Enjoy the greenhouM window, th? quiet location, the privacy of this wooded lot
in this well kep't split level. The 3 bedroom, 2'/i baths, living room,
family room with fireplace and ! la
I special buy . ________ _
more details call Alita Carrpll,
large laundry/mud room. Make this home a special buy for 842,900. For
RIVERHILLS Lovely 3 bedroom, I, split
amily _ ^ ^
large kitcnen with beautiful
feiy 3
2</i bath, split level, features living room, famth '
Tly room with fireplace.
greenhouse window, also heat pumo. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge A Southerland, 7M 3500. nighls 754 5714.__
SPACIOUS contemporary home on approximately 2.6 acres In country 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, and much CENTURY 21
more. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Aoencv. 754 2121 or 754 7424.
STOKES Stately Southern mansion locatad a short distance from Greenville. Completely renovated 4 bedrooms. 3'/> baths, 4 fireplaces.
fireplaces, screened porches. Must see to appreciate. Owner anxious to sell. rfrTce reduced to 8120,000. W G Blount A Associates, 754-3000.
TENNIS BUFF? Swimming? See this beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath
homa. Fireplace and patio. Possible FHA loan assumption. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 754 2121 or
754 7424.
WINTERVILLE 2 bedrooms, freshly painted, new roof, hardwood floors, corner lot, excellent rental
history. 818,000. Call owner 754 7314, 57
after 5 754-4980.
room. 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted dishwasher, cable TV, 7 Years Located 3 miles from Green
|i?fc*Jr m. U0-.
ni7m
With
s old. reenvllle.
758-0144' or
2709 JEFFERSON DRIVE 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace.' 839,500. 88,000 down and
assume 10% VA loan. Open 9-7. Call Durham 488 7405 or ^7^ mi._
111 InvBStment Property
For The Best In
DUPLEXES
Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders 752-7194
INVESTORS! Let us show you th*M 3 mobile homes and housa in
country. Community water. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 754 2121 or 758 Q18Q.
MUST SELLI Deed ot trust from houM that was sold. Value 84,000, will Mil for 84700 752 9278 before 5 p.m.
RIDGE PLACE DUPLEX Each, baths,
unit has 2 bedrooms, i'/> baths, living room, dining area. Possible loan assumption. 851.000 355 2060
1 HOUSE has 2 apartmants. 2nd houM renovated last 3 years. Extra lot, zoned 0 C F Can build duplex
or 4 I bedroom apartments. Close to university. For mI* by owner 758 04i4evenlngi5toi0._
113
Land Fix Salt
13 ACRES Wooded. Near hospital. Call 752 4139. Leonard Llllev. -
115
Lots For Sale
BETHEL HIGHWAY 4 acresr
cleared, good road frontage.^ 812,000. Speight Realty 7S4 30.r niflhts7S8-74_f.
EVANSWOOO RESI lots from 89,000 812.500
Blount A Associates, 754-3000
000. * -
HIGHWAY 33. Acre wooded lot. owner financing. $11,900. Speight Baaliy ZS9.:?m.qlahts 7.^8 7741
HUNTINGRIDGE
Large residential lots 88,500 813,500. Millie Lllley. Owner/Broker. 752 4139_
NICE LARGE L<2.T in peaceful country Mttlng. Possible owner flnancim
ing with small down pay-
The Evans Company, 752
2814, Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye
ment.
Bowen 754 5258
THE PINES In Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Pavad streets, curb and gutter,
Kestlglous neighborhood. 810,500 III NUMlevMarcus Realty at 744 2144 tor full details.
WATER
Cnocowli
Ct|ifrt(
'ATERFRONT lots, located In Creek.
rinlty on Crawford
:8|lfrtd P9ert a.t 944 8914
WINTERVILLE school district Large lots, community water. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 754 2121 or 754 7424._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
DONT FORGET:
SALE TIME
SET THE ALARM CLOCKS
The City of Greenville is having a Summer Sale of surplus vehicles and equipment. WHEN? This Saturday Morning 25 June 1983 at 10 A.M. WHERE? At the new Public WorKs Facility, 1500 Beatty Street, (beside Blount Fertilizer Company) just off 14th Street by the railroad tracks. WHAT? Items for sale will include: trucks, pickup, cars, camera, wheel balancer, battery charger, 20 ton jack, pro gas motor edger, typewriters, lawn tractors and mowers, and other miscellaneous items. Bring your family and your cash, company name/cerr tified checks or money orders and join the fun anO^ excitement of an old fashioned auction. Items o6 display Thursday, Friday, and Saturday until sal time -Sale 10 A.M. 29 June 1983. Further Inform; tion can be obtained by calling the City Purchasine; Agent at 752-4137, extension 298. ^ ^
i
iBe LMUiy tteuecior, ureenvme. w.c.-r TMmy. june m, iw-a
115
Lots For Sale
cbcnar of Lot Strtef and S R 1725. Two lots togottwr over 1 aero. Call 7i2r4ie7oftor Sp.m.__
3,2 ACRE woo^ homesite I miles east of Greenville 314.500 752 leis
117- Resort Property For Sale
ON NORTH CREEK overlooking Pamlico River. 2 bedroom. 1 bath cement block cottage. Pier, boat ram^.^^lOxU shop. I.i acre of land.
PAMLICO BEACH COTTAGE redoctloo. The owners are leaving
the country and say sell. Tl
finance the beach front 10% The new wice onl 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened in
are leaving II. They wiH property tor y K.5M tor
porch and all furnishings. Call Srldoe a Southerland. 7a 3500
PAMLICO BEACH, NC Desirable yr round waterfront property. 5 bedrooms. 3*/i baths, modern kitch en. 2,000 square feet. Large screened porch. Only $00,000. Call Lt^ Riley Real Estate. (V19) 798
PAMLICO RIVER Lots. Near Washington. N C Large wooded lots. Beautiful building sites with ' beach front. Call for location
sandy beach front. Call for I anddetalls.W G Blount, 756
3000.
PEACE AND QUIET - River cot tage Pamlico Beach 50 miles from Greenville 2 bedrooms, lar
r
Ch.
living room, screened por furiUshlngs on the water with pier, screened deck and sundeck over water, boat shelter with lift and boat house for winter storage $45.000. By Owner 355 2544
O'S BEACH Located near
3ath. 2 bedroom A-frame cottage on the Pungo River. Call for price and details. W G Blount & Associates. 75* 3000
2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River, water front lots with bulkheads. 3 bedrooms, 1Vi baths, large kitchen ahd. family room, large closets. Built for year round comfort, with heat purnp, air condition and fireplace. Owner will finance 80% af good Interest rate for 10 years. Excellent location, 2 miles below Bath, NC at Bayview. Vance Overton. 754 897 or 923 2701.
120
RENTALS
lots for rent Also 2 and 3
bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets Call 758-4413 between 8 and S._
need STORAGE? We have any size-to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage. Oper day Friday 9 5. Call 754 9933
n Mon
WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease. 20,000 square feet available Will subdivide 754 5097 or 756 9315
121 Apartments For Rent
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
Allenergy efficient designed.
Oueen size beds and studio cou;nes.
Washers and dryers optional
F?ee water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
FrOst-free refrigerators.
Lockted in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact JT or Tommy Williams _756 7815_
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom lownhouses with ivj baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557_
EASTBROOK
AND
VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom
ildhden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appll ancas, central heat and air conditioning, 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 rales Starting $^50 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. 756 6869
GRIFTON AREA New centrally heated and air conditioned. 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. 12 miles from Kinston, 17 miles from Greenville Handicapped units available. Rent starts at $190. AdjOsted leases available lor students.. Office hours 1,0 a m. fo 2 p.m , Monday through Saturday. Office 524 4239, home 4 4821
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartment For Bant
DUPLEX NEAR ECU 2 bedrooim. I bath, $235 a month. No pets. 7S?2940
JOHNSTON STREET APARTMENTS 1 bedroom unfurnished apartments available immediate. Water and appliances furnished. No pets. Call Judy at 756-6336 before 5 p.m., Mohdav Friday
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One end two bedroom gardon apartments. Cerpsted, rang, re-frigeretor, dishwasher, disposel and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center end schoots. Locatedlusf oH lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LARGE ONE BEDROOM within walking distance of ECU and
downtown. No pets. Partial utilities IncludML $210 month. Days or nlQht 756 2542
I 756-9318
.Good
LARGE 2 BEDROOM duplex_____
location. 705 Hooker Road.-Stove, refrigerator, central haat and air, washer/dryer hook ups, carpeted. Lease and deposit. No pets. $275.
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!
at our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent Call Owen Norvell at 758-6050 or 756 1498, WII Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758 7029.
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-050
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality xonstructlon, fireplacts. I .eat pumps (heating costs M% less than comparable units), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insolation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 1 S Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, 1 mile from hospital med school. Really nice. $3(M. Deposit, lease. 825 4931._
Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day.
NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG MANOR BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS
Features
2 large bedrooms
li'j baths
Thermopane windows
E 300 Energy efficient
Heat Pumps
Spacious floor plan
Beautiful individual Williamsburg
interior
Patios with privacy fence
Washer/dryer hookups
Kitchen appliances
Custom built cabinets
CALL 756-7647
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse ajart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis ppsal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM apartment Near No pets. $215 a month.
campus 756 3923
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756-7815.
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances. $210. Call 758-
RENT FURNITURE; Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79j
month. Option to 756 3862.
>uy. U REN
is:
SPACIOUS TWO bedroom duplex carpet, heat pump, air condition, fireplace, outside storaoe. 756-3413
SPACIOUS NEW townhouse near Nichols. 2 bedrooms, ivj baths, washing hook ups, attic and outside storage. End unit, available August I . $325. 756 9006 after 6 p.m.
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10a.m. to5p.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CENTIPEDE SOD
Will Deliver
752-4994
SPEND6
WEEKSTHIS
SUMMER
BEINGPAID
TDHAY
We are seeking special people to appear as costumed' cartoon characters at personal appearances for a fast food restaurant chain The applicants chosen will receive an attractive weekly salary and travel expenses Because a costume is being used, applicants must have the following qualifications;
Must be 5'4" - 5'6' in height.
Must weigh between 140-150 lbs.
Must wear size 8 shoe or smaller.
Must be 18 years or older with a valid driver s license and a clean driving r0cord
Must bfe in good health and physically capable
Must be available both weekdays and weekends for the period July 23-August 30.1983
If you meet thBM requirefnents, please send a letter BxplBining your qualifications and your experience woridng with children to:
Special People'
P.O. Box 1917 QrMnvNie,.N.C. 27139
Equ*l (Jpixxtunity Emptoyer
121 Apartment For Rent
ONE BEDROOM furnished aprtmtnt. 1 block from unlvorsity. HMt. oir and water furnished. Short or long term lease. No pets. 758 3781 or 7g^l889._
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, end 3 bedrooms, washer hook ups. cable TV, pool, house, playground. Noar EQi
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street OHka - Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
TWIN OAKS tewnhomes, 2 bedroom, l</i bath, carpet, range, refrlgeretor, dishwasher, hookups. Nonets. $310 756 7480._
TWO BEDROOM agertments available. No gets. Call Smith
Insurance a Realf^sz 2754
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS
Near ECU Most utilities included. $275 up. Available Immediately. 7Sa049l or 756-7809 beferef p.m.
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, Vft bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.
9 to 5 Monday Friday
756-7711
I AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available Immediately. 72 3311.
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT
Eompletely furnished. Full utilities. all 752 43fa after 5p.
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air. carpeted, appliances. $250 a month. Brvton Hills. 758 3311.
2 BEDROOM apartment Kitchen applienes furnished, totally electric. $325 month. Call 756 7647.
2 BEDROOM townhouse, carpeted, central air and heat, modern appll anees, washer/dryer hookup, $295. 108 Cedar Court. 758 33 n_
2 BEDROOM, carpet, refrigerator, dishwasher, air. 5 blocks from campus. 752 0180, 756 3210, nights 756 2766._
2 BEDROOM APARTMENT Stove and refrigerator furnished. Central heat and air. 4 blocks trom campus. 758 2347 or 752 6068.
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near uni sltv 756 5077.
verslty. Available July 1. 758 6200 or
5 RCX3M APARTMENT AND 4
room apartment, also 2 bedroom trailer. fs2 3839.
704 EAST Third Street. 2 bedrooms. 2 blocks from ECU Stove and refrigarator. Lease and deposit $260.756 1888 9 to 5 weekdays_
122
Business Rentals
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or office space. Arlington Boulevard. 3,000 square feet Oily $3.60 per square foot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348.
FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Boulevard. 4500 square feet $4.25 per square foot Call 756 93l5or7i6 5097
FOR RENT 10.000 square toot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie smith at 946 5887_
125 Condotnlnlums For Rent
2 BEDROOM, 2'/j BATH townhouse near hospital available July 1st $325 per nrionth. It's new and ready for occupancy. Rear patio and private drive. Call Clark Branch. tealtors, 756 6336
3 BEDROOM, 1W BATH townhouse for rent in Wildwood Villas This townhouse has central heat and air and a full basement tor storage. Available immediately for $4<X> per month and $4(X).00 deposit. (Jail Clark Branch, Realtors, 756-6336.
127 Houses For Rent
A 3 BEDR<X)M. IV] bath house in Colonial Heights. $320. Deposit and lease. Family only, no pets. Call 756 7716 after 6
AVAILABLE IN JULY 3 bedroom house with 3 room upstairs apart ment. Close to university. 756-6444.
CHERRY OAKS Available August 1. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace. 2 car garage. Deoposit and lease. 756
FOR RENT IN AYOEN 3 bedroom. 2 bath, two story house. Living room, dining room, sewing room, carpeted. $300 per month Tor rent with option to purchase. Purchase prtCoiS.OW. ?4f6?9
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom, iv, bath brick home with fireplace and fenced in backyard in Ayden. Cable TV included. 756 7247
FOR SALE OR LEASE, large 4 bedroom brick house. 2 baths, detached garage. 922 East I4th Street across from campus Call 758 4228afters.__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752 6116
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
KNOLLACRES
SUBDIVISION
V4 mil* past Sunshine Garden Canter on Old Tar Road
LOTI LOT 2 LOT 3 LOT 4 LOTS LOTS LOT 7 LOTS
1.8 ACRES
6.0 ACRES 6.2 ACRES 7.S ACRES
9.0 ACRES
6.0 ACRES
6.0 ACRES
9.0 ACRES
$18,000
SOLD
$35,000
$40,000
$30,000
SOLD
$35,000
SOLD
Wlntarvllle water aystem, new paved state maintained road under conatniction, 1100 square foot minimum Blnqie famUy dwelling, restrictive covenants.
Contact
CLIFTON 0 GEARY
758-7540
MondayFriday From 7:30 to 0:00
127
Houses For Rent
FOUR BEDROOM house for rent In Stokes. Beautifully renovated older home feeturing living room, dining room, den, 3Vi beths, kitchen with breekfast eree. Ahust heve refer-
Blount et 756 3000,
HOUSES AND epertmcnts in Oaenvllle. Call 746-35i4or 524 3180. IN FARMVILLE Spacious 4 bedroom house wlfn 2 beths, wall to wall carpet end blinds. New kltch-en. $250 monthly. Cell 753 3101 devs.
TWO STORY 3 bedrooms, WOO per month. No pets. Call Oeboreh 7583191
1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS and town. 505 East 4th Street. 4 bedrooms, lots of room. $400 a month plus deposit. 758 0174
2615 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3 bedroom, central heat, air condl tioner. garage, nice neighborhood. Families onfy. Lease end deposit. $295.756 l888to5weekc|ays.
3 BEDROOM, 2>/} bath house for rent on a month to month basis. In Riverhills. $425 decmlt. $425 per month. Call 919 477 5720 after 6p.m.
3 BEDROOM HOUSE Fenced in backyard. Good neighborhood in Greenville. Central heal and air. Available In July . 756 6444.
3 BEDROOM HOME Rent plus deposit. Call 758 0806 after 6,_
133 Mobile Homes Fof Rent
SPECIAL RATES tor students. Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes $125 and up No pets, no children. 758 0745.
12x60 PARTIALLY FURNISHED Air, washer and dryer, good loca tion $165 per month plus deposit Call 752 30or 758 1800
1980 CONNOR $185 per month. $100 deposit. 2 miles for campus Call 7sf 1914 or 752 5006.
J BEOR(X>M Mobile Home for rent :all 756 4687___
2 BEDR(X>M, furnished, washer, air. good location No pets, no children Call 758 4857.
2 BEDROOMS
752 1623
Call 758 0779 or
2 BEDR(X>M trailer, 1' ] baths, air. no pets 756 6005
2-BEDROOM mobile home on land scaped country lot Fully furnished, including washer, dryer. $175 month 753 5 732 or 752 6529
IF THERE'S something you want fo rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns. Call 752 6166 to place your ad
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
133 Mobile HofMi For Rent
2 BEDROOMS - Meadowbrook
area. 756 8948. _
60*12, WASHEIt^^eir $170 per month $75 depeeif. Call Tommy 756 7815. _
135 Office SpBCt For Rent
RENT J9M
ofnce space or com-
square feet.
S^ble for ______ . . - _____
merclal 604 Afttnoton Boulevard 756-8111
or Twmv
|.101 SOUTH EV
-ASE Contact ims, 756 7815.
...___... Strtet next to
. pstfare on 264 By Pass - 4 offices, carpet, reception room, heat, air condition. Excellent location. Available June 1. Call Van Fleming, 7S6 6235or7S2 2e7~__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
EXPERIENCED
MACHINE
OPERATORS
Needed for metal working operations. One of the Greenville areas most progressive manufacturing firms has openings for skilled employees immediately! We offer very competitive salary and benefits program and an excellent working environment.
Please make application through the
Employment Security Commission
3101 Bismarck Street Greenville, N.C. 27834
Ml "Woy'
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH NURSE
Responsible for comprehensive employee safety and health program in a large state institution for the mentally retarded. RN, N.C. license, 1 year professioanal nursing experience. Prefer 4 year degree, occupational health background and certification. Good Benefits. Salary S15,612-$23,S56. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to:
CASWELL CENTER PERSONNEL OFFICE
2415 West Vernon Ave. Kinston, NC 28501
Equal Opportunity Employer
STUDENTS
NEED
HOUSING
Many of the students who will be attending Pitt Community College for the fall quarter 1983 will need housing. If you have private rooms, mobile homes, apartments, or other living accommodations for rent, please call Pitt Community College, Student Services Office.
756-3130 Ext. 261
CAMBRIDGE
NEW CEDAR SIDING E-300 energy efficient home with country front porch. Well planned living tree Includes 3 bedrooms, IVti baths. Convenient to shopping centers and medical center. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs. Low50's.
Call 752-2814
OR
Bans Company
Faye Bowen
756-5258
Of GreenvHle, Inc
701W. Fourteenth St.
Winnie Evans 752-4224
iSiMt
FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111
R C WATERS
CONSTRUCTION CO.
756-5805
QUALITY CONSTRUCTED CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
E 300 ENERGY EFFICIENT. COHE BY AND SEE OUR PLANS OR LET US HELP you DESIGN A HOME TO MEET VOUR INDIVIDUALNEED. t
C.Al.1. FOR APPOINTMENT TOD AY
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bMlroom condominium, ocMotront. famlllut only. 754 4Zp79r726 ?869
CONDO AT ATLANTIC BEACH; 3 bedroom, 3 bath, spacial weekday rates of $60 per night. Oceanside, pool and Jacuzzi, tannis. Call 756-7768 or 756-0160._
EMERALD ISLE Pabble Beach.
Ocean Front Condos. Salat ' Rfntem W4?1P___
WINTER6REEN VIP condo. 2 bedroom. Hike, wlm, oplf, etc. 60% discount all summer. That's right.
Geii7?2ifi.;L
4 BEDROOM turnishad cottage on Atbamarle Sound. Weekly or mon-thly,(;pll8?5 7ff1,_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
138
Rooms For Rent
ROOMS FOR RENT Call from 9 a.m. p,m
142
Roommate Wanted
FEMALE R(X3MMATE wantad tor 3 bedroom townhouse at WIi Ridge. Pool, tennis courts ma. 756 9691
MALE - YOUNG professional to share 3 bedroom house In Lake Ellsworth. $150 per month plus '/'i utilities. 756 Sa20.
RCX3AAMATE WANTED to share 2 badroom townhouse. $120 and utilities. Call 355 2242before 5._
Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Clei--------
assif led every day
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
142 Roommate Wanted
RoSMAT^VATI^TMMpai-
month. Furnished, swimming pool. July a August only 752 7786. Laura
R(X>MAAATE WANTED in Win terville. 2 bedrooms completely furnished. $75 plus /i utilities Call
141
Wanted To Rent
NEW ECU FACULTY member and spousa desire to rent 2 or 3 bedroom house beginning August 1 For more information pTease contact Kav
Davis, 756 69*6 __
PROFESSIONAL MATURE married couple desires country rental In Greenville area Fonvielle 105 Beag^le Trail, Wilmington, NC 28403 or 7W 0178 alter 6 p m
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
PUBLIC NOTICE AUCTION
V
LOCATION: Old County Home, 1 mile off of Hwy. 43 (Old County Home Rd.)
Saturday. June 25,1963 at 10:00 a.m.
Pursuant to North Carolina G.S. 160A-270, the Pitt County Board of Commissioners has authorized the County Manager to dispose of the following surplus equipment by public auction:
OFFICE EOUIPMENT 1 Mail inserting Machine
1 Folding Machine
4 Adding Machines
2 Validating Machines 8 Calculators
23 Typewriters
5 Copiers
3 Slide Projectors
1 Recorder (Bell & Howell) 19 Secretary Chairs 37 Assorted Chairs
3 Arm Chairs
4 School Chairs
14 Desks
6 Tables
1 Century Sale 32 File Cabinets 17 Cabinets (wood & metel) 1 Typing Table
4 Typing Stands 1 Cash Register
5 Card Cabinets
7 Black Cabineli w/rollers MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
15 Hospital beds
4 Bedside Lamps 1 X-Ray Illuminator
1 EEG Machine 1 Audiometer 1 EKG Machine 1AOC Machine 18 Exam. Tables 6 Bedside Tablea 9 Qoose-neck Lamps 6 Centrifuges 8 Physicians scales 6 Pediatric Scales 4 Physician Stools
GENERAL
28 Wood doors 3 Coffee-urns (steam)
2 Kitchen tables
1 Water dispenser 1 Clothes dryer 5 Vacuum Cleaners 1 Box coat hangers
3 Metal door frames 5 Aluminum windows 1 Set cement steps
1 Metal shelves 5 Refrigerators 100 Shop lights 15 Lavatories & sinks ^ 1 Fire pump-trailer
iSteellanklOOGal.)
1 Steel Water Tank (200 gal.)
9 Storage lockers
2 Stove units 440v.
2 Stoves
1 Fuel Tank (50 gal.)
2 Bundles pipe (1 size)
1 Backhoe & front end loader 1 Backhoe snap on 1 Metal trailer 16x8 1 Conveyer bell 1 Box scraper 1 Air compressor 1 Water pump 1 Blower
1 Flatbed trailer
2 Window Air Conditioners
1 Phone Booth
3 Couches
2 Scrub-machines
4 Mobile Homes 1 Mechanic rack
10 rolls of carpel 4 Turbine vents 1 Dishwasher
1 Toilet
Assorted Books
INSPECTION: Day and Morning before sale RAIN DATE: July 9,1983
NOTE: Barbecue will be sold by a local volunteer Fire Dept. The County reserves the right to add to or delete from this list. Other terms and conditions will be announced at sale. Someone will be at the sale location from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. to assist you during limes of inspection. The Pill County Board of Commissioners reserves the right to reject any bids.
TERMS: Strictly Cash or Good Check Immediately following sale. Everything sold as is. Where
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OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY
On Call This Weekend
Nanette Whichard REALTOR
During NON-Office Hours Please Call 756-7779
DUFFUS REALTY, INC.
756-5395
CYPRESS CREEK TOWNHOUSES
Models Open Saturday And Sunday 2-6 P.M. w. q. bloiint & dSSOCidtt'S
GANNON COURT CONDOMINIUMS
264 By-Pass East Saturday June 25 - Wednesday June 29 Furnished Model Open Daily Affordable Condominiums from $40,500.
LIVE WRQR REMOTE
Saturday 10:00 AM
Free Pepsi
Register For Free Prizes From Apple Records Jimbo's Jumbos
Brody's Larrys Carpetland
Eastern Pride Car Wash Overtons Skis
Home Builders Western SIzzlin
Grand Prize To Be Given Away Wednesday
t
MOORE & SAUTER
ASSOCIATES
110 SOUTH EVANS ^ GREENVILLE.N C 27834 (919) 758-6050
MANUFACTURERS REBATE
ON
PRI-INGINIIMD MITAL BUILDINOS
DELIVERED TO YOUR JOB SITE
(Within a 50 Mile Radius of Greenville)
TAXES AND FREIGHT INCLUDED
30 wide X 60 long x 10 high.............................$5,982.00
40 wide X 75 long x 12 high.............. $8,523.00
50 wide X100 long x 12 high ............ - $13,211.00
Available for 4 week delivery Sitework erection and concrete available upon request MANY OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
CECO Contractors, Inc.
Hwy. 264 W. Greenville, N.C. 27834
Phone-355-2474 These prices are good only on buildings ordered before June 30,1983
34-Tbe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Fridey, June *4, UO
The Legislature
Senate Expected Enact High Rise Limitations
t. 4. 1^.1. . itc maAtnale oiam cAviiallv Diit lAOialathtA iIa I
Bill
By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The sUte Senate is expected to enact legislation today to limit hi^rise construction on North Carolina's mountain ridges more than three months after the bill was introduced.
We started with no consensus at all, and weve come a long way, said Sen. R.P. "Bo Thomas, D-Henderson, who introduced the Senate version in March.
Rep. Margaret Pinky Hayden, D-AUeghany, said the passage will culminate efforts begun last November, when complaints began about a 10-story condominium springing up on Little Sugar Mountain in Avery County.
We believe ridge construction can have a detriment^ impact on the environment, she told the House before it voted 93-7 to approve the bill.
The bill started the day as a compromise between the House and Senate versions. A provision backed by Ms. Hayden would let affected counties enact their own ordinances on ridge construction by Jan. 1 or they would automatically come under the prohibitions of Thomas' bill.
Thereafter, buildings taller than 35 feet above the crest of a ridge would be outlawed. The only exemptions are for utility towers, chimneys, flagpoles, steeples, belfries, antennaes, cupolas, wires and windmills.
Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, introduced an amendment designed to answer all Senate objections by restoring a section allowing counties to opt out of the bill after a binding public referendum. While the bill addresses all ridges more than 500 feet above a surrounding valley, Nesbitt suggested it be limited to ridges 3,000 feet or more above sea level, unless lowland counties decide to use the 500-foot rule.
It kind of leaves the lowlands a little bit alone, said Nesbitt.
The amendment prompted such an outpouring of support that House Speaker Liston Ramsey of mountainous Madison County, an avid backer of the legislation, took an unusual hand in its passage.
Is there anybody opposed to the amendment? he asked. Is there any reason why we cant vote
Rep. S B. Lacey, R Avery, who represents the area were a 10-story condominium sprang up atop Little Sugar Mountain, was the only member to speak in opposition.
Im afraid we may be creating MAMA, a Mountain Areas Management Act, he said. The engine is revved up and ready to go, but Im concerned about all those boxcars and cabooses that will follow.
Lacey said the condominium provided 70 jobs and $20 million to his county that would have been prevented if the ridge law had been in effect.
Rep. Howard Chapin, D-Beaufort, asked where lowland members would have to go to benefit from protecting the
any member state refused a compact decision to locate a waste disposal facility within its boundaries. Payne suggested adding a similar provision to the North Carolina bill, saying the circumstances have made us likely to be chosen for a site because we create as much waste as we do.
Guard Probe
The House National Guard Committee is expected to meet again Tuesday to continue its inve^igation into alleged irregiilarities in the North Carolina National Guard
Rep. Murray Pool, D-Sampson, has said Adjutant Gen. William E. Ingram misused military aircraft, showed favoritism in promotions and improperly collected a pension.
Ingram and Crime Control and Public Safety Secretary Heman Clark have said the allegations are frivUous and without foundation.
During Thursdays meeting. Pool focused on a golf league in which he said guardsmen played while on duty.
Pool continuously questioned Ingram about the league, saying a memo from Ingram indicated he forfeited 15 matches between March 30 and June 30,1982 yet stUl played 44 hours while playing an average of once a week.
How is that possible in 14 weeks? Pool asked.
Ingram responded that he made up some of the matches, which require an average of 1 'k hours to play.
Obscenity
A bill amending North Carolinas obscenity laws was approved by the House Judiciary I Committee after members assured themselves it would not define convenience stores as adult bookstores.
The bill, introduced by Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, would add adult live entertainment, like strip shows, to activities considered under the obscenity law. It would also add to the definition of an adult book store that it should receive a preponderance of its income from the sale of sexually oriented materials.
The bill would add a defense against charges of disseminating obscene material to a minor if the minor is married or is an emancipated adult.
Rep. Martin Nesbitt, D-Buncombe, was concerned with defining something as an adult book store if more than half of
scenic vistas in North Carolinas mountains.
You can come up and sit on my porch, responded Ramsey.
In other legislative action:
WorkersComp
A bill to extend workers compensation to agricultural workers was approved by a House committee, but only after an amendment was adopted that labor groups say will prevent anyone from qualifying.
This doesnt cover anybody, said Christopher Scott of the state AFL-CIO, which had supported the original bill. We ought to try to kill this now, Workers will be better off without it.
Its an insult to farmworkers and would almost exclude all farmworkers, Chip Hughes of the N.C. Farmworkers Network told the Manufacturers and Labor Committee.
The bill, introduced by Rep. Joe Roberts, D-Gaston, originally would have required that workers compensation be provided to workers on any farm where 10 or more are employed at any time. But Roberts offered an amendment Thursday limiting the bill to regular, full-time, non-seasonal workers.
Roberts said the change came after consultations with the N.C. Farm Bureau, which was concerned about insuring those who might work only a week or a month and then go to other states. He said the original bill would make record keeping extremely difficult.
But Rep. George Robinson, R-Caldwell, fought the amendment, saying that in light of recent convictions of involuntary servitude in North Carolina it might kill two birds with one stone.
It would cover the non-seasonal workers and, in addition, it would require some reporting by crew leaders, he said, adding that the reporting might make migrant crew leaders more responsible. Robinson also questioned why farmers should provide insurance only if they employ 10 or more, while other businesses are covered if they have four workers.
The committee agreed to adopt Roberts amendment despite opposition by William Stevenson, chairman of the N.C. Industrial Commission and a chief advocate of the original bill.
Rep. Harry Payne, D-New Hanover, offered an amendment that Stevenson said would have extended benefits to many more workers.
Waste Compact The House Judiciary I Committee postponed action on a bill to include North Carolina in a Southeast compact for low-level nuclear wastes after members objected to South Carolinas version of the bill.
Rep. Harry Payne, D-New Hanover, said South Carolina had adopted a provision saying the state would withdraw if
See Impasse On
Tax Legislation
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -The work of a state House-Senate conference committee stalled Thursday, when the group failed to agree how large their tax package must be to balance the proposed 1983-85 budget.
The committee adjourned in frustration and agreed to meet again Monday.
But House members signalled they are willing to give up a 2-cent-per-mile weight-distance tax on tractor-trailer trucks and accept an increase in the automobile license fee from $2 to $4 and the truck fuel tax sticker from $l to $7.50 for in-state trucks and $10 for out-of-state trucks.
The agreement hinges on the Senate accepting the Houses hlghtf estimate of highway needs.
At one time, the House suggested replacing the wei^t-distance tax with a three-fourths cent increase in Urn gasoline tax. But the
Senate rejected the idea, which would have boosted
the gasoline tax to 13 cents a gallon.
The conference committee concentrate Thursday on Highway Fund needs because it contains the least differences.
The Senate package would raise $208.1 million compared to the House plan for raising $240.1 million. Part of the difference stems from the Senate plan to spend $28.5 million less than the House for resurfacing highways.
Committee members agreed that differences over resurfacing needs developed after Expansion Budget Committee leaders - Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir,
and Rep. William Watkins, D-Granville - signed a memo to their subcommittees seeking $52.8 million In additional money for the Fund in 1963^ and inl9M.
auuiMViam a
Highway Fui $22.3mlIUool
its materials were sexually oriented. But legislative aide Susan Frost said the bill would not include convenience stores selling four magazines, evai if three dealt with sexual themes.
Hazardous Wastes
The Senate approved a bill that makes it unlawful to locate two hazardous waste landflUs 25 miles or nearer to each other, ensuring that the PCB landfill in Warren County will be the only one of its type there.
The bill, which already has passed the House, also requires the state to detoxify the PCB in the Warren landfill as soon as technologically feasible.
Lemon Law
A bill letting people who buy defective vehicles seek compensation from the manufacturo' was oiacted. It had passed the Senate Wednesday and the House earlier.
Military Credit
After lengthy debate, a divided Senate approved a bill adding honorable discharge from military service to the list of factors that could lessen a convicted criminals sentence. The bill already has passed the House.
Under the Fair Sentencing Act, a judge wishing to deviate from prescribed soitences may consider circumstances of the case. If aggravating factors outweigh mitigating factors, the sentence may be harsher. If the opposite is true, the sentence may be lessened.
Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, fought the bill, pointing out that existing mitigating factors are related directly to the legal process. They incliMle, for example, cooperating with prosecutorsand being a passive participant in the crime.
When passing the Fair Sentencing Act, the Legislature didnt get into specifics such as whether a person (had) good Sunday School attendance ... or was an Eagle Scout, said Barnes.
Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, said military service was in a different category from other forms of service and should be given ^ial consideration.
Boy Scouts dont wear purple hearts, said Lawing. Sunday School teachers dont wear purple hearts. They fight to defend the right to be a Boy Scout or teach Sunday School.
No-Fault Divorce
A bill diminaUng groimds for divorce otbm-than separatioo for over one year was approved by the Senate and acted into law.
Forced Retirement
The Senate passed a bill that diminates most mandatory retiremit laws in the state, in keeping with a federal court ruling that struck down mandatory retirement as age discriminatkm.
CoodoConversioo
The Siate apinroved a House bill barring owners of bousing projects from suddenly deciding to convert the buildi^ to condominiums and ordering residents to buy or move out.
Under the bill, owners of the buildings would have to give residents at least 30 days notice. Residents then would be given first option on the apartments and would be given 30 days to decide whether to buy.
Western Resideoce
A bill guaranteeing that the Western Governors Residence in Asheville wiU be fixed whenever damaged was enacted into law when the Senate approved of a House amendment.
The bill was introduced after a dog owned by a former governor damaged a rug in the residence.
New Committee
Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green appointed what he called a ^ial Ways and Means Committee chaired by Si. Robert Swain, D-Buncombe. Other members are Sens. Cecil Jenkins, DCabarrus, James Edwards, IKaldwell, Tony Rand, D-Cumberiand, Aaron Plyler, D-Union, and Bob Warren, D-Johnston.
Green declined in an interview to say what the committee would do. Ill tell everybody tomorrow, he said.
ShiJlfliihlng
The State House enacted two bills changing the laws on shellfishing in North Carolinas coastal waters.
The first reduces from 48 to 12 hours the waiting period for resuming fishing after waters closed due to pdlution have been reopened. The other bill rewrites laws governing leasing arrangements.
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Durwood Little753-4139
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William Earl Stocks 746-3043 524-4128
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