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INSIDE TODAYTAR HEEL FOURTHParades, picnics, sporting events and even mudslinging were combined to celebrate the Glorious Fourth. There were fireworks, too. (Page 13)THE LEGISLATUREIn the future, N.C. District Attorneys may be notified when criminals they prosecuted become eligible for parole. (Page 16)
SPORTS TODAY
NO-HITTERS
Dave Righetti of the Yankees threw a no-hittei the first in 24 years for (Page 9)
New York r yesterday, a Yankee.
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 141
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 5,1983
16 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
Weather Affected Holiday Observance
IN FULL FLOWER - Tobacco flowers are at full peak for most tobacco fields now, with farmers busy getting the flowers broken out, or topped. Here Mark Pilgreen tops plants in his field near Winterville. Many farmers are also flnding it
necessary to have top suckers, the shoots that grow along the stalks between leaves, broken out as sucker cimtrol chemicals do not always do a thorough job of preventing sucker growth. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
Tobacco Flowering Early After Cool, Wet Spring
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - Cool, wet weather this spring has helped spread blue meld and other diseases in fields across the state and caused some plants to flower too early, agriculture officials say.
In some Piedmont fields, tobacco is flowering on plants barely a foot high, said Sam A. Tuten Jr., a Forsyth County agricultural extension agent for field crops.
Growers are being forced to break off the flower tops by hand and select a sucker that will grow into a full-size tobacco plant. They they have to go back through the fields to pull off the remaining suckers.
Tuten warned growers to beware of spreading mosaic virus disease, which causes mottled and crinkled leaves in tobacco. The highly contagious disease can be spread to healthy plants by workers during the early topping process, he said.
The best thing is to have one worker precede the others in the field and to remove all the diseased plants without touching the other plants," he said.
The early flowering has
REFLECTOR
occurred because tobacco has been under severe stress from prolonged cool and moist conditions. Tuten said. Stress rushes the reproductive process.
Tobacco turned out from a sucker will take a little longer to reach maturity, but it can still yield a quality
crop if there is good weather for the rest of the season, he said. Even a plant that has had an early topping will flower again when it reaches full size.
Meanwhile, blue mold is still present in fields of flue-cured tobacco, said Dr.
N.T. Dick Powell, extension tobacco disease specialist at North Carolina State University.
Several new cases of the fungus have been reported in tobacco fields across the state in the past two weeks, Powell said.
Reagan Addresses NEA Urging Discipline And Stricter Standards
By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) -President Reagan, seeking support from the nations second largest teachers union, called today for stricter, school discipline and academic standards and decried those who would divide, delay and drag us down.
The president set a goai of raising verbal and math
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RADIO TUBES SOURCE?
I recently received a 1930 Colonial radio which is in mint condition. However, two No. 245 vacuum tubes are missing. I would appreciate it if anyone would know a possible source for these tubes. Also, I would appreciate information on Colonial Radio Corporation. R. J.
Anyone who can help is invited to call Ronald E. Jensen, 1311 Cotten Road, Greenville; phone,* 752-3()04.
scores in the College Board tests by 50 points to make up for the decline between 1963 and 1980.
Reagans comments were in a speeh prepared for delivery to the 67th annual convention of the American Federation of Teachers, second in size to the National Education Association.
Even though the federation has been less shrill in its criticism of Reagan than the larger union; AFT chief Albert Shanker said on Monday he would give Reagan no more than an F-plus on education.
Reagan made no attempt to hide his differences with the union, particularly over his support for merit pay for master teachers. The AFT has opposed specific merit pay plans, while remaining open to the concept itself.
Of course we have differences, Reagan said. I am not here today as a salesman, trying to peddle a pre-packaged, all-purpose, off-the-rack education program. I am fully aware that there are some major areas where we disagree - matters like tuition tax credits and vouchers.
Reagan has called fortax breaks to parents of children in private schools, but has not mentioned that prominently in his recent emphasis on education.
He backed into mention of merit pay, calling attention to the recommendation of his National Commission on Excellence in Education for . "better wwards for teachers
who excel and then adding: Isay amen.
The president sought to emphasize his agreements with the union :
-The AFT wants to upgrade standards. So do I. -The AFT believes in stricter discipline codes in schools. So do I.
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
The. weather on July fourth in Greenville played games with people, keeping them guessing about whether or not the annual Jaycee celebrations at the Town Common could oe weathered out or would be rained out.
Happily, the early morning threat of rain gave way to bright, hot sunshine, southern style - up to 96 sultry degrees; and the rumbling twilight thunderstonn passed over in time to permit the exciting yearly display of fireworks over the Tar River.
The only total losses in planned activities were those of the street dance which had been scheduled for 7 p.m. with music to be performed by the Rattlers of Greenville; and the calling off of the 3 p.m. water skiing exhibition by Judson Whitehurst on the Tar - the water level in the river was ruled as being low enough to create a real danger for Whitehurst.
One bonus for those who happened to be on hand just after 3 p.m. - and not listed on the calendar of events was a free-fall parachute jump by three veteran parachutists. One of the men, Rich March of Franklinton, commented, This makes my 1,400th jump. The weather was just right, with a slight breeze blowing against us.
The others making the jump were Mark Taylor of Raleigh, and Lonnie Wilier of Greenville.
Wilier, a long-time jumper, said, This makes about 2,500 jumps for me. Today, I left the plane at 3,800 feet, opening my parachute at 2,500 feet. All of our jumps were good ones today, with all of us landing pretty close to our targeted areas.
Taylor said I had 15 seconds of free fall, and didnt open my chute until I was at 2,000 feet.
Each of the three were cheered as they touched ground at a spot between the mounted cannon and the river.
Another contingent who received cheers were the young men and boys who struggled mightily to reach the top of the greased metal pole to rip off a $5 bill taped snugly to the top. A number of efforts failed, but eventually, young Stephen Fredericks III, grimy and perspiring after clambering over the backs of sturdy assistants, was victorious.
Onlookers gaspied in surprise at one point. A lightweight contender slipped, and his toe got caught in the shorts worn by the man beneath him, temporarily disrobing him. A quick response by the disrobed man resulted in hitching his clothes back into place while managing not to lose his hold on the slipped lad clinging to his back.
Three of the young men volunteering for the task were Marines from Camp Lejeune, one of whom said, We came here to enjoy a civilian celebration of the fourth.
In the competition for distance spitting of watermelon seed, the champions were Laren Cannon in the youth division; and David Burke in the adult division.
Undoubtedly, the one July fourth volunteer worker who most keenly felt the full effects of the heat was Dano Jones, a graduate student at East Carolina University. Jones was the guy all dressed up in a thick, fleecy chrome blue monster suit, complete with padded gloves and an oversized head. I really know what its like to be super hot, he laughed, once he emerged from his furry cage of a robe.
Children flocked around the booth for chances to throw darts at balloons and to win a prize; and young and old threw balls to dunk volunteers into a container of water beneath them when the release bell was struck.
Considerable attention was directed to the large, colorful ultra-light plane anchored on the grass; and athletic types enjoyed playing volleyball. The youngest ones participated in the triycle race for those in the 2 to 5 year-old age bracket, and visitors of all ages took part in a number of skili activities.
Brad Walls, one of the Jaycee coordinators for this years Jaycee sponsored Fourth of July on the Town Common in Greenville, termed the day a success. It has not been a record crowd so far, he said at mid-afternoon, but theres been a steady flow of people, at least as many as we had last year, and they all seem to be enjoying themselves.
AFTER THE EXHILIRATION ... of precision air rides to earth supported by silk comes the mundane task of gathering up the jump gear. The trio of veteran parachutists mating an exhibition jump Monday at the Fourth of July cdebratkm on Town Common,
VI(nX)RY - After half a dozen valiant efforts, young Stephen Fredericks of Greenville finally made it to the top of the pole to retrieve the 85 bill taped there. Spectators cheered Fredericks and the volunteers, including three Camp Lejeune Marines, wdio offered shoulders and arms to make possible his ascent up the greased pole. (Reflector Photo)
Legislative Prayer Sessions Upheld
shown here gathering their gear, are; left to ri^t, Lonnie WUler, Mark Taylor, and Rich Mark. All three agreed weather conditions at 3 p.m. were ideal for the exhibition jump. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)
WASHINGTON (AP) -State legislatures and Congress may open their sessions and work days with prayers led by paid chaplains, the Supreme Court ruled today.
By a 6-3 vote, the court said such legislative prayer sessions do not violate the constitutionally required separation of church and state.
The court said the Nebraska Legislature may continue paying the Rev. Robert Palmer, an ordained Presbyterian clergyman who has served as the states legislative chaplain since 1965.
Writing for the court. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger noted that Congress for 200 years has paid chaplains to lead the nations lawmakers in prayer, and that Nebraska and many other states have practiced the same policy for 100 years or more.
There can be no doubt that the practice of opening legislative sessions with prayer has become part of the fabric of our society, Burger said.
To in invoke Divine guidance on a public body entrusted with making the laws is not, in these circumstances, an establishment of religion or
a step toward establishment; it is simply a tolerable acknowledgment of beliefs widely held among the peple of this country, the chief justice said.
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I-The Daily Rtlector. Greenville, N C.-Tuesday. July 5,1983
Elizabeth Brown Weds Thomas E. Arnold
Elizabeth Leigh Brown and Thomas Edward Arnold were united in marria^ Saturday at high noon in the chapel at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church. The Rev. James H. Bailey performed the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Q. Brown of Greenville and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Jewel Arnold of Grifton and Robert Arlen Arnold Sr. of Philadelphia.
A program of wedding music was presented by organist Mrs. Alan Merritt. Guitarist Joe Collins of Greenville sang The Wedding Song and his own rendition of "A Wedding Song.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. She wore a formal gown of white qiana designed with an (^n sweetheart neckline outlined in a bertha collar of reembroidered alencon lace beaded with pearls. The gown featured an empire bodice and was fashioned with covered buttons in the back. The modified A-line skirt extended into a chapel length train. She wore a chapel length veil of illusion edged in alencon lace held in place by a Juliet cap overlaid in matching lace beaded with pearls. The bride carried her mothers lace covered prayer book adorned with sonya sweetheart roses, white carnations and babys breath tied with narrow satin ribbon.
The maid of honor, De-borah Edwards of Greenville, wore a formal gown of peach lustreglo designed with an open neckline bordered in a bertha collar of crystal pleating edged in matching chantilly lace. The empire bodice was encircled with a self-fabric rolled tie sash from which fell a flared accordian pleated skirt. She wore sonya and babys breath in her hair and carried a nosegay of pixie, sonya and peach roses with babys breath tied with matching bows.
The bridesmaids, Katherine Holmes of Long Beach and Henrietta Dunn of Fayetteville, wore formal gowns designed like the honor attendant and carried
MRS. THOMAS EDWARD ARNOLD
nosegays similar to that of the honor attendant.
The father of the bridegroom served as best man. Ushers were Charles Q. Brown Jr., brother of the bride, and Howard Cowan of Richmond, Va., cousin of the bride.
Donna Bunch of Greenville presided at the guest register.
The mother of the bride wore a street length gown of hyacinth organza. She wore a wristlet of purple statice and babys breath. The mother of the bridegroom wore a formal gown of ivory lace overlay and ivory taffeta. She wore a corsage of sonya roses.
A reception was given by the brides parents in the church parlor following the ceremony. Wedding cake was served by Pam Collins and Kathy Beatham. Punch was poured by Susan Con-gleton and Becky Tripp.
An after-rehearsal dinner was given at the home of the
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bride following the rehearsal Friday evening. The bridesmaids luncheon was given by Judge and Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts at their home Friday afternoon.
The bride is a graduate of Peace College in Raleigh and is a senior at East Carolina University. She is employed by Eastern Carolina Vocational Center. The bridegroom attended Pitt Community College and is employed by Flanders Filters, Washington.
After a wedding trip to Bald Head Island, the couple will reside in Ayden.
Workshop Is Planned
WINDSOR - The North Carolina Federation of Womens Clubs, District 15, will have its annual summer workshop here July 11 at the Cashie Baptist Church. Mrs. Van Taylor of Williamston, district president, will conduct Uie meetings.
Mrs. Lewis Boroughs, first vice president, and Mrs. Vance B. Grubbs, second vice president, will be speaking.
A workshop on "Leadership Development will be conducted by Mrs. Ernest Holt, past district president and immediate past state vice president.
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Drinking Can Test Patience
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by UniMnal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: Some time ago you printed a list of test questions for the excessive drinker. My husband took the test, found he needed help and started going to Alcoholics Anonymous. He hasnt had a drink in five months and he can thank A.A. for that.
At the same time, I started attending Al-AnOn meetings. It certainly helped me to cope with my home situation regardless of whether my husband was drinking or not.
nease print a list of test questions to help people decide whether they need Al-Anon.
GRATEFUL TO AI^ANON
DEAR GRATEFUL: All right. Here are the questions:
1. Do you worry about how much someone else drinks?
2. Do you have money problems because of someone elses drinking?
3. Do you tell lies to cover up for someone elses drinking?
4. Do you feel that drinking is more important to your loved one than you are?
5. Do you think that the drinkers behavior is caused by his or her companions?
6. Are mealtimes frequently delayed because of the drinker?
7. Do you make threats, such as, If you dont stop drinking. Ill leave you?
8. When you kiss the drinker hello, do you secretly try to smell his or her breath?
9. Are you afraid to upset someone for fear it will set off a drinking bout? '
10. Have you been hurt or embarrassed by a drinkers behavior?
11. Does it seem as if every holiday is spoiled because of drinking?
12. Have you considered calling the police because of drinking behavior?
If the answer to five or more of the above questions is Yes, you need Al-Anon. Look for its phone number in your telephone book. Or write to Al-Anon Family Group, Inc., P.O. Box 182, Madison Square Station, New York, N.Y. 10010, for information. Please enclose a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope.
DEAR ABBY: We work in a public office and have contact with many people every day. Our problem is one co-worker who constantly chews gum in a manner that is very irritating to those of us who must work closely with her. 'The incessant noise of her chewing, popping and cracking continues without consideration for co-workers or clients.
We have nothing against chewing gum if its done in an unobtrusive way, but this person is driving us up a wall with her noisy chewing, cracking and popping. Help!
OUT OF PATIENCE
DEAR OUT: If the gum chewer is unaware of her offensiveness, one of you should tell her privately, in a friendly way. If she is aware and doesnt care, tell her supervisor. And since there are several of you, theres clout in numbers. So get cracking!
DEAR ABBY: I am a man, 74, very active and in good health. I have been a widower for five years. About 10 days ago I had surgery and was in the hospital for eight days. (Nothing serious.)
I had a middle-aged nurse taking care of me. She went out of her way to be nice to me and was extremely patient and good-natured. Just before leaving the hospital I told her how much I appreciated her, and I tried to give her a $20 bill. She refuseid to accept it. In fact she acted a bit insulted.
Abby, was I out of line by offering her a little tip for her services?
GRATEFUL PATIENT
DEAR GRATEFUL: Although you meant well, nurses do not as a rule accept tips. But it would not be out of line to send her a thank-you card or a small gift.
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1983 Debutantes Are Announced
RALEIGH - Invitations to the 57th annual North Carolina Debutante Ball have been issued. Area debutantes include;
Lady Britton Aycock, dau^ter of Dr. and Mrs. Sylvester Hassell Aycock Jr. of Farmville; Elizabeth Ann Longino, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Frank Henry Longioo of Greoiville; Louise Carmen Taft, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Marvin Taft of Greenville; Melissa Ruth Taft, dau^iter of Mr. and Mrs. William Holston Taft Jr. of Greenville;
Eliza Felton Norfleet Taylor, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Allen Taylor of Greenville; Katherine Stewart White, daughter of Mrs. Katherine Shipman White and TiKMnas Jackson White III of Greenville; Virginia Adams White, dau^tef of Mr. and Mrs. Charies Alexander White Jr. of Green\1Ue; Ann Clark
Auxiliary
Wins
Awards
The Ladies Auxiliary to the Veterans of Forei^ Wars won first place in state competition for the most outstanding program in the Cancer Aid and Research project.
The woman contributed over $3,000 to the program. Projects included cake sales, concessions and donations. Raye Brewer served as
(Please turn to Page 3)
Davis, darter of Mr. and Mrs. David Ramsey Davis Jr. of Williamston; and Serena Chesson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wilson Chesson of Williamston.
The event will be held here Sept. 8-10. The formal presentation to North Carolina society of young ladies from across the state will highlight the weekend festivities.
The Debutante Ball is sponsored by The Terpsichorean Club, comprised of young gentlemen
from the Raleigh area. The young ladks, who will be presented by their fathers, were selected by over 100 nominators located throughout the state. Final approval of the debutantes is made by Terpsichorean Club members.
During the ball weekend, there will be eight different functions to be attended by the debutantes, their families and their escorts.
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Couple Marries On Monday
The DaUy ReHector, GreenvUle, N.C -Tuesday, July 5,1983-3
Wedding Vows Spoken Monday
Barbara Anne Barker of Bridesmaids were Wanda
KINSTON - Sharon Ann Scott and Joseph Kirby Loftin, both of Greenville, were united in marriage Monday morning at eleven oclock in a garden ceremony here.
'The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R.L. Scrtt of Kinston. Parents of the bridegroom are Martha S. Loftin and Leonard Loftin, both of Kinston.
The Rev. Troy Bennett officiated at the double ring ceremony. A program of wedding music was performed by Chaz Lahnn, vocalist and ^itarist.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of chantilly lace over peau de soie designed with an open neckline outlined in a ruffled bertha collar edged in satin cording. The fitted bodice was overlaid in chantilly lace. Satin covered buttons fashioned the back bodice and satin cording encircled the waistline. The full, circular skirt extended to form an attached sweep train. She wore a bridal hat overlaid in organza and accented with silk Venise lace. She carried a cascade bouquet of gardenias, white roses, daisies and babys breath accented with satin streamers and love knots.
Serving as honor attendant was Brenda Hollowell of Kinston, sister of the bride. Bridesmaid was Linda
Carey, sister of the bride. Each wore a formal gown of orchid chiffon over taffeta designed with a sabrina neckline and blouson bodice. The modified waistline was encircled with a satin tie sash. An assymetrical overlay of chiffon complemented the A-line skirt.
Junior bridesmaid, Kristen Owens of Kinston, niece of the bride, wore a formal gown of orchid chiffon over taffeta designed with a Peter Pan collar fashioned of white Brussels lace. The blouson bodice was enhanced with tucks of chiffon. Brussels lace trimmed the short baby doll sleeves. A satin tie sash encircled the waistline, from which fell the flared skirt.
The father of the bridegroom served as best man and usher was Malcolm Smith of Greenville.
A reception was held outside immediately following the ceremony.
An after-rehearsal dinner was held at Kings Restaurant in Kinston. A wine and cheese party was held at the home of the mother of the bridegroom following the rehearsal. Several showers were given in honor of the bridal couple.
The bride is a graduate of Kinston High School and attended Mount Olive Junior College before graduating from Mitchells Hairstyling Academy. She is employed as a cosmetologist at
MRS. JOSEPH KIRBY LOFTIN
Lowe Family Reunion Held
A past to cherish; a present to rejoice; and a future to fulfill was the theme of the 20th reunion of the Lowe family held in here during the weekend. Over 100 descendants of the late Lonnie and Lula Lowe attended. '
Mr. and Mrs. James Chance of Bethel hosted the family dinner. Evangeline Williams, local chairperson, welcomed the guests. The response was given by Ralph Lowe of Cartersville, Ga. The Rev. Ernest McNair gave the invocation and grace.
Rosa McNair presented a history of the Lowes family reunion which was accompanied by a drawing of the family tree by Angela Dixon. Joyce Jones gave special recognition to senior members of the Lowe family. Cited for endurance and continuous support were Mrs. Willard Griffin, Mrs. Johnnie M. Carney, Charlie Best, James Lowe, Minnie Chance, Mrs. Jimmie M. Jones, Lurlean Williams and Pearl Roberts.
David Deveaux, national chairman from Washin^on, D.C., conducted the business session assisted by vice chairman Lonnie R. Lowe and secretary, Margaret Tylc.
Several members of the Lowe family attended and participated in Sunday
worship at Medley Chapel CME church, Bethel. Participants included Doris Dixon of Greenville who gave the responsive reading; Barbara Britt, Washington D.C., reading of the scripture; Ralph Lowe, Cartersville, Ga., morning prayer; Burnest Griffin, Greenbelt, Md., solo; Angela Dixon, Greenville, solo; and Lonnie C. Lowe, Washington D C. who spoke on the contributions of the Lowe family-
A cookout was held Sunday afternoon at the home of Ms. Andrews in Robersonville.
Local officers for the event were Miss Williams, chairman; Joyce Jones, vice chairman; Doris Dixon, secretary; Patricia Neal, treasurer; Mrs. Andrews and Pauline Brown, program committee.
The 1984 Lowe family reunion will be held in Columbus, Ga.
California Concepts in Greenville. The bridegroom is a graduate of Grainger High School and attended Lenior Community College and East Carolina University. He is employed, as a
Auxiliary...
(Continued from Page 2) chairman and was presented the award at the state convention held in Winston-Salem last week.
They also received first place for the support of the state scholarship pro^ams. It was second place in the Americanism category which was headed locally by Carrie West.
Attending the convention in addition to Ms. Brewer and Mrs. West were Dorothy-Armistead, Mattie Askew, Bonnie Waldrop, Margie Tyson, Rosa Lee Boyd, Estelle Steiner and Sue Buck.
The auxiliary contributed $100 each to two local ap-
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profession musician with the duo Lahnn and Loftin.
After a wedding trip to Florida, the couple will reside in Greenville.
peals for assistance to cancer patients. A contribution to the cancer fund was made in memory of Ennis Blanchard, a local charter member of the Post.
Ms. Armistead, president, installed Jean Ham as a new member.
Mary Lucy Taylor, Ada Jones, Ms. Brewer and Ms. Steiner were meeting hostesses.
If a bow you want to use on a present is crushed, Family Circle magazine says you can fluff it up by merely holding it over a steaming pot of water.
Greenville and Daniel Patrick Laurion of Dover, N.H. were united in marriage Monday afternoon at two oclock in Saint Gabriels Catholic Church. Father Jerry Sherba officiated at the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barker of Route 13, Greenville. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Leo K. Laurion of Dover, N.H.
A program of wedding music was performed by organist Terri Lupton of Reelsboro, cousin of the bride, and soloist Faye Gove. The wedding was directed by Lola Bates.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. She wore a formal gown of white chantilly lace over taffeta designed with an open Queen Anne neckline outlined in embroidered lace. The fitted bodice featured an overlay of chantilly lace extending into a draped Renaissance waistline. Sheer lace fashioned the long fitted sleeves. Ruffled tiers of chantilly lace enhanced the full skirt and attached chapel length train. She wore a fingertip veil edged in lace attached to a bandeau covered with seed pearls. She carried a bouquet of yellow sweetheart roses, white daisies, babys breath, greenery and white satin streamers.
Maid of honor was Tonya Bullock of Greenville. She wore a long blue gown of organza over taffeta with a bustle effect. She wore babys breath in her hair and carried a nosegay of yellow and white daisies accented with babys breath, greenery and white satin streamers.
Barker, sister-in-law of the bride, and Alice Harrison, both of Greenville. Each wore a dress styled like that of the maid of honor and carried nosegays tied with yellow satin streamers.
Jessica Barker of Greenville, sister of the bride, was flower girl. She wore a long blue gown of organza over taffeta with a bustle and capelet sleeves. She wore babys breath in her hair jnd carried a basket of yellow silk rose petals. Ring bearer was Jamie Bland of Greenville.
The brother of the bridegroom, Timothy Laurion of Dover, N.H., served as best man. Ushers were Ralph and Jerry Barker, both brothers of the bride from Greenville. Carter Bates of Greenville was ushers aide.
The mother of the bride wore a two-piece orchid street length dress with and a cymbidium orchid corsage. The mother of the bridegroom street length dress with a cymbidium orchid corsage. The grandmother of the bride, Mrs. H.A. Barker of Bayboro, wore a white street length dress and a cymbidium orchid corsage.
A reception given by the parents of the bride was held in the church fellowship hall. Jane Brooks of Greenville presided at the guest register. The cake was served by Edna Mills of Black Jack and punch was poured by Mary Barnett of Hobucken, aunt of the bride. Rice bags were distributed by Jeffrey Bates and Steven Bates. Good-byes were said by Amy and Don Barker of Ballston Spa, N.Y., brother and sister-in-law of the bride.
After the rehearsal, a
MRS. DANIEL PATRICK LAURION
cookout and pool party was given by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bates and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Williams Jr.
The bride attended D.H. Conley High School, The bridegroom is employed by Northeast Container Company, Dover, N.H
The couple took a wedding trip to Atlantic Beach.
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Guest Speaker: tiecky Truelove McLeod Becky grew in a Christian atmosphere and early committed her life to the Lord as an early church leader. She realized she couldnt serve Him effectively in her own strength and found her life renewed by the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
The story of her open confession and healing was published in the March, 1982, edition of Guidepost Magazine.
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4-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, July 5,19S3
EditorialsWorkable Budget
The Pitt County Commissioners last week approved a $27.93 million budget for fiscal 1983-84.
The budget holds the tax rate of 54 cents per $100 valuation which has been in effect for two years.
The budget provides for a 4- to 8-percent across-the-board pay increase but freezes an incentive pay program which began last year; We wpuld prefer that it were reversed. The county could get far more productivity for its money if it used its funds to reward those who are most efficient. The budget does contain funds for continuation of the longevity pay plan which compensates those employees who remain with the county.
There were disturbing cuts in the school capital outlay funds which we hope will not have an adverse effect on adequate maintenance of the city and county school facilities.
Beyond that, however, the budget seems to be one which can carry the county forward. A capital reserve fund of $563,700 has been established and programs over which the commissioners have little control, such as social services, are funded.
The county commissioners have held the tax rate and we assume the did so while still providing well for the present and growth needs of the county. That is as much that we as taxpayers can ask of our commissioners.An Endless Cycle
A proposed increase in tuition for the state university system pinpoints the endless cycle that many people find themselves in these days.
Art major Lauri Daughtry pointed out in a recent Daily Reflector news story that the proposed tuition increase probably will not be a problem for her because she receives financial aid and holds a job while attending East Carolina University.
She concluded, If I didnt have a loan, I probably wouldnt be able to go to school. It just costs so much these days.
That same article pointed out that financial aid available to students will be increased to cover the higher tuition.
If that occurs, then some of the'burden of finding more money for college will be delayed especially for the students who need financial help in getting an education.
But as Ms. Daughtry pointed out, it is truly an endless cycle: you borrow to be able to go to college so that you can qualify yourself to make more money to pay off the loan.
That leaves the other students, those more fortunate ones who are able to attend college without outside financial help. The proposed increase $35 a semester for in-state , students isnt that much, but it could be enough to break their financial planning.
We hope not. The state, so long as it maintains its existing tax structure and its distribution of funds, also has limited money to spend. A tuition increase is one of the few means available to supplement educational revenue.
Until the state reshapes its budget, personal budgets are destined to suffer.
Elisha DouglassStrength For Today
^James KilpatrickThe Power Of A Coiled Spring
There is a religious leader in this country who, until he was nearly 30, was a dangerous criminal. He was in and out of jail from his childhood on. He came from a good home and his father, as long as he lived, stuck by him.
At last, after some particularly bad conduct in prison, he was sentenced to solitary confinement. Here, in desperation and near physical collapse, he had what not one person in a million has a vision of heav
enly things. He was healed of all criminal tendencies and after leaving prison became an outstanding Christian leader.
We would not want to convey the impression that an experience of this sort is normal, but the stupendous change made on this criminal does show that there are spiritual powers at work in the world probably at work on all of us trying to transform us and lift us to higher levels.
WASHINGTON - Seven years ago, when the country was cau^t in the patriotic throes of a bicentennial celebration, much was said and written about the Declaration of Independence. My impression is that since then, the Declaration has slipped back into that vast sea of documents that are often cited but seldom read.
Viewed simply from a literary standpoint, the Declaration would stand forever as a remarkable accomplishment. Jefferson was its principal author. The committee for drawing the Declaration of Independence desired me to do it, he wrote in his autobiography. It was accordingly done. But the other four members of the committee also had a hand in the drafting, and their work then had to go to the Congress.
As every writer knows, it is exceedingly rare that anything worthwhile emerges from a committee. It is still more rare that a document is improved by editing andamendment on the floor - but that was the case here. Jeffersons purple language relating to slavery was
eliminated in compliasance to South Carolina and Georgia, thou{^ our northern brethren also felt a little tender under tlx^ censures; for though their pe(^le had very few slaves themselves, yet they had bei pretty considerable carriers of them to others.
The pusillanimous idea that we had friends in England worth keq)ing terms with, still haunted the minds of many. For this reason, those passages which conveyed censures on the pecle of England were struck out, lest they should give them offense.
Congress made other changes. In Jeffersons original version the second paragraph, with its recital of general grievances: ended with this sentence: To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid World for the truth of which we pledge a faith yet unsullied by falsehood. The Congress happily put a period after World.
The result of these accommodations and compromises was a taut document with the power of a coiled ^ring. But the enduring beauty of the Declaration lies in
the simplicity with which Jefferson expressed great and complex ideas about the rights of man and the role of government Ideas that may seem conventional in our own time but were wildly radical then.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable ri^ts, that among these'are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.
To be sure, in the context of human slavery the assertion that all men are created equal has to be read metaphysically. But note especially the proclaimed right of mankind to the pursuit of happiness. It was a perfect phrase. We have no right to catch happiness, only to pursue it. Incidentally, that word happiness appears a second time in the ad(^ted text, and was used yet a third time in Jeffersons original draft.
In a single phrase, the Declaration then sums up the whole purpose of government. It is to secure these rights that governments are instituted among men.
\' /
7 think the natives are more than restless, sirs!
Paul T. O'Connor
Everybody Wants A Change
RALEIGH - Pity the poor North Carolina Constitution. Every time the Legislature comes to town, the Constitution comes under fire from hordes of politicians who want to change her. If the Constitution were a person, shed no doubt have a severe inferiority complex.
Since the Consitution was adopted in 1971, the General Assembly has asked the voters to approve 19 amendments. The voters have obliged on 15 of those requests. Theres so much eraser dust on the Constitution that a citizens group, the Committee for Constitutional Integrity, called for constitutional changes that would slow down the amendment process. So far, theyve gotten nowhere.
At the assembly this year, it seems everyone wants to play James Madison. To date, nine amendments have been proposed by 45 different legislators, counting co-sponsors. One has passed. One has been killed. Another has gotten through the House and is now before a Senate committee.
In November, 1984, the voters will be asked to ratify an amendment to the constitutional qualifications for attorney general and district attorneys. If the amendment passes, youll have to be a licensed lawyer to hold either of those two jobs.
The dead bill would have turned the political situation at the department of Education on its head. State school board members would have been elected. (Theyre now appointed.) The superintendent of public instruction would have been appointed. (Hes now elected.)
The House has passed a proposed amendment that would allow the assembly to create agencies to finance the construction of agricultural facilities. State revenue bonds would be issued but public money could not be used.
Still to be acted iqwn are six proposed amendments. The one which attracted the most attention was proposed by Sen. Donald Kincaid, R-Caldwell. He wants to put a constitutional limit on the length of legislative sessions. Kincaid would limit the assembly to 70 legislative days in odd-numbered years and 20 days in even-numbered years. Several bUls have been proposed that would limit sessions statutorily and it is almost certain that if any limit is ^proved, it will not be Kincaids amendment.
Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston, likely challenger of U.S. Sen. John East in the 1986 election, has a proposal that would give the citizenry the right to propose legislation concerning taxes and fees. It would create for the first time in the
state an initiative procedure. If five percent of the registered voters signed a petition endorsing a tax or fee bill, then the bill would go directly to the voters. If the bill won, it would become law.
Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamaiice, wants the percentage growth of the state workforce limited to the growth of the states population. Sen. Cary Allred, R-Alamance, wants counties to have the right to exempt property from the inventory tax a power now reserved to the assembly. Rep. Charles Hughes, R-Henderson, wants it clear in the Constitution that someone convicted of a crime can be required to pay the cost of prosecution, imprisonment or restitution. His amendment specifies that that money would not be required to go to the school fund.
And then there is Rep. B, Holts amendment which would limit votes on constitutional amendments to the November general elections in even-numbered years. Her bill would also create a Constitutional Amendments Publications Commission that would publish an explanation of all proposed constitutional amendments. With all these amendments, you see, Mrs. Holt thinks the Legislature ought to tell the public what theyre voting on.
The Daily Reflector
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Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Tough Choice Faces President
WASHINGTON - Just as President Reagan is trying to warm up relations with the Kremlin, he must decide what to do about the third Soviet test of a new long-range missile, secretly described by Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Air Force analysts as more than twice the size allowed by the SALT II treaty.
The CIA has sent its analysts back to restudy their data before sending it on to the White House, putting a hold on one of todays most important government secrets. But there is little doubt about validity. Administration officials were shocked by the clearest evidence so far of one-sided Soviet missile cheating. Thus, Reagan must decide whether to publicly accuse the Soviets of SALT II violations even though he may not consider the time ripe for confrontation.
Thats because the president is trying to moderate his Cold War rhetoric and shed the Genghis Khan cloak, bestowed on him by Democrats, in time for the 1984 election. But Reagans staunchest supporters in Congress, who have been dismayed by his past reluctance to confront Moscow on SALT II violations, will demand that he face up to the damning evidence once it reaches the OvIlOffice.p^
The Soviet missile, designated the PL5, underwent its third teit May 30. This was the first test which the U.S. was able to scrutinize by special radar screens operated from an electronic ship, well-known to the Russians, stationed in the Bering Sea off the coast of Siberia.
Normally, radar readings are not nearly so informative as telemetry readings from the missile during its fli^t, but the PL5s telemetry was heavily encrypted. Radar scrutiny did reveal this central fact: The throw weight (payload) of the PL5 appears slightly more than 200 percent of the throw weight of the old SS-13.
The significance of that ratio derives from the fact that SALT II, which Moscow and Washington have agrwd to obey even though it never was ratified, permits only one new type missile each for the two superpowers. The Kremlin has condiKted four tests on what the U.S. regards as the one permissible new type Soviet missile, designated the SSX24. Thus, the PL5 cannot be a legal new type missile.
But SALT says the throw wei^t of a modernized or follow-on missile cannot exceed the original by more than 5 percent. Yet, the Soviets have informed the U.S. that the PL5 is a fdlow-on of the
SS-13, not a new type missile. Clearly, then, if Air Force and CIA analysts are even close to being right in estimating a 200 percent in throw weight, the PL5 is a new type missile, not a modernized SS-13. Summed up, the radar ship caught the Kremlin cheating red-handed.
When the CIA and Air Force Intelligence first received radar data from the May 30 test, they sent it routinely to the Foreign Technology Division of Air Force Intelligence and to the governments Lincoln labs In Cambrldg, Mass. Examination of the data in both laboratories produced substantial agreement on throw weight. These findings were returned to the CIA and the Air Force.
Air Force intelligence officers argues for immediately sending the alarming report on the PL5 to thie White House, State Department, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA) and Department of Energy. But CIA officials worried about implications of so wide a dissemination. Despite months of W'hite House hints about going to the mat with the Russianson alleged SALT violations, Reagan always has decided that evidence of cheating has fallen short and pulled
back at the last moment from charging a violation.
The CIA finally decided it did not want the heavy responsibility of sending the president what looked to be Irrefutable evidoice of cheating, boxing him in a corner. Once he received the evidence, Reagan would have no exit from a major confrontation with Yuri Andropov at a time he might not want it.
Accordingly, the CIA ordered the data sent back to the labs for more study. It also ordered major efforts to break the encryption code of the missiles telemetry
- in itself a probable violation of SALT II
- to learn the PL5s secrets from its own reports back to Soviet earth stations.
But that can only delay the decision for Ronald Reagan. Both his political advisers and the State Department, taking differenct routes, have arrived at the same destination: agreement that now is the time for some U.S.-Soviet reconciliation, specifically a new arms control agreement. Just at this point, ironically, the president soon will have on his desk evidence of Soviet cheating soblatant that it could produce an outcry menacing even U.S. adherence to SALT II.
Copyrigit 1983 Fj^ld Enterprises, Inc.
To the extent that government denies the people their ri^t to pursue happiness in their own unoffending ways, government does wrongly. The operative word is secure, from which we derive the national security. This is the first obligation of government, to make secure our right to life and to liberty. Every other function of government ta behind.
The Declaration of 1776 ends with two paragraphs that carry a ring of irony today. At a time when our right to the free exercise of religion increasingly is hedged about, we may recall that the Founding Fathers appealed to the Supreme Judge of the World for the Rectitude of our Intentions. They put their firm reliance, on the Protection of Divine Providence.
There was a time when schoolchildren were expected to memorize at least the first two paragraphs and the last two paragraphs of the Declaration. In our own time, if Divine Providence were to be invoked in a classroom on a Monday, the teacher would be haled into court on Tuesday. Its no bad idea, I submit, to get back to Jefferson at least once a year.
Anne Crowley-Focus
MIAMI (AP) - A generation of Cuban immigrants is coming of age in politics here.
Economically successful and aided by a change in Floridas voting law, thi immigrants have gradually shifted their focus from the plight of Cuba to the politics of America.
Cuban-Americans, a third of Dade Countys population but just 20 percent of its voters, arent ready to sweep a statewide election yet, but they have three representatives in the 160-member Florida Legislature and their reach can already be felt in Washington.
Their impact is absolutely tremendous, said state Rep. Ileana Ros, one of three new Cuban-born legislators.
Its not like five or 10 years ago, when people didnt care to get involved in politics, said Julio Mendez, operations director at WQBA, a Spanish-language radio station.
The longer we stay here, the more we learn about the system, the more people are going to become voters, Mendez said. And more and more Latins are going to get into politics.
Paul Cejas was the first Cuban to win a countywide election when he was voted onto the school board in 1980, and George Valdes followed his lead, joining the Dade County Commission last year. Ms. Ros and two other Cuban Republicans benefited from Floridas change to single-member legislative districts, winning seats in the Florida House last November.
, Before the change, the larger districts had tended to dilute the ethnic vote.
As of June 1, 139,816 of Dades 710,858 registered voters were Hispanic, and the vast majority of those were Cuban, said Joe Malone, the countys assistant supervisor of elections.
The Cuban influence is much heavier in Dade Countys cities, especially Miami, Hialeah and Sweetwater, where Cuban-Americans make up the largest bloc of voters.
The mayors of Hialeah and Sweetwater are Cuban, as are two of Miamis commissioners. Miami Mayor Maurice Ferre is Latin, too, but hes of Puerto Rican heritage and won his last election by virtue of Anglo and black support.
'This new political movement has its roots in Fidel Castros rise to power in 1959. The Cubans who fled his communist regime never intended to stay here, but as they settled and turned Miami into a business center for all of Latin America, their attention ^adually turned to government and politics.
Until about 1976, everybody was so concerned about what was going on in Cuba, they overlooked the concept of politics in this country, said Humberto Cortina, another of the Cuban legislators.
But the owners of growing businesses discovered things they wanted to change and found the only way to do that was through the political system. They started by lobbying, making campai^i contributions and urging Cubans who held U.S. citizenship to register and vote.
As registrations increase, the more appealing it becomes for Hispanic candidates to run for office. The chances of victory are greater, said Ms. Ros.
One thing leads to another, said Rafael A. Penalver Jr., an attorney who is chairman of the governors Commission on Hispanic Affairs. Once you record (economic) accomplishments like that, people are going to listen to you. Among those listening are President Reagan and his advisers, who like the staunch conservatism and anticommunism of most Cubans. As a result, the Cuban-American National Foundation, which lobbies in Washington, was able to lure Reagan to Little Havana for a one-day visit last month.
Cubans, who gave Reagan massive support in the 1980 election, like the presidents policies on Central America and Cuba.
Another pet issue for Cubans Is Radio Marti, a Reagan pn^iosal to broadcast anti-communist propaganda into Cuba. Despite opposition from the U.S. broadcast industry, the proposal has been voted out of committee in the U.S. Senate and found favor in the House.
Weve seen the image of the loud, obnoxious, crazy Cuban ... the Ricky Ricardo, said Ms. Ros. But many of the people involved (in the foundation) are soft-spoken and analytical. Weve cleared up our image.
With many more Cubans yet to gain citizenship and voting rights, she said, only growth can be ahead for this political movement.
I lie ucMy i\
'Solidarity' Immigrant Finds Freedom In U. S.
CONSnrunONS salute - The 185-year-old frigate U.S.S. Constitution, the worids oldest commissioned war^, fires a salvo as part of its annual 21-gun salute and turnaround
cruise Monday in B(^ton Harbor. The Constitution is turned around and berthed in the c^posite direction once a year so her masts and iron sides weather evenly. (AP Laserphoto)
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Independence Day had a special meaning for a former Solidarity activist and his family who moved to Raleig^ last week, giving up their Polish homeland for freedom in the United States.
Jan Wolicki said Monday that he and his family had found the United States to be different from Poland and nothing like Poles told him it would be.
Better, he said. We were told we would not have freedom.
Wolieki, his wife and three children left Poland after Wolicki was imprisoned twice for his activities with the Solidarity labor union. He said there was no problem with leaving the country because the government wanted him to go.
The family, sponsored by Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church, is living with a Raleigh family until an apartment they have re
nted is available.
Wolicki, who speaks little English, said he was first arrested Dec. 13, 1981, the day martial law was declared and Solidarity headquarters were taken over.
He said police took him to a station at midnight and
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, July 5,1963-5
terned, Wolicki said through the Rev. Willie Houle, who acted as an interpreter for an interview.
"When we went to the police to ask where they were, the police said, If you dont know where your husband is, how would we? his wife. Mirolawa.said.
Wolicki said he was not allowed to return to his former job as an electrician after his release from the internment camp and lost his pension.
then interned him for two months. He was charged with contributing to articles in a Solidarity newspaper and supporting the union.
The hardest part was that the families didnt know where we were being in-
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Armed Robbery Investigated
Greenville police are investigating a Monday night armed robbery at a local restaurant that saw a lone intruder escape with two bank bags and an undetermined amount of money.
Police said the robbery at Wendys at 103 Greenville Blvd. occurred when a man armed with a revolver walked into the rear of the restaurant and ordered the employees to lie on the floor behind the front counter. The man told manager Michael Kallock to open the safe, according to police.
The employees told officers the man fled on foot with the money.
No injuries were reported in the 10:09 p.m. incident.
Two Traffic Accidents Investigated
No injuries occurred and no charges were preferred as a result of two traffic accidents investigated Monday by Greenville police.
A car operated by Ronald David Rice of 2603 E. 10th St. sustained damages estimated at J500 when the vehicle left South Evans Street south of Sara Lane and struck a state owned sign before hitting a wooden fence.
Police said damages to the fence, located on the pn^rty of Lee McDaniel of 100 Pinewood Road, were estimated at $40. while damages were set at $25 to the fence. The wreck took place around 7:14 p.m.
Vehicles operated by Susan Page Anderson of 203 N. Elm Street and James Junior Levy of 308 Paris Avenue received damages estimated at $200 each in a 10:17 p.m. mishap on South Greene Street at West Fourth Street.
Radio Guest Announced
City Manager Gail Meeks announced that the guest on the City Hall Notes radio program today will be Hansy Jones, childrens librarian at Sheppard Memorial Library.
Mrs. Jones will discuss summer programs for children at Sheppard and its branches.
The program will be aired at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.
Maritime Safety Bill Introduced
First District Rep. Walter B. Jones, chairman of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, said he has introduced legislation aimed at improving the safety of the American maritime community.
The Farmville Democrat said, The intent of my legislation is to improve the maritime safety environment without imposing onerous burdens upon those in the maritime community.
He said the bill: increases the penalty for operating without a valid Coast Guard certificate of inspection from $500 per offense to up to $5,000 per day; requires a vessel owner to report to the Coast Guard when a vessel has not been heard from in 48 hours; requires the master of the vessel to report to the owner within every 48 hour period; authorizes $5 million for each of fiscal years 1985 and 1986 to cover up to 50 percent of the cost of installing satellite telecommunications syterns on merchant vessels; and permits the Coast Guard to investigate all acts of marine incompetency or misconduct committed by any person licensed by the Coast Guard.
Jones said the bUl is based on information acquired during full committee hearings on the disappearance of the U.S.-flag vessel S.S. Poet in 1980, the sinking of the oil rig Ocean Ranger in 1982, as well as investigations of other major marine c^ualties.
Brown Graduate From Greenville
PROVIDENCE, R.I. - Susan C. Warshauer, dau^ter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Warshauer of Greenville, received the A.B. degree in history during graduation ceremonies at Brown University held earlier in June.
By ALISON SMALE
Asociated Press Writer
MOSCOW (AP) - Yuri V. Andropov met with West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl today, 24 hours after the Soviet leaders sudden cancellation of two meetings with his guest raised questions about his health.
The meeting, announced by the official news agency Tass, is the first Andropov has held with the head of a NATO government since becoming Communist Party
Marathon
Exhausting
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Neither rain nor wind could stq) Firestone High School band marathoners from trying to break the worlds record for continuous play, even when their music flapped in the breeze and they had to head for cover.
What finally got them, after 874 hours, was plain old exhaustion.
The 22 students had been trying to break a Guinness Book of World Records enti7 of 100 hours, 2 minutes, set in> 1977 by a Maryland high school band.
The marathon was called off at 5:30 a.m. Monday, said Donna Curfman, wife of Firestone band director Scott Curfman.
The kids had just finished a 45-minute sleep break. They were really disoriented. They couldnt shake off the dream state and play again. she said.
After each tune, the children took a one-minute break. They were allowed a five-minute break every hour, or they could save up the five-minute breaks for some sleep.
Current and former band members began playing at 2 p.m. Thursday. They played in a tent most of the time, but three times had to go inside to avoid heavy winds and hi^ rain, Mrs. Curfman said.
As the marathon wore on, People were amazed they could play at all, said Mrs. Curfman. They were almost better than when they started.
leader last November following the death of Leonid 1. Brezhnev.
Tass gave no (tetails of the morning meeting, saying only that the two leaders have had a conversation at the Kremlin today.
Andropov, 69, has seemed frail in recent public appearances and his abrupt cancellation of his meetings with Kohl on Monday for personal reasons led Western observers to believe he was ill.
The Foreign Ministry summoned West German
Ambassador Andreas Mayer-Landruth early Monday and told him Andropov would forego Mondays scheduled talks and a state banquet at the Kremlin.
Mondays cancellation was so sudden that there was barely time to telephone Kohl with the change of plans before he boarded his plane for Moscow, West German sources said.
The chancellor told journalists with him on the plane that he did not see the cancellation as a aiub and
accepted Andn^vs excuse of personal reasons.
West German delegation sources said afta* the brief meeting today that it was clear that Andrqpov had cancelled Mondays meeting fmr health reasons. They said Andropov was suffering a a sli^t disability in moving his left hand.
The sources, vdio asked not to be illentified, quoted Andropov as saying it was my de^)est desire to be there (Monday) but it couldnt be.
The concern caused by Mondays sudden move dis-
Actor Richard Burton Is Wed For Sth Time
LONDON (,AP) - Actor Richard Burton has married for the fifth time, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported today.
It said 57-year-old Burton married Sally Hay this time around, at a private ceremony in New York on Monday. It said Miss Hay, in her mid-30s, is a former BBC television production assistant.
The couple reportedly met in Vienna, Austria, at the beginning of last year when Burton was working on the movie Wagner. She was working as a script assistant on the set, the BBC said.
Burton has been married twice previously to actress Elizabeth Taylor and has been starring opposite her in a Broadway production of the Noel Coward comedy Private Lives for nearly two months.
But the BBC said that off-stage. Miss Hay has been his constant companion. It said she has been staying with Burton at his New York hotel suite.
Though the BBC reported the wedding was held in New York, it quoted the manager of the Lombardy hotel where
Wholesale Auto Parts Complete Line
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Burton is staying as saying Monday night that the couple was in Los Angeles and he knew nothing about a wedding.
Staff at the Lunt Fontanne theater where Private Lives is showing also were reported surprised at the news. They have not seen Burton for several days as the show has been temporarily closed because Miss Taylor has a throat infection.
Repeated attempts to reach Burtons West Coast publicist Valerie Douglas by telephone for comment were unsuccessful. There was no answer at the phone number listed for Zev Bufman, producer of Private Lives, and calls to Fred Nathan, the shows publicist, were an
swered by a recorded message.
Burtons last marriage, to model Susan Hunt, former wife of British racing driver James Hunt, ended after six years in 1982. ,
His new bride had not previously been married. When newspapers first noted their frieiKfajp in June last year, the wealthy Welsh-born actor was quoted as saying: She is very young and innocent, so I dont want to put her in the glare of publicity.
placed what bad beoi the main focus of Kohls trip the East-West tpiarrel over nuclear arms in Europe.
At the Kremlin dinner Monday, Kohl and Soviet Premier Nikolai A. Tikhonov, substituting for Andropov, said they believed there still is time to reach agreement at the U.S.-Soviet talks in Geneva on limiting nuclear missiles in Europe.
The North Atlantic Treaty Orgai^tioo has pledged to start installing 572 U.S.-made medium-range missiles in Western Europe by year-end if the Geneva talks fad. NATO says the missiles are meant to counter a Soi(iet buildup of more than 350 SS-20 medium-range missiles aimed at West European targets.
I appeal to the Soviet Union to make possible a balanced result at the talks, Kohl said. I agree with the Soviet government that it is not too late.
Tikhonov said there is still a possibility for...an agreement at Geneva and we call for making use of it.
He dwelt on what he called the need for agreement and for equal levels of nuclear arms between East and West, but coupled this with a warning that the Soviet bloc would take measures
without dday to respond to any NATO defdoyment of the new missiles.
Like previous Soviet statements, Tikhonovs ^)eech - reportedly the text Andit^v would have read if he bad been present at the banquet - did not say what the Soviets plan to do if new U.S. missiles are ^tioned.
West German officials familiar with the talks held Monday between Kohl and Tikhonov indicated they amounted to little more than a restatement of positions on the missiles issue.
The Soviets most influential new^per, the Communist Party daily Pravda, indicated there would be little progress on the missiles' issue in an article today that reiterated Moscows objections to U.S. disarmament pn^wsals.
U.S. offers amounted to no more than a mirage of reasonableness and are part of a pre-planned deadlock Washington has arranged to install the Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in Western Eun^, Pravda said.
A Soviet source said prior to Kohls arrival that the Kremlin was now resigned to at least the initial deployment of Pershing 2s In West Germany and cruise missiles in Britain and Italy, scheduled for this fall.
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10 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine, WINSTON LIGHTS 100's: 12 mg."tar", 1.0 mg. nicotine, WINSTON KING: 15 mg."tar", 1.1 mg. nicotine, MORE FILTER, MENTHOL: 16 mg."tar",1.3 mg. nicotine, WINSTON 100's: 17 mg "tar" 12 mg nicotine, CAMEL FILTERS HARD PAC.K, SALEM KING, WINSTON BOX: 17 mg."tar", 1.3 mg. nicotine, SALEM 100's: 17 mg. "tar'',1.4 mg. nicotine, CAMEL REGULAR: 21 mg."tar", 1.6 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarette by FTC methodWarning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
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Stock And Market Reports
Hogs
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP (NCDA) - There was no trend on the North Carolina hog market today. Kinston 44.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville. Dunn, Pink Hill. Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level. Laurinburg and Benson closed, Wilson 44.50, Salisbury 43.50, Rowland
44.00, Spiveys Comer 44.00. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 34.00, Fayetteville unreported. Whiteville 34.00, Wallace 33.00, Spiveys Corner 34.00, 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. The final weighted average was 47.92 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market tone for next weeks trading is steady to firm, mostly steady, and the live supply is moderate for a very good demand. Weights light. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Tuesday was
1.698.000, compared to 1,810,000 last Tuesday.
Hens
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was about steady. Supplies fully adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter were too few to quote.
NEW YORK (AP) - Stock prices took a sharp drop today amid new worries about the outlook for Federal Reserve credit policy and interest rates.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials fell 14.42 to 1,210.84 by noontime.
Losers outnumbered gainers by about 5 to 1 among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
Late Friday, before the long July 4 weekend, the Federal Reserve reported a $600 million increase in the basic measure of the money supply.
The news came as a disappointment to traders who had been looking for a decline in the money supply to help ease fears of credit-tightening by the Fed.
Interest rates in the credit markets jumped in late trading Friday and again today. Over the weekend speculation mounted that the Fed might be planning a move, such as an increase in the discount rate, to try to slow monetary growth.
The NYSEs composite index tumbled 1.28 to 96.63.
At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was down 2.43 at 242.27.
Volume on the Big Board totaled 30.83 million shares at noontime, against 33.13 million at the same point
Friday.
NEW YORKlAPi
-.Midday stocks
Hi^
Low
Last
AMR Corp
3f-,
37'4
37>,
AbbtLobs
48*
48
48
Allis Chaim
I8'4
18
18
Alcoa
37
36*4
36,
Am Baker
17
16*4
16*4
AmBrands
47,
47*
47,
Amer Can
43*4
43*,
43*
Am Cyan
4,
46'4
4'4
AmFamily
21*4
21*4
21*4
Am Motors
9*
9
9
AmStand
33
32*4
32*4
Amer T4T
64',
63*
63',
Beat Food
26'
25,
25
Beth Steel
23*,
22*4
22*4
Boeing
44\
44
44'
TUESDAY
7:00 p.m - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:30 p.m. - Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church
7:30 p.m. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m - Toughlove parents support group at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 7:30 pm. - Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group atllON Warren St.
8:00 p.m. - Pitt co. Alcoholics Anonymous at AA BIdg, Farmville hwy.
8:00 p.m. - Narcotics Anonymous meets at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church
WEDNESDAY
9:30 a.m. - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 1:30 p.m. - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. - Kiwanis Club meets 6:30 p.m. - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 7:30 p m. - Winterville Jaycees meet at Jqycee Hut 8:00 p m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg on Farmville hwy 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., F^^villehwy.
Boise Casco Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coip CaroP>U Celaoese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot For .McKess Fuqua Ind GTE Corp GnDvnam GenlElect s Gen Food Gen Mills Gen .Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GLNor .Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM
Inti Harv
Int Paper
Int Rectif
Int T4T
K mart
KaisrAlum
KanebSvc
KrogerCo
Locklieed
Masonite n
McDrmlnt n
.Mead Corp
MinnMM
Mobil
.Monsanto
NCNB Cp
NabiscoBrd
Nat Distill
NorflkSou
OlmCp
Owenslll
Penney JC
PepsiCo
Phelps Dod
PhilipMorr
PhillpsPet
Polaroid
ProctGamb s
Quaker Oat
RCA
RalstnPur RepubAir Republic SU Revlon Revnldlnd Rockwl s StRegisCp Scott Paper SealdPow SearsRoeb Shaklee s Skyline Cp
Sony Corp Southern C
Co
ildOil StdOilInd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide Cniroyal CS Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart WalMart wi WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Wool worth Wrigley Xerox Cp
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30*4 30*4
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42', 42',
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48*, 48',
64*4 64*4
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54\ 54*
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55'4 55*4
71*
32
Following are selected 11 market quoutkms Ashland prC Burroughs
Carolina Power A Light
Collins 4 Aikman
Connor
Duke
Eaton
Eckerds
Exxon
Fieldcrest
Halteras
Hilton
Jelferson
Deere
Lowe's
McDonald's
McGraw
Piedmont
Pizza Inn
P4G
TRW. Inc United Tel Dominion Resources Wachovia
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation
Branch
Planters Bank
47', 47'i
25*4 a 40' 40',
31' 31*,
47*, 47*
46', 46*4
a a',
a a
a a
113 113',
52*4 52',
53', 53',
119 119*
8* 8* 51*, 51V,
a a
41 42*
34' 34*
19*4 19*4
18', 18',
41* 41*
121* 121*, 51*4 51',
22 22
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81 82',
88*, 88*4
a*4 a*i
a a
27* S'
56* a',
31*4 31',
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59*4
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57', 57*4
34*, 34*,
29*
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22 22'
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21*4 21*4
34*, a*
MV, 50*
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23*4 23*4
51*, 51*,
40* 40*
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49*4 49*4
22 22
74, 74*4
34*4 34*4
57 57
14*4 14*4
77*4 77*4
67*, 67*
13, 13
24*4 24V,
a*4 a*.
40 40
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a> s
50*4 50*4
48*, 48*,
37* 37V
57', 57*
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46* 46*4
a.m stock
42*,
a*
21*
41V,
29*
22*4
42',
a*,
a*
34*4
151
a*
a',
34*
a
64',
43*4
37*
16
av,
74',
21
21*
40
27*4
24
19',
Suing Stone Age Motel
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Yabba dabba doo! A court is about to consider whether a motel with a Stone Age theme room is infringing on a copyright for The Flintstones.
Attorneys for Hanna-Barbera Productions Inc. say theyve filed suit in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles against a motel where one room features an early Bedrock decor.
The company is trying to protect its claim to Fred Flintstone - Bedrocks first citizen in the long-running cartoon series - his wife Wilma, baby Pebbles, neighbors Barney and Betty Rubble, and his pet, Dino the Dinosaur.
The lawyers said Monday the Madonna Inn, Mar San Luis Obispo, features a Flintstone Room, a rock-walled cavern that contains likenesses of Fred and Wilma.
It also contains Freds favorite phrase, featured on television since 1964, which the suit contends is spelled wrong.
The lawsuit says Freds phrase properly should end with a word spelled doo, the lawsuit says. The motel incorrectly spells it do.
Hanna-Barbera attorneys say the company owns it eiUierway.
They havent got a leg to stand on, responded motel owner Alexander Madonna, noting that his Flintstone Room has been in operation for the past 10 years.
Cannon Mishap Cost Both Arms
PROVO, Utah (AP) - A cannon misfired during a Civil War reenactment, severing the arms of a 39-year-old man and injuring another man, police said.
Kenneth Huff of Orem was in critical condition following surgery at Utah Valley Hospital late Monday.
A nursing su^rvisor said Huff lost an eye and his arms were amputated below the elbows by the blast Monday afternoon dt the Kiwanis Park in Provo.
The cannon discharged prematurely during reloading during a Fourth of July observance. The cause of the accident was not immediately known, police said.
Joel Clements, 28, of Pleasant Grove, was in stable condition and in surgery late Monday for an injured hand.
Provo police said both of the injured men belonged to the Civil War Association, a group specializing ip historical reenactments.
MASONIC NOTICE There will be a regular stated communication at William Pitt Masonic Lodge Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Work in the fellow craft degree. All fellow craft and master masons are urged to attend.
D.W. Adams, WM Thurston Wynne, secy
MASONIC NOTICE Master Masons of the lOth Masonic District who will be advisors to the Youth Knights will meet at Solid Rock Masonic Hall, Everetts, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
AnniniasC. Smith,
Dqwty
Inmates'Brew Stirs Rampage
MOBERLY, Mo. (AP) -Homemade alcohol brewed by inmates contributed to a prison rampage in which one guard was stabbed to death and five others were injured, officials said.
Guards ended the disturbance by about 35 drunken prisoners Sunday night by firing shotgun blasts into the melee at the Moberly Training Center for Men, said assistant superintendent Jim Jones. By Monday, the me-dium-security pricon had returned to normal, he said.
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Four Small Churches Burned In Texas Town
Obituaries
GAUSE, Texas (AP) -Residents in this town of 500 people expressed shock and disbelief after a nut with a flame in his hand hurled Molotov cocktails into four small churches, destroying two and heavily damaging the others.
No one was injured in the arson blazes that kept firefighters busy for three hours early Monday in this east-central Texas farming town, authorities said.
I didnt believe that we had those kind of enemies in Gause, said Sampson Standiford, chairman of deacons of the Zion Hill church. Everyone here works together and lives together and weve never had any problems like this. Its hard to believe.
It was definitely arson -no question about it, said Tommy Chamberlain, fire marshal in nearby Cameron. All of the fires were caused by a nut with a flame in his hand.
Bottles were found at the scene of each fire, he said.
Milam County Judge Phil Smith set a special commissioners court meeting for today to discuss offering
a reward for information about the fires.
Fire leveled the Per^ Memorial Church of God in Christ and damaged the Stevens Chapel A.M.E. Church and the Hoyte diurch of Christ, just north of Gause, said Milam County Sheriffs Deputy Bill Harris.
Authorities had no suspects or a motive for the fire bombings, which sheriffs dq)uties believe were done by the same person or group of people, Harris said.
We had just done about $5,000 in repairs, said the Rev. Clei^hus Swain, pastor of Perry Memorial Church of God. There have been church services in that old building for more than 50 years. Now its gone. Theres nothing we can do about it. Its just Gods will, I guess. The first fire was reported at 3 a.m. Monday. Volunteer fire fighters from Gause, aided by personnel from the Cameron and Heame fire departments, extinguished all the blazes by about 6 a.m.
Nothing worthwhile was left. It was a total loss, said Swain, whose 64-by-24-foot church had served a congregation of 11.
Missing Child Eludes Search
ROAN MOUNTAIN, Tenn. (AP) - An 8-year-old boy who a neighbor says is friendly and unlikely to run away eluded searchers for a third day Monday, but law enforcement officials say time is running out on the boys chances of survival.
Michael Eugene Reel of Hickory was reported missing on a family camping trip Saturday on Roan Mountain. The search by more than 100 law enforcement officers and volunteers has been hampered by the boys apparent fear of responding to rescuers.
The boys father, Ernie Reel, was calling for him with a bullhorn Sunday, when another searcher heard the boy yell, Daddy, Im coming out, law enforcement officials said. They waited, but never saw him, and an intense search turned up nothing.
He just wont come to the people that see him, said Avery County sheriffs dispatcher Mark Phillips. Evidently hes pretty scared and wont come to them.
That sort of reaction puzzled his Hickory neighbors, accustomed to Michael's winning ways.
Thats not like him, said Nina Black, who lives across the street from the Reelss home. Hes a real friendly boy. Ive never known him to run away.
He wouldnt run away on purpose, Ms. Black said. Hes a good kid. Ive known him all his life. I cant understand it. Theyre going tc find him. We got faith theyll find him. the boy had walked away from a Roan Mountain campsite he shared with his
The City Right-of-Way/Traffic Control Division is responsible for the design, fabrication, and installation of all traffic and street signs and traffic markings.
mother, Patricia Reel, his grandmother, Margaret English, and four sisters, authorities said.
Mondays search ended before nightfall, and although searchers remained optimistic that the boy was alive because he had been spotted and heard. Carter County, Tenn., Sheriffs Department Sgt. Doug Jennings said time mi^t be running out.
If he stays out there much longer, hell suffer, Jennings said.
A woman reported seeing a young boy Saturday with a bowl walking along N.C. 261 near the t(^ of the mountain. Deputies believe the boy had a bowl to hold BBs he was shooting.
Everybodys out there, Jennings said. Theyre working on getting the (Tennessee) National Guard on it.
Jennings said the boy was last seen wearing jeans and a T-shirt, and had no food or water with him when he disappeared. It rained Sunday night and the temperature at the base of the mountain was about 60 degrees, he said.
I'd say it was in the 50s up at the top, Jennings said. Its a good 3,000 feet. And, its a large search area. Id say its more than 10 square miles. Im guessing that from where he was reported missing, its four or five miles from the top.
The Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church sustained several thousand dollars in smoke, fire and water damage and may be beyond repair, the Rev. J.H. Cliapmansaid.
The building is just about gone, Chapman said. Theres a lot to be done, from what I could just see.
We certainly feel sorry for someone like that, Chapman said of the arsonist. We have no feelings of animosity.
Jaruzeiski Given Award
MOSCOW (AP) - Gen. Wojciech Jaruzeiski, the Polish leader, has been awarded the highest Soviet prize, the Order of Lenin, Tass reported today.
The official news agency said Jaruzeiski was granted the award on the occasion of his 60th birthday and "in recognition of his services in the development of the fraternal friendship and cooperation between the peoples of the Soviet Union and Poland.
Jaruzeiski played a prominent role during Pope John Paul IPs visit to Poland last month, meeting twice with the p(^ and pronouncing the visit a success both for the church and the state.
Western analysts in Moscow attached no special significance to the timing of the award for Jaruzeiski.
In a separate report, Tass said the Communist Party Central Committee and the presidium of the Supreme Soviet, or parliament, congratulated Jaruzeiski on his birthday.
In a period difficult for Poland, you... are leading its struggle in defense of socialism and for the earliest overcoming of the crisis and normalization of societys political and economic life, the committee said.
Decided Must Kill Them All
HOUSTON (AP) - Two teen-agers who confessed to the fatal stabbings of four people in a video game arcade decided during a robbery that all the people would have to be killed, a detective says.
James Edward Randall, 16, and his cousin, Richard James Wilkerson, 19, signed businesslike confessions, detective J.C. Mosier said Monday. They had decided that all the people would have to be killed during the robbery Friday, Mosier said.
Wilkerson, a former assistant manager of the arcade, was charged with capital murder.
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Barnhill
Mr. Henry Vernon Barnhill, 67, died Monday in Pitt Memorial Hospital. He resided at 2805 Jefferson Drive.
The funeral service will be' conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Norman Joyner, pastor of the Bethel Baptist Church. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mr. Barnhill was a native of Pitt County and ^nt most of his life in Greenville. He was a veteran of World War II and served in the U.S. Navy. He had been plant manager for UNX Chemicals, Inc., for the past 28 years. He was a Baptist.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Pauline Langley Barnhill; a daughter, Mrs. Pe^y B. Gaskins of Route 1, Grimesland; three sons, Robert S. (Bobby) Bamh of Greenville, John E. Barnhill of Englewood, (>)lo. and E. Earl Barnhill of Route 1, Vanceboro; three sisters, Mrs. Novella B. Powell of Clearwater, Fla., Mrs. Betty B. Smith of Newport and Mrs. Louise B. Ward of Washington; seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.
Haut
Mr. Richard H. Dick Haut, 48, died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
His funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapd by the Rev. Gordon Conklin. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
A retired building contractor, Mr. Haut was a native of Chicago, wIk) had been a resident of Greenville since 1965. He previously had served in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Ann Walker Haut; three sons, Richard Kevin Haut of Black Jack, and Michel Stephen Haut and Daniel Scott Haut, both of Greenville; a daughter. Miss Lorrle Ann Haut of Greenville; and his mother, Mr. Gladys C. Green of the home.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.
McCuUou^i
Mrs. Barbara Jordan McCullough died Monday in Union Memorial Hospital in New York City. She was the daughter of Mrs. Annie Marie Jordan of Robersonville. Funeral arrangements will be announced later.
Bondman Harry James Is Dead
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Bandleader Harry James, one of ine last great talents to emerge from the big band era of the 1930s and 1940s, died early today in Valley Hospital, a spokesman said.
He was 67.
The family spokesman, who asked not to be identified, said James had suffered from lymph gland
Rescuer Injured In Boat Mishap
NASHVILLE, Ark. (AP) -A police captain suffered leg cramps, cuts and bruises after he was thrown from a rescue boat on a rain-swollen creek and spent four hours clinging to a tree branch.
Nashville Police Capt. Oliver Pugh, 36, said Monday he was rescued about 7 a.m. Saturday when officers searching near the flooded Mine Creek heard his shouts and reached him in a boat.
Pugh said he was knocked into the water when he and another officer tried to rescue five children who were trapped in a partially submerged truck. The children, ages 3 through 8, were also -''scued Saturday.
cancer since April.
Despite the illness, James had continued to travel with his band, playing in Denver June 10-11 and a performance in Los Angeles June 26.
James two sons and two daughters had come to Las Vegas over the weekend to be with their father. He entered the hospital Friday.
James, who toured several months a year with his band, was a resident of Las Vegas.
One of his two marriages was to pin-up star Betty Grable, who died July 2,1973.
Scholarship
The 1983 Winterville Jaycettes Scholarship was awarded to Miss Ora Anne Ross during the recent D.H. Conley High School Awards Day presentations.
She is planning to enroll at Pitt Community College this fall to pursue a career in nursing.
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 5,1983Righeffi Snaps Yanks' No-Hit Streak
It's Over
New York Yankees pitcher Dave Righetti jumps into the arms of catcher Butch Wynegar after throwing a nohitter against the Boston Red Sox Monday at Yankee Stadium. It was the first no-hitter by a Yankee pitcher since Don Larson pitched a perfect game in the World Series in 1956. (AP Laserphoto)
NEW YORK (AP) - Dave Righetti was one out away from a no-hitter. At the plate was Wade Boggs with 101 hits - the first player in the majors to reach 100 - and a .357 batting average, second best in the American League.
In the stands at Yankee Stadium, 41,077 fans were standing, screaming and applauding.
I could see everybody was nervous and they were making me nervous. 1 couldnt even look in the dugout, Righetti said. I said, Great, I have the best hitter in the league in that situation.
But Righetti had something to prove.
There was a lot of emotion, a lot of buildup in my mind. I wanted to prove to people that Im an All-Star,he said.
So the New York Yankees 24-year-old left-hander fired a sharp slider past Boggs for his ninth strikeout, completing a 4-0 victory over the Boston Red Sox and the first no-hitter by a Yankee since Don Larsens perfect game in the 1956 World Series.
But his next outing will come in Kansas City next weekend rather than in the All-Star Game Wednesday night in Chicago. The Yankees had recommended the AL take Righetti as a replacement for injured teammate Ron Guidry, who had to beg off, but the nod went to
Baltimores Tippy Martinez.
I wanted to go and represent Ronnie, Righetti said. My pitching shows I deserve it. Im not complaining. The guys who were picked deserve it. I was 8-3 at the time and maybe that wasnt good enough.
Rij^etti is 10-3 now, the no-hitter coming on the heels of his first major league shutout, a five-hitter against Baltimore last Wednesday night.
I didnt talk to him but once the whole game, said catcher Butch Wynegar. I didnt want to break his concentration. When I hugged him, he had tears in his eyes. Then I had tears in my eyes. It was a big thrill.
Not one ball came close to a hit, not a one. We werent very tricky, just fastball-slider, fastball-slider. Ra^ maybe threw five or six changeups. He had outstanding stuff. He was real pumped up at the beginning. But as the game went on, he went to more breaking balls. He began spotting his pitches more.
I tried to stay calm all the way, but when there were two outs in the ninth I got real nervous. I didnt know what to call on that last pitch. At first, I thou^t fastball. Thats his best pitch. But at the last second, I changed my mind. I dont know why.
And Rags didnt shake me off. I would have kicked myself if he had lost his no-hitter on the slider. But Ill tell you, that was some great slider. It exploded down low and kept going.
The Red Sox had pounded Yankee pitching for 37 runs and 54 hits - including nine doubles, a triple and 10 homers - in the last four meetings, but Righetti was hotter ian the 94-degree heat.
I was hoping it was going to get to him and wed catch up to him, but we never did, said Bostons Dave Stapleton. Weve been swinging the bats very good. To no-hit us the way weve been hitting the ball is especially something.
Righetti had watched the Boston bats at work all weekend hitting one king-sized home run after another.
I could have gone out there and had in my mind to knock a few guys down, he said, but they had to hit me and I just went out and shut them down. I was determined the first two or three innings to set a pattern and take the bats out of their hands. I couldnt let them do what they did the last few days.
I didnt have great control, thats why 1 walked four. But I had effective wildness. I had a pretty good fastball to begin with and I kept a pretty good fastball throughout the day and I changed locations. I kept
my slider m on them all day; it was down or in every time.
Boggs routine liner to center in the fourth was the hardest ball the Red Sox hit. The best defensive play came in the eighth when right fielder Steve Kemp jumped and reached into the stands to grab Dwight Evans foul fly.
The no-hitter was the first in the majors since Houstons Nolan Ryan pitched his record fifth one against Los Angeles on Sept. 26, 1981. It was the first regular-season no-hitter by a Yankee since Allie Reynolds hurled a pair in 1951, the second coming on Sept. 28 against Boston. The last no
hitter against the Red Sox was pitched by Baltimores Tom Phoebus on April 27,1968.
The Yankees got the only run Righetti needed against John Tudor in the fifth inning on singles by Kemp. Roy Smalley and Andre Robertson. Don Baylors ninth homer of the season made it 2-0 in the sixth and Kemp added a two-run single in the eighth.
No-hitters are kind of a specialty, said Boston Manager Ralph Houk. Sometimes you dont hit the ball and you get a bloop hit. Youve got to have thin going your way. He had nine strikeouts. That means we didnt have that many chances to get a hit.
Babe Ruth District Tourney Thursday
Righetti Joins Elite Yankee No-Hit Club
No-Hitter Eluded Legendary Hurlers
By The Associated Press
Whitey Ford never pitched a no-hitter. Nor did Lefty Gomez, Ron Guidry or any other left-hander who toiled for the New York Yankees except George Mogridge in 1917.
And no left-hander had ever hurled a no-hitter at Yankee Stadium, the ballpark built for left-handed pitchers as well as left-handed hitters, until Dave Righetti did it Monday.
His four-walk, nine-strikeout 4-0 victory over the Boston Red Sox was the first no-hitter by a Yankee since Don Larsens perfect game in the 1956 World Series - Don lives neai* me (in California) and I see him during the winter at golf tournaments, Righetti said - and the teams first regular-season no-hitter in 32 years.
Righetti said none of his teammates mentioned the no-hitter during the game, but when he went to the clubhouse before the ninth inning he heard it on the telecast of the game.
I dont talk to anyone during a game, but I went back to change my gum, as I always do, and I heard it. I could have killed him, said the 24-year-old Righetti, who has never spent a full season in the majors.
In other American League games, the Oakland As nipped the Texas Rangers 4-3, the Kansas City Royals whipped the California Angels
Sports Colendor
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Baseball American Legion Playoffs Sr. Babe Ruth Jamesville at Ayden-Grifton Pughs Firestone at Kiwanis SoftbaU Church League Oakmont vs. Jarvis First Free Will vs. St. James First Christian vs. Black Jack Immanuel vs. MaranaUia Arlinston Street vs. Memorial Industrial League Pitt Memorial vs. Greenville Utilities
Grady White vs. Empire Brushes
#1
Union Carbide vs. WNCT-TV Wednesdays Sports Bas^
American Legion Playoffs Sr. Babe Ruth Ayden-Grifton at Pugh's Firestone
Jamesville at Kiwanis Softball City League Pair Electronics vs. Whittington Ormonds vs. California Concepts Subway vs. Sunnyside Eggs Liberty vs. PTA
Industrial League Enforcers vs. Fire Filters Empire Brushes 12 vs. Carolina Leaf
East Carolina if2 vs. TRW East Carolina mi vs. Cox Armat(V|e
5-1, the Chicago White Sox trimmed the Minnesota Twins 12-6 and the Milwaukee Brewers downed the Cleveland Indians 8-3. Seat-tle-Toronto and Baltimore-Detroit were rained out, the latter game halted in the top of the fifth with the Orioles ahead 5-4.
The Red Sox, who had pounded out 20 extra-base hits in their previous four meetings with the Yankees, hit several balls hard against Righetti but didnt come close to a hit.
I was determined the first two or three innings to set a pattern and take the bats out of their hands, Righetti said. 1 couldnt let them do what they did the last few days. I didnt have that great control, thats why I walked some people. But I had effective
wildness.
1 had a pretty good fastball to begin with and I kept a pretty good fastball throughout the day and I changed locations. I kept my slider in on them all day; it was down or in every time.
The Yankees scored in the fifth inning against John Tudor on singles by Steve Kemp, Roy Smalley and Andre Robertson. Don Baylors ninth homer made it 2-0 in the sixth and Kemp added a two-run single in the eighth.
Righettis only disappointment came when he learned that he had been bypassed as a replacement on the AL All-Star squad for the injured Guidry.
The ^ys who were picked deserve it, Righetti said. I was 8-3 at the time (10-3 now)
and maybe that wasnt good enough. I had a little anger in my mind. Im good enough -I know it and you know it.
As 4, Rangers 3
At Oakland, Rickey Henderson stole three bases and scored three runs as the As ended Texas four-game winning streak, although the Rangers remained two games ahead of California in the AL West. Henderson, who set a major league record by stealing 130 bases last year and has 42 this season, tied an AL record by stealing seven bases in two games.
In the first inning. Henderson singed, stole second, went to third on a grounder and scored on Bill Almons sacrifice fly. The As snapped a 2-2 tie in the third when Henderson walked, stole second, went to third on another
Central Division Crown Just First Step For USFL Panthers
By The Associated Press
Winning the Central Division championship in tne United States Football Leagues first season is only the first step, says Michigan Coach Jim Stanley.
The Panthers captured the crown with a 33-7 pounding Sunday of Arizona, , which prompted Wranglers Coach Doug Shively to predict: Michigan will win the whole thing.
But to do that, the Panthers have to get by the Oakland Invaders next Sunday in the first.xound of playoffs. And on July 17 in Denver, in the USFLs inaugural title game, they have to beat the winner of Saturdays other playoff matchup between the Chicago Blitz and the Stars in Philadelphia.
Michigan beat out Coach George Allens Blitz for the division title, each team finishing at 12-6 but the Panthers winning by virtue of their two victories over Chicago. Asked how he felt about that feat, Stanley said: Happy, but tired. This is a fine moment - but there are two more games to be played.
The Panthers, who scored the most points in the league (451), fi^ to be solid favorites against Oakland, which managed to win the Western title despite a. 9-9 record and scoring just two more points (319) than it allowed.
Still, as Invaders Coach John Ralston pointed out; Weve played them before and it should work as a plus ^
for us because we beat them 33-27 on March 19. Plus, Arthur Whittington should be available. Whittington, among the USFLs top rushers with 1,043 yards and receivers^ (66 catches for 584 yards) nursed a cracked rib on the sidelines the seasons final two games. The Panthers rushing leader was Ken Lacy with 1,080 yards. The quarterbacks were 1-2 in the league -Bobby Hebert with 27 touchdown passes and Oaklands Fred Besana with 21.
In Philadelphia, Kelvin Bryant, No. 2 in the league in rushing with 1,442 yards, will be testing the sprained ankle which he rested last Sunday in the Stars regular-season finale, a 21-14 loss to lowly Washington.
The Stars Doghouse Defense, which gave up only 204 points, by far the fewest in the league, will be tested by the Blitz, which finished second in the league in scoring with 425 points.
Chicago has two 1,000-yard
rushers in Willie Spencer (1,157) and Kevin Long (1,022) and the leagues leading receiver in Trumaine Johnson (81 catches for 1,322 yards).
When quarterback Greg Landry was injured, the Blitz lost a lot of effectiveness at quarterback and eventually had to trade for Bobby Scott, who had spent most of the season as New Jerseys erratic quarterback. Chuck Fusina, too, was rarely awesome at quarterback for the Stars.
Philadelphia won its regular-season meeting with the Blitz, 31-24 on May 15. The last time we had the game in hand, said Coach Allen. Then we fumbled the ball away three times in the last quarter, they turned it into 21 points and won.
grounder and scored on Almons second sacrifice fly which second baseman Jim Anderson caught just beyond the infield. Henderson doubled with one out in the fifth, stole third and scored the eventual winning run on a sacrifice fly by Rick Peters.
Whenever Rickey goes, the Oakland As go, said Manager Steve Boros.
Royals 5, Angels 1
At Anaheim, Paul Splittorff pitched a four-hitter for his first nine-inning complete game since 1981 and Leon Roberts drove in two runs. Splittorff, who pitched a five-inning rain-shortened complete game against Texas earlier this season, came within one out of what would have been his first shutout in five years until Brian Downings RBI single with two out in the ninth.
The Orioles jumped on Tommy John for three runs in the first two innings. Hal McRaes firstrinning single scored U.L. Washington, who singled and went to second on a grounder by George Brett. After Willie Aikens doubled and John Wathan walked in the second, RBI singles by Roberts and Greg Pryor made it 3-0. Roberts drove in another run with a sacrifice fly in the third.
White Sox 12, Twins 6
At Minneapolis, Greg Walker drove in five runs with a two-run homer and a three-run double, while Dennis Lamp earned the victory with 6 1-3 innings of relief. Vance Law led off the eighth inning for Chicago with a double and pinch runner Jerry Hairston was sacrificed to third. Julio Cruz walked and stole second and Rudy Law was intentionally walked to load the
bases. With two out, Walker, who homered in the sixth, doubled'to clear the bases and give the White Sox a 9-6 lead.
Brewers 8, Indians 3 At Cleveland, Milwaukees Ben Oglivie, selected earlier in the day to replace the injured Reggie Jackson on the AL All-Star squad, celebrated by clouting his fourth career grand slam in the first inning following two-out singles by Robin Yount and Cecil Cooper and a walk to Ted Simmons. Winner Don Sutton allowed three runs' and nine hits in seven innings as the Brewers won for the eighth time in the last 10 games.
The Babe Ruth League will open tournament play at the district level at two sites Thursday and Friday.
Greenville will play host to the 13-15-year-old tournament, involving seven teams. The winner of the double elimination event, which begins Friday, will advance to the state tournament to be played at Bayboro starting July 15.
Meanwhile, in Snow Hill, the 13-year-old district tourney will begin Thursday with a six-team field. The winner in that tournament, also a double elimination event advances to the state tournament in Wilmington, also starting July 15.
In the 13-15-year-old tournament in Greenville, three games are set for the opening day, Friday. At 3:30 p.m., Washington faces Nash County, while Tarboro and Pitt County collide at 6 p.m. The final game, at 8:30 p.m. sends Greene County against Greenville.
Martin County, which received a bye in the first round, faces the Washington-Nash winner at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. That game will be followed by the other winners bracket game and the first of the losers bracket games.
Sunday, two games are slated, one in the winners bracket and one in the losers. Three losers bracket games will be played on Monday, with the finals - going two
f
Baseball Tourneys Open Thursday
games if needed - on Tuesday.
Play in Snow Hill begins on Thursday with two games, Washington vs. Martin County at 6 p.m. and Nash County vs. Greene County at 8:30 p.m.
Friday, Greenville meets the Martin-Washington winner, while Pitt County faces the Nash-Greene survivor.
On Saturday, three games are set, two in the losers bracket and one in the winners. Two losers bracket games will be played Sunday, with the finals on Monday. Again, two games would be played if necessary, to decide the title.
Wayne County Edges Wilson
Wayne County, seeded third in the Area I East playoffs, gained a 13-12 victory over Wilson last night in the first game of their best-of-three first round playoff series. Wilson had taken an early 10-2 lead before Wayne rallied to pull it out.
Meanwhile, fourth seeded Rocky Mount defeated Kinston, 12-10, in the first of their best-of-three series.
Pitt County, the winner of the regular season title, has a bye in the first round, and Snow Hill, seeded second, has been awarded a forfeit victory over Edenton. Pitt will face the Rocky Mount-Kinston winner starting Saturday, while Snow Hill is to face the Wayne-Wilson survivor.
The Greenville Little Leagues begin their postseason tournament play on Thursday with six games scheduled - three in each league.
Action begins at Elm Street in the Tar Heel Little Lea^e with the Exchange meeting the Moose at 2 p.m. They will be followed at 4 p.m. by Wellcome vs. Pepsi-Cola, and First Federal against True Value Hardware at 6 p.m.
Top-seeded Carroll & Associates will face the Exchange-Moose winner at 4 p.m. Friday, with the other winners colliding on Friday at 6 p.m. The finals will be held Saturday at 2 p.m.
In the North State League, the Optimists meet the Kiwanis at 2 p.m. at Guy Smith Park on Thursday. Union Carbide faces the Jaycees
at 4 p.m., followed at 6 p.m. by Coca-Cola and the Lions.
Sportsworld, the league regular-season champ, takes on the Optimists-Kiwanis winner at 4 p.m. Friday, with the other two survivors meeting at 6 p.m. The finals will be Saturday.
The two league winners will then meet in the City Championship, a best-of-three series beginning Monday, July 11, at Elm Street. Games will be daily at 6 p.m.
Catcher Darrell Porter of the St. Louis Cardinals was rated a high school All-American as a quarterback at Southeast High in Oklahoma City.
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Cardinals Still In Race Despite Hurts
By Tbe Associated Press Keith Hernandez is gone. Lonnie Smith was out of action for a while and Joaqvin Andujar is having an off-year.
Yet. the defending world champion St. Louis Cardinals are only two games out of first place in tbe National League East at the All-Star break following Mondays doubleheader ^lit with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
"I consider us lucky," St. Louis Manager WTiitey Henog said after the Cardinals lost the opener 7-2 before winning the second game 11-4.
If you had told me in spring training that Bob Forsch and Joaqum Andujar would be 10-17 in July, I wouldn't think wed be a contender.
Darrell Porter belted a grand slam and Ozzie Smith drove in three runs with four hits in the St. Louis victory. The Pirates took the first game behind Jason Thompsons three-run homer.
In other NL games, Philadelphia downed New York 4-0, Atlanta belted Cincinnati 0-5, Houston edged Los Angeles 54, San Diego held on to beat San Francisco 4-3, and Montreal swept a doubleheader from Chicago, winning the opener 6-3 and taking the second game 4-2.
St. Louis ripped Pittsburgh starter Jim Bibby, 3-9, in the first game and finished with 18 hits, four by George Hendrick. Ozzie Smiths 4-for-5 performance raised his average from .191 to .205.
"That looks a lot better, Herzog said.
Neil Allen, who was 2-7 when the New York Mets traded him and Rick Ownbey to St. Louis for Hernandez last month, started and won the second game. Allen, 3-1 with the Cardinals, gave up a three-run homer to Richie Hebner and Bill Madlocks solo blast.
The victory raised St. Louis record to 40-39. Montreal leads the division while Philadelphia is a half-game ahead of the Cardinals. St. Louis has been hurt by the loss of Lonnie Smith, who missed time while undergoing treatment for a drug problem.
plus a poor season so far from Andujar, who is 4-11.
Rick Rhoden, 6-7, pitched a complete game in tbe opeoer while Tony Pena and Madlock each had three bits and a run batted in.
Pittsburgh is now 34-42 and 64 games behind Montreal.
"Teams have come from farther back in September than we are, Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner said. I guarantee you Im baj^y with the position were in now.! Phillies 4, Mets 0 A holiday crowd of 52,710 saw Steve Carlton throw a four-hitter and strike out nine to regain tbe all-time strikeout lead.
Carlton, 9-9. now has 3,569 career strikeouts, eight more than Houstons Nolan Ryan. It was Carltons 294th lifetime victory.
Bob Dernier squeezed home the games first run in tbe third inning and Joe Lefebvres RBI triple made it 2-0 in the fourth.
Rookie Walt Terrell. 1-3, hit Kiko Garcia with a pitch to force home a run during a two-run sixth.
Expos H Cubs 3-2 Chicago began tbe day just two games behind front-running Montreal in the NL East. But Andre Dawson and Gary Carter made sure the Cubs wouldnt catch the Expos.
Dawson belted two home runs, giving him 17 this season, and doubled while Carter also homered as Montreal won the opener, ending the Expos five-game losing streak and snapping Chicagos six-game victory string. Carter also homered in the second game.
Scott Sanderson, 5-6, won his first game since May 27 in the nightcap, though he left the game in the seventh inning when he hurt his thumb following a ^ill over first base while riinning out a grounder.
Montreal Manager Bill Virdon later said Sanderson may go on the disabled list because of the injury.
Braves 9, Reds 5 Chris Chambliss had three run-scoring singles while Claudell Washington and Dale Murphy added three hits
apiece in Atlantas 14-hit attack, which - coupled with Los Angeles loss - moved tbe Braves into first place in the NL West for the first time since May 5.
Chambliss had an RBI single in the Braves three-run first inning, drove in another during a three-run fifth and singled home another run in a
two-run sixth.
Pete Falcone raised his record to 7-1 aftw taking over for Ken Dayley in the foiffth.
Nick Esasky drove in four Cincinnati runs with a three-run homer, his third, and a sacrifice fly.
AstrosS, Dodgs4 Jose Cruz led off the bottom of the ei^th inning with a
home run, breaking a 4-4 tie and giving Houston the victory
Tbe iKMner, his sixth of tbe season and third in three games, pinned tbe loss on Steve Howe. 2-3.
Houston knocked,out Fernando Valenzuela by scoring three runs in tbe sixth to take a 4-2 lead.
Planters Wins Tourney Title
Bobe Ruth Leogue
Planters Bonk 10
Everette's.........2
Planters Bank, winners of the Babe Ruth League in the regular season, came back to down Everettes Pest Control in the finals of the league tournament for the championship Sunday night.
The game story was inadvertently omitted from yesterdays paper.
Planters got all it needed in the first inning of the game, scoring five times. With one down, Chris Jones reached on an error and stole second. He scored when Monty Atkinson reached on an error. Rodney Harris walked and stole second. Tyrone Jones also walked, loading the bases. Tom Taylors grounder got Atkinson at home, but left the bases loaded. Greg Jones then doubled in both Harris and Jones, and Taylor and Jones both scored when Galloway was safe on an error.
Planters went on to add three in the second and one each in the fourth and fifth. Everettes two runs came in the fourth.
Planters, which had moved into the finals in the winners bracket was forced to a second game Sunday when Everettes, the losers bracket finalist, took the opening game, 5-4.
Jones led the Planters hitting with two, while no one had more than one for Everettes, which got only three off the hurling of Harris,
The game wound up the season for the league.
Little Uogue
North State 17
Tar Heel..........16
The North State League dads got a lead-off home run from Mike Aldridge in the bottom of the sixth inning to gain a 17-16 victory over the Tar Heel fathers in the annual Pops All-Star game during Moose Field Day for the Greenville Little Leagues.
The Tar Heel dads moved out with three runs in the first, as Don Parrott homered, but the North Staters rallied with siijiruns in the bottom of the
frame, on homers by Aldridge, Bily Kuykendall and Dave Gordon. Lee Hemrick homered for a run by the Tar Heels in the second, while the North Staters got two more as Aldridge and Kuykendall again homered.
The Tar Heel pops rallied with five in the third, includ-ing homers by Chris Christopher and Hemrick, with the North State scoring twice. The fourth saw the Tar Heels scored six more times, with Jack Foley, Christopher and Hemrick again homering. The North State fathers added three with Billy West and Aldridge again getting homers.
The North Staters added three more inthe fifth, for a 16-15 lead, with Dan Powers, Gordon and Mitchell Jones homering.
The Tar Heels tied it up in the top of the sixth on a Grant Jarman homer, but Aldridges fourth homer of the day won it for the North State dads in the bottom of the sixth.
In the field day events, winners were selected in two age groups, 9-iO, and 11-12.
Mitchell Jones of the Optimists won the 9-10 age group for base running, while Greg Willoughby of True Value Hardware took the 11-12 group.
Rives Mann of First Federal (9-10) and Wes Mackenzie of Pepsi-C61a (11-12) were the winners in infielders throw for accuracy. William Gibb of Union Carbide (9-10) and Andy Everett of Moose (10-11) were the outfielders throw for accuracy winners.
In the catchers throw for accuracy, the winners were Jason Smith of Carroll & Associates (9-10) and Jeff Burnett of Union Carbide (11-12). Winning the pitchers throw for accuracy were Mann (9-10) and Adam Nobles of Wellcome (11-12).
Jonathan Powers of Union Carbide took the 9-10 home run hitting contest, while Michael Cox of First Federal won the 11-12 age group. Drew Johnson of First Federal (9-10) and Tim Moore of Sjwrtworld (11-12) were the winners in throwing for distance.
Winnina Wave
After Uuung tbe checkered flag, Buddy Baker salutes fans at the Firecracker 400 NASCAR race at the Daytona Motor Speedway Monday.
Baker ran out of gas just before the finish but was able to coast over the finish line ahead of the pack to gain the win. (AP Laserphoto)
Baker Holds On As Gas Runs Out In Final Lap
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - All Buddy Baker could do at the end was hold onto the steering wheel and hope nobody showed up in his rear view mirror.
Baker was out of gas and coasting through the last lap of Mondays Firecracker 400 Grand National stock car race, on the way to his first victory in 62 starts.
The engine was sputtering on the backstretch and then it quit, but I knew I could make it to the finish line. I knew I had it won, but...
Bakers Wood Brothers Ford Thunderbird rolled quietly across the finish line 3 seconds ahead of the speeding Buick Regal of second-place Morgan Shepherd.
David Pearsons Chevrolet was a distant third, followed by Ron Bouchards Buick and a frustrated Terry Labonte, whose Monte Carlo also coasted slowly across the finish line.
Labonte had been leading Baker going into lap 159 of the 160-lap event at Daytona International Speedway, but he ran out of gas and watched helplessly as Baker shot past.
What can I say, the car just ran out of gas, Labonte said. I didnt have any idea it was going to run out. I actually thou^t I had enough (to finish).
For Baker, it was a sweet victory - his first for the Wood Brothers, who he came to this season, and his first since winning the Winston 500 in May of 1980.
Im more excited for the Wood Brothers and (sponsor) Valvoline han for myself, said the 42-year-old Baker, who now has 19 career Grand National victories. They gave me a chance when I needed it.
We all needed a win, though. Weve come close
before this year. The combination has been there, but we just havent had the luck we had today (Monday) .
It was the eighth Firecracker victory for the Wood Brothers. No other team has more than two.
Baker, who picked up $32,950 from the total purse of $327,440, averaged 167.442 mph.
The race was marred by just three caution flags and one accident.
The last of the three caution periods began on lap 79 when the right-rear tire on Dick Brooks Thunderbird blew and Brooks spun between turns 2 and 3 on the 2.5-mile high-banked track.
Bobby Allison; the defending race champion and the current Winston Cup point leader, braked quickly to avoid Brooks and was struck in the rear by Richard Petty. Allison then slammed into the ginning Brooks.
There were no injuries, but the crash eliminated Brooks and Petty and kept Allison and Neil Bonnett, who also damaged his car running through the debris from the accident, from contending the rest of the day.
Labonte took the lead during the ensuing pits stops and built an 11-second margin over Baker before having to pit again for fuel on lap 122. He actually ran out of gas as he approached his pit and had trouble restarting the car, costing him valuable time.
Baker ducked in for gas two laps later and, with a typically fast Wood Brothers stop, came out in the lead.
Labonte, his car running very strongly, charged back from seventh place into the
top spot, passing Baker and Bouchard on lap 150.
At that point, with the end in sight. Baker began to plot strategy.
Baker lost tbe Daytona 500 last February when he went into the last lap leading the race and saw three drivers, led by Cale Yarborough, slingshot past him at tbe end.
That finish has gnawed at him ever since.
That win should have been mine and the Woods, Baker said. I give that race away from first place and, this time, I was going to run second if a paper bag was in first on the last lap.
When it was pointed out be could also have lost from second place, Baker grim^ and said, At least I wouldnt look dumb again.
Labonte interrupted Bakers thought process when he suddenly slowed between the third and fourth turns.
When youre going 200 miles an hour and the guy ahead of you slows to 160 in a heartbeat, you pay close attention, Baker explained. It was just a reflex to cut (the wheel) right, and I just hooked it around him real quick.
When something like that happens, its like coming around a comer and finding a car backing out of a driveway in front of you. You have to react real quick and have a little bit of luck.
The main thing, though, was that the car outhandled everybody today. Leonard Wood and all the boys did a good job. The car was just flawless.
Steve Sax singled in two Los Angdes runs to tie it in tbe sevoith. Steve Yeagers 13tta homer accounted for tbe Dodgosfirst two nms.
Padres 4, Giants 3 Mark ThurnxiQd, making his secofld start in tbe majors, wtm his second game with some clutch relief by Gary Lucas.
Sixto Lezcano drove in two runs with a triple and a sin^ as San Diego took 4-1 lead against Mike Knikow, 5-5.
But Joel Youngblood, who smacked a solo homer in tbe fourth, driUed a two-run homer to pull San Francisco within 4-3 with no outs in the top of tbe eighth.
Tbe Giants thi proaeded to load tbe bases against Eric Show, who was making his first relief appearance of the season, with three strai^t singles. That brou^t on Lucas, who earned his nmth save by getting Tom OMalley on a fly ball and inducing pinch hitter Rich Murray to hit into a double play.
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Tennis Has Shed Cloak Of Dignity For Big Show
By WILL APSpedall
(WILLGRIMSLEY I Correspondent WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Theyve wrap(^ up another Wimbledon, tbe 96th over 106 years. Late next month tbe big show settles down at Flushing Meadow for the U. S. Open. Then what?
Tennis, as a sport, sheds its cloak of dignity and credibility and becomes just another globe-girdling medicine show.
This way, ladies and gentlemen, ane see John McEnroe bash his racket over a net post.
In tbe stadium, Jimmy Connors, the flying disc with the loudest grunts in captivity.
For 15 bucks we give for your pleasure the cold Czech assassin, Ivan Lendl.
Hurry, hurry, hurry. See it now.
Bigtime tournament tennis is in a mess.
Agents have wrestled control from the establishment, which appears at a loss to take remedial measures. Top players have become arrogant and ind^ndent, with their agents help milking tbe game of its life blood with utter disregard for tbe ^rt itself.
Under-the-table payments are rife. Agents hold tq>-ranking players ransom, demanding illegal appearance money for tournaments which need a drawing card to survive.
There is stirring among tbe hundreds of lesser players whose presence is ne^ed to make the show authentic. A revolt could be in the offing.
These spear-carriers have a legitimate gripe. They say tbe rich are getting richer, top players lopping off the biggest portions of the prize money and also demanding secret payoffs to show up. A revolt is not improbable.
There is probably $50 million paid out in a year in appearance money, said Mike Davies, the executive i director of the Association of 1 Tennis Professionals.
So what can the tennis brass do about it?
Very little, said an influential spokesman of the tennis hierarchy.
The promoters wont admit theyre paying it. Neither will the guys.
Evidence is almost impossible to get.
There are 78 tournaments on the world-wide Grand Prix schedule. Milan has been
for next year. Rot-and Stuttgart are under fire. These are just drops intbebuck^.
An^r drop in tbe bucket, in the player category, is Guillermo Vilas, the A^^n-tine, who has been suspemled for a year and fined $20,000 for transgressions involving appearance money.
The players are fighting it. John McEnroe, Sr., a New York Wall Street attorney, is pleading tbe players case.
I am a capitalist, tbe elder McEnroe said here last week. I believe an individual should be permitted to make whatever he can.
TTiis is a touchy issue. Opposition of the run-of-the-mill players is understandable. Yet the bigger stars insist on getting what theyre worth.
Its hard to fault the players except that they show very little reg^ for the sport and its tradhtions. They should look at bow the pro golfers (^rate.
The trouble with bigtime tennis is that it has let itself get out of the hands of the people who should adminster it and fall into the hands of agents.
The agents own the game -tbe two main ones being Donald Dell, a Washington, D. C., attorney who heads Pro-Serv, Inc., and Mark McCormack, who started with Arnold Palmer and now has a world-wide player agency empire called International Management Group.
Between them, they control most of the tc^ players. Dell, who started with his old Davis Cup team of Arthur Ashe, Stan Smith, (Hiarley Pasarell and others, has a thriving stable consisting of Ivan Lendl, Yannick Noah, Jimmy Connors and others.
McCormack built Bjorn Borg into an $8 million-a-year commodity and added several
top men on the tour. McEnroe beI(M)gs to his lawyer dad.
Dell not only serves as agent for top players but administers the Grand Prix tour, promotes rival tournaments, sells exhibitions and negotiates TV contracts which use him as a commentator.
Despite conflicts of interest, these massive entities have such clout that they can woo promoters all over the world
GTA Wins Net Match
The Greenville Tennis Association defeated the Brigadeer Tennis Team from Kinston 7-2 Monday at the River Birch Tennis Center.
The GTA will host the Ebony Racquet Club of Raleigh July 16.
Summary:
Nelson Staton (G) d. Ricky Cooper, 6-3,6-2.
Marvin Hardy (G) d Billy Gooding. 6-3.6-2.
Bobby Short (G) d. Dwayne Canady, 6-0.6-4.
Leon Johnson (G) d. Levi Rasberry,6-2,6-l.
Richard Harrison (G) d. Garland Walker, 64), 6-2
Graylin Johnson (G) d AnUiony Rouse, 1-6,6-3,6-2.
Gooding-Cooper (K) d. L Johnsbn-Staton, 6-7,6^, 6-3
Bobby Wilkins-Hardy (G) d Rasberry-Canady, 7-5,6-2
David Brown-Walkr (K) d. Elvin Tuten-Bemard Haselrig, 6-3,7-5.
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Gomez Recalls First Mid-Summer Classic
SCOREBOARD
TheDailyReflecu>r,Greenville,N.CTuesday, July 5,1-11
CHICAGO (AP) The year was 1933 and baseball decided it would help Chicago celebrate its Worlds Fair with a unique idea, an All-Star Game matching the best playws in the two leagues against each other The starting pitcher for the American League was Lefty Gomez, who had a distinctly southpaw view of the world. He reflected on that first game assignment on the eve of Wednesday nights 50th anniversary game in Com-iskey Park.
Lets see, noted Gomez. Fifty years ago. I miet have been five
He was, in fact, 24 at the time, a flame-thrower who was a natural for the All-Star starting assignment. Before the game, Gomez said, American League Manager Connie Mack went over the National League lineup with his pitcher.
Paul Waner, fastball hitter; Wally Berger, fastball hitter; Bill Terry, fastball hitter; Their first five guys were fastball hitters and I was a fastball pitcher. I told Mr. Mack that would be tough. Gomez survived the problem, pitching three shutout innings and even delivered a single, driving in the first run of the game.
He set back the designated hitter 40 years, said teammate Joe Cronin.
Gomez frowned.
1 only had one weakness at
the plate, he said. The pitched ball. When I got to first base, about aoo people fainted."
Cronin and Gomez were among 13 of the 13 survivors from the 1933 Game who accepted invitatioos to appear at the Golden Anniversary Game - Bill Tory and Woody English were unable to make it. The 13 spent thr time telling tall tales on each other while the 1983 Stars prepared for this years Game.
The current stars held workouts at Comiskey Park today after two oldtimers team ^iced their reunion with a game of their own.
I hope it doesnt go long, observed Gomez, because rigor mortis might set in
Dick Bartell, the National League shortstop, brought along his original glove, a beat-up modd that looked like it bad grabbed its share of ground balls. He pounded the pocket lovingly.
The American Leaguers laughed when they saw it, but it was good to me, he said. I caught more than I booted with with it and when it got in there, it waait easy to get out.
Ben Chapman, the AL left fielder and leadoff batter in 1933, ^ared at Cronin, who mana^ him for one year with Boston.
They said I had a quick temper, Chapman said, but he had a quick release. I batted .340 and he traded me
Records Set At Sports Festival
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) - Take that, Mark Spitz!
The National Sports Festival, blasted by Olympic swimming champion Spitz last week as a joke, an exercise in futility and an event in which none of the top-notch athletes compete, got the last laugh.
Festival V ended its 12-day run here Sunday in spectacular fashion. Two scintillating world track records in the mens and womens 100 meters - a 9.93 by Calvin Smith and a 10.79 by Evelyn Ashford - capped a festival that featured other outstanding performances by:
-Greg Louganis, the worlds best diver who won two gold medals;
-Swimmers Jeff Kostoff and Michelle Richardson, each of whom won three gold medals;
-Gymnast Scott Johnson, who tied his own festival record of seven medals, five of them gold;
-Gymnast Kelly Garrison, who suffered burn-out two years ago at age 13 but rebound^ to win six festival medals, including three golds.
In addition, this countrys best amateur boxers, led by super heavyweight Tyrell Biggs, used the festiv^d as trials for the Pan American team.
And the 1984 U.S. Olympic hockey team was selected Monday at tlie conclusion of the festival competition. Named to the squad, which hopes to repeat the United States stunning gold-medal performance of 1980, were such first-round National Hockey League draftees as Brian Lawton, Pat LaFon-taine and Tom Barrasso and 1980 Olympians Phil Verchota and John Harrington.
Festival successes werent confined to the athletic arenas, either. Organizers announced that the ticket sales had exceeded $700,000, virtually assuring a profit for the second strai^t year, and that attendance set a festival record, topping 200,000. The track competition on Sunday drew 13,500 sp^tators, and all four gymnastics events were contested before capacity crowds of 7,200.
Except for some concern about whether portable bleachers would be delivered in time for the track competition, the festival came off without a hitch. The Spitz incident, in fact, was the only real controversy.
After his remarks were published in a Knight-Ridder News Service report, festival organizers, U.S. Olympic Committee officials and athletes alike angrily counter-attacked. Spitz later issued an apology and claimed he had been misquoted by the reporter. Whatever damage had been done to the festivals image was obviously forgotten, and repaired, by the
subsequent performances.
The most dramatic, of course, were the 100-meter records, which came within 15 minutes of each other on a sunny Sunday afternoon at the 7,200-foot elevation of the Air Force Academy track. Ashford, 26, of Venice, Calif., who earlier anchored the womens 400-meter relay team that just missed the world mark, > was timed in the 100 in 10.79 seconds, clipping two-hundredths of a second off the old mark set by East Germanys Marlies Gohr last month.
I wanted to come here and run under 11 seconds and give Gohr something to think about, said Ashford. Shes got something to think about now.
Then Smith, 22, of Bolton, Miss., shattered a mark that had stood for 15 years - the 9.98 time by Jim Hines in the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. 1 just came here to run as well as I could, said Smith.
While Ashford and Smith set the only world records at the festival, more than 50 American or meet marks were broken.
The site of the sixth festival to be held in 1985 will be announced in December. F.\ Don Miller, executive director of the USOC, said 11 cities are under consideration for the festivals in 1985,1986 and 1987, including such major-league franchise cities as Philadelphia, Washington, Houston, Miami, Cleveland and Indianapolis.
This is the first time so many big lities have been in the running to host the festival, which has been held in Colorado Springs three timesf and Indianapolis and Syracuse, N.Y., one time each.
But Miller said that doesnt necessarily mean the USOC is changing its basic concept of the festival as a training ground, for young athletes, which might best be held outside the glare of competition from big-league sports.
Some day, it may come to the point where it has to be held in a metropolitan area of one million or more, he said. But we will face that problem when we get there.
Former Cosmos Coach Dies
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) - Hennes Weisweller, who coached championship teams in three nations - including the Cosmos of the North American Soccer League -died today at his home.
Weisweiler, who was 62, died of an apparent heart attack, according to a spokesman ,for the Zurich Gra^shoppers.Weisweilers death came only a few weeks after he led the Grasshoppers to the Swiss title.
the next year.
Prince Hal Schumacher, the only member of the four-man NL pitching staff who did not work in the 1933 Game, was asked what be remembered of the event.
My most vivid memory, be said, is that I was 50 years younger.
The NL will have considerably more pitching help Wednesday night than it did in the first game.
Manager Whitey Henog selected a lO-man staff and six of the huriers - Jesse Orosco of the New York Mets, Bill Dawley of Houston, Dave Dravecky of San Diego, Atlee Hammaker of San Francisco, Pascual Perez of Atlanta and Lee Smith of the Chicago Cubs - will be making their All-Star debuts. Moritreals Steve Rogers and Fernando Valenzuela of L(k Angeles, the NLs starting pitchers in the last two All-Star Games, both worked on Monday.
Harvey Kuenn, manager of the AL Stars, made his second roster change Monday, naming Milwaukee outfielder Ben Oglivie to the AL squad as a replacement for injured Reggie Jackson of California. Oglivie had finished fourth in the fan balloting. Earlier, Kuenn bad substituted Baltimore reliever Tippy Martinez for Ron Guidry of New York on his eight-man pitching staff. One AL pitcher. Matt Young of Seattle, worked on Monday.
The Americans will be trying to snap an 11-game losing streak. They trail in the series 34-18-1 dfter once leading it, 12-4. Gomez, the winning pitcher for the AL in the first game, was asked what the modem American Leaguers were doing wrong.
He paused for a moment and then offered an answer.
Were not getting enough runs, he decided.
Toronto
Baltimore
Detroit
New Vort
MUwaiAee
Boston
Cleveland
BoseboH Sfondings
^ ne AMded Proi AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pet
539
397
3
436
WEST DIVISION Texas 44 34 564
Caliionua 42 36 531
Chicago 40 37 519
Kansas City r 36 507
Oakland 37 43 463
MinoesoU 33 48 407
Seattle 30 51 370
SMardafsCanies Toronto?, Seattle 6 Baltimore 7. Detroit 2 Texas 13. Oakland 3 Milwaukee 6. Clevelaiid 5 Boston 10. New York 4 Chicago 4. Mumesota 2 Kansas City 5. Calilorrua 3 SoBdtay'sGames Seattle 4. Toronto I Detroit 10. Baltimore I Boston 7. .New York 3 .Mionesou 4. Chicago 3 Caliionua 5. Kansas City 2 Texas 16, Oakland4il5innings) Clevelands. MUwaukee2 MoodaysGaioe* ChicagD 12. Mmnesou 6 New York 4. Boston 0 Milwaukee k. Cleveland 3 Kansas City5. Caliionua 1 Oakland 4. Texas 3 Seattle at Toronto, ppd . ram Baltimore at Detroit, opd . ram TocadiysGames ssdieduled
GB
1
2
2
44
44
10
2
34
44
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124
154
SwUn'iGaaes
Philadetphia 6, New York 4 St Loins4. Pittsiiiirg|i3 Cincinnati 1 Atlanu I Chicago?. Montreal 4 San Diego 4. San Francisco 1 Houstanl Los .Angeles 1
Moadi^Gaas Pittst)urgb7-t.St Lotus 2-11 MootrealM. Chicago 3-2 Philade^4.NewYorke .Atlanta 9. Cmcmnau 5 Housloo5.LosAMeies4 San Diego 4. San Francisco 3 TuendaT** Ganes No games sdiedued
Wettaeatay'iGnne All-Star Game at Comiskey Chicago, mi
Park.
Leogue Leaders
Bv The Associated Preas NATIONAL LEAGUE B.ATTLNG 1180 at batsi-Hendnck. StLouis. 347. Knight. Houston, 336, Easier. PittsburghT 333, .Murphy. AUanta. 324: Dawsoa Montreal. 321, Madlock. Pittsburg). 321.
RUNS-Muiphy. AtlanU, 76. Garvey, 64. Raines Montreal. 60.
Wilson. .New
.No games i_______
Wetesday'sGame
All-Star Game at Comiskey Chicago, ini
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Park.
EAST DIVISION
W
Lffi
Pet.
GB
Montreal
41
36
532
Philadelphia
31
36
514
Iz
St Louis
40
39
506
2
Chicago
38
41
481
4
Pittsburgh
34
42
447
64
New York
30
50
.375
12-,
WEST DIVISION
AUanU
49
31
613
_
Los Angeles
47
31
603
1
San Diego
41
38
519
74
Houston
40
40
500
9
San Francisco
39
40
494
94
Cincinnati
34
47
420
154
San Di^. ____
Evans, San Francisco, 57.
York. 49
RBI Dawson. Montreal. 65. Hendnck. StLouis. 58 Murphy, Atlanta, 58 Guer rero. Los Angries, 50. Evans San Francisco, 49, Garvev, San Diego. 49 TKenne^. San Diego. 49 HITS^Dawsoa Montreal. 99, Them. Houston. 99 Oliver. Montreal. 96 Garvey. San Diego, 93. Hendnck. StLouis. 93. Muiphy. .AUanta. 93 DOUBLES-Knight. Houston. 21 Buckner Clucago. Dawsoa Montreal. 20. JRay. Pittsburgh. 20. Oliver .Montreal. 20 TRlPLES^Butler. AUanU. 8. Moreno. Houston. 8: Dawson. .Montreal. 6. Raines .Montreal. 6. 5 are tied with 5 HOME RUNS-Evans, San Francisco 19. .Murphy. AllanU. 19. Dawson. Montreal. 17. Guerrero. Los Angeles. 17 Schmidt. Philad^u. 15 STOLEN BASES-Raines. Montreal. 34: Wilson. New York, 30. LeMasIer. San Francisco, 27. SSax. Los Angeles, 27 Moreno. Houston. 26 PITCHING 17 decisionsi-Falcone. Atlama, 7 1. 75, 2 58 .Monteiusco. San Diego. 7 1, 875. 4 38, Ryan. Houstoa 7-1. *75, 1 94 PPerei. AUaitta. 10-2, *33. 2.38; Rogers. Montreal. 12 3 800.2.77 STRIKEOUTS-Carlton
AUanta. 10. Lebmith, Clucago. 10 Lucas. San Diego . 9
AMERICAN LEAGL'E BATTING 1110 at batsi Carew Caliionua. 403. Brett. Kansas City. 364. Botts. Bostoa 356 Gniiey. New York. JSjrThomtoaClevetand. 324 RUNS-Yoimt. Milwaukee. 56 DEvans. Boston 53: WWdson Kansas City. 53 Ripkea Baltimore. 52. Ward. Minoesou. 52
RBI-Rice. Bostoa 51. Krttle. Chicago. 56. Cooper. Milwaukee. 54. Ward. .4^ oesou. 52 Franco. Cleveland. 49 L.NPamsh, Detroit. 49 HITS-Boge. Boston. 101. Ward. Min nesou. 97: Wlutaker Detrod. 97 Carew. Caliionua. 93. Rice. Bostoa 92. WWilson Kansas City. 92. Yount. MUwaukee. 93 DOUBL&McRae. Kansas City. 24. Boggs. Bostoa 23. Hrbek. Minnesota. 23. LNTamsh. Detroit, 23. Benuiard, Seat-Ue.21
TRIPLE:^riitia Toronto 6: 7 are tied wiUi5
HOME RLNS^Rice, Boston 22, Armas. Bostoa II. Kittle. Chicago. II. Cooper. Milwaukee. 16; 4 are tied with IS.
STOLEN BASES RHenderson. Oakland. 42. JCnii. Chicago. 40. WWUsoo. Kansas City. 39. RLaw. Ctuc^. 32. Sample. Texas. 25 PITCHING i< decisions I-Koosman. 6-1. *57. 3 92 RUackson,
157. 4 12 Kisoa Caliionua. 7-2, 771. 32*. Righetti .New York. 10-3. m. 3 26: Sutcliiie. Cleveland. 10-3 76S. 392
STRIKEOUTS Slieb. Toronto. 112. Blyleven. Cleveland. 99 Moms. Detroil. 93: Rigietti. .New York. 86 Sutton. .Milwaukee II SAVES-Quiseoberry. Kansas City. 20. Stanley. Boston 16. Caudill. Seattle. 15. RDavis. Minnesota. 12. Lopez Detroit. II
x-ctinched divisionat lilie >-clinched wild card
Sativday's Game Biraitngiam 29. Tan^ Bav i;
Stmday's Games' Boston :M .New Jersev 10 Chicago 31. Oakland f .Michigan 33 Aruooa 7 Washington 21 Philadelphia 14 Los .Angeles 21 Denver ft
REGLXAR season ElVDS
Transactions
By The AsKciated P-ess BASEBALL American Leamie
BALTIMORE ORIOLES-Placed Jim
Palmer pitcher on the 21-day disabled list TO.NTO BLUE J.AY^S-Placed
10 Lennie Pond Buick Regal 157
11 Harr%Gant BuickRegal 17
12 Ken Kagan Chevrolet .Monte Carlo SS,157
13 Dave Marcis Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS. 156
,14 Bobby Allison Buick Regal 136
15 Bobby HiilinJr Buick Regal. 135
16 Sterling Marlin Chevnget Monte CarloSS. 135
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20 Darrell WaJinp Chevrolel Monte CaiioSS'152
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Mike .Morgaa pitcher on the disabled list Called uo Doyle .Alexander pitcher
Chicago. 6-: Toronfo, 6-1.
USFL Stondings
ByTbeAMociatedPrtM FINAL STANDINGS
Atlantic W L T
X'PhiladeiphialS 3 0
S.N DIEGO PADRES-Removed Mike Couchee pitcher irom the disabled list and optioned him to Las A'egas oi the Paciiic Coast League
FW13AU .National Foothaii League S.AN FR.ANt ISCO 49ERS-Announced the resignation oi Paul Martha vice president general counsel, to become presidetit oi the Pittsburgh franchise in the United Stales Football League United States Football League BIRMINGH.AM ST.ALLIONs^igned Joe Cnbbs. running back, who will join the team m 1984 after playing the 19*3 season for the Buffalo Bills HOCKEY Natmoal Hockey League WINNIPEG JETSSigned Andrew McBam right winger, to a multi vear contract
Firecracker 400
DAYTONA BEACH Fla AP Results of .Monday s Firecracker 400 Grand National slock car race, with tvpe of car. laps completed and winner s average speed in mph 1 Buddy Baker. Ford Thunderbird. 160.
148
23
148
135. Soto. Cmcinnati.
Philadelphia, 124 McWUliW
Pittsburgh. 100. Berenyu Cincinnati. 17, R^rs. Montreal, 85 sAVESReardon. .Montreal. 13 Lave"
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Lavelle. San Francisco. 11, Bedrosian.
Boston New Jersey Washington
' x-.Michigan
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x-Oakland Los Angeles Denver Arizona
11 7 0
6 12 0
4 14 0
Central
12 6 0
12 6 0
11 1 0
9 9 0
Padfic 9 9 0
8 10 0
7 II 0
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Pet. PF PA -
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500 343 326 159
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389 284 304 9 Dale Earnhardt, Ford Thunderbird
222 261 442 158
Chrysler Imperial Tommy Gale Ford ThundertHrd
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78
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16 Jimmy Means Buick Regal. 64
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N.C.Scoreboord
6611^ TOP
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ID aAY A PUMe ^xm&ro(0 WUEM MD PDMTGT AfPOfJY Of IKXlEtJTlVE KAOiOEV ?
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
1
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peuo PjaD6t^V\?
By The Associated Press Baseball Carolma League
Alexandna T. Kinston 3 Winston Salem 7. Lvnchburgi) Soccer .Amencan Soccer League Jacksonville?. Carolina I
U.S. IN A GROUP NEW YORK (AP) - The United States Olympic hockey team is now eligible to defend its title in the 1984 Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
The U.S. team regained a place in the A group in world competition in March when it won the international Ice Hockey Federation championship in Tokyo.
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12-The Day Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Tuesday, July 5,190
A Review
Poverty Inspired Invention In
P/ppin First Rafe Show Overnight's Year
T.i.n book and musical score - W
Take the exciting stage visuals of Gre^rv Buchs scener), Gar\ Weathersbee's dramatic limiting, and costumes by Eaves-Brooks supervised' by Patrice .Alexander. add to that outstanding performances, and lavish it all on an award-winning
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book and musical score -and the end result is first rate entertainment at the East Carolina Siimmer Theater during this independence week.
"Pippin. with a script by Roger H. Hirson and music and lyrics by Stepehn Schwartz, is a thoroughly 20th century feat of transforming a snippet of medieval history into the fabric of stage magic. Un-doubtedly. King Charlemagne, gone from the scene these nearly 1,200 years, would heartily applaud this song and dance biography of his familys life, despite free-play with factual history and 1980s irreverences.
However that may be. the story structure of Pippin provides the narrator (the leading player) with a device to tie together a bouquet of episodes from the lives of the great Frankish ruler, his wife Fastrada. his sons Pippin and Lewis, his mother Berthe, and others close to the family, along with an assortment of peasants, soldiers, and dancing ladies.
Excellent performances abound in this first 1983 Summer Theater musical.
Babs Winn in the role of Fastrada, mother of Lewis and step mother to Pippin, is a beautiful, winsome, sexy schemer whose mind is a sharp match for her shapely body. Hers is the role that includes the shows best known song, Spread a Little Sunshine. Veteran of several summer theater productions, Ms. Winn lowers a great deal of acting, dancing, and singing talent around the stage in this prime role.'
Scott Evans brings an appealing innocence and naivity to his interpretation of Pippin, heir apparent tom between his incurable idealism and the harsh reality of the world about him in his quest for finding meaning in life. He is both the bora loser and ultimate winner, by far the most completely realized character in the show. On one or two occasions, his singing voice did not project quite well enough to be heard easily.
In the role of Lewis, Pippins narcisstic half-brother, Donnie Thibodeaux exhibits a superabundance of erotic male vitality, ef-
IN TITLE ROLE . . . Scott Evans, who portrays the title role in Pippin is shown in the opening portion of the musical, dressed as a student just returned home to be with his family. (Photo by Chris Bennett).
ByFREDROTHENBERG APTelevisioo Writer NEW YORK (AP) - For NBC News Overnight, which celebrates its first birthday tooi^t, poverty is the mother of invention.
We had no corners to cut, says Oieryl Gould, the late-night broadcasts saiior producer. We were left with a $1.98 news, so we had to substitute creativity for money.
Without the budget to commission stories from NBC correspondents, the breezy, literate Ovemi^it has found fresh ways to tell the same old stories, ising reports from affiliates, plugging into foreign broadcasts, patching together outtakes from Ni^tly News and doing video-and-music montages.
People think of us as poor cousins, says Ms. Gould. We get hand-me-downs and leftovers and turn them into good casseroles.
Linda Ellerbee, the shows earthy and uncoiffed coanchor, says: This is a video-exchange club. Were
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fectively cancelling out the characters paucity of brainpower with a hyper projection of physicality.
Ayden-Griftons Joey Pollock makes an impressive Charlemagne (or Charles, as hes named in the show). Pollock portrays the middle-aged king as a man sure of himself as the instrument of power confident in his own philosophy of whats right and wrong -and Pollock sings well too.
Latecomer to the near-end of the show Sharon Lawrence as the widow Cattierine adds considerable luster to Pippin, particularly in her wonderfully wistful number I Guess Ill Miss The Man; and Susan Marrash-Minnerly makes a splendid transition from needle-point chair-bound grandma to the rollicking old lady who belts out fond rememberances of lusty times past in No Time at All.
John Kuhn is effective as the tie-things-together Leading Player, more so in spoken than in singing roles. Other members of the cast give vibrant support as singers, dancers, peasants, soldiers - Aubrey Barnes, Scott Breibart, Su-Su Corbitt, John Courie, Paula Johnson, Vince Kelly, Bob Sharpe, Patti Weeks, Jami Wilkerson, Melodic Wolford; Fred Johnson as the Field Marshal; and young Thomas Leahy as Theo, son of Catherine.
Other observations - a big share of credit for the pleasures of Pippin is due Mavis Ray for the splendid choreography that encompasses a wide variety of movements, dance styles and moods. The orchestra, directed by Michael Biagi, provides a precise, clean beat - only once or twice letting the volume override the singers.
Director Jay Fox confirms
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with Pippin that hes equally talented as director or actor. He maintains a spirited pace without missing out on focusing in on the subtle introspective moments which are important , to the fullest measure of enjoyment from a show like Pippin.
If Pippin is a weathervane for the next three shows, 1983 is going to be a memorable summer for the East Carolina Summer Theater.
JERRY
RAYNOR
(Pippin (^ned Monday night at McGinnis and will play nightly through Saturday, with curtain time at 8:15 p.m. For reservation information, call 757-6390).
TV Log
For complote TV programmittg information, conault your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays OaHy Rafloctor.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
TUESDAY 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8 00 On the Road 8 :30 Our Times 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 Late Movie WEDNESDAY 2 :00 Nightwatch S:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Child's Play 11:00 Price Is 12:00 News9
12:30 Youngand 1:30 As The World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Light 4:00 Special S:00 Hillbillies 5:30 AndyGritfith 6:00 News9 6:30 News 7 :00 Joker's Wild 7:X Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Archie 8:30 Gloria 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch
WITN-TV-Ch.7
Good Intentions
Didn't Pay Off
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Singer Brenda Lee lent her support to a center for the handicapped for the Fourth of July, but despite her good intentions, it didnt payoff.
Ms. Lee, who recorded the hit Im Sorry in 1956, headlined a benefit Monday for the Montgomery Therapeutic Center for the handicapped. In an interview before her performance, she said it was a chance to help out those less able than herself.
But for the center, the event was disappointing.
TUESDAY 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 FamityFeud 8:00 A Team 9:00 R. Steele 10:00 St. Elsewhere 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight WEDNESDAY 5 30 Dark Shadows 6:00 Almanac 7. M Today 7 :25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the '10 :00 Facts Of Lite
10:30 Saleofthe 11:00 Whcelof 11:30 Dream House 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 DaysOfOur. 2:00 Another WId. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Little House 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 FamityFeud 8:00 All Star 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
We didnt make a dime for the handicapped center, not a dime, said Carol Braswell, jamboree organizer and aquatic director at the center.
TUESDAY 7:00 SanfordA 7:30 B.Miller 8:00 Comedy Hour 8:30 Laverne 9:00 3'sCo.
9:30 9to5 10:00 Hart to Hart 11.00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:30 StarskyA WEDNESDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J.Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 GoodAAorning 6:13 Action News 6:^5 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Happening
:30 Sanford A 00 TooClose :X Loving 00 Family Feud X Ryan's Hope 00 My Children 00 One Life 00 Gen. Hospital 00 Cartoons X W . Women X People's 00 Action News X ABC News 00 Sanford A X B.Miller 00 Fall Guy 00 Gold Monkey 00 Dynasty 00 Action News X ABC News X StarskyA X Mission X Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
We have to raise $25,000 a year, Ms. Braswell said. We ]ust did not get the publicity.
TUESDAY 7 M Report 7:X Old House 8:M Nova 9:M Mirage 10 :W Saudi Arabia 11:M AAonty Python 11;X TBA 12 : W Sign Oft
WEDNESDAY
3:M Teaching 3:X Cooking
o
(po
very good as scavengers.
So, recently, Overnight showed its audirace of news junkies, late-shift workers and nursing mothers these pieces; How Polish TV covered the popes visit, a British Broadcasting Corp. report from Africa and, from a Tucson affiliate, how the vistas from an Arizona observatory have been impaired by the big-city lights.
Some correspondents, when doing stories for other NBC broadcasts, will some-times remember Overnight. Its an opportunity to experiment, be more analytical and produce longer pieces. For example, a crew at Cape Canaveral, doing daily news coverage, shot pictures of the rusty, out-of-work launch pads specifically for Overnight. We help peq^le be more creative, says executive producer Deborah Johnson.
In style and content, Overnight relishes its banner as the Not-Ready-for-Prime-Time News. Ms. Johnson says the lead story in its opening news summary often differs from the one on Nightly News. Its better when were different, she says, cheri^ing the time her top story was the final segment on Nightly News, and vice versa. Were a little more offbeat.
Thats attributable to the broadcast starting at I;30 a.m. EDT, the sedentary ways of its audience and the lifter tone of co-anchors Bill Schechner and Ms. Ellerbee. We try to be more interpretative and take more leeway, says Schechner.
And have more fun. Were the only unit at NBC where people go around smiling, says Ms. Ellerbee. Were serious about what we do, not solemn.
If youre up late watching Overnight, youve obviously chosen to be there. We assume its an adult audience, and they have at least as much sense as we do, says Ms. Ellerbee. We can be more subtle. We can assume that they have prior knowledge and read the newspapers.
The anchors, who write their own copy and take turns with a daily essay, receive viewer mail that is
legible, articulate and rations. Much of it comes from pe^le who say theyve never written to a TV show before. If you allow people into your homes at that hour, you react to them personally, says Ms. Johnson.
The Overnight newsroom has a very casual, chummy atmosphere. Balloons and stuffed animals cover the desks, bowls of popcorn shuttle back and forth and. last week, the big news in the newsroom was the arrival of two computer wordprocessers.
Maybe we can teach this thing to write, said Ms. Ellerbee. Or play Donkey Kong, added Schechner.
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The staff of Overnight is dominated by women, and its unique in network newscasts to have women serving as executive and senior producers. Schechner feels this contributes to the shows togetherness.
Its easier for us to express feelings that we wouldnt if we all were the same sex, he says, Its easier to be open and soft, and I like that.
Oy family spirit also has a lot to do with the late hour, says Ms. Gould. Were all in this bunker together.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, July 5,198313
Tar Heels AHark Independence Day In Varied Ways
By Hie Associated Press A blistering sun did not prevent thousands of North Carolinians from celebrating Independence Day with traditional parades, picnics.
fireworks and sporting events from mudslingiRg to skydiving.
In Kernersville, officials had decided there wasnt enough interest to have a
parade. But George Russell Wilson, a 39-year-old cancer patient, had promised his 94-year-old grandmother, Mamie Heath, that shed see a parade.
Says Boys And Girls Going Their Separate Ways in Scouting Field
By MARIO FOX Associated Press Writer KANANASKIS COUNTRY, Alberta (AP) - One of every 20 people arriving for the 15th World Scout Jamboree is female, but the grandson of the movements founder sees boys and girls once again going their separate ways in scouting.
Social morals go in circles. Morality is coming back and, equally, segregation (of boys and girls) is coming back again, Lord Robert Baden-Powell said Monday. Baden-Powell, 46, whose grandfather founded scouting in 1908, heads a coeducational troop in his hometown of Guilford, England.
"In Europe, now, I think, young people want to be se^egated, he said. Its going the other way, and the rest will catch up with Europe on this. Baden-Powell said his grandfather was "shocked at seeing the first troop of girl scouts, because it never occurred to him that little girls would want to play the game of scouts.
While troops in the United States and Canada generally are not mixed, several countries sent coeducational delegations.
About half the 13,600 scouts registered for the jamboree had arrived by late Monday
Plane Crashes In Wake County
FUQUAY-VARINA, N.C. (AP) - A single-engine airplane crashed today in southern Wake County, seriously injuring the pilot, officials said.
The plane went down near Kennebec Airport off N.C. 55 south of Fuquay-Varina about 11 a.m. Wake County deputies identified the pilot as Harlan Veehan, but did not know his age or hometown.
The pilot was taken to Good Hope Hospital in Erwin by the Angier rescue squad. Deputies said he was listed in serious condition, but hospital officials refused to comment.
A witness said the plane circled the area after the pilot had been practicing landings and made several loops. At the top of one loop, the engine stalled and the plane slammed onto a dirt road.
FOUNDERS GRANDSON - Lord Robert Baden-Powell is shown at the entrance to the 15th World Scout Jamboree in Kananaskis Country, Alberta. He is the grandson of the founder of the Boy Scout movement. (AP Laserphoto)
in this rugged country in the Canadian Rockies, about 50 miles west of Calgary, and the rest were expected today.
In preparation for Wednesdays ceremonial opening, scouts set up tents and pursued the jamboree tradition of trading patches identifying their home nations.
They seemed oblivious to some political maneuvering behind the scenes. Taiwan abruptly dropped its plans to send 20 scouts because Canada, the host nation, recognizes the Peoples Republic of China as the only China.
Because of political tensions at home, efforts also were made to separate Israeli and Arab tent sites and those of Northern Ireland from other United Kingdom delegations.
While Baden-Powell said he sympathized with jamboree organizers trying to reduce possible friction, he believed children couldnt care less about adult politics.
The founder would not have fought boy-girl scout troops, nor would he have been surprised that politics
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sometimes interiered with scouting, Baden-Powell said.
On a trip to prerevolutionary Russia, the movements founder saw how the czar used scouts as an arm of government, his grandson said.
Baden-Powells lordship was given first to his grandfather for his scouting work and has been passed from generation to generation. All three generations have been active in scouting.
Given the choice, I would rather not have the name (title), because it is so much responsibility. I just have so much time and my business takes me out of the country so much, he said.
Baden-Powell, a currency broker, said, nonetheless, that on reading his grandfathers book, Scouting for Boys, I wanted to run out of the house and start up a scout troop right out.
The first Lord Baden-Powell, a British army officer and hero of the Boer War, had an idea of how boys could help themselves, his grandson said. He realized that if you had young people growing up with adult responsibilities, they could help themselves tremendously.
So, Wilson took a newspaper ad and invited all comers, with the lone stipulation that he be in the lead car. The result was the towns largest parade in 30 years.
Greensboro celebrated its 175th birthday Monday as the nation celebrated its 207th. The festivities included a parade, games and a look-alike contest with prizes awarded to those looking the most like Gen. Nathanael Greene, Dolly Madison, 0. Henry and other figures from Greensboros past.
In the Old Salem section of Winston-Salem, the British ambassador to the Enited States, Sir Oliver Wri^t, spoke at a celebration honoring the 200th anniver
sary of July Fourth festivities by Moravian settlers.
Wright said the British are willing to let bygones be bygones, and Relations between nations are ultimately a matter of relations between people.
To keep peace, all it needs is all the effort, all the sweat, all the sense of commitment and yes, all the sense of love for other people, he said.
Eleanor Lightner, dressed in a traditional flowing dress and ruffled cap, said the celebration began when peace was announced between England and the United States in 1783.
The Moravians went one
Models Wage Naval Battles
For information on the services provided by the City Public Works Department, call 752-4137.
GIG HARBOR, Wash. (AP) - When members of the North American Scale Warship Combat Club meet to battle at sea, they do more than maneuver radio-controlled model ships. They fire real shot - BB shot, that is.
Its a heck of a lot of fun, said Paul Fleming of Gig Harbor, whose 9-month-old Gig Harbor club is one of four in the Puget Sound area.
On bi-monthly maneuvers, members sail radio-controlled scale models of World War II vessels out on a pond or take.
Fleming said Sunday that most maneuvers pit Allied forces against the Axis, and the war games are scored on an elaborate point system.
Every time the BBs fired from miniature guns hit a ships superstructure, the
Offer Dating Large Women
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Theyre more sensuous. Theyre more womanly. To some men, theyre even more of a challenge.
Thats why a dating service for big women is doing a hefty business, according to Mary Taylor, owner of La Grande Personne. And she said about half her 400 clients are slender men.
Of course, a lot of men wont look twice at large women, but a lot of men admire them. They find them more sensuous, Ms. Taylor said.
There is a certain breed of man who thinks if a woman is a challenge, a big woman is a bigger challenge, said Linda MacDonagh, 35, a client with a size 22 figure.
While 99 percent of female members are 20 to 100 pounds overweight, 95 percent of the men are normal weight, Ms. Taylor said.
One male client, Ken Mayer, 36, who carries 180 pounds on a 5-11 frame, had his own reasons for being attracted to larger women: I find them more appealing from a purely physical point of view. They are more womanly, he said.
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oi^rator chalks up 5 points. Hitting a gun turret is worth 25 points, hitting the sides above the waterline is 20 points and a hit below the waterline adds 100 points.
A sunken ship is worth 1,000 points, while surrender is worth 3,000.
Underwater mines actually balloons anchored beneath the waters surface add another degree of uncertainty to the battles.
An opponent on the other side of the pond cant see the balloons and every ship is required to carry a thumbtack on the bow, just below the waterline.
When you hit one, the balloon sends about a gallon of water into the air, Fleming said, and you have to immediately beach your boat and stop firing.
The battles can decimate the models and Fleming said some club members participate only in nondestructive bi-monthly fleet maneuvers to spare the ships theyve spent hours crafting.
Ken Clary, of Tacoma, said he builds his models with their possible destruction in mind.
Some of the boats are incredible, Clary said. Some of these guys are going to surely cry when they get blown up.
In assembling their battle fleets, each team works with 20 combat factor points. A battleship is eight points, a heavy cruiser four points, and a destroyer two.
Clary said the clubs often use the same strategies and maneuvers used by the Navy when recreating battles. Sometimes, they try to change history.
Fleming is working on a model of the British battleship Hood, which went under during a World War II encounter with Germanys Bismark.
This year, the Hood will sink the Bismark, he said. I guarantee you."
However, at last years national competition in Texas, another Hood was sunk in less than two minutes.
Fleming said the Texas group, the R-C Combat Club, was the first to organize in the country. Such groups now have 180 members nationwide, he said.
step further and made it a day of thanksgiving, she said.
The state Senate took the day off. But the House convened for its regular Monday evening session and held a special ceremony to honor Americas veterans.
Rep. Tom Womble, D-Forsyth, who led the ceremony, asked his House colleagues who had served in World Wars I and II, the Korean War or the Vietnam War to stand, along with those who had lost loved ones in any of the wars. Forty-three of the 108 representatives present rose.
We recognize those persons who have made it possible for us to convene in a free land, said Womble. We are able to do this because youve done a great deal ... endured strict discipline, hardship at times, boredom at times and real danger at other (times).
After a moment of silence, the lawmakers recited the Pledge of Allegiance to the American flag.
In Sparta, the Blue Ridge Mountain Fair included a flea market, parade, mudslinging and bluegrass music. In Raleigh, a free celebration at the State Fairgrounds featured watermelon, music and a 110-foot-long submarine sandwich.
Sky-diving and wheat threshing were part of the 13th annual Fly-in and Threshers Reunion at Denton International Airport in Davidson County. And singer Mike Cross appeared in Chapel Hills Fourth of July celebration at the University
of North Carolina.
In Durham, the 1983 Festival for the Eno at Eno River Park concluded with profits to be used to buy more land for the park, which covers most of 20 miles of the river through Durham and Orange counties.
In Marion, Bruce Edwards became queen for a day when he wowed the crowd at the towns first male beauty contest in his red minidress with blue pantyhose and a girdle,
In Marshall, Madison Countians enjoyed their annual rodeo while feasting op bluegrass and barbecue.
In Columbus, contestants chased greased pigs and rolled barrels before tapping their toes at a street dance like those scheduled in dozens of towns from Lake Lure to Murphy.
In Franklin, the nations oldest wagon train completed its 26th annual trip when 74 wagons and hundreds of horseback riders rode into town. The trip began on June 27 some 118 miles away in Andrews.
In Robbinsonville, about 5,000 people attended the final day of the first Great Smoky Mountains Heritage Festival, a four-day real mountain folk-life event.
Bills Fast Food, Inc.
Corner of 4th & Greene 757-1898
3 Hot Dogs $-|00
for
Plus Your Choice of Regular Chili or Bills Famous White Hot Chili ~
Special Expires July IS, 1983
ONE HOUR PRIME TIME SPECIAL
JERRY FALWELL
PRESEXTS
WATTS 1983
Rciisu Watts in Los Angeles 20 scars ajtcr the riots.
WNCT TV 7:00 pm Channel 9 Tuesday
A
TV VitfM SttiM ApglltKei
WITH COLORTYME YOU CAN RENT A BEHER TV OR APPLIANCE THAN MOST PEOPLE OWN!!!
Amenca's Largest TV/Audio/Appliance Renta! System
TV Video Stereo Appliances
Delivery And Service Included
Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville Boulevard (Next to Kmart)
Hours: Monday Thru Saturday 9 A.M. to6 P.M. Friday 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. Closed Wednesdays (Except July 6)
Phone 355-2101
VOU CAN T 5AV VOU SLEPT WELL UNLESS YOUR HAIR 15 MUS5EP UP
BOY PIP I EVER SLEEP LASTNlEH-^i
BC
vVlTK
tAv^ ME AU^, r HAP M/^^FFEElTEr.
NUBBIN
50 Years of All-Star Baseball
Tomorrow baseballs superstars are scheduled to meet in Chicago for the 1983 All-Star Game. The first All-Star Game was played on July 6,1933 50 years ago also in Chicago. The game was held in conjunction with the Century of Progress Worlds Fair in that city, and the money went to provide pensions for professional baseball players. Fans loved seeing the best players on the same diamond. The star of that first All-Star contest was the legendary Babe Ruth of the American League team, managed by Connie Mack. The Babes two-run homer in the clutch gave the American League a 4-2 victory. Since then, the National League has won nearly twice as many All-Star games.
DO YOU KNOWIn 1982, who managed the winning All-Star team?
MONDAY'S ANSWER-'Semper Fidelis means Always faithful.
VEC, Inc. 19M
I'M SELLING \r A locksmith COURSE
BEETLE BAILEY
TMAT^ TMec"5ECTiOM AMP IT COtJTAlNe "CLA66IFIEP material"
PHANTOM
FRANK & ERNEST
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income.
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7-5
GENERAL TENDENCIES; An opportunity is now afforded you to make some long-range plans where your future security is concerned. You can add to this during the daytime.Utilize charm.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You find new ways of improving your property and also advancing more quickly in career matters. Get started early.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20| Important you put your best foot forward with others today whom you want in your life in the days ahead. Apersonal goal can be reached.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Get out and see that expert who can give you the advice you need at this time to get ahead faster in career affairs.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You have an opportunity now to do something that will make you more important in the conununity in which you dwell.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Find the new outlets in which you can place your energies that are just your cup of tea and make progress. Make new acquaintances.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Good day to plan that trip you have in mind and get your wardrobe in order. Then get your business affairs in order.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You wish to get all those responsibilities out of the way, so get a wiggle on and do just that. Strive for more peace. '
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) A dynamic associate has a good plan for the future, so be sure to co-operate with him. Discuss other deals as well.
SAGI'TTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You have to be steadfast in that work you have agreed to do if you are to gain the right benefits from it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Some little gift for the one you love who is so devoted would be wise. Make sure you handle business matters wisely.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Get those repairs made to your home that family have been harping about and gain more harmony there. Take it easy tonight.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Be more thoughtful of those who work or dwell with you and the days ahead can be easier and more profitable. Take little trips.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she wUl want to know all about the value of property, stocks, bonds, government certificates, etc. so slant the education along such lines and your progeny could become quite a financial wizard. Stress religion and sports.
The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
Overseas AAarines Celebrated Fourth
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By CHRISTIAN BUSTANI Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The 1,200 U.S. Marines from Camp Lejeune, N.C., in the multinational peacekeeping force in Lebanon celebrated Independence Day with traditional barbecues and a 54-mile double marathon. Hamburgers and cheeseburgers, along with a couple of beers and sodas, were served to the Marines after the ceremony, said Capt. Mike Haskell, 33, from Westborough, Mass., the unit spokesman.
Thirty-six Marines carried U.S. and Lebanese flags during the run around the red sand roads at the international airport south of Beirut, where most of the Marines are stationed. The normal marathon course is 26 miles and 385 yards.
Tell them (the Marines) that their countrymen are grateful, President Reagan told the soldiers in a July 4 message. Tell them that we stand behind them. Tell them that we are proud of our colors, the Presidents message said.
The current Marine force, the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit, has been in Lebanon since May. The two months have been fairly calm and interesting, said Lance
1.
CroBaword By Eugene Sbeffer
ACROSS 1 Persian ruler 5 Recipe nttasure '
8 Two Years Before the-
12 Verdi villain
13 Pie mode
14 Everyone, in Essen
15 English streetcar
16 Southern dessert
18 Endeavors
20 Dims or blurs
21 - -pick (be fussy)
22 Inlet
23 Breakfast in bed items
26 Southern baked dish
30 French river
31 Morning phenomenon
32 Saturate
33 Sour mash drink
36 Timber tree
38Lendan- DOWN 17 French (listen) IWorksas galpal
39 'Teutonic a judge 19 Force
sky god 2 Role for 22 Tier
40 Deputy Robert 23 Restaurant
43 Roars Wagner check
47 Fried batter 3 (^ture 24 - Rita
cakes medium 25 Babylonian
49 Wicked 4 Com product god
50 UncEHnmon 5 French royal 26 Farmyard
51 River is- house layer
land 6 RuUr trees 27 Neatpin
52 Pumpkin, 7 - -Man 28 Hebrew
for one (videogame) measure
53 Hebrew 8 Madman 29 Slender
measure 9 Swiss or finial
54 Boston party Bavarian 31 Summer drink 10 Gash beetle
55 Dagger llLinkspegs 34Hesigns
Avg. solution time: 23 minutes.
mm mm
ggSB BBS [@IM1
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laigsBg mm
BHaa HHs hmbI
35 Sheet of cotton.
36 Trouble
37 Mintj(^drink^
39 SeedcSYwii^
40 Hair style
41 Metric unit
42 Ireland
43 French cheese
44 Bakers need
45 Dry by
rubbing 7-5 46 Wild plum Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 48 Corrode
CRYPTOQUIP 7.5
EKRAGJCAWJW MVWJ EXGFV JK
MCKGRVT ECGFJAFV: FKCT MVXJ.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip - STONE MASONS COLLECTION OF FINE ORNAMENTS: BRICK-A-BRACK?
Todays Cryptoquip clue: E equals P.
Hie Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which eadi letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. ISi^e letters, short words, and words using an apostrojte can give you dues to locating vowels. Solution is acconqilished by trial and error.
C) 1W3 King Features Syndicate, Inc
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
1983 Tribuna Company Syndlcata. Inc;
MINE THOSE DIAMONDS!
Corporal Eric Sturghill, 22, of Chicago. Its better than I thought from reading the new^apers. Of course, they say it can be very easy to get into problems here, but 1 dontt worry. Its been OK till now.
One Marine has been killed and five wounded in incidents since the American peacekeeping force was assigned to Beirut last fall. There have been no violent incidents involving the present unit.
Sailors aboard the U.S. 6th Fleet flotilla that is supporting the Marines on shore held their Independence Day celebrations Sunday. With hundreds of guests invited aboard the ships off Beirut, the Navy staged a small boat regatta as well as barbecues and a performance by a Lebanese folklore group.
The 24th Marine Amphibious Unit and the Navy flotilla are here on a six-month assignments, twice as long as previous tours by U.S. peacekeeping units.
TO SAVE FORESTS BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - The European Cominunity Commission has proposed an $89 million program to save forests from fire and acid rain over the next five yearo.
Nort)i-Sout)i vulnerable. West deals.
NORTH AKJ96 Void 0 AK3 4 A10854 WEST EAST
442 43
'^653 ^QJ108742
0Q10875420 96 43 4KQ7
SOUTH 4Q10875 ^ AK9 0 J
4J962 The bidding:,
West North East South
3 0 Dble Pass 4 4
Pass 6 4 Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: Three of 4.
There are those who preempt on very weak hands in the belief that they should do all they can to interfere with the enemy auction. But that tactic can backfire - it can sometimes allow declarer to bring home his contract because the preemptive bid has revealed a defenders hand.
West could have been sentenced for attempted robbery because of his light opening bid. It did not prevent his opponents from reaching their spade slam. North made a takeout double and then went straight to slam when South jumped to four spades in response.
West led a low club, and it was obviously a singleton. It was also the only lead to give declarer a problem - with any other attack, declarer could have drawn trumps, stripped the red suits from his hand and dummy, and then end played East by running a club to one of Easts honors.
It might seem that declarer miist now lose two club tricks, but he found an ingenious method of landing his slam. He won the ace of clubs and drew two rounds of trumps. Next came the ace-king of hearts, stuffing two
clubs from dummy, and a club ruff. Since West was now marked with nothing but seven diamonds in his hand, the coup de grace was administered.
Declarer cashed th^e high diamonds, discarding^a club from hand, and then con tinued with the tables te-maining diamond. However, instead of ruffing this trick, he sluffed another club from the closed hand.
West won the trick, but he did not relish having the lead. On his forced diamond return, declarer ruffed on the board while getting rid of the last club from his hand. So he lost only a diamond trick, and the slam was home.
Arrested After Speed Chase
DURHAM, N.C. (APO - A Wilmington man was arrested Monday after leading police on a chase through southwestern Durham, officials said.
Three public safety cars were damaged and one officer required surgery to mend a cut on the arm, officers said.
An 18-year-old man was arrested, but police said they had not determined what they would charge him with. A Durham County magistrate said the man would be placed in the Durham County Jail under a $50,000 bond.
Police received a call about l;30 a.m. that Chapel Hill officers were chasing a person toward Durham on Chapel Hill Boulevard. Durtiam officers picked up the chase near the city limits and continued into the city on the boulevard.
Police said the man ran police cars and passenger cars off the road several times. r
t
024
Foreign
1*75 DATSUN B2I0. n*w paint and interior. 1*76 Datsun trucK. Both in flood condition. Call 753-3570
PUBLIC
NOTICES
1*75 DATSUN BJIO. Excellent con dition. 42 miles per gallon, white ^ith blue interior. AM/FM radio. i1300. 758-6444
1*75 TOYOTA Corolla. 5 speed, very good condition. S1350 or^t offer 752 *076._
1*76 TOYOTA CELICA 5 speed with air. Motor transmission, excellent. Body needs minor repairs, $1200. 757 151* anytime._
1*77^ DATSUN B210. Needs some work, but still runs. Has 141.000 miles. $1000. 758 7*64
1*81 VOLKSWAGON SCIROCCO 30.000 miles, has everything; air. cruise, sunroof. Make otter. 757 0676.
1*82 TOYOTA WAGON 5 speed, loaded, low miles. Make offer. 756 7417.
1*82 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA. 5 speed: low mileage. AM FM cassette, air. 5 year 50.000 mile warranty. 756*730
029 Auto Parts & Service
BELLS FORK GARAGE TOYOTA SERVICE and Save! _Phone 756 37*6_
032 Boats For Saie
HOBIE CAT 16'. Excellent condition. Call 482 4162 after 7 p.m. Edenton. NC
SAN JUAN 28. Cruise/race with 5 sails. Hot and cold water. $25.500. 758 084*.
051
Heip Wanted
REGISTERED DENTAL Hygienist for a very busy dental practice. Please send resume to 'Dental Hygienist'. P O Box 1*67. Greenville. N C 27835.
RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION Supervisor. Experienced required. Send past experience summary. Saiary plus fringe benefits plus bonus available. Mil to P O Eiox 85*. Greenvilte. N C 27834.
RN PART TIME and Per Diem Be a Red Cross Nurse. Join a professional team and assist in providing the gilt of life to others. Graduate of an accredited school of nursing. Eligible for licensure In NC Minimum 1 year recent hospi tal nursing experience required. Available for irregular and flexible hours of assignment. Occasional over night travel, but no shift rotation. Send resume to Tar River Blood Center, PO Box 6003. Greenville, NC EOE Previous applicants need not reapply
066
FURNITURE
RENT TO OWN Throe piece living room suite, sofa, chair, loveseaf $26.33 per month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St. or phone
Mant to tell livestock? Run a .lassified ad for quick response.
072
Livestock
RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonalo, Director of Nursing. *43 2111
ROOFERS WANTED with experi ence.Call8t0 5. 758 5278.
SALES REPRESENTATIVE
For national known gift and sta tionery lines. Eastern NC and Eastern Virginia. Straight commission. 217 Deer Creek Drive, Matthews, NC 28105.
SECRETARY For small chain of preschools. Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone calls please
SAN JUAN 21' sailboat. 5 hor<.. power Volvo outboard. Fleet Cap-tain trailer. $5,000. 758 7018.
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Peter G. Lautares late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or before December 14, 1*83 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 8th day of June, 183.
Violet J. Lautares P.O. Box 506 2303 East Third Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 E xecutrix of the estate of Peter G. Lautares, deceased.
June 14, 21.28, July 5, 1*83
83E283 NORTH CAROLINA COUNTYOFPITT The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of ARTHUR FURMAN FLETCHER, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Executrix at 2404 Umstead Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina. 27834, on or before December 27, 1*83, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersign ed.
This 15th day of June, 1*83. GLORIA JOHNSON FLETCHER Executrix of Estate of Arthur Furman Fletcher Gaylord. Singleton, McNally & Strickland P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 June 21. 28, July 5,12, 1*83
12' KRANSCO SUPER SNARK sailboat. $400. Never used. Call 756 3867 after 6 p.m
17' 1*73 FIBERCRAFT with 1*81 Johnson 70 horespower. Cox trailer has new axle, bearings, and springs. 758 2887 after 5
1*73 MERRIMAC 16', Tri hull, new seats. 65 horsepower Evinrude motor, like new, $1500. 756 7364 after 5_
1*76 MFG 1* with 115 Johnson outboard. Galvanized trailer. One owner. $4000. Call 752 6245
24 CRUISE BOAT with cutty cabin and head. Boat has never been used or registered. Has top. side, and aft curtains. Outboard motor not included. $42*5. Galvanized certified tandem trailer available with boat. $800. Call *46 8*41 _
034 Campers For Sale
POP UP CAMPER Sleeps 6 In eludes sink and ice box-electrical and water connections. Needs new top. Good bottom and tires. $600. 756 84*2 or 752 5124._
TRUCK COVERS Alt sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774._
1*78 21' Wilderness Like nw. Only used tew times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self-contained. $5300 negotiable. 756 853*._
036
Cycles For Sale
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers. 407 Evans Mall. Downtown Greenville.
010
AUTOMOTIVE
RENTAWRECK Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save. 752 2277_
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 7* 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay too dollar
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114. __
013
BuIck
.r,, BUICK LIMITED Loaded. ..New Michelin tires. 350 engine $32*5. 746 3152 or 746 6376.
t*7* BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruise, power windows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mileage. Make otter. 756 853*.
1*81 BUICK SKYLARK 4 door, AM/FM stereo, air, low mileage. ZM4302,_^
014
Cadillac
1*81 CADILLAC Coupe Devllle Loaded with options. Priced to sell Call BB&T William Handley 752
a*.
015
Chevrolet
1*7* CHEVY CHEVETTE Metallic blue. Excellent condition. 4 speed with air. AM/FM $1**5. 758 4151
018
Ford
1*67 MUSTANG $1500. 752 1333.
1*73 FORD PINTO Runabout, air, automatic. Make offer. 756 853*.
1*77 FORD GRANADA AM/FM, cruise control, almost new tires. Very good condition. $1700 756 16*0 or 7M M58.
1*81 MUSTANG Pewter gray. 4 speed, AM/FM stereo tape deck, 1 owner. $3750 negotiable. 746 3228.
020
AAercury
1*64 MERCURY Monterey Body in fair shape. Motor in very good shape with low mileage. $500 negotiable. 756 661S. 752 6362.
1*75 COLONY PARK MERCURY jiFully loaded. Everything works. $625 756 2031.
021
Oldsmoblle
1*80 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS Supreme Brougham, $54*5. Days 355-280* or nights 753 2368._
023
Pontiac
, FIREBIRD 1*7*. Fully equipped.
good condition. Call Rex Smith ..Chevrolet, Avden, 746-3141._
024
Foreign
.HONDA PRELUDE, 1*80, 'automatic, AM/FM cassette, great condition. $6.000. 757 3367 after S. .
1*68 MERCEDES 220 D Excellent condition. 753 5732 or 752 652*.
i1*73 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good. $1700. Call 758 2300 days,
KX 80 1*82 KAWASAKI,
competition dirt bike, excellent condition. $600. Call after 6. 746-23*7.
1975 CB 500 T HONDA 7.000 miles. Good condition. $650. Call 752 *5*2 after 5 p.m.
1*75 754 HONDA 2*,000 miles. $750. Good condition. 746-6144.
1*75 754 HONDA 2*,000 miles. $750. Good condition. 746 6144.
1*76 HONDA XL-175. On and off road. $350. Call 7510267 after 6p.m. 1*77 HONDA GOLDWING 1000. Wind jammer, stereo and cassette player. Excellent condition. Best offer! Call 758 2*07aHer6._
1*80 YAMAHA MAXIM I 650
motorcycle. Excellent condition. Many extras! $1750. Call 756 3828 after 6._
1*81 HONDA 400CM Just tuned, 5,000 miles, tall backrest, luggage rack, 2 helmets, wet suit. Excellent condition. Serious calls only. $1600. Nights 746 3335._
039 Trucks For Sale
A-1 CONDITION 1*81 Dodge Pickup. $4,700 firm. AM/FM sterm, excellent gas mileage. 757 3626 or 751*111
CHEVROLET SCOTTSDALE 1*81. Fully equipped, low mileage. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-31L_____
FORD PICKUP 1*75. Fully equipped, eMellent condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-
1*68 CHEVY 6 cylinder Pickup. Good condition. 757 i5l* anytime. 1*7* CHEVROLET LUV, 4 speed with air, $34*5. Days 355 2809 or nights 753 2368._
SOCIAL STUDIES teacher with coaching responsibilities. Math teacher wifh coaching, responsibilities. Secondary choral music teacher. Persons interested should call Director of Personnel. 823-3658 or write Director of Personnel, Tarboro City Schools, PO Box 370, Tarboro. NC 27886
SPEECH LANGUAGE CLINICIAN
- Part time position, Farmville Child Development Center on site, direct service, and family con
sulfation. 15 hours per week._Send resume: Speech Clinician.
13, Farmville. NC 27828.
PO Box
SR
TYPISTS!
MS
jui**
MAN POW R TEMPOR AR Y Services offers you:
> Unique Fringe Benefits Top Pay
Flexible Schedule
Call us tor an appointment We Are Not a Fee Agency
MANPOWER
TEMPORARY
SERVICES
118 Reade Street
757-3300
SURVEY INSTRUMENT MAN
party chief. Prefer S I T Call *^56 1408 after 5.
WANTED experienced secretaries part time. Call 756 4254 or apply In person at 414, Pitt Plaza, between *
person _. a.m. and5p.m
WANTED NURSING instructor. Minimum MSN degree, current NC certification. 2 years exper'ence clinical and teaching in obstetrics, pediatric and medical/surgical nursing. Position open August 1. Applications accepted through July 15, l*83^alary commensurate with qualitfTatlons. Send letter of ^plication and complete resume to C A Bucher, Nash Technical Col
NC 27801. EOE
059 Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll, 752 6331.
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm. 752 7765
CEILINGS INSTALLED, tile or suspended. Commercial or residential. 6 years experience. Free estimate. Call Ron Kidwell at *46 6567 anytime.
FOR SALE; 2 gelding walking horses, 1 solid black; 1 sorrel. Can 746 6880 or 746-623*
HORSEBACK RIDING
Stables. 752 5237._
Jarman
CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused items. To place your ad, phone 752 6166
074
Miscellaneous
AIRLINE TICKET - Raleigh to San Francisco on July 14 1 way. $160.
Call 355 2566.
ANTIQUE UPRIGHT PIANO Good condition. $425. 825 0765.
077 Musical Instruments
USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Yamahas. Wurlitzers. etc. The Music Shop, Greenville Square Shoooino Center, 756-0007._
YAMAHA PIANOS and discount prices makes Piano & Organ Dis Iributors a great place to iJiop! 32* Arlington Boulevard. 355-6002._
080
INSTRUCTION
I NEED TUTOR for Administrative Law class. Call Abdulla, 752 6586 anytime._
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. CafI 758-4413 between 8 and 5._
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlinoton Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday *-5. Call *56 **33._
WAREHOUSE AND office space fi5r
lease. 20,00r------' * - '
Will subdivi
lease. 20,000 square feet avaifable. ide.756 50*7or 756 *315
121 Apartments For Rent
082 LOST AND FOUND
GERA8AN SHEPHERD, black and tan male, approximately 65 pourtds, lost in Stick Valley area. Answers to Joe. Reward. 746-466*
LOSTII Large white male dog Vicinity of Red Oak. Answers to ttw name Bear. Reward if returned
756 2743.
LOST LADIES WHITE gold Hamilton wrist watch. Liberal re ward it recovered. Call after 7 p.m., 758 1052.__
BEDDIN6&WATERBE0S
Why pay retail when you can save up lo Vj and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt Plaza), 355 2626.
BROWN WCX30 baby crib, $35. 2 yellow high chairs, $15 each. Yellow chanoinino table, $10. 355-6877.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation *1* 763 *734
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CALL US AND SEE why people are coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings. Call 823 3834, * 30 to 5:30 or by ap pointment
CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.
DINING ROOM SET, den and living room furniture, ladies clothes (size 10-14). books, set of child's golf clubs, and flea market odds and ends. 756-3462 anytime.
EARLY AMERICAN sofa and chair, 2 tables. Good condition. 19" color TV Great buy Call 355 6002 days; 756 *254 evenings
FOR SALE; Used equipment for sandwich shop - local tor appoint-ment call 717-346 *616._
HOTPOINT PORTABLE
dishwasher with cutting board. Used very little! $200. M5 241* or 752 4187.
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson
MAGIC CHEF electric stove, Whirlpool refrigerator, Almond color, both new. Take $600 for pair. Days 355 280*or nights 753 2368
METAL DETECTORS for an exciting and profitable hobby. Call for a free catalog, 756 8840, Baker's Sports Equipment. P O Box 3106.
MOVING- Must Sell G E almond colored refrigerator with ice maker, 1 year old. Call 758 4132 between*and5._ _
CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And PiCKlnson Avenue.
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.
STEREOCITY
Now open featuring Marantz Sansui-Sharp-and other brands. We offer quality compo nents and match systems at discount prices. We finance In our store. Call Mike Edmundson, Sales
Manager at Stereo City, 757 0451, located 2808 East lOth Street.
A Division of Furniture World
THEATRE SEATS, $2.00 each. Some with cushions. Can be used in boats, churches or recreational facilities. 756 5400or 758 4031
USED FILING CABINET, legal size; used overhead projector; bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk, secretarial chair. Call 758 3761 nights or 757 11*1 davs.
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Enterprises. 756*123 day, 756 1007
DATA ENTRY - ALL PHASES Can
be done on my computer or yours. Call 756 4254 days, 752 5377 nights, ask tor Sharon
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood
and metal. Equipment formally of p and Strip. All items returned thin 7 days. Tar Road Antiques.
046
PETS
AKC DACHSHUND puppy 355 6476 AKC REGISTERED Collie pups for sale. Champion bloodlines. Blue Merles, sabfes, and tri color. $225 male. $200 female. 756 *280 after 6
AKC RHODESIAN RIDGE BACK
lies. $200. Call Jennifer at
puppies.
*4<r*500.
051
Help Wanted
ACCOUNT SALES representative epresent N C company calling on offices in Eastern N C area.
Must have own transportation but no overnight travel required. Pay based on salary and commission. Send resume to 'Sales Representative', P O Box 4114, Greenville, N C 27834.
AVON REPRESENTATIVES Can Have Summer Fun
with the money they make during working hours of their choice!! Work part time or full time and make up toSO%!
Call 752-7006.
needed for local Law Office. Expe rience required in bookkeeping, ", and accounts receivable.
lease send resume to PO Box 802, Greenville, NC__
CASHIER
Convenience store. Good at-biosphere. Steady employment. Apply at Dodges Store, South Memorial Drive.
DRIVER WANTED with experi ence driving concrete mixer, 756-
gziL
EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN
to work with established firm. Excellent opportunity, good benefits. Please call 756 3240 for Interview.__
lAAA SEEKING AN INDIVIDUAL TO LEARN MY BUSINESS
PARTTIAAE
Busy manager in nationwide organization is seeking an Individual who has strong desires to learn the workings of this successful organ! zation. The Individual selected must be willing to accept sales training and have desire to quickly accept major responsibilities. Call Ford or Danny at 756-4254 7 pm - 10 om only.
LEGAL SECRETARY heeded im mediately. Must have good general office Skills. Including typing, transcribing, telephone communications, and receptionist. Send resume to PO Box 1712, Greenville.
LPNS NEEDED tor 3-11 and 11 7 shifts. Apply at Greenville Villa lursing Home, Becky Hastings, Plrgctpr of Nurses, 758-4121.
MANAGMENT CALIBER person, work 2 hours day an earn 1000 month. Honest person to handle com^an^ funds. Clerical duties.
NEED GOOD BASE and lead guitar player with playing experience to join Gospel group. Just starting, so there will be no pay. Prefer serious musicians only. If interested, call 758 27*8 from 9 to 5 or 758 6007 from liaJlL
OPENINGS FOR REGISTERED NURSES
For part-time home care. Desire nurses with background in Oncology Nursing or skilled intravenous therapy. Desire nurses with recent hospital or clinic expe rience. If interested, please send resume and references to
HOME CARE P O 00x31444 Raleigh, N C 27612
PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5 years experience. 756-7*61
RAOn SALES to T V sales. Look Ing tor experienced radio salesperson eager to join a televi sldn sales staff In Eastern NC Mall resume to WITN TV, PO Box 468, Washington, NC 2788*, c/o Frank
Call for free estimate. Days 756 *123, Night 756-1007
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583
GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341. _
LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime._
PAINTING Tired of paying con tractors high prices? Experienced painters. Work guaranteed. Call 757 1233.
PAINTING interior and exterior. Free estimates, work guaranteed. References 12 years experience. 756 6873 after 6p.m.
QUALITY PAINTING, Interior and exterior. Carpentry and gutter re-pair. 524-4822 after 6 p.m.
SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service, 756 2&M anytime, if no answer call back.
060
FOR SALE
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale. J P Stancll. 752 6331._
065 Farm Equipment
B F AVERY TRACTOR Model V Manual lift. Attachments. $850. 756 303*.
FOR RENT Two 10,000 bushel grain bins. 15 per bushel. Located approximately 4 miles west of Wintervllle. Call 756-50*7 or 756-*315.
MARLISS 14' no-tlll grain drill. Season close out Only 1 to sell. List $12,250, Special $950. Call for details on additional bonus. Herring International, 756-5800
POLY TARPS-pertect for tobacco harvesters-l0'xl2', $*.4*, I2'xl4'
$13.4*; 15'x20' $21.95. Rubber straps 15"-3 tor $1.0*. Other sizes and supplies for the tobacco farmer In stock. AgrI Supply, Greenville, NC, 752 3***
WANTED PEANUT HAY RAKE, good condition. Call after 8 p.m. Call 752 37*2. _
Want to Mil livestock? Ron a
Classified ad for quick response.
066 FURNITURE
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $2* 26 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World. 757-0451
BASSETT SOLID WOOD table and 6 chairs, china hutch and base. Take over payments on only $67,37 per month. 757-0451. Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St.
BEDROOM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest. Take over payments on only $26,33 per month. 757-0451. Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St.
COLOR TV
Want one? Oieck out ColorTyme, c^heck out Tele Rent, check out Curtis Mathes, and then check out Furniture World. We rent to own tor less money than any store in Greenville. 757-0451. Remember that Furniture King will not be undersold. He don't ptav.
FURNITURE! FURNITURE!
THE FURNITURE KING has it alll For the lowest prices on bedroom, dining room and living room furniture, pick up the phone and call 757-0451. We finance In our store. Remember the 'Furniture King' will not be undersold at Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St.
FURNITURE USED and antiques. Mar Js and Westbrook, 1211 S Evans. Monday thru Friday, 12 to 6.
A^TTRESS WORLD at Furniture World. We keep a truck load all the time. We finance. For the lowest price on bedding, visit Furniture Worjd,^2808 E Toth St. or phone
QUEEN SIZE sofa bed. One year old. Reasonably priced. 756-304*
RECLINERS We have SO to choose from. Barcalounger and Catnapper. We finance in our store. Phone 757-0451 or visit the 'Furniture King' at Furniture World. 2808 E iQth St.
RENT TO OWN Six piece solid wood living room suite, sofa, chair, rocker and 3 tables. Only $29.26 per month at Furniture World, 2808 E IQth St. Phone 757 0451._
USED FROST FREE refrigerator. Used air conditioner. 756 877T.
USED TYPEWRITERS and adding machines, excellent condition. Rea-sonable prices. 756-303*.
WATERBED, mattress, liner, heater and sheets. Sacrifice. Call 752 5020.
WOODSTOVE and ladder rack tor sale. 756 120* after 6 p.m.
1*" COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11 sr^ month. Furniture World. 757-
2 GIRL SCHWINN bikes. Good condition. 1 20" and 1 24". 1
exercise bike. $35each. 756-3383
5 PIECE bedroom suit by Williams (Queen size bed), dark oak finish, $875 . 756 38*1, Monday Friday, 8 a.m. to5p.m., 756 2*5*, 6 to*p.m.
Help fight Inflation by buying and selling through the Classified ads. Call 752 6166.
075 Mobi le Homes For Sale
GOOD SELECTION of used homes. Low down payments and monthly payments. All homes guaranteed. Tommy Williams, Azalea Mobile Homes. 756 7815.
^ST MOBILE HOME in North Carolina is at Azalea Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass West,756 7815.
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $235 per month. Also FHA and conventional financing availablel.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard
NO MONEY NEEDED AT
Tradewind Family Housing. New 1*83 prices start at $8*95. We take anything but 3 wheeled wagons and one-eyed goats in trade. Come on in and let us work out your down payment. Tradewind Family Hous ing, 70S West Greenville Boulevard, 756 4833.
TrTd'wd*
FAMILY HOUSING
Aobile Home
Stop in and see why we are the fastest growing Mol dealer in North Carolina
1. Quality Homes
2. Best Prices a. Super Service
4. Easiest & Best Financing in Town
(Conventional, VA, FHA)
5. People Who Care TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Blvd. 756-4833
PURCHASED NEW 1*7* Conner 2 bedroom home. Assume loan, no equity necessary. 756 0333 ask tor John from* to 6.
REPO'S - $3*5 DOWN and take up payments. Call John Moore, 7S6 7815. Azalea Mobile Homes.
;?X60, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Ideal for student. 758-1*76after 6;30.
12X65. Good condition. Furnished. Central air. Washer/dryer. $5*00. 752 6245.
14 WpES for as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Homes. 756 *841.
1*6*, 12x48, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. Approximately 3 miles from campus. 758 1*76 after 6; 30._
1*75 CONNER 12 x 36 . 1 bedroom, partially furnished. $2500. 752 *003. 1*80 LANIER deluxe mobile home. Large country kitchen and living area. Washer/dryer, dishwasher. Central heat and air. Some equity and assume loan. 752 *5*3.
1*83 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.
076 AAoblle Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. SmHh Insurance and Realty, 752
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CRAFTED SERVICES
Quality lurnllura Raflnlshlng and rapalra. Superior caning for all typo chaira, largar aalacllon of cualom picturo framing,. aurvay atakoa-any length, all typoa of pallota, hand-craflod rope ham-mocka, aalaclad framed reproducllona.
Eastern Carolina Vocational Center
Induatrlal Park. Hwy. 13 758-4181 8 A.M.-4:30P.M.
Qreanvllle, N.C.
093
OPPORTUNITY
FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE
business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 2) years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758 0702.
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT
for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financirrg. Call Gary Quintard 758 5156 after 5
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville. N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015._
NIGHT CLUB - store and trailer, 58x12 tor sale 264 By Pass. Farmville 2*1 7*2*
TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752
3575._
095 PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Cafl dayor nighf, 753-3503, Farmville.
104 Condominiums For Sale
CONDOMINIUMS Windy Ridge, Wildwood Villas, University. Two, three and tour bedrooms. Flat and
two stories. $30,900 to $72,500 Duttus Realty Inc.. 756 53*5
LEXINGTON SQUARE. 2 bedrooms. 1 year old. FHA 235 assumable loan. Phone 756 7935
109 Houses For Sale
APPEALING TOWNHOUSE design otters great room, 3 bedrooms, 7 2 baths, private patio, plus new paint and carTCt $5i500 in Windy Ridge Call Ball & Lane. 752 0025
ASSUMABLE 8</2%
FmHA Low Payment
Three bedroom brick, 1/2 acre. Sacrifice by owner. Low down payment. Call 615 622 8558
AYDEN Perfect tor the family that prefers a small town Large corner lot. Brick ranch featuring 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, large den and kitchen, garage. $69,500. W G Blount & Associates, 756 3000
BY OWNER 6 room house and lot. 2 miles from Wellcome Middle School. Less than $20,000. 752 6267
BY OWNER A lovely older home. Close to ECU 1886 square feet Well built. Has everything. Call 752-3804
BY OWNER Remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Ele mentary and parks. Fireplace, large kitchen, dep and dining room, privacy fenced back yard with pool and deck. $5*,***.**. 758 1355 before 7:30 am - after 9:15 pm - anytime Sunday. _
BY OWNER Contemporary home near hospital 303 Chatham Way, Candlewick Estates. Super floor plan. Unique design. 1*50 square teet heated. 1100 square feet garage. Heat pump. Average electric cost $82 month. Pool/tennis courts 2 blocks away. Call 752 6724 or 753 3327
COGHILL - Pretty ranch on Slay Drive. Three bedrooms. IV2 baths, living room with fireplace. $49,500. Four bedrooms, two baths, living room with fireplace, on Deal Place $55,500. Duffus Realty. Inc., 756 53*5.
EXCEPTIONAL RANCH home with family size family room, formal areas. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, fenced backyard. $74,500. Call Ball & Lane, 752 0025.
FmHA assumption. 3 bedroom home, IV2 baths, adjusted gross income $12,000 or less. Call Joe Quinerlv, 524 5338or 524 41*1
HORSESHOE ACRES 3 bedroom featuring great room with fireplace and buift in book shelves, 2 Targe tile baths, dining room, kitchen, garage. Located on 3/4 acre lot. $64,0(>0. W G Blount & Associates, 756 3000.
OAKDALE 120 Holiday Court. Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, 1'/2 baths, living room, kitchen with dining area, den. Located on large corner lot. $37,500. W G Blount & Associates. 756 3000
111 I nvestment Property
retail store building for sale in small eastern N C town with established tenant and long term lease. Contact Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland, 756 5260.
RIDGE PLACE DUPLEX Each unit has 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths, living room, dining area. Possible loan assumption. $58,000. 355-2060.
113
Land For Sale
16 ACRES Approximately 6 cleared and 10 wooded. Planted with 1 year old Pines. 2 miles form hospital. $2,000 per acre. 752 0720.
AVAILABLE LATE JULY New 2 b^room townhouse in Shenandgah. Range, refrigerator, dishwasher, and hookups. $310 Couples pre ferred. Lease and deposit. No pets. 756 4746.
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenance
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-tree refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact JT or Tommy Williams _756 7815
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IVj baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, tree cable TV, her dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club
house and POOL. 752 1557
DUPLEX 2 BEDROOM apartment Close to university and schools. Electric heat, central air. range, refrigerator, dishwasher, washer dryer hook ups. $285. Availabie August 1. Deposit; lease required. 756 041* evenings, nights, and weekends.
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid service $70 week Cail 756 5555, Heritage Inn Motel
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
-All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases ils
-Furnished With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up
756-5555 The Heritage Inn
ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse in woody area, washer and dryer hook up. $285 a month. 756 62*5.
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-686*
JOHNSTON STREET APART MENTS I bedroom uniurnished apartments available immediate. Water and appliances furnished. No pets. Call Judy at 756 6336 before 5 p.m., Monday-Friday._
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located |ust oft lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LARGE 4 BEDROOM apartment, 2 full baths, fireplace, 13flOA Myrtle Avenue, $340 per month. Lease and deposit required. No pets. Call 355 2544 or 7^ 048*._
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASEII!
at our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Owen Norvell at 758-6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 702*.
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
115
Lots For Sale
EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL
lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount & Associates, 756 3000
HANRAHAN MEADOWS located on State Road 1110 between Ayden and Griffon. Vj acre lots, cleared, $500 down, balance of $3500 financed at 12% APR with monthly pay ments of $92.17 a month. Call 752 7333 or 756-2682. Restricted to permanent single family dwellings
THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 (or full details.
Vi TO 5 ACRES, Highway 264 South, Ayden-Gritton area and Highway 33 South. Call 756 2682or 752 0277.
____ _ _____ry
corner of Lee Street and S R 1725. Two lots together over 1 acre. Call 752 4187 after 5p.m._
117 Resort Property For Sale
2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River, water front lots with bulkheads. 3 bedrooms, iVj baths, large kitchen and family room, large closets. Built for year round comfort, with heat punnp, air condition and fireplace. Owner will finance 80% at good interest rate tor 10 years. Excellent location, 2 miles below Bath, NC at Bayview. Vance Overton, 756 86*7or* 2701._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr. 756-6221
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs S()% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall-to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
GIVE US A call soon. We'd like to help you place a classified ad In this newspaper today. Call 752 6166.
NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 2 bedrooms. V/i baths. No pets. 752-3152 or 752-6715, ask for John or Bryant
NICE, 2 BEDROOM apartment in quiet residential neighborhood, near college. Rent Includes water and sewage. $250. 756 5*91
Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed In the Classified columns of today's paper.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752 6116
Safe
Model S-1
Special Price
$12250
R*eg. Price S177 00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S. Evans St.
752-2175
MECHANICS
Experienced in the installation of storm windows and doors. Limited travel. Excellent salary potential.
NO LAY OFFS
GUARANTEED 5 OR 6 DAYS WORK WEEKLY, YEAR ROUND
Call For Appointment
757-1200
From 910 5
121 Apartments For Renf 1127
Houses For Renf
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments 12)2 Redbanks Road Dish
NICE 2 BEDRCX)M house tor rent La^rge yard Avai.able now 752
.......... rxvOVI. i^l^ri
washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza
, - r.I.;,,, riii f-IdZd
and University Also some furnished apartments available
756-4151
ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets $215 a month 756-j923.
UNIVERSITY AREA 3 bedrooms, appliances furnished, washer/dryer connection. S275 112 East 12th
Street 756 0765_
1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS and town 505 East 4 th Street 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, lots of room $400 a month plus deposit 758 0174 2615 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3 bedroom, central heal, air condi tioner. garage nice neighborhood. Families only Lease and deposit $2*5 756 1888 to 5 i
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815 ^
ONE BEDRCX3M APARTMENT
Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances $210 Call 758
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din mg, bedroom complete $7* 00 per month Option to buy U REN CO,
756 3862
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10 a m to5p m Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hookups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
_i weekdays_
3 BEDROOMS. 1 bath, central heat University area $375 Responsible , mature graduate students or work ing singTes Grier Rental Agency, j 1100 Charles Boulevard_
,133 Mobile Homes For Rent
. CLEAN 12 wide, 2 bedroom. College 1 Court Students or couples $155 plus
deposit 756 0222 or 756 1455_
MOBILE HOME FOR RENT : Partly furnished Contact Gladys
Brown. 753 4206__
I SPECIAL RATES lor students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile ; homes $125 and up No pets, no
i children 758 0745_
12X60 TWO BEDROOMS, washer, dryer, air, carpet No pets. 756 1 235 I 2 BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent. Call 756 4687___
2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location No pets. r>o
children Call 758 4857__
i 2 BEDROOM trailer, )' 2 baths, air,
I no pets. 756 6005 __
. 2 BEDROOM. 2 bath, private lot. no j pets, married couple 752 6579_
135 Off ice Space For Rent
EAST 10th STREET Private, all utilities, furnished $75 per month 756 7417
^'^9 apartments
available No pets. Call Insurance & Realty, 752 2754
FOR RENT 2500 square teet Suitable lor office space or com mercidi 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815 5.000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass Plenty of park ing. Call 758 2300days_
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, I' j bath townhouses Available now $2*5/month 9 to 5 Monday Friday
756-77n
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom, IVj bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps, Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.
75(5-0987
A AND ,2 ,BEDR<X)M apartments. Available immediately 752 3311
1 BEDROOM APARTMENT
Completely furnished. Full utilities Call 752 4363 after 5 p.m.
2 BEDRCXIM apartment. Kitchen npplianes furnished, totally lectric, $325 month. Call 756 7647
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceantront. families only 756 4207 or 726 3869.
ATLANTIC BEACH TOWNHOUSE
on ocean Sleeps 6. 752 257*._
138
Rooms For Rent
SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges Across from ECU $25 per week includes all. 752 7278
142 Roommate Wanted
FEAAALE ROOAAAAATE WANTED tor apartment in Greenville area. Call 322 5352
2 BEDROOM townhouse. carpeted, central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer/dryer hookup, $2*5 108CedarCourt, 758 3311.
2 BEDR(X3M apartment. Central air, cayieted, appliances $275 a month. Brvton HiliL 758 3311 _
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU on Stancill Drive. Central air, ran^e^retrigerator, hookups. $275.
MALE DESIRES roommate to share 3 bedroom house $145 in-
Icludes all. Call 758 0*66_
MATURE MALE roommate wanted > to share 3 bedroom home with J
, others. 752 157* after 6__
3RD ROOAAMATE NEEDED tor 2 bedroom furnished apartment at Tar River Estates Private room. Available July 15 Call 757 3783 after 6^___
704 EAp Third Street. 2 bedrooms, 2 blocks from ECU Stove and refrigerator Lease and deposit. $260.756 1888 * to 5 weekdays._
122 Business Rentals
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or
sis, space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only $3 60 per square toot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 75? 4\4
FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Boulevard. 4500 square f^y|25^^quare toot Call
148 Wanted To Rent
PROFESSIONAL MATURE
married couple desires country rental in Greenville area Fonvielle 105 Beagle Trail, Wilmington, NC 28403 or 7*9 0176 after 6 p.m.
WANTED TO rent room/rooms in family house. Use of kitchen and bath or similar Preferably un turnished/turnished Acceptable single ladv. 758 0*32, Ms Smith
WILL RENT reasonably priced house in Pitt County. 1212 B South Cotanche, Greenville. 752 7184
K -?-i- square foot
building. IdeaUy located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at *46-5887.
2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space for ledS6 *n smdit strip shoDoina center. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756-5260_^
127 Houses For Renf
EXTRA NICE RANCH HOUSE with horse barn. On 2 to 3 acres. Approximately 10 minutes from Greenville, and 5 minutes from Farmville. 3 bedrooms. 2'i baths, central heat and air, large master bedroom with fireplace. $325 a month. 823 1607.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752-6116
HOUSE FOR RENT in Ayden 3 bedrooms, living room, bath kiirh-en, 2 porches. Call 746 3674
HOUSES AND apartments in Greenville. Call 746 3284 or 524 3180
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
752-6116
has opening for
ASSISTANT
BUYER
Of
Ladies Fashions
APPLICANT MUST
Be Career Minded
Like Clothes
Like Retailing Like Excitement of Fashion
Enjoy Challenges
Be Able To Travel New York and Charlotte
See Mrs. Kinley at Brodys, Pitt Plaza
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1982 Datsun B 210, 2 door lift-back, Air. automatic, sun roof. $6250.
1982 Buick Regal, 2 door hardtop.$8350
1981 Toyota Corolla Uftback,
2 door, automatic, air condition. $5650
1981 Pontiac Grand Prix, 2
door hardtop. $6650
1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic, 4 door. $5650
1979 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed. $3350
1979 Malibu Station Wagon,
air, automatic. $3650.
1978 Pontiac Bonneville, loaded. $5150.
1978 Dodge Pickup, short bed, 6 cylinder, 3 speed. $3350
1978 Fiat 128, 2 door . $1750
1977 Oldsmobile Omega,
broughan, 2door, $3150.
1976 Plymouth Valiant, 4 door, automatic, air. $1750
1976 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed. $1950
1975 Chevrolet Monza, 2 door sports coupe. $1450
1967 Chevrolet Pickup,
automatic. $850
12 Months, 12,000 Miles Wsrrsnty Availsble FInincing AttUU* WHh Approrad CradH Hwy 43 North 752-5237 Business
Grant Jarman 756-9542
Edgar Denton 756-2921
Donald Garris 758-0929
WAMTED
Experienced set-up/operator for mills and lathes in metal machining industry. Must have a minimum of 2 years experience in setting up lathes and/or vertical and horizontal mills, working from prints and other written instructions. Must be available for day or night shifts.
Temporary weekend set-up/operators also needed for mills and lathes. Skills needed are the same as listed above. Would involve two 12 hour shifts on Saturday and Sunday.
For further information on these openings contact the Greenville Job Service Office at 3101 Bismarck Street, Greenville or call 756-2686.
\
Bill To Notify DA's When Inmates Near Release
BvJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer R.ALEIGH. N.C (AP) District attorneys who complain they arent notified when criminals they prosecuted become , eligible for parole would get their wish un^r a bill approved by the state House By a 94-11 vote, the House passed Monday and sent to the Senate a bill requinng that the N.C. Parole Commissioo inform the DA when any inmate becomes eligible for release.
Currwitly, the commission notifies the district attorney only when an inmate sentenced to longer than 18 months is being considered for parole before servmg half his term That policy allows the quiet release of too many criminals, said Rep. Charles Woodard. D-Wa.vne.
i think D.As need to be notified because thev represent the pulse of the people. said Woodard. "Wliat they choose to do about it is up to them. They could get the papers to report that so-and-so is up for parole and anyone opposing it should contact the parole commission, or they could do nothing. I just want them to know
Woodard said his bill was inspired by a Wayne County case of a man convicted of shooting and seriously wounding a woman as she prayed before a church altar, then murdering a man at a service station. Sentenced to life imprisonment plus 10 years in 1970, he became eligible for parole last year without the knowledge of Distriict Attorney Donald M. Jacobs. Woodard said.
Several legislators spoke in support of the bill and recounted similar cases in the counties they represent.
Rep Chris Barker. DCraven. led opposition to the bill, saying local pressure often makes it hard for the inmate to
\Decided Voters Favor Edmisten
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - More than half the registered voters surveyed by The Charlotte Observer said they have not yet decided on a favorite candidate for governor in 1984.
Attorney General Rufus Edmisten was preferred by 14 percent of the 587 people surveyed in the Carolinas Poll. The Observer reported Monday, but 52 percent said they were undecided. Charlotte Mayor Eddie Knox was second with 9 percent.
Insurance Commissioner John Ingram was third with 6 percent, followed by Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green with 5 percent. All four men are Democrats.
Other potential candidates and their percentages include former Republican state Sen. Bev Lake, 3 percent; former Democratic state Rep. Tom Gilmore, 2 percent; former Superior Court Judge Lacy Thornburg, a Democrat, 1 percent; former Democratic Commerce Secretary D M. Lauch Faircloth, 1 percent; and state Sen. Cass Ballenger, R-Catawba, less than 0.5 percent.
U.S. Rep. Charlie Rose. D-N.C., polled 3 percent, but Rose announced last week he would not run for governor.
Edmisten, Gilmore. Knox and Thornburg have announced for the Democratic nomination.
In the lieutenant governors race, Bill Cobey, the Republican who lost to Green in 1980 and to 4th District Rep. Ike Andrews, D-N.C., in 1982, polled 12 percent, compared with 6 percent for former House Sp^er Carl Stewart, a Democrat. Sen. Robert Jordan, D-Montgomery, got 4 percent. None has announced for office yet.
The Observer said 71 percent of those surveyed said they didnt know who would make the best lieutenant governor. For attorney general. 79 percent said they were undecided.
The poll results are based on telephone interviews conducted Jun 6-16 by the marketing research department of Knight Publishing Co., publisher of The Observer. The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.1 percent.
The survey was completed before Greens June 20 indictment by a Wake County grand jury on charges of bribery and conspiracy to take bribes.
Weekend Traffic Safer Than Hoped
ByThe Associated Press The Fourth of July weekend proved safer than predicted with six people killed in traffic accidents on North Carolina roads, the state Highway Patrol reported today.
Last month, the North Carolina State Motor Club predicted that 15 people would die and 800 would be injured on Tar Heel highways during the weekend.
David Taylor Zekonis, 20, and Paul William Zekonis, 63, both of Monroe, died Saturday morning on U.S. 74 in Robeson County when the car they were riding was struck by another car driving left of the center line, state troopers said. Three people were injured in the accident 8mileswestofLumberton.
A motorcycle accident claimed the life of Howard Wayne Burkha*t, 24, of Statesville. The cycle he was riding Sunday afternoon on Allen Ford Road 6 miles west of Statesville went out of control and overturned several times. ^
Connie Hayes Smith, 24, of Lumberton, was killed at 11:50 p.m. Saturday when the
Solar Fraction
The solar fraction for this area yesterday, computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 74. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 74 percent of your hot water needs.
PICK UP A little extra money by selling used items in the classified section- of this n|wspaper. Call 752-6166.
car she was driving along a bural road 10 miles south of her hometown hit a tree.
Dierdra Long Thweatt, 39, of Cameron, died when her car left a rural road six miles north of Southern Pines and struck a tree about 7:30 a.m. Sunday.
Leonard Elton Tripp, 41, of Dunn, died Sunday whe" 1e lost control of his motor 'p about 8:40 p.m. ai a crashed down an emta k ment on RPR 1779, one mik south of Erwin, troopeis said.
The deaths raised the 1983 state traffic toll to 560, compared witli 577 a year ago.
Cuba Offering Scholarships
GEORGETOWN, Guyana (AP) - Cuba will grant 300 full scholarships to students from the Caribbean area for the 1983-84 academic year. Ambassador Lazaro Cubezas Gonzales said.
Cuba has trained 938 students from Caribbean countries since 1979, nearly 100 of them from Guyana. Scholarships for the upcoming academic year will also go to students from Dominica, Antigua, St. Kit-ts-Nevis, Barbados and Trinidad-Tobago, the ambassador said Sunday.
The scholarships will be offered in nutrition and food technology, agricultural engineering, sugar technology and medicine, Cubezas Gonzales said.
He added that Cuba will train a total of 5,680 foreign students under its scholarship program this year.
get a fair bearing before the parole commissHMi.
Debate on the bill bigbli^ted the House caladar for the Fourth of July sessk. The Senate didnt meet and planned no action before 6 p.m. today, while the House scheduled a full day of CMomittee meetings and a regular session for today. In other legislative action: Shopping Carts
The House approved 101-3 a bill making theft of store flopping carts illegal and returned it to the Senate for concurrence with an amendment.
By a vote of 80-23, the House voted to soften the punishment from (500 or six months in prison to (100 or 30 days behind bars.
Rep. Frank Ballance, D-Warren, said he considered the original punishment a bit heavy for this type of offense.
But Rep. Paul Pulley, D-Durfaam, sak the fines woe meant to deter what be called a growing problem.
C(nlla Access
A resolutkm urging the state to solve a controversial problem regarding access to the Outer Banks hamlet of Conrila was approved 964) by the House.
The resolutkm is a watered-down versin of a Soiate bill that origioaUy would have incorporated CwoUa in an effort to open a private road that for years serveas an important link for Outer Banks residoits, said Rep. Charles Evans, I>Dare.
In recMt years, the road was acquired by a private
landowner who bkxed it off and hired armed ^lards to protect the entrance, be said.
The resohion sen& a strmg message to the state Department (rf'Transportatioo to... acquire what K necessary to provide accesssaid Evans.
Oonstnictioo
A bill that would have required some home builders to be licensed as general contractors drew such heavy fire that its floor manager. Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne, moved that it be sent back to CMnmittee. The House complied, 57-44.
Under the bill, anyone building more than two residences a year costing more than (30,000 must be a Ikei^ coikractor.
Lancaster said the bill tightens a loophole in a 1981 law that excluded from the d^mitioo of general cmtractor people, firms (M- cwporatioos that construct buildings on their owii land for their own use.
This bill would put out of business all the small entrepeneurs ... uriio have been building three, four, or five houses at fairly low markups, said Rep. Joe Mavretk. D-Edgecwnbe.
Coltrane
The House approved 1054) and sent to the Senate a resolution honoring the life of John Coltrane, a jazz musician who was born in Hamlet in 1926, raised in High Point and died in 1967.
Rep. Sidney Locks, D-Robeson, called Coltrar.e a legend-
^ native son (rf Nwtb Carolina who spread joy and jid)Datioa...tomillioas.
Rep. Dorothy Burnley, R-Guilford, played two tape recordings of Coltranes music and hailed him as a man who had the ability, man or woman, black or white, to reach your soul.
Pikblk Health
A bill revising and iqidatmg North Carolinas public health laws that carries a controversial amendment was approved on its final reading 105-2 and returned to the Senate for concurrence.
Last week, an amendmoit was attached to the bill that repeals a 1981 provision barring North Carolina from enacting any hazardous-waste laws more strict than fedoal standards.
'The move was an effort to force Senate action on a House bill that would do the same thing but is stalled in a Senate committee.
TimeSiares
A bill regulating time shares won final House approval 1034) and was sent to the Senate.
Time shares refers to the practice of buying partial ownership in a vacation home and using it for certain times each year. Its said to be gaining popularity as people seek to secure a beach resort home without paying the full price of a cottage or condominium.
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