Daily Reflector, June 30, 1983


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INCOME TAX CUTTHE UGBLATUEDemocrats failed to scuttle income tax cut in senate, but vow they have not been silenced and plan political campaign debate. (Page 8)Senate President pro tern aeeks co-signers for a bill calling for a referendum on gubernatorial succession law In North Caroline. (Page 18)

SPORTS TRAOEDYKansas City running back Joe Delaney died in a vain attempt to rescue two drowning youths yesterday in Louisiana. (Page 15)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 137

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 30,1983

28PAGESTODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

$27.93 Million Budget VotedPitt Commissioners Avoid Tax Increase

By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The Pitt County Board of Commisoners Wednesday adopted a net tMidget for the 1983-1984 fiscal year totaling some $27.93 million dollars and maintained the same 54 cents per $100 valuation tax rate that has been in effect the past two year.

Based on an estimated net property valuation of $2.15 billion, the 54-cent tax rate is expected to provide $11.6 million in local ad valorm tax revenue. The remainder of the money needed to fund the new budget includes about $6 million from

other local sources of revenue, plus state and federal grants.

For the most part, the budget, as addopted, follows recommendations made by County Manager Reginald Gray in earlier budget sessions, and includes an across-the-board pay hike for county employees ranging from 4 percent to 8 percent and amounting to about $303,000. While the board placed a freeze on the coMlys incentive pay program - a move that cut $91,363 frwn Grays recommendations - the new budget does include funds for continuation of the longevity pay plan.

New in the budget for the coming year is a capital reserve fund amounting to 563,700, which includes funds for new landfill equipment, a bookmobile, a tax and land records mapping program and the purchase of land.. Commissioners cut $244,300 from Grays recommended $808,000 reserve fund in order to save more than 1 cent on the tax rate.

recommended budget came from school capital outlay funds. The board cut $307,800 in school capital funds, a move which saved 1.4 cents on the tax rate.

Gray had recommended a 2-cent increase in the tax rate for 1983-1984, but early in the budget process, commissioners said they wanted to maintain the same tax rate.

The other big reduction made by commissioners in Grays

In his budget messa^ to the board. Gray told commissioners the budgets in the general fund were recommended for a conservative but efficient operation without frills," and said for the most part, "increases recommended are in areas we have little control over such as telephony, utilities, hospitalization insurance. Social Security ^ retirement."

PLO Mutineers flouting Arafat Forces In Battie

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - PLO mutineers have routed Yasser Arafats forces from most of their positions in the central Bekaa Valley, according to reports from eastern Lebanon, and the loyalists say Syria is trying to drive them farther north.

Reports from the Bekaa said Palestine Liberation Organization guerrillas rebelling against Arafat exchanged heavy artillery fire with the PLO chiefs loyalists Wednesday ni^it in the towns of Taanayel and Taalabay.

There was no report of casualties in the exchange, which lasted at least two hours.

Today, the Syrian-backed rebels guarded their newly captured positions as the fighting abated.

The rebels, who began their mutiny seven weeks ago, say Arafat has become too moderate in his stance toward Middle East diplomatic initiatives.    ,

Arafats AI Fatah supporters, from their headquarters in the north Lebanese port of Tripoli, said in a communique Wednesday that Syrian officers warned them to immediately clear out of Bar Elias, on the Beirut-Damascus highway, and Taanayel, to the north. The communique said they refused.

Associated Press reporter Terry A. Anderson reported today that Arafats loyalists had been ousted from all positions south of the international highway but still held the town of Chtaura. Rebels were in control of all adjacent areas to the south and east of Chtaura.

We will fight until dead, one loyalist officer in Chtaura said.

who kicked the PLO chief out of Syria last week. Arafat had accused Syria of escalating the mutiny Observers have speculated that Assad wants to control all the Palestinian guerrillas in Lebanon so they cannot drag him into another war with Israel.

Arafat was reported in Tunteia today, trying to arrange a meeting of PLO leaders.

Pottponed

The surplus cheese and butter giveaway scheduled to begin Friday at the Pitt County Office Building has been canceled until further notice, according to county officials.

County Manager Reginald Gray said the eligibility rules will change Friday and the county is not authorized to distribute the surplus dairy products until the new rules have been established.

The future distribution date will be announced later, he said.

STORM DAMAGE ... Pieces of barn roof lie scattered about at Ram Horn Horn Stables after the roof was ripped off 12 horse stalls by what

witnesses called a tornado. No injuries were reported. (Reflector Photo by Angela Lingerfelt)

Al Fatahs permanent representative in Saudi Arabia, Rafik al-Natsheh, said he asked King Fahd to arrange a meeting between Arafat and Syrian President Hafez Assad,

Another Soviet

Witnesses Say Tornado Struck

Spy Buoy Found

Barn In Northern Portion Of Pitt

REFLECTOR

OTLIflC

752-1336

f

Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, GreenvUle, N.C. 27834.

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

USHERSASKED East Carolina Summer Theater house manager Loren Watkins has asked Hotline to appeal for ushers 16 years or older no experience needed - for each of four plays to be ven throughout July.

Twelve ushers are needed each night. Anyone wishing to volunteer will be paid by being able to stay that evening and see the performance free of charge. The usual charge is $10 a seat. Pippin runs July 4-9; A Little Night Music, July 11-16; No, No Nanette, July 18-23; and *Theyre Playing Our Song, July 25-30. Anyone wishing to take part may visit the Theater Arts Building on East Fifth Street and sign up.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - A buoy bearing the the markings USSR, Academy of Science pulled in by a fisherman earlier this year has been identifed as a Soviet spying device aimed at submarines, the Providence Journal said today.

The newspaper quoted unidentified Pentagon sources as saying the buoy, similar to one found by Boy Scouts in Washington state last year, was set adrift to gather information from submarines frequenting Groton, Conn.

Groton, Conn. is where fast-attack and missile-firing Trident submarines are built and tested by the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Corp.

The latest buoy was brought ashore March 1 after it was pulled up in the nets of the 75-foot Narragansett-based trawler Matthew & Melissa while fishing off Block Island.-

A Pentagon source said the

buoy was designed to monitor speed, sonar capabilities and identifying sound characteristics of Navy subs, the newspaper said. It could probably transmit information to a nearby ship or satellite, the newspaper said, quoted an unidentified source.

The buoy was about 3^ feet in diameter, with red and white panels, and marked in both English and Russian with the label USSR, Academy of Sciences.

What witnesses described as a tornado destroyed a portion of a bam at Ram Horn Stables in northern Pitt County Wednesday.

Owners Beth Bright and Tommy Thompson estimated the damage to the structure at $20,000. Witnesses said winds took the roof off 12 horse stalls attached to the main barn around 3:30 p.m. but no injuries, animal or human, were reported.

The high winds, described as being over In two seconds, also blew down part of the fence surrounding the stables riding area.

There were boards and nails and live wires everywhere, said witness Debbie Davis, who boards her horse at Ram Horn. "A horse busted throu^ the stall and hit a live wire but it (the horse) was all right.

Trainer Linda Simkovich,

who was standing 20 feet from the barn, said she didnt see or hear , a thing unusual but "the next thing 1 knew the horses were out and there was no roof

A cold front that settled across the middle of North Carolina spawned thunderstorms with high winds, heavy rains and severe lightning that moved through Pitt County Wednesday.

The Pitt County Sheriffs

The newspaper quoted officials as saying four spy buoys have bwn found in the past four years in U.S. waters near submarine operations.

Initially, government spokesmen had identified the buoy as a standard oceanographic buoy, used for scientific study after it was transported to a Navy intelligence facility in the Washington area.

Gov. Hunt Urges.Early

Office said no confirmed funnel clouds were reported and they had no other accounts of severe wind dam age

A spokesman for Greenville Utilities reported only scattered problems from the storm and no major power outages

GUCs weather station recorded .74 inch of rain from the storms The mercury touched 94 degrees Fahrenheit Wednesday, then crept to a low of 64 degrees F At 8 a.m. today the temperature was 69 degrees F. and the Tar River stood at 3.8 feet above sea level.

Action On Waste Bills

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt warned today that the General Assembly must act quickly on bills regulating di^x>^ of hazardous and low-level radioactive waste if the state is to avoid problems.

A bill that would prohibit

landfill disposal of certain hazardous wastes and allow

dardson landfills.

burial of other wastes in concentrations considered to

be safe is before a Senate subcommittee. The bill also

would allow the state to exceed some federal stan-

The other bill would enter North Carolina into a Southeastern regional compact for handling low-level radioactive wastes. It has stalled in a House committee.

Award County Contracts For Insurance

MAIUNGS FEEDBACK Pitt County Manager Reginald Gray said today that the county has not given access to voter registration and tax lists to any company or organization except political parties, which is required by law. Therefore, the names of the 12,000 persons in Pitt County who were sent N.C. Sheriffs Association promotional material referred to in the Tuesday and Wednesday Hotline columns came from a source other than the. county, he pointed out.

By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The Pitt County Board of Commissioners Wednesday voted to award contracts for the countys property and casualty insurance to Hooker and Buchanan Inc. of Greenville after the firm ndbmitted bids which save the county more than $17,000 in premium costs and at the same time provide broader protection.

The boards action was based on the reomuneiida-

tion of David Lively of Risk Consultants of Charlotte, an insurance consulting firm hired several months ago to review the countys insurance program.

The county is now paying $55,384 in insurance premiums for comprehensive and general ItebUity, auto liabUity and other insurance coverage on its property and employees.

The bids submitted by Hooker and Buchanan, the only bidder, totaled $37,951

for the insurance package which provides broader coverage at a savings of $17,433 a year.

Lively told the board that the bid is a very good one and I can recommend it to you. We were pleased to see the results."

Lively also told commissioners Uiat the payment schedule under the bid would be beneficial to the county becauaa most of the insurance premiums are on a montluy basis with no inter

est. At present, the premiums are paid at the beginning of the policy period.

Most of the countys i^ur-ance covered by the bid is presently written by firms represented by Hooker and Buchanan.

paying $11,442 a year for comprehensive and general liability coverage while, under the bid, the coverage is provided for $5,442. Auto liability insurance now costs the county $20,530. The cost for the coverage under the package bid is $11,789.

The largest savings under the bid was for comprehensive and general liability coverage and for auto liability insurance.

At present the county is

Next week, commissioners are scheduled to consider recommendations by risk consultants on bids received for the countys group health insurance coverage.

c/

WEATHER

Goudy tonight, 30 percent chance of showers with low in 70s. Partly cloudy Friday, hi^ in the 90s, continued chance of

showers.

Looking Ahead

Partly cloudy, quite warm and humid with widely scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms through the July 4tb holiday weekend. Highs in the 90s and lows in 70s.

Inside Reading

Page M-Obituaries Page 19-Big Bingo Page 21-In uniform Page 28-Area items





2-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Tlwraday. June , IMS

Reinventing Extended Family In Kansas City

ByMIKEREVZIN

Associated Press Writer

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Twenty-year-old Teresa Hansen, who recently finished her first year of college, found a perfect roommate in Mary Mantz -who received her degree 65 years ago.

The 86-year-old Mrs. Mantz and Ms. Henson are two of about 400 people - from 18 to 94 years old - brought together by the non-profit Homesharing Project which began serving the Kansas City area a year ago.

The program is open to all ages, but the most common match involves a college student who pays little or no rent in return for helping an elderly person with household chores. About 100 matches are currently in operation.

"In some ways 1 think we're reinventing the extended family, said Elizabeth Ossorio, the project director. Ms, Ossorio, who works part-time, runs the program with two fulltime employees on an annual $50,000 budget, which includes donations from various companies and office space profided by the Metropolitan Community Colleges.

People signing up for the program do so for more than financial reasons, Ms. Ossorio explained.

Both from the homeseekers and the homeowners we hear a lot about being lonely and isolated and wanting companionship," she said."Basically, our function is to introduce them to each other."

Occasionally the program has to turn down applicants who have a misconception about the service.

We cant provide a nursing service, said Ms. Ossorio, explaining that the program is not designed for someone who needs full-time medical care,

"On the whole, a great deal of satisfaction is expressed about how this inter-generational sharing works, she said Some of the matches with 18-year-olds have been just fantastic.

"1 think its a terribly important transitional thing for some young people. Maybe its their first time away from home. Its not nearly as scary if theyre with a grandmotherly or grandfatherly type, she added.

Those seeking matches pay a $5 fee and fill out an application. Program volunteers visit the homes of people who have space available, and give the homeowners information on possible homesharers.

The homeowners identity

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HOMESHARING PROJECT...has been serving the Kansas City area. Here Teresa Hansen, a second-year student at Penn Valley Community College, finishes pouring a cup of coffee for her roommate, 86-year-old Mary Mantz, as the two share breakfast recently.! AP Laserphoto)

is not revealed to hom'eseekers unless the homeowner thinks a match is possible If the two work out arrangements, a three-week trial period is held.

The homeowner and sharer work out arrangements for rent, usually about $100 a month, and household chores.

In 40 percent of the matches, the homesharer pays no rent, but provides some service, such as housekeeping, yard work or driving.

Ms. Henson agreed that the program helps young people adjust to being away from home. She said her living arrangement with Mrs. Mantz, and her contact with Mrs. Mantzs nearby relatives, was just like having a family away from home.

Ms. Henson came to Kansas City from Audubon, Iowa, to attend Penn Valley Community College, She signed up for Homesharing to save money and because her parents didnt want her to live alone. She has lived with Mrs. Mantz since August 1982.

Mrs. Mantz, a 1918 graduate of the University of Missouri, is a widow and former teacher. She wanted to remain in her home of 23 years. But her children encouraged her to join the program because they didnt feel it was safe for Mrs. Mantz, who has poor vision and heart trouble, to stay alone.

Ms. Hansen pays no rent for living in the two-story, three bedroom house in an upper middle class neighborhood. She cooks dinner for the older woman, eats dinner with her and sees that she takes her medication.

Mrs. Mantzs daughter. Mary Griffith, lives nearby and comes to the house whenever Ms. Hansen is gone.

"All we ask of her is that she be here In the evening, or tell us she plans to be away, said Mrs. Griffith.

The social aspect of sharing dinner is important, Ms. Ossorio said, adding that an elderly person living alone

often doesnt bother to eat a nutritousmeal.

Some young people, after sharing a home with an elderly person, "have expressed' the feeling they really didnt know how much knowledge and skills and vvisdom went into old age, Ms. Ossorio said.

Others, she added, are uncomfortable.

Some have said its hard to be around a feeble person. Its a little overwhelming to some young people.

Bridal

Policy

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph Is requested for engagement announcements.    For

publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

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

Plonk, a British word for wine, was a corruption of vin blanc. It was brought into use by British soldiers stationed in France during World War I,

Color Consultant Is Chapter Speaker

Mothers Forked Tongue May Split Couple

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by Univanal Ptm* SyndtctU

DEAR ABBY: If they gave a prize for the most insensitive mother-in-law in the world, mine would win hands down! When Harold (her son) introduced me to her. she said, How do you do? Is your complexion always that bad, or is it a temporary condition?

Harold and I have been married for eight months, and Mums is still talking about all the rich and pretty girls Harold could have married. Ive been taught to respect my elders, but when she told a roomful of relatives last evening that she had saved $1,000 for Harolds divorce, I nearly told her off. (Everyone laughed as if it were a joke.)

Harold is an only child. His mother raised him alone, as her husband left her when Harold was an infant. I will give Mums credit for raising a fine son, but he never takes my part when she insults me. He just asks me to please 1 patient with her because shes not well. I say if shes not well, she should see a doctor.

Help me. Abby. I cant take much more of this.

D. IN BRITISH COLUMBIA

DEAR D.: "Mums could be emotionally disturbed. Ask Harold to tell you more about her condition. Perhaps if you knew all the facts youd be better able to cope witb the situation. To understand all is to forgive all.

DEAR ABBY; Ive been dating a guy for over a year and we have a really great relationship, but theres a silly little problem. We both have pretty good jobs, but I make a little more than he does, so I insist on picking up the tab for our dates about half the time.

When we go out to eat or take in a movie, its rather awkward for me to start digging around in my purse, so I always give him the money privately before we go out. I always give him more than enough to cover the cost, but for some reason, he never gives back my change. I hate to ask him for it, but, Abby, this happens every time I give him money, and it all adds up.

Is there some way I can remind him to give me my change without coming off as cheap or petty?

SHORTCHANGED IN IOWA CITY

DEAR SHORTCHANGED: Yes. Wait until you are out of the public eye, then say, By the way, before you forget, may I please have my change? Period.

DEAR ABBY: Please settle a problem for me. I am getting married in a couple of months. My future sister-in-law will be six months pregnant at the time of my wedding. I want very much for her to be a bridesmaid, but I am not sure whether it would be in bad taste because of her pregnancy. Shes been married for two years, and her husband (my fiances brother) will be a groomsman.

I dont see anything wrong with having an obviously pregnant bridesmaid, but I also dont want to offend anyone.

What do you think?

WITHHOLD MY NAME

DEAR WITHHOLD: Bad taste? Certainly not. Invite your sister-in-law to be a bridesmaid, and if anyone is offended, shame on him or her.

CONFIDENTIAL TO G. IN McALLEN, TEXAS: Congratulations. Stay clean. Reality is for people who cant handle drugs.

Patsy Garzik, color and wanfarobe consultant, spoke to the GreenviUe C3u^, Professiooal Secretaries International on Monday eviing.

She has a degree in fine arts and art education and has studied teztiles and

ciothing and fabric desip. She danonstrated the difference when one knows their OHTect color seast, using two modds from the group.

The schdarship award was given to Dariene Gardner, D.H. Conley High School paduate. She was also giv a secretarial handbook.

Ann Harrington, CPS presented Nila Bland, outgoing president, a certificate of appreciation and scrapbook.

Betty Lou Shinn, Loureen Din, Mae Parrot, Linda

Rains and Arne Stokes were wekomed as guests by Ms Harrington.

An installation gift of $2S wiU be given to the new Czype Fear Chapter which will be installed July 17.

Linda Little, Beth Mewhorter and Marpret Nelson were installed as new members.

Area secretaries interested in the group are asked to call Ms. Hairing at 758-7411.

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PITT COUNTY OUR LITTLE MISS

MIm Roecilnd MIchcilc Gibeon. age 12. daughter of Mr & Mrs

Michael W Gibson, formerly of Greenville. N C and granddaughter of Mr & Mrs John I. Causey. Sr . Greenville, will represent Pitt County in the 198^ North Carolina OUR LITTl.E MISS IDEAL MISS PAGEANT to be held at UNC at Wilmington. NC on June July 1 and 2 The North Carolina OUR 1 ITTl E MISS IDEAI. MISS PAGEANT is affiliated with the Univeral Pageant System now in its 21st year

The winner of the pageant will receive a cash scholarship, crown, banner, trophy and their entry fee to the INTERNATIONAI OUR LITTLE MISS/IDEAL MISS PAGEANT in Las Vegas Contestants will he judged on 'A pose-personality, ^ talent. * 4 interview, and '/4 appearance

Miss Gibson will also be competing m the Pro Am modeling and Command Performance Talent events

Births

Hawkins

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Wayne Hawkins, 220 Fairway Drive, a son, Corey Scott, on June 20,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Rouse

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Keith Rouse, Rt. 1, Greenville, a daughter, Jessica Diane, on June 20, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

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At Wits

End

By Erma Bombeck

Were a country of believers. Especially we believe everything we read.

It probably ^ back to the days (rf Virginia OHanlon, who questkmed the existence of Santa Gaus and was told by her father, "If you read it in tlM New York Times it is so. (How can you trust a man who doesnt read the comics?)

I believe most of what I read. Let us just say Ive been cautious since the day I followed a recipe that had me adding ei^t cups of rice to 1/2 cup boiling water.

Besides, there are a lot of crazies around who write with their terminals on overload.

For example, Ive read a rash of stories lately about' how you can perform simple exercise while going about your daily routine so that no one will notice. Like while you are pushing a grocery car you can use the cart handles as a ballet bar, sweeping down into a plie position and up against, pretending to pick up a piece of lettuce.

1 wouldnt do that if 1 were

you.

Another one had you doing entire routines while cleaning your house. It sounded so simple to bend over my vacuum sweeper and extend my ri^t leg straight behind me while I touched my head to my knee. That was just before the sweeper sucked my nightgown into it, causing me to nearly pass out.

Still another story suggested that exercises can be done so discreetly on an airline that your fellow passengers would have no clue as to what you are doing.

Wrap both aims around your shoulders and give yourself a big hug. Then let your head drop back and look up in the overhead compartment and start to chew to relax your facial muscles. ,

Now if someone hasnt tapped out an SOS on the call button by this time, relax your shoulders and arms to make a circle with one shoulder 10 times before you reverse and roll your shoulders backward.

Im not telling you what to do, mind you, but when the kids were smaller, I read where you could exercise in the privacy of your car as you went about your daily erands. Since my stomach muscles had fallen around my knees, I chose to do the old Traffic Light Muscle Toner. Whenever I stopped the car, 1 would inhale, contract my stomach muscles together and squeeze my buttocks to the count of 10. One day 1 saw a driver in the car next to mine stare at my beet-red face with some concern. I smiled. He made a U-turn over a median and went the other way very fast.

Thats the day 1 realized Virginia OHanlons father lied.

Births

Lewis

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Warren Lewis Jr., Tarboro, a son, Charlie Warren III, on June 21,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Cale

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. James Douglas Cale, A-29 Glendale, a son, Jason Douglas, on June 21,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Hatfield Bom to Mr. and Mrs. James Alvin Hatfield, Hookerton, a son, Steven Michael, on June 22,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

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4-Tbe Daily fteOeclar, Greearille, N.C.-Tbunday, Jiae , un

Ediforials

Handle With Care

If one listens to all the experts, one could easily envision a North Carolina just down the road filled with convicts gleefully carrying out community service work. Court of Appeals Judge Willis Whichard even sees the program, an example of alternatives to incarceration, as boosting North Carolina States drive for the national basketball championship this year because such a sentence possibly saved one of the school s players from prison.

It could all be a little farfetched, but there is no doubt that community service projects can be one means of alleviating the problem of crowded prisons. They expecially would be helpful for traffic offenders convicted under the new drunken driving program, which is expected to increase drastically the case loads for the states courts.

State officials estimate 50,000 drunken drivers may be eligible for community service sentences in a year. Of course, they dont all deserve prison nor do all individuals convicted of more serious crimes.    j

But, as we have said before, prison must not be turned into something to be viewed lightly by those who would break the laws of society. Alternatives are fine, but they Aiust not be abused or society itself will be abused.

Secret No More

A report of the accidental finding of a Russian spy buoy off the coast of Washington should have come as no surprise to the U.S. Department of Defense.

A week or so ago, a London-datelined story cited American dismay some secret developments in the field had been duplicated by the Soviet Union; and it stood to reason.

The United States obviously has been using such equipment for some time, and it was logical to expect that sooner or later the Russians would have recovered the equipment, duplicated it to fit their own needs and utilized it accordingly. ^

So while discovering the secret is no longer a secret, and is being used by the Soviet navy, such knowledge is in Itself of value. At the same time it is disappointing to learn one more advantage of our technological expertise is being applied against us.

Paul, T, O'Connor

Change Of Jobs

^Waltor Moan^

Carter Papers May Have A Future

RALEIGH - This is the time o the year when legislators talk about changing jobs They've been in Raleigh for seven months now and theyre tired They moan about lost work back home, about how they dont have any influence in Raleigh. So, they dream of greener pastures or maybe a return to private citizenship From the current chatter around the Legislative Building, it appears that the political races of 1984 promise to rid us of some familiar faces in 1985.

Gov. Jim Hunt cant run for re-election but only one legislator is definitely seeking his job. Sen. Cass Ballinger, R-Catawba, appears to be the frontrunner for the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Two other Republicans are keeping their names up for consideration, however. Rep. Howard Coble, R-Gullford, looks more like a candidate for Congress In the 6th District, but he refuses to rule out a run for governor Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, has looked at the U.S. Senate seat held by Jesse Helms, and hes looked at running for lieutenant governor. He also refuses to rule out a run for governor.

Democrats have begun mentioning Sen. Russell Walker, D-Randolph, as a possible gubernatorial candidate. Walker also gets mentioned as a possible candidate for Congress in the 4th District. Sen. Kenneth Royall, D-Durham, the Senates most powerful member, is getting some mention as a gubernatorial candidate, in the event that Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green drops out of the race. Royall for governor, however, Is probably just speculation.

With Green vacating his office. Sens.

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

m ColtnciM SirMt, QrMnvHI*, N.C. >7134

EstablWMdIMt l*uWt(lwd Montfty Through Friday Aftomoon and Sunday Morning

DAVID JULIAN WHICHAND Chalnnan of tho Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-OAVID J. WHICHARD FuWiahoro

Saoond Claaa Poalago Raid alOroonvUla. N.C. (USP814S^)

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WASHINGTON (AP) As political rododrama, that presidential caiqiaign debate in Gevelaod was no match for the mystery of the Jinomy Carter briefing papers that wound up in the hands of Ronald Reagans campaigners.

President Reagan says be nevo- saw the papers and they wouldnt have done him any good in the 1980 debate even if be had. After all, it took no pcditical wizardry to figure out what was iikely to be said when the White House rivals met one week before that election.

The debate between Carter, then president, and Reagan, the challenger, was a predictable recitation of what each man had been saying for months. What drama it did offer stemmed from the fact that the rivals were finally face to face, with the election at hand. Reagan won the election. The debate seemed a standoff.

The one ingredient nobody could have anticipated was supplied by Carter, and it wouldnt have been in any briefing book. I had a discussion with my daughter, Amy, the other day before 1 came here, to ask her what the most important issue was, Carter said. She said she thought nuclear weaponry and

the contnri of miciear arms.

Then it got predictaUe again; Carter said that on nuclear weapmiry, Reagans attitudes were dangerous and belligerent. Reagan said they werent.

But Reagans news conference account of the episode - which was to minimize the importance of material his people mysteriously obtained from the Carter camp - misses a major point. The cpiestion isnt whether the Carter papers were useful to the Reagan campaign. It is where they came from, and bow and why.

One of the mysteries of Watergate was why any savvy politician* would figure there was information at Democratic National Headquarters so valuable as to be worth the risk of breaking into the place to get at it.

And one of the legacies of Watergate is a political establishment sisitized to anything that smacks of dirty tricks.

Rea^n said he never saw the Carter campaign papers, never even knew about them until he read about them in the newspapers. I happen to agree with House Speaker Tip ONeill who said today that he didnt think the debate

woidd have turned out any dtfferently one way or the otbr, Reagan tdd his news confermce Tuesday Reagan said as be recalled the debate, there would have been no use fw the Carter papers anyhow. Everything that was used in that debate had been used pver and over again out on the campaign trail, he said.

Nonethdess, there is pditical embarrassment for the White House in the fact that Reagans people hid the p^rs, and that they wound ig) in administratkMi files. Now they have been turned over to the Justice Departmoit.

Reagan said his instructions were to investirte and to take iqppropriate action if any wrongdoing was invirived, by anyone involved in either campaign.

When the question of ethics was raised, the president said be deplored any douUe standard in pditks. I think it should be above reproach, be said, and there shouldnt be unethical things done in campaigns, even such things as accusing the other candidate of being a racist and things like that.

That was a slap at Carter, who didnt quite call Reagan a racist, but certainly

W,kSeNWOR, /WSeNOT, ||\AK!^UtSSTHMlk/ ATteRAIili,

RlfieBMiPUii vouviafrA &M

m.

James Kilpatrick

Round Of Applause

Bob Jordan, D-Montgomery, and Harold Hardison, D-Lenior, hope to succeed him The attorney generals race could attract three Democratic lawyer-legislators, Rep Parks Heims, D-Mecklenburg, Rep Paul Pulley, D-Durham, and Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne. Sen Dick Barnes, D-Forsyth, is sounding increasingly like a candidate for slate labor commissioner.

In the 1st Congressional District, Rep. John Gillam, D-Betie, has talked of challenging U.S. Rep. Walter Jones In the 2nd, Rep. Ken Spaulding, D-Durham, may challenge U.S. Rep. Tim Valentine. In the 4th, Sen. Wilma Woodard, D-Wake, may challenge U.S. Rep. Ike Andrews. Thats not very likely if Walker runs for Congress, however.

Several House members are looking for Senate seats. Rep. Austin Allran, R-Catawba, plans to run for Ballingers seat. Rep. Charles Evans, D-Dare, may seek the seat now held by Sen. Mel Daniels, D-Pasquotank, who may have other political ambitions. Rep. John Jordan. D-Alamance, is giving thought to a challenge of Sen. Cary Allred, R-Alamance.

Then there are those legislators who are just hanging it up and retiring The two most influential are Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, president pro-tem of the Senate, and Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, House Base Budget chairman. , Take Adams announcement with a grain of salt, however. Hes prematurely announced his retirement before.

Rep. S B. Lacey, R-Avery, says hes retiring. Rep. Ruth Cook, D-Wake,, is taking a seat on the Utilities Commission. Other possible retirees include Rep. George Robinson and Sen. Donald Kincaid, both R-Caldwell, Sen. Joe Johnson, D-Wake, and Rep. Brad Ligon, R-Rowan.

By no means is this a complete list. For each departing senator, there is usually a local House member ready to move to the upper chamber. The race to succeed Insurance Commissioner John Ingram should attract a few legislators and theres always the prospects of staying home and making more money to lure some politicians into retirement.

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court had one of its better days on June 13. Six opinions came down. In five of them the court spoke ununimously; in the sixth the vote was 8-1. In two of the cases the court followed the sound doctrine of judicial restraint. All of the opinions were brief. A round of applause is in order.

There havent been many occasions for applause during this term. Through June 13 the court had divided 5-4 on 20 cases. Time after time the justices have done the spread-eagle act; in the Missouri abortion case, Powell wrote an opinion In six parts, but he appeared to be alone in liking all six of them. His eight colleagues romped off in three directions, concurring and dissenting across the landscape. All of the justices tend toward long-windedness, and Justice Blackmun in particular has a way of sitting on a case forever.

But June 13 was a good day, and because I recent^ have had some unkind things to say about the courts occasional adventures in judicial activism, it is only fair to call attention to the courts opinions in two cases. One involved an unhappy aerospace engineer in Alabama. The other involved five unhappy black sailors in the Navy. In both cases the court refused to impose its own ideas on well-established law,

William C. Bush, the aerospace engineer, felt aggrieved by the positions to which he was assigned during a reorganization of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center in 1974. In May and June of 1975 he made a number of public statements, including two televised interviews, that were hi^ly critical of the a^ncy. He was quoted as saying that he did not have enough meaningful work to keep him busy, that his job was a travesty and worthless, and that ^ taxpayers money was being spent fraudulently and wastefully.

For thus exercising his vocal cords, Bush was demoted from the civil service grade of GS-14 to GS-12, at a loss of $9,700 a year in pay. He sued the director of the center, william R. Lucas, asking damages for defamation and for viiriation of his constitutional rights. The Supreme Court, for purposes of decision, assumed that Bushs First Amendment rights

had indeed been violated. The question was, could the aggrieved engineer sue his superior for damages?

As Justice Stevens emphasized in his opinion for a unanimous court, the Supreme Court has power to grant the relief Bush had asked. But in this case, the court concluded that federal civil ser-vunts already are protected by an elaborate, comprehensive scheme by which the improper actions of governmental executives may be redress^. The court, acting with, restraint, refused to fashion an additional damages remedy of its own.

The same sense of restraint was evident in the courts unanimous refusal to grant the five sailors a new right to sue their superior officers for damages. The five had complained that because of their race they had been given undesirable duties and low performance evaluations. A federal district court threw out their suit, but the Ninth Circuit reversed. On June 13, speaking through Chief Justice Burger, the court came down solidly in support of the long-established procedures under the Uniform Code of

Military Justice.

The special nature of militaiy life, the need for unhesitating and decisive action by military officers and equally disciplined responses by enlisted personnel, said Burger, would be undermined by a judicially created remedy exposing officers to personal liability at the hands of those they are charged to command.

None of the other four cases on June 13 amounted to much. Two cases were accepted in order to resolve intercircuit conflicts. A third had to do with federal preemption of state law on an Indian reservation in New Mexico. The fourth involved a fellow who pleaded guilty to a charge of manufacturing phencyclidine, received a prison sentence of 25 years, and then decided to sue the officers who had arrested him.

In brief, it was much less than a landmark day at the high court, but the several opinions were brisk, nicely reasoned and altogether workmanlike. The justices functioned as judges, not as social critics or gynecologists or superintendents of schools, and I like it that way.

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

The maze, or labyrinth, used to be very popular at amusement parks, especially in England. Once a person got into its narrow hallways, escape seemed almost impossible. The more one tried to extricate himself, ^ the more hopeless became his involvement.

But there was one way in which a person could get out very easily. A man was always seated in a chair above the maze. He was clearly visible to everyone in the narrow

passages. All one had to do if he became hopelessly lost was to signal this man and he would show the bewildered person how to get out quickly and easily.

In the confusion and frustrations of our lives, just as in the labyrinths of amusement parks, rescue comes only when we look up. To rely upon our own powers only involves us all the more hopelessly.

It is when we look up that we discern One who indicates the way of escape and leads us out.

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer

Hysteria Reigns Over AIDS

SAN FRANCISCO - Out of fear, they burned Jews at the stake, walled families inside their homes, and turned away refugees from stricken villages. Doctors advised their patients to avoid excitement ... especially at bedtime. And the Church traced it to supematurai disappointment with mans ways.

Such was, wrote Barbara Tuchman in her book, A Distant Mirror how medieval Europe responded to the Plague. A future historian might find similar folly in modem Americas tioBt-ment of AIDS andits victims.

Yet when the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome has long been cured and eradicated, the notion of homosexuals as forever diseased may stili fester.

PuMic hysteria over AIDS has already given anthropologists plenty to work with. Coronado, Calif., police and Are (dficials, for exan^le, have canceled a cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) course because students .^were unwilling to engage in mouth-to-mouth resuscitation wim a dummy. In New York City, a bailiff and other court officials donned surgical masks and glove when an AIDS-stricken

inmate took the stand.

Here in San Francisco, whose large, politically-powerful gay population is well-known across the U.S., technicians at station KGO-TV refused to work in the same studio featuring AIDS victims. (While it might seem the logical place for complete hysteria, San Francisco is relatively cum. Local papers say convention bookings havent dropped off. Added Mayor Diane Feinstein in an interview: "Theres much less hysteria here. Everybody knows about the disease.)

Yet. as in other i^acei the AIDS

suggested it during the I960 canqmign.

Even so, Reagan acknowledged that some (rf the material was pik to use, at least as a time-saver. David Stockman. noWv budget director, {riayed the of Carter as Reagan rehearsed fw the Geveland debate. Stodonan has said he found the stuff useful. Rea^ said he thought Dave meant that nce he was going to {day President Carter in practicing in front of a panel of questioners, that it saved him from having to go out and dig up what were all of the accomplishmaits of the Carter administration.

He bantered about the reaction of his 1980 campaign manager, William Casey, now GA director, whai the Carter material arrived. ... Hed be the fellow that would pass it cm as quickly as he ^t it, the president said. I do that with some papers sometimes, too, now. I dont look, but I know that they could be handled by someone else.

The day after the Geveland debate, Reagan said he wasnt sure hed won it, but Ive examined myself. I cant find any wounds.

There may yet be some.

epidemic comes at a critical juncture for homosexuals, whose acceptance by socfo-ty has slowly edged higher in recent years as their overt numbers and self-assertion have increased Indeed, many straight Americans have gradually grown tolerant of gays in the workplace, in neighborhoods and in schofris. Theyve seen the emergence of a gay culture - in the form of bookstores, newspapers, movies and even a tdevision series - and tacitly assented to its in-corporatkn into American culture as a whole.

Skip Wolhnberg

. >

Changes

NEW YORK fAP) - The municipal bond market undergoes a significant change this week in the way it does business.

A federal law requires that, beginning Friday, new issues of tax-free municipal bonds be sold only in registered form. For the first time, buyers will be required to identify themselves when purchasing new issues, and the issuer must keep track of who owns its bonds.

Until now, municipal binds had been issued each year in what is called bearer form. No record was kept of who owns such bonds. The bonds were sold with attached interest coupons, which owners sinlply clipped at maturity and redeemed for cash at their local banks.

Here are some questions and answers about the new system and what it may mean to issuers and bondholders;

Q. What types of securities are affected by the new requirement?

A. Registration will apply to new issues of municipal bonds that states and local governments sell for things such as street improvements, sewage treatment facilities and other public projects. These bonds are attractive to investors because the interest paid on them is exempt from federal taxes and most state and local tax. Such issues are regarded as relatively secure because the issuing agencies are units of government that have their taxing authority to make sure the bonds are repaid on time.

Q. Why is the change being made?

A. The Treasury Department said the change would help it crack down on tax evasion. The government said some people were buying muniqpal bonds to conceal income, some of it ill-gotten, while others may have failed to report such instruments in computing tax due on inheritances.

Q. Why was the July 1 date picked for the change?    

A. It was a compromise. The original registration legislation set a deadline of Jan. 1, 1983, but the deadline was extended for six months after bond issuers complained they could not make the change in time.

Q What will the change mean to issuers?

A. Issuers will either have to set up the machinery to keep track of who owns their bonds and make sure interest payments are made on time. For some larger units of government, this may mean adding a few employees who use existing computer systems to do the job. Smaller units of government, however, probably will have to hire an agent to keep track of who owns the bonds and to help make the transfers when the bonds are traded.

Q. How have issuers reacted to the new requirement?

A. The state of South Carolina went to court to challenge the requirement, saymg it represented unwarranted interference with the rights of states to issue such bonds. In June, the Siq>reme (?ourt agreed to hear the case, but it refused to issue an order that would have blocked registration pending its decision. The case will not likely be argued before the court until fall.

Q. What changes will be apparent to Individual investors?

A. In addition to having to identify themselves when buying bonds, investors may get a higher rate of interest for doing so. Bond dealers say when a registration requirement took effect for housing bond issues in 1962, issuers had to pay about V4 percentage point to percentage p(rint more in interest for registered bonds compared with bearer bonds. They said the diiferential has disa^ieared over time.

(). Are there any other advantages for investors?

A. Issuers will get their interest payments automatically and will not have to remember to clip coupons to get thrir money. Registration also will make it easier for investors to prove ownership of the bonds if lost (Hr shden.

Q. What if a buyer simply want it known he owns municipal_______

A. It has been estimated there are $406 billion worth of beara^ bond municipal issues (Nkstanding, none of which are affected by the new requirement. These bonds will continue to be bought and add bi the secondary senirities maitet.

not





The DeUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N C.-Thunday. June 30,1963-5

Downtown Pitt PlazaBRAND NAMEDURING OUR STOREWIDE SALE- SHOP FRIDAY & SATURDAY

A Country Miss Dresses

/ V2

Group of casual dresses in cool & comfortable ^ fabrics for any occasion By Country Miss. Serbin & ^ Bayard. . The kind of dresses you can live in Sizes ^ 6 20

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Be comfortable in the classic style of J G Hocik blouses, skirts & blazers

Austin Hill Summer 3v Separates

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Good-looking

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Quality and fashion are fust in these exciiiMce iMttnn print skiits and cooidinating tirps *

Surrey (by Serbin) '4 Cotton Skirts and

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Koret Koratron Co-ordinates

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t-Tbe Day Reflector. Greenvflk. N.C.-tlimlay. June 30,1

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Carolina Eaat Mall, Qraanvllle, N.C.

Vi Yearly Sumnier Shoe SALE.. .Now In Progress

40

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Clearance

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SALE

dr.

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s." ___

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Deacon.............................(wr    $22.00)    il

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Carolina East Mall

FISH TANK SPECIAL

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Glazed

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Fine Jewelers Sirce 1922

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Downtown Greanville Shop Daily 10 to 5:30

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Carolina East Mall

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Formerly Black Jack Antiques

Grand OpeningSPECIALS!

July 1,2 and 4

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FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY

JULY

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Machine Time

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Carolina East Centre    ^

niamond Clusters    ^    Bridal    Sets

Diamond Clusters ^    Bridal    Sets

Reg. Sale    Sale

.07 Ct........$130.00    $91.00    .03    Ct........$135.00    $94.00

.10 Ct........$195.00    $136.50    ^    .04    Ct........$158.00    $126.00

.25 Ct........$415.00    $290.00    ^    .10    Ct........$310.00    $217.00

.50 Ct........$655.00    $458.00    4*

5 Diamond Necklace

Earring Set

Sale

Reg.

$570.00

S39900

Diamond-Sapphire Pendant

^    Sale

^    $?M00

The Youth Shop

C arollna East Cantrr

4th Of July Super Sale

Featuring

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3 Days Only Friday, Saturday & Monday July 1.2&4

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3 Diamond Princess Ring

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Sale

S7500

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$215.00

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$15000

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Sale

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Sale

$8500

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if

If 14 Kt. Gold If Filled Crosses

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^ 8-TheD*Uy Reflector, GreenvilJe,N.C.-TWsd*y, June 30,1963

Democrats Vow Continued War On Tax Cut

rjosephs

ByaiFFHAAS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Democrats, eyeing the 1984 elections, are serving notice that their failure to limit the third and final installment of President Reagans tax cut

will not silence them on the issue.

The Republican-controlled Senate voted virtually along party lines 55-45 Wednesday to scuttle House-passed legis-lation that would have limited the maximum tax

reduction to $720 a year for couples and $637 for single people.

The tax cut goes into effect this Friday and Reagan hailed the vote saying, 1 can put my veto pen away.

But House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr., D-Mass., refused to give ground on his contention that the presidents tax policies favor the wealthy and are driving up budget deficits.

The Senates failure to approve the tax cap may have been a victory for the president but a defeat for fairness. .. The people want fairness and sooner or later they are going to get it, ONeill said.

Sen Bill Bradley, D-N.J., a

leader in the fight for the limit, said that despite the loss. Democrats made a consistent record on the equity and fairness of Reagans tax pdicies.

That record is likely to be aired at length in next years political campaigns.

Reagan and his congressional allies have defended his tax program, enacted in 1981, saying that it is necessary to return more money to upper-income Americans since they make most of the investments in the country.

During a nationally broadcast news conference Tuesday ni^t, Reagan reiterated the argument saying, True fairness means honoring our word. R means

What Flaltrnrcf Tunguska?

()n thi.>-(liitf (ti litOh. ii iiugi lircb.ill .Mcminglv (fll out of (h<skv in ('cntral Si Ihtiii. causing a liugc ex plosion where it landed Some 2.001' sijti.ire kilometers of forest and thousands of trees were flattened and hurned around the impact site, and the atmospheric shock wave i ircled the earth three limes! Yet. amidst all that destruction, there was no im|act crateral the site. This remarkahie(Kcurrence. ( ailed iheTunguska Kvenf. has haflled people lor 7.i vears 1 hough a number <d ex|)lanalions have been pul forward including lil't's, black ludes and anlimafler it seems most likel v that Tunguska was sirui k hv a htothall field*si/e fragment of a comet

DO Yor KNOW? - When is Hallev's Comet expei'ted to reappear.'

WEDNESDAY'S ANSWER - A Congressional 'gypsy moth" is a Republican who often votes with Democrats.

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FATAL WRECK - A fireman extinguishes blaze in a tractor-trailer rig that started a seven-car chain reaction wreck on U.S. 74 near Lumberton Wednesday afternoon. Three people died and at least five others were seriously injured after fire engulfed three of the cars involved in the accident. Truck driver Leonard Sanders of Newberry, S.C. has been charged with three counts of manslau^ter and careless and reckless driving in the crash. (AP Laserphoto)

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SALE

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ALL summer fashions

Dresses................... ...... Orig. $23 to $35

Sundresses.......................Orig.    $24    to    $35

Tops, shirts, blouses  ..........Orig.$    5to$28

Shorts, shortsets    Orig. $ 7 to $29

Skirts..........     Orig.    $10    to    $30

Jackets, blazers...........  Orig.    $11    to    $24

Swimwear.................. Orig.    $10    to    $37

Casual & Dress pants..............Orig.    $16    to    $35

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Sale $14, Sale $15, Sale$ 3, Sale$ 4 Sale$ 6 Sale$ 7 Sale$ 6 Sale $11

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encouraging and rewarding every citizen who strives to excel and help make America great again.

Meanwhile, some Senate Democrats indicated that delay by House leaders in beginning the tax cap effort revenue bills must originate in the House - may have robbed them of the time necessary to attract moderate Republican votes that would have been essential for passing the limit in the Senate.

Sen. Dale Bumpers, D-Ark., said he was really saddened that this has been put off as long as it has.

Bumpers, another leader in the effort to enact the limit, also said there was no reason to pursue the legislation after the cut takes effect.

I dont think theres any point in bringing this up again, Bumpers said.

However, the Senate action will not be the last con-gressiopal skirmish this year over taxes.

The $859 billion budget Congress adopted over Reagans objections last week directs the tax-writing committees in the House and Senate to draft le^slation raising $73 billion in additional revenues over the next three years in order to pare soaring budget deficits.

Reagan has ruled out any significant tax increases before 1986.

The Democratic plan would have permanently affected 8.1 million couples and individuals - about half of whom earn less than $50,000 a year. But nearly 90 percent of the additional taxes of $6.2 billion in 1984 would have come from those making more than $50,000.

The Senate action means that all taxpayers will see a tax reduction this year averaging about 10 percent below last years levels.

For example, a $20,000-a-year one-earner couple with two children and an average amount of itemized deductions will pay the government about $164 less than last year, a figure that would not have been

affected by the Democratic plan. But a $50,000 couple will get an $828 tax cut, compared with $720 under the pn^wsal that was rejected.

A single person earning $30,000 will get a tax cut of $505, the same as if the Democrats had won the Senate battle A $100,000-a-year earner will get $2,065, compared with $637 if the limitation had been approved.

The Democrat-controlled House had passed the measure last week on a

Hm Maintenance ContrKts,

I    With A Cleaning, For IBM -

I    Typewriters.

229-191 party-line    vote with    I    355-2723

no Republicans    voting in    I    c<.ndatc..tyi>ttw

31333 'Sy.. las.

Will Be Closed The Week Of July 4th For Vacation.

We Will Re-open HQiiday, July 11th.

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756-6108





Military Air Controllers Returning To Bases

Aulomoi *P V,cPinp Shop Forpiqn Oomp<;l,c

Engines Rebuilt

By PAUL NOWELL Associated Press Writer

SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, 111. (AP) - A two-year mission ends today for the last of the military air traffic controllers who replaced striking civilians, but some decided to stay for more pay instead of returning to the Air Force.

They performed wonderfully, said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Dick Stafford.

About two dozen Air Force controllers are the last of 800 assigned to 65 FAA control centers Aug. 3, 1981, when 11,500 civilian members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization walked off the job and were

fired by President Reagan.

Stafford said the military controllers, borrowed frmn about 80 installations, helped keep the system working while the FAA trained new civilian controllers. The civilian ranks are now at about 93 percent of capacity, he said, and there is no further need for the military controllers.

Pot Crop In State Park

Police Investigated 3 Collisions Here

WEOn, Calif. (AP) -State forest rangers have discovered more than 600 marijuana plants, ranging up to seven feet tall, nestled among trees and bushes at Humboldt Redwood State Park

Ten rangers plucked 570 of the plants Tuesday and said it was their largest singleday haul in the 51,()00-acre park, located about 230 miles north of San Francisco.

Area Manager Carl Chavez said Wednesday that the plants, which were later burned, were valued at about $1,(KK) to $2,000 apiece.

Rangers also found sophisticated gardening equipment, including a gasoline-powered water pump, a water tank, plastic piping, rat traps and fertilizer, Chavez said.

James Everett Brooks, 23, who said he was from Highland, Calif., was arrested in connection with the hidden garden, Chavez said. .

Where most of these gardens are, there is some related resource damage, Chavez said. Thats our major concern.

Chavez said marijuana farmers clear trees and shrubs in the forest to make room for the plants, and create a high fire risk.

Film Premiere Set For Bailey

An estimated $2,500 damage resulted from three traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted from a 5:26 p.m. collision at the intersection of Memorial Drive and N.C. 33. involving a truck driven by Rufus Junior Cooper of 1504A Fleming St. and a car operated by Roberta Lynn Coggins of Route 11, Greenville.

Police, who said Ms. Coggins was injured in the collision, estimated damage at $200 to the truck and $900 to the car.

Cooper was charged with having improper breaks and driving under the influence in commection with the incident.

Charlie Manning Daniel of Route 5, Greenville, was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 4:18 p.m. collision on 10th Street, 50 feet west of the Riverbluff Road intersection.

Investigators said the Daniel car collided with a vehicle driven by William Taylor Seamans of 806 Riberhill Drive, causing $600 damage to the Seamans car and $250 damage to the Daniel auto.

Vehicles driven by Linwood Warren Smith of Route 1, Hookerton, and Christine Edwards Ward of 1502 Powell St. collided about

7:30 p.m. at the intersection of Gum Road and Washington Street, causing an estimated $300 damage to the Smith car and $250 dam-a^ to the truck driven by Ms. Ward.

Police charged Smith with failing to stop for a stop sign following investigation of the wreck.

The illegal strike did create a proWem, however, for the Air Fwce Communications Command at Scott Air Force Base.

From a simple arithmetic point of view, we knew there was a potoitial that our boys might leave when their hitch was up, said Col. Derrel L. Dempsey, dq>uty chief of staff for air traffic services.

We took a survey at the beginning of the strike and found as many as 90 percent of the military controllers who. had dates of separation between August 1981 and August 1982 would leave if the FAA offered them a job, he said.

One reason is the FAA pays its controllers rou^ily twice as much for doing the same work, Dempsey said. And the military controllers were expected to work tbe same six-day week as the civilian controllers - for no extra pay.

Sgt. John Pruitt, returning to duty at Scott Air Force Base in suburban St. Louis,

said be will have to talk with his wife about whether to stay with the military or apply for an FAA position when his hitch is up next year.

Most of the civilian controllers got their start in the military. he said. I like my job. But I haven't decided whether I want to do it in the military or with the FAA.

Four of Pruitts fellow officers assigned to Pittsburgh chose to leave the military for the FAA during his stay there, and two other signed up for a new hitch with the Air Force.

To keep its highly trained controllers, the Air Force increased the re-enlistment bonus from $12,000 to $16,000, Dempsey said. And the Air Force took measures to ensure that the military controllers werent denied any educational opportunities while working at FAA control centers.

Steps were also taken to make sure that the military controllers housing needs

were met. And a program was set up to make sure their families left behind were taken care of. he said.

Stafford declined to say how many military controllers were hired by the FAA during the strike.

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BAILEY, N.C. (AP) - A Smithsonian Institution documentary on old-fashioned medicine shows, filmed in 1980 in Bailey, will be completed by mid-July and will premiere in Bailey, the films producers say.

Paul Wagner, co-producer, said the film was supjwsed to have been completed in early 1981, but money from a $35,000 grant ran out. Several months ago the National Endowment of the Arts viewed the film and decided to grant the $30,000 needed to complete the project.

Take Advantage Of This Great Opportunity

DEFERRED INQUIRY

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) - Puerto Ricos top justice official is setting up a commission to review the controversial police slayings of two young independence advocates in 1978.

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Ethics Panel Probes Altered Reports

By LARRY MARGASAK Associated Press Writer ^WASHINGTON (AP) -The chairman of the House ethics panel says he is ready to investigate the publication of House committee reports that distorted remarks made by GOP lawmakers at public hearings.

Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, responding to Republican

pleas for ur^ncy, told the Rules Committee on Wednesday his ethics panel will begin its probe as soon as the full House authorizes the investigation.

The chamber was scheduled to consider such a resolution today.

Republican House members initially demanded formation of a Watergate-

style investigating committee to probe what some GOP staffers already are calling altergate.

The GOP said a special committee would avoid the secrecy normally imp^ by the ethics panel during the initial phase of its investigations.

But Majority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, said the

TOOTHLESS GRANNY - Catherine Me- decay. At her press conference yesterday she Coll, a 69-year-old toothless grandmother won    said that fluoride    is    a    horrible    poison    and

a 204-day legal battle Wednesday to stop    made a witches    brew"    of    drinking    water.

Scotlands largest local authority adding    (APLaserphoto)

fluoride to drinking water to reduce dental

Big 'Royalty' For Playwright

NEW YORK (API -Playwright Neil Simon says having a theater named after him is the biggest royalty Ive ever received

Luck, good fortune and a short name play a great part in having a theater named after you. .. If 1 was (Swiss playwright) Friedrich Duerrenmatt, Jimmy Nederlander would never have thought of this, Simon

told friends, family and actors at the name-change ceremony Wednesday at what is now the Neil Simon Theatre on 52nd Street.

It had been the Alvin Theatre. Nederlander owns it.

Simon, 55, who has written 21 Broadway plays in 22 years, including The Odd Couple, The Sunshine Boys and his latest.

Brighton Beach Memoirs, said hes always wondered how theaters got their names.

The Plymouth Theatre, of course as you all know, was the first theater to sail to America to escape religious persecution from English theater critics, he quipped.

Earlier this month, Broadways Uris Theater was renamed the Gershwin Theater after composer George Gershwin and his brother, lyricist Ira Gershwin.

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ethics panel shoeld conduct the probe and offered a motion to refer the GOP special committee proposal to the Rules Committee.

Wright won on the largely party-line vote of 2S6-161, and the rules panel quickly killed the GOP measure by refusing to consider it. Instead, it approved a resolution to send the matter to Stokes committee.

The issue involves remarks by lawmakers during at least two sets of committee hearings which both Republicans and Democrats agree were altered in the official committee reports on the proceedings.

Republicans said their remarks were changed to make them seem less knowledgeable, less confident and ineffective about the subjects of the hearings: the Environmental Protection Agency and silver prices.

The remarks of Democrats were changed to make those

lawmakers look good, the Republicans chargl.

In the 15 years Ive been around here Ive never beard of transcripts being altered, said Rq>. Trent Lott, R-Miss., the minority whip.

Minority Leader Robert H. Michel, R-Ul., called the alterations a blemish upon the House. What is at issue here is Uie integrity of this House.

Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner Jr., R-Wis. termed the transcript changes this disgrace upon

the House of Representatives..

He Mamed House Democratic committee staff members f<r the alteratkms and said be did not bdieve any congressmen were responsible.

The committee reports often are vital in drafting legislation and are used years later by courts to interpret the intit of legislation.

The EPA bearings occurred in 1982 and the silver hearings in 1980.

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Catalog Showrooms

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Guarantee

For Buyers Losing Jobs

Rites For Six Killed Airmen

DETROIT (AP) -Chrysler Corp. officials say the automakers plan to cover car payments for buyers who lose their jobs should help boost sales by eliminating potential customers purchasing fears.

S^esmen for the No. 3 U.S. carmaker expressed cautious optimism as the experimratal program took effect Wednesday in Louisville, Ky., Tucson, Ariz., and Rochester, N.Y.

Fear of unemployment is one of three reasons that buyers postpone purchase of an automobile. Two others are purchase price and high interest rates, said Joseph A. Campana, Chryslers vice president of marketing.

The intention of this program is to sell automobiles, said spokesman Tom Houston. Weve addressed the price problem somewhat, because our cars are affordable, and weve addressed the financing through lower interest rates. Now, we hope were taking away the third objection.

'The program, available to buyers who have jobs at the time they purchase the vehicle and lose their jobs more than 30 days after delivery, runs through July 31. It applies only to buyers Of new 1983-model cars in the three cities, Chrysler said.

The company will assume payments of up to $300 per month until the buyer finds a job, the car is resold or 12 consecutive months of loan payments have been made after the date of unemployment, the company said.

The buyer does not have to repay the company, said Joe Tetherow, a Chrysler spokesman in Los Angeles.

It is a test, and we will take a look at it to see just how well its worked, Houston said. But you cant speculate (about possible expansion) when were just beginning.

The three cities were selected for the trial program because they have a Balance of blue- and white-pollar workers, they mirror Jhe automakers 12 percent market share nationwide and because their unemployment rates reflect national figures Figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that Louisville, Tucson and Rochester each averaged about 10.3 percent unemployment in April, compared with 10.1 percent nationally.

The new program is in addition to the nationwide sales incentives Chrysler already has in place. The automaker is offering 8.7 percent financing or rebates of $300 to $750 on selected 1982 and 1983 models.

Chrysler sold 400,323 cars in the United States so far this year, up 21.5 percent from the 329,492 sold through the same period of 1982.

V\feekend

Great pair-ups! Panama Jack his friends and Wrangier

Sale 10.99 and 11.99

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Funeral services for six Air Force men killed when a military cargo plane crashed during a simulated coinbat mission will be held Friday at Nellis Air Force Basfr.

The crew of the C-130 had just completed a simulated heavy equipment drop when the plane crashed after noon Tuesday on the base about 110 miles northwest of Las Vegas, authorities said Wednesday.

Rescue teams flown in by helicopter were at the remote crash site Wednesday retrieving the victims bodies and examining the wreckage for clues to the crash.

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Sale 14.99 and 18.99

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, Reg. $22 and $26. Wrangler' denim jeans in basic or prewashed styles.

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Samsonite Luggage

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Boarding Bag.................... sss    17.49

Roll Bag................... 19-99

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Garment Bag .........seo    29.99

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Hand Towel....................   5

Washcloths........... ................................................





m

INTENT ... Seven-year-old Jennifer Long, daughter of Bonnie Long of Greenville, peers throu^ a band lens at a vial of fruit flies. She is participating in the East Carolina

Many Children

University Science Day Camp, udiere she is learning and having fun. (ECU News Bureau Photo by Chris Bennett)

At Day Camp Swiss Declare

Russian A Spy

ECU News Bureau

Approximately 90 schoolchildren in grades K-3 participated in weeklong sessions of the Summer Science Day Camp sponsored by the East Carolina University Department of Science Education.

The children were involved in high-interest science activities which included laboratory sessions and outside field trips.

The camp program was directed by Dr. Carolyn Hampton of the ECU science education faculty.

Area students attending the day camp included:

Farmville; Adrienne Allison.

Stokes: Corie Lane Bullock.

Grifton: Christopher Charboneau, Jason Roscoe.

Bethel: Denise Roberson.

Winterville: EvanSinar.

Falkland: Amanda Smith.

Ayden: Chris Claybrook.

Greenville: Nabeel Barakat, Victoria Buck, Christopher Bullock, Patrick Close, Steven Collingwood, Karen Cox, Carl Crawford, Annie and Will Eckstein,

Paul Fletcher, Robert Fulp, Amy Helms, Grainger Hill, Lucy Kitchin, Jordan Markowski, Richard May, Benjamin Mega, Amy Schwartz, Natalie Volkman, Jennifer Baines, Peter Brinson, Keats Casey, Katherine Collier, Frances Collins, Emily Davis, Chris Dozier, Lori Evans, Julie Harman, Matthew Leggett, John Mason, Jessica Mega, Zishan Mustafa, Timothy Pritchard, Edward Ram-persaud, Thomas Rose, John Savage Jr., Paula Song, Christy Thompson, Elizabeth Amspacher, Barrett Barringer, Allen Colombo, Walt Daugherty, Michael Hanrahan, Emily Blair Hines, Jennifer Long, Peter Muller, Michael Nelms, Christopher Nobles, Alison Pratt, Amy Roberts, Lara Rusch, Natalie Weaver, Benjamin Williams, Jimmy Wilson, Gary and Tara Wooten, Robert Pleasants, Peyton Allain, Edward Broaddus, Jeffrey Carstarphen, Katie Clark, Catherine Collingwood, Maggie Fleming, Brent Gibson, Tony Mills, Michael Powell and Pattie Wooten.

Superior Court Report

The following cases were disposed of during the June 13 term of Pitt County Superior Court.

Jesse Lee Andrews, Simpson, speeding, 10 days jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, 2 years unsupervised probation; driving under the influence, not guilty Steven Michael Bredlgkeil, 260:i K 10th St, obtain property by false pretense, 3 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, 3 years probation, obtain property by false pretense (3 counts), dismissal by prosecutor Danny Ray Carmon, 307 Watauga Ave., uttering forged check, 2 years jail .suspended, 3 years probation; forgery (2 counts), dismissal by prosecutor

Hurt Giles Jr, Whites Trailer Park, possession of stolen goods, 1 year jail, 7 days active, remainder suspended on payment of fine, costs, 3 years pnmation.

Barbara Jean May, lOO-B In dependence Blvd., shoplifting, 30 days jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, I year probation William Henry Moore, Route 1, Greenville, peeping tom, mistrial declared, case dismissed Kelex Albert Staton, Route 3, Tarboro, driving under the influence, 90 days jail Reginald Medows Tensley, Rocky Mount, obtain property by false pretense, motion to dismiss allowed

Mamie Williams, Route 2, Ayden, food stamp fraud, dismissal by prosecutor

BERN, Switzerland (AP) - The Swiss government today alleged that a Soviet vice consul had been a spy for years and demanded that Moscow recall the diplomat immediately.

A Justice Ministry communique said the diplomat, whose name was not given, was attached to the Soviet consulate-general in Geneva. It said federal and local police established that he had attempted for several years and partly successfully to collect information ... of political, economic and scientific nature.

The communique said the activities were not compatible with his status. The government, it said, had protested to the Soviet mission and demanded that the man be recalled forthwith.

The case followed the

Falwell, Helms Unite In Drive

RALEIGH. N.C. (API -The Rev. Jerry Falwell and Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., will hold a series of voter registration meetings next week in five cities around the state.

Falwell, the leader of Moral Majority, announced the voter registration drive in a June 27 letter to supporters.

Officials of the Helms for Senate Committee say the drive is a'project of Moral Majority and is not connected to Helms expected bid for reelection in 1984.

The Rev. Lamar Mooneyham of Durham, chairman of the Moral Majority in the state, said the state group had asked Falwell to help kick off the voter registration drive and Falwell had invited Helms for the tour.

expulsion of three Soviet diplomats or consular officials earlier this year for allegedly masterminding subversive activities in this neutral nation. The Switzerland-based director of the Soviet news agency Novosti was also booted out on such charges.

Justice Minister Rudolf Friedrich told Parliament earlier this month that there were 75 espionage cases from 1980 through 1982 involving Soviet-bloc nations, including 28 linked to Soviet nationals.

\ .

Settlement For Death In Jail

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -An insurance company representing the Wake County Sheriffs Department has reached a $5,000 settlement with the family of a man who died in the county jail 18 months ago.

Sheriff John H. Baker Jr. Tuesday announced the settlement with the family of Henry Lee Whitfield of Rox-boro. Whitfield, 41, died Nov. 18, 1981, after suffering an asthma attack while serving a three-day sentence for drunken driving.

Family members had sought $300,000 in damages, claiming that jailers were aware of Whitfields asthma condition buUailed to separate him fro^nmates who smoked cigarettes. The suit claimed jailers also failed to give Whitfield his asthma medicine.

DISRUPTION

LIMA, Peru (AP) - A soldier fired his rifle in the air near President Fernando Belaunde Terry durilng an army ceremony yesterday, and there was an explosion a few blocks away, police report.

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(In The Comer, At Greenville Square) 756<9509    Houn: 10<6, Mon.-Sat.Reagan Calls For'Grassroots Effort' In Education Renewal

WHiniER, Calif. (AP) -President Reagan, visiting a hi^ school of mostly Mex-ican-American students, called today for a grassroots campaign for educational renewal.

The president, on a crossHiount^ campaign to draw attention to the need to make changes in the nations education program, was visiting what he said had been at one time a problem school.

The school. Pioneer High School, is now praised by the Department of Education and is the site for the second regional forum on the recommendations of 'the National Commission Excellence in Education.

I wish I could load all the students and teachers of this school on a bus and take them around the country with me, showing the nation what can be done, Reagan said in remarks prepared for the opening of the forum.

About 2,700 students, 72 percent of them Mexican-Americans, are enrolled at the school.

The president planned to visit a program teaching students with limited English language ability. According to a White House statement, 50 percent of the schools entering ninth grade students fail proficiency tests in reading, math or writing.

But by the time they are seniors, they can meet state requirements for high school diplomas, the White House said.

While in Whittier, the town where former President Richard M. Nbcon was educated, Reagan said federal officials are responsible for identifying the national interest in education. But he said local officials must pay the bills and it is at the local level where progress will be made.

Local school boards can set higher standards. They can see that outstanding teachers are rewarded for their efforts, the president said, adding:

The time has come for a

grassroots campaign for ed-ucaUooal renewal that unites larents, teachers, students, ocal officials and concerned citizens, Reagan said.

This evening, the president planned to attend a $l,000-a-person fund-raising dinner for the California R^ublican Party at the site of the Spruce Goose seaplane in Long Beach. The seaplane, which only made one flight, is the largest plane ever built. Howard Hu^es labored over the project for five years.

On his way to California, Reagan learned that the Supreme Court had upheld a Minnesota law permitting parents of children in private school to claim tax credits for tuition payments. Support for tuition tax credits is part of Reagans overall education program.

Im happy about it, the president toM reporters.

Education Secretary Terrell H. Bell, who accompanied the president to education speeches in Louisville, Ky., and Shawnee, Kan., on the westbound trip, said Reagan had not changed his mind about trying to get rid of the Education Department.

But, said Bell to reporters aboard Air Force One Wednesday afternoon, We have to face political reality, and the reality is that we cant get a bill passed.

Bell said that one proposal he made to shift some of the departments functions could only muster the support of 19 senators.

I dont expect well be pushing for anything between now and January, 1985, Bell said.

Ever since the education commission delivered its report last April calling for improved academic standards and merit pay for

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master teachers, Reag^ has focused ob the topic io public appearances. His interest reflects his aides belief that educatkm can prove to be a positive political issitt if be seeks rejection next year.

The merit pay idea has put Reagan at o(kls with the Natkmal Education Association, the largest teachers unioD, which argues that all teachers salaries should be raised.

The plan has gotten a friendlier reception from the American Federation of Teachers, vdiich the president will address Tuesday before heading home to Washington after a Fourth of Jidy holiday at bis Santa Barbara ranch.

You have to keep in mind that those two unions are in competition with each other, the education secretary said.

On his way out West on Wednesday, Reagan told a convention of the National Association of Student Councils in Shawnee, Kan., that false percq>tions of his .administratioo were plaguing him in such areas as civil ri^ts and aid to studoits.

There is a misperception that in s(Hne way we have been turning back programs of aid to studmts as a result of tightened eligibility requirements, Reagan said.

He said the administration had changed the requirements, so that more money would go to those at the bottom of the earnings scale.

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96

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Assorted Sayings & Designs On Front Of Shirts Slight Imperfects - A Reg. 2.99 Value.

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14-Tlie Daily Reflector, Ureenvuie, N.t'.-Tbursday, Juoe 30.1003

Stock And Market Reports

Private School Opinion May Renew Tax Baffle

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents higher. Kinston 45.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum. Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg, and Benson closed, Wilson 45.00, Salisbury 43.50, Rowland

44.00, Spiveys Comer closed. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 34.00, Fayetteville

33.00, Whiteville 34.00, Wallace 33.00, Spiveys Corner closed, Rowland 34.00, Durham 35.50.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 49.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. Two few of the loads offered have been confirmed. The market is firm and the live supply is moderate for a very good demand. Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was 1,699,000, compared to 1,788,000 last Thursday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market pushed ahead today, following through on Wednesdays late rally.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 4.61 Wednesday, rose 4.51 to 1,218.35 by noontime today.

Gainers outnumbered losers by about 9 to 5 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Analysts said investors were finding it hard to ignore all the recent positive news on the economy.

The government reported Wednesday that the index of leading economic indicators, which is designed to detect future economic trends, rose 1.2* percent in May, marking its 11th consecutive increase.

There was also speculation that the Federal Reserves report on the money supply, due after the close on Friday, would show a second straight weekly decline. That would presumably help ease recent fears that the Fed would be forced to tighten credit. ^

Gainers among the volume leaders included Chrysler, up % at 32'/^; International Business Machines, up at 120^; Merrill Lynch, up I'/b at 52%, and Eastman Kodak, up % at 72%.

The NYSEs composite index gained .46 to 97.02. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 4.18 at 482.71.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 34.26 million shares at noontime, against 36.58 million at the same point Wednesday.

RepubAir Republic Stl Revlon Reynldind Rockwl s Ri^rown StRegisCp Scott Paper SearsRoeb Shaklee s Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co

Sli_______

StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind Cn Camp Un Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart WalMart wi WestPtPgp Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp

V*

21%

Sl%

32%

24%

30%

24%

40%

31%

28

14

15%

40%

3

5OV4

50%

22%

75%

34%

56%

14%

76%

68%

14%

24%

35%

40

76%

38%

50%

49%

37%

57%

35%

55%

46%

Following are selected 11 market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power li l.ight

Collins & Aikman

Connor

Uuke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Hatteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

McCraw

Piedmont

Pi/ra Inn

P&(;

TRW. Inc United Tel Dominion Resources Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

7%    7%

21% 21% 35% 35% 50% SI 32%    3S%

24%    24%

30%    30%

24    24%

40%    40%

31    31%

27%    28

13%    13%

15%    15%

40%    40%

38%    38%

50%    50%

50%    50%

22% 22% 74%    74%

34%    34%

56%    56%

14%    14%

75%    75%

88% 68% 13%    14%

24%    24%

35%    35%

38%    40

76%    76%

38%    38%

50%    50%

49%    49%

37%    37%

57    57%

34%    35

55    55%

46%    46%

a m stock

41%

55%

22%

40%

29%

22%

41%

28%

34

34%

15%

58

35%

34%

31%

65%

42%

37

16%

54%

74%

21%

21%

40

27%-27% 24-24% 1 % 19%-20%

NEW YORK IAPI

AMR Corp AbblLabs Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamlly Am Motors AmStand Amer TliT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroPwU Celaneae Cent Soya Ctiamp I Chryiler CocaCola Coig Palm Comw Edit ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAIrl DogChem duPont Duke Pow EaatnAIrL Baat Kodak EatonCp Eamarfc

Eixon Plraatone PUPowLt PlaProgresa PordMoi For McKess Fuqua Ind GTE Corp GnDynam

Midday slocks High    Low    Last

36%    36

47%    47

17%    17%    17%

38    37%

16%    16%

48%    48

43%    43%    43%

46%    46%    46'-.,

22%    21'.    21

9%    9'<i

33%    33

83%    63'.    63%

26%    26%    26'i

23%    23%    23'-.

46%    46

60% 60 36%

36'

47%

16%

48

9%

33',

lya

Inl

37

70%    70

22% 22'

23%    22',

25%    25',

Gen Food Gen MIUs Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacU Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co QtNor Nek

ssrar

11

Rand

tTHarv Int Paper M R^f

mtSt

Kmart

ProctGamb a Quaker Oat RCA

RalitnPur

46

60% 37 70

_ .    .    22%

63%    83%    63',

14%    14%    14'i

25%    24%    25

32%    32    32'^

50%    50%    50%

23 25%

28%    28%    28%

43%    43%    43<-.

43    42%    4%

33%    33    33

48%    48    48

22%    22%    22%

11%    II'.    11%

73%    72%    72%

41%    41%    41%

70%    70%    71W.

34    33%    33,

20',    20    20',

35,    35%    35,

18%    18'    18%

57    57    57%

49%    49%    49%

63    62%    63

40%    40%    40%

54    53',.    53%

M%    54%    54%

44%    44'    44%

54%    54%    54%

73%    72%    72%

34    33%    34

46%    46%    46%

26%    26%    26%

40%    40%    40%

31%    31%    31%

48%    48    48

45    45    45

27%    26%    26%

35%    35%    35%

115% 114% 114% 51%    51%    51%

50%    50%    50%

120V. 120% 120% 8'    8V,    8%

52    51%    51%

36%    35%    36%

41%    40%    40%

35%    34%    34%

20    19%    19%

19    18%    10%

41%    41    41%

121% 121% 121% 162% 162% 162% 22%    22%    22%

30%    30%    30%

84%    14%    84%

31%    31%    31%

91%    91%    91%

26    26    16

39%    38%    39

29%    29%    29%

57%    57    57%

39'y    30%    30%

34    33%    33%

59%    59    59%

35%    35%    35%

a%    21%    21%

56%    58    58%

34%    34%    M%

39%    30    30%

54%    53%    54%

50%    50%    50%

29    21%    21%

22%    22%    22%

Obituaries

Snowplows Clear Roads

RIVERTON, Wyo. (AP) -While most other states enjoy sunny summer weather, parts of Wyoming are still buried under more than 3 feet of snow.

District Ranger Dave Stark of the Shoshone National Forest in western Wyoming said snowplows were sent Wednesday to clear 3'rfoot drifts from the Loop Road, a 26-mile scenic route.

He said Fremont County Commissioners wanted the dirt road opened by July 1 in time for sightseers expected for the Fourth of July weekend.

The road, usually opened by June I, meanders through meadows, forest lands and the middle fork of the Popo Agie River. In the winter, its a great snowmobile trail, Stark said.

Snowfall was 130 percent of normal during the winter, according to the National Weather Service in Lander, which recorded 166 inches in between September and May. Most of the snow fell in April and May.

"This is the latest the road has opened since 1 came here in 1979, Stark said. We had a late spring season and the snow was very late in starting to melt.

Hog Farmers Breaking Even

RALEIGH, N.C. (API -Hog farmers in North Carolina are just breaking even with the current price at markets, the North Carolina Pork Producers Association says.

Hogs are fetching about 46 cents a pound for the farmer, but production costs normally run 45 to 46 cents a pound, said A1 Daniel, executive director of the organization.

He said prices were 10 cents to 15 cents a pound higher a year ago. The higher prices combined with cheap feed corn prices last fall stimulated production, he said.

By The Associated Pieas A Supreme Court ruling that upheld a state law granting tax breaks to parents of private school children drew a happy response from President Reagan, but opponents say the ruling could turn state legislatures into battlefields on the school tax issue.

The high court ruled by a 5-4 vote Wednesday that a Minnesota law which gives tax deductions up to 6700 to private school parents does not violate the constitutional separation of church and state.

Matthew Stark, executive director of the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union, which challenged the Minnesota law, called the ruling part of a national "wave of hostility and criticism of the public school system.

The legislatures throughout the country are going to become more important as the scene in which well be fighting against diversion of public funds to parochial schools, Stark said.

Oh, yes. Im happy about it, Reagan said Wednesday ac he was flying to California aboard Air Force One. The decision provides a boost to Reagans proposal to give tax credits to parents-of private school students.

The Reagan plan pending in Congress calls for a maximum per child credit of 6100 the first year it is enacted, and would cost an estimated 6200 million in that year.

Robert L. Smith, president of the Washington-based Council for American Private Education, hailed the decision as "a significant

victory for increased parental rights in elementary and secondary education and for opening up greater educational opportunities to all Am1can families with school-aged chUdren.

Thomas Shannon, executive director of the National School Boards Association in Washington which has opposed tax breaks to private school parents, predicted that Reagan and congressional s^ies will now be scurrying to revise their bills to bring them into line with the Minnesota decision.

He said the court ruling does not validate tuition tax credits as such, since the Minnesota decision Involved tax deductions, not credits. In past decisions, the Supreme Court has ruled tax credits unconstitutional.

We believe its poor public policy and bad fiscal management, regardless of whether its the law of the land, Shannon said. Whats next? Tax credits for recreation centers and swimming pools?

The Minnesota law also entitles public school parents to tax deductions for certain school costs, such as lab or athletic fees.

According to federal statistics, about 5 million youngsters, or around one of every nine American school children, attend private school. Nearly 4.2 million of those attendJefigiously affiliated schooMr-aad^ million go to Catholic schools.

Monsighor John F. Meyers, president of the National Catholic Educational Association, said, Contrary to claims of its bigoted and-or uninformed oppo-

HousekeeperGiven Sentence In Thefts

NORRISTOWN, Pa.,(AP) - A woman who stole more than 687,000 during an 11-month period while working as a housekeeper for wealthy families has been sentenced to four to eight years in prison.

June C. Saunders, 29, of Philadelphia, was sentenced Wednesday after pleading guilty March 10 in

Police Sergeant Retiring Today

Greenville Police Chief Glenn Cannon said this morning that Sgt. Lawrencie L. Jackson will retire from the department effective today.

Sgi. Jackson, a Pitt County native, began as a part-time school crossing guard in 1955 and joined the department full time in 1%1 as a records clerk. She became supervisor of the records division in 1971 and was promoted to sergeant in December 1977.

Sgt. Jackson was honored at a reception at the police department Wednesday afternoon and was given a silver tray in recognition of her dedicated service, Cannon said.

Montgomery County Court to seven counts of theft by deception and one count of recklessly endangering another person.

Judge Anthony J. Scirica also ordered Ms. Saunders to pay 687,000 to her employers. Officials testified that Ms. Saunders had not helped police to recover some items, as she had promised at the March hearing.

In a similar case in Bucks County, Ms. Saunders was sentenced to 11/ii to 23 months in prison and ordered to repay 625,000 to her victim.

Assistant District Attorney Steven T. ONeill said Ms. Saunders answered classified ads using aliases and references from nonex; istent past employers. She was finally arrested by Lower Merion Township police on Sept. 30 at the home of a prospwtive employer in Philadelphia.

ONeill said the woman usually would strip a house of its valuables on the first day, and in one case, slipped a tranquilizer to a Merion woman before stealing more than 637,000 in money and jewels.

Polecats Air Complaints

NEWARK, Ohio (AP) -When five skunks aired their complaints about police treatment. City Hall quickly got wind of the dispute.

It all started Wednesday when a woman called police about skunks In her basement.

Animal Control officer George Campbell said he trapped an adidt and four baby skunks and brought them to the police station at City Hall for fellow officers to see.

nents, the MinneaoU tuition tax deduction is sound tax p(riicy, sound ecooomic policy and above all, sound educatkmalpdicy.

Spokesmen for two teachers unions, the American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association, condemned the ruling.

Heading toward the 1984 election year, we were going to hit on this issue, but itll be much stronger now, said AFT president Albert Shanker. I think our job as a union is to fight politicaUy to see to it that those who are elected to office are those who oppose tuition tax credits.

Donald C. Hill, president of the NEAs Minnesota affiliate, the Minnesota Education Association, called the opinion part of... a conspiracy against the public schools, a kind of elitist mentality .

Minnesota state Rep. Tom Osthoff, who sponsored the 1976 deduction legislation, said the ruling could boost his current effort to increase deductions for private school parents.

I think it frees up some members of the legislature, the St. Paul Democrat said. A lot may have voted no (to the original legislation) ... because they thought it was an infringement on the Constitution.

Edwards

Mr. Jessie Frank Edwards of Route 1, Ayden, died Saturday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. His funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Zkm Chapel Free WUl Baptist Church in Ayden by Elder J.L. Wilson. Interment will be in the Ayden Cemetery.

Fatol Crash

A Route 3, WUliamston, man was killed on U.S. 13 Wednesday about 3:30 p.m. durii^ a rainstorm when he lost control of the pickup truck he was driv-

Trooper W.J. Featherston said View Vester Nicholson, 64, died at the scene of the one-vehicle accident which took place on U.S. 13 north of GremiviUe adjacoit to Carp Grain Mill. He said the driver appaimitly ran off the road on the right, losing control of the four-wheel-drive truck which went down a dit-chbank, became airborne, cleared a 38-foot driveway and hit a pine tree.

Featherston said the driving rain at the time of the accident may have contributed to Nidwlsons loss of c(itrol of the vehicle.

Mr. Edwards was bom and reared in the Vanceboro community, but had made his home in and around Ayden for the past 43 years. A retired merchant, be was a monber of Grifton Chapel Free Will Baptist Church and the Grifton Greater Men Fellowship aub.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Hennie Hardy Edwards of Ayden; a dau^ter, Mrs. Barbara Carol Midgette of Palmer Park, Md.; a son, Jessie Cardell Brown of Ayden; a stepson, Kelbert Hardy of Greenville; three sisters, Mrs. Mamie Leary of Route 1, Vanceboro, Mrs. Willie Florence Chgapman of Providence, R.I., and Ms. Bessie Edwards of Philadelphia; four grandchildren and three step-grandchildren.

Family visitation will be held in the chapel of Norcott Funeral Home, Ayden, Friday from 8 to 9 p.m.

Jackson

ROBERSONVILLE - Mrs. Judy Lynn Whitehurst Jackson, 24, died Wednesday in an anto accident. Her funeral service will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Biggs Funeral Chapel in WUliamston by the Rev. David Kirkland. Burial will be in the Oak City Cemetery.

Surviving are her husband, Larry Eugene Jackson of RobersonvUle; two daughters, Miss Kimberly Dawn

Jackson and Miss Tracy NioUe Jackson, both of the home; her parents, Bobby and Irene Whitehurst of RobersonvUle; three sisters, Mrs. Debbie Bullock of Everetts, Mrs. Becky Whitaker of RobersonvUle, and Miss Angie Whitehurst of RobersonvUle; a brother, Bobby Ray Whitehurst Jr. of RobersonvUle, and her g^randmothers, Mrs. Christine Stroud and Mrs. Peail Strickland.

The famUy will receive friends Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Big^ Funeral Home CTiapel in WUliamston.

FARMVILLE - Mrs. Daisy Holmes Rogers, 79, of 208 Grimmersburg St. died today in WUson Memodal Ho^ital. Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Farmville Funeral Home.

Mrs. Rogers, a lifelong resident of the community, was a retired educational counselor for East Carolina University. She was a member of the First Baptist Church in FannvUle, past president of the PUot Club in GreenvUIe, a member of the United Dau^ters of the Confederacy in Chattanooga, Tenn., a member of the Farmville Literary Club which she served as president in 1966.

She graduated from Meredith College with a degree in music and held an M.A. degree in educational counseling from ECU.

She is survived by one granddaughter and one grandson.

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 30,1983McEnroe, Lendl Set For Confrontation

WIMBLEDON. England (AP) - When John McEnroe and Ivan Lendl take Center Court at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships on Friday, it will be more than a

match - it will be a confrontation, rackets at court length.

1 think if I play my best tennis I will be able to beat John McEnroe," said the Czechoslovakian, who is

seeded third here at the All- . said: I am looking forward to En^and Lawn Tennis and the match"

Croquet Gub.

Never one to back down from a challenge, McEnroe, the tournaments No. 2 seed.

The last time the two met was in the championship match of the WCT Finals in Dallas on May 1. McEnroe

Delaney Dies In RescueAttempt

MONROE, U. (AP) - A Monroe boy died in a local hospital today, only hours after he was pulled from a water hole where Joe Delaney, the Kansas City Chiefs running back, drowned trying to save three boys in the water.

One of the boys drowned in Wednesdays accident.

Lancer Perkins, 11, died about 2:05 a.m. EST, said a spokesman for St. Francis Medical Center.

Delaney, 24, jumped into the hole in an attempt to rescue the three boys who were floundering, according to police and eyewitnesses.

One of the boys, a 6-year-old, got out of the water safely.

Police said family members identified the last body to be recovered as that of Delaney, the Chiefs No. 2 draft choice in 1981 who went on to become National Football League rookie of the year.

Assistant Police Chief E.W. Smith said the other victim was Harry L. Holland Jr., 11, of Monroe.

The drownings occurred in publicly-owned Chenault Park. His mother said Delaney, who frequently visited friends in Monroe, just happened to be among the hundreds of people attracted by a big free admission promotion for a privately operated waterslide.

Funeral arrangements were incomplete.

Delaney, who lived about 100 miles away at Haughton, is survived by his wife, Carolyn, and daughters 7 years, 5 years and 4 months old.

Within hours after his death, Delaney was lauded in the Louisiana Senate at Baton Rouge, by Chiefs officials and teammates, and by officials at Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, La., where he was an All-America tailback in football and sprinter in track.

How many kids would do that? asked A.L. Williams, the Louisiana Tech head coach who coached Delaney at Northwestern. But thats Joe - always trying to help someone else. It cost him his life, but hed do it a hundred times. He was so unselfish

Kansas City Back Joe Delaney

He was one of the greatest young men to put on a uniform - hell, to put on clothes. He probably didnt even know the kids he tried to save... thats just the way he was, said Bobby Ray McHalffey, who coached Delaney at Haughton High School.

Smith said the accident happened when the three youths were swimming in a water hole left by construction workers who usied the dirt to build the slides hill.

It is an area where they shouldnt have been, but boys will be boys, Smith said.

Witnesses said Delaney, who was sitting alone nearby, hollered at the boys to be careful and not to wade too far into the water. Moments later, they said, the boys stepped off into deep water, went under and Delaney, fully clothed, plunged into the pond after them and himself went under.

One of the boys got back to the bank but the others did not make it.

Delaneys body was the last recovered from the pond,

which covers about two acres, said Eddie Cox, a photographer for the Monroe News-Star-World.

When he got there, Cox said, one boy was being placed on a stretcher. There was an oxygen mask on his face and he was being given CPR while being carried to an ambulance.

About 400 people were gathered around and some people were hollering there were others in the water, said Cox.

A hospital spokesman said Delaney and Holland were being administered cardiopulmonary resuscitation when they arrived at the hospitals emergency room, but they never revived.

1 think Joe Delaney was a hero for today, said John Mackovic, the rookie Kansas City coach who knew Delaney only briefly. I think people from his high school, college and area could always point to him and say you could be like him.

What does one say when a

Sports Calendar

friend and member of the family is suddenly taken from this earth? asked Kansas City owner Lamar Hunt in a prepared statement issued by the Chiefs.

We are saddened and shocked by the news of the untimely death of Joe Delaney, Hunt said. His professional career was brief in years, but his electrifying style of play and enthusiasm for life will be remembered and treasured by all in the family of the Kansas City Chiefs, Hunt said.

Delaney was a record-smashing NCAA Division I-AA All-America in both football and track at Northwestern State, where Coach Williams recalled he was recruited as a wide receiver and comerback but unselfishly agreed to switch positions because of a running back shortage.

At just S-10 and 180 poounds, he became the first Northwestern football player to rush for more than 3,000 career yards and his jersey, bearing the number 44, was retired last year.

In track, he set school records of 10.3 seconds in the 100 meters and 20.6 in the 200, and was a member of the 400-meter relay team - along with fellow NFL players Victor Oatis and Mark Duper - that won the 1981 NCAA championship.

After being drafted by the Chiefs, he won a slot as a rookie starter and played in the Pro Bowl.

In his rookie season, Delaney rushed 234 times in 15 games for 1,121 yards and had 246 yards in pass receiving.

In the off-season, it was discovered that he had a detached retina and that, coupled with leg injuries, dropped his output during the 1982 strike-shortened season to just 380 yards in eight games.

Delaney was the second professional football player from Louisiana to die within the past week:

On Saturday, Larry Gordon, 28, of the Miami Dolphins, who was born in Monroe, died of a heart attack.

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won that encounter in five sets, winning the fifth-set tiebreaker 7-0.

The next week, at the Mercedes Tournament of Champions at Forest Hills in New York, Lendl verbally challenged McEnroe, saying he would try to hit the worlds No. 1 player with his shots if McEnroe questioned line calls.

The gauntlet was thrown, but Lendl, seeded to meet McEnroe in the T of C final, was upset in an early round, while McEnroe went on to win the clay court tournament.

This, then, will be their first on-court encounter since Dallas. And neither is expected to give an inch in their battle for a berth in Sundays final.

The other mens semi-final pairing Friday pits hard-serving Kevin Curren of South Africa against New Zealands Chris Lewis, a grass courts specialist.

Todav, the womens semifinals 'will send top-seeded Martina Navratilova against South Africas Yvonne Vermaak, while Andrea Jaeger, the No. 3 seed, will face No. 10 Billie Jean King, who is seeking her seventh Wimbledon singles title and' her 21st overall crown here.

McEnroe advanced to the semi-finals with a 6-3,7-5, 6-0 victory over Sandy Mayer on Wednesday, while Curren stopped Tim Mayotte 4-6, 7-6,

6-2, 7-6. On Tuesday, Lendl stopped Roscoe Tanner 7-5,

7-6, 6-3 and Lewis eliminated Mel Purcell 6-7, 64), 6^, 7-6 in the other quarter-finals

Whoever wins will be the favorite in the final, but that doesnt guarantee victory, McEnroe said of his clash with Lendl. You cannot take anything for granted

Asked what it would take for him to win, the 1981 Wimbledon champion said;

"I have to be aggressive with my serves and volleys, and attack his serve whenever possible. He seems to have adjusted well to grass, and the fact that he is probably the slight underdog because of my

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

Todays Sports Baseball Little League

a^imistsvs. Jaycees oose vs. Wellcome Pr} League Post-Season Tournament American Legion Kinston at Pitt County (8 p.m.) Edenton at Snow Hill (8 p.m.)

Sr. BabeRuUi Washington at Pughs Firestone Winterville at Ay(ten-Grifton SoftbaU City League Subway vs. Whittington Metal Craft vs. PTA Pantana Bobs vs. Liberty Church League Mt. Pleasant vs. Peoples Immanuel vs. Memorial Grace vs. Church of God Black Jack vs. Arlington St. -First Presbyterian vs. Unity

First Free Will vs Oakmont Faith vs. First Pentecostal Jarvis vs. First Christian Fridays Sports Bas^l American Legion Wilson at Snow HilllSpm.)

Pitt County at Wayne County (8 p.m.)

Little League True Value Hardware vs. PepsiCola (Joca-Coia vs Union Carbide Babe Ruth League Post-Season Tournament SoftbaU Church League Immanuel vs. Black Jack Church of God vs. Trinity Industrial League Empire Brushes #1 vs Burroughs-Wellcome #1 Burroughs-Wellcome *2 vs. Vermont-American WNCT-TV vs. Enforcers Greenville UtUities vs. Carolina Leaf

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experience takes pressure off

him.

Lendl, who skipped last years Wimbledon because, he said, be wasnt able to ^t enough practice time on grass, sa^ he is ready this year.

I think I have proven myself as a grass court player now because I am playing well and winning matches. he said. As far as Wimbledon is concerned, it is one of the Big Three tournaments and I will always play here as long as I am physically and mentally fit.

Winning one of the Grand Slam titles is more important to me than being No. 1 on the computer.

Against Mayer, a semifinalist here in 1973. the year most of the worlds top players boycotted Wimbledon. McEnroe struggled at first. But he won all the big points and took the last eight games of the match to wrap up what turned out to be an easy victory.

Mayer, though, wasnt overly impressed.

1 really do not think he is playing terribly well, as he has played generally sharper matches overall against me.

said Mayer.. I do feel though that Lendl has found his stride on grass. However, the court matchup is not in his favor.

I think for a guy like him. with such a big serve, volleying can become secondary .

The Curren-Mayotte match pitted two young giants against each other Curren shocked top-seeded Jimmy Connors in the fourth round.

blasting 33 aces past the man reported to have the best return of service in the game.

For Mayotte, it was his third straight trip to the quarterfinals here, where he reached the semis last year. Amd the ferocity of his serve is almost equal to that of Currens.

Both are former NCAA champions. Curren winning in

I Please turn to page 16)

Pitt Places Six On All-Star Unit

Pitt County, which has already wrapped up top seeding for the Area I East postseason tournament and clinched at least a tie for the league title, dominated the leagues all-star selections, landing six players on the 27-man squad.

The Area I East All-Stars, will host the Area 1 West All-Stars in a game to be played Saturday at 8 p.m. at Wilsons Fleming Stadium.

Pitt Coach Bill Davis will serve as head coach for the East team, assisted bv Jim

Ram Delays Pitt's Quest

Rain washed out play in American Legion, Little League and Babe Ruth League baseball yesterday, as well as the various Recreation Softball Leagues.

Pitt Countys American Legion baseball game at Wayne County was rescheduled for Friday night. Pitt needs one victory - or a loss by Snow Hill - to clinch the 1983 regular season Area I East title.

Snow Hill, meanwhile, was rained out in a home contest with Edenton, and they will attempt to play that game tonight

The two Little League

games rained out. Exchange vs. Carroll & Associates in the Tar Heel League, and Kiwanis vs. Sportsworld in the North State League, will be played Sunday at 2 p.m at their respective fields.

Last nights Babe Ruth league tournament games, sending Coca-Cola against PepsiCola, and Brown & Wood against Everettes Pest Control, have been reset for Friday at 6 and 8 p m respec tively, at Guy Smith Stadium Games scheduled for Friday will be played Saturday, and those for Saturday, will be moved back to Sunday

Fulghum of Snow Hill and Tommy Hawkins of Wilson Making the team from Pitt County are shortstop Kenny Kirkfand, center fielder Randy Warren, left fielder Rudv Stalls, second baseman Mont Carter, third baseman Greg Briley and catcher Curtis Evans.

Snow Hill, currently in second place in the league standings. was next in numbers with five players. They include Richie Chase, Jeff Ginn, Bobby Carraway, Greg Frederick and Mike Sullivan.

Rocky Mount had four players chosen: Barry Butler. Marshall White, Eddie Coates and Billy Godley Making the team from Wayne County are Scott Edwards, Stan Mozlngo and Rex Fields.

Wilson landed Chris Proctor, Mark Davis and Christy Rodri. Chosen from Edenton were Scott Mizelle, A1 Bunch and Preston Wood. Picked from Kinston were Kevin Lee. James Fisher and Jeff Herring.

The regular season ends on Friday night for the Area 1 team, with the playoffs starting on July 4.

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Manning's Key Hit Aids Brewer Win

By The Associated Press

Rick Manning has had trouble putting decent numbers together since he was traded to Milwaukee earlier this month, but he has put three big victories in the win column for the struggling Brewers.

Mannings batting avera^ has hovered in the vicinity of .200 since the Brewers acquired him from Cleveland on June 6 in exchange for Gorman Thomas, the popular slugging center fielder. But he won a game with an llth-inning homer a^inst Baltimore on June 16 and saved two runs with a brilliant catch in a 4-3 victory over Cleveland last Sunday.

Manning was at it again Wednesday night with a two-out, two-run triple in the bottom of the ninth inning that ^ve the Brewers a 4-3 victory over Detroit and knocked the Tigers out of a share of first place in the American League East.

1 had been trying too hard, Manning said. 1 finally decided to be myself, to go the other way with the pitch. 1 was telling myself 100 times a day to relax, but saying it and doing it between the lines are two different things.

Elsewhere in AL action, the Toronto Blue Jays downed the Minnesota Twins 4-2, the New York Yankees whipped the Baltimore Orioles 7-0, the California Angels nipped the Texas Rangers 2-1, the Chicago White Sox defeated the Seattle Mariners 5-3, the Boston Red Sox outslugged the Cleveland Indians 11-10 in 11 innings after dropping the opener of the doubleheader 5-3 and the Oakland As pounded the Kansas

City Royals 11-6.

Detroit relief ace Aurelio L(^ came on to start the Brewers ninth and issued a leadoff walk to Robin Yount. With two out, Ben Oglivie singled Yount to third and Manning lined an 0-1 pitch to the gap in right-center, scoring both runners.

He got ahead (rf me with a breaking ball, Manning said. Then 1 stopped thinking. 1 was just trying to hit the ball and keep the game going. They were shading me to the left side, and 1 think it was a breaking pitch that 1 pulled to the gap.

The Tigers led 34) and Juan Berenguer, a last-minute replacement for Dave Rozema, who couldnt get loose while warming up, retired the first 11 Milwaukee batters until Cecil Cooper singled with two out in the fourth. Ted Simmons then homered for Milwaukees first two runs.

Blue Jays 4, Twins 2

At Minneapolis, Cliff Johnson laced a tie-breaking twocut, two-strike double in the eighth inning and scored on Lloyd Mosebys double as Toronto took sole possession of first place in the AL East, one game ahead of Baltimore and Detroit. Damaso Garcia led off the inning with a double off Bobby Castillo, went to third on Ranee Mulliniks grounder and held there as Willie Upshaw grounded out. But Johnson came through with his double and Moseby greeted Len Whitehouse with another RBI double.

YankMsT, OrMeiO

At New York, Dave Righetti fired a five^utter for his first major league shutout. Leading ^0 on Oscar Gambles RBI grounder in the first inniog and Graig Nettles run-scoring single in the sixth, New York broke the game open with five runs in the seventh off Mike Boddkker and Sammy Stewart. Steve Kemp and Don Baylor singled and, after a sacrifice, Andre Robertson singled both home and continued to third on center fielder John Shelbys throwing error. Don Mattingly foUowed with a run-scoring single and Butch Wynegar homered.

Angels 2, Ran^l At Anaheim, Bob Boones third Ut of the game, a oneout single in the bottom of the ninth inning, scored Ellis Valentine with the winning run. Loser Mike Smithson walked Valentine with one out and he went to third on a sin^e by Tim Foli before Boone bounced bis single to center field. Winner Luis Sanchez rrtired Texas in order in the ninth after Tommy John held the Rangers to five hits. The triumph lifted California into a first-place tie with Texas in the AL West.

White Sox 5, Mariners 3 At Seattle, Greg Walker and Tom Paciorek ddivered run-scoring singtes in the seventh inning as Chicago broke a 3-3 tie. Winner Britt Bums gave up seven hits in 81-3 innings and struck out nine, equaling his career high. Jerry Dybzinski opened the seventh inning with a double off Matt Young. Mike Stanton replaced Young and gave ig> a bunt single to Julio

Cruz, who stole second before the RBI hits by Paciorek and Walker.

Indiaia 5-10, Red SoQC 3-11 At Geveland, Jim Rice drove in ve runs with two hmners and a double and Tony Armas doubled borne the lead nm in the 11th inning as Boston gaii^ a split. The Indians took the opener with a three-run rally in the eighth inning, including a two-run pind) single by Mike Hargrove.

in the nightcap, Clevelands Gorman Thomas tied the game 0-9 in the bottom of the ninth with a solo home run off Bob Stanley, the first-game loser. But in the lltb, Boston put runners at first and third on a walk and a throwing ernH* by pitcher Bud Anderson on Rices potential double |day ball. Armas doubled home one run and Eddie Jurak hit a sacrifice fly for the decisive run.

As 11, Royals 6 At Oakland, Carney Lansford hit a first-inning gr|pd slam and Rick Peters RBI double broke a tie in a five-rw fourth inning as the As defeated Kansas City for the third night in a row. Winner Jeff Jones pitched 4 2-3 innings of scoreless relief, while loser Steve Renko who gave up all five runs in the fifth. After Tony Phillips singled and scored the go-ahead run on Peters double, the As added four more runs on Bill Almons RBI double, RBI singles by Marshall Brant and Rickey Henderson and a wild pitch.

Spitz Blasts Sports Festival

COLORADO SPRINGS, ble for comment.

Colo. (AP) - With the 1983 t National Sports Festival heading toward its final, climactic weekend of action, former Olympic swimming star Mark Spitz has blasted the competition that is sanctioned by the U.S. Olympic Committee.

Spitz, winner of seven gold medals in the 1972 Summer Games at Munich, was quoted in a Knight News Service report as saying that the Sports Fesitval was a joke and an exercise in futility. None of the top-notch athletes are here. All the good ones bypass this, said Spitz, who had been here last weekend as a commentator for ABC on -the Festivals swimming and diving events. Its just a lot of money wasted thak^could be doing some good somewhere else.

Theyre not producing any Olympians here. Its just a big get-together. Thats all.

Spitz remarks triggered a flood of telephone calls and telegrams from United States Olympians to USOC headquarters here, according to spokesman Mike Moran.

Late Wednesday, after a phone call from USOC Executive Director F. Don Miller, Spitz aaid he had been misquoted and issued an apology.

Under no circumstances would I ever be involved in demeaning an organization (the USOC) which enabled me to be who I am and represent myself, my country, and my sport of swimming, Spitz said in the statement, released here by the USOC.

My statements, unrelated to swimming, were not intended to denigrate the National Sports Festival or its participants, he added The writer, Mike Downey, was not immediately availa-

McEnroe...

(Continued from page 15)

1979 while at the University of Texas and Mayotte taking the title in 1981 while playing for Stanford.

The serve is the most important shot of alt, and if that is going well, everyone raises the rest of their game with it, Mayotte said after his loss. "The trouble is every time you walk on court someone is breaking the'sound barrier.

"I felt I played the best tennis of my life in the first two sets. The turning point came in the second set when I was feeling good. If 1 had managed to win that set, I would probably have won the match.

"I did begin to think about making it to the semis when I lost the three match points in the tiebreaker, Curren said, and when I got a fourth match point, I was mad at myself and decided to concentrate on making the shot and playing the point. I was determined to hit the bail hard.

He did, and Curren took his spot against Lewis in the semi-finals.

' Spitz comments came as some of the Festivals big sports were beginning to unwind.

Hockey, in which the United States dramatically won the Olympic gold medal in 1980, began Wednesday with the .West defeating the East 5-3 in ihe opening game, as Gary Haight, Steve Griffith and Gary Sampson scored three goals in a 2:18 span of the second period, and the North beating the South 8-4 as Gary Fusco, the collegiate player of the year, had a goal and an assist, and sparkled on defense.

Basketball, in which the United States has won every Olympic gold medal but one, decided its teams for the Festival finals Friday ni^t.

In the mens competition, it will be the South against the East, .and among the women, the South will face the West.

The South mens team gained its berth in the gold medal game Wednesday night, beating the North 119-112 as Steve Mitchell scored 24 points, while the East downed the West 119-106, behind Walter Berrys 27 points.

Teresa Edwards scored 18 points, leading the South womens team to a 101-89 victory over the North, while the West gained the final despite a 92-90 loss to the East, thanks to the round-robin tie breaker formula.

Gymnastics, another premier Olympic sport, begins tonight, and track and field, the blue ribbon event of the quadriennial Summer Games, starts Friday.

Several gold medalists were decided Wednesday, foremost among them Dan Johnson of Garrett Park, Md.

Johnson, a kayaker, won the mens 1,000-meter pairs for his sixth medal - tops in this years festival. He teamed with Geoff Smith of Skaneatles, N Y to take the title - his second gold, to go along with two silver and two bronze.

Tourney

Scheduled

The Roanoke-Chowan Tennis Association will sponsor a tournament August 5-7 at the Ahoskie public tennis courts.

Competition will include mens and womens doubles, mixed doubles, mens over-35 doubles and a consolation tournament in' each event. Trophies will be awarded for first, second and third place in the "A division and first and second in the "B division.

Other activities fo|^ the participants include a pig picking, watermelon party, raffle, ice cream party and a ping pong tournament.

The entry fee is $14 per person, and the deadline is August 1. Food, tennis balls and a T-shirt will be provided for each participant.

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Basketball Challenge

Dudley Bradley of the Chicago Bulls works the ball inside during first half action between the Carolina All-Stars and the NBA All-Stars.

The exhibition game pitted an eight-man team of Tar Heel alumni of which Bradley is one against a team from the NBA pro all-stars. (AP Laserphoto)

Wrong Lefty For L.A.

By The Associated Press When Fernando Valenzuelas pitching, you can be sure youre going to see a pretty good left-hander on the mound.

But Wednesday night, it wasnt Fernando Valenzuela.

Whjle the Los Angeles Dodgers ace southpaw left early in the midst of a 13-2 shelling by San Diego, Padres rookie left-hander Mark Thurmond was the one who was in total command of the situation.

That was asking quite a bit of a young fellow to go out there and face that team, said Padre Manager Dick Williams after watching his young left-hander stifle the Dodgers on seven hits. We didnt know what to expect -although hed been pitching well in Las Vegas.

Thurmond was called up Tuesday from San Diegos Las Vegas farm club and immediately inserted into the starting rotation in place of Andy Hawkins, who was sent down. Thurmond pitched two innings in three relief appearances earlier in the season in a brief trial with the Padres.

Elsewhere in the National League, Chicago beat Pittsburgh 54), Atlanta routed Houston 11-1, Montreal stopped Philadelphia 5-2 in the opener of a doubleheader before the Phillies came back to win the nightcap 3-2, Cincinnati edged San Francisco 7-6 and St. Louis tripped New York 4-3.

Steve Garvey, Kurt

Bevacqua and Luis Salazar hit home runs as the Padres battered Valenzuela, 8-5, for 10 runs, chasing him in the fifth inning when they scored seven times. It was the most runs the Dodger left-hander has given up in the major leagues. Five were unearned due to a pair of Dodger errors.

Thurmond, meanwhile, walked only one and struck out four.

Cubs 5, Pirates 0 Mel Hall hit a leadoff home run in the first inning and Keith Moreland and Ron Cey later clubbed two-run shots, and Dick Ruthven scattered seven hits to lead Chicago over Pittsburgh.

The Cubs got all the offense they needed when Hall drilled a 2-1 delivery from Jim Bibby, 3-8, into the right-field seats at Wrigley Field in the bottom of the first.

Morelands homer, his 11th of the year, came in the sixth following a single by Cey. In the eighth, Cey followed a walk to Leon Durham with his eighth homer, off Lee Tunnell.

It was the second complete game of the season for Ruthven, 5-5, and his first shutout. He walked none and struck out four.

1 felt like Clark Kent the first couple innings, and Im glad I got rid of that, said Ruthven, who later pitched like Superman. I was overthrowing, starting to challenge those guys with high pitches that could have cost. Braves 11, Astros 1 Rafael Ramirez, Brett

Butler and Chris Chambliss each stroked three hits as Atlanta scored runs in bunches to rout Houston.

Ramirez and Butler keyed a pair of four-run inning off Joe Niekro, 4-7, in the first and fourth and the Braves put the icing on the game with a three-run eighth.

Winning pitcher Ken Dayley, 24), allowed six hits in seven innings before leaving in favor of reliever Donnie Moore in the eighth.

Expos 5-2, Phillies 2-3

Gary Carter, Mike Vail and Andre Dawson slugged home runs to lead Montreal over Philadelphia behind Steve Rogers seven-hitter in the first game of their doubleheader.

Rogers, 11-3, struck out three and walked six to out-duel Steve Carlton, 8-9. Carlton gave up just six hits, didnt walk a batter and struck out nine in eight innings to reclaim the lead in his race with Houstons Nolan Ryan for baseballs all-time strikeout mark. Carlton now has 3,560 strikeouts to Ryans 3,553.

Charlie Hudson and A1 Holland teamed up to pitch the

Dr. J Puts On Dunk Exhibition

Phillies over the error-plagued Expos in the second game. Hudson, 2-2, worked seven innings and gave up seven hits.

Montreals Scott Sanderson, 4-6, who allowed only two hits in six innings, was the victim of shoddy support in the second inning when three errors, including two by third baseman Tim Wallach, helped the Phillies score three runs.

Reds 7, Giants 6

Cesar Cedenos sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth inning capp^ a two-run rally and lifted Cincinnati over San Francisco. Cedenos one-out sacrifice fly followed Eddie Milners game-tying single off reliever Greg Minton, 2-5.

Jeff Leonard drove in three runs, one with a homer in the fourth, and Tom OMalley snapped a 5-5 tie with a solo homer in the top of the ninth to give the Giants a 6-5 lead going into the botUmi of the inning.

Cardinals 4, Mets 3

David Greens tie-breaking single in the eighth lifted St. Louis over New York as Rusty Staubs record pinch-hitting streak came to an end.

GREENSBORO (AP) -Julius Erving dazzled the crowd Wednesday night with an exhibition of dunk shots, but in the end, a team of former Tar Heel stars handed "Dr. J and a team of National Basektball Association stars a 128-12 loss in an exhibition game.

For Erving, the game at Greensboro was a return to familiar stomping ^unds.

Erving played in front of Greensboro Coliseum crowds during his days in the American Basketball Association. That leagues Carolina ent^ played some of its games in the Greensboro facility.

Erving added one more jewel to his illustrious career this season as he helped the Philadelphia 76ers capture an NBA crown, his first since entertaining the league in 1976.

Erving said the loss Wednesday night wasnt nearly as important as the chance to exercise.

"For this game, the attitude was certainly to come in and have fun, get some running in and entertain the fans, Erving said. I think the mission was accomplished.

With fans yelling for him to dunk every time he touched the ball, Erving said he was appreciative of the response.

I thought it was very, very warm. Since I had played here during my ABA days, I hoped I would be received warmly here because this was a part of my career, Erving said.

The University of North Carolina stars led by as much

Tennis League Results Given

Arlington Self Storage gained its first victory of the season with a 21-13 win over .University Book Exchange Wednesday in Junior Novice Tennis League action. In the other match, Greenville Recreation tied Wachovia 16-16.

In advanced league action, the E.C.T.A. team defeated Greenville Tennis Association 6-3, and Greenville Recreation defeated G.T.C. 64.

as 13 late in the first half, taking a 5845 lead on a Dudley Bradley dunk with 1:37 left. The NBA stars rallied and eventually took a 78-75 lead with 13:51 to play on Eric Sleepy Floyds three-point play.

A Wood jumper gave the Tar Heel team a 79-78 lead, but Nate Archibalds jumper gave the NBA team an 80-79 edge with 12:52 remaining.

Rich Yonakor, a member of the 1977 North Carolina team that finished second in the nation, hit a baseline jumper with 12:24 left for an 81-80 lead the Carolina team would never relinquish.

A1 Wood led the Tar Heel team with 25 points. Walter Davis and Mike OKoren, members of the 1977 team on which Wood played, scored 24 and 22 points respectively. Bradley had 19 and Gene Banks, who played for Duke and who was switched to the Tar Heel team, added 15.

Floyd had 21 to pace the NBA team, while Erving had 20. Artis Gilmore scored 16 points, while Archibald and Adrian Dantley had 10 each.

Kiwanis Top Winterville

HOLLYWOOD - David Jester pounded out two hits and Billy Mitchell pitched Kiwanis to a 12-2 romp over Winterville Machine Works in Senior Babe Ruth League baseball Wednesday.

Steve Kite had a pair of hits for Winterville.

Kiwanis improved its record to 7-3, while Winterville Machine Works slid to 2-9.

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Colleges Tighten Reins On Logos

ROCHESTER, N Y. (AP) -Theres money in that blue soda from Nwth Carotina, those maize-and-blue jelly beans from Michigan and those Joe Bruin T-shirts from UCLA.

Image-conscious consumers around the world will spend more than $100 million this year on goods bearing the names, mascots and colors of U.S. colleges and universities.

The souvenirs range from neckties and side chairs to* pennants, liquid soap, baby booties and liquor decanters.

For decades, the profits of the souvenir business went directly to the entrepreneurs who invented and marketed the goods. Colleges earmd nothing.

Moreover, deans, provosts and alumni could do little more than cringe when a company put out an item such as a sha^ toilet seat cover bearing their schools proud name.

The stakes rose in the late 1970s when, for the first time, college-labeled goods began appearing in profusion thousands of miles away from their home campus. It became possible, for example, for football fans in Los Angeles to buy Texas A4M jerseys in their local department stores.

Tired of being frozen out of the money and insulted by

shoddy or tasteless merchandise bearing their names, ct^eges and universities have begun fighting back.

In the last five years - and particularly in the last 10 months - schools ranging from the University of Alabama to Slippery Rock State College have registered their names and mascots with the U.S. government.

Trademarks in hand, the schools are insisting that manufacturers obtain authorization for their products and pay royalties.

East Carolina University has not - at this time -registered its name and Pirate symbols, but Athletic Director Ken Karr said the matter was under study. Karr said he expected East Carolina would in the near future, take steps to register its name and mascot.

Schools will make more than $1 mUIion from royalties this year, estimates Steve Crossland, executive director of International Collegiate Enterprises in Northridge, Calif.,

Our school was basically unaware that it could protect itself, Robert Dawson, a spokesman for Slippery Rock, said recently. Now the western Pennsylvania college figures on making a smaJl annual income from its

famous name.

The turning point for Slippery Rock and dozens of other colleges nationwide was a

company in 1982 and hurt Champions close relationship with its clients. The company changed strategy and began

Woods, Hart Giiide Pirate Network

federal appe^ court ruling last Augik in favor of the University of Pittsburgh in a suit against Champion Products Inc. of Rochester.

Champion, one of the worlds lar^t makers of custom-printed athletic clothing, had said Pitts trademark was invalid because the school had gone for decades without enforcing its rights.

Champion said the college names and mascots on its shirts were mere embellishments. The real trademarks, it said, were the little Champion labels at the back of the neck.

But the Circuit Court of Appeals in Pittsburgh said Pitt had the right to seek an injunction and damages. The Supreme Court refused to hear Champions appeal, and the matter has been sent back to district court, where it remains.

That lawsuit and several others contributed to a 66 percent earnings drop for the

making deals.

You cant do business if youre in the courts with your customers, Leon Ellin, Champions vice president for finance, said recently.

Golden Eagle Enterprises of Selma, Ala., Crosslands main competitor, has eight members from the Atlantic Coast and Southeastern conferences; Alabama, Clemson, Mississippi, Georgia Tech, North Carolina and North Carolina State, Duke and Maryland.

Experts warn over-optimistic college administrators that 7 percent royalties wont make their school rich, and only a school with a nationally known football or basketball team is likely to earn much money at all.

Campus bookstores, which probably account for the bulk of collegiate goods sales, are exempted from royalties in many cases on the theory that it is pointless to take more

money from students and hand it over to the odlege anyway.

UCLA, which registered its trademark in the early 1970s, leads the nation in licensing with gross revenues in excess of half a million dollars in 1982, according to licensing administrator Jack Revoyr.

Nearly 80 percent of that is from Japan, where the UCLA name has become a flukish status symbol and is regarded as more of a brand name than an educational institution.

Other scho(^ hope to make their money in swift kiUings When North Carolina State won the national basketball championship this year, 100,000 cases of Coca-Cola in commemorative six-packs were sold in a single day.

You cant believe what goes on. Its beyond a normal persons comprehension, when a whole state goes insane, Crossland said.

While Coca-Cola paid royalties to the Wolfpack, dozens of overnight entrepreneurs made a few

quick bucks and got out. Crossland estimates that nationwide, colleges are collecting royalties on only about a third of the merchandise sold.

Bill Battle, president of Golden Eagle and former football coach at Tennessee, said that for many colleges, controlling use of their name is even more important than earning money from it.

One businessman presented Crossland with a sample of North Carolina State toilet paper, intimating he could

make up designs for other schools as well.

We tore off sheets and sent them to all our members, Crossland said. Florida State said they would probably buy the Florida paper, but they wouldnt want the Florida State paper done

The idea was nixed

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The Pirate Sports Network, voice of East Carolina University football and basketball, will again feature Jim Woods as play-by-play voice for football, while newcomer Dave Hart Jr. will handle the color commentary.

Woods, a veteran of 14 seasons with the Pirates, has a background of over ^ years In sportscasting. Hes affiliated with WNCT-TV in Greenville, serving as host for the Ed Emory tv show.

Hart, named in the spring as Assistant Athletic Director for Marketing, will be the first change on the football network In 10 years. A veteran coach and former player at the University of Alabama, Hart has been a color commentator on state-wide radio network in the state of Kentucky for

various high school events. Also, for seven years. Hart had his own radio show for basketball just outside of Louisville, Ky.

The 34-year-old Hart has a vast background and knowledge of athletics, having starred in football, basketball and baseball in high school; attended Alabama on a basketball grant-in-aid, and has been closely associated with athletics through his father, Dave Hart Sr., former college football coach and now the Director of Athletics at the University of Missouri.

The Pirate Sports Network is operated by the athletic department at East Carolina University, with Ken Smith, Assistant Athletic Director for Public Relations, serving as executive producer.

Race Teams Seek Ways To Beat Rules

WINSTON-SALEM (AP) -NASCAR race team officials say they are working on ways to overcome new restrictions on engines aimed at cutting speeds.

One of the rules limits cowl air induction, in effect choking the engine. The other rule bans mushroom valve lifters and rev kits, with the intent of cutting engine RPMs.

Im not too conerned about losing the mushroom lifters, because well get that power back eventually, said Tim Brewer, crew chief for Raymond Beadles team.

But losing the rev kits will

drastically hurt the durability of the engines One mistake and youve lost an $18,000 motor That rule is definitely not in the best interest of the sport.

Cale Yarborough triggered the speed-cutting regulations when he flipped and crashed while running 201 mph in Daytona 500 qualifying in February. He won the pole at Talladega at 202.650 mph, an all-time NASCAR qualifying mark.

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High game: Mark Spain 235, Susan Puryear 236. Hi^ series: Mark Spain 633, Susan Puryear 585.

BottbflllStondingi

ByTlwAMOdaltdPrw NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W Lffl Pet. GB Montreal        M    -

St Louis    3S    J7    4*3    4

Philadelphia J3 J5 4K 44 Chicago    34        46    *

Ptttsburib    32    31    .437    (4

New York        45    32    114

WEST DIVISION Los Angeles    4*    Z7    630    -

AllanU    45    30    600    2

San Francisco 36    36    514    14

San Diego    37    37    500    94

Houston    37    31    43    10

Cincinnati    32    44    4J1    154

WadMadayiGaaiMa Chicago 5, PtttiharlhO Atlanta It. Houston 1 CinciimaU 7. San Franclsco6 Montreal 5-2, PhiladslphU 13 St Louli4.NewYo(tif

Montreal (Biirrlt 3-lr at PWladeiphIa (Groas 14)

San Francisco iBraintag 6-4) at CtncinnaUiPulso24i Pittaburgi dUiod 5-71 at Chicago (Jenklntl-Tl     _

Los AMfidaa (Hootoo 7-2) at Saa DIago (WhttaoiW)

Houaloa iKMppsr 24) at AtlanU (FalcamS-D.tn)

New York (TeneU ID at SI Lou)s iAllcnS4),(o)

PitdaysOaMt Montreal at Cblcagt SI LouisatPHtibiir^to) ClncUiiiaUatAtlaoUL(al NcwYa(katF1iSai3sipiMa.in)

LoaAafrimallli^in)

San PriMtaeaalSaa Diego, (B)

Toronto    41    21    5    -

Baltimore

Detroit

New Yorli

Boston

Milwaukee

Cleveland

California Texas Chicago Kansas City Oakland Minnesota Seattle

40    32

40    32

38    33

37    36

34    36

33    41

WEST DIVISION 40    33

556

556

535

507

486

446

548

548

521

500

480

408

35 144

Wednesday s Games

Chicago 5, SeatUe 3 New York 7. Baltimore 0 Toronto 4, Minnesota 2 Milwaukee!. Detroit 3 Cleveland 5-10. Boston 3-11. 2nd game II innings California 2. Texas I Oakland II, Kansas City 6 TbundaytGanMB Toronto (Leal 741 at Minnesota (WUIIams44i Detroit (Morris 641 at Milwaukee (Mcaure3-7)

Kansas City (Creel 0-3) at Oakland

* Bahfmore (Palmer 22) at New York I Fontenot (MU, (n)

Texas (Tanana 3-li at Callfomla (Witt 4-5). (n)

Only games scheduled

Fridays Gamsa Seattle at Toronto M ilwaukee at Cleveland. (n i Baltimore at Detroit, (nl Boston at New York, (n)

LTiicagoat MlnnesoU. (n)

Kansas City at Calllornta. (ni Texas at Oakland. 10 35 (ni

Uogut Ufldflrt

BATTING (170 at tMU) Carew. CalifoniU. 404: Bous. BoMon. 362; McRae. Kansas CttTlBl. Griffey. New York. 331, HrM. MlmwaoU. 321; Yount, Milwaukee, .320 RUNS Yount. Milwaukee, 51; D Evaoi, BoMon. 4; Rtphen, BaMknore. 4. Wud. MimietoU. 48; Boggs, BqMm. 48,Cailino,Mliine*U,* hBl KllUe. Chicago. 54; Rke. Boston, 52, Ward. Mlnaeaola. 58, Cooper, MlWaukac. 4; DeClnces, Calllorala. 41; Franco, ClevelandJ6.

HITS: Boas. boMon. 7; BWIakw, Detroit. S; Carew. Cailfonta,; WwL

**DOUbA? McR^JkaSw^. M;

* fRIPLES C Moere. MUwaokae, J; G Wilson. Datrait. 5; Grilfln, Toronto. 5; Herndon. Dairott. 5; K Gibson. Datr^A WhHaker. DsUolt. 5; WtnOeid. New York.

^ HOksE RUNS KtUlc. CMcag. 18; Rice, Boatan, II. Annaa. Boa^ 17, DcClncct, Caiifsraia. IS; 6 are tied wMh

'^STOLEN BASES; J Crin, Cbica|a. 2; WUm. Kanaaa CKy. 37; RlimSnon,

Oakland, 32, K Law, Chicago, 30, Sam pie, Texas,,25 PITCHING (6 decisions Flanagan, Baltimore. 64. 1 000, 2 72; Kison, California, 7 1,    875, 2 93, Koosman,

Chicago, 6-1, 857, 4 11. R L Jackson, Toronlo, 5 ),    833, 4 35, Sanchei,

California, 8-2, 800,3 45 STRIKEOUTS Stieb, Toronlo, 105, Blyleven, Cleveland, 93, Morris, Detroit, 88, Rigietli, New York, 77 Sutton, Milwaukee, 76 SAVES Qulsenberry, Kansas City. 18. Stanley, Boston. 16, Caudill. Seattle. 15; Lopei, Detroit, I), RDavU, Minnesota, II

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (170 at bats I Easier. Ptl tsburgh. 341. Hendrick. St Louis. 335. KnighT, Houston, 335, K Hemandei. New Yoik. 319: Dawson. Montreal. 317. Murphy. Atlanta. 317 RS Murrty, AUanta, 67, Garvey, San Diega. sT Raines. Montreal, sS. Evans. ^ Francisco. 53. Dawson. Montreal. 46. Guerrero, Los Angeles, 46, Wilson. New York. 46 RBI Dawson. Montreal, 51. Murphy. AllanU, 56, Hendrick, StLouls, 5J; Evans. San Franctico. tt. Guerrero. Loa Angeles. 47 mTS Thon. Houston, 92. Dawson, Montreal. 90, K Hernandet. New York, 8. Oliver. Montreal, 81; Garvey. San Diego. 86. Murphy. Atlanta. 86, R Ramirez AUanU.IF DOUBLES: Garvey. San Di^. I. J Ray, Pittsburgh, I, Buckner, Chtcago, 18. Dawson. Montreal. II; Knl^t. Houston. 18; Oliver, Montreal, II TRIPLES: Moreno. Houaton.l. Butler, Atlanta. 7. Dawson, Montreal. 6; K Hernandex. New York, 5; Raines. Montreal. 5. Washington. AUaoU, 5.

HOME RUNS Evans. San Francisco, 19: Murphy. AtlanU. 19; Guerrero. Lot Angeles. 16, Dawson. Montreal. 15, Schmktt, PhUadet^. 14 STOLN BASS: Ratnes, Montreal. 33; LeMaater. San Francisco, 27. WUson. New York, 27, Moreno, HouMon. M. S S^ Los Angeles. 24 PrriTHING (6 decHionai Fatcone. AUanU, 6-1, fi7, 2.43. Monlefutco. San DIM. i-l, B7. 4.; yan, HouMon, 6-1, BtT 07; P Perei. AUtnU. -2. III. 2 37. RMm,Moiilreal. II3, 719.277 iTRlkEOUTS: Carito^ PhL_

121. Solo, CinckMiaU. 117, McWL., PIttaburifc, M; Bcrnyt. Ctnckmall. r, RMrt.HoiRraal.l5 ^VnS; Reardon. Montreal. II; UvoBe, Sao Fraaelico. II; Bedroataa, AUanU, 9; U Smitt. CMcago. 9; 4 an Utdwlihl.

Tampa Bay Birmingham

xUakland Denver liOs Angeles Arizona

II

647 346 349 471 314 309

529 312 286 412 270 283 412 275 356 235 254 409

6 0

8    9    0

Pacific

9    8    0

7    10    0

7    10    0

______4    13    0

x-clinched divisional title

Saturday 's Games Oakland )7, Boston 16 New Jersey 21, Arizona 14 Sundays Gamca Michigan 34, Chicago 19 Washington 28, Los Angeles 2) Philadelphia 31, Birmingham 10 Moodiy't Gum Tampa Bay 26, Denver 23 Saturday, July 3 Tampa Bay at Birmingham, ini Sunday, July 2 New Jersey al Boston Oakland at Chicago Arizona al Michigan PhUadelphIa at Washington Denver al Los Angeles

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BOSIDN RED SOX-Announced the retirement of Mark Fldrych, pitcher Signed Mike Brumlcy, ihorUtop. who was assigned to Winter Haven in the Class A Fl^da SUU League

KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Aclivaled George Brett, third baaeman Optioned Cliff Pastomicky. third baieman. to Omaha of the American AsaocUtkm BASKETBALL NaUonal BaibalbaU AaaocUtta

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The LegislatureSeeking Gubernatorial Succession Referendum

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - North Caroliniaiis who voted in 1977 to let tte governor and lieutenant governor serve two terms could change their minds if a leading state senator has his way.

Senate President Pro Tern Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, Wednesday sou^t co-signers of a bill that would schedule a referei^um on gubernatorial succession for the 1984 general electio

kesman said Gov. Jim Hunt, who was instrumental in legislative approval of the 1977 amendment, would iy oppose any attempt to change it. the bill, which had not been filed late Wednesday, lid retain the present system in which Uk governor and lieu^nant ^vemor serve for four years and can seek re-electiOD to one additional term.

Other clWes would be returning to the pre-1977 policy of limiting the stated t^- and second-ranking officeholders to single four-year terms or limiting both to one six-year term.

Many lawmakers have complained that succession has made it tougher for new leaders to emerge since top legislators have less opportunity to run for higher office.

1 dont think the Legislature is happy with succession, said Barnes.

Brent Hackney, Hunts deputy press secretary, said the current system allows... continuing programs that couldnt be fully developed in just one term.

And voters can always choose not to re-elect anyone not doing the job, he said.

Lawing said in an interview he and other supporters were close to lining up commitments from the 30 senators needed to ensure that the bill will pass the Senate.

Because the bill would amend the constitution, approval by three-fifths of the 120-member House and 50-member Senate is needed before it can go before the states voters.

The idea of repealing succession was floated earlier in the session but no propo^ legislation was filed as Gov. Jim Hunt expressed strong opposition. Asked why Senate leaders waited until the sessions waning days to move the bill, Lawing replied, We felt the time was right.

One source who asked not to be named said supporters strategy appeared to be rushing the bill through the Senate this session, then wating until the 1984 short session to push for House approval in time for the fall election.

Lawing has close ties to Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green, who opposed the 1977 amendment permitting succession although he took advantage of it to win a second term in 1980. Hunt also was re-elected in 1980.

In other legislative action;

Bingo

A preliminary vote was scheduled for today on bill designed to put professional bingo operations out of business.

A vote was delayed Wednesday when the state House amended it to include a $50 fee for infrequent charity-run games.

Rep. Bruce Ethridge, D-Onslow, sponsor of the bill, introduced a five-page amendment to answer concerns expressed by members of the House Judiciary I Committee before it was sent to the floor.

House Speaker Liston Ramsey ruled that the amendment was substantial enough to warrant another days study.

Ethridge said provisions in the 1979 law allowing charities to sponsor bingo games operated by others ended up tunneling profits away from charitable causes.

Our law has been circumvented and the professional bingo operator has taken over in North Carolina, he said. It was intended for bona fide charitable organizations to run the games and benefit while giving service to the community .

The bill would establish an agency in the attorney generals office to oversee bingo operators. Charitable organizations would be required to pay a $250 initiation fee and $150-a-year renewal fees to fund the agency, but Ethridge said the law would end up saving money for the state.

The bill also prohibits back-to-back bingo games, a procedure Ethridge said professional bingo parlors used to get around laws forbidding more than two games a week by a charitable organization at one location. He said games by different charities would be scheduled one after another, with $10,000 in prizes when the law allows no more than $2,500 in a single game or $1,500 each in bi-weekly operations.

The bill provides that licensees must report their earnings and pay prizes by check. Those failing to report would lose their licenses, while other violations would be misdemeanors or felonies, depending on the severity.

Property Tax

The Senate gave final approval to a bill barring industries other than cotton textile manufacturers from taking advantage of a 1981 law permitting tax breaks for adding equipment designed to reduce the threat of brown lung disease.

Had the law not been enacted by today, it would have cost the states 100 county governments combined tax revenues of more than $7 million because local officials must decide on their property tax rates by July 1.

The original 1981 law was supposed to apply only to cotton textile plants that install an apparatus to clear the interior air of cotton dust that causes byssinosis, or brown lung. But other firms began installing anti-pollution equipment and seeking the tax deduction.

According to the N.C., Association of County Com-

missionm*s, Meckloiburg County stood to lose over $5 million because Duke Power requested the tax break for adding air-cleaning attachments to a nuclear power plant.

Wake County was in danger of losing around $1 million. Other counties and their potential losses included Brunswick ($251,477), Person ($133,978), Gaston ($113,460), and Stokes ($90,077).

Ridge Law

Sen. Robert Swain, D-Buncombe, said he didnt know when a special committee he chairs will begin considering a bill to regulate mountaintop development, but denied the bill faced certain extinction.

Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green sent the bill Tuesday to the Special Ways and Means Committee that he appointed last week. Green said then that all new bills would be soit to the paml, which was ordered to act quickly on all proposed legislation by approving it, killing it or recommending that it be delayed until the 1984 short session.

The ridge law has passed both chambers but is before the Senate for consideration of House amendments.

Published reports Wednesday said Green sent the bill to the special committee in retaliation for a statement attributed last week to Rep. Margaret Hayden, D-Alleghany, sponsor of the House version of the ridge law.

The Winston-Salem Journal quoted Ms. Hayden as saying Green, who has been indicted on five counts of receiving bribes and conspiracy, should resign.

Sen. Charles Hipps, D-Haywood, who said Tuesday the bill was in serious trouble, said Wednesday in an interview he was getting mixed signals on its prospects after speaking with Green and Senate President Pro Tern Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg.

Swain, asked whether he expected the bill to emerge from committee and be passed this session, said, I really, sincerely hope so. I havent heard anybody say they wanted it killed.

The bill would require 24 mountain countie&and their cities to either adopt a strict permit system to control high-rise construction on mountain ridge crests, ban tall buildings on mountaintoi^ or call a referendum on whether there should be any controls.

Hazardous Substances

The public would be notified of all hazardous substances used by industries under a bill considered by the House Water and Air Resources Committee.

Weve spent a lot of time these past two terms talking about substances which are hazardous wastes, said bill sponsor Rep. Harry Payne, D-New Hanover. Before they were hazardous wastes, they were still a hazard.

The bill would require firms using hazardous substances to inform the Department of Human Resources, neighboring residents and employees. Companies also would be required to train workers in the proper handling of the chemicals and proper treatment if someone is exposed.

State Employees

A proposed constitutional amendment to limit state hiring narrowly escaped being killed in a House committee and appeared to have little chance of winning the two-thirds House vote needed for approval.

Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance, said the amendment would prevent government from growing faster than North Carolinas population. He said that was particularly important because incoming administrations tend to hire many new state employees.

Rep. Joe Roberts, D-Gaston, moved to table a motion to give the bill a favorable report, but withdrew the motion when the Constitutional Amendments Committee deadlocked 5-5.

The committee then voted 5-5 on a motion for a favorable report, but Chairman Bertha Holt, D-Alamance, broke the tie and sent the bill to the House. If approved, the bill still would require passage in a statewide referendum before becoming

IdW

Parental Notice

The Senate approved 4(M a bill requiring that parents be notified when minors are arrested and returned it to the House for concurrence with an amendment.

Senators argued at length about the amendment, which wouldlrequire that parents be notified whether or not they live in North Carolina.

Military Tuition

The House Military and Veterans Affairs Committee approved a bill granting nonresident military personnel and their dependents in state tuition rates for attending one of the 16 University of North Carolina campuses.

The bill was passed by the Senate earlier this session when it convened at Camp Lejeune.

It will cost some money, but the effects it will have -encouraging retired military people to settle here, and helping our relations with the military thats our biggest industry - are worth it, said Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne.

VictimsCompensation

The Senate Finance Committee approved a bill setting up a program to compensate crime victims. But the committee heeded the request of the Administrative Office of the Courts that the program be funded by appropriation, not by proceeds from increased court costs.

1 would have preferred that the bill pass in its original form, but its encouraging to think that we will have the program, said Rep. Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, sponsor of the bill.

Committee Agrees On Spending Needs; Funding Pian Undecided

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Representatives of the state House and Senate have agreed they need to raise an additional $219.1 million next year but there remain strong differences of opinion about how to do that.

The House-Senate conference committee negotiating differences in tax packages agreed Wednesday on the $219.1 million figure.

The House wanted to spend $242.2 million in addition to the money for continuing government operations and it has proposed a plan for raising ^.6 million. The Senate wanted to spend $184.2 million and wmt&raise $231.5 mil nw committee also accepted a plan for raising highway funds with an increase in the price of a fuel tax sticker for truckers from $1 to $10 and the price of an automobile license from $16 to $20 and a higher estimate of revenue growth.

The two sides agreed that if even more money is

needed in 1984-85, they will accept a three-fourths cent increase in the gasoline tax, making the tax 13 cents a gallon. The Senate negotiators say they doubt theyll need theextra gas tax.

Heated debate erupted, however, over a Senate plan to generate $74 million by changing the accounting procedures for the salaries of teachers who are paid for 10 months work over a 12-month period.

The committee recessed without scheduling another meeting.

Teachers now may choose to be paid over a lO-m(mth or a 12-month period for their 10 months of work. The 12-month pay period goes from September through August while the state fiscal year goes from July to June.

The Senates idea, which negotiators say is the cornerstone of their tax package, would make the sy period conform to the

1 year and leave the state with a onetime surplus of $74 mUlion. The windfall money eventually would

have to be replaced in the budget.

It is a reserve carried over from year to year, said Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir.

But Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, said teachers already have earned the money. He said approving the windfall would amount to passing a one-year bud^t thats not balanced.

Voters approved a balanced budget amendment to the state constitution several years ago.

Tf thats the way were going to start running state government it would be a drastic change, said Rep. William Watkins. D-Granville. If you want to slap! them (voters) right in the face with a cold fish the thing for us to do is go with the$74mUlion.

House Speaker Liston Ramsey requested an opinion from the attorney general regardiog the constitutionality of the $74 million

He asked whether the Legislature must balance

each years budget. Sources said the attorney generals office ruled that the Legislature must balance the two-year budget, not,each year individually. They said that would make Uk $74 million windfall legal.

The House alternative is to raise windfall money by requiring businesses remit employees tax withholdings monthly instead of quarteriy, requiring insurance corn-pay taxes quarterly ead of annually and accelerating corporate tax payments.

Adams said there is a basic philosophical difference between the House and Senate packages. The Senate would spare businesses from carrying their share of the tax burden, he said.

Somewhere along the line we are goins to run out of windfalls and were going to talk about the corporate tax, said Sen. Craig Law-ing, D-Mecklenburg. The simplest, easiest, least painful way to do it is to take the money already there, the $741

THE DAYS GET LONGER Rep. James session in the North Carolina House of Repre-Gentry, Democrat of King, shows the strains of sentatives. (APLaserphoto) another long legislative day during Wednesdays

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Largest Bingo Game Anywhere

  ..... -  .  /v nal iniA oftf invnlvMl in it was to do

CHEROKEE, N.C. (AP)-Organizers say Saturday Hints bingo game on the Cherokee Indian Reservation will attract about 3,000 players and gross $1.5 million, making it the largest game anywhere in the world.

I believe this is the biggest bingo game anywhere in the world. said John Tate, a spokesman for Cherokee Bingo Management in Virginia Beach, Va. Weve got 2,300 people signed up right now. vAnd were

Scavenging Pig Is Enjoying immunity

MIAMI (API - The police were quite firm; they dont haridlepigs.

The animal control folks were equally firm: they only handle dogs.

So a skinny pig that looked like a dog foraged through garbage in a suburban neighborhood in peace, until police finally changed their minds and managed to lasso the petite porker.

The thin pig was "having a field day" in Phil Edelmans garbage early Wednesday, so the retired labor lawyer called police.

"They said, We dont handle pigs, Edelman said So he called Dade County Animal Services. "They said, rWe only handle dogs."'

He called police again and two officers came by.

"They came over and I was standing by the fence. said Edelman. "I pointed to the pig and they said. Its a doberman. 1 said. No, its a pig

The police lassoed the pigs hind legs and dragged it into the prisoner compartment of their squad car

The pig was taken to the Humane Society, and executive director Ken McGovern said it had been starved and mistreated.

"If we find the owner, well have to do something about it. because it hasnt had humane care, he said. It needs some groceries.

expecting another 200 or so to show up at the door.

For $500, the players get transportation to the game, all their bingo cards for the day and the chance to win six-figure cash prixes. And there will be door prizes, including a 1983 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, a 1983 Nissan Pulsar NX and a seven-day Caribbean cruise and $500 cash.

Security Saturday night will be tight, promoters said. Payoffs will be made by certified check.

Play will begin with 30 games with $5,000 payoffs each, followed by 20 games with $20.000 payoffs. The big payoff will come around 11:30 p.m. with the last of four jackpot coverall games in which the first player to fill his card wins $200,000. If mohe than 48 numbers are required to fill the card, the jackpot will be reduced to $100,000.

The other three coverall games will be for $50,000, $100,000 and $150,000.

Big-time bingo came to western North Carolina last December after a federal court held that states laws limiting bingo winnings were not applicable on federal Indian reservations.

This is an offshoot of the Seminole game in Miami. Tate said. After it was ruled legal down there, the

Cherokees wanted to get into the act.

Last year, the 12-member tribal council decided to allow bingo wj the reservation and awarded Dan McCoy and John Young a 10-year contract to run the games.

McCoy and Young, both Cherokees, then hired Tates Virginia Beach firm to provide the bingo expertise.

The games began the first weekend in December and have been held every other Saturday since. Those games had $225,000 payouts with the largest one-game payoff at $25,000.

Last Saturday we seated 4,400 people and turned another 300 away, said Robert Sherrill, one of approximately 235 people working at the bin^ hall. You couldnt hardly find room to seat the people who came inhere

From all this business, the Indians receive a $150,000 annual guarantee, collect 9 percent of the gross receipts, charge a users fee for the building, which is owned by the 5,500-member tribe, and levy a $2 head tax on the players.

Most everybody is pleased about whats happening, especially in the slow months. said McCoy. Its been a real boon to the economy. The only reason I

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^ involved in it was to do something about the economy.

Its been very positive. said Jimmy Myers, president of the Cherokee Chamber of Commerce, Anytime you have 4,000 people coming into a community its bound to be. Theyve got to eat and theyve got to sleep. In some vei7 dull weekends in the spring and winter it has helped tremendously. Cherokee Police Chief John Smith said the bingo players havent caused any trouble. They come for one thing -to play bingo, said Smith. And iats what they do.

Paid $1 Million ForConviction

ALBANY, N Y. (API - A 66-year-old retired doorman who spent 24 years in prison and came within two hours of execution has received more than $1 million from New York state as compensation for being wrongly convicted of murder Isidore Zimmerman received a check for $1,007,763.75 on Tuesday in compensation for "loss of earnings, medical expenses, loss of liberty and civil rights, loss of reputation and mental anguish "

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2-The Dtfly Reflecto. GreenrUle, NX.-Tlwnday, June JO,

(Uo99Word By Eugme Sheffer

ACROSS IComein last 5 Dirty I Collection

12 Actor Jannings

U Salad fish

14 Altar phrase

15 Facial feature

17 Hoover, for one

18 Spielberg

19 Movie music

21 Prefix for adorable

22 Tablelands

24 Ship worker

27 Moray

28 Impale

31 The Greatest"

32 L.A. player

33 Self

34 Makeover

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37 Pinnacle

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with Love

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48 Heavy table

51 Card playing word

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GOREN BRIDGE

Heroes Honored In July 4 Film

nCaMMUMQOUM

ARDOOIARfBAIir

etW3 TrtbufW Company SyndicaM. Inc.

ENTRIES OUT OF THIN AIR

CRYPTOQUIP    6-30

JTCEOANV ANPXJ NO VEPX JXZNXR TO EONCEZ CEPOXANRC.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - ARE THE SCOTSMANS FOND ROMANCF^ HIGHUND FLINGS

Todays Cryptoquip clue: P equals G.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter u^ stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

I9t] King FealurtsSyndical*. Inc

FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, JULY 1.1983

from the Carroll RIghtar Initltuta

GENERAL TENDENCIES; Conditions can almost slow down to a halt today. Tonight, make a conscious effort to keep things running smoothly for most people around you will be vacillating and uncertain.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Some secret anxieties can keep you from accomplishing much in the business world if you permit it. Perk up and do your best.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Employees are not very helpful today. The social side of life can also be annoying, so take time to read or study.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Steer clear of those in power since they are not in very good moods and may take things out on you. Try to grin and bear it.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Concentrate on different angles with some new venture you are contemplating. Delegate responsibility.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) You may feel you are being cheated in business, but use tact with those concerned. Show more thought to a loved one.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Find a way of encouraging a depressed partner and don't bother him over some obligation at this time.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Co-workers may not be very helpful to you, so rely more on yourself and get rid of your worries. You get excellent results.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Try not to be extravagant where recreation is concerned or you will later regret it. Dress neatly today.    ,

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Use common aense in handling some conditions at home that you do not like. Straighten them out.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You may receive a letter that could anger you, but dont reply until you have cooled down. Drive carefully today.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Dont commit yourself too heavily where property and money matters are concerned. Plan repairs at home.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You should be very careful in whatever you do today. Avoid making expensive mistakes. Stay away from friends.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .. . he or she wiU understand spiritual and mental capabilities of others and will endeavor to help them. Slant the education along the lines of astrology, psychology, psychiatry, medicine and the like. Provide ample time for rest.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Chemical Spray Control Barred

MILWAUKEE (API -Chemical sprays should not be used to control prisoners who commit minor infractions at Waupun Correction Institution, a federal judge ruled after inmates testified thev were sprayed for refusing to return a meal tray.

U.S. District Judge Terence T. Evans issued an order Wednea^ prohibiting s from using tear gas.

officials from i

Mace or other chemical sprays excq)t when inmates pose a threat of death or bodily injury to another person, or when physical control of the institution is lost.

The ruling resulted from a class-action suit filed on behalf of inmates, who claimed the sprays were used without just provocation.

Both

deals.

vulnerable. North

NORTH

97

^AK543

OA975

85

WEST    EAST

J64    KQ103

<?Q976    '^JIOS

0J3        0 82

KQJ7     10962

SOUTH

A852 92

0 KQ1064

A43

The bidding:

North East South West 1 9 Pass 2 0 Pass 3 0 Pass 4 NT Pass 5 0 Pass 6 0 Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: King of .

We are convinced that there is a god that looks after chronic overbidders. Consider this hand from a recent Italian championship.

The kindest thing that can be said about South's bidding is that at no stage did he make an insufficient bid. North, who really did no more than open the bidding, found himself in slam. For tunately, South had the technique to make the most out of his chances. ^

West led the top of his club sequence, and declarer won the ace. His only hope was to set up hearts for a second discard, and to accomplish that he needed three fast entries to the table. Only two are apparent.

Declarer crossed to the ace of hearts and ruffed a heart n hand with the ten. Then he led a low trump and boldly finessed dummy's nine! Another heart was ruffed

and a trump to the ace drew all the outstanding trumps and left declarer in dummy. He discarded two clubs on the king of hearts and dummys long heart, then cashed the ace of spades and conceded a spade. He was able to ruff two spades on the table to bring in twelve tricks.

Just your normal everyday slam. It needed only a 2-2 trump break, a 4-3 heart division and the jack of trumps in the West hand. By our calculations, the chances are slightly over 10 percent. But in the words of Lew Mathe: "The only good slams are those that make!

Hungry Bears Stealing Food

PARK, Calif. lAP) -Summer hunger pangs and a scarcity of nuts and berries have emboldened bears at Yosemite campgrounds, ^ where the animals have developed a taste for human food.

The plants normally eaten by black bears are still snowbound, said Yosemite National Parks bear expert, Mike Webb. As an alternative, the bears confront campers and swipe their food.

Webb said bears are attracted to human food because it is high in nutrition, generally, while the grasses and nuts they eat are pretty poor stuff ,

Two people have been slightly injured by the bandit bears, but Webb said black bears dont have the desire to physically attack people.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A group of Americas greatest military heroes, winners (tf the Medal of Hodot, are spotlighted in a new television film that will be shown nationwide during the July 4tb weekend.

This honors the exploits of all the hoxHC men who won the medal, said retired Army Col. R< Ray, president of the Medal of Honor Society, at a reception Wedn^y night to preview therdm.

Ray and about 30 other Medal of Honor winners gathered at the National Archives to watch the half-hour film, which was produced in exjunction with the society.

Heroes; The Official Story of the Medal of Honor, has been syndicated ami will be shown in about 150 cities across the country on Saturday and Sunday, according to executive producer Chuck Ashman.

The Medal of Honor, the nations highest military award for bravery, was created in 1861 by President Abraham Lincoln. It has been awarded 3,414 times. There are 217 living recipients.

One of the films highlights

Bank Merger Is Consumated

RALEIGH, N.C. lAP) -The merger of Peoples Bank of North Carolina into First Citizens Bank was consummated Wednesday, adding six offices and the towns of Madison, King, Walnut Cove, Dobson and Stokesdale to First Citizenssystem.

Peoples Bank brings assets of $45.9 million and deposits of $41.6 million to First Citizens, which has assets of 1.7 billion and deposits of $1.5 billion as of March 31,1983.

is a newly discovered film clip showUig Gen. John J. Pershing awarding medals to a number of sddiers x a French battlefidd in 1918.

Among the medal winners

X that grainy clto was Harold Furlong, a young Army lieutenant who single-handedly charged a German line to save his company and a relief force.

Furkmg, a retired doctor, said in the film his knees were shaking so badly when Perking gave him the medal that he couldnt recall what Pershing said to him.

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NEW-STYLE WING - Forward-swept wings have been mated to the fuselage of the X-29 technology demonstrator aircraft at the Grumman Aero^ace facility in Bethpage, N.Y. This is the first of two aircraft Grumman

With The

Armed Services

Electricians Mate 3rd Class Alton R. Lewis, son of Mamie R. Lewis of Snow Hill, recently departed on a deployment to the Mediterranean. He is a crewmember aboard the nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser USS Virginia, which will participate in training excercises with other Sixth Fleet units and those of allied nations.

Fireman Recruit Stephen E. Peele, son of Mr. and Mrs. Shelton Riddick of Route 1, Williamston, completed recruit training at the Naval Trianing Center, Great Lakes, 111., where he studied general military subjects such as seamanship, close order drill. Naval history and first aid.

specialist field.

Russell E. Barnes, son of Dorothy M. Barnes of Roanoke Rapids, enlisted in the Air Force and departed for Lackland AFB, Tex., where he will undergo six weeks of basic training. He wUI receive training in the computer operations field.

Pfc. Marion C. Peaden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion T. Peaden of Route 2, Farmville, recently participated in excercise Solid Shield 83, which is designed to emphasize command and control of military forces in a simulated combat environment. He is a member of the 2nd Battilion, 8th Marine Regiment, Camp Lejeune.

Carol A. Kelly, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Laytham A. Formyduval of Route 2, Grifton, was promoted to the rank of technical sergeant. She is a telecommunications supervisor at Hurlburt Field, Fla., with the 2068th Communications Squadron.

Marine Pvt. Peyton B Eastwood, son of Mr and Mrs. Peyton Eastwood of Williamston, reported for duty with the 1st Marine Division, Camp Pendleton, Calif.

Staff Sgt. George R. Williams, son of Delzora Williams of Route 3, Williamston, was awarded a Meritorious Service Medal at Fort Bragg for outstanding non-combat achievement. He is a communications system specialist with the 1st Special Operations Command.

Michael R. Moye, son of Mr. and Mrs. Soencer R. Moye Sr. of Greenville, was promoted to the rank of senior airman. He is a mission capability controller at Wurtsmith AFB, Mich., with the 379th Bombardment Wing and a 1979 graduate of Farmville Central High School.

Staff Sgt. Gary L. Boyette, son of Jewel W. Leggette of Route ^te 2, Williamston, was a^rded a Meritorious Service Medal at Fort Jackson,\^S.C., for outstanding non-combat achievement. He is a personnel specialist with the Army Transfer Point and a 1970 graduate of Robersonville High School. His wife is the former Connie Bland of Robersonville.

is building to demonstrate the wing design nd other advanced technologies. The X-29 will be rolled out of its fixture later this year and will begir fli^t tests in 1984. (AP Laserphoto)

Navy Ensign Van K. Sul-liva, son of Fran T. Worsley of Greenville, was commissioned in his present rank upon graduation from officer candidate school at the Naval Education Training Center, Newport, R.l. At the school, he studied the principles of leadership, manpower management techniques, navigation and communications.

Storekeeper 3rd Class Ricky E. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronaid C. Smith of Farmville, is sening as a crewmember aboard the dock landing ship USS Portland, which is currently operating off the coast of Beirut, Lebanon, as part of the U.S. Sixth Fleet Amphibious Force.

Dwight B. Bell, son of Meledy Early of Greenville, enlisted in the Air Force and departed for Lackland AFB, Tex., where he will undergo six weeks of basic training. A 1961 graduate of J.H. Rose High School, he will receive special training in the refrigeration and air conditioning field.

Ronald S. Hunt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Purcell of Greenville, was promoted to the rank of captain. He is a missile launch officer at Little Rock AFB, Ark., with the 374th Strategic Missile Squadron.

Gregory G. Jones, son of Helen F. Roberson of Route 4, Greenville, enlL'ted in the Air Force and departed for Lackland AFB, Tex., where he will undergo six weeks of bask* training. A 1962 graduate of Norths High &bool, he will receive trainiag in the environmentai support

Pvt. Rickey J. Rountree, son of Jeanette Quinerly of Greenville, completed a power generation and wheeled vehicle mechanics course at the Army Training Center, Fort Dix, N.J., where he learned basic automotive theory, maintenance-shop operations and procedures for tactical vehicles.

Rescue EHorts Earn Reward

ELIZABETH aTY, N.C. (AP) - Petty Officer Gregory Carl Petsch of the U.S. Coast Guard has been given a meritorious service award for his rescue efforts during the sinking of a coal carrier off the Virginia coast in February.

Petsch, 29, pulled two crew members of the Marine Electric from the sinking vessel into a helicopter rescue basket Feb. 12. Petsch had volunteered to descend in the basket in 50 mph winds after it became apparent the crewmen were too weak to heip themselves.

Both crewmen later died and only three of the 36 crewmen aboard the ship survived.

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^BS News Cutback Stirs Controversy

ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP) - When any major corporation tightens its belt, bodies inside feel the squeeze. Its a

common occurrence in business, and not usually newsworthy. Who cares if International Widgets is cutting back production in its Pottsylvania plant and

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phasing out its line of plastic prongs?

But the budgetary infighting at one multibillion dollar company has become public because the pinched party is CBS News.

And what galvaimed attention to the problems of CBS News was that when Pope John Paul II landed in Poland for the historic return to his homeland June 16,. ABC and NBC broadcast it live, while CBS was showing The Price Is Right.

According to published reports, C^ spent about $1 million less than ABC and NBC to cover the popes trip. Internally, that was a symbol that we had serious problems, says a source at CBS News, who didnt want to be identified.

Yet, id wasnt until Gene Jankowski, president of the CBS Broadcast Group, saw the coverage from Poland and, about the same time, understood the furor within CBS News caused by suggested budget and personnel

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As a crowd of mostly female fans screamed in delight Wednesday, Stallone, 36, became the 166th star to have his hand and footprints immortalized in cement outside Manns Chinese Theater.

Attired in a black pinstriped suit with red tie and handkerchief, Stallone plunked his bare hands and booted feet into the damp cement near a block where John Travolta placed his prints three years ago. The star of "Rocky and its two sequels also used a white dowel to scrawl his message to Manns Theaters board chairman Ted Mann: Dear Ted, Keep punching, America! Sylvester Stallone 6-29-83.

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) - A free Beach Boys concert on the Fourth of July is expected to draw half a million fans and dozens of law enforcement personnel, but the National Guard wont make it.

Mayor Michael Mattfews said Wednesday that Gov. Thomas H. Kean refused a request for the Guard to be put on alert for the surfside concert. A spokesman for the governor said state police should be able to handle the crowds.

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cuts, that he moved to bolster the hopes and mtM^e of the troops at CBS News.

Various sources within CBS, who refused to be identified, provided information for the following account of last weeks Battle of the Budget;

Last Thursday, Jankowski met with Van Gordon Sauter, president of CBS News, and Ed Joyce, the news divisions executive vice president. The following day, he addressed two-dozen of CBS News production and on-camera elite, including Dan Rather and Bill Moyers. He assured the group that he would not insist on any specific financial and personnel cutbacks, allowing Sauter to trim where he could.

Jankowski also promised that CBS News would have enough money to remain competitive with ABC and NBC during the 1984 election year, and that the news division would have 20 hours of prime-time programming in the upcoming season, five pertaining to the elections.

In attempting to overcome severe financial troubles at CBS, the Broadcast Group, which includes entertainment, sports, news, radio and TV stations, was looking for across-the-board budget cuts. The suggestion made to CBS News was for $12 million in reductions, which would

his credit, when Mr. Jankowski understood this, he wait about solving the problon.

This year's more desperate need for economizing comes from escalating costs, and the fact that CBS Inc. made large expenditures in the last five years to gun otpensive sports events, regain the top spot in prime me and expand and improve news programming. \

In addition, the netv sales departm miscalculated the adve ing market and has lost\ million in projected-mercial revenues.

Sauter, reached on vacation Tuesday afternoon, said, We will cmtinue to seek ways to diminish costs and eliminate (job) redundancies that will not diminish our journalism and our competitive position. No doubt we will have success in those areas.

That the BatUe of the Budget was played out in the press, and not solely in corporate board rooms, says something about the skill of some at CBS News to lobby in their own behalf. After years reporting leaks from the high-powered world of international diplomacy and domestic politics, some sources at CBS News ^read

amount to more than 60 lost jobs.

The company has serious problems and began to set goals (for CBS News) which were fundamentally unreachable, said a source at CBS News who requested anonymity. Every year theres haggling about the budget, but it tends to get resolved internally. This time, the scope and consequence was larger to CBS News and the company. To

Everlys To Be Reunited

Legislators Honor Novelist

Bracing For A ConcertTurnout

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Novelist Walker Percy, whose books include The Moviegoer, which won the 1962 National Book Award for fiction, once said hed get very nervous if the Louisiana Legislature ever praised his work.

The Legislature did just that on Wednesday.

The House and Senate adopted a resolution praising the author as a cultural hero.

It concludes; THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED ... that the Louisiana legislature, despite his nervous protestation, does hereby commend Walker Percy of Covington for his contributions to American literature and does hereby reco^ize the credit and honor his achievements have brought to Louisiana, his home state.

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - The Everly Brothers of the 1950s - Phil and Don - have decided to bid bye-bye to 10 years of separation and reunite on stage.

The rock n roll idols of the late 50s, whose heyday began with Bye, Bye Love and continued with others hits like Wake Up, Little Susie, will "Walk Right Back with a performance in London in September.

Phil, now 45, said Tuesday by telephone from his home in Hollywood that he and Don, 46, who lives in Nashville, made the decision in the spring. They have never elaborated on their disagreement, but Phil said they settled it in a family kind of way.

We have Indian ancestry and that had something to do with it. A big hug did it, he said.

The Everly Brothers are among the founders of rock n roll, along with Elvis Presley and Bill Haley. Some of their other hits: All I Have to Do Is Dream Bird Dog, Ut It Be Me, Cathys Clown and So Sad.

Phil Everly said the reunion concert, to be held at the Royal Abbot concert hall, probably will be taped for cable television and recorded for an album.

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their trouUes to the press, and Jankowski was obliged to react quickly .

In (me piblisbed report, Sauter was even said to be contemplating resigning. Sauter would not comment, but a source in the news division said Sauter would have lost the respect of his staffers if he had accepted a cutback of $12 million after a previous budget slashing of almost $7.5 million this spring.

The cuts bad come despite the fact that, in the past year, CBS News increased its broadcast airtime by over 60 percent, with programming that ran from 2 a.m. to 9 a.m. each weekday.

There are those within CBS who feel that news, while not sacrosanct, should not be sliced with the same knife that is used to carve up entertainment budgets for fare like Dallas and The Dukes of Hazzard.

In this case, they went public with their views, and it seemed to make a difference.

But the tactic may have built resentment in other divisions at CBS, where some budget cuts were swallowed and others haggled out - all in private.

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Polish Prelates In Rome To Talk Foundation Plans

By VICTOR L SIMPSON Associated Press Writer

ROME (AP) - Cardinal Jozef Glemp, Polands Roman Catholic primate, arrived in Rome today to discuss Pope John Paul IIs pilgrimage to his'homeland

and said Lech Walesa wont be removed from politics.

But another Polish colleague, Archbishop Henryk Gulbinowicz of Wroclaw, enigmatically told reporters upon arrival that Walesa is still important but not in the

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Glemp and several other bishops flew from Warsaw today after reports surfaced that the pqie, during his recent trip, had struck a deal with Polish authorities and advised Walesa to step aside. Polish sources at the Vatican have denied the pope had done so.

Glemp confirmed that the church and Communist authorities were negotiating the establishment of a foundation to channel money to Polish farmers. But he said he knew nothing about reports that the church might run a new union to replace the outlawed Solidarity.

No, I have never heard anything like this, he told reporters at Romes Leonardo da Vinci Airport.

Said Gulbinowicz; I think in this moment its not good to talk about a new union, because the other is not finished. So why a new one? Glemp replied, No, when asked whether Walesa would be removed from the political scene. Asked whether Walesa would regain the same leadership positon he had before martial law was declared Dec. 1, 1981, he said, at this moment, I cant yet define what his position will be. Things are developing. Gulbinowicz said of Walesa: Perhaps he will return in another way. He did not elaborate.

Asked whether the Polish government would definitely lift martial law on July 22, Polands national day, Glemp said,We think so, the church would want it, but there are political questions in which I have no part. Gulbinowicz said the gov

ernment has given the green light for the farmers aid foundation, but Glemp said there were legal questions to be worked out.

Also accompanying Glemp were Archbishop Jerzy Stroba of Poznan and Bishop AlfonsNossoIofOpoIe.

Cardinal Franciszek Macharski, the popes successor as archbishop to Krakow, left for the Vatican on Wednesday.

A church official said the bishops of Katowice and Czestochowa were expected to come, too.

John Paul visited the cities represented by the senior clergymen during his eight-day pilgrimage.

The Vatican meeting is the first chance the regional bishops have to meet with the pope as a group and discuss the visit.

Topics are expected to include the mounting speculation about Walesas private papal audience, which occurred just a few hours before the pope returned to Romea week ago.

Neither Walesa nor the Vatican has disclosed details of the secretive session.

On the day after the p<^s return to Rome, the Vatican

newspaper ran a controversial editorial suggesting Walesa, a shipyard electrician, might step aside in any future negotiations with the Communist authorities.

The bishops also might discuss church-state relations in the aftermath of John Pauls visit, which drew millions of faithful across the country to papal Masses and which sparked rallies and marches bv the tens of

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GERONIMO - Petty Officer Stan Kulick drifts to a barefoot landing after a mid-air reenlistment in the Navy for another four years. The ceremony began at about 9,500 feet and ended at 4,000 vriien Kulick and Petty Officer Jerry Hoekstra, who administered the oath, broke ol a free fall and opened their parachutes. (AP Laserphoto)

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thousands in support of Solidarity.

Polands Communist Party chief and premier. Gen. Wo-jciech Jaruzelski, has claimed the pilgrimage was a success for the state as well as the church.

Warsaw has been rife with speculation on what the pq)e and Jaruzelski discussed during their two meetings. Neither the church nor the government has released concrete details of the talks.

On Wednesday. Polands Communist Party launched a harsh attack on the suspended writers' union, charging prominent literary figures with helping provoke

the upheaval that gave birth to Solidarity.

It follows a series of tough

steps announced by the government despite rumors of

conciliatory moves following the pope's visit

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0

^ ' TTHEY'PB mdjtly

f-AWYfpJ.

........ (. so

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

I'VE 6IUENTHI6 60ME THOUGHT/INDI FIGURE THE CDORSTTIIVIE TO BREAKUP WITH A GIRL IbLATEflTNIGHTflT HER HOUSE'

r

SHE'LL JUST CRC> AND GO CRAZA AND OOU WON'T STAND A CHANCE /

TRUST (V\E/ir'5 BEST IFIT'SDONE ATSOME KIND, OF PUBUC PLACE hllRINf,THP DAO/

HLLORI? VO'RE PR06ABLV WONDERING JHUI WANTED TD IY\ETCOUHERER)R BREAKFAST/

1. the faculty for making desirable discoveries by accident. 2. what happens when you read classified dailyyoull be pleasantly surprised at all the Interesting things for sale.

Rtft^dorCtoMifM people read

nwm74IM

THE DAILY REFlECniR Clas^ied Advertising Rates 752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days.....40* per line per day

Classified Oispiay

2,90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Claasified Uneage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday  Friday noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday .., Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday.. Wednesday 5p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

Sometimes the simplest things work the best like a simple, little ad in classified For a simple solution to your selling problem, try classified

RiflKtirClassifiii Nmi 7524166

PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTICE

Having qualified as Administrator ot the estate ot Annie R. Manning late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator on or before December 9, 1983 or this

notice or same will be pleaded in bar All persons in debted to said estate please make

ot their recovery

immediate payment This 7fh day ot Jon B .F. Manning

June. 1983

P.O. Box 309 Bethel, North Carolina 27812 Administrator of the estate of Annie R. Manrting, deceased.

Annie R. Manrting, c June 9, l, 23, 30, I93

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executrix ot the estafe of H. C. Buck late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present , them to the undersigned Executrix on or before December 16, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment This Uth day of June. 1985 Iona 0 Buck    {

Route 2. Box 346 C Greenville. N.C. 27834 June 16, 23. 30; July 7, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Executor ot itafeotl    ^

North Caroll

Ing c

against the estate of said leased

the estaf ot Leila Ross Clark late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all per^s haying claims

to present them to the undersigned on or before December 16, 1913 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of thair racovary All parsons in dabted to said astate pleas# make Immediate payment.

This 14th day ot>ne, 1983 James Warren Clark, Jr.

2011 PInacrest Driya Greenvllla. North Carolina 27834 June 16. 23, 30; July 7.1983

4attia D.

Executor of lata

'Ing quail    _    ___

tala of Nattia D. Williams . . I County, North Carolina, this lify all parsons having claims tfw astata of said acaasad nt them to the undi^gnad

Havli the asta of Pitt C Istonotit against tl

to present them to the________

Executor on or batora Oacambar 1983 or this notice or same ^11 be pleaded in bar of thair racovary. AH parsons Indebted to said astato plaasa make Immadlaio pay' Thlsuthdovof Juna.ftiS

>7834

WalJwrL.WIl . >07 Crown Point raanvilla.

Point Rd.

 J, North Caroijno _

E Mocute ol tho oetoto ot Nottio 0. WMiiams, docoosod mo 23. 30, Juiy7, UI93

atign frusl Com Customor I or mil

JI^NAL ivan that the Ap

Bank and astabiish a

ommunlcation

by given'

[ST'S,

nlnaitCBcilat**"'^ lorth Sidaot Mandahall Student

fessyiifaW!

rollna27834

was filed on Juno >7,1983 with tho

WInslon-Juno 30,1883

Ina

ER^E"ffS;?ON

at 10:00 .''Eutarn Time al the premises of Everett Truck Lines. Inc. on Cherry Road, I"

NC 27889, the

public auction to the^ighesl bidder all of Its right, title and interest to:

oi':;rLT3;;s.M>'!TsS

Hr'iiiSs.'M'iiym;,

Dozer s/n 31343 eQuiPPf^ with ^kland S T rake and S A4 shear

^*^e (5) Komatsu D4SP Swamp Dozers s/n s 2975, 3101, J'Oi and 2877 equipped wtth RocklarxJ S T

'^*0 (1) Miller Heavy Duty OffMt Disc 18 ft. 3 in. wide s/n 153X034090.

TERMS OF SALE A minimum Down Payment ot 25% in either cash, certified or cashier s check at the time ot sale with the balance due within 24 hours. The undersigned reserves the right to bid.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Charles E Ricketts at

404/458 9211 LEASING SERVICE CORPORATION 2261 Perimeter Park Atlanta. Georgia 30341 June 30, July 3, 1983_

PUBLIC NOTICES

NOTICf

??TVcUNtV ^

Godorcy Steve Johnston, deceasced. laleM Pitt County, this is to nrtlty

will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery. All persons indebted to the said Estate will please m^e im mediate payment to the undersign ed^

SAND

(very . All persons indebted to the

^'ii'siwai.'wsrsiss

ijsS'X*'sa ,

HOWARD, BROWNING, SAMS I POOLE .

BY^sTInLEYM SAMS

GreeS?i nC 27835 0859 June 23,30, July 7, 14, 1983

UNDER G S 44A;2

Joe Cullipher Chrysler Plymouth Inc., 3401 S Memorial Drive. Green ville. N C.. wiil offer tor sale at public auction on July 5, 1983, af 10:00a m the following.vehic es

1    1974    AMC, serial No

A4AI57H 297030    ,    ,

2 1974 2 dr Mazda, Serial No LA235120670

June 23, 30, 1983

WANT

ADS

762-6166

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

ANYONE INTERESTED in form ing a singles club tor Greenville area please call 752 8870 All ages welcome. __

WE PAY CASH tor diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 E vans Mall, Downtown Greenville

010

AUTOMOTIVE

RENTAWRECK

Rent dependable used cars af low rates and.save 752 2277

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car. call 756 1877. Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar.

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autotinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County Hastings FgrO. Call 758 0114___

013

Buick

1979 BUICK REGAL Silver AM/FM stereo, cruise, power win dows. I owner. Good condition High mlleaoe. Make otter 756 8539.

1981 BLACK BUICK REGAL Limited. 2 door, fully equipped, low mlleaoe. Real nice. Call 758 1650.

1981 BUICK SKYLARK 4 door AM/FM stereo, air, low mileage

014

Cadillac

1981 CADILLAC Coupe Deville Loaded with options. Priced to sell Call BB&T William Handley 752

015

Chevrolet

CAMARO 1981. Fully equipped, low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet Avden. 746 3141

CAPRICE 1982. 4 door, fully equipped, low mileage. 2 in stock Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden. 746 3141_

CASH FOR your car Barwick Auto Sales 756 7765._____

CAVALIER 1982. 4

equipped. Call R Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.

CELEBRITY 1982. 2 door, low mileage, good condition Call Rex Smith Chevrolet'Avden, 746 3141

CHEVROLET NOVA, 1978. fully equipped, low mileage. Call 758 545&

MALIBU 1982. 4 door, low mileage 2 in stock. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141_

1968 CHEVROLET 2 door Nova Rough but runs. Best offer Mid Eastern Brokers. 756 4254.

1972 CHEVROLET Caprice, electric windows, door locks, air. Average condition. Best otter. Mid Eastern Brokers. 756 4254

1979 CHEVY CHEVETTE Metallic blue Excellent condition. 4 speed with air, AM/FM S1995. 758 4I5S

017

Dodge

OOOGE DART, 1974, air. power steering, radlals. low mlfeage 746 3530 days, evenings 746 4203

018

Ford

1973 FORD PINTO Runabout, air, automatic Makeoffar. 756 8539

030

AAercury

1964 MERCURY Monterey Body in fair shape. Motor in very good shape with low mileage. 5500 negotiable. 756 6615 . 752 6362. or 7Sf3418.__

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS SUPREME 1982 2 door, fully equipped, excellent condition 2 in stock Call Rex Smith C.h.tYrg!tt. AytHttt.  .....

CyrgitL

1979 DELTA ROYAL, diesel, air. tilt wheel, cruise. AM/FM, 54500 Excellent shape Days 756 3613;

QiflhULZSLZHL

1910 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Supreme Brougham. $5495. Days 3S2809 or nights 753 2368

023

Plymouth

1973 SATELLITE Automatic, alr. povrtr^steerlno and brakes, bucket! aat. 1500. 7?t 3100 Of 758 6321

1974 PUSTE R V8. autometic. alrj ntw tira, kWQ. Call 758 8749.    !

023

Pontiac

iutamtr,

1S4903.__^

024

Fortign

T(^UEasi;

F^rci. '

Fork

for quick sale Flat. 197S IrJy. Excellent condition. 81,000. 756 0183.

TOYOTA COROLLA 1982. 4 door, oytomatjc, olr condition, ooed con ditlon. Call Rax Smith Oiavrolat,

Avden. 7o6-3l4i._

TOYOTA TERCEL 1983 1 daor. automatic, air condition. Call Rax Smlth^relatrA^dKi. 746-3141. I960 MERCEDES 230 0 Excellent condition 753 5733 or 753 6S39.

1973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tiras. Runs llMJEi

EL??>toyv

1974 MAZDA RX4 WAGON With rotary angina, Intarjor/axlarior in xcelbnt condition. Ruas good, but todsenolne seals tiOfUJii 7045





The DaUy Reflector. GreeoviUe, N.C.-Thundoy, June 31, IMS-S

Foreign

b7i VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE

rnOATSUN B3W. mrm Mint Mid

lM^ior 197 Datsun truck Both in f condition Coll 753 370

uyM TOYOTA COROLLA 5950 Also

hat^VolkswaQen. 753 5334__

t7 TOYOTA CELICA 5 speed with sir Motor transmission, axcellant. fijdy needs minor repairs SI200 6s7 I5l9anvtim

Iit77 DATSUN B3I0. Needs some Tork Has 141,000 miles SIOOO

t^ fiat spider Need tuition yy! Come by P3 Wilson Acres

11977 FIAT SPIDER, new top and Jpaint job Runs good 753 4958, keep

aliina

J)77 MERCEDES 240^0 Dark blue, body and interior in very good condition Call Washington. 946 3349

Ihtween4and9pm

1977 SUBARU WAGON, automatic. regular gas. extra clean. $1,450 |75i584after6Ejn.

11981 DATSUN 310 GX, low mileage. AM/FM stereo, air Call 754 0447

latter4D.m

11981 VOLKSWAGON SCIROCCO laO.OOO miles, has everything, air. Icruise. sunroof Make otter 757 Iqa76._______

.1983 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA. 5 Ispeed. low mileage, AM FM cassette, air, 5 year 50,000 mile [warranty 754    9730

1029 Auto Parts & Service

TOY

BELLS FORK GARAGE lYOTA SERVICE and Save!

Phone 754 3794

l032

Boats For Sale

brand new

Sailboat 752 4349

Super Snark

051

Help Wanted

BOOKKEEPER/RECEPTIONIST needed tor local Law Office Expe rierKe required in bookkeeping, payroll, and accounts receivable Please send resume to PO Box 802. Greenville, NC

0S9

Work Wanted

CAPABLE PERSON TO follow up and/or find leads tor home im provement product enjoyable work with good meme potential, either lull time or part lime For addi tional information, contact Harold Creech 8, Associates, 752 4348

CASHIER

Convenience store Good at mosphere Steady employment Apply at Dodges Store. 209 South Memorial Drive

DRIVER WANTED with experi ence driving concrete mixer, 754 0782___

FRUSTRATED

In your present job? Maybe you should talk to us We otter complete training and opportunity for real personal and financial indepen dence Start PART TIME to see it you tit our business and can enter lull time management with $100,000 plus income potential If you really think you have the potential for greatness call 754 4254 to set up a

contidential interview_____________

FULL TIME teller position 1 3 years previous _experience neces

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplace* and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprises. 754 9123 ^y.    754    1007

niotit.    ^

DARLEEN'S domestics Tired, need more time? Let someone else do vour hoosecleanioo- 752 3~>58.

DATA ENTRY ALL PHASES Can

be done on my computer or yours. Call 754 4254 days. 752 5377 nights. ask tor Sharon

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint

and varnish removed from wood and metal Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques Call tor free estimate Days 754 9123, Night 754 1007

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable

prices All site yards Call 752 5583

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways Call 752 7341_____

I WILL BABYSIT from 6 to 10p m for children from 1 year old Dora Soell. 758 1043 after 4 p m

ipply at Branch Banking 8. trust Co . third and Greene Street,

sary

Greenville Attention' Juanice Scott An Equal Opportunity

Employer_____

GENERAL AUTOMOTIVE and automatic transmission mechanic needed for automotive service de partment Apply in person at Trent Oldsmobile Cactillac and Buick lnc 633 2213    _____

large trailer for 22 24 sailboat with keel, fiberglass dingy

752 3101 or 754 4445______________|

SAN JUAN 21' sailboat 5 horse i

power Volvo outboard Fleet Cap |

Itain trailer $5,000 754 4061______,

114 DIXIE 85 Mercury outboard I

Cox galvaniied trailer Many ! extras Excellent condition Great boat for fishing or pleasure! 756

|7____

Il973 MERRIMAC 14', Tri hull, new seats. 65 horsepower Evinrude motor, like new. $1500    754 7344

latter 5___ _

J973 STEURY 18 ski boat 130 horsepower Chrysler engine with power trim and tilt, long trailer Good condition $3000 Call 758 4454 1l979 DIXIE. 17 foot. 105 Chrysler with tilt and trim. Cox drive on trailer. Excellent condition. $4.000 Call 752 2439atter6p m________

Campers For Sale

IJAYCO POPUPS New Camptown IrV Call 744 3530

TRUCK COVERS Alt sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^ortsman tops 250 units in stock O'Briants.

Raleioh, N C 834 2774    ^    _________

.USED JAYCO POPUP Sleeps 8 Excellent condition Call 746 3530 or 746 4203

GENERAL OFFICE WORK and sales representative 2 years col lege Pleasant telephone voice a must Base salary plus commission

Farmville 753 4433 ___________

LEGAL SECRETARY needed im mediately Must have good general office skills Including typing transcribing, telephone com munications, and receptionist Send resume tpPO Box 1712 Orwnydie_ NEED GCX3D BASE and lead guitar player with playing experience to (oin Gospel group Just starting so mere will be no pay Prefer serious

musicians only It 9 to 5

nterested, call 5 or 758 6007 from

1978 21 Wilderness. Like new Only ' used tew times Sleeps 8 Root air, i awning, fully self contained $5300 . negotiable 754 8539    ________

036

Cycles For Sale

1975 CB 500 T HONDA 7,000 miles Good condition $650 Call 752 9592 after 5 p m

1975 754 HONDA 29,000 miles $750 Good condition. 744 6144.    _

1975 754 HONDA 29,000 miles $750 Good condition: 744 6144._________

1980 YAMAHA MAXIM I 6501 motorcycle. Excellent condition i Many extras! $1750 Call 754 0828 j after 6_______________I

1982 GS850L SUZUKI 2300 miles Shaft driven Perfect condition Excellent buy Priced right Call 754 1643    _

039

Trucks For Sale

BELLS FORK GARAGE Toyota Service 4 cylinder Valves ad usted, $14 00    4 cylinder tune

special, $20, including points and

oTuos 756 3796    ___

CHEVROLET EL CAMINO 1977 Good condition Call Rex Smith 'hevrolet, Avden, 746 3141

GMC PICKUP 1982 4 wheel drive, low mileage. Call Rex Smith hevrolet, Avden, 746 314[

WANTED: 1975 through 1977 Blazer

n good condition. 752 7645    ____

1959 STUDE BAKER pickup 6 ylinder with overdrive $1500 or best otter 758 5378_____________

1948 CHEVY 6 cylinder Pickup Good condition 757 1519 anytime. , 1975 JEEP J 10 pick up High mileage. New paint, air condition, stereo cassette New tires. $3500. 753 2427

vheels and

1978 TOYOTA LAND Cruiser, 4x4, blue Excellent condition 47,000 miles. 752 8512    ___

1979 CHEVROLET LV, 4 speed with air, $3495 Days 355 2809 or nights 753 2348.____

979 DODGE 4 WHEEL DRIVE Very clean Call 754 0582, ask tor Mike    ________________

758 2798 from

5'ol0_._........ ........

NURSING POSITIONS available RN and LPN. full time and part time 75 bed ICF Competitive salary Please contact Oak Manor Nur^mg^Hpme, Snow Hjll, 747 2848 QUALIFIED, LOVING person to help care lor 2 elderly people Light housekeeping, cooking, and some personal care Must be able to drive and provide references Call 754

7911 alter 6p rn ___

r' E si D E NT IA L CON ST R UC flON Supervisor Experienced required Send past experience summary Salary plus fringe benefits plus bonus available Mail lo P O Box 859, Greenville. N C 27834    _    _

RN AND LPN position available lor new retirement nursing community in Tarboro, NC The Albermarle. 200 Trade Street at Granville

Tarboro. MC 82X2799 ^________

RNS AND LPNS Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact Barbara McDonalcl, Director ol Nursing, 943 21 11    _    _

ROOFERS WANTED with experi ence Call 8 to 5. 758 5278 SECRETARY For small chain ol preschools Apply in person at 313 East lOth Street No phone calls please

SR

TYPISTS!

55 Words Per Minute WE NEED YOU!

MANPOWER TEMPORARY

Services offers you

Unique Fringe Benefits

Top Pay

Flexible Schedule

PAINTING Tired of tra pai

757 1233

.  _____   paying    con

tractors high prices? Experienced ainters Work guaranteed Call

PAINTING Interior and exterior Free estimates, work guaranteed References 12 years experience 754 6873atter6p m

PLUMBING REPAIRS and new

work Call 752 1920or 744 2657.    _

PROFESSIONAL TAILORING and

alterations. Men and women Call Giannette. 754 2992_

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, counter tops Jack Baker Floor Service. 754 2848 anytime, it no answer call back

060

FOR SALE

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor

sale J _P Stancil, 752 6331    _

065 Farm Equipment

B F AVERY TRACTOR Model V Manual lift Attachments $850 754 3039    _

FOR RENT Two 10.000 bushel grain bins 15 per bushel Located approximately 4 miles west of Winferville Call 754 5097 or 756 9315    _ _

073 Fruits and Vegetables

PEACHESII Excellent for pickling, cookie preserving and freih eat ino Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard. 3 mile* North of Bailey. Highway 581 North Open 7 a.m. to 8 p m Monday throu^ Saturday, 235 4444_

NEW RED POTATOES for sale $10 a bushel. Call 754 7644 after 4 p.m. SWEET CORN ready now, tomatoes ready now^ BluetxKry s ready soon Dews Call ahead. 754 7114.

Berry Patch

074

Miscellaneous

AIR CONDITIONER, Sears 20,500 BTU s $150. 754 8048.

AIR CONDITIONER tor sale 5.000

BT G E , 4 speed, 10 setting thermostat control, runs and cool*

real good, reduced to $145. Call 752 4348between9a.m. and4p.m. ALUMINUM SLIDING glass door. 6, double tempered glass, *125 9 triple sash window unit, double glazed. $75 Several exterior doors ~44 4793 after 5

antique corner^ chair, $225^ Black naugahyde sofa. $175. Belt massager. $100 Three quarter vio lin. $1 752 4301._

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $22 44 on a 4 piece Western living room suit Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757 0451    V

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up to ' z and more on bedding and waterbeds Factory MaMress A Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza) 355 2626

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables Cash discounts Delivery and installation 919 763 9734

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and 5lpn^ Also driveway work

CALL US AND SEE why people are

coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings 823 3834 9 30 to 5 30. or bv appointment

CALL US AND SEE why people are coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings Call 823 3834, 9 30 to 5 30 or by ap pointment

CAMERA Excellent condition 35 mm Mamiya/Sekor New cost, $200 Will take $80 Large storage chest.

$20 Call758 0727atter5pm____

CHILDS CAR SEAT Child s winter suit size2T Call 752 3899

MOWER CONDITIONER New Holland 7', good condition, tield ready $2000 Goldsborb, 919 689 9808

TOBACCO HARVESTER PARTS

Bearing priced for 5 or more, I " bore $4 99 each 3/4" bore $4 99 Cutter head bearings $5 09 each Curtains for 2 row trailer $48 98 Foam rollers $4 19 each. (30 or more) 18" Conveyor chain $4 04 per toot. 20" Conveyor chain $4 28 per toot, (50 toot or more) Agri Supply

C_p, Greenville, NC, 752 3999 _

WANTED PEANUT HAY RAKE, good condition Call after 8 p m Call 752 3792

4 ROW TOBACCO sprayer with 150 gallon tank hydiaulic boom Call 795 4819    _

067 Garage Yard Sale

GIGANTIC YARD SALE, Saturday

July 2. 9 a m until Take Highway 903 North through Stokes, turn left at Crandall's Station Watch tor

signs Pull type Datsun trailer with camper snell, baby things, furniture, large color TV, tires.

1981 TOYOTA PICKUP truck Blue long bed $5500 or best otter 752TH

Call us for an ^pointment We Are Nol a Fee .^ency

MANPOWER

TEMPORARY

SERVICES

118 Reade Street

____757    3300

TV COPYWRITER Some former training and/or experience re quired Send resume and salary range to Copywriter, PO Box 1967,

Greenville, NC 27834 EOE_________

WANTED experienced secretaries part time Can 756 4254 or apply in person at 14, Pitt Plaza, between 9

a m andXj>,,rn^ ______________

WANTED:    Business Administra

tion Instructor Doctors Degree preferred, minimum Master's De gree plus 24 additional hours in field 12 month contract Salary based on Institution's Salary Formula Applications accepted through July 20 Contact Pitt Community College. Personnel Department, 756 313(5. extension 28V

ecTe/aa

ladies, children's, men's clothing,

and lots olother thinas ___

MULTI IN DOOR/OUTDOOR Yard Sale at Old Fairgrounds Saturday.

7 until _______________ ___

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Gro .mds Flea Market open Saturday 8 til 5 Sunday I til 5 Outside dealer spaces $2 00 Inside spaces $6 00 Call Bill 746 3541, Mike 746 3550, Fair Ground 758 4914 YARD SALE, 413 West Village Drive, 7 until, Friday and Saturday. July 1 and 2. Monday and Tuesday, July 4 and 5 All at give away prices Plenty of clothes, all sizes

andjofs Q*pPief things ______

YARD SALE7'Safurday JuIy 2 in front of Bonnie's Country Store, Bell Arthur. 8 until Infants, toddlers, men and women's clothina. ,   ___

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman

Stables, 752 5237    ______

, NEWLY FRESH CUT Timothy and ; Alfalfa hay Buy by the bail or by I the ton Call Mr Gentile at 752 1370 I or 752 9914___________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

0779 or 758 4990

040

Child Care

BONDED BABYSITTING service now ottering 24 hour, 7 days a week services for infants, children, hand leaps, and elderly Your home or the sitters Rates are reasonable and we welcome spur ot the moment contacts Mid Eastern 756 4254 days. 757 3529 nights__

046

PETS

AKC DACHSHUND puppy 355 6476 AKC RHODESIAN RIDGE BACK puppies $200 Call Jennifer at

944 9500    _______________________

AKC YORKSHIRE Terriers, Schnauzers, Cocker Spaniels, and

Bassett Hounds Call 75 2_68i____

BULLDOG puppies lor sale, $50. Call 746 4432____

WASHINGTON COUNTY Hospital ambulance service has an opening lor a full time EMT Must be slate certified, high school graduate or equivalent and must relocate Sala ry $10,000 plus uniform allowance and shift differential with paid health, life and disability insurance, vacations and holidays Call Mr Sykes. 793 4135, 9 a m lo 5 p m Monday Friday

059

Work Wanted

DOG OBEDIENCE CLASSES 8 weeks, $25, begin June 30 Basic 6 30 to 7:15, advanced 7:15to 8 00, Call 756 1348 to register

EXPERT DOG OBEDIENCE

training and boarding. 758 5590 _____

PUPPIESIM Cute, cuddly, and cheap ' 2 Golden Retriever, ' 2 who knows what? Have had shots and wormed $20 Call 752 0988 starting Monday

2 SIBERIAN HUSKIES Red with blue eyes AKC registered Wormed and shots 752 5333 $125_______

2 YEAR OLD female Pekingese, spayed and all shots. Very loving and housebroken, golden haired. Call 746 2712    _

051

Help Wanted

ARE YOU INTERESTED In earn ing extra money? If you have a permanent lull 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 27834 _    

AVON REPRESENTATIVES needed in WInterville and Ayden areas. Earn- up to 50% Call 756

EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN to work with established firm. Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please call 7M 3240 for Interview

EXPERIENCE IN termite or pest control field wanted, but not neces sary. Will train. For Information coir752 6440, ask tor manaoer _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L, Lupton, Co,

Special

Executive Desks

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed ar>d fully insured Trim ming, cutting and removal Free estim^tej^ Jj* StanciT 75^ 6331    _

AN IMPRESSIVE SIGN is the secret for impressive profits tor your business We are masters of impressive signs Call Steve Atkins, The Siqnrriaster. 757 3426 ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK Carpentry, masonry and roofing 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington alter 6 pm 752 7765    __

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson

Ayemje _________________

COLOR TV, $95, and other appli anees Call 758 6537.____

COUCH AND CHAIR, $50 Antique piano, $200 Antique walnut tainting sofa, $200 Antique pine coffee table, $50 Gun cabinet. $100 Gas heater,

$150 756 J 7 78,..........................

DAY CARE EQUIPMENT tor sale almost new, but drastically reduced tor quick sale. 2 cribs. I for $70 and 1 tor $40, mattresses tor $20 each, 20 cots at $20 each Call 752 4348

b^tweeji9^ m and6p m_______

FOR SALE: Used equipment tor sandwich shop local lor appoint 346

I 9616

m en_l c a 11 717    _____

FOR SALE: 6 horsepower riding mower and 3 horsepower gocarr 746 6840

FREEZER 16 cubic fool upright, practically new $325 756 3291 after 5 _30p rri

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Shop Stripping. Repairing Re finishing (Formerly ot Eastern Carolina Vocational Center) Located approximately 200 yards on

Pactolus Highway Call 752 3509_____

HARVEST GOLD Whirlpool washing machine 8 years old Excellent condition Also Harvest Gold small dresser and chest of

drawers 7M 3?45^ter X___

H E NREDO N T R A D TIO N A L walnut lighted dining room hutch Like new 756 8_663^r Aa nrr ICE CREAM chest freezer $50 Call

756 342() after I pm_______

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% oft Barkers Retrigeration. 2227 Memo rial Drive. 756 6417    _

IF YOU HAVE ever purchased a wedding or formal gown only to be used one time, then put in the closet to retire, we can help! Call Mid Eastern's "Rental gown service and let us show you now those gowns can make money lor you! Mid Eastern 756 4254 _

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available 754 4742 alter 6 p m , Jim

Hudson ___________

MAGIC CHEF electric stove Whirlpool retrigeralor Almond color both new Take $400 lor pair Days 355 2809 or nights 753 2348.  .....

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CENTIPEDE SOD

Will Deliver

752-4994

MECHANICS

Experienced in the instailation ot storm windows and doors. Limited travel. Excellent salary potential.

NO LAY OFFS

GUARANTEED 5 OR 6 DAYS WORK WEEKLY, YEAR ROUND

Call For Appointment

75M200

From 9 to 5

YOUR CAR

MAY BRING A BIG TRADE-IN ON A NEW '83 CHEVY.

60 >30 beaulitui walnut finish Ideal (or home oroltice

Reg. Price S2M.N

Special Price

M79*

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT75?-Z175

GM QUALITY    1^1    SflA/Kf    PARTS

GENEPAL MOTORS PMTT, 'KVISION

1

074

Misctilenaous

METAL DETeCTOAS Call or writ* fof frs* catalog BeKar * ts Equipmant. PO Box 3IM.

Sports E

METAL WORKING LATHE Nttvw

used. $550 7S< 4525

MOVING SALE Badropm suit, solid wood, 1 year old New $aM. sacrifk* S3fM. Wlckar chair and miscellanequs taWtS 754 ML

CLEARANCE SALE on Snappar Movers. Goodyear Tire Ceniw. West End Shopping Canter And Dickinson Avenue.

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO 1 room air conditioner. Wanted to buy used school bo* for church In go^ condition. 757 311 or 752C773 anytime

REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE Large, coppertone Holpoinf, run* like new, look* very good, (size Is 63>4x28x25), priced to move fast at just $195, Call 752 4341 batwean 9 m.andsp.m.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Ranf shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company-

SOFA AND CHAIR, blue velvel; $150. Dinette teble with 4 chairs, all new condition. $125 752 6164 after 5 p.m.

SQUIRE WOOD STOVE Used two inters Excellent condition I $495 Call 758 3796

THEATRE SEATS,^ $200 each Some with cushions Can be used In boats, churches or recreational tacllittes 758 5400or 758 4031

TWO so watt Lyric speakers Good condition. $50 or best offer Days 9371 or nlQhts 754 7887

TYPEWRITER FOR SALE tan. manual. Ramlrtgton. newly cleaned and reconditioned, types like new Priced et just $125 alI 752 4348 between9a m and6pm

USED DESKS FOR SALE Priced fr^ $75 to SISO Call 752 4348 between9a m and6p m

USED FROST FREE retrioer* Used air conditioner 754 877f

USED GE washer and dryer Vary ^ood condition $200 752 2537 after

USED TYPEWRITERS and adding machines, excellent condition Rea sonable prices 754 3039

VYOODSTOVE and ladder rack for sale 754 t 209after4p m___

WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them tor cash with a Classified Ad

1 SEARS KENMORE Model 800 washing machine. Avocado color. $ 145 Call 754 0417_

t/2 CARAT DIAMOND cluster in white gold setting $350 or best otter. 7gl231

tlS VOLT ELECTRIC welder tor sale. $70 Fish cookers. $30 752 1488 after 5:30

2 ALL WEATHER TIRES lor sale (078x14). excellent condition, tubeless. smooth running Reduced to $25 each Call 752 4348 between 9 m. andD.m

4 B F G A/T RWL F70 x 14 tires, (less than 5000 miles) mounted on lactory while spoke mags Will III small trucks L'JV, Courier. Toyota. Datsun. etc $250 or best otter    4

MOTOROLA equalizer booster with digital lights for auto $40 or besr

0<^ BOX for small trucks Well made plywood/steel construction $120 or best otter

CHARTER ARMS 22 caliber Ex plorer II pistol Semiautomatic with extra clip and gun rug $95 00 or best otter

Call 825 4321 work, or 825 1140 home. Bethel

4 SEARS DYNAPLY TIRES H78 15 Less than 500 miles $140 Call

758 4710 after 5___________

4X 10 COX UTILITY trailer $350 Call 355 6447    _______

075 AAobile Honm For Sale

ALL NEW QAKWOOOS reduced for July Red Tag " sal*. Prices on ell new Oakwood homes et our sales

in Gre

centers

reenvlll* end Wilson

have been slashed Cali or stop by today! Greenville 7S4S434. wTlton

FOR SALE 1*79 Taylor. 14x70. 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, un derskirted. new carMt, new furnitura, naw 2S" color TV Sharp#, utility building, sun deck, localed Lot 132. Shady Knoll. $19,500 757

wy4.of ZM nw Me, CtrreweY

LONGEST MOBILE HOME In North Carolina is at Azalea Mobil*

Homes. 344 Bypass West, 754 7815.

NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New double wide 3 bedroom. 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of lOM than $235 aar month. Also FHA and conven Flonol finaiKing.availablol.

CROSSLAND HOMES

430 West Groonvlllo Boulevard

.   mmi_

imisw

FAMILY HOUSING

Stop in and see why we arc the fastest growing Mol iler In North Carolina

obile Home

Homes _^par Sarvtca

asiast A Bast Financing In Town il, VA, FHA)

Who Cara TRAOEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 70S West Graanvilla Blvd.

077 Musical Instruments

wSlTZ^ piano, oak cabinet I4 volume sat musk books. $1200 firm. Like now. 524 425) days.

YAMAHA PIANOS and discount price* makes Plarto A Organ Ois tributors a great place to shop!

355 4002

YEAR

Sale

END FISCAL Clearance Everything oreetly reduced! Organ Distributors. 329

Piano A Organ Distributor!

Ar!jnfl}9nOgg5yftrtf,M5tOO?

080

INSTRUCTION

I NEED TUTOR for Administrative Law class Call Abdulla. 7524586 anytime_

093 OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business tor sale Complete farm supply Established 21 years Owner deceased, tamily hat other tnttrtVs (?ett 7M 071)1

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT

tor sale by owner Downtown Greenville 75 teat restaurant, 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits some owner financing Call Gary Qvlntard 758 5154 atter^

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris A Co . Inc Financial A Marketing Consultants Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, NC 757 0001 nights

LWJftli.

104 Condominiums For Sale

FIREPLACE in living room makes

it cozy, yet it's spacious with 3     itfis,

______ to pool and play

area at Windy Ridge. $58,000. Call

bedrooms.' 2<> baths, patio with storage, adjacent to poof^ai

J L Harris A Sons. Inc.. Realtors. 758 4711.

109

Houses For St

ASSUMABLE 8V2%

FmHA Low Payment

Three bedroom brick. 1/2 acre Sacrifice by owner Low down Myment Call 415 422 8555

BETHEL FARMERS HOME loan 3 bedrooms. I'2 baths, bricked with fenced in yard Mint condition $39.900 Speight Realty 754 3220, nights 758 774 r _

BY OWNER 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, lir

?p m , 753 3030

BY OWNER It'2% assumable loan 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal living and dining room, don with fireplace, carpeted throughout Central air. gas heat, fenced backyard, patio. I block from Aycock Junior High. 107 Azalea Drive 754 8281

fireplaces. 2500 square feel, nice yard. Farmville $59.500 Call alter

NIGHT CLUB store and trailer. 58x12 for sale 264 By Pass. Farmville 291 7929.

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals Financing Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE'S, Licensed Brokers 401 W First Street 752

3575    _ ____

14 WIDES for as low as SI70 per month Call or come by Art Deilano Homes. 754 9841

1971 HOMETTE 12x40 2 bedrooms, mostly furnished Also washer, dryer, under pinning, covered deck, excellent condlttoo. 758 3496

1972    12x52    CONNOR    Halteras

Excellent condition Call 752 7233

1973 VALIANT, 12x60 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, set up In Oakwood Acres Trailer Park. This one has lots of extras $6000    758    4021    alter 4 30

1975 CONNER 12 X 36 I bedroom partipMy tgrnjthad,500 752 9003 1981    28 X 40 doublewide 3

bedrooms, 2 bafhs. greatroom Musi move from site Excellent condition, many extras 927 3475

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimne sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces Ca day or night, 753 3503, Farmville

BY OWNER Remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Ele menlary and parks Fireplace, large kitchen, den and dining room, privacy fenced back yard with pool and deck $59 999 99 758 1355 before 7 30 am alter 9 15 pm anytime Sjjtiday_______

BY OWNER Hardee Acres Possi ble 9'2% loan assumption 3 bedrooms. I'2 baths, oen with fireplace trench doors, deck. 16x24 workshop Call 752 5250

BY OWNER Contemporary home near hospital 303 Chatham Way.

Candlewick Estates Su|>er floor 1950 s

atd noO s

arofinas orlglnaj.chim^nev | ecureos! $82 nioVith Pool/tenn-'is

plan Unique design feet heated '

square square teet Heat pump Average

KK Condotninlums For Sale

LEXINGTON SQUARE, 2 bedrooms 1 year old FHA 235 assumable loan Phone 756 7935

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1983 14 WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $148 91 At Greenville's volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales. North Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 6068

1984 REOAAAN doublewide can be seen at Art Deilano Homes Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Deilano Homes, 756 9841

3 MOBILE HOMES 2 and 3 bedrooms Priced from $5400 to $8900 Have air and appliances Call Mary davs 752 3000, niohts 756 1997

076 AAobi le Home I nsurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money Smith Insurance and Realty. 752 2754

077 Musical Instruments

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO Call 758 2177._

USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Yamahas, Wurlltzers, etc The Music Shop. Greenville Square Shopping Center, 756 0007_____ _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

GOOD SELECTION ot used homes Low down payments and monthly payments All homes ouaranteeo Tommy Williams. Azalea Mobile Homes, 756 7815___

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

courts 2 blocks away Call 752 6724 or 753 3327    __    ______

DRESDEN PLACE Condominiums Close enough to walk to class Located at me corner of 11th and Charles SI Two bedrooms. I'2 baths, kitchen with all appliances living room dining combination Goocf loan assumption $43 600 W G Bigynt & Associates. 756 3000

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Pre - 4th Coupon Specials

OIL, LUBE & FILTER

Expires July 15th

Keep It Cool!

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE

Includas Freon And Labor Expires July ISIh

Otticial North Carolina Inapectlon Station

YOU MUST , PRESENT COUP'N

mooDfvEAm

^ r\

ITIRE ^ CENTERl

Waat End Shopping Canter Phone 756-1371 Open8to6Mon.-Fri..S8t.8toS

729 Olckinaon Avenue I hone 752-4417 Open 8 to 6 Mon.-Fri.. Sat. I lo 5

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

From

$

5495

82 Chevettes

From

<6996

82 Corollas

From

$

8295

82 Grand Prixs,

Regals or Cutlasses

From economy to luxury.. .these cars represent an exceptional value. We have 30

to choose from, all with low mileage, and all are ftilly equipped.

^ 109 Trade Street/Greenville/756-3228

if





26-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C-Thuraday, June, 1863

109 Houses For Sale

FmHA assumption 3 bedroom home baths, adjust^ gross income $12,000 or less Call Joe . $24 533 or 524 4191

Quinerlv,

GREAT LOCATION! Eastwood area Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dinino area, den $50,000 Mid Eastern Brokers 75 4254

LAKE GLENWOOO Bryant Circle j bedroom, 2 bath brick home with fireplace Large lot ( acres). 1492

square feet living space, deck FHA assumption $49,000 _

Inc . 524 4148 or 524 5Q42

Echo Realty.

NEW LISTING Four bedrooms A four bedroom and two bath home in Coqhill Living room with fireplace, dining area, deck If you need a four bedroom home, here it is, and with

unrurcK/f"    < ww ......

an affordable price $55,500 Duffus Realty Inc ,75 5395_

OAKDALE 120 Holiday Court. Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, 1' baths, living room, kitchen with dining area, den Located on large corner lot $37,500 W G Blount & Associates. 754 3000 __

BY OWNER 4 room house and lot 2 miles from Wellcome Middle School Less than $20.000 752 4247

"village east TOWNHOUSES

Near the lUniversity, brick townhouses featuring 2 bedrooms, iw baths, outside storage, patio, kitchen will all appliances Special financing Call tor details $41,900 W G Blount & Associates, 754 3000 WESTHAVEN, CLUB PINES Three bedrooms, two baths, corner lot $45,000 Three bedrooms, two baths, contemporary, $2,M0 Three bedrooms, 2'? baths, Williamsburg, $82,500 Four bedrooms, three baths, solar hot water. $105,000 Duflus Realty Inc ,

754 539^________________

108 N EASTERN STREET 3 bedroom home, ideal tor starter home or investment Freshly

painted, new carpeting, insallation in ceiling, ikialls, and floor Storm doors and windows VA loan

117 Resort Property For Saig

ON NORJH CREEK overlooking

Pamlico River 2 bedroom, 1 ^

cement block cott

ramp. iOxU shop. 11 acre, of land

Am

744

lage

iTa

Pier, boat

PEACE AND OUIET River cpf tage Pamlico ^ach 50 miles

from Greenville 2 bedrooms, large living room, screened porch.

IIVIIIU I Wf,,,    

furnishings on the wafer wifh pier, screened deck and sundeck over water, boat shelter wifh lift and boat house for winter storage $45,000 By Owner 355 2544_

2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River, water front lots with bulkheads 3 bedrooms. 1'j baths, large kitchen and family room, large closets Built for year round comfort, with

heat pur^, air condition _and ice Ow

fireplace Owner will finance 80% at

good interest rate for 10 years EKcellent location, 2 miles below

Bath, NC at Bayview Vance Overton, 754 8497 or 923 2701

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Securit

bedroom mobile homes Security deposits required, no pets Call 75 4413 between and 5

NEED STORAGE? We have any siie to meet your storage need Call Arlington Sell Storage, Open AAon Friday 9 5 Call 754 9933

WAREHOUSE AND office space for

lase 20.000 square feet available Will subdivide 754 5097or 754 9315.

IF THE RE'S something you want to

ell        

rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns Call 752 4144 fo place your ad

121 Apartment For Rent

assumption at 9>.%

t 1^1 IWf I t r    -     .    ----

efficiency of a new home and _ mortgage payments of the older home Call owner/broker at 758 4041 or 758 1535 nights and weekends No tee, $44,000 firm

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table

and fireplace Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7

_____ .    7    years old

miles from Greenville

the $50 s 758 0144 or

Located Priced

752 744^    ___

3 BEDROOM brick ranch, 1530 square feet, extra large family room with raised hearth, brand new

I L8UMI Will! I

large country kitchen, formal living room with fireplace, 2 car garage, covered patio, large corner lot.

fenced backyard, $55,000 (Assumable $32,000 loan, owner will finance a second I 307 Lindell Road, adjacent to Lakewood Pines, 754 469J alter 5p m    _ _____ _

111 Investment Property

DUPLEXES: 4 Income producing units Mid Eastern Brokers 754 4254

large 4 BEDROOM brick house across from Belk Dorm, 922 East I4th Street Ideal rental $34,900

752 2004 __________ ______________

RETAIL STORE building lor sale in small eastern N C town with established tenant and long term lease Contact Aldricige & Southerland, 754 3500, nights Don

Sogfherlanji. 754 5240    _____

RIDGE PLACE DUPLEX Each unit has 2 bedrooms. I'j baths, living room, dining area Possible

loan assumption $SB,000 355 2040 __

2 BEDROOM DUPLEX Carpel, stove, and refrigerator Gocxl IcKa lion Low $40 s Possible loan assyrritign_ C^i_754 4092 ____________

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom aparfments

All energy efficient designed

Queen si/e beds and studio couches

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and Sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches

Frost free refrigerators

Located in A/alea Gardens near Brcx>k Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams 754 7815 _

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1'. baths Also I bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV. washer dryer hook ups. laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL . 75 1557

room, sauna, tennis court, clufc

DUPLEX 3 blocks from campus. $225 Available August I Call 752 7550    __________

EASTBROOK

AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

115

Lots For Sale

BETHEL HIGHWAY 4 acres

cleared, good road frontage $12,000 Speight Realty 754 320, nights 758 774r

EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL

lots Irom $9,000 $12.500 Call W G Blount & Associates. 754 3000 vHANRHAN MEADOWS located on Stale Road 1110 between Ayden and Griffon ' i acre lots, cleared, $500 down, balance of $3500 financed at 12% A P R with monthly pay ments of $92 17 a month Call 752 7333 or 754 2482 Restricted to permarient ^ngle famjly dwellings HrGHWAY 33 Acre wooded lot, owner financing $11,900 Speight Realty 754 3220. nights 758 7741 THE PINES in Ayden 130 x 180 corner lot Excellent location Paved streets, curb and gutter

 . ___ gi

prestigious neighborhood $10,500 Call Moseley Marcus Really at 744 2144 lor lull details

I TO 5 ACRES,

, Highway 244 South, Ayden Grilton area and Highway 33 South Call 754 2482 or 752 0,277

2 LARGE LOTS Cherry Oaks,

corner ol Lee Street and SR 1725 Two lots together over I acre Call 752 4187 after 5p m^

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and fownhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Easlbrook Drive

752 5100

EFFICIENCY I bedroom, maid service $70 week Call 754 5555, Her ilage I nn Mgtej__

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

With or without maid service

Weekly or monlhl^^rates

Starling $250 month and up

756 5555 The Heritage Inn

FEMALE RCX3MMATE needed for 3 bedroom duplex near ECU Rer>t 199 plus 1 uHimes Call 100.1 _

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spaciobs grounds with abundant parking, economical

parking

ufllilies and POOL. Adjacent to Grgenyille Cpunlrji Clubji 4849

GRIFTON AREA New centrally heated and air conditioned. 1. 2 and 3 bedroom apartments 12 miles Irom Kinston, 17 miles from Greenville Handicapped units available Rent starts at $190 Adjusted leases available lor slu dents Office hours 10 a m to 2 m , Monday through Saturday

121 Apartments For Rent

JOHNSTON STREET APART_-ments 1 bedroom imfurnished

aparfments available immediate Water and appliancM furnished. No

its' Call JJdv at 754 4334 before 5 m , Atondav Friday

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, raim, re-fr^erafor, dishwasher. dispoMi irid cable TV Coovenlenfly located

r~shopping center and schools Located jusf off 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LARGE ONE BEORO<^, wifhin distance of ECU and

downtown. No pels. P^tlal utilities included $210 month. Days 754 9318 or niohl 754 2542. _

LARGE 2 BEDROOM duple* Good location 70S Hooker Road. Stove,

refrigerator, central heat 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 4050 or 754 1498. Wil Reid at 758 4050 or 754 0444 or Jane Warren at 758 4050 or 758 7029

MOORE &SAUTER

no South Evans 758-6050

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, tir^jaces

heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups. cable TV,wall to wall carpel, thermopane windows, extra insulation

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    I    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd. 756 5067

NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately 2 bedrooms, I'2 baths No pets 752 3152 or 752 4715. ask lor John or Brvant

NICE, 2 BEDRCX3M apartment in

ig ' '

quiet residential neighborhood, near college Rent includes water and sewage $250 754 5991

NICE QUIET 1 bedroom, hookups, carpet, icemaker Reasonable 754 2471 or 758 1543______

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart Dish

ments 1212 Redbanks Road washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Pla/a and University Also some furnished apartments available

756 4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets $215 a 'month 754 3923    ____

Looking tor an apartmant? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns ol to day's paper

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 754 7815    __

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT

Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances $210 Call 758 3311__

STADIUM APARTMENTS One

bedroom lurnished apartment Ad joins ECU Completely modern, excellent location 904 East I4th St

p m , Monday through iati Office 524 4239, home <24 4^2I_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Call 752 5700or 754 44/J_

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Otiice hours 10a m to 5pm Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at)

754

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD

CALL 756-8111

8.7 % APR

Or

Up To $750.00 Cash.Rebate

(On Selected Vehicles)

Plymouth Reliant NOW You CAN Afford Americas Most Beautiful Driving Machines!

Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE LATE JULY Nw 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. Rartge, refrigerator, dishwasher, and hookups. $310. Couples pre ferred Lease and deposit. No pets.

yjAJUL_

ONE BEDROOM turnisl^, near campus, $200 includes utilities. Call 754 1512 after 5:30 p.m

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete $3yj per month. Option to buy. U REN CO,

TAR RIVER ESTATES

I. 2, and 3 bedroonis. washer dryer pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

hook ups, cable TV.

Our Reputatioo Says It All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM    -----

available. No pets. Call Smith

apartments

__________ No pets. Cl

Insurance a Realty, 752 2754

TWOBEDRCX)M

APARTMENTS

Near ECU AAost utilities included $275 up Available immediately 7$-049l or 754-7809 before 9 p.m.

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, V/j bath townhouses. Available now $29S/month 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom. I'/ bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court

756-0987

I AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately 752 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment at Whitehollow Drive $250 00 per month 2 bedroom townhouse at Village East $300 00 per month

Both'require lease and security Dutfus Realty. Inc , 754

deposit

0811,

9 am Friday

5 pm, Monday

2 BEDROOM apartment Kitchen applianes furnished, totally ectric, $325 month. Call 754 7447

2 BEDROOM fownhouse, carpeted.

central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer/dryer hookup. $295 108 Cedar Court, 758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment Central air. carpeted, appliances $275 a

month Bryton Hills 758 3311 ___

5 ROOM APARTMENT AND 4 room apartment, also 2 bedroom trailer f52 3839    _

704 EAST Third Street 2 bedrooms, 2 blocks from ECU Stove and

refrigerator Lease and deposit

'75 ------

$240 754 1888 9 to 5 weekdays___

QUICK ACTION Classilied Ads are

the answer to passjng on your extras to someone who wants to out

122

Business Renfals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space Arlington Boulevard.

3,000 square (eel Only $3 40 per U ' "    

square foot For more information call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348

FOR RENT Prime retail space, Arlington Boulevard 4500 square

Arlington Boulevard 45UU square feet $4 25 per square loot Call 754 9315 or 754 5097

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building Ideally located on

Highway 33 In Chocowinily Call onnie Si

Donnie Smith at 944 5887 2100 SQUARE FEET ol retail space

for lease in small strip shopping iridge &

center Contact Aldridge

Southerland Really. 754 3500, nights Don Southerland 754 52M

127

Houses For Rent

FOUR BEDROOM house lor rent in Stokes Beautifully renovated older

home featuring living room, dining room, den. 3' ? baths, kitchen with

breakfast area Must have refer enees and security deposit $500 per month Call Belly Beacham at 754 3880 or W G Blount at 754 3000

127

Houses For Rent

THREEE bedroom. IV, bii home. Located T'l mil from

Carolina Eatf Mall Haaf pump, fenced in backyard Available August 1    320 a month. Call

7^7. 754 50,or355 229aL

TWO STORY 3bfropnw.^^

month. No pets Call 758 3191.

UNJVERSITY AREA 3 b^riwms;

appliances furnished, washer/dryer connection. $275    112    East    12th

Street. 754 0745

1 BLOCK FROM C^PUS and town 505 East 4 th Street 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, lots of room ' month plus deposit. 758 0174

$400ai

2415 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3 bedroom, central heat, air condi

iMToruufn,    98WWPX    J

tioner, garage, nice neighborhood Families only. Lease and deposit 1295 754 I8< 9 to 5 weekdays

BEDROOM houses for rent 410 raris Avenue $300.00; Biltmore Street $330 per month All rMuire

lease and security deposit Dutfus

-            754    Nf!;

Realty, Inc.,

3 BEDROOMS, I bath, nice neighborhood Couple prelerred 754 4104 after 5._

133 Mobile Hom^^ Rent

MOBILE HOME FOR RENT

Partly furnished Contact Glady;

Brown, 753 4204.

SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes $125 and up No pets, no children 758 0745    _

I BEDROOM Mobile Home tor rent. :all 754 4487

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children Call 758 4857_

138

Rooms For Rent

FURNISHED ROOM for nwt^ female. Kitchen

month. Non smokers only Call 752 7411

NEW BRICK HpME^In Stokw

Completely furniahed Female. ^ after 5 p.m. vxeekdays or anytime weekenls752 12SV--

ROOM FOR RENT, pr'v* .52I Male preferred, at VtliS

With or without board. 752^1t2.-

SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Fo privileges Across from ECU $25 per week Includesall. 752 7278.

142 Roommte Wanted

FEAAALE ROOAAA^TE WANTED

for apartment in Greenville area. Call 322 5352

AAALE DESIRES roommate to share 3 bedroom house $145 in Call 758 0944

cluOWftlL

NEED 2 ROOMAAATES^ for 3

be^troom trailer. Call 355-2438._

ROOAAAAATE WANTED - to nice two bedroom duplex near Rivergate Shoppl^    !

male,^7 years old and don f like cigarettes Call Steve, 752-8420 after 5p.m

2 FEAAALE ROOMAAATES to share

apartment $87 a month plui^ ' 3

.lilitiei $87 deposit required Call A9 1103 after 5.    ___

144 Wanted To Buy

USED 3 crank hi low hospital bed

.......

;all 757 1943

WANTED 2 to 5 acres of land suitable for house and gart^ within 10 miles trom Greenville

2 BEDROOMS Call 758 0779 or 752 1421____

2 BEDROOM trailer. 1< / baths, air. no pets 754 4005

2 BEDROOM Washer, dryer furnished

MOBILE HOME

air. carpet, tully

Good location 7

'Sf27.

2 BEDROOMS, I bath Furnished, very clean^l75 758 7741 after 5

135 Office Space For Rent

EAST 10th STREET Private, all utilities, furnished $75 per month 754 7417_____

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable (or office space or com mercial 404 Arlington Boulevard 754 8111    _ _

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 754 7815, 5,000 SQUARE FEET office build

ing on 244 Bypass Plenty of park ino Call 758 2^ days___

between Highway U Southjsnd NC " *11 Rea

33 Et Call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and4p.m

WANTED Jeans, dishes, glassware, dolls, toys, small appli anees, what nots. 355 4994, Helen

148

Wanted To Rent

NEW ECU FACULTY member and spouse desire to rent 2 or 3 bedroom

house beginning August 1 For more information please contact Kay Davis, 754 4944_

PROFESSIONAL MATURE

married couple desires country rental in Greenville area Fonvielle 105 Beagle Trail, Wilmington. NC 28403or 799 0178atter4p m

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceanfront, families only 754 4207 or 724 3849

ATLANTIC BEACH TOWNHOUSE on ocean. Sleeps 4 752 2579.

EMERALD ISLE Pebble Beach Ocean Front Condos Sales Rentals 1 800 482 7810____

4 BEDROOM furnished cottage on Albamarle Sound Weekly or mon thiv Call 825 7321__________________

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furnltur* Ratlnlshing and raptlrt. Suporlor caning (or all typ* chslrt. largar lacllon ol cuitom pictur* framing, survty slaktaany langth. all lypaa ol palala, hand-craftad ropa ham-mockt: aalactad tramad raproductlona

Eastern Carolina Vocational Center

Industrial Park. Hwy. 13 758-4188 -^    SA    M-4:30P M

Graanvllla. N C

NO DOWN PAYMENT

NO OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENSE

1983 Ford Ranger Pickup

HOUSES AND apartments ir Greenville Call 744 3284 or 524 3180

HOUSES FOR RENT in Ayden I 3 room, bath, kilch en, 2 porches 1 2 bedrooms, den.

bedrooms, living room.

kitchen, bath, and 2 porches Call 744 3474

OUTSTANDING SPACIOUS briCk home lor the special family, 4 bedrooms and game room downstairs. 2 lull baths 3 room suite with lull bath upstairs and private entrance Big lot. shade trees Very nice neighborhood %400 and lease Mr Byrd, 757 6941 or 75B0I9______

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton, Co.

752 6116

$149.98

Per Month*

Stock numbers 6112.    %OV:?6128    and 6129. 114 wheel

base. 2.3 litre engine, automatic transmission, power steering.

Based on 48 Month Red Carpet Lease with approved credit. Ford Rebate covers refundable security deposit, and first months payment. First years license tags paid by Hastings Ford. Limit one per customer.

HURRY, Theyre Going Fast!

AST

AmrniaS!

Ud C41 Companv Tenth Sheel S ,64 By fdss

FORD

758-0114

Greenville M C 27834

Bethels Finest Used Cars

1981 Chevrolet Caprice - 4 door, white. One owner

1977 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door, automatic, yellow.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix 26.000 actual miles, like new, white. One

1975 Olds Delta 88 - Convertible.

1975 Chevrolet Monza Red. Priced to go!

1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Like new, 26,000 miles, beige, loaded

1970 Chevrolet Camaro Average

1980 Chevrolet Monza Blue, automatic, air condition, sharp. One

1980 Buick Skylark 2 door, air condition, automatic, dark blue, one owner, like new

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue, white vinyl top, sharp cai

TRUCKS

1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Red, 4 speed transmission, clean.

1980 Datsun King Cab Orange. 4 speed transmission.

1979 Buick Regal - Blue, dean sharp car.

1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel - Like new, automatic, power steeiing.

1978 Chevrolet Nova 1 dooi red

',977 Chevrolet CK-10 -4X4 White Priced to go'

1978 Toyota Wagon Brown 41 UUU actual miles, nice and clean

1976 Chevrolet Ed Camino Blue

1977 Chevrolet Monte Cailo Landau

- White.

1972 Chevrolet C-10 - 6 cylinder, standard

We Are In Great Need Of Used Cars Now

We Are Offering Highest Trade-In Allowances Ever!

WYNNES CHEVROLET

R.tmon I .Uh.irn On The Corner, On The Squere" JoeR.iwh, BoiiniMt.iih.ini Bethel. N.C    Phone    825-4321

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNiTiES GREENViLLE UTiLiTIES COMMISSiON

PLANT MAINTENANCE MECHANIC

$12,584-$16,910

Position available for person to perform skiHed mechanical work in the Installation, maintenance and repair of specialized equipment such as pumps, motors and valves at the Water Treatment Plant. Some experience in carpentry, masonry and plumbing is required.

Apply in person at the Personnel Office, 3rd Floor, Greenville Utilities Office Building, 200 W. Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27834

"An Equal Opportunity Employer

WHY PAY RENT?

When you can own a new 14* wide

S099500

For Only ^ ^ ^ ^ PluaTa*

CHAPEL CEILING & PADDLE FAN

Only At

AZALEA

MOBILES HOMES

264 Bypass West

756-7815

The Real

Estate Corner

INVESTMENT PROPERTY

This property is being sold to settle the Sermons estate. Consisting of 7 brick rental houses located in Griffon. All houses are presently rented with an annual income of $14,970. The property is in a good state of repair and would make an excellent investment for tax purposes. For price and details, contact:

w. g. biount & assoc

756-3000

Evenings, call Bob Barker, 1-975-3179

REDUCED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE BY OWNER

Wonderful location jn Grifton-2 blocks from school. 1 block from park, in center of town. Three bedrooms carpeted, study-sewing-game room, greatroom with exposed beams and vaulted ceiling, parquet floor, floor-to-ceiling brick fireplace with optional gas log hook-up. bath, kitchen. All new paneling throughout, carport, patio.

Call 524-4689 Or 522-6350 Or Reply to P.O. Box 455 Grifton, N.C. 2S530

NEW OFFERINGS

Why pay rent, we have a new listing in Meadowbrook that you can buy for the same monthly payment as rent. Nice home with 2 bedrooms and 1 bath. Quiet neighborhood. Call today, offered in the mid $20's.

Listing Broker Ray Hoiioman

753-5147

II youve been vaitlnB for a loen assumption in OueN RMge. this is N. 1422 square feet wHh 12 3/1% variable loan with paytnonta of 1555 por month total. Patio, wtll landscapod and In front of pool and tannis courts. Offorsd at S9I,S00. Sound good? It it. CaH today. It wont last long. Only two story avaSaMo untM November.

CLARK-BRANCH

REALTORS

756-6336

REALTY WORLD.

I

1 I

*    ikm*.    'vrT'br





TOYOTA EAST gives youLCM MONTHLY PAYMBTTSand new Free AlrConditkmIng!

Were making new cars affordable with low monthly payments like these!'

And now, with most models, you can get air conditioning at no extra cost.

Tercel

$12993

per month

with approved

credit, only 000 down,

plus refundable security deposit,

taxes and tags. This Tercel, stock #AL4494

is based on a reduced lease price of 7,645^T

Truck

$12965

per month

with approved credit, only M ,000 down, plus refundable security deposit, taxes and tags. This Truck, stock #4146 is based on a reduced lease price of 7,635l

TOVOTA

EAST

Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer

>

109 T rade Street/Greenville/756-3228

Clica

$169^

per month

with approved

credit, only M ,000 down,

plus refundable security deposit,

taxes and tags. This Clica, stock #4503

is based on a reduced lease price of *10,705^.

per month

with approved

credit, only 000 down,

plus refundable security deposit,

taxes and tags. This Supra, stock #4399

is based on a reduced lease price of M 5,231

Cressida

*258

per month

with approved credit, only *1^0 down, plus refundable security deposit, taxes and tags. This Cressida, stock #MX4358 is based on a reduced lease price of M 4,500.

We have many other comparable deals oni J Toyota models in stock. And dont forget.. .you get air conditioning at no additional charge with

most models! aB clud0 5 year-

60,000 mile warranty





-T1 Dfly Reflectoc. GreewrtUe, N.C.-Thunday, Jtne SO, 19

CIvIfan Clubs Recognized

Tbe Greenville Civitan Club and its l9ei-2 president, Julian R. Rawls, and the Tar River Civitan Gub of Greenville and Its 1981-82 president, Vicky Wang, were honored Wednesday at the Civitan International convention in Hollywood, Fla.

Both local Civitan Gubs were named as a Honor Gub," and Rawls and Ms. Wang were designated distinguished" presidents.

Also honored at the convention was Harold Jones, a lieutenant governor of the North Carolina East District of Civitan International. Jones was recognized for leading more than half of the Civitan clubs under bis supervision to achieve Honor Gub" status.

Crandol, Teel Reunion Set

The Crandol and Teel families will hold their fourth annual family reunion Sunday at the Moose Lodge. For more information call 756-6096.

Beddards Set Family Reunion

The 40th Beddard reunion will be held Sunday at 1 p.m. at the Moose Lodge in Richlands. All families are asked to bring a covered dish dinner. Refreshments will be provided by family members from the Richlands-Jacksonville area.

For additional information call Roosevelt Beddard, Richlands, at 324-5191 or Garland L. Beddard, Greenville, 756-1455.

Military Awareness Day Set Friday

Military Awareness Day will be observed at Carolina East Mall Friday during the centers business hours.

The 514th MP Company of the the North Carolina National Guard from Greenville will display a variety of military police equipment including vehicles, weapons, communications equipment and food preparation utensils.

Several guardsmen will be present to display a selection of military uniforms and to answer questions.

The 440th Army Band of the North Carolina National Guard from Raleigh will be in concert at the mall at 5 p.m. to honor people who have served and are currently serving in the Armed Forces.

The band, which has been named oustanding National Guard Unit in North Carolina five times, is under the direction of Warrant Officer Michael C. Stephens of Williamston.

WO MICHAEL C. STEPHENS

The band was also the first National Guard band to serve as the official military band for the United States Military Academy at West Point for two weeks.

There is no charge for admission.

City Offices To Be Closed

City hall, all municipal offices and the recreation centers and gyms in Greenville will be closed Monday in observance of Independence Day. River Birch Tennis Center will remain open throughout the holiday weekend.

Transit buses will not operate on Monday The sanitation division will be closed Monday, delaying refuse and trash pickup in the city one day from the normal schedule. The regular collection schedule will resume on i Thursday. Emergency calls for public works services may be made to 752-3473.

Sheppard Memorial Library and its branches will be closed Saturday, Sunday and Monday for the holiday observance.

Family Reunion Scheduled

The New York chapter of the Laughinghouse-Sneed family reunion is sponsoring its llth annual gathering here July 8-10. For further information contact Esther Laughinghouse at 752-6552 or Clayton Walden at 212-522-5020.

Hollander Makes RPI List

Frank Thim Hollander has been named to the deans list at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.C. He resides at 1010 E.lOth St., Greenville.

Hospice Group To Meet

Hospice of East Carolinas bereavement support group will meet tonight at 7 p.m. at the Hospice Office, 1003 S. Clark St. Any person who has experienced the death of a family member or close friend and feels the need for such a support group may attend.

Students Serve As Senate Pages

Two students from Pitt County served as pages in the North Carolina Senate the week of June 20-24. Tod A. Hudson of Winterville and Donna Pierce of Greenville worked with the senators and the staff of the General Assembly.

ATTENTION Kmart SHOPPERSCORRECTION

On the laat pao* of tho Kmart Happy Birthday Sala advartlaamant puollahad in tho Wadnaaday, Juna 21th adltion of Tho Dally Raflactor, a mlloaga wafer-out warranty waa faaturad for aach tira on aala. Thia warranty appaarad through arror and ahouW bo diaragardad.

Tha Kmart tira warranty la aa followa: Warrantod agalnat manufacturara datact with 90 day fraa raplaca-mant pro-ralad to X of traad uaad. Copfa* of tha com-plata Kmart tiro warranty ara availabla In tha Automotiva Sarviea Dapartmant.

Wa apologlza for thia arror and any Inoonvanlanea tNa mayhavacauaad.In The Area

/ioore Named Ruritan Of Year

Tony Moore of Winterville has been named Ruritan of tbe Year by the Wintervflle Rurttan Gob.

Moore is a teacher at

D.H. Cooley High School and is currently chairman of the W.H. Robinson Parent-Teacber Organiza-tk>n and president (A tbe A.G. Cox Booster Gub. He also serves as chairman of the Winterville Pee Wee Baseball League and pres^ ident-elect of the Pitt County Young Democrats.

He holds B.S. and M.S. degrees from Appalachian Strate University.

Moore was presented a plaque from Ruritan Woodrow Worthington at a recent meeting of the club.

The club also voted to sponsor a Babe Ruth baseball team and to assist

Nightly Services Schduled

Services at AUoi Chapd Church win be held Thursday md Friday n^ts b^inning at 7:30 p.m. with the Rev. James Vance id charge. Guest choirs wUl include the Greenvflle Travdhig Cbidr on Thiffsday and Saint Maits Gkht of Kinston on Friday.

A Womans Itey program wiU be observed Sunday at 11 a.m. Tbe speaker wUl be Eldress Martha Stnmg from Haddocks Chiq)el Free WUl Baptist Church in Winterville.

Bppes High Memorial Planned

I

TONY MOORE

the towns Recreation Commission with a barbeque dinner July 16.

Bruce Gray and Karl McLawhorn reported that 40 ball teams are participating in the towns summer league.

Greenville Students Earn Honors

Jeffrey Dale Heath and Johnna Kay Hines of GreenvUle have been named to the deans list at Bob Jones University for the spring semester.

Heath is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman heath and Miss Hines is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Hines.

Solicitation Request Approved

Police Chief Glenn Cannon has announced approval of a request by the Belvoir Free WUl Baptist CTS to conduct a bake sale Saturday to raise money to sponsor a youths attendance at the Free WUl Baptist national convention in Columbus, Ohio.

A memorial marking the site of tbe fiHiner Eppes High ScbofU will be unveiled at tbe (Ud school at 3 p.m. Saturday. The dedication wUl follow a parade dioing a Fourth of July reunion for former students at GreenvUle Industrial and Eppes High schools.

Break-In At Station Reported

Greenville police were investigating a break-in at Tripps Bypass Smrice Station on Memorial Drive, Chief Glenn Cannon said this morning.

Cannon, who said tbe break-in was reported about 6 a.m., said entrance to the buUding was gained by breaking a window. He said 30 tires, a number of cases of beer, a quantity of cigarettes and several car tire rims were reported stolen.

Car Wash, Fish Fry Planned

The C.G. Spiritual Choir of Selvia Chapel Church wUl sponsor a car wash and a fish fry Saturday from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on the lot of Hardees Funeral Home, 901W. Fifth St.

Mid-East Staff Attends Meeting

The staff of the Pitt County Mid-East Regional Housing Authority attended an annual meeting last weekend at Appalachian State University sponsored by the North Carolina Section 8 Housing Association.

Speakers included Larry Parker, North Carolina area manager of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; Joanne McDonald of The TrUlum Group,and Ned Fowler, chairman of the board of directors of the association.

Log Truck Driver Is Killed

The 31-year (Ud drtvrn* M a loaded log truck, Vernon Everette Jr. of RoiRe 1, JamesvUle, was kUled in an 11:20 a.m. accident Wednesday on UJS. 64 aboid 4.5 mUes east oi JamesvUle in the eastern p^ of Martin County. A second person, Darien Jeron Evans, 24, of WUliamston, was injured in the accidoU and was taken to Washington County Hospital in Plymouth where he remains a patieiU.

The investigating officers report stated that a car driven by Evans swerved to tbe 1^ (U center to avoid hitting a car be had ovmtaken, and ran into the side of the log truck. Tbe truck left tbe road, bit a ditch and a tree, resulting in the load of logs shifting forward and crushing the cab and tte driver.

No charges have been filed in the accident, wfaicb is undn-investigation.

Red Cross Plans Blood Drive

The second Liberty Blood Drive, aimed at helping to meet the needs of Uie Fourth of Julyb(Uiday period, is planned for Friday at tbe Moose Lodge.

Red Cross ^keswoman Ruth Taylor said a goal of 350 potential donors has been set for the drive, which will be held from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m.

Mrs. Taylor said the area blood committee, headed by chairman Mike Colombo, considers the Fourth of July period and Christmas to be the two most critcal times of the year in terms of blood usage.

Available At

HENDRIX-BARNHILL

Memorial Dr. 752-4122

FURNITURE COMPANYS

StoKwiile

Limited Time Only!

Sale Starts Friday 8:30 A.M.

1 We Must Clear Out Summer Stock To Make Room For Fall Merchandise.

Shop Taft Furniture Companys

'.    Super    Sale

Berkline Wallaway^ Recliners

Super Comfort!

Super Value!

Super Size!

Savings UpTo250

BERKUNE

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oi y // Easy room arranging since chair may be piaced just from the wall. Will not touch wall in any position. A great space saver!

Prices Start As Low As

SHOgoo

Large Selection Of Styles And CoversOver 100 To Choose From.

Super soft and comfortable Wallaway' In 100% nylon.

Regular

399.00

Sale

Plush comfort in corduroy. Matching Rockalounger^ available.

Regular

419.00

Plush Wallaway* operates 1112" from wall.

90 Day Cash Plan - No Interest Charge. Or Use Convenient Monthly Terms With Approved Credit.FURNITURE CO.Free Delivery Up To 100 Miles 535 Dickinson Avenue Downtown Greenville 752-5161

85 Years Of Continuous Service To Eastern North Carolina Plenty Of Free Parking Next To Our Storev>


Title
Daily Reflector, June 30, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30497
Date
June 30, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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