Daily Reflector, July 10, 1983


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rSUNNY

Mostly sunny Sunday and Monday. High in the mid 80s. Low Sunday night in upper 50s. Light winds Sunday.WATER HUNT

Water is becoming earths most precious item, and the hunt for it is desperate. The story is on Page A-10.STARS IN BLITZ

The Philadelphia Stars rallied from 21 points down to defeat the Chicago Blitz in the USFL playoffs. (Page B-1)

Today's Reading

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D-5thru D-10

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Arts.......

Crossword

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Bridge

Editorial

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Building

Enterment

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Business

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Opinion

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 145

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FiaiON GREENVILLE, N.C. SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 10, 1983

106 PAGES9 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTS

Lived On Apples, Berries

Rescuers Find Boy Safe After Week On Mountain

INJURED IN CRASH - Bob StauffeidKirg of Durham is checked by an emo-gracy medical technician after his camper collided Saturday with a church bus five miles west of Wnfe Forest on N.C. 98. The state Highway Patnd said 26 people,

Including 22 of the 55 dldren aboard the bus, were injured. Two were described as having serious injuries. The bus was taking the children from Camp Kanata, north of Raleigh, to Gainer for a roller skate outing. (APLaserpboto)

Hunt & Helms: The Race

By WILLIAM M. WELCH Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) - Neither man has declared, and the election is 16 months away, but the expected bid by North Carolina Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. to unseat Republican Sen. Jesse Helms is already shaping up as one of the major confrontations of 1984.

Thats going to be the most important race in the country outside the presidential race, says Hamilton Jordan, former chief of staff to President Carter. Youve got two men who represent what it means to be a Democrat and a Republican.

The contest is turning North Carolina into a battleground for competing national interests. The Republican right wing

is intent on keeping the Senate warrior, while Democrats hope to topple Helms, taking with him his multimillion-dollar political empire and perhaps control of the U.S. Senate.

In recent weeks Hunt, a moderate Democrat in his second term, has been to Washington, New York and Atlanta in search of money.

Last Tuesday Helms, also in his second term, flew across North Carolina with Moral Majority leader Jerry Falwell to kick off a campaign Falwell said was aimed at getting millions of conservative Americans registered to vote

If he were not to be reflected next year, Falwell said of Helms, the whole nation will be set back in my opinion five

(Please turn to AS)

Local Blood Collections Escape 'Misinformed' Fears Over AIDS

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer There has been no noticeable impact on blood collections or consumption in Pitt County or the other 27 counties served by the local Red Cross blood center because of concern over the disease Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Dick Carney, director of the Tar River Blood Center, said last week.

Carney suggested that nationally, misunderstanding about AIDS has led some

people to believe they can contract AIDS by being a blood donor, while others who are undergoing surgery have asked to select their own blood donors.

Individuals, Carney said, cannot contract AIDS by donating blood, and there is still inconclusive evidence that AIDS can be transmitted by blood transfusion.

While some areas of the country are experiencing difficulties with blood collections because of the concern over

AIDS, Carney said the AIDS scare does not appear to have affected blood collections in dhe local area.

We are seeing the normal decline in collections dering the summer months, but this happens every year. Its nothing more than that.

Carney also said that the Red Cross blood service, along with the other two major collection agencies -the American Association of Blood Banks and the Council of Community Blood Centers

- which collect and process 98 percent of the blood used in the United States, oppose a directed donations system where patients identify their own blood donors.

He said there is no indication that directed donations can provide a safer blood source, and 'hat a directed donations ' ''n ^uld disrupt the ca t ig /olunteer donor system While there have been questions about directed dona-(PleaseturntoAS)

ByTOMEBLEN Associated Press Writer ROAN MOUNTAIN, Tenn. (AP) - An 8-year-old city boy missing for a week in rugged mountains along the Tennessee-North Carolina border was found Saturday, hungry and apparently hallucinating but otherwise in good condition.

The boy ate a half-dozen candy bars, drank two soft drinks and ate an apple just after being found. At a hospital he downed roast beef and mashed potatoes for lunch and asked for hot dogs for supper.

A six-man search team found Michael Eugene Reel of Hickory, N.C., about 9:30 a.m. EDT in a blackberry thicket on Roan Mountain. He was only l'/ miles from where he disappeared, but rescuers said they believed he had wandered around the mountain.

Although Michaels feet were wet, tender and swollen and he had several scratches and insect bites, he appears to be in excellent, excellent shape, Carter County Sheriff William Crumley said.

Michael was taken briefly to Roan Mountain State Park where he was reunited with his mother, Patricia, then to Carter County Memorial Hospital in Elizabethton for observation. He was listed in satisfactory condition and doctors said he would be kept overnight and released Sunday.

He should not have any physical long-term effects from this, Dr. Dennis Laug said after examining the boy. He should be running and playing and acting normal in two or three days.

Its unbelievable the shape hes in for what hes been through. I think its amazing that he has survived this ordeal.

Laug said the boy was mainly scratched from the twigs, mostly around his ankles.

He walked right into us, said Jimmy Doyle, one of the men who found him about 30 feet into the woods off a field.

I just happened to be at the right place at the right time, Doyle said. He was just standing there. I said, Who are you? and he said, Michael. I said, Michael

who? and he said, Michael Reel.

Doyie said Michael appeared to be clean and his hair pretty well Roomed ... But his shirt was in rags and his pants looked like he had been wallowing in the the mud.

Im just in shock because they found him, Mrs. Reel said at the hospital. "He told me he was going to get some water and the next thing he knew'he was lost.

1 figured hed be hurt pretty bad before they found him. I knew they would find

him but 1 thought he would be in shock or something, she said.

Rescue squad members said the boy talked of having spent time watching television with his grandfather, but they believed he had hallucinated

SAFE WITH FATHER - Michael Reel, 8, of Hickory gets a hug from his father, Ernie Reel, in a hospital bed in Elizabethton, Term., Saturday. Michael was found Saturday morning by searchers on Roan Mountain near the

North Carolina-Tennessee border after ending a week in the mountains. He had wandered away from his familys campsite July 2. (APLaserphoto)

Summer Heat Can 'Do In' The Unfit

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer The cotton ball clouds, blue skies and warm temperatures of summer are enough to lure even the most dedicated, lethargic television watcher outdoors for physical activity.

But as beautiful as the days of summer seem, they can pose a danger to the uninitiated exerciser and even the physical fitness buff.

Those dangers include cramps, exhaustion and strokes caused by summer heat, according to Dr. Joe Williamson, associate chairman of the Pitt County Memorial Hospital Emergency Room.

During June, July, August and part of September each year we see about three to five cases of heat exhaustion a week. Stroke and cramping are not as frequent. We see maybe four strokes a summer, but these strokes can be fatal, Williamson said.

According to Williamson, beat cramps are usually caused by repetitive action done while in the sun. For example, someone who usually works in the office might decide to go out and chop weeds in his garden on a Saturday. He chops the whole garden with his ri^t arm in a reptitive motion and after a time, his arm cramps up like a rock and goes into spasms. The reason this happens is probably because his sodium level gets low from sweating so much in addition to the repetitive motion.

The two biggies - heat exhaustion and heat stroke - are absolute emergencies, according to Williamson. Someone who is not used to regular exercise and decides to go out and jog several mUes on a hot, 95Kiegree afternoon, is more

susceptible to stroke than others, but an experienced runner can get heat stroke as well.

With this type of stroke, the persons body temperature goes as high as 105 degrees to 106 or even 107 degrees. The sweat glands shut down and the person begins to get confused and sometimes even experiences seizures.

^T.liamson said as many as 25 percent of the people who get heat stroke can die, so it is absolutely necessary to get a person with the above symptoms to the hospital for treatment as soon as possible, even yesterday, he said.

When we get the person to the hospital we pump lots and lots of fluids into him and if the temperature is too high, we usually submerge the patient in an ice bath to get the 'temperature to stabilize as soon as possible.

Heat exhaustion is a milder form of heat stroke, even a forerunner of the more serious affliction, but is not as lethal However, according to Williamson, prompt treatment is just as necessary.

Little babies and older people suffer from heat exhaustion more than any other ^oup of people, just because they are not used to being out in the heat as much. They dont even have to be doing anything strenuous to feel the effects of the heat, Williamson said.

Common sense and preventive measures can divert all three of the beat-related problems, cramps, exhaustion and stroke, Williamson said. These problems can be averted if caretakers of babies, older adults and exercise buffs and weekend tennis players make sure their intake of balanced fluids is increased when the weather is hotter and avoid overextending themselves. There are commercial drinks

made especially to replace sodium in'the body lost through sweating, but the old remedy of a salt tablet and a glass of water does justas well, he said.

Although heat-related problems do not arise much in water sports, swimmers and parents of young swimmers should know the rules of their pool or know dangers associated with the place they are swimming, according to Ray Scharf, ECU swimming coach and local swim instructor.

Every time I hear of someone getting hurt in the water, because they were not aware of possible dangers, 1 just want to cry and wish I had been there to help the people, Scharf said.

Everyone knows that you don't run at pools and you dont go in over your head if you cant swim, but 1 would add to that that people need to bie aware of their limitations and the limitations of the place they have chosen to swim - be it the ocean or a river or a lake, he said.

Most people are unaware of drop offs, currents, tides and sometimes venture into situations that are more than they can handle, but despite all the seemingly negative things I have said, as far as Im concerned theres no better place to be than in the water

Of course, there are more activities to participate in during the summer months than jogging, tennis, gardening and swimming and the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department offers an array of alternative amusements.

Spots in a number of the department-sponsored day camps are still available, according to recreation coordinator Carol Whiteford. Children 8-13 may sign up to participate in the (Please turn to AS)





Obituaries | Cflucus Leader Urges Reagan Quit

Allen

FARMVILLE - Mrs. Jackie Worthingtwi Allen, 79, of 110 S. Cootentnea St. died Saturday morning. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 3:30 p.m. from the Church Street Ouipel (rf Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Lee Parker. Burial will follow in Crestlawn Me-morial Gardens near Farmville.

Mrs. Allen, a life-long resident of Farmville, was a member of Bethany Free Will B^tist Church.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Mable Bowen of Farmville, Mrs. Mamie Dail of Snow Hill and Mrs. Dean Jones of Chesapeake, Va.; four sons. Bill Allen and Roy Lee Allen, both of Farmville, J.D. Allen of Aydi and Jack Allen of Virginia Beach, Va.; four sisters, Mrs. Annie Edwards of Grifton, Mrs. Velma Barrow of Snow Hill, Mrs. Hester Hemby of Bell Arthur and Mrs. Mae Stone of Sanford; 17 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren.

The family will be at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday and at other times at the home of Bill Allen, 201 Dale Drive, Farmville.

Burge

FARMVILLE - Funeral services for Mrs. Eula Laura Means Burge of 513 S. George St.will be conducted in the H.B. Suggs School Gymnasium at 1 p.m. Monday by Dr. C. Grady Stokes. Burial will follow in Crestlawn Memorial Gardens.

Mrs. Burge was a member of Saint Stephen AME Zion Church, where she served as pianist and a member of the trustee board. She taught in the Pitt County sSchool system from 1947-1968 in Farmville and Bethel schools. She was a native of Gastonia, but had resided in Farmville since 1947.

Surviving are her husband, John L. Burge Sr. of the home; two sons, John L. Burge Jr. of Ponsona, Calif., and Dr. William R. Burge Sr. of Alameda, Calif.; 11 grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren.

The body will be on view at Joyners Mortuary from 6-8 p.m. Sunday. The family will greet friends at the h(ne Sunday and will assemble at the home at 12;30 p.m. Monday for the funeral procession.

Highsmitb

BETHEL - Jane Moore Hi^ismith, 63, a retired school teacher, died Saturday. Graveside services will be held Sunday at 4 p.m. at Bethel City Cemtery.

Surviving are her husband, John Ral^ Highsmith of Bethel; mk daughter, Peggy Highsmitb Brinn of Greenville; her mother, Mrs. Maggie Taylor Moore of Bethel; two sisters, Mrs. Anna Moore Foster of Greenville and Margaret Moore Renshaw of Seattle, Wash.; a brother, James Sidney Moore of Pittsboro, and four grandchildren.

Reaves

Mr. Benjamin Reaves of 1208-B Fleming St., Greenville, died Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Fuiml arrangements will be announced later by Norcott and Company Funeral Home, Ayden.

Taft

Mr. Ernest Taft of Emporia, Va., formerly of Greenville, ^ed Saturday in Emporia. Funeral services will be conducted Monday at 2 p.m. at Norcott and Company funeral home in Greenville by the Rev. Hue Walston. Burial will follow in Jones Cemtery.

Mr. Taft was bom and reared in the Greenville area but made his home in Richmond, Va., for many years before making his home in Emporia for the past four years.

Surviving are his foster sisters, Mrs. Annie Ruth Jackson and Mrs. Catherine E. Harris, both of Freeman, Va., Mrs. Louise Gemons of Stokes and Mrs. Sarah Little of Bridgeport, Conn.

The family will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vmon (Boots) Gemons of Stdres.

Israel Gives Up Beirut Districts

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Israeli army units withdrew Saturday from two areas on the outskirts of Beirut and turned them over to the Lebanese army, Israel Tde-viskm reported.

The television report quoted an Israeli source as saying the troops moved out of the Monteverde and Ein Saade districts as part of a normal shift in deployment.

A duty (rfficer at the military command denied knowledge of any such move but said if true, it was a routine change and not part of a pullback or any withdrawal.

The television report also said a unilateral Israeli pullback could begin as soon as this week with the start of a withdrawal from the outskirts of Beirut and the central Chouf mountains to the Damour River nine miles

to the south.

Such a pullback would be the first stage of a much-discussed plan to eventually withdraw all Israeli troops to the Awall River, 17 miles south of Beirut.

Prime Minister Menacbem Be^ and his Cabinet were (pcted to continue discussions on a re^loyment of Israeli forces in Lebanon at the regular weekly meeting Sunday.

Israel is counting on the Lebanese army, the multinationai peacekeeping force d^loyed in Beirut, and the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon to fill the vacuum left by an Israeli redeployment.

Israeli military and pditi-cal sources have said a partial withdrawal would not affect Israeli positions against Syrian forces in eastern Lebanon.

THE BATTLE OF

ARJNAOIDDON

(REVELATION 10:14-16)

HEAR THIS BIBLE MESSAGE OF THE END OF THE WORLD

SUNDAY NIGHT, JULY 10, AT 7:30 P.M.

AT THE BIG GOSPEL TENT LOCATED ON MEMORIAL DRIVE ACROSS FROM HOLIDAY INN. GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA

A. L BRYSON B.A. THEOLOGY, BIBLICAL LANGUAGES

*BIG SERMONS EACH NIGHT

MONDAY ... . SOAP OPERA NIGHT-THE GUIDING LIGHT

TUESDAY....................THE    DEVIL    MADE    ME    DO    IT

^DNESDAY.........THE HANDWRITING ON THE WALL

THURSDAY...........THE    MAN BORN WITH GRAY HAIRS

HOW MANY GODS ARE THERE ANY WAY?

|f|TU"DAY....................................NO    SERVICE

SUNDAY   SEVEN SEALS OF REVELATION

By EVANS WITT Associated Press WhIo*

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - The chief of the National Womens Political Caucus - a R^ublican - urged President Reagan on Saturday not to seek a second term, saying he is a dangerous man for American women.

Mr. President, one term is enou^, Kathy Wilson said in a speech. For tite sake of American women - Rqniblicans, Democrats and independents - please step down. Do not seek the Republican nomination.

Four years is enough. As a matter of fact, it is entirely too much.

In another speech, Pat Bailey, a Republican member of the Federal Trade Commission, accused the Reagan administration of fostering bigotry because of its response to womens demands.

I have never doubted that the president is a nice person, she said. But benign bewilderment in response to the womens revolution is license to big)try at all levels and at all comers of the land.

Ms. Wilsons q;)eech was a break with caucus tradition. The group has not previously become involved in presidential politics.

Her statement also was surprising because she has been one of the few leados of a

national womens group who has maintained good relatkms with the Reagan White House over the past two years.

Ms. Wilson was the first of a series of mostly Republican leaders to address the caucus sessions Saturday.

The Republicao members of the caucus adopted their demands for the partys 1984 platform late Saturday, requesting that the party support the Eipial Rights Amendment, abortion rights, affirmative action, pay equity, pension reform and more money for maternal and infant programs.

They also sent a letter with their platform demands to Reagan, saying that appmnt-ments by themselves are not suffic^t to win the siqiport of Rqiublican womi.

Mr. President, if you cannot bridge the gap with Republican women, how can we ever become a majority party?

Sen. Robert Packwood of Oregon, a Republican known as a strong advocate of womois rights, said be h<^ bis party returns to the traditions of Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt.

Eitho- the Rq[)ublican Party will chan^ or expire, Packwood said at a news conference after speaking at a conventimi luncheon.

He warned the feminists that the battle to preserve a womans right to an abortion is not

over, saying that those who seek to outlaw abortions are implacaWe."    ..

Four of the six announced Democratic presidential candidates - former Vice President Walter Mndale and Sens. John Glenn of Ohio, Gary Hart of Ciriorado and Alan Cranston of Califwnia - also arrived to seek support am^ the women activists. Sen. Ernest HoUin^ of South Caitdina was to arrive Sunday in time for the caucus members to question the five on their stands on womens issues.

TTie womens caucus has 77,000 members, about percrat of them R^ublicans. The org^anizatkm is known as the practical politician wing of the womens movemait, giving both Democratic and R^ublican women the services of a political party recruitment, training and money.

Ms. Wilson attacked Reagan both personally and for bis policies.

Ronald Reagan is the only American presidait ever to be elected on the basis of an ideology that has bei frozen in his head for a quarter of a century. The underlying backwardness of that ideology is conceed from us by Mr. Reagans unremitting congeniality, she said.

But these engaging superficial performing skills cannot conceal the hard fact that for

American women Ronald Reagan is a dangerous man.

Ms. Wilson attacked Reagans programs since be took office in 1981.

Aboard this administrations economic Titamc, there seems to be a new notion of women and diildrai firsL she said, pointing to Reagan cuts in programs for cfail(hnen ai^ poor women.

And it doesnt stop there. Ronald Reagan stripped my partys platform of the Equal Rights Amendment where it had been for 40 years, and despite all this talk about government intervention, hes given bis wholehearted suf^rt to right-wing efforts to nationalize our bodies, she said, referring to Reagans of^ition to abortion.

Ms. Bailey, who was ai^inted to the FTC by Democrat Jimmy Carter and whose term has four more years to run, said women should thank Reagan for creating a climate that expose the shallowness of our nations commitment to equality.

She said Reagans policies have discoura^ both government and business from provictog equal opportunities for women and minorities and have unleashed repressed hostility toward women that is pouring down aU over us now. I

Chile Jails Three Political Leaders

SANTIAGO, ChUe (AP) -The president and two other leaders of Chiles largest political party were jailed Saturday and accused of planning a protest later this week against Gen. Augusto Pinochets military government.

Scores of Christian Democrats shouted Liberty! Liberty! in the halls of the Supreme Court building as police ushered their partys leaders to an armored prison van after a 5*/i-hour hearing before Judge Amoldo Dreyse.

At the ^vemments request, the judge had called party President Gabriel Valdes, Secretary-General Jose de Gregorio and former Sen. Jorge Lavandera to question them in the case of two young Christian Democrats jailed Monday night.

The two were seized at a Santiago printing shop while

picking up 700,000 leaflets urging Chileans to take part in a one-day protest Tuesday against President Pinochets rule. They were charged with threatening state security.

Valdes, a former fweign minister, smiled as pdice led him from the courtroom, and Lavandero flashed a V-sign. Some Christian Democrats sai^the governments action would boost suport for the third Day of National Protest.

Later, three womoi, including a former Giristian Democrat member of the now-dissolved Congress, were arrested during a silent and peacful demonstration to protest Valdes arrest, according to published r^rts.

TOP QUALITY, fuel-economical cars can be found at low prices in Gassified.

EQUALITY OF RIGHTS - Judy Goldsmith, presidmt of the National Organization of Women, leads a demonstration in front of the White House Saturday. The full sign in the

background reads: Equality of Rights Under The Law Shall Not Be Denied or Abridged by The United States Or By Any State On Account Of Sex. (AP Laserphoto)

Price Elected Party Chairman

DIal-A-Prayer

752 1362

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -David E. Price, a political science professor at Duke University since 1973, was elected chairman of North Carolinas Democratic Party on Saturday.

The election came during a meeting of the partys executive committee in Raleigh.

Price succeeds Sen. Russell Walker, D-Randolph, who resigned the post.

A native of Erwin, Tenn., Price attended Mars Hill College and received degrees

from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Yale University.

Price, of Chapel Hill, served as executive director of the state Democratic Party from 1979-80. In 1981-82 he was staff director of the Democratic National Committees Commission on Presidential Nomination that was headed by Gov. Jim Hunt.

In other business, the executive committee approved a plan to send a record

number of delegates to the Democratic National Convention in 1984 and a plan governing selection of state delegates.

North Carolina will select 88 delegates and 29 alternates, Walker said. The number of delegates assigned to the state is larger than it has ever been, mai^y because of North Carolinas relatively large vote for Democratic candidates in 1980.

Walker said Hunts com

mission created additional slots to insure that the partys top elected officials would become involved in the national convention in San Francisco July, 1984.

Besides giving the state more delegates, this years plan should increase the importance of the North Carolina presidential primary, said Walker.

I Card of Thanks

The family of the late Bettie Jean Corey Streeter expresses deep appreciation to Dr. I.A. Artis, other doctors, nurses, nurses aides & other workers of the Pitt County Memorial Hospital, the rescue squad, J.C. Hardee & staff members of the Hardees Funeral Home, the ministers, relatives, neighbors and friends for all kind acts rendered during her illness and death. You have been a blessing to us. May God continually bless you in all undertakings.    i

.

jggy homeNw^ ^FEDERAL SAVINGS

IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE ASSOCIATION OF

ROSCOE L KING, VICE PRESIDENT

Mr. King may be reached at our downtown Greenville office, 758-3421. Evenings and weekends, caii 756-2071.

HOM FCDCRAL SAVINGS

AND LOAN ASSOCUnON

OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA    fSLT

Wedlike to be your full-service financial institution"

LAND WANTED

Must Be Located In Or Near Greenville City Limits.

Must Be Zoned Commercial And In High Traffic Area. Minimum Of 4 Acres Required.

Contact Charles Or Parker Overton

at 752-5025 or 758-7600





Joan Warren Named To PCC Board

Gov. Jim Hunt has named Joan Warren of Greenville to the Pitt Community College Board of Trustees. She will serve until June 30,1991.

Ms. Warren is secretary-treasurer of Ed Warren Associates and serves on the Governors Task Force Commission for Recognition of State Employees. She is a member of the Sir Walter Cabinet and the Greenville Arts CouncU. She is a former member of the Greenville Service League.

Contractors Meet Tuesday

The Down East Chapter of the Painting and Decorating Contractors of America will hold its montWy meetings on a regular basis at the Three Steers Restaurant, the second Tuesday of each month at 6:30 p.m. The next meeting will be Tuesday with dinner at 7 p.m.

For dinner reservations, call 756-7611 by Tuesday afternoon. For more information about the chapter call Billy Lovic, president, at 753-2228 or Linwood Dickens, 753-3069.

La Leche League Meets Thursday

La Leche League of Greenville will meet Thursday at 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. The program topic for each meeting will be Advantages of Breastfeeding for Mothers and Babies."

The meetings are open to all interested women. Babies are welcome. For further information, contact Judy Beckert, 7564197.

Gymnastics Clinic Scheduled

The Pitt County Community Schools will sponsor a gymnastics clinic at Farmville Middle School from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. nightly Monday through Thursday.

Instruction will be given on the balance beam, the mini-trampoline and in the area of floor exercises. For further information, call the Community Schools office at 756-6106, ext. 205.

Tingen Graduates From Wittenberg

Timothy Aubrey Tingen graduated recently from Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio. Tingen, a speech and theater major, is the son of Mrs. Revalene S. Tingen of Route 7, Greenville.

Dental Student Awarded Scholarship

Michelle Kyle Anderson, daughter of William and Dorothy Anderson of Winterville, was recently awarded a Board of Governors Dental Scholarship by the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill School of Dentistry. The scholarship provides a stipend of $4,000 per year plus tuition, mandatory fees, instruments and supplies, and is renewable for each year of study.

Miss Anderson will begin the four-year DDS program in August. She graduated from Ayden-Grifton High School in 1978 and from UNC in May 1982. with a bachelor of science degree in dental hygiene.

While a student at UNC. she was involved m a number of organizations including the American Dental Hygienists Association, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., the Black Student Movement and the Professional Health Society.

,,She was selected last summer to participate in the Medical Educational Development program, an eight-week summer program which allows minority premedical and predental students from across the country to enroll in a curriculum of study similar to that of a first-year medical or dental student.

Keeper Will Seek Goat ReplacementIn The Area

Hubert Student Serves As Intern

John Barnett of Hubert is one of 115 students selected to participate in the North Carolina State Government Internship Program this summer.

Barnett, who studied English last year at East Carolina University, is working in the public information office in the North Carolina Department of Administration. He is the son of Kenneth and Barbara Barnett of Hubert.

Gardner Award Winners To Be Feted

Chancellor and Mrs. John M. Howell will honor East Carolina Universitys three winners of the 0. Max Gardner award with a reception Wednesday evening at the chancellors home.

FRANCIS SPEIGHT

The three being honored are Professors Emeritus Ovid W. Pierce and Francis Speight and Professor Stanley Riggs.

Riggs, a geologist, won the 0. Max Gardner award this spring. Pierce, a novelist, won the award in 1973 and Speight, an artist, was presented the coveted award in 1975.

The 0. Max Gardner award is presented annually by the University of North Carolina Board of Governors to members of the faculty who have made the greatest contribution to the walfare of the human race. The award was established by a be-

OVID PIERCE

STAN RIGGS

MICHELLE KYLE ANDERSON

quest in the will of the late former governor.

Riggs, professor of geology, is known for his studies and explorations of the worlds deposits of phosphates and for his concerns for the fragile ecology of the Outer Banks and Atlantic coastline.

Speight is a painter and teacher of painting. Pierce is the author of five major novels and other works. Both Pierce and Speight are previous winners of the North Carolina Award.

Family Swim Night Planned

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department Pool is offering a new program - Family Swim Night. Beginning Friday, the pool will be open for families only (parents and their children, no children by themselves). This program will be offered on Fridays from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Admission is $1 for anyone 6 years or older. Season passes are honored.

SAN DIMAS, Calif. (AP)-An 11-year-old girl whod planned to take care of the Marines goat mascot until it was killed by airport inspectors upon arrival from Lebanon - says shes asking President Reagan to help find a replacement.

The goat, named Gen. William E. Billy Goat, was a mascot of U.S. Marines in Lebanon, and was being sent to California by the Army-Navy 83 Foundation.

Roslyn Caldwell of San

Dimas, 25 miles northeast of Los Angeles, was to keep the goat, which would be used at the Army-Navy football game in Pasedena in November.

NOTICE

VENTERS GRILL

Is Closed For Vacation Will Re-Open July 18

Thank You For Your Patronage Have A Nice Summer

MONDAY

12 Noon Greenville Noon Rota-r}' Club meets at Rotani Bldg.

12:30 p.m. - Kiwanis of Greenville-University Club meets at Holiday Inn 5:30 p.m. - Greenville TOPS Club meets at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m. - Host Lions Club meets at Tom's Restaurant 6:30 p.m. - Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. Eastern Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Administration Bldg.

8:00 p.m. Lodge No. 885 Loyal Order of the Moose

TUESDAY

7:00 a.m. Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a.m. Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m. Down East Chapter of Painting and Decorating Contractors of America meet at Three Steers

7:00 p.m. Family Support Group at Family Practice Center

jroup

7:30 p.m. Toughlove parents support group at St. Pauls

Episcopal Church 7:30 p.m. Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at HON. Warren St.

7:30 p.m. Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. - Withla Council of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholic Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.

f'

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400 s. Evans St. 752-3866 The Most Unique Shop In Eastern N.C." Thousands of Unique Items China-Crystal-Brass-Copper-Pewter-Collectibles etc.

Applications Available For Review

The North Carolina Department of Human Resources federal block grant applications for fiscal year 1983-84 will be available for public review and comment Monday through Friday in the Eastern Regional Office, Division of Mental Health, Metal Retardation and Substance Abuse Services located on St. Andrews Drive in Greenville.

The applications for federal blcok grant funds include low-income energy assistance, social services, maternal and child health, preventitive health/health services and alcohol, drug abuse and mental health.

The public may review the documents between the hours of 8a.m.and5p.m.

Funds Solicition Approved

Police Chief Glenn Cannon has announced approval of a request by Joy Temple Holiness Church of Deliverance to conduct door-to-door and sale-benefit affair solicitations during July, August and September to raise funds for installation of a new floor in the church.

The Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Sunday, July 10,1983-A-3

owned by William Turner Bradley of 219 Singletree Drive.

Dixon was charged with exceeding speed limit, exceeding safe speed, use of improper lane, hit and run and driving under the influence (third offense). Estimated damage to the Bradley car was $2,500, whUe damage to the Dixon vehicle was placed at $2,000.

Alumni Meeting Scheduled

The Greenville Industrial-Eppes Alumni will hold a business meeting Monday at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will be at the home of Marion Wilkes, 1108 W. Fifth St., 752-0862.

State Employees Elect Officers

Linda Lan^ey of Greenville has been elected chairman of Area 5 of the North Carolina State Employees Association Inc. Her election came at a meeting Friday in Kinston.

Other officers elected were Jay Barrington of New Bern, vice chairman; Tommy Potter of Grantsboro, nominating chairman; Bill Allison of Kinston, resolutions chairman; Gene Collier of Greenville, constitution chairman, and Susan Herring of Bayboro, audit chairman. Ivan V. Hill of Ayden, current state president of the association, was recognized and awarded a plaque for Outstanding Member of the Year . Area 5 includes Beaufort, Carteret, Craven, Greene, Hyde, Jones, Lenoir, Onslow, Pamlico and Pitt counties.

Wreck Causes $4,500 Damage

Approximately $4,500 in vehicle damage resulted from a collision Saturday, according to Greenville police records.

The collision occurred when a vehicle driven by Thomas Neal Dixon Jr. of Richmond, Va., collided with a parked car

Coffey To Speak

Hooker Memorial Christian Church will hold a Joy in July - Adventures in Sharing program on the church lawn each Wednesday in July beginning at 7:30 p.m. The speaker for this week will be Albert Coffey.

Those attending should bring lawn chairs or blankets. In case of rain, the program will be held in the church lounge.

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Twice Rammed By Same Ship

TACOMA, Wash. (AP) -Since 1978, a drawbridge that spans the 150-foot-wide Blair Waterway here has been rammed 29 times. And twice in the past seven years it has been rammed by the same ship.

The British freighter Dilkara struck a leaf of the crossing recently, blocking traffic during the morning rush hour. In its first encounter, the Dilkara decomissioned the bridge for 11 days.

For information on voter registration, call the Pitt County Board of Elections at 758-4683.

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Sunday

Opinion

If Death Must Be, Then Let's Make It Quick

It is not certain how much a U.S. Supreme Court ruling of last week concerning the postponement of executions will speed up the process.

The court ruled that federal appeals courts do not have to delay executions of death row inmates who have non-frivolous appeals pending. The court was upholding the expedited procedures adopted by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Texas.

The court, through Justice Byron White, said that inmates seeking execution postponements must have a substantial showing of being deprived of constitional rights, that merits of the appeal can be considered, and that postponement of executions is not automatic because of a pending appeal to the Supreme Court.

The ruling will no doubt mean that some death row inmates will go to their deaths sooner. At the same time it obviously leaves wide discretion to the lower courts as to when to delay an execution. Given the propensity of the courts to allow virtually unlimited time for appeals and the finality of carrying out the death penalty we could guess that the courts will proceed carefully in making use of these new Supreme Court granted powers.

As with other Supreme Court rulings, however, this one carries a message to the federal courts. They are expected to intervene less in capital punishment cases and to delay the executions only if there are real constitutional questions involved.

If our society is going to accept the concept of capital punishment, then it should be carried out promptly following fair trial and reasonable appeals. To execute only a small number of those sentenced to death in any given year in our nation is the most uneven application of justice of all.

Tme l/p

N<mI

Yoncay

Mother

Expanded Plan For Surplus Food Makes Sense

The cheese and butter giveaway program, in which area residents who qualify are given the commodities from the federal governments surpluses, has proven popular.

It is so popular that the Pitt County commissioners have accepted the recommendation of Leroy James, Agricultural Extension Service county chairman, that the program be expanded.

James, whose agency now supervises the distribution, asked for and got the authority to add flour, corn, meal, rice, dry milk and honey to the program. The commissioners gave James authority to make application for all surplus foods.

It makes good sense. Thanks to the great efficiency of American agriculture our nation is in the unique position of having too much food. Why not put it in the hands of those who can consume it rather than pay for continued storage?

The Daily Reflector

INCORPORATED

M9 Cotanch# Streat, GreenvHIa, N.C. 27834 Estabflshad 1882 Publishad Monday Through Friday Aftarnoon and Sunday Morning DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of tha Board JOHN S. WHICHARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishars Sacond Class Postaga Paid at Graanvilla, N.C.

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Pitt And Adjoining Counties $4.00 Par Month Elsawhara in North Carolina $4.35 Par Month Outsida North Carolina $5.50 Par Month

MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS Tha Associated Press is ax-clusivaly entitled to use tor publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the locel news published herein. All rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.

UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL

Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.

CffR/S fUAJAjcrr 'ffi Ditu ^cfucro^

Alvin

Taylor

Sunday Morning Notes

Lightning has awed man for millions of years. The strange bolts streaked through the skies, hit trees and sometimes men, often killing them instantly.

Its little wonder that humans have regarded the power of an electrical storm as the wrath of the gods and feared that their own misconduct could bring a lightning strike which would dispatch them from this life.

Pitt County has its share of * violent storms. Several moved through last week as season record temperatures gripped the area, bringing on the violent storms of late afternoon.

It is generally understood now how lightning bolts are generated and, since the same procedure is used to generate power for our homes, businesses and factories, we are less fearful of storms.

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

The bolts from the skies, however, are just as dangerous to modem man as they were to the cave man. Today the danger is different. Many of us are in danger working in the fields or perhaps on the golf course when the storms roll in. And there can be danger standing on a river bank fishing. We only have to look at lightning-scarred trees to recognize this.

But lightning does other things to modem man. It can disrupt our power supply and communications simply by hitting a line. We all know that electricity can be off for a few moments up to hours after a major storm. And it can play havoc with electronics. Television sets have been wiped out by a bolt and computers can be totally disrupted.

Lighhtning has been powerful enough to fuse sand, split trees

by evaporating water, break loose large stones and throw 50-pound rocks 20 yards.

It is interesting to note that lightning causes some 150 deaths annually in the United States, $20 million in property damage and sets 10,000 forest fires which destroy $30 million in timber. It is estimated that world-wide, 1,800 storms are in progress at any given time, producing 100 flashes per second. In a day there are 44,000 thunderstorms and 8 million flashes.

So there is plenty of danger from lightning. Campers, those on or in the water, golfers (because of their metal cleats), virtually anybody who is outside when an electrical storm comes up, is a possible victim. In this area the storms come up often at this time of the year. The lesson is: be careful.

A snooty Charieston lady is said to have rmarfced that, For the life (rf me I cant fathom why they make such a todo over Whistlers Motho. After all, she was only a McNeill from Wilmington.

The Charleston lady was right. Anna Whistler was a McNeill of Wilmington and Qarkton - her father. Dr. C.D. McNeill, maintained homes both at Wilmingti and in Bladen County. But her talented sons painting - a side view (rf a woman in a bon^ seated in a chair with her hands folded on her lap - achieved fix her immortality. It hangs in the Louvre and - along with the Winged Victory, Vemis De Milo and the Mona Lisa - is on the "must list of every American visitor to the Paris museum.

Anna McNeill Whistler was honored at a ceremony in Garkton in 1938 when a historical marker at the site of her childhood home was dedicated. Several hundred persons gathered to hear addresses by Ambassador to Mexico Joseph Daniels and Robert Lister, the cfaieftan of the McNeill dan, extolling the mother of the American painter, who lived most of his life in London and became famous as a wit and lambaster of critics as well as an etdier and painter.

Daniels, noting that Annas Scotch heritage - she was a McNeill of Tayni^, he said - asserted that the genious she imparted to her son had enaUed her to emerge as The Mother - The Mother d the whde worid. Continuing the hyperbde, Daniels asserted that No son has ever lived who has so immortalized his mother.

You cannot look iqion the portrait or think of Whistlers Mother without feeling that she answered the plea of Charies Wagner for simplicity in life, for simple thoughts, dmple works, simple needs, simle beaidy. Thoe is impressive dignity and calm contemplation in the face and in the unconscious serenity and sureness of horsdf - a perfect woman, noUy planned, he said.

Danids went on to relate - for the first time - the story of the portrait. He told of the mothers touching, unswerving, devotion to her son - a devotion which in later years led her to leave her native land and to go out udiesitatingly through a mighty Federal blockade of Gvil War times to join Jamie in En^and. But in Limdon she found that her son was troubled.

Whistler felt that the world had betrayed him and that his own mother had failed him, Daniels continued. He left England without even a goodbye to his mother. Mrs. Whistler waited firm, understanding, troubled. On through two years she waited, alone in England.

But not quite alone, Daniels hastened to add. He said that Thomas Carlyle, the great Scottish essayist and historian 4 lived nearby, would frequoUy join her to keep her company in her vigil. Dour, tacitura but with Highlander insist and understanding and sympathy, he came in the afternoons and sat down. There was not much talk. He sat across the hearth, with a rug across his lap and glowered and grieved. One day Jamie would come back.

It was there that he found them, the dour Cariyle, the tranquil mother, waiting. It was so that he painted them. The portraits are companion things. The portrait of Mrs. Whistler is confession and atonement - and for himself and for her, immortality. Daniels vignette may or may not be true, but Whistler did paint the dour Scot. His portrait hangs in the museum at Glasgow.

Actually Whistler did not - at least at first - know the portrait of his mother by its present name. He called it an Arran^ment in Gray and Black to de^mphasize its subjective content.

While advertising and defending his credo (tf art iw arts sake, Whistler staged daborate exhibits, lectures and polemics. Sometimes his zeal got him involved in lawsuits. One of these came after the critic John Ruskin, in discussing Whistlers fancifully entitled work, Falling Rocket: Nocturne in Black and Gold, wrote that Whister asked 200 guineas for flinging a pot of paint in the publics face. Whistler won the argument in court, but payment of the cQpit costs left him nearly bankrupt.

Before he died, Whistler was widely acclaimed tor his excellent draftsmanship, exquisite odor and his teclmical proficiency both as a painter and etcher. He was the author of brilliant critical essays, and his lecture ptddished under the title Ten oclock was of great influence on students of the theory of art. In fact, Daniels was not exaggerating extensively when he told the crowd at Garkton in 1938 that Whistler was probably the gr^test modem painter.

North Carolinians who wish to examine samples of bis genius and have not the time or money to visit the Louvre in Paris or the Tate Gallery in London, will find representatives of his work at the Freer Gallery in Washington. It includes an entire room from the Leyland home in London which he decorated in a style that anticipated Art Noveau.

Whistlers mother may have been only a McNeill from Wilmington, but her son created a big splash in the art world of the late 19th century.

House Republicans Taking GOP Lead

WASHINGTON - House R^blicans are becoming the cutting edge of the partys drive for majority status, as seen in two remarkably candid letters taking to task key figures in the Senate R^ublican leadership and the Reagan administration.

On June 22, the House minority whip, Rq). Trent Lott, sent a heated letter to Sen. Pete Domenici, diair-man of the Senate Budget Committee, expressing anger over capitulation to the Democrats. On June 29, Lott and the rest of the House GOP leadership signed a letter to Dr. Martin Feldstein, chairman uf the Council of

Economic Advisers, expressing concern over his tight-money, high-tax policies.

Republicans normally do not ciunmit strong language to paper in communicating with each other. But the angry letters from the House reflect two R^lkan Parties existing side by side, with a widening gap between them: Wall Street vs. Man Street, populist vs. elitist, growth vs. austerity.

Newt Gingrich, a third-term congressman fromGeorgia and former history professor who is the Houses new GOP theoretician, has been meeting regularly with other junior

House KqHiblicans to devise strategy for what be calls o^imistic, as contrasted with pessimistic, Repi^licans. They assume optimistic Republicans cannot count on either the Senate Republican majority nor the administration (though Ronald Reagan himself is at heart an (^ timist) to seize the opportunity for national support.

Lott, the Houses second-ranking Republican, shares the outlook of these junior colleagues. So, on June 22, be sat down and scribbled in longhand (to be typed later by his office) a letter to

Domenici that departed from ths formalities usually observed in such correspondence.

Trying as best I can to respect the privileges of our two branches of Congress, Lott wrote Domenici, I must express my disappointment, in fact anger, at the way you handled the recoit budget resolution. Specifically, he assailed the senator for dealing exclusively, inside the Senate-House budget conference, with the leading Democrats, Rep. James Jones and Sen. Lawton Chiles, and ignoring his House Replican counterpart, Rep. DelLatta.

That produced a compromise budget resolution written to'Democratic ^ificatiofls and calling for a $70 billion, three-year tax increase. Domenici and the other members of the Senate GOP Gril^ of Cardinals put a higher priority m maintaining institutional procedures than ideological partisanship. So, the esteemed Senate majority leader, Sen. Howard Baker, ended up voting for Domenlcis package on final passage.

Domenici has not answered Lotts letter at this writing, reflecting this view by one Senate GOP inskta-: Trent is the self-appointed cons

cience of the Republican Party, and we ignore him ac-cordin^y. Indeed, Lott -allied with Ra. Jack Konp, chairman of the House Republican Confermtce -has battled for a growth oriented economic policy.From beginning to end, Lott opposed Reagans reappointment of Paul Volcker to the Federal Reserve Board chairmanship as the choice of Wall Street, not Main Street.

Not uprisingly, Lotts an-dKemps are the first two signatures on the July 29 letter to Fddstein.

Copyright 1963 Field Enterprises, Inc.

James J. Kilpatrick

Ruling Wasn't So Bqd After All

WASHINGTON - Now that a couple of weeks have passed since the Supreme Court struck down the legisative veto, it is possible to view the consequences of that opinion in a little better perspective. At fir^ impression it seemed a calamity. We will discover in time, I bdieve, that the decision was not catastrophic after all.

As Justice Lewis Powell observed, the breadth of the courts decision gives one pause. Over the past 50 years Congress has reserved a power of legislative veto in roughly 200 statutes. Powell said his c^leagues jqiparently had invalidated every one of them.

If so, the consequences are as destructive as Justice Byron White termed them. Quoting from Macbeth, White saw aU these pretty chickens slain at one feU swoop. But it is useful to keep in mind that while Congress repeatedly has reserved a power of veto. Congress has exercised that power very rarely. We should recognize also that Congress retains alternative means to get to the same end that its veto power would have accomplished.

The system has worked in this fashion: The two houses in Congress pass a bill delegating certain powers to the executive branch, and they present that bill to the president for bis ^ signature. He si^ it. The act contains a provision saying thuit the affected agency may exercise the delegated power, but

The but is the power reserved by Congress to veto the agencys action if Congress finds the action unauthorized or unwise.

I happen to like the device. It accords fully with my own understanding of the basic constitutkmai provision that all legislative powers are vested in the Congress. The power to write law-surely embraces the power not to write law, and that is what the legislative veto is mostly about. Congress delegates power to an agency such as the Federal Trade Commission, authorizing the FTC to issue rules and regulations having the force and effect of law. The veto has provided an efficient mechanism against abuse of the regulatory power.

The Supreme Gxirts decision creates an ironical situation. The court felt that the le^aUve veto permitted Congress to circumvent the constitutiooal requirement of presentmeiU to the president, thus blocking the chief executive out of the picture. But without the veto, both the Congress and also the president are now blocked out. For the moment, it might appear that rules and regulations having the force and effect of law may be written by the bureaucracy without restraint from any quarter.

But this is not so. Now that the first moments of panic have passed, it is clear that Congress has lost none of its basic power. If the FTC should issue some sweeping regulation on TV commericals - a regulation so offensive that the Congress from passing a specific bill to that effect. If the president signs

the nullifying bill (or if Congress overrides a presidenial veto), thats the end of the matter. Or the Congress could write apro-viskm into a bill appropriating funds for theFTC to the effect that none of the rqmropriated rntrney could be spent on a regulation having to do with TV commercials.

It may be - who ea know? - that the possibility of a legislative veto has had a restraining effect upon the executive agencies. But there is no reason to suppose mat, freed of this threat, the bureaucracy will nm amok. The regiilatory agracies remain answeraUe to Congress for every penny they can spend.

Rep. Elliott H. Levitas, D<ia., has come up with an attractive idea. He will c^ra an amendment to the pending authorization bill for the Coosumer Product Saf^ Commission that will provide not a le^tive veto but a le^tive affirmation: No major new rule proposed by the CPSC could become effective unless it were proved by a joint, resolution of Congress and signed by the president.

As an apostle of strict construction, I have to accept the majoritys decision. The chief justice gave us strict construction with a vengeance. The opinion wifi make life mai^mny easier for presidents and bureaucrats and marginally more difficult for the Con{^ but it is not the enormous transfer of power that it seemed to be at first.

Copyright 1963 Universal Press Syndicate .





Totbeeditw:

On May 24 the Supreme Court handed down the decision on the case of Bob Jones University versus the United States. By an 8-to-l margin, the court ruled that Bob Jones University would lose its tax-exempt status.

These are the incredible events which led up to that decision, accordimg to a booklet titled What About the Bob Jones Decision? by Kent Kelley:

No law exists or ever has existed in the Bob Jones case. It was based entirely upon Internal Revenue Service regulations which were never passed by Congress.

No adversary existed in the Bob Jones case. Not one person charged the school with discrimination.

The U.S. Justice Department dropped the case against Bob Jones saying there was no basis in law to continue.

The U.S. Supreme Court, in an unprecendented move, sought out William Coleman, a civil rights lawyer, to continue prosecution of the case.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the man it had appointed and the case was decided against Bob Jones.

to put it another way: Suppose you are called into court to stand trial fora traffic violation. There is no arresting officer with charges against you; there is no law on the boote which you have violated; yet the court appoints an attorney to prosecute you. As a result, the court finds you guilty and takes your drivers license. Such is the action taken in this case. No charges. No violation of any law. But guilty.

Rachel Steinbeck Stun Greenville

Letters submitted to Public Forum should be no longer than 300 words. The editor reserves the right to edit longer letters.Paul T. O'Connor

RALEIGH - Alex Brock, director of the State Elections Board, remembers a few years back to the year when he, as a Wake County voter, had to go to the polls on six different occasions. In addition to the elections for local offices, there were bond issue and other referenda.

Brock says we dont need that many election days each year. Theyre confusing to the voters. They hurt voter turnout and they waste a lot of money.

Rep. John Jordan, D-Alamance, dropped a bill in the hopper near the end of June that would require that all elections in North Carolina, except those for municipal offices, be held on one of two voting days. If the county commissioners wanted to hold a water and sewer bond referendum, for example, theyd have to schedule the vote for either May or November.

Theres nothing complicated about this bill,Jordan says. If youre afraid of your

people, youll vote against this bill. If you want a low voter turnout, vote against this bill. If you want a high turnout, vote for it.

Jordan says that some bond referenda are scheduled with the hope of a low voter turnout in mind. Hold an election in February, when no one is thinking about elections, and youll have a low turnout. Some county commissioners want to hold a bond referendum when no one votes. Theyll tell you they want to hold an election on a cold, rainy night because the lower the turnout, the better an organized numerical minority can be effective.

His bill would put those bond issues on the ballot at a time when elections for president or Congress or the General Assembly would be drawing a bigger turnout. The result, he says, would be a vote more representative of public sentiment.

He also thinks the reverse could happen.

Many local issues - like liquor by the drink votes - bring extremely large turnouts. That would mean more people participating in political elections which were also on the ballot that day. Brock noted that referenda regarding the creation of special school tax, sanitary or fire protection districts regularly draw large turnouts, also.

It was just that proposition which brought forth enough opposition to get the bill sent to subcommittee. Rep. George Brannan, D-Johnston, says he doesnt want statewide elections getting all mixed up in the heat of local issues.

Ruffin Bailey, lobbyist for beer wholesalers, took the floor to ask that ABC elections be exempt from these universal election dates. It would unnecessarily extend the amount of time needed to petition for an ABC election and actually vote, he said. In the hallway later, Bailey cornered Jordan and told him

politicians wouldnt like running in an election if a wet-or-dry vote was also on the ballot. Jordan agreed. They might get asked to take a stand, he said. Things could get nasty for the politicians.

The bill would not affect municipal elections. Brock said they would continue to be held in odd-numbered years with primaries in October and elections in November.

Jordan suspects that his bill will be weakened in sudcommittee. Probably have the ABC elections taken out. Politicians dont want to do anything thatll make running for re-election any more difficult.

But even with those elections exempted, Brock said, the law would be a big improvement. When you ask the voters to go to the polls six times in one year, he said, they end up staying away completely. And, youve paid the costs of holding six elections when hardly anyone's voting.

Maxwell Glen    |*ff        

and G>dy Shearer    ti IX ITS

WASHING'TON - Recently the Cable Health Network celebrated its first anniversary by introducing a revolutionary new program, Physicians Journal Update.

While Physicians Journal Update offered an unusual array of medical news and esotrica, it was revolutionary mostly for its 11 charter sponsors. All were American pharmaceutical companies, and several of them were hawking prescription drugs. Whether the programs viewers knew it or not, they were witnessing a new, and potentially dangerous, kind of advertising.

Overrun by plup and promotions for non-prescription (over-the-counter) elixirs, American consumers have until recently lacked ready information on prescription medicines. That is principally because a 1962 federal law requires drug compres advertisements to include extensive medic data (side effects, when to take it and not, etc.) for balances sake. Though the law specifies neither media nor audience, its effectively relegated prescription-drug promotion to sleepy medical journals, favored only by doctors and pharmacists.

Then early last month, with the Food and Drug Administrations blessing, the American subsidiary of Britains Boots Pharmaceuticals began testing on Tampa (Fla.) television a commercial for its prescription arthritic pain reliever, Rufen. The advertisement, scheduled to end its Tampa run next week, only compared Rufens price with that of its chief rival (ironically, the competitor is made under license from Boots).

The FDA had yanked an earlier version of the ^t, charging that It did not meet the govemmentss balance standard. Bootss bare-minimum approach to promotion was to earn ^emment approval, as was Cable Healths argument that ^ysidans* Journal Update would principally reach health professionals and provide the fine print for each advertised pi^ct after every program. Thou^ no one knows how many d^t-^onsumer advertisers are waiting in the wings, FDA C^missioner Arthur Hull Hayes Jr. could lift a moratorium on further advertising sometime this fall - pending, of course, comments from doctors, consumers and the drug companies ttiemselves.

So far, the drug firms aims are clear. Though low-cost, generic drug-makers directly supply only 20 percent of the nations pharmaceutical market, many of the major name-brand companies perceive them as increasingly powerful insurgents. Short of dropping their own prices, many major firms believe that a high^uallty image will lure consumers back to the fold.

Meanwhile, a steadily growing market ($14 billion in 1981 and, according to the Stanford Research Institute, potentially $33 billion in 1987) has only encouraged many pharmaceutical houses to eye a bigger share, and so regard television as their best means to that end. We had to try something different, John D. Bryer, Bootss president, told us by telephone from his Shreveport, La., office. In any event, he said, We have the right to tell the consumer certain information.

Yet, even if Boots restricts itself to price advertising for a proven product, the danger remains that other companies will wish to exercise their right to push useless or potentially harmful medicines on Americas pill-popping populace (Oraflex, anyone?). Many doctors rightly fear a deluge of patients whove succumbed either to exaggerated claims or to hypochondria. Adding to the horror is the prospect that, once educated by company ads, patients will try to treat themselves by circumventing physicians to get their drugs.

Indeed, it seems almost sUly to think that a television producer could squeeze every important detail about a drug into 60 seconds, and perhaps even sillier to expect the average viewer to understand them. So far. Cable Health Network, which supplements each one-minute commercial with 80 seconds of instructive information, has only shown how inadequate television is for making balance commercially viable outside specialized programs.

Unfortunately, despite its moratorium, the FDA has yet to prove that its seen the folly of expanded direct-to-consumer promotion. Had Commissioner Hayes not, in fact, cheered the prospect of such advertising last year, his agency miit have avoided playing re^atory catch-up. Now that a possible wave of merchant chemists awaits a green light, the Reagan administration may not have the strength to say no.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

Barnes

Gersteniang

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, having trouble winning over Democrats to his program of military and economic aid for friendly regimes in Central America, seems to have hit on a tested and proven method for bringing in opposition support: a bipartisan commission.

Twice in his years in office, Reagan has turned to a special panel, made up of Republicans and Democrats, after striking out when trying to settle a problem on his own. And twice these presidential commissions have come through.

Now, Democrats are balking at going \ along not only with specific spending requests, but are also questioning the overall thrust of his {wlicy in Central America. So, Reagan is giving serious consideration to appointing another bipartisan commission, one that would be responsible for studying the direction U.S. foreign policy should take in that troubled region.

Some Democrats feel Reagans requests for money have put them in a politically dangerous position. They fear that failure to support him will leave them open to attack if left-wing guerrillas, aided, according to Reagan, by Nicaragua, Cuba and the Soviet Union, continue to make advances. But these Democrats are also feeling pressure from party leaders and constituents to

Bipartisan Politics

fight Reagans efforts to greatly increase aid to El Salvador.

So far this year, Reagan has asked Congress for $136 million in military aid for El Salvador and has gotten $56 million. Overall, he has asked for $392 million in all forms of economic and military assistance. Congress has approved $264 million, balking all the way.

From the debate and the continuing problems he has had winning congressional support, it is clear that Reagan has been unable to develop the bipartisan consensus he says he wants in the area of foreign policy.

He said at his news conference last week that following his speech to Congress last spring on Central America, there was a decided shift in favor of our position.

But, he said, there has been a constant drumbeat ever since. 1 made one speech; but then the drumbeat ever since to the people is somehow denigrating our position there and indicating that theres something wrong in that position.

Enter the bipartisan commission.

When the president failed to win support for his early plan to bail out the Social Security system from its anticipated shortfall, the political outcry forced him into a quick retreat. He hit on a bipartisan commission, with some of its

George

Jahn

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) - In Hungary, entrepreneur of the Soviet bloc, hard currency buys high-interest, tax-free savings accounts, and guarantees of anonymity from executives who would fit in at any Western banks head office.

Secrecy In Hungary

Bank officials deny suggestions that Hungary is attempting to compete with Switzerland, the worlds traditional money shelter. But they do not shy from the comparison as they list the benefits of a Hungarian anonymous bank account.

Deposits, in virtually any

Western currency, are administered by the National Savings Bank, known among the nations thrifty by its Hungarian acronym, OTP. It pays interest in the same currencies.

About one Hungarian in 10 saves at the bank -normally in forints, the

Chet

Currier

Price Tags Remain High On Big Items

NEW YORK (AP) - If youve been shopping lately for a car, furniture or home appliance, you probably have no trouble understanding why businesses refer to such items as big-ticket goods.

Inflation may have slowed lately, but the price of a large product like this can still be daunting indeed.

To spread out the financial burden over time, of course, you can borrow money. But with interest rates remaining very high rdative to the inflation rate, credit isnt cheap either.

Even if you can come up with the cash to buy the merchandise in question outright, you might hesitate. In addition to parting with the money, you are losing its potential future earning power in a high-yielding investment such as a Treasury bill, bank money market deposit or money-market mutual fund.

In recent years, it has become an increasingly popular alternative not to buy the item at all, but to lease it.

If all the circumstances are right, experts in personal finance say, leasing can be an attractive way to go. But they note that any shipper, before signing a lease, should do some careful com

parisons, using the information the leasing company is required to provide under the Consumer Leasing Act.

The act applies to personal property leased to you for more than four months for personal, family or household use, points out the accounting firm of Deloitte Haskins & Sells. It covers, for example, long-term rentals of cars, furniture and appliances but not daily car rentals, leases for apartments, or business leases.

The information the leasing company must provide, in writing, includes:

-Monthly payments and all other charges for taxes, delivery, license and registration, as well as any required security deposit.

-Responsibilities for insurance coverage.

-Arrangements for maintenance and repairs to the item involved.

-Circumstances under which the lease may be canceled, and any charges to be imposed in that event.

-Statement of whether the leasing customer has an option to buy the property, and if so, at what price.

It is also important to note, says Deloitte Haskins & Sells, whether the lease is open end

at    

or closed end. As the firm observes, Open-end leases usually offer lower monthly payments but may result in a large extra payment at the end of the lease term. This extra payment is referred to as a balloon payment, and is based'on the value of the property when it is returned.

When there is any dispute about that value at the end of a lease, the accounting firm adds, the leasing customer has the right to get an independent appraisal that is binding on both parties.

Comparing the costs of leasing against buying on credit can be complicated. But one thing is for certain: simply looking at which plan requires the lowest monthly payment does not assure you of arriving at the cheaper choice.

Tax deductibility of interest payments, for one thing, should not be overlooked, especially if you are in a high tax bracket. It might make an expensive financing arrangement cheaper than a lease. On the other hand, favorable deals on insurance, maintenance and other costs might tilt the scales in favor of the lease.

Before leasing or buying, financial experts say. it may be well worth the trouble to get detailed proposals of both kinds of deals and calculate which fits your specific situation best.

domestic, non-convertible money. But, a select 60,000 of the nations 10.7 million people have OTP hard-currency accounts, containing earnings from abroad or money sent by relatives in the West. Another 2,000 accounts are held by Westerners, Arabs and other foreigners, and the number is growing, OTP says.

The non-Hungarians attention is usually drawn to the OTP offer by discrete brochures in Hungarys more exclusive hotels and other places frequented by the better-off visitor.

Our accounts are even safer than those in Swiss baqks, said OTP Managing Director Antal Beszedes, during a recent interview in his wood-panelled office.

Wood and brass set the accent throughout the ornate five-story OTP headquarters, built at the turn of the century near the Danube River, in what used to be prewar Budapests international banking district.

OTP special account holders leave a sample signature with their first deposit in Hungary or in a foreign bank if they make the transaction abroad, said Beszedes. Signatures on withdrawal slips are compared with the sample.

Like Swiss account holders, those with money ' at OTP are shielded from tax.

members named by House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill of Massachusetts. The panel, after passing a deadline or two, hit on a plan acceptable to Democrats and Republicans.

When the president first proposed hiding 100 MX missiles in the plains of Wyoming, the ensuing criticism from the West. Reagans original political base, forced him once again to turn to a special commission. It, too, hit on a solution that enabled him to win the congressional support he needs to keep the MX alive.

Now, he is likely to see if such a commission can be of help in the political minefield of Central American policy, one more issue that could become an important element in the 1984 elections.

Already, the presidents aides are talking with members of the House and Senate who have advanced the idea, to determine a possible mandate and what the commission would do, officials report.

Were seriously considering it, said Larry Speakes, the deputy White House press secretary, who added that it has already reached the stage of being discussed with the president.

It is entirely consistent with the presidents emphasis on developing a bipartisan consensus, said another White House official.

Besides, it might just help the president win the support he needs to get some of the funds approved.

Craig

Webb

RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -If Rep. James G. Martin leaves Congress to seek the Republican gubernatorial nomination, count on him setting off tremors that shake up other Charlotte area politicians plans for top state and legislative posts.

Martins announcement already has provoked soul-searching by some politicians on whether they want to seek the 9th Congressional District seat as well as a search by others for possible candidates.

The resulting vacuum from Martins departure could pry several politicians out of the races for other seats, creating more vacancies that in turn would attract lesser-known, upwardly mobile politicians from within the districts confines of Mecklenburg, Iredell and Lincoln counties.

Rep. Parks Helms, for example, used to debate solely whether he should run for attorney general in 1984. Now the Charlotte Democrat says he is being urged to run for Congress as w'ell.

Sen. Benjamin Tison has a similar dilemma: whether to run for Congress and become a force in Washington or seek his state Senate seat again and possibly play a major role if his old friend, former House Speaker Carl Stewart, wins the lieutenant governorship.

I have some interest in the U.S. Congress, he allowed recently. "But I'm not sure the timing is very good. I have children who are 11 and 13, and I dont know if 1 want to leave my job and move to Washington. Still, I would have to give it consideration.

Republicans share those problems. Sen. William Redman, R-Iredell, has been touted by party leaders as a good possibility for statewide office, and he says he might enjoy the challenge of Congress - if he can figure out how to afford Washington and tolerate its lifestyle.

Redman said he also fears what will happen if he or other Republicans leave the Legislature in a bid to replace Martin.

"I think we have a lot. of

Tremors

people in the General Assembly right now who can go back and capture those seats, but I dont know if new ones can get them, he said.

"This probably could be a banner year for Republicans, if the economy and a lot of other things work out in our favor. (President) Reagans coattails are going to be quite long, and a super candidate for governor can also have extremely long coattails.

Redman said that if the GOP can find good candidates to replace the Congressional hopefuls, the party will not be hurt at the General Assembly. But if the party fails, It could be devastating for us people down here.

Mecklenburg County politicians also might want to apply Redman's warnings to local government. Published reports indicate four of Mecklenburg County's five commissioners say they are intrigued by the idea of running, and several Charlotte city leaders also might run - even as some of them are seeking to win city council seats in this fall's elections.

Despite the large numbers of people who are listed as possible Martin replacements, Mecklenburg County Democratic Party (Chairman Hugh A. Campbell Jr. said he does not fear a rush by politicians to leave other posts.

"I don't think we're going to have a situation where itll be a wholesale rush to run for Congress, he said. I don't think its going to be so many itll hurt the other races. How many others would there be anyway? Youd have maybe one or two to fill with new people.

All talk about candidacies is speculative anyway, because it depends on whether Martin leaves the seat he has occupied for 10 years. As a result, the possible replacements are left in an even more tenuous position.

As Helms put it: This represents a significant change in lifestyle, and you dont make a decision on the basis of something as speculative as this.

f(0

Worret Acmi

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SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) - U.S. special envoy Richard Stone was not seen in public Saturday, adding to speculation he planned to meet with leaders of leftist guerrillas fighting to topple the U.S.-backed govenunient in El Salvador.

Stone arrived Friday in the Costa Rican capital from San Salvador after the Salvadoran government asked him to seek the participation of leftists in elections scheduled for December. He refused to tell reporters at the airpoirt if he planned to meet with the rebels.

In Washington, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Jeane Kirkpatrick, said Friday she thought Stone would meet with the leftists, but only to discuss their possible participation in the election.

Reports circulated here that Ruben Zamora, a leader of El Salvadors Democratic Revolutionary Front, or FDR, made up of illegal leftist parties, had arrived in Costa Rica to meet Stone.

Everything indicated that the meeting between Stone and members of the FDR was going to take place last ni^t. But the meeting was suspended, the San Jose newspaper La Nacin reported Saturday without giving the source of its information.

No spokesman was available at the U.S. Embassy to discuss Stones plans, but a U.S. Embassy spokesman in San Salvador said Stone would spend Saturday here and return to El Salvador on Sunday.

After meeting with Costa Rican Foreign Ministr Fernando Volio on Friday, Stone told reporters he could not comment on possible

Cigarette Claims

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Trade Commission wants to prevent a tobacco company from advertising that Barclay cigarettes have only 1 milligram of tar, contending the cigarettes have at least three times that much.

Ironically, the figure of 1 milligram is based on a test of the cigarettes conducted by an FTC smoking machine a test that the commission

says was rendered inaccurate because of the way the Barclay filter is designed.

Requests for preliminary and permanent injunctions against Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. of Louisville, Ky., were filed in U.S. District Court on Thursday, according to Susan Ticknor, an FTC spokeswoman.

There was no immediate action on the commissions request.Drug Checkpoints

(Continued from A-l)

River Park North Day Camp for one-week sessions, and youngsters in grades three through seven may also sign up to participate in the Jaycee Park two-week program. The South and West Greenville Day Camps also have qoaces available for children ages 6-13 and 5-10.

Children can join the departments mobile recreation program that regularly visits town and neighborhood parks at any time and anyone interested may participate in the cheerleading camp held at Jaycee Park. Spaces for swimming and tennis lessons are also available.

For more information about these youth recreation programs, call 7524137 and ask for the recreation department. For swimming lessons, call 752-0673, and for tennis instruction, call 756-9343.

The department also sponsors a number of activities for senior citizens including shuffle board, exercise classes, swimming, nutritional programs, arts and crafts, movies and speakers, and sponsors entertainment for Sunday In The Park, held in the park off Reade Circle near the Tar River every Sunday.

For more information about these activities, call 7524137.

Meeting Expected With Salvadorans

discussions with the leftists and refused to give his agenda.

In a communique distributed Thursday in San Jose, the leftists said they were interested and willing to initiate a process of dialogue on substantive matters.

While in San Salvador, Stone met with President Alvaro Magana and Defense Minister Eugenio Vides Cassanova. Salvadoran officials indicated they hoped Stone would make some contact with the rebels.

Above all, we would like to talk to them about participation in elections because that is the ideal way to have peace, said Francisco Jose Guerrero, a top Magana aide.

When Stone was in Mexico City at the end of his get-acquainted tour of Central America last month, he received a letter from the coalition of Salvadoran leftist factions inviting him to talk with their leaders.

Althou^ the Reagan administration and Magana want the leftists to participate in the elections, they have ruled out any negotiations that would give a share of power to the rebels.Most U.S. and Salvadoran officials (k) ihR believe the leftist groups could win the election.

The Constituent Assembly has not decided whether the elections will be limited to president and vice president or whether a national legislature and municipal officials also will be elected.

Leftists boycotted the elections in March 1982 for the Constituent Assembly, claiming their candidates would be killed by rightist death squads.

(Continued from AI) to 10 years in the battle to return this country to moral

sanity.

A poll by the Chariotte Observer released over the July 4 weekend showed Hunt leading Helms SO pm^t to 31 percent. Helms chief political strategist, Ralei^ lawyer Tom Ellis, acknowledges Hunt is ahead, but be says the margin is about 7 points.

In a stream of advertising since April, Helms has attacked Hunts record and associated him with out of state radical leaders. Among those pictured in the ads are Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., black leaders Jesse Jackson, Julian Bond and Harold Washington, and union leaders.

One ad pictures Hunt with Jackscm in a 1982 meeting and a more recent comment by Jackson that be hopes to register 200,000 black voters in North Carolina. Ask Yourself: Is Tliis a Proper Use of Taxpayer Funds? Helms ad saj^.

Another ad shows striking teachers, mostly black, and cites Hunts support for a bill allowing payroll deductkms of dues to a teachers association.

The Winston-Salem Journal, in an editorial, called the ads evocative of the worst kind of politicking seen in this state in the past 30 years.

...the quotes were deliberately jumbled to imply, with all the subtlety of a burning cross, that taxpayer funds are being used to buy black votes for Hunt ... the new^aper said.

They are mudslinging in its worst sense, Hunt said of the ads in a recent interview. I think they aw>eal to the worst. They do appeal to fear.

Whos the racist? responds David Flaherty, chairman of the state Republican Party. They guy out trjdng to register black voters so they can elect him to the Senate, or the guy whos just saying whats going on?

Republicans have objected to Democratic campaigning, too. When Helms and his coUeagiK, Sen. John East, cast surprising votes in favor of a bill raising the tax on cigarettes last year, the Hunt-controlled Democratic Party took out full-page ads dubbing them Tobacco Tax Twins, a stinging label where tobacco is a billion-dollar crop and a sacred cow.

They also point to fund-raising letters by the N.C. Campaign Fund, a legally indqwndent committee of Hunt supporters, calling Helms a dangerous right-wing demagogue and the most dangerous figure in the Siate since the late Joseph McCarthy .

Both sides are looking to their voter registration efforts.

Last year the Hunt-cootroUed elections board registered almost 70,000 new black voters, boosting Mack registratk by 17 percoit. But (tffkials say still only 63 percent of eligible blacks are roistered.

We know how they are ^nng to vote - DemocratkaUy, said Helms diief strate^ Raleigh lawyo* Tom Ellis. They always have.

Helms National Congressional Gub ^>ent more than any other pditical action committee last year, over $10 million, using direct mail appeals and automated telepb(e solicitations tape-reanrded by the senator.

Democrats say they expect Helms to spoKl $14 million and estimate he is already ^>Kiing $M,000 a week on advertising. Helms campai^ leaders di^Hite the gures, though he spent $7.5 million in his 1978 campaign against a hapless Democrat with less than <me-twenty-fifth that amount.

Helms reelectkm has significance beyond here both because of his Congressional Gubs success and his championing of social causes - opposing abortion and scbocri busing and favoring school prayer, for example. Hunt has focused on jobs and education as governor, and has supported the Equal Rights Amendment diile his administration provided state-paid abortions for poor women.

While Helms organization is built on national computer lists. Hunt has a strcmg state machine based on patronage, organized down to the precincts. Hunt aides say they expect to spend $4 million to $6 million and believe his organization can offset Helmsmoney.

Their race may be colored by a mushrooming state scandal that has seai one Democratic legislator sent to prison, another indicted, and Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green indicted on bribery charges.

Green, a conservative Democrat, was elected ind^n-dently of Hunt and is from the opposing wing of the party, but to the extent the scandal taints all Democrats, Hunt could be damaged.

But the issues are expected to be the candidates themselves, with Helms attacking Hunt as a libm*al and the governor d^icting Helms as ignoring the state while tilting at conservative windmills.

I think it will be a very fundamental and a very significant race, Hunt said ... the politics of hope and the pditics of fear.

Helms has challenged Hunt to debate him, and has vowed, Im going to hold their (the Democrats) feet to the fire.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Police arrested 220 people Saturday at roadblocks aimed at disnq^ drug trafficking in the nations c<q)ital.

Police spokesman Lt. Hiram Brewton said about two-thirds of the arrests were on drug charges, with most of the rest for traffic violations. Some people were simply givra citations to appear in court, but most were not, he said.

Checkpoints were set at midday and continued into mid-evening.

Although each of the citys

seven police districts had operated similar roadblocks in the past, Saturday was the first time the eidire city had beencovoed.

At least one roadUock was set iqp in each district, but they were frequoitly diifted, with a particular point being used "as long as we got good results, the spokesman sakl.

Were familiar with areas where theres heavy drug traffic, BrewtM said, so are the dealers. Thats why its difficult to make arrests because they have plans to counter police action.

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AIDS...

(Continued from A-1) tions on a local level, Carney said, We dont plan to get into that kind of activity. We contend that a directed donor is no more a safe donor than we routinely draw from, and directed donore create all matter of logistical problems.

Carney noted that four major population groups have been identified as carriers of AIDS - homosexual or bisexual males with multiple sex partners, hem^hiliacs, users of self-administered intravenous drugs and recent Haitian immigrants.

Checks have been put into place ... a more stricter screening system, Carney said, so we dont draw blood from these p^Ie.

Carney said, We are not experiencing any influence over collections or consumption of blood because of AIDS. Were answering a lot of questions, but beyond that, it has not affected us that much.

The Tar River Blood Center,

Soviet Defectors Arrive in U.S.

NEW YORK (AP) - A Soviet violinist and her accompanist, who defected in hopes of bettering their careers, arrived Saturday in the United States after abandoning a concert tour in Finland.

Violinist Victoria Mullova and accompanist Vakhtang Zhordania arrived at Kennedy Airport shortly before 5 p.m. on a flight from Sweden, said Port Authority spokeswoman Fern Gian-batista.

for the 12-month period which ended June 30, collected 39,500 units of blood in eastern North Carolina. The Greenville center serves 25 hospitals in the area.

Carney, wlw said I think the community reacted with a great deal of fear over what he terms a misconc^tion, urged area residents to continue supporting the Blood-mobile program, especially over the next two months when blood coUectfons traditionally decrease and usage increases.

The government has established a toll-free tele

phone hotline to provide the public with up-to-date information on AIDS. The number of the hotline, open daily from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., is 800-342-AIDS.

Two publications are also available. Facts on Aids may be obtained free by writing to the Public Health Service, Office of Public Affairs, Room 721-H, 200 Independence Ave. S.W., Washington, D.C., 20201. If requested, the AIDS Information Bulletin will be sent to health professionals on the first and third Mondays each month.

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Adopt-A-Pet !    9'"    2"** '^'^

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 10,19S3-A-7

^           ijlliMnu^yL

The Adopt-a-Pet of the Week is a 4-month-old registered female Irish setter. 758-6912.

Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following:

Three 10-week-old male kittens, one black and two gray tabbies. 7564)262.    ^    ^

A 3-month-old part Labrador-part golden retriever female puppy, shots and wormed; three 3-month-old kittens - one orange male, one white female, one gray tabby female Humane Society. 756-3251.

Two 8-week-old kittens one black and one gray tabby; a medium-sized mixed-breed spayed female dog; a part dachshund ^ayed female. 756-1268.

A 2-year-old black neutered male cat. 758-2511.

Three 4-month-old kittens one long-haired, two short-haired. 752-3003 or 7584)362.

A calico neutered male cat with alt shots - litter-trained

756-8094 or 756-3911.

Three long-haired 8-week-old kittens. 355-2128.

Eight 7-week-oid puppies - half birddog, half shepherd collie. 756-4752.

A black female kitten 4 months old that has all shots

757-3681.

A 5-year-old registered female Irish setter with all shots. Owner prefers home with children. 758-6912.

A 7-week-old female calico kitten. Humane Society 756^702.

A spayed female gray and white cat 1-year-old and a 6-month male gray and white cat. 752-6695 after 7 p.m.

A 6-year-old spayed female cocker spaniel-pomeranian. Needs indoor living or fenced-in yard. Humane Society 752-9922.

A 14-year-old male black En^ish sheepdog. 746-6851.

Three 8-week-old golden retriever puppies with shots and wormed. 752-0988.

A 24-month-old black and gray kitten. 756-3566.

Found in Camelot area - German shepherd. Call and describe. 756-5002.

To place an animal for free adoption through this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage, 756-4867; Barbara Haddock, 752-9922; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; or Carol Tyer, 752-6166.

By The Associated Press

A second week without state welfare, unemployment, disability and salary checks began in California and Pennsylvania as stalemates over state budgets dried up payments and prompted lawsuits.

Payments for nearly half a million people in the two states have been withheld since the new fiscal year began July 1.

In Sacramento, Calif., Democratic legislators recessed for the weekend to study a new proposal by Republican Gov. George Deukmejian for an extra $100 million in school money. The plan would slightly reduce the $1.2 billion the governor wants to slice from an unbalanced $27.2 billion budget.

Democrats want to bridge the gap with tax increases and have refused to vote for ohe budget until Republicans approve a measure limiting Deukmejians budget veto powers.

The impasse has left the state without authority to spend money since the fiscal year ended June 30. More than 285,000 unemployment and disability checks have been withheld, and another 350,000 would be halted if the impasse continued through next week.

State Senate GOP caucus chairman John Seymour of Anaheim said the governors latest proposal offers an increase from $700 million to $800 million in new funds for local schools.

Senate President Pro Tern David Roberti and Assembly Speaker Willie Brown, the Democratic leaders of the Legslature, promised to get back to Deukmejian no later than Monday with a response to the proposal they received Friday, Roberti said.

AJso on Monday, court decisions are expected on three suits filed by the United Auto Workers, the California AFL-CIO and the

Bay Area Legal Foundation, a public-interest group, seeking to force the state to pay jobless and disability benefits despite lack of a budget.

In Harrisburg, Pa., the Lepslature was scheduled to convene Monday, with a midnight deadline for reaching a compromise on an out-of-balance $8 billion budget.

If lawmakers fail to provide Republican Gov. Richard Thornburgh with new taxes to fund the budget, he has until midnight to decide whether to veto the bill or slash the budget.

The impasse has resulted from the GOPs refusal to accept a $356 million economic development and relief program proposed by the Democrats, which Republicans say is too costly.

A compromise appeared to be near Friday, apparently centering on a plan to entice lawmakers to vote for higher taxes in return for up to $225 million in local school aid. The education funds would be the only part of the Democratic proposal to survive the budget process.

But the state House adjourned for the weekend without reaching an agreement, and the Senate had already adjourned earlier in the week.

We just didnt know if there was enough votes to pass any agreement, said Rep. Ivan Itkin, chairman of the Democatic caucus. There naturally needed to be discussions among the senators and they wont be in a position to do that until Monday.

About 180,000 families were denied welfare aid and paychecks last week, and a U.S. District Court hearing was scheduled for Monday morning on a suit by a welfare-rights organization asking that welfare payments be fre^.

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Tiny Infant Finally Goes To Her Home

MADISON, Wis. (AP) - A girl who was one of the worlds smallest surviving babies, weighing little more than a pound at birth, has been allowed to go home after four months in a hospital.

Doctors said Carmen Hox-ie had less than a 20 percent chance of survival when she was bom about three months prematurely March 8 at St. Marys Hospital Medical Center.

But on Friday her parents, Diane and Thomas Hoxie of Morrisonville, were allowed to take their 4-pound, 7-ounce child home and doctors said she can now be cared for like any full-term baby.

Dr. Willard Blankenship, the hospitals director of perinatal medicine, said Carmen will probably lead a completely normal life.

During a combination news conference and going-home party for the baby, Mrs. Hoxie said her emotions have ranged from very scared at Carmens birth to just a little nervous Friday.

She said she took a short course in cardiopulmonary resuscitation in case something should happen. But she said doctors told her Carmen is now normal and healthy and does not require any extraordinary care or life-saving equipment.

She has a temper, Mrs. Hoxie said. Shes real demanding. The nurses have

spoiled her and well take over where theyve left off. Carmens scheduled birthdate was June 28, but she was delivered by emergency Caesarean section in her 24th week to save her mothefs life.

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IN THE WHEEL - Missy Peters, 4, top left, Susan Pietracz, 4, right, and Timmy Peters, 5, bottom, found a mound of car aixi

truck tires the perfect sp<rt to play. The children were at a day care center in Holyoke, Mass.(APLaserphoto)

Professor Files Lawsuit

LOS ANGELES (AP) -A former professor who was criticized for encouraging his students to experiment with sexual activity has sued the state college system for more than $2 million.

Barry Singers suit also seeks court declarations that California State-Long Beach discriminated against him and denied him freedom of expression when it refused to reinstate him after he resigned.

A section of the suit asking the court to order him rein

stated was crossed out before it was filed Friday in Superior Court.

Singer attracted widespread publicity last year after complaints that students had fulfilled class requirements through a variety of sexual experiments and that he had been romantically involved with some students.

He denied any wrongdoing.

Student Betty J. Willman had complained that Singers class, The Psychology of Sex, encouraged students to

perform sexual experiments.

Singer contended the experiments were entirely optional.

He was suspended in May 1982 for 30 days pending an investigation. Two days later he resigned, saying he did so under severe duress.

CORRECTION

In The Sears Section In Todays Paper The Following Merchandise Will Not Be Available For Sale. On Pg. 4 The Family Sport Shoes Advertised At $9.99 Pr., Pg. 5 Toddler And Little Boys' Belted Pants, Advertised At $8.99. On Pg. 7 The Big Boys Woven Plaid Shirt Advertised At $8.99. On Pg. 33 The KS Super Camera Outfit Advertised At $164.95. We Regret Any Inconvenience That This May Have Caused.

Sears, RiieliuckS Co.

Graanvllla, N.C.

Toms Restaurant

(Behind Phelps Chevrolet)

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

We Will Reopen Monday, Inly 11, At 6 AM.

Lynn.G. Borchert-, M.D.

Announces The Opening Of His Solo Practice In Gynecology, Infertility, An(i Reproductive Endocrinology On July 5, 1983

Sensitive Individual Care

Infertility Evaluation and Therapy, Including Microsurgical Repair of the Fallopian Tubes, Artificial Insemination, Menstrual Problems, Menopause, Excessive Hair Growth, Annual Exams, Pap Smears, Birth Control. Sterilization and Female Surgery Dietary Counseling By Registered Dietitian Available,

By Appointment: Physicians Quadrangle. Bldg. C 1705 W. 6th St.

Greenville. N.C. 27834 Phone 919-752-0973

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HEIR WEDS - Patrick Reynolds, heir to the Reynolds tobacco fortune, was married in Ofterscbwang, West Germany, Saturday. He

Morgans Body Is Unclaimed

LOS ANGELES (UPl) -The battered body of Vicki Morgan, mistress of the late department store magnate Alfred Bloomingdale, lay unclaimed in the county morgue Saturday with no plans announced for a funeral service or burial.

A morgue ^esman said no one had claimed the body and. We. dont know whats going to happen.

Marvin Pancoast. 33, Miss Morgans live-in companion, confessed killing Miss Morgan by beating in her head with a baseball bat while she slept. He was booked for murder and scheduled for arraignment Monday Two sources close to the case, who chose to remain anonymous, said that Pancoast, who had shared a condominium with Miss Morgan for three weeks, suffered from mental problems and thought he was doing the right thing 'in his confused state.

Pancoast surrendered to police at the North Hollywood station Thursday and told officers he had beaten Miss Morgan to death because she was financially destitute.

The woman was very, very depressed, one source said. She had gone from $18,000 a month from Bloomingdale to absolutely zero He (Pancoast) thought it was a mercy killing.

Miss Morgan filed an unsuccessful $11 million palimony suit last July against Bloomingdale, founder of the Diners Club, a long-time friend of President Reagan and a member of his kitchen cabinet.

Miss Morgans attorney, Michael Dave, said that Pancoast and Miss Morgan, who had known each other since 1979, were definitely not lovers.

Dave described her as a very tragic figure. She wanted very much to have peace and love and she never fund it in her life,

Miss Morgan was supporting herself by selling gifts Bloomingdale gave her during their 12-year affair, inc\u(Bng a Mercedes Benz, but the money was exhausted, he said.

She was not just in financial trouble, he said. She was destitute.

She and Pancoast were to , be evicted from the condominium because they were unable to make payments, officials said.

Pancoast is a former clerk at the William Morris Agency, the worlds largest talent agency.

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

Los Angeles Finding Its Famed Police Officers Little Less Shiny

and his bride, R^ioe, are shown in an open crriage following their wedding. (AP Laserphoto)

Trio Sought For Staging Illegal POW Hunt In Laos

BANGKOK, Thailand (UPl) - Police searched Saturday for three Americans who reportedly spent more than a month in communist Laos on an illegal, secret mission in search of U.S. prisoners of war, news reports said.

It was not knowTi if the three men were able to find information on any of the estimated 2,500 U.S. soldiers still listed as missing in action In Indochina more than eight years after the end of the Vietnam War.

The Bangkok World reported Saturday that, the men, believed to be American soldiers of fortune, were spotted crossing the Mekong River from Laos into northeast Thailand on Thursday.

ment but would not confirm or deny the report about

three foreigners crossing into Thailand from Laos.

By LINDA DEUTSCH Associated Press WritCT LOS ANGELES (AP) -The arrests of two veteran Los Angeles policemen in an alleged murder-for-money scheme has added more tarnish to the once gleaming record of a department known to millions through television and movies.

The police department, known as the LAPD, has been the spit-and-polish model for the honest cops depicted in TV series starting with Dragnet and including Adam 12, Police Story, Policewoman and T.J. Hooker.

After Fridays announcement of the police arrests, department ^kesman Lt. Dan Cooke conceded: Obviously, it doesnt help us any. Anytime you have an officer involved in a serious crime it reflects on all of law enforcement.

You go out with people and someone says to you, Have you knocked anyone off lately? or Do you knqw where I can get a TV set? he said. Well be hit with these sick jokes for years. Its no wonder that officers become paranoid about socializing with anyone outside our profession.

Police Chief Daryl Gates

said two officers and an auto mechanic were arrested late Thursday for c(spiracy to commit murder, allegedly to collect an insurance policy on the intended victim. He said they were arrested just minutes before the unidentified woman was to have been killed in suburban North Hollywood.

The victim was to have been put into a van, possibly given drugs and then killed in an unspecified manner, Gates said. She was not harmed.

Hopefully, the public

understands we have 6,000 other officers who dont do this kind of thing, Cooke said.

He said it was to the departments credit that at least we uncovered it, we investigated it and we arrested the officers. Some departments mi^t try to cover iq) the whole thing. We do not.

In some recent scandals, LAPD officers have bei charged with sexual misconduct in a case involving girls who were part of an Explorer Scout volunteer

group in the Hollywood division.

A burglary ring was found (grating in the Hdl;^ood division with officers allegedly stealing from businesses when they answaed bogus burglary calls.

Early this year, three officers were arrested in five months for investigation of cocaine dealing.

A controversial intelligence unit was in-vesti^ted after accusations that it spied on civilians and political acti(m groups.

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They were believed to be the same group that Thai military intelligence sources said' crossed illegally into Laos in May to search for American POWs.

The three men were identified at the time as Charles Kerr. Peter Titno and Jim Dunhill, all Americans. No hometowns were available.

The newspaper said police were searching for the three men seen crossing the Mekong to question them about their activities.

Police in northeast Thailand said in a telephone interview they had confiscated some radio equip-

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Reagan ^ Endorses Housing Changes

WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Reagan, pledging to use the full power of the federal government to pro-t^ all Americans constitu-tiooal rights, said Saturday he will propose legislation to strengths fair bousing laws.

We believe this is an important step for civil ri^ts, Reagan said in bis weekly radio address.

Reagan said he will follow up his January State of the Union promise to put real teeth in fair housing provisions of the 1968 Civil Rights Act by sending Congress new legislation this cmningweek.

The legislation would make it easier for individuals to bring housing discrimination suits and increase the >enalties against landlords I or violations, Reagan said.

As I said, were committed to fairness and were committed to use the full power of the federal government whenever and wherever even one persons constitutional rights are being unjustly denied, said Reagan, speaking from Camp David, Md., presi-dehtial retreat.

Reagan also blamed ^oom and doom from misery merchants in the news media for spreading the notion his administration is unfair.

And he assailed big spenders who claim to carry the banner of fairness and compassion for having caused the inflation that robbed all Americans of 20 percent of their purchasing power in the last two years of the Carter administration.

Reagan said inflation caused by past Democratic Coo^-esses is not my idea of fairness and I doubt if its yours.

Under Reagans proposed bousing amendments, first announced May 19 by Housing and Urban Development Secretary Samuel Pierce, the Justice Department could take to court cases referred 4)y HUD on behalf of individ-^ bias victims instead of having the Justice Department wait to determine whether a practice of bias exists. Now, HUD tries to conciliate disputes, and individuals must go to court on their own.

The amendments would also prohibit discrimination based on a persons handicap or the size of his or her family and would raise the penalty against landlords to ^ 150,000 fine for the first, violation and $100,000 for the second.

Klan Takes Off Masks

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) One of the countrys most vocal Ku Klux Klan groups said Saturday it is ending some of its secrecy, no longer allowing members to wear masks in public and taking the wraps off its constitution and induction ceremony.

The move is intended to get the white supremacy group into mainstream politics, one Klan official said.

But the Invisible Empire, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan still wont tell outsiders who belongs or how many members it has, AlVln Easterling, grand dragon of Louisiana, said at a news conference.

Meetings, when masks may be worn for ceremonial purposes, also will remain closed to outsiders.

Imperial Wizard Bill Wilkinson had said earlier that the groups constitution was being opened to the public because the need for secrecy that was necessary back in the 1800s, when the Klan was founded, is no longer relevant.

Ihe Invisible Empire is among several competing KKK groups around the country. Founded after the South lost the Civil War, the Klan was an organization of night riders who wore hoods and sheets and turned to violence to maintain white supremacy.

We avow the distinction between the races of mankind as decreed by the Creator, and we shall ever be true to the maintenance of the ri^t of people to segregate and to strenuously op-)ose any compromise f, it continues.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 10,1983A-9

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Thirsty World's Hunt For Water Is Desperate

By CHARLES J. HANLEY Associated Press Writer

The worlds most plentiful substance is fast becoming its most precious.

So precious that a half-million Chinese have just scratched out a canal system to get it to parched Tianjin. So precious that supertankers may soon reach halfway across the globe to carr\' it to dry Arabia. So precious that it is a crime in Arizona to dig for it without a license.

Around the world the thirst for water is growing so great that the search for it is turning into a scramble.

It is nearing a point at which man - in this case the Soviet government - may risk a shift in the planets climate to get more of it.

i think we are headed for a disaster, says Dr. Peter Bourne, who heads a public-education group in Washington called Global Water.

In the industrialized world, pollution of underground water reserves threatens to make major cities uninhabitable by the end of the century. Bourne says. In the Third World, he says, unhealthy drinking water will continue to kill millions of people, and food production stunted by drought and overw helmed by population could mean mass starvation.

He likens it tothe global oil crisis of a decade ago.

"There is the same problem in trying to get people to pay attention to it before the crunch comes, Bourne said in a telephone interview. "If anything, the oil crisis was a sort of created crisis. This one could be life-threatening. War-threateningaswell.

In the Middle East, one of the worlds driest regions, the Arab-Israeli conflict and antagonisms between Iraq and Syria are rooted in part in the struggle for water.

The worlds water worries can only grow worse, say the

experts.

"As population, industrialization, agricultural production, and technological capabilities increase, world water withdrawals could double by the end of the century from their mid-1970s level (of 900 cubic miles a year), says water-resources specialist Philip P. Micklin, a Western Michigan University geographer.

Water does not vanish. Once it is used, it returns to the global water system - the hydrosphere, as the scientists call it. But when it is withdrawn from the system at too fast a rate, the evaporation and precipitation process cannot keep up.

The scale of water use reflects a societys complexity. Although the basic human requirement is only a half-gallon a day. per-capita daily consumption in the United States is more than 4,000 times that. Half of it goes to irrigate crops.

But for half the worlds people ... reasonable access to a safe and adequate drinking water supply is still more a wish than a reality, says the U.N. Development Program.

The United Nations has declared the 1980s the water decade. The World Bank estimates that reaching the goal of clean water for 80 percent of the global population by 1990 would cost $30 billion a year. But in 1981 only $10 billion was spent on water projects worldwide.

Here are capsule looks at some of the greatest regional problems:

UNITED STATES

The situation being faced in the Southwest of the United States is potentially going to be as serious as anyplace else in the world,said Bourne.

By 1985 water withdrawals from the Colorado River basin will equal the supply. Something will have to give, and it will be California - in that year, under a court i^ing. Southern Californias cities will be cut off from their Colorado River water, 10 percent of their supplies.

Meanwhile, the underground reservoir watering much of the Midwest breadbasket the Ogallala aquifer, stretching from Texas to the Northern Plains is drying up. Optimists say it will last 40 more years, but pessimists say it may be dry by the end of the 1980s.

to keep the West wet, visionaries speak of grand plans to tap the watery riches of Canada.

One proposal calls for reversing the flow of the Yukon and Tanana rivers, which rise in northwest Canada, flow through Alaska and empty into the Bering Sea. Their waters would be driven southward to the American West through the Rocky Mountain Trench a 1,000-mile-long north-south trough between mountain ranges.

Another proposal would throw a 90-mile dike across the bottom of Hudson Bay to trap the runoff of eastern Canadas rivers and channel it into the Great Lakes.

The U.S. and Canadian governments now dismiss such ideas, which would i^uire vast systems of reservoirs, canals and pumping stations. But builders and engineers who champion them say they are inevitable.

SOVIET UNION

The Aral Sea basin,d cotton-growing Uzbekistan, is probably the most outstanding example of a man-made problem, says Micklin.

The irrigation drain on its rivers has shrunk the area of the great Asian lake from 25,000 to 20,000 square miles. The rivers are expected to be fully exploited by 1990.

Soviet planners have blueprints for a huge network of dams and canals to reverse the flow of the Pechora, Ob and other northern rivers that now rush uselessly into the Arctic seas. But the environmental impact is unclear. For one thing, depriving the Arctic of those warm waters could expand the ice cap and chill the global climate.

The Soviet government has not yet plunged into this gargantuan project, but the Uzbeks and Kazakhs are pressing for action.

MIDDLE EAST

As they build their economies, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates grow more and more dependent on desalination - facilities that remove the salt from seawater.

How to keep the American West wet

How the Sovleti would redirect riven

Sudanese Commandos Get Five From Rebel Captives

Critical shortages still loom. Last August, the arid island emirate of Bahrain called on its people to reduce per-capita consumption to 50 gallons a day from 200.

Arab schemes to tow in icebergs from the polar regions crop up and die out. But now the United Arab Emirates is seriously negotiating the large-scale purchase of water from Japan.

After unloading oil in Japan, Mideast tankers would fill up with water from the southern Japanese island of Yakushima - avera^ rainfall 315 inches a year and carry it to the Persian Gulf.

ISRAEL

The Israelis have made the desert bloom, but there is a limit - they are using 95 percent of available water resources, and one-third of it comes from Arab territories seized in war.

KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) - President Reagan on Saturday hailed the skill of Sudanese commandos who rescued two American missionaries and three other Westerners from Sudanese guerrillas, the official SUNA news agency said.

In a message to President Jaafar Nimeiri, Reagan also e^ressed sorrow for the killing of one Sudanese soldier and the wounding of two others in the rescue Friday. Eighteen guerrillas were    killed    in    the

raid.

The U.S. and other governments whose nationals were among the hostages said they were not told of the commando raid plan in advance. D^lomatic sources also said the United States and the others had urged restraint.

SUNA said the rescued hostages were in very good health in Juba, a r^onal capital in southern Sudan.

They five were missionary John Ha^s, 36, of Lyons, Kan.; missionary pilot Ron Pontier, 29, of Qermont, Fla.; missionary pilot Martin Overduin, 32, of London, Ontario; Willem Noort, a Dutch male nurse; and Alois Pscheidt, a West German mechanic.

An anti-terrorist squad of the Sudanese army freed the hostages, who were kidnapped June 24 and June 25. Their abductors, the Liberation Front of Southern Sudan, held them in Boma, a remote

area in soutteastern SiKlan.

Western diplomatic sources in Kenya, Nairobi, said the rescuers used five helicopters to flush out the captors from a riverside guerrilla, camp. High grass and swamps apparently made a ground assault impractical.

The Sudanese military

command said foreign forces were behind the outlaws (H)eration. Informatioa received so far show contacts between the group and the Libyan government.

The communique said two of the rebels had been trained by Cuban tnx^ in Libya.

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In The World PLO Soys Arofot Will Visit Moscow

Beatles Songfracks Are Pound

LONDON (AP) - Four previously unheard Beatles soogtracks have been found among a mass of tapes in the vault of the groups former recording studio here, the groups record company said Saturday. The announcement by EMI Ltd. did not ay when the tracks were discovered but spokesman Brian Southall said they may be released as singles.

The songs are named: That Means A Lot. If You Have Got Trouble, How Do You Do It and Leave My Kitten Alone. A version of the song How Do You Do It was taken to the No. 1 spot in the Britih pop music charts several years ago by Gerry and the Pacemakers.

There was no immediate explanation why EMI announced the existence of the four songtracks only now.

Smoking Rule Sets Off Riot

EL PASL Texas A no-smoking rule sparked a riot among prisoners bent on one last hurrah in their old jail before moving to a new $31 million facility, the county sheriff said Saturday.

^enty prisoners, five firemen and five deputies were injured Friday during the rioting, in which prisoners beat guards, set fires and tore up beds.

El Paso County Sheriff Mike Davis said the riot was inevitable. He said all 619 prisoners being transferred to the new jail were ordered to shower and were told they would not be allowed to take tobacco, pipes or other smoking material, with them.

Soviets, Bulgaria Deny Aliegation

MOSCOW The Kremlin on Saturday denied Mehmet Ali Agcas claims that KGB agents trained him to attack the pope, calling the charges threadbare propaganda and nothing more than absurd insinuations. Bulgaria also denied Agcas accusations that its agents were involved.

Agca made the claim in Rome Friday while being returned to prison, where he is serving a life sentence for the May 13. 1981, attack.

Aftershock Hits Community

COALINGA, Calif. - A strong earthquake rattled this tiny farming community early Saturday, toppling boulders into a canyon and sparking three fires, but doing far less damage than the quake that devastated downtown Coalinga two months ago.    .

The quake, the latest of hundreds of aftershocks from the big May 2 temblor, struck at 12:40 a m and registered 5.3 on the Richter scale, said Dennis Meredith, spokesman for the California Institute of Technology at Pasadena.

The May quake, measuring 6.5, destroyed three quarters of the old brick buildings downtown, injured 47 people and caused $31 million damage.

Years Later, Name Is Restored

SAN ANTONIO, Texas - San Antonio is restoring the original name of its botanical gardens - the Japanese Sunken Gardens - in honor of a Japanese family that was driven out of the city after the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Kimi and Miyoshi Jingus had cared for the gardens for more than 25 years when officials ordered them to leave the city on Dec. 8, 1941, one day after the bombing of Pedrl Harbor, said City Councilman Van Archer, who headed the drive to restore the name.

The same day, the gardens were renamed the Chinese Sunken Gardens, which they have been called ever since, he said.

Nine Times, But He Wins

LA PLATA, Md. - It took nine appearances in court. $1.000 in court costs and the loss of a job, but a 26-year-old man was found innocent of possessing a marijuana cigarette laced with PCP.

Frederick A. Wright of Temple Hills said he never thought it would be so much trouble to prove he was innocent. Wright said he had never smoked the marijuana cigarette police found among a group he was with at a bar Sept. 10 But his trial was delayed repeatedly as the court considered other cases ahead of his.

Prosecutor Leonard Collins said delays are normal becau.se courts over-schedule in anticipation that a few defendants wont show up, But Collins admitted that nine appearances is outside the limit.

Nudists Scarce For Project

MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP, N.J. (AP) - A small group of naturists marked National Nude Weekend on Saturday by cleaning up a stretch of federal beach before stripping for a dip in the Atlantic Ocean.

Only seven members of the 700 Tri-State Metro Naturists gathered at Sandy Hook beach in the morning, and their president, Bernard LoibI, said he was ashamed at the turnout for the effort to promote clothes-optional sunbathing.

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VISA and MASTERCARD ACCEPTED

By Tbe Associated Press PLO chief Yasser Arafat will travel to Moscow in a weeks time for consultations on frazzled relations between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Syria, a leading PLO official said Saturday.

He spoke veral hours after Syrias government newspaper branded Arafat a traitor and threatened to chop off his fingers.

Abu lyad, Arafats security chief, gave no exact date for Arafats visit to Moscow. He spoke with reporters at Romes Leonardo Da Vinci airport during a stopover on a trip from Tunis to East Germany.

Meanwhile, the chief me-diator between PLO mutineers and loyalists said he plans to visit Moscow Monday to put the Soviets in the real picture.

The mediator is Khaled Fahoum, speaker of the Palestine National Council, the PLOs parliament-in-exile. He heads the six-man team trying to resolve the two-month-old mutiny against Arafat.

Fahoum spoke in an interview with The Associated Press in Damascus just after briefing Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul Halim Khaddam on the progress of the mediation effort.

Fahoum said the Soviet leadership had invited a delegation from the Palestine National Council to visit the Soviet Union, but I will go alone this time.

He made no mention of Arafat visiting Moscow.

. Reports in the Arab press said the Kremlin has been trying to help settle the Bekaa Valley mutiny within Arafats mainstream Fatah guerrilla group and heal his rift with Syria, the Soviets closest Middle East ally.

Israeli and Syrian troops have been facing each other in eastern Lebanons Bekaa Valley since Israel invaded Lebanon last summer to crush the PLO. Israel has agreed to withdraw under terms of a U.S.-mediated pact, but Syria has refused, saying the accord jeopardizes its security interests.

In Tel Aviv, Israel Television reported the Israeli army withdrew from two areas on the outskirts of Beirut and turned them over to the Lebanese army.

A duty officer at the Israeli military command denied knowledge of any such move but said that if it had happened, it was part of a routine change in deployment and not part of a pullback or any withdrawal.

The television report said a unilateral Israeli pullback could begin as soon as this week. Such a pullback would be the first stage of a much-discussed plan to eventually withdraw all Israeli troops to the Awali River, 17 miles south of Beirut.

Fahoum stressed that during his meeting with Khaddam, the foreign

minister reiterated Syrias eagerness to preserve the unity of Fatah aixl the PLO.

Syria has never locked us out and will never do so, Fahoum said.

Several hours before, he s{X)ke, the Syrian newspaper Tishrin called, Arafat a traitor and threatened Syria would chop off his fingers if he tries to take decisions on the Arab-Israeli conflict independently. The threat appeared to be a general warning to Arafats

men in tbe Bekaa Valley.

Syria expelled Arafat June 24 after he accused Syrian troops of actively backing Uk mutineers against his leadership in the Bekaa Valley.

Fahoum said his mediation team was successful only in consolidating a cease-fire between Fatah loyalists and the mutineers led by breakaway Col.SaedMousa.

Both rebels and loyalists are keen on preserving the unity of Fatah and conse

quently that of the PLO," Fahoum said. That is good, very good. Without this the PLO will be finished. Fahoum admitted his team had made little headway in resolving the Fatah mutiny, saying the r^ls insist that Arafat should meet ail their organizational demands. He

did not say what these demands were.

Meanwhile, in the town of Efrat, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan, about 100 Israelis rallied against the governments settlement policy two days after a Jewish settler was stabbed to death in Hebron.

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Texas Town Finds Itself

Copless, Mayorless And Now, Less City Council

By MIKE COCHRAN Associated Press Writer

TYE, Texas ( AP) - The ma\'or fired the cops, who sued the mayon who was ousted by the city council, which resigned to protest the cop firing.

Got that"

Theres more. Such as the siege of City Hall and the time someone beat a horse and nailed rabbits to a wall Welcome to Tye, Texas, population 2.200. home of the Rinky Dink Cafe and Mayor Jim Snowden, whose car displays a sign saying "God is My Co-Pilot."

The car has a flat tire.

This is convoluted and comical, but rarely amusing to the citizenry of this little city on the western fringe of Abilene. A number of residents. including the cops, were unhappy with Snowden for firing the citys three-man police force.

I fired three policemen and the city judge because 1 have the state's authority to do it." Snowden said once by way of explanation.

"They were out joining that Citizens for Better Government. and its sole purpose was to make trouble for me."

At 62, Snowden, an automotive shop owner, is a short, tough, stubborn, grizzled, balding, chainsmoking ex-Army sergeant who contends the majority of the Tye residents are on his ' side, not to mention God and the law and, for a while, one city council member.

fhe mayors adversaries, namely Citizens for Belter Government, portray him as arrogant and vindictive. They call him Hitler.

"I wish I was a dictator, Snowden told a reporter, chuckling. "It would be the most efficient government we could have

Reflecting on that a moment. he added: "Nah, really, I believe in democracy Whatever, the proems beg^ Jan. 4 when Snowden, acting without council approval, fired rookie policeman Terry Hood, who along with Chief Don Parrack and his assistant, John Mauney, were the Tye police force. Snowden dismissed Hood for letting civilians ride in his patrol car.

The debate over Hoods dismissal came to a head Jan. 21 with the resignation

of three council members: Ruby Kennedy. Helena Braz'ell and Ernest Tyler.

"Snowden told me he was the mayor of this town and he'd run it any way he wanted to." said Mrs. Kennedy. 69, a stout, grandmotherly figure.

The dissident trio gathered that evening at the Rinky Dink, unofficial headquarters for anti-Snowden forces, and hit upon a novel idea: Why not fire Snowden?

The next day, a Saturday, the three council members called a meeting at City Hall to withdraw their resignations and set their ouster plan in motion.

Parrack said Snowden learned of the scheme and told him: "If you let those council members in here or allow any kind of meeting, youll suffer the consequences.

He ignored the threat.

With Parrack and Mauney cradling loaded shotguns in the hallway, and backed up by a quartet of deputies, Mrs. Kennedy and her two collea^es cited Snowden for official misconduct and voted to oust him from office. They also reinstated the rookie officer. Hood.

Parrack said later he deputized four Tye residents only after receiving information that the mayor was deputizing people ... to make an armed march on City Hall and prevent the meeting from being held.

Poppycock! responded Snowden.

At the time, the only other council member was loyalist Violet Law, who did not attend the session. There was one vacancy on the five-seat council.

Snowden said he got assurances from the Texas Municipal League that the vote to oust him was illegal and then, citing the same violations used to fire Hood, dismissed his two-man police force. Mauney and Parrack have filed a $4.5 million lawsuit against Snowden and the city.

On Feb. 9, Snowden fired Municipal Judge Dennis Hodges and announced; "I have as of now assumed all duties of city judge. I have summarily dismissed all cases pending in Tye City Court.

Hodges was accused of usurping the authority and

power of the mayor and demonstrating disloyalty to the city and the council by joining Citizens for Better Government. Hodges, 64, refused to be fired and sued Snowden for libel.

Tye, right now, because of this (turmoil), is the laughingstock of the country, said Hodges.

Adding a minor element of intrigue to the whole mess was the arrival of Terry Woolley, a self-styled undercover narc who refused to discuss his background for fear of "jei^ardizing lives. Identifying him as an able stranger, Snowden provided Woolley bed and board at his home.

Among the crimes Woolley did not solve, contends Harold Boyd, owner of the Rinky Dink and a force behind the anti-Snowden faction, was the maiming of his daughters Apaloosa colt and the murder of seven angora rabbits.

Somebody beat the colt in the head and cracked its skull, he said. Someone also nailed seven of our long-haired rabbits up on the wall.

Meanwhile, to counter the Citizens for Better Government, Snowden formed his own political group and called it The Peoples Choice. His hand-picked slate was designed to win back control of the council in the April 2 election.

On April 2, Snowdens forces swept the three council seats up for grabs, giving him control of the panel. A short time later, CBG holdovers Tyler and Mrs. Kennedy resigned, leaving Snowden without opposition.

As they say out here in West Texas, its great to be back in the saddle again, said Snowden, beaming.

In mid-April, the Snowden majority supported his firing of Hodges and the three police officers. The council also hired Woolley.

Once on the payroll, Woolley wasted little time quitting. Complaining of a heavy workload and the reluctance of council members to give him an assistant, he submitted his resignation in June.

I would have had to be John Wayne or suicidal, he said, to continue as things

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MAYOR OF TYE - Mayor Jim Snowden of    Snowden, 62, an automoUve shop owner, fired

Tye, Texas, p^ outside the west Texas    the town;s three police officers and the city

community;s city hall, near his car, which    judge, he says,becuse he has the authority to

carnes the sticker, God is my co-pilot.    dosit. (APLaserphoto)





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 10,1963A-13

_    #--------,    AV,    t90l-State Senate Approves Anti*Slavery Legislation

ByJOHNFLESHER

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Slavery would be outlawed in North Carolina under a bill likely to become law next week, but a propo^l to make it a felony for farmers not to report suspected violations appears dead.

The anti-slavery bill passed the state Senate 44-1 Friday and was returned to the House for concurrence with Senate amendments that watered down the original House bill.

The Senate voted 30-15 against an amendment pro-p^ by Sen. Bill Martin, D-Guilford, to hold farmers who failed to report known cases of slavery ^ilty of aiding and abetting the crime.

Martin argued that making such negligence a misdemeanor was a slap on the wrist."

You might get two years (in prison), you might get a fine, you mi^it get nothing," he said.

Sen. Vernon White, D-Pitt, chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee that handled the bill, warned that the amendment would restore provisions approved by the House and strongly opposed by farmers.

Under the bill, holding anyone in involuntary servitude or enticing someone with the intent of enslaving him would be a felony punishable by up to five years in prison and a fine. It would be the first anti-slavery law enacted in North Carolina, although slavery is illegal under the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and 10 people have been convicted in North Carolina on federal slavery charges.

White said the bill was a compromise that farm and labor interests could live with.

I dont think we can do anything to improve it," said White. By amending it wed just make it more controversial.

Martin argued that the bill is too weak, which he blamed on lobbying by opponents who were influenced more by feelings than facts.

Unfortunately this is the kind of bill that gets caught u(j.in emotion on both sides, he said.

In other legislative action:

Hazardous waste producers would be held strictly liable for damages due to waste spills under a bill approved by the House Judiciary I Committee after months of debate.

Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, who chaired a subcommittee working on the bill, said it would treat hazardous wastes in a manner similar to dynamite.

It holds producers liable without regard to negligence or fault, he said.

The producer would be held liable until the waste was delivered to a licensed waste treatment or disposal facility, Hackney said. The only defense for producers would be if the injured person knew about the risk before being hurt or if the spill was the result of ah intentional act or omission by a third party.

The House Water and Air Resources Committee

approved a watered-down version of a bill that once would have required industries to inform employees and nearby residents of all hazardous chemicals.

The panel removed all mandates from the bill, leaving it up to employers to decide whether to label chemicals and inform workers about precautions to use in handling them.

Rep. Harry Payne, D-New Hanover, who introduced the bill, said it would help establish the basis for lawsuits should an employee be injured by handling unlabeled materials. But he admitted it felt short of solving the problem.

A bill redefining North Carolinas branches of government was enacted when the House gave final approval to a joint conference committee report. The bill came in response to state Supreme Court rulings that the distinction among the branches had become blurred.

Most of the measure centered around removing legislative members from executive agencies and boards.

The House rushed approval of a bill to allow tandem trailers on federally funded highways in North Carolina in an effort to avoid any chance of losing those funds.

Rep. Jeff Enloe, D-Macon, said the bill was the least we can get by with and still meet the federal standards. This bill does limit it to what the federal government said, agreed Rep. Foyle Hightower, D-Anson, one of the sponsors of the legislation. Without it, they (tandem trailers) could operate on anyroad.

The bill must be passed by the Senate before adjournment or the state could lose all federal highway funds.

The House killed 46-43 a bill to raise the cost of annual automobile inspections by $1.25.

Were going to tax these people in cars completely to death, said Rep. Charles Owens, D-Rutherford, who noted the recently-approved $219 million tax package already raises levies on license registrations as well as new and used cars.

Rep. Mary Seymour, D-Guilford, argued for the measure, citing statistics on everything from the number of service stations going out of business to the dangers of doing away with inspections entirely.

The number of one-eyed, bald-tired and brake-light-dead cars has multiplied, she said of Colorado, where inspections were halted two years ago. Half the cars are in violation.

The bill would have raised the price of an inspection from $4.25 to $5.50, with 25 cents of each inspection fee going to create an enforcement program in the Division of Motor Vehicles. Service stations would receive the other $1.

Mrs. Seymour said the rate was last raised in 1979 and noted that of 7,128 service stations offering inspections in the state, 343 had closed in the first three months of 1983.

The secretary of the Department of Human Resources could order the

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cleanup of hazardous waste dumps abandoned by industry and recover the costs from the waste generators under a bill approved by the House.

Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, said the bill mi^t require some funds at the outset, but added that it had been approved by the Appropriations Committee.

Artwork

Artwork done on consignment would legally belong to the artist unl he was paid under a bill li^i-mously approved by^e House and sent to the Senate.

Rep. Annie Kennedy, D-Forsyth, said current laws consider artwork to belong to art dealers in the event of bankruptcy.

A bill to remove the legal presumption that sales of

alcoholic beverages to un-dera^ drinkers are done knowingly was approved 47-1 by the state Senate.

Sen. Tony Rand, D-Cumberland, said the burden of proof that the vendor knew his customer was underaged should lie with the prosecution.

The lone dissenting vote was cast by Sen. George Marion, D-Surry, a staunch foe of alcoholic beverages.

The Senate Finance Committee postponed action on a bill that would offer a $3,000 income tax break for anyone keeping elderly people at home instead of putting them in rest or nursing homes.

Sen. Rachel Gray, D-Guilford, said elderly people who live at home are healthier, happier and they

live longer.

'The ^nate, on a split voice vote, approved a bill that would make sweeping changes in the process by which state construction projects are approved and take place.

Under the bill, a State Building Commission would be created within the Department of Administration. It would select and employ architects, engineers and other professionals to plan and supervise the projects. It also would award contracts and adopt rules on construction and design, architecture and engineering, and reviews.

The bill would create a State Building Division within the Administration Department to administer rules made by the Building

Commission.

Lengthy debate arose from provisons of the bill moving several positions to the Administration Department, including the Labor Departments boiler and elevator in^rection office and the Insurance Departments building inspection office.

Supporters of the bUl included several representatives of contractors, subcontractors and engineers. They said the consolidation would make the entire construction process more efficient.

Detractors included Insurance Commissioner John Ingram, Labor Commissioner John Brooks, their deputies and building inspectors who said they liked the present system.

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In The State | Push Readied For Waste Proposal

Judge 5 Decision Is Challenged

Wlf^TON-SALEM - A Forsyth County prosecutor has asked for a delay in several trials resulting from an undercover investigation, saying the judge was wrong in dismissing charges against one of the defendants.

Judge J.W.H Roberts of Greenville dismissed four counts of attempting to receive stolen property against Holloway King Smoot Jr., 53, of Winston-Salem. Roberts said Smoot couldnt be convicted because a police officer testified that the property offered him by undercover police was not actually stolen.

Prosecutor Robert M. Brown immediately asked that the other cases be continued. Roberts said Brown was shipping for a judge but postponed the cases until Aug. 11.

Nine Defendants Plead Innocent

ASHEVILLE - Nine of 12 people indicted in connection with alleged vote-buying (^rations in western North Carolina have entered innocent pJeas before a federal magistrate. Seven of the nine pleading innocait were from Clay County and two were from Alexander County.

Those from Clay County included Sheriff Howard Barnard, 48, and Ernest Hartsell Moore Jr., 51, who was defeated by Barnard in the Nov. 2 elections around which the investigation is centered. Barnard is charged with buying votes, conspiracy to buy votes and obstruction of justice. Moore is charged with three counts of vote buying.

Arson Suspected In Fires

DURHAM - Police said Saturday they su^t arson in two fires that destroyed two buildings and several vehicles in an area near Duke Universitys east campus. One of the structures destroyed was the Durham city schools maintenance building.

Several vehicles belon^g to the school system were lost in the fire. Damage was estimated at a minimum of $200,000.

Reynolds Appealing Tax Bill

WINSTON-SALEM - R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. is appealing a tax bill on $258 million worth of imported tobacco.

In question is more than $2 million in Forsyth County taxes and $800,000 in Winston-Salem and Kemersville taxes. The company has said it should not have to pay taxes on the tobacco because it is stored in custom-bonded warehouses in the two cities.

The Winston-Salem-based companys latest appeal will be heard by the state Property Tax Commission No hearing date has been set.

Society Warns Contact Wearers

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - As the Legislature enters what could be the sessions last week, supporters are readying a final push to met legislation regulating disposal of hazardous wastes in North Carolina.

The chances are pretty good, but were going to have to move soon, Zeb Alley, Gov. Jim Hunts top legislative lobbyist, said in an interview Friday.

A bill that would ban burial of most hazardous wastes has passed the House but is bottled up in a Senate subcommittee, where it faces substantial opposition from industry lobbyists and influential Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir.

The subcommittee had planned to meet Monday but was pre-empted by budget meetings. Sen. Rachel Gray, D-Guilford, said she ho[^ to convene the panel Tuesday.

If the subcommittee doesnt produce a bill by midweek, it will be extremely difficult for one to pass by Saturday, when most legislative leaders are predicting the General Assembly

will adjourn.

Yes, I do think the bill will pass, Ms. Gray said Friday. Its important to the governor, to the entire leadership. We must pass one.

Sponsored by Rep. Billy Clark, D-Cumberland, the bill would ban burial of most wastes. Others could be put in landfills only if they d(Hit exceed specified danger thresholds.

, Critics say such thresholds would be arbitrary and without scientific basis. Proponents cbunter that recent technological advances make them feasible.

Another sticking point is the bills rq>eal of an amendment to a 1981 law that prohibits the state from acting any hazardous waste regulations stricter than federal standards.

Clark and other lawmakers who (^pose the amendment say they no longer have faith in the federal Environmental Protection Agency to impose regulations that will protect people and the environment. Hardison, who sponsored the 1981 amendment, says excessive regulation would discourage job-creating industry from coming to North Carolina.

Hardison, a member of the subcommittee

studying Clarks bill, said in an interview Friday be would not back down on his effort to restore his amendment - even if it means jeopardizing the bill.

The only way Ill back off is if I get outvoted, he said. If youre going to throw the baby out with the bath water, why have the bUI?

The picture was complicated last week as a frustrated House, trying to prod the upper chamber into action, attached a real of the Hardison amendment to a lengthy ^ate bill rewriting North Carolinas public health laws. That bill is before a joint conference conunit-tee.

Hunts strategy, say his aides, is to persuade the subcommittee considering Clarks bill to relent on the Hardison amendment in order to salvage the bill. The battle over the Hardison amendment then could be resumed in the conference committee considering the public health law revision.

It (the Hardison amendment) is the major bone of contention rig^t now, but were hqping the subcommittee will be reasonable, said

Alley.

Hunt, who has imposed a temporary moratorium on hazardous waste landfills, has embraced the Clark bill as a compromise between environmentalists who favor a permanent ban and industry allies who want as little regulation as possible.

Clark agrees, but says lobbyists who depict it as anti-industry appear to have the upper hand in the battle to influence the Seqate.

Industry objects to the thresholds, industry wants the Hardison amendment, and industry has a sympathetic ear in the Senate, said Qark. If anything comes out (of the subcommittee), it probably will be substan tially different from what we passed.

Ordinarily, substantially different versioi of the same bill are sent to a conference committee. But If the Senate approves a bill in the sessions waning days, Clark may face the choice of that version or nothing.

Clark declined to say what hed do in such a case, but added; A small piece of the pie is better than no pie.

rywc

IH -

RALEIGH - Consumers should beware of fake safety bulletins claiming industrial electrical sparks can cause eye damage to contact lenses wearers, the North Carolina Society of Ophthalmology warned Saturday.

Dr. J. Lawrence Sippe of Charlotte, president of the group, said the bulletins have appeared on company bulletin boards throughout the state. They are a hoax, he said.

ippealing Again

2 - A 17-year-oid subsi

Bus Driver A^

JACKSONVILLE - A 17-year-oId substitute school bus driver will appeal her second conviction for driving her bus into the path of a train in January.

Marilyn Mills had appealed her February conviction in Onslow County District Court of failing to yield the ri^t of way to a Seaboard Systems train but a Superior Court jury Friday also found her quilty. Her attorney says an appeal now will ^ to the North Carolina Court of Appeals.

Mitt Mills and 41 studmU on the bus were injured, but none seriously.

Audit Raises 'Grave Concern'

LUMBERTON - A recent audit of the Robeson County Housing Authority has raised serious implications ... of grave concern, federal housing officials told the Robeson County Board of Commissioners. A letter to the commissioners from federal authorities also accused unnamed housing authority officials of lying about corrections of former audit findings.

The board decided to call for a confernce with federal officials to hear more about the audit.

The FBI recently conducted a probe of the countys Comprehensive Employment Training Act program. Last week CETA director Christian G. Antwi pleaded guilty to misapplying $190,000 and embezzling $259 in federal funds.

District Attorney Returns

RALEIGH - Wake (founty District Attorney J. Randolph Riley returned to his job Friday, seven weeks after taking a leave of absence to check himself into a private psychiatric hospital in Winston-Salem.

Riley, 37, entered Mandala Center Hospital on May 23. He said doctors there said he had manic-dq)ressive illness. Riley said he was taking lithium carbonate to control the condition.

Blood Donations Normal Again

CHARLOTTE The number of blood donations in North Carolina has returned to normal after a marked dn^ parked by public concern about Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, an American Red Cross official said.

Dr. Gustav Mogollon, regional director of the Red Cross in Charlotte, said hysteria developed because most people did not fully understand the blood donation process.

He said once a needle is used on a donor, it is immediately discarded. But many people seeking to give blood when the AIDS scare first developed thought the same needle would be used on more than one individual, he added.

Teacher-Slapping Brings Sentence

RALEIGH - A Durham woman has been sentenced to six months in jail for slapping her daughters teacher. Lilly Lyons, 45, formerly of Raleigh and now a Durham resident, was found guilty of assault and ordered to pay a $100 fine and serve six months in jaU. She also received an 18-month suspended sentence.

Mrs. Lyons admitted striking Vivian L. Lynch, a fourth-grade teacher at Douglas Elementary School in Raleigh who taught Mrs. Lyons daughter, Maria, last year. Mrs. Lyons said she was upset that her daughter had beeii involved in several fights.

Wake County District court Judge PhUlip 0. Redwine caUed the case the worst offense of unprovoked assault Ive ever seen in this courtroom.

Lawyers Say Court Will Reverse Eastern Award

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) A $4.1 million jury award to two survivors of a 1974 Eastern Airlines plane crash near Charlotte was reversed by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, according to the attorneys involved.

The ruling wont be made public until Monday, but an attorney for Eastern said Friday the court ruled 5-4 in favor of the airline.

A 1982 4th Circuit decision by a three-judge panel had upheld a 1979 jury award to the survivors and reversed an award of about $800,000 to the widow of a man killed in the crash.

Eastern requested that the full court of appeals review the 2-1 decision, with arguments heard in February in Richmond, Va.

Plaintiffs attorneys, Gary Hemric of Charlotte and Robert Smiley III of Washington, said they will confer in Charlotte early next week to discuss possible appeal.

I think its a safe bet well

take it to the Supreme Court, subject to seeing the opinion, Hemric said. Were not going to give up.

The attorneys said the court issued a brief consensus opinion backed up by 71 pages containing four concurring and dissenting opinions. They said they expected to receive the (pinion in the mail Saturday with the court to make them public Monday.

Norma Mihalek, wife of Francis Mihalek of Charleston, S.C., said she was surprised and wanted to read why her husbands $1,137,500 award was reversed. The other plaintiff, Richard Arnold IV of Portland, Ore., who had been awarded $3,027,500, could not be reached.

We based our arguments on the oppositions arguments to the jury, said William Raper of Winston-Salem, Easterns attorney for the case since 1980. We alleged improper arguments inflated the damages

awarded.

Eastern had argued before the three-judge panel that the plaintiffs attorneys improperly appealed to the jury for sympathy, contrasting the victims poverty with Easterns financial assets.

Raper said he repeated those argents to the full court while Hemric said he argued no improper statements were made.

The cases are the last of 78 claims from the crash of Flight 212 rom Charleston to Chicago via Charlotte. The plane crashed short of the runway at the old Douglas Muncipal Airport, killing 72 of 82 people aboard.

The original panels verdict said that air traffic controllers on duty didnt contribute to the crash, and a previous judge had ruled that the government didnt contribute. The attorneys said it isnt known whether the circuit courts opinion addresses those issues.

S.C. Growers Seeking Delay In Tobacco Sales

SOLDIER - Spec. 4 Susan C. Currin of Raleigh has bera named Junior Enlisted Soldier of the Year in the North Candna National Guard. Ms. Currin, who is a medic

with the 230th Support Company in Goldsboro, is shown packing a field medical kit at the North Carolina Military Center in Raleigh Saturday. (AP Laserphoto)

Survey Reflects Varying Opinons On Wage Gap

Study Of Cocaine Use Asked

RALEIGH - Acting Wake County District Attorney C Colon Willoughby has requested the state attorney generals office to begin a probe of possible cocaine use among Raleigh lawyers, a spokesman for Attorney General Rufus Edmisten said in a statement.

Peanut Referendum Scheduled

ROCKY MOUhlT - The North Carolina Peanut Growers Association is seeking to double the a.sses,sment on peanut producers to raise more money for market development and promotions.

In a referendum Aug. 16, peanut producers will decide whether the assessment should be increased from $1 to $2 a ton. Association officials said the increase, the first since 1973, would raise about $250,000.

Peanuts are grown on about 177,000 acres on 9 500 North Carolina farms.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI) Men and women business executives differ greatly on why a gender earnings gap exists and how the problem can be solved, a recent survey shows.

Benson Rosen, professor of business administration at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said in a statement released Saturday men and women also have different opinions about comparable worth compensation.

Under c'-mparable worth compensation, now being considered by several corporations and state and city governments, workers performing different jobs of equal value to the employer would be paid at the same rate even if job content varied and the market wage was higher for one job than for another.

Rosen said a comparable worth compenstation system would lead to upgrading salaries for typically female ^jobs such as nurse, secretary, librarian and social worker.

To examine corporate attitudes on the issue, Rosen surveyed 900 men and women business executive who read Harvard Business Review. The surveys results, by Rosen and coauthors Sara Rynes of Cornell University and Thomas Mahoney of Vanderbilt University, appear in the July-August issue of the Review.

Rosen said men and women questioned in the

survey disagreed dramatically on the causes of the earnings gap.

U.S. government statistics show the average female college graduate earns less than the average male high school dropout.

Women tended to attribute the gap to company bias in hiring and promoting, while men were likely to blame women themselves for choosing low-paying jobs with restricted career opportunities, Rosen said. Men, however, did believe conscious or unconscious bias of employers held women back more often than any job-related weaknesses of women.

Both men and women ranked skill, effort and responsibility high among the factors that shmdd be used to set salary, Rosen said. But many more men than women said the going market wage should be an important consideration. Since many women felt salaries were already low in traditionally female jobs, Rosen said, women saw this consideration as perpetuating the status quo.

A sizeable number of women believed companies should upgrade salaries of women trapped in low-paying careers to match the earnings of men in positions of similar responsibility, he said.

Generally, men and women agreed that closing the salary gap will require

women to make earlier and firmer career commitments, he said, and to become more assertive in managing their careers.

FLORENCE,. S.C. (AP) -A delay in the flue-cured tobacco marketing season from July 26 to Aug. 2 is critical to crop sales because the plants, affected by ill-timed weather, are late in maturing, a tobacco official says.

Rep. Robin Talln, D-S.C., said be is reasonably certain that the opening would be postponed in an announcement expected Tuesday.

Talln made the comment after talks with Hoke Leggett, associate administrator of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Talln said Leggett is also hearing the same call from officials in Florida and Georgia.

E. Dick Lewis, secretary of

the Pee Dee Tobacco Warehouse Association, said the delay is espwially important this year in order to present a hi^ quality crop to buyers.

If we open with a poor quality offering and very little volume, the auction sales results could be disastrous, he said. American flue^ured tobacco is facing increased competition from cheaper foreign leaf. We just cant staiKl anymore setbacks.

Ben Kittrell, tobacco expert at Clemson University, said the 53,000-acre crop is looking better after recent rains but has not reached the maturity needed for a July 26 opening sales date.

We had a cold, wet spring which delayed field preparation, transplanting and then forced re-planting after a series of frosts, he said. Georgia and Florida had the same problems as well as portions of North Carolina.

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Stars' 4th Quarter Blitz Stuns Chicago

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - All Kelvin Bryant could think of was hang onto the ball as he dodged into the end zone to lift the Philadelphia Stars to a 44-38 overtime victory over the Chicago Blitz in the first United States Football League semifinal playoff game Saturday.

I was just trying to squeeze it, hang onto it, just get over, Bryant said after he and other players were doused with champagne in the jubilant Stars locker room.

Philadelphia came from a 21-point \ deficit, overcoming 84-degree temperatures and six turnovers that led directly to Chicago scores. The Stars tied the game at 38 with 50 seconds left in regulation play on quarterback Chuck Fusinas 11-yard pass to Tom Donovan and David Trouts extra point. Then they marched from their own 27 on 14 plays to win 7:02 into overtime on Bryants 1-yard run.

It would have been easy to get down on myself, said Fusina, who was intercepted four times and fumbled the ball away once. But nobody on the team got down on me. They just kept saying weve come from behind before, we could do it again.

Chicago Coach George Allen called it one of the best games in history.

Its the first time in my coaching career that we took the ball away seven times and still lost, he said. But the Stars got their momentum going and we just couldnt stop them.

Jim Mora, coach of the Stars, remembered that his team had trailed Chicago by 14 points in a game in May but came back to win 31-24.

So, today, we knew we had a shot, he said. The key was execution, coming up with the big plays and great calls by (offensive coordinator) Joe Pendry. We didnt make any of the mistakes we had been doing earlier in the game.

The Stars will meet the winner of Sundays Michigan-Oakland game next Sunday in Denver for the first USFL championship.

Bryant, named the USFL Player of the Year this week, finished 142 yards rushing on 24 carries.

The Stars trailed 38-17 before mounting the fourth-quarter ^urt, capp^ by Fusinas short pass over the middle, which Donovan carried into the end zone. It was Fusinas third touchdown pass of the game.

Philadelphias other fourth quarter points came on TD passes by Fusina of 17 yards to Scott Fitzkee and 2 yards to Jeff Rodenberger, plus a 42-yard field goal by Trout.

Chica................7    14    It    7    (i-M

Phila&phU..........14    0    0    24    S-44

CHI Long 1 run (Corral kick)

CHI-Scott3run (Corralkick)

PHI - Bryant 10 run (Trout kick)

CHI Johnson 12 pass from Scott (Corral kick)

PHI - Fusina 12 pass from Harvin (Trout kick)

CHI - Boatner 12 pass from Scott (Corral kick)

CHI-FG Corral 32 PHI-FG Trout 42 CHI - ^ncer 1 run (Corral kick)

PHI - Fitzkee 17 pass from Fusina (Trout kick)

PHI Rodenberger 2 pass from Fusina (Trout kick)

PHI - Donovan 11 pass from Fusina (Trout kick)

PHI Bryant 1 run A-15,684

After a 42-yard Chicago punt, the Stars steadily moved the ball downfield from their own 30 with 2:46 left before Fusina hit Donovan.

In their last meeting, the Stars stormed back for a 31-24 victory over the Blitz, using three Chicago turnovers for the decisive scores.

Chicago quarterback Bobby Scott passed for two touchdowns as the Blitz intercqited four passes and recovered three fumbles by the Stars, turning six of those plays into points.

A crowd of 15,684 attended the USFLs first postseason game.

Fusina completed 22 of 33 passes for 254 yards, three touchdowns and four interceptions. He rushed for 66 yards.

Scott hit eight of 14 passes for 80 yards and two scores. Kevin Long led the Blitz with 76 yards rushing.

The Blitz opened the fourth quarter with a 21-point lead, scoring after fumble recoveries by Ed Smith and Stan White and an interception by Carl Allen.

Scott passed 12 yards to Mack Boatner, Tim Spencer scored on a l-yard run, and Frank Corral kicked a 32-yard field goal to make it 38-17.

Chicago led 21-14 at halftime, with its

touchdowns set up on interceptions and a fumble by Fusina.

Comeitack Virgil Livers hauled in a Fusina pass with nine minutes left in the first quarter and Long dived over from the 1 for the Blitzs first touchdown eight minutes later.

Safety Luther Bradley recorded his 13th interception of the year, gabbing another Fusina pass and returning it to the Stars 19 less than a minute into the second quarter. Scott capped a drive with a three-yard run with 13:21 to go.

Philadelphia came within 14-7 with 5/2 minutes left in the half on Bryants

10-yard run. But the Blitz came back with another touchdown after linebacker Jim Fahnhorst fell on a Fusina fumble on the Blitz 41.

Scott passed 12 yards to Trumaine Johnson with two minutes left in the half.

Bryant sparked the Stars next drive with a 21-yard run and Fusina scrambled 18 more yards to the Blitz 30.

Fusina then handed off to Allen Harvin and raced downfield. Harvin hit Fusina with a pass at about the 5-yard-line and the quarterback ran into the end zone to pull the Stars within 21-14 with 48 seconds left in the half.

First downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Passes Sacks By Punts

Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Time of Possession

Chi

13

41-138

80

40

8-14-1

2-16

4-45 2-1

5-51 29:46

Phi

33

54-306

250

49

23-34-4

2-16

0-00

3-3

7-81

37:16

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHINGChicago, Long 21-76, Spencer 12-34, Boatner 3-11, Scott 2-9, Dennison 2-8, Johnson 1-0. Philadelphia, Bryant 24-142, Harvin 20-87, Fusina 7-66, Riley 3-11.

PASSING-Chicago, Scott 8-14-1-96. Philadelphia, Fusina 22-33-4-254, Harvin 1-1-0-12.

RECEIVING-Chicago, Ricker 5-57, Johnson 2-27, Boatner 1-12. Philadelphia, Fitzkee 6-102, Harvin 4-45, Collier 2-37, Donovan 3-32, Bryant 2-14, Fusina 1-12, Riley 2-12, Folsom 1-6, Parker 1-4, Rodenberger

Over The Top

PhUadelphia Stars Kelvin Bryant flys over Chicago Blitz defenders to score the winning touchdown in sudden death overtime play in the USFL playoffs at Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia Saturday. The Stars rallied from a 38-17 deficit to win, 44-38. (AP Laserphoto)

Panthers Face Oakland

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Michigan Coach Jim Stanley hopes 'wide receiver Anthony Carter can keep it going as the Panthers big-play man when the United States Football League club meets the Oakland Invaders in a semifinal playoff game Sunday.

The Panthers won the Central Division with a 12-6 record while Oakland won the Pacific Division with a 9-9 mark.

Carter represented a sizable investment when the Panthers signed him for an estimated $2 million. However, Michigan didnt come to terms with the three-time All-American from the University of Michigan until just a few days before the season opened.

The 5-foot-ll, 160-pound Carter needed time to learn the plays and to adjust to the pro game. In the meantime, however, the Panthers were struggling to a 1-4 record.

We were 1-4 and didnt know what was going on, Carter recalled. I know I didnt know. I wasnt in the offense as much as 1 wanted to be and things werent going well.

However, the Panthers pulled off a 21-6 victory over the Generals in New Jersey in their sixth game and things began to turn around under Stanleys steady hand. The Panthers played at an 11-2 clip the rest of the way.

The confidence is here now, and we know all we have to do is execute what the coaches have planned for us, Carter said.

For his part. Carter finished the regular season with 60

catches for 1,181 yards and nine touchdowns.

When youre 1-4, youre only thinking of getting to 2-4, then 3-4, Stanley said. But, I did feel we had a good chance to pull out the season. I knew we had the two elements you need -talent and character.

The Panthers, who reduced ticket prices, rather than raise them for the playoffs, are predicting a crowd of between 55,000 and 60,000 in the Silverdome.

Last week, with their divisional title and a playoff berth already locked up, the Invaders closed out the regular season by losing to Chicago 31-7, enabling the Blitz to gain a wild-card entry into the playoffs.

I had a difficult time getting the team up for the Chicago game, but I certainly wont have that trouble for the Michigan game, said Invaders Coach John Ralston. Michigan is playing the best ball in the USFL right now.

The Invaders defeated Michigan 33-27 in the third game of the season.

Theyre a good football team, Stanley said. Theyve got one of the best tight ends in Raymond Chester, a running back in Arthur Whittington and a top quarterback in Fred Besana.

Chester has caught 68 passes for 951 yards and five touchdowns. Whittington has rushed for 1,043 yards on 282 carries and 12 TDs.

Lead In Milwaukee Tournament

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Don Pooley prefers to play within his limitations, but the veteran touring golf pro made a promise:

Ill be very aggressive. Ill have to be. Now that its in sight, I want to go after it, said Pooley, who shot a 4-under-par 68 Saturday for a one-stroke lead over Wally Armstrong after three rounds of the $250,000 Milwaukee Open Golf Tournament.

Pooley, 31, birdied two of his first three holes and finished with only one bogey as he established a 54-hole total of 205, 11 under par at the 7,010-yard, par-72 Tuckaway Country Club course.

I played a real solid pro-am here and I felt I could win this week, he said. I put a little more pressure on myself this week. I really feel I can do it.

Pooley, who has won $97,859 on the tour this year, has credentials better than

Long Anchors Experienced Line

By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor When people talk about the offensive line at East Carolina University, the man who quickly comes to mind is Terry Long.

Long, a 6-0, 280-pound bundle of muscles enters his senior season as an all-America candidate, who has virtually sewed up the title of Strongest Football Player in the World.

Last spring. Long competed in what will probably be his only powerlifting contest, breaking North Carolina records in the bench press, the squat and the dead lift. Altogether he hoisted a total of 2,203 pounds, the third largest total ever in the world. No other collegian has come close to him in this.

But, accoring to line coach John Zemhelt, the offensive line isnt all Terry Long. In our offense, Terry is featured more than any of the others, but they are all a good group of linemen, the coach said.

In four of the five positions in the interior line, veterans return. John Robertson, a 6-6, 240-pound senior, is slated to start at right tackle, with Norman Quick, a 6-2, 247-pound junior at right guard. John Floyd, a 6-1, 252-pound senior, starts at center, with Long at the left guard position.

Flanking Long on the current depth chart is a red-shirted freshman Tim Dumas, 6-6,265.

All five of them add up to more bulk - and, according to Zemhelt - more strength lan any Pirate tine in the past.

The w r tlimg about the situation is that we e only one spot to fill this fall, Zemhelt said. That spot is the one that Dumas inherited when Jeff Autry received a serious arm injury in a non-football accident last winter. Autry, a 6-3, 237-pound junior, is not likely to play at all this year because of the injury.

Had Autry not been injured, however, the Pirate first line would be an all-veteran crew.

As the season progressed last year, I think we got better and better, Zemhelt said. Our offensive line played as well as we could ask of them. Now they have confidence in themselves, since we had a good deal of success in running the ball against people.

So, Zemhelt feels that the front lines only real battle - barring some upset or a major injury - will be for the left tackle spot. Right now Dumas is in the front seat, but Zemhelt expects him to be contested by both Mac Powers, a 6-3, 265-pound senior, or Greg Sokolohorsky, a 6-5, 290-pound junior transfer.

Then, theres depth. That will be the big task ahead of the coaching staff come the start of fall practice.

Last year, we started the season

/

Terry Long (74) moves out on the block during lost season's action.

with about nine people we knew we could count on, but we finished up with only six or seven due to injuries, Zemhelt said. Hopefully, well be able to come up with more this year. Currently listed as the second team player at left tackle is Brad Henson, a 6-2, 255-pound junior, whom Zemhelt feels could move into a starting role. Scott Totten, a 6-4, 267-pound junior is behind Long, with Shawn Brady, a 6-4, 250-pound redshirted freshman, behind him.

Greg Thomas, a 6-1,. 215-pound freshman, is listed at second team center, backed up by Tim Mitchell, a 6-2,260-pound junior.

At the right guard position behind Quick is Ricky Hilburn, a 6-5, 273-pound junior, with both Paul Hoggard, a 6-2, 225-pound freshman, and Stuart Ward, a 6-2, 230-pound sophomore, behind him.

Greg Quick, a 6-5, 290-pound freshman, backs up Robertson at right tackle.

The worst thing about the spring is that we had so many of our second and third line people get little injuries and miss a day or two. They didnt get to work as much as I would have liked for them to, Zemhelt said.

But I feel good about our depth. They have the ability to be able to spell our front line people and get some playing time. Hilburn came along well in the spring but Sokolohorsky needs to trim down some.

Physically, Zemhelt feels that the Pirate line is as strong as any team it will face this year - and that includes some biggies.

This is the big key, Zemhelt said. If your strength is as good or better that those you face, you have a chance to be successful. These guys believe they are in a position to compete with anyone. Theres no question about that.

Zemhelt also feels theres no question that the Pirate offensive line is the most veteran its been in a long time. We have eight coming back who played a lot last year. I feel real good about em. We can be as good as our offensive line.

If so, the Pirates just might be winners again in 1983.

most of the contestants in this tournament, which usually is bypassed by the top pros, who prefer to prepare for the British Open the following week.

Pooley was 48th on last yars money list with $87,962 and has finished in the top 10 in four tournaments this year, including a tie for second at Atlanta.

Ive been consistent but not top-notch, he said. Ive played 22 consecutive rounds in par or better, but 1 couldnt put anything together. This may be the week.

I played a solid round from tee to green, but I three-putted the last green, which leaves a sour taste in my mouth, he said. I wish I had a bigger lead, but Im happy to have it.

Pooley three-putted from 35 feet for his bogey on No. 18.

Pooley started the third round tied for the lead with Mark OMeara, at 137. OMeara slipped to a 75 Saturday and was seven strokes back at 212.

Tied at 207 were Mark Calcavecchia, who shot a 66 Saturday, along with Dan Pohl and Ronnie Black, both of whom shot 67s.

Pooley, who has made the cut in 16 of the 18 tournaments he has entered this year, birdied his second and third holes to begin his break from the pack.

He bogeyed his last hole, but retainedU.S. Women Nip Yugoslavs

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) - Carol Menken-Shaudts short jump shot with 13 seconds left secured the United States 86-85 victory over Yugoslavia Saturday and sent the American women into the gold medal basketball game of the XII World University Games.

The United States, 5-1, will play Romanian, 4-0, at 11 p.m. EDT Sunday for the gold medal. Romania beat the United States 87-71 Thursdy. Romania advanced to the finals with a 97-68 victory over China Saturday.

The two teams teams battled back and forth in the first half with the Yugoslavians gaining a 45-42 advantage. The 6-foot-5 Menken-Shaudt kept the United States close, scoring 14 of her 25 points.

The Yugoslavians, led by Jamina Perazic and Cvetana Dekleva, pushed their lead to four points but could not pull away early in the second half. The U.S. team tied it 63-63 with 10:20 left on a basket by Debroah Lee of Delta State. The Americans took the lead for the first time, 67-65, with 9:11 left on two free throws by Menken-Shaudt of Oregon State.

That was the same time Joyce Walker of'Louisiana State entered the game for the first time. Her eight points helped propel the U.S. team to a 79-73 lead.

But the Yugoslavians would not give up and pulled within one, 84-83, with 40 seconds remaining. Menken-Shaudts field goal with 13 seconds left gave the U.S. team a cushion. Deklevas goal with four seconds left pulled Yugoslavia within one again. But four strai^t fouls could not prevent the U.S. team from inbounding the ball and running out the clock.

Ostrowski of Tennessee followed Menken-Shaudt with 16 points, and led the U.S. rebounding with eight.

Leading Yugoslavia was Perazic with 21 points and 11 rebounds, and Dekleva with 18 points.

the lead when Armstrong played his 18th in par.

Armstrong, 38, plans to quit the tour after this season in order to spend more time with his family. But before that, he wants to cushion his bank account.

That was the hardest decision of my life, Armstrong said. I thought, Why do I have to spend $60,000 and break my head just to break even? I just dont feel that at this point In my life that I want to pay that price.

Calcavecchia, 23, credited his hot round to a set of irons borrowed from fellow tour member Ken Green. But he said tee shots are the key here.

The key to success here is four tee shots - the four par-5 holes, Calcavecchia said. Ive played them two-under in three days, which isnt too bad.

Black said he would try to play his normal game in the final round and ignore the leader board.

If you execute your shots, and just concentrate, the pressure is not that big a deal, Black said. Its who handles the pressure best who wins.

Five contestants    were    tied at 208:

Richard Zokol,    Larry    Mize, Lonnie

Nielsen, Mick Soli    and    Bill Murchison.

Mize and Zokol matched Calcavecchias 66 for the days best round as hot, dry and relatively windless conditions invited low scoring.

Tied at 209 were Tze-Chung Chen, Payne Stewart,    Roger    Maltbie and

Morris Hatalsky;    Defending champion

Calvin Peete shot    a    third    round 73 and

was at 215 with four others.

Dan Pooley    69-68-68-205

Wally Armstrong    66-72-68-206

Mark Calcavecchia    69-72-66-207

Ronnie Black    70-70-67-207

Dan Pohl    70-70-67-207

Larry Mize    72-70-66-208

Mick Soli    68-72-68-208

Bill Murchison    70-70-68-208

Lonnie Nielsen    74-67-67-208

Richard Zokol    70-72-66-208    .

Tze-Chung Chen    73-68-68-209

Roger Maltbie    69-69-71 209

Payne Stewart    70-69-70209

Morris Hatalsky    70-68-71 -209

Lon Hinkle    65-78-67-210

Brad Bryant    70-72-68-210

Lennie (elements    73-67-70210

Skeeter Heath    74-67-69-210

Bruce Fleisher    71-72-68-211

Jay Haas    72-70-69-211

Buddy Gardner    67-71-73-211

Jim Colbert    69-71-71-211

Steve Melnyk    72-69-70-211

Mark Lye    72-69-70-211

Lindy Miller    72-72-67-211

JimBooros    72-71-68-211

George Archer    70-73-68-211

George Cadle    71-70-70-211

BillCalfee    72-69-70-211

BobTway    73-70-68-211

Greg Powers    73-71-67-211

Tim Norris    74-72-66-212

MikeMorley    70-70-72-212

I Clarence Rose    69-69-74-212

Mark OMeara    65-72-75-212

Kermit Zarley    73-73-66-212

Ken Green    68-75-69-212

Ray Stewart    72-74-67-213

D A Weibring    72-70-71-213

Bill'Sander    70-72-71-213

Dennis Tiziani    68-71-74-213

Victor Regalado    73-70-70-213

Howard Twitty    70-73-70-213

GaryGroh    75-69-69-213

Sammy Rachels    73-72-68-213

Bob Boyd    74-70-70-214

Charles Coody    71-74-69-214

Gary McCord    72-70-72-214

Calvin Peete    69-73-72-214

John Adams    75-68-71-214

Gavin Levenson    71-71-72214

Lance Ten Broeck    77-68-70215

Pat McGowan    71-71-73-215

BillKratzert    74-70-71-215

Rod Curl    71-73-71-215

Leonard Thompson    70-73-72-215

David Ogrin    73-73-70-216

Jon Chaffee    73-73-70-216

Jim Dent    70-72-74-216

Mickey Yokoi    72-71-73-216

Pat Lindsey    72-71-73-216

David Peoples    73-72-71-216

Mark Pfeil    75-66-75-216

Larrv Rinker    73-73-70-216





B-2-Tbe DaUy Rdlector, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Sunday, July 10, IMS

Wildcats Denied Request Hardship Year For Bowie

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -The NCAA has denied an informal reqiwst by the University of Kentucky for another year of eligibility for 7-foot center Sam Bowie, who missed two seasons due to a stress fracture in his left shinboiK.

Basketball Coach Joe B. Hall said he still plans to file some kind of formal request with the NCAA even though he doubted seriously that Bowie would use an additional year if it were granted.

But, it (the extra year) would be something to negotiate with, Hall said, meaning Bowie could toy with the pros if he could play college ball another year.

Were going to make a more formal request, Hall said. So far, weve just looked into it.

The request, written by UK law professor W.L. Matthews, was made by letter last month to Steve Morgan, director of legislative services for the NCAA, and asked whether Bowie could be redshirted a second year because he missed two seasons.

Morgan denied the request, citing the NCAAs five-year rule, which says athletes must complete four years of eligibility in a five-year period. The time span begins with the athletes enrollment as a first-semester freshman.

Only three exceptions would allow an athlete eligibility over more than a five-year span - military service, missionary work or some catastrophe causing the athlete to drop out of school.

Hall declined to elaborate on what type of formal request he might make. He could try to seek an amendment to the five-year rule at the NCAA annual convention next Jan.9-11 in Dallas. UK would have to find six other schools to back such an amendment.

Hall said his request has merit because there is no precedent for such acticm.

Theres never been a two-year injury, Hall said. Usually, an injury either puts you out for one season or completely knocks you out. Tom Yeager, the NCAAs assistant director of legislation, however, says whatever UKs approach, such an appeal wont be successful.

I dont have any op- timism, Matthews said. Id be misleading Sam Bowie, Coach Hall and everyone (by being optimistic). Youve got to tell it like it is.

Yeager said Bowie cant qualify under any of the three exceptions because he was enrolled at UK throughout his two-year treatment.

The rule flat out states the student cant attend an institution, Yeager said.

Countersuit Claims Resale To Convict

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Philadelphia Eagles owner Leonard Tose, already in court over a suit filed by four investors trying to buy his National Football Lea^e team, claimed in a $15 million countersuit that the investors had agreed to resell part of the club to a convicted felon.

Tose filed his suit Friday in Delaware County Court against Louis Guida, an investment broker; Ira B. Lampert Sr., an accountant; and plagie surgeon Julius Newman and his wife, lawyer Sandra Newman.

In a suit filed a week ago, the four acci^ Tose of trying to back out of a June 17 agreement to sell the team. A hearing on the case is scheduled Tuesday in Delaware County Court. Until then, Tose is under a court order not to sell the Eagles.

In his suit. Tose said NFL rules prohibit a felon from owning any part of a franchise, and he asked the court to award him $15 million in punitive damages for concealments and misrepresentations.

Tose said the secret buyer was Jacque S. Zinman, 58, a Montgomery County insurance broker who was sentenced in November to 366 days in jail and ordered to pay a $50,000 fine on charges including income tax evasion.

Zinman, contacted by the Philadelphia Daily News, said he was absolutely stunned by the charges. He said that

\

he knows Tose and the Newmans, but that he was in the hospital when the agreement between Tose and the investment group was reached.

Guida, in an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer, contended that Tose and his dau^ter, Eagles Vice President Susan Fletcher, introduced Zinman into the negotiations.

Guida said Tose had agreed to sell his 99 percent interest in the team for about $40 million. The group agreed to lend funds to Fletcher to buy as mud) as 20 percent of the team, Guida said.

None of the other principles in the case could be reached for comment.

Toses suit said Zinman had obtained the right to buy an interest in the team after Guida, Lampert and the Newmans took control of the Eagles.

Guida said that under a memorandum of understanding, Tose agreed to give up all financial interest in the team for cash and the assumption of the teams debts. Tose was to remain as a consultant, drawing fees that over the years would increase the total cost of the deal, including the loan to Fletcher, to about $50 million.

Fletcher was to become the teams general manager, repaying her debt to the investors out of salary and bonuses, Guida said.

Connors, Lendl Win In Sun City Tourney

SUN CITY, Bophuthatswana (AP) - Jimmy Connors and Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia won their second straight matches in the Sun City $1 Million Tennis Challenge on Saturday, setting the stage for their final match Sunday worth $400,000 to the winner.

Connors defeated South African-born Johan Kriek, 6-2, 0-6, 6-3, a day after avenging his Wimbledon loss to South African Kevin Curren with a 4-6, 6-4, 6-2 victory Friday night.

Connors had been beaten by Lendl the last two times they played indoors, including the U.S. Masters.

Lendl overcame Curren 3-6, 6-3, 6-2 Saturday, ending the match with four straight aces before a crowd of about 4,500 at the Sun City gambling resort. Lendl had 10 aces against eight for Curren.

On Friday, Lendl beat Kriek 2-6,6-3,6-4.

The final days exhibition play Sunday pits Kriek against Curren for third and fourth prizes of $200,000 and $100,000, respectively, and then Connors against Leixll with loser taking second place and $300,000, the biggest payday for any tournament this year.

Connors brought his wife.

Patti, on the trip, and gave every appearance of attempting a reconciliation with her. She watched him play both matches and walked arm-in-arm with him from the players quarters, but Connors continued to be coy about their future.

Were discussing a lot of things, said Connors Were not in a hurry. Were just taking it day by day.

Curren and Lendl held their serves in the opening set until the sixth game when Curren broke Lendl to go ahead 4-2. He held his serve at love with an ace and in the ninth game won the set with a well-played drop shot.

The second set also went with service until the fourth game, when Curren began playing his baseline shots long and wide. Lendl broke in the fifth game to go 5-1 up and although he dropped his serve in the next game, he had no trouble in taking the set 6-3.

Lendl broke Curren again in the first and fifth games of the final set to go up 4-1 and from there on was in control.    

It was the second straight dual loss for the favorites of the crowd, who had come hoping see to local players upset two of the three top players in the world.

Gaulf Ponders Decision Over NFL, 1984 Oiympics

Decision Time

Tennessees Willie Gault, one of the nations top hurdlers who was the top draft pick of the of the NFL Chicago Bears, must decide with in the next

two weeks whether hell compete in the 1984 Olympic Games or sign a pro football contract. Gault is in Edmonton to compete in the World University Games. (AP Laserphoto)

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) - Willie Gault, the football-track star from the University of Tennessee, said Saturday he still had not decided which sport he would continue to pursue... at least for the next year.

Gault, an outstanding wide receiver-kick returner for Tennessees football team last season, was a first-round pick by the Chicago Bears in the National Football League draft in April.

He also is one one of the worlds top sprinters and hurdlers, ranking third internationally in the 110-meter high hurdles and No. 9 in the 100-meter dash in 1982 - and has dreamed for years of winning an Olympic gold medal.

The two sports, however, dont mix.

If Gault signs a professional football contract, he would be ineligible for next years Olympic Games at Los Angeles. If he decides to stick

with track through the 1984 Olympics, his bargaining power for a lucrative pro football contract would be reduced considerably.

The Bears open rookie training in about another week, so Gault will have to make his decision soon.

Ill make it by about the 19th (of July), he said Saturday, at a news conference also attended by Larry Ellis, head mens track and field coach of the United States teams in the XII World University Games and the 1984 Olympic Games.

Making the Olympic team is something Ive dreamed about for the last six or seven years, said Gault, who failed to make the 1980 team in the 100, 200 and hurdles but was a member of the 400-meter relay team.

However, he indicated he did not like having to go through the pressure of trying to make the Olympic team again.

He also said it has been his

Seasoned Bradshaw Still Spirited On The Field

Lopez Drops From LPGA Event, Tour

LATROBE, Pa. (AP) -Thirteen pro football seasons are behind him now, and hes no longer the brash youngster the Pittsburgh Steelers signed out of Louisiana Tech in 1970.

But despite four Super Bowl championships and an already storied career that will someday rank him among the premier players in National Football League history, 34-year-old Terry Bradshaw still is a kid at heart.

Thats why he can kid about an injury that would endanger the careers of some quarterbacks, why he jokes about the regimented training camp schedule that many players bemoan.

You know quarterbacks dont do anything but play golf and fish at noon. I love it, he told former teammate Rocky

Motuszok May Return To L.A.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Although he announced his retirement, Los Angeles Raiders defensive lineman John Matuszak may again play for the National Football League team. Coach Tom Flores said Saturday.

Flores said that Matuszak, who announced about two months ago that he was retiring because of a back problem that kept him out of play last season, was expected to turn out at the Raiders training camp, which (^ns July 21.

There may be a fifty-fifty chance he can play, Flores said in an interview. If he can play close to past performances he can really help us.

Right now at this point I know he made a premature announcement that he was retiring, but I think he was a little emotional at the time because he had gotten a little sore from working out, Flores said.

But since then he has worked out quite hard and we have worked him out and there havent been any recurrences of the soreness. So theres a chance he might come back and compete, Flores said.

Matuszak wasnt available for comment about the situation.

Bleier, now the sports director of Pittsburgh TV station WPXI.

On Saturday, Bradshaw was placed on a list of players who are physically unable to play. The precautionary move will open a roster position for another player and enable Bradi^aw to use the teams training facilities to rehabilitate his elbow. He will not be allowed to practice with the team, however.

A team spokesman said Bradshaws status will be re--evaluated Aug. 16, when National Football League teams must reduce their rosters to 60 players.

Brad^aw said all he does in the evenings at camp at St. Vincent College is go to the movies and eat popcorn. Its a great life. I love every second of it.

Surgeons operated during the winter on Bradshaws right elbow, which he reinjured during the Steelers annual mini-camp in May.

Hey, in three weeks Ill take three Tylenol and Ill be ready, Bradshaw said. Im going to write a book about it.

Bradshaw has co-written books called No Easy Game and Man of Steel.

What are you going to call this one? Bleier asked.

Made of Steel, Bradshaw said.

During his career, which began in 1970 when the Steelers were coming off a dismal 1-13 season, Bradshaw has seemed to be made of the very product in which Pittsburghers take so much pride.

He has overcome various injuries to help the Steelers win four Siq)er Bowls in six years and, though he played poorly in games at Cleveland and Buffalo, Bradshaw had one of his best seasons statistically in 1982.

He has talked several times in the past about retiring, but now says he wouldnt mind playing until he was 40, five seasons from now.

He can do it, too, said his backup. Cliff Stoudt, who admittedly didnt throw any parties when he heard the news.

Ive seen him not be able to walk on Tuesday and throw for four touchdowns on Sunday, Stoudt said. Hes got by far the strongest arm in pro football. And hes such a strong competitor. '

Bradshaws doctors told him he should be able to throw the ball as bard as he wants and as long as he wants by September. The Steelers q?en Sept. 4 at home against the Denver Broncos.

Until then, he said, 1 can throw left-handed.

PALM COAST, Fla. (AP) -Nancy Lopez, who is 5>/^-months pregnant and finding golf more difficult each day, will not compete on the remainder of the LPGA Tour, she announced here Saturday.

Its better than feeling sick, she said.

Lopez was forced to withdraw from the Peter Jackson Classic in Canada last week, complaining of severe stomach pains. Doctors at first thought it was contractions, but later said she was dehydrated and diagnosed her ailment as cramps.

I was scared because I didnt know what was happening, she said. My doctor felt what happened last week, when I got sick, was a warning to me to stop.

Lopez had two victories and $88,492 in earnings in 1983. She said her only regret about dropping off the LPGA tour is that she wont be able to earn $100,000 for the sixth consecutive year or participate in the U.S. Open at the end of July.

Lopez is the only woman golfer to earn at least $100,000 for five straight seasons and the youngest to earn $1 million. Shes currently sixth in the money standings. Last year she won $166,474.

Ill, play golf still but not competitively, said Lopez. I think Ill miss competition but I might not. I enjoyed the pressure. Now that its not there. Ill enjoy that too.

Lopez said she was hoping to extend her LPGA schedule to the Open, where she has been runner-up twice.

lifetime dream to play pro football after watching Lynn Swann (formerly of the Pittsburgh Steelers) and Drew Pearson (of the Dallas Cowboys) catching passes. Another factor in his decision, he said, would be financial - having to make a living for my wife (Dannese, his childhood sweetheart whom he married June 11 in their hometown of Griffin, Ga.) and myself.

But, he added, I dont think money will be that big a factor. Ive been living for 21 years without having a lot of big money.

Gault called it unfair to myself and other athletes who are able to do both to be forced into making a decision between the two ^rts.

Asked how much influence his wife would have on his decisoon, he said, She told me to do what I want to do. But before making the big decision, Gault will run the hurdles and on the Americans 400-meter relay team in the World University Games.

It is important for me to perform well here before I go to Europe (to compete in the World Championships next month in Helsinki, Finland and the summer track circuit) or play pro football, he said.

I need this meet. I need all the meets I can run.

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Jays' Bonnell Blasts Floating Knuckler

TORONTO (AP) - Barry Bonnell found a hitters dream on a 3-2 pitch in the fourth inning - a knuckleball that didnt move, sailing fat and sweet over the heart of the plate.

Bonnell jumped on the Charlie Hough offering and launched it into the bleachers for a two-run home run that helped lead Toronto Blue Jays to a 5-1 victory over Texas Rangers Saturday. It was the Rangers third straight loss.

It didnt move like he wanted it to, said Bonnell, whose homer capped a three-run inning. The thing is that with knuckleball pitcher, 10 percent of the time it doesnt work real good.

They cant make it work real good every pitch. I got lucky and he got unlucky. His ball just didnt move on that pitch.

Bonnell has a couple of philosophies about the knuckleball, a pitch employed solely in the American League by Hough.

There are really two approaches to it, said Bonnell. You can take it and hope he misses with it or else you can swing and hope it isnt working too good.

I tend to use the latter. But if hes throwing it good, theres nothing you can do about it..

Luis Leal, who was relieved by Roy Lee Jackson in the eighth, scattered eight hits and boosted his record to 9-6. It was the third straight loss for Texas.

Toronto erased a 1-0 deficit in the fourth against Hough, 7-7, with the help of a throwing error by Texas shortstop Bucky Dent. With one out, Lloyd Moseby and Ernie Whitt walked and Dave Collins followed with a grounder to second. Dent got the force at second but his hurried relay to first bounced up the line, allowing Moseby to score.

After Collins stole second.

Bonnell drilled his fifth homer of the season.

The Jays added two runs in the seventh. Collins led off with a single and moved to third on Bonnells double. Alfredo Griffin drove in Collins with a sacrifice fly and Damaso Garcia added an RBI single.

George Wright put the Rangers ahead 1-0 in the top of the fourth with his ei^th home run of the season.

TEXAS

abrbbi

Rivers dh 5 0 10 Tolleson ss 4 0 2 0 BBell 3b 4 0 0 0 LAPrsh    r(    4    0    10

Wright    cf    4    12 1

OBrlen    lb    3    0    1>0

Sample    1(    4    0    10

Sunobrg c 3 0 0 0 Biittner ph 1 0 0 0 Dent ss 3 0 10 BJones pb 10 0 0 Totals 3( 111

TORONTO

abrbbi

Garcia. 2b 3 0 2 1 Mullnks 3b 4 0 1 0 Upshaw lb 4 0 I 0 CJhnsn dh 3 0 0 0 Moseby cf 3 10 0 Whitt c 3 0 0 0 Collins If 3 2 10 Bonnell rf 3 2 2 2 Griffin ss 2 0 0 1

Totals

2t 5 7 4

Texas    000    100 00b-    1

Toronto    000    300 (Bx    5

Game-Winning RBI - Bonnell (2). E-Dent LOB-Texas 9, Toronto 4. 2B-Rivers, Bonnell. LAParrish. Sample. 3B-Wright. HR-Wright (8), Bonnell (5). SB-Moseby    (J6).    Collins    (10).

Face To Face

Boston Red Sox manager Ralph Houk (right) voices his opinion to umpire A1 Clark after Clark called Boston leadoff batter Jerry Remy out on a bunt attempt in the first inning at Fenway Park Saturday. (AP Laserphoto)

Griffin

Texas

Hough L.7-7 Schmidt Toronto

Leal W.9-6 RUackson

SF

IP H R ER BB SO

7 1-3 8 1 2-3 1

BK-Leal.T-2:13.A-326,234

Boston...........10

Californio.........3

BOSTON (AP) - In his 23rd year of terrorizing major league pitchers, Carl Yastrzemski still gets excited when he confronts the man on the mound.

Its a challenge. One-on-one. Two guys battling each other. I love it, he said after meeting that challenge Saturday by driving in five runs with a two-run homer and a bases-ioaded double as the Boston Red Sox crushed the California Angels 10-3.

Yastrzemski, who was batting .242 June 10, lifted his average to .327 with two hits in four at-bats. He passed Frank Robinson for 11th place with 1,815 career runs batted in and tied Ty Cobb for seventh place with 1,139 extra-base hits.

Im just trying to drive the

ball and not go after home runs, just hits, said Yastrzemski, who has batted .517 while hitting safely in each of his last eight games. I feel good now at the plate.

Hes attacking the ball, said Boston Manager Ralph Houk. Hes hitting off his back foot now instead of the front. You get excited watching Yaz do this.

Boston pounded out 15 hits, including a solo homer by Dave Stapleton and a 4-for-4 day by Glen Hoffman, against four pitchers.

They had the ball going between third base and shortstop all day long, said California Manager John McNamara.

Yastrzemski followed a second-inning walk to Dwight Evans with his second two-run

Trevino Fires 3-Under To Take Canadian Lead

LTEL, Quebec M - Lee Trevino shot a 3-under-par 69 Saturday and increase his lead to four strokes after three rounds of the Canadian Professional Golfers Association champ-pionship.

Trevino, who shot a 65 in the rain Friday, was one of 10 golfers in the field of 75 to better par on the 6,525-yard Royal Quebec Golf Club course Saturday. Trevinos 69 gave him a 201 total, 15 under, and four ahead of Tommy Nakajima of Japan.

Nakajima, who started the day at nine under, shot a 70 to move 11 under for the 54 holes.

Dave Barr was at nine under until a double-bogey six on the par4 17th sent him to one over for the day and seven under for the tournament.

Dan Halldorson, who started the day 10 under, struggled to a 76 to slide to six under.

Halldorson, who watched several putts lip out on the front nine, got into tree trouble when he took a triplebogey seven on the second hole, and shot a 40 on the front nine.

Graham Gunn, who hdd a

hole-in-one on his way to a 65 on Friday, was off-target Saturday. He shot a 75 to slip to five under.

Daniel Talbot came in at even-par 72, also five under after 54 holes.

Trevino was one over on the front nine before drilling four birdies on the back nine. He said he could have been four over after the first nine were it hot for some accurate chipping and hot putting.

The wind was what made the difference, especially on

the front nine, said Trevino. What happened was there was a fear of missing the green because if you miss the green theres a lot of rough.

Trevino, who said hes played in about 10 tournaments in which Nakajima was entered, cautioned that he didnt have the CPGA won yet.

That man (Nakajima) can play, he said. You can shoot five or six under on the back nine, and I thought he was going to after he birdied the 10th and 11th.

Heeves Reconsiders Denver Controct Fxtension Offer

DENVER (AP) - Denver Broncos Coach Dan Reeves says he has changed his mind about that contract extension he turned down at the end of last season.

In a news story published in todays Denver Post, Reeves said things have changed a lot since he turned down Broncos owner Edgar F. Kaisers offer to extend his contract.

Kaiser made the offer at the

January Birdies To Two-Stroke Lead

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -Don Januarys birdie barrage Saturday - including six in the first nine holes - and his second 6-under-par 65 in three days, gave him a two-stroke lead after three rounds of the $150,000 Greater Syracuse Seniors Pro Golf Classic.

En route to a nine-hole course record 29, January recovered from a disastrous 75 on Friday and set the stage for his third strai^t Professional Golf Association Seniors tour championship and fourth in seven events.

His 54-hole total of 205 was two strokes better than second-round leader Jim Ferree.

January set records Thursday for the Bellevue Country Club and the second-year tournament with a seven-birdie, one-bogey round of 65.

His round Saturday was identical in the number of birdies and a bogey on his finishing hole, but he was even more on target - with a 20-footer his longest birdie putt.

Ferree double-bogeyed the

18th hole of the par-71, 6,604-yard course to finish at 207, while Billy Casper shot even-par 71 and Gene Littler a 70 to share third place three shots behind January.

Rod Funseth and Paul Harney - at 210 each -stayed in the chase, while Peter Thomson slipped in at 211 and Gay Brewer stayed 1-under after three rounds with a 212 total.

January sank a 20-foot putt on the second nole for his first birdie, then matched par on No. 3 before lacing together four straight birdie putts of 3, 4>/^, 4 and 3',^ feet.

He closed the front nine with a 2-foot birdie putt and then ran off six consecutive pars. At 16, he sliced his tee shot into the 10th fairway but recovered and dropped an 18-foot putt for birdie.

His only bogey came on No. 18, when he thre^putted from 40 feet.

Januarys 29 on the front nine, set a record on the Donald Ross-designed course, breaking a 5-under score of 30 held by several players.

end of the Broncos dismal, 2-7 National Football League season in 1982. At the time. Reeves said he did not want to go into a negotiating session following his worst season as a professional football coach.

On Friday, however. Reeves said he now would not mind being approached again about a contract extension.

There were probably underlying things (to his prevous decision) before, Reeves said. Things like, Where are we going? Were we going to do the things that we had said? Now, theres no doubt in my mind that thats where were going. Im more excited about having a good year. Im hoping they approach me and want to si^ a multiyear because I certainly like the direction were going.

Kaiser and Broncos General Manager Hein Poulus said Friday they were unaware Reeves had changed his mind, but said they are willing to go along.

Is he our coach? Yeah, Kaiser said. That hasnt changed.

Poulus said the Broncos would make an offer when theres time and when it feels comfortable. Dan is our coach, whether hes signed a one-year contract or a 10-year contract.

Reeves said he will not approach the Broncos about the subject.

But I would say, if they were to approach me I would probably look at it...Id be more willing, he said. Im excited. I cant honestly say I was excited about it when I was approached then. But now I believe this is going to be the greatest franchise in football. I couldnt honestly say that before.

homer in as many games to give Boston a 2-1 lead. It was his fourth hoper of the year and 446th of his career.

The 43-year-old designated hitter then capped a six-run fifth inning with his towering three-run double to make it 8-2.

California nicked John Tudor, 6-5, for a run in the second on Ron Jacksons double, Bobby Grichs sacrifice and Bobby Clarks single.

The Angels tied the game 2-2 with an unearned run in the fifth. Bob Boone singled and took third on Rod Carews double. Tim Foli then lined out to third baseman Wade Boggs, whose throw to second to double up Carew was wild, allowing Boone to score.

Stapleton snapped the tie with a leadoff homer in the

fifth, his fourth. Hoffman then singled, went to third on Jeff Newmans sacrifice and Jerry Remys single and scored on Boggsforceout. *

CALIFORNIA

abrbbi

Carew lb 4 0 10 OBerry c 10 0 0 Foil ss 4 0 0 0 ReJksn dh 4 0 1 0 Downing If 4 1 3 1 Valentin rf 4 0 0 0 RJcksn 3b 4 I I 0 Grich 2b 2 0 0 0 RCIark cf 4 0 11 Boone c 3 110 Sconirs lb 10 10 Totals 35 3 9 2

California Boston

BOSTON

ab r b bi

5 0 2 0

4 10 2 10 0 0 3 12 0

5 111

Remy 2b Boggs 3b Jur^ 3b Rice If Armas    cf

DEvans    rf    12    0    0

YsUmk    dh    4    1    2    5

SUpltn    lb    4    2    3    1

Holrmn    ss    4    2    4    1

Newman c 3 0 I 0

Totals 36 10 15 10

010 Oil 000- 3 020 061 lOx-10

Game-Winning RBI - Stapleton (6).

E-Boggs. Foil DP-California 2. LOB-California 7. Boston 6. 2B-ReJackson, RoJackson, Carew, Hoffman, Yastrzemski. HR-Yastrzemski (4), Stapleton i4), Downing (6). S-Grich, Newman.

IP H R ER BB SO

California

Forsch L.8-5    4    2-3    7    7    4    2    0

BMcLaughlin 1-311100 CBrown    2    6    2    2    0    2

Curtis    1    1    0    0    0    3

Boston

Tudor W,6-5    9    9    3    2    1    6

HBP-bEvans by BMcLaughlin WP-CBrown T-2:17. A-32,667.

An error by shortstop Foli and Tony Armas run-scoring single chased Ken Forsch, 8-5. Reliever Byron McLaughlin then hit Evans with a pitch and Yastrzemski doubled.

Brian Downing belted his sixth homer for California to start the sixth, and Boston scored in the bottom of the inning when Boggs grounded into a force play that drove in Hoffman, who had doubled.

Stapletons single, a wild pitch by Curtis Brown and Hoffmans single produced Bostons final run in the seventh.

Chicago...........8

Milwaukee 3

CHICAGO (AP) - Greg Luzinski isnt concerned about his average nor his statistics.

Its too late for that, said Luzinski who had three hits, drove in two runs and scored another Saturday as the Chicago White Sox defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 8-3.

Ive raised my average 37 points, said the slugger. With all the at-bats Ive had, you cant do it overnight.

Were playing good ball so you cant worry about averages or statistics, said Luzinski, who is now hitting .235 after a horrendous start.

All three of Luzinskis hits came off loser Don Sutton, whom Luzinski had not faced since 1980 when both players were in the National League.

Hes a good pitcher and I hit some pitches that were down, said Luzinski. I dont remember how I did against him in the other league but Im sure I got my share of hits and hes gotten me out.

Rookie Ron Kittle provided the most damaging blow off Sutton, a two-run homer in the fourth inning that put the Sox ahead to stay.

It was a fastball, said Kittle. With a man on second, I was trying to go the other way and found the swing I havent had for a while. Thats the way it goes sometimes. One swing and you click in.

Kittles 19th homer, a 425-foot blast after Luzinski doubled in the fourth inning, erased a 2-1 Milwaukee lead.

The White Sox scored three more in the fifth off Sutton, 6-5. Jerry Dybzinski reached on an error and Rudy Law doubled. Julio Cruz singled in Dybzinksi and after Cruz stole second, Luzinski singled home both runners.

In the eighth. Kittle doubled

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and scored on a single by Tom Paciorek, who stole second and scored on shortstop Robin Younts error.

Jerry Koosman, 7-1, was the winner but needed seventh-inning help from Dick Tidrow, who notched his fifth save.

The Sox took a l-O lead in the first when Law singled, stole second and scored on Greg Walkers single.

Milwaukee went ahead in the second as Don Money doubled and later scored on a single by Ned Yost. Jim Gantner tripled in Yost.

Koosman sailed through the next four innings but ran into troulbe in the seventh, Ed Romero doubled and scored on a single by Yost. Gantner also singled before Tidrow came on to get Paul Molitor to hit into an inning-ending double play.

MILWAUKEE

abrbbi

Molitor 3b 4 0 I 0 CMoore rl 4 0 10 Yount ss 4 0 10 Cooper lb 4 0 0 0 Money dh 4 110 Romero If 3 110 RHowel ph 1 0 0 0 Mannng cf 4 0 0 0 Yost c 3 12 2 Gantnr 2b 3 0 2 1

Totals

34 3 9 3

CHICAGO

abrbbi

RLaw cf 4 2 2 0 Baines cf 0 0 0 0 JCruz 2b 4 12 1 Walker lb 4 0 11 Squires lb 0 0 0 0 Luzinsk dh 4 1 3 2 KitUe If 4 2 2 2 Paciork rf 4 1 1 1 Hill c 4 0 0 0 VLaw 3b 4 0 0 0 Dybzisk ss 4 1 0 0 Totals 36 811 7

Milwaukee    020 000 100- 3

Chicago    100 230 (ttx-8

Game-WinningRBl - Kittle 14).

E- Cooper,    Yount    DP-Chicago I.

LOB-Milwaukee 4, Chicago 4. 2B Money, CMoore, Luzinski. RLaw. Romero, Kittle 3B-Gantner HR-KitUe (19) SB-RUw (33), JCruz 2 (41). Paciorek (3).

IP    H R ER BB so

Milwaukee

Sutton L.6-5 Tellmann Ladd Chicago Koosman W.7-1 6 1-3 Tidrow S,5    2    2-3

T-2 33 A-27,770.

4 1-3 8 2 2-3 1 I 2

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B4-The Daily Redector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 10,19C

Cey Batters Candlestick

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Ron Cey enjoyed another successful visit Saturday to windy Candelstick Park, his home away from home.

Cey smacked two-run line drive homer, his 10th of the season and 20th of his career at Candelstick, to lead the Chicago Cubs to a 4-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants.

"I have a great deal of confidence playing in this park, siad Cey, who hit his other 19 homers at Candelstick while as a Dodger. I really dont know why, but the success factor has carried over year to year.

Only Willie Stargell, with 25 and Joe Morgan and Tony Perez, with 21 each, have more homers at Candelstick among opposing hitters.

Ceys homer capped a four-run sixth inning rally by the Cubs and Chuck Rainey nd three other pitchers held the s-Ramey 2, m Giants to four hits.    

Its a big change from the last time we were here, said Chicago Manager Lee Elia, san Pnnciaco remembering the visit in May when the Cubs were in last

portedly in jeopardy. Everythings kicking pretty good now. Ceys doing what we expected of him and the pitchers are getting the job done.

Giants rookie Mark Davis, 0-3, had a one-hit shutout through five innings before getting into trouble by walking winning pitcher Chuck Rainey. 9-7, to start the sixth.

Gary Woods and Ryne

CHICAGO    SAN FRAN

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Woods c( 2    110 LeMstr ss    3 0 0 0

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Sndbrg 2b 4    0    I    0 OlUy 3b    3 0 I I

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Cey 3b    4    112    Clark    rt    4 0 0 0

Durham If 4    0    0    0 Leonard If    4 I I I

Moreind rf 4    0    1    0 CDavis c(    3 0 0 0

LeSmith p 0 0 0 0 May c 4 110 JDavis c    4    0    10    Kuiper    2b    2 0 I 0

Bowa ss    4    0    2    0    Venabf    ph    0 0 0 0

Ramey p    0    10    0    Pettini    ss    1 0 I 0

Prly p    0    0    0    0    MDavis p    10 0 0

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Johnstn rf 1    0    0    0 Brgmn pb    0 0 0 0

Minion p    0 0 0 0

Brenly    pb    10 0 0

Totals 9    4 7 3    Totab 2 4 2

Chicw    000    M    t-4

Sannancisco    100    M    KO-2

Game-W'ibnmgRBl - none E-LeMaster. Cey LOB-Chica S. San Francisco 0 2B-JDavis. ffR Leonard i8), Cey ilO) SB-Buckner (5). MDavis IP    H

Sandberg then singled to load the bases with no outs. Rainey scored as Bill Buckners groundo- forced Sandberg at second and Woods came home when shortstop John LeMaster threw wihfly to First trying to dodUe up Buckner. Cey then hit his lOth honw run of the seasMi and his 20th career homo- at Candlestick Park to give Cbicafo a 4-1 lead.

Jeff Leonards ei^th homer gave the Giants a 1-0 lead in the fourth, and they scored

another in the seventh.

Rainey left with the bases loaded and ooe out in the seventh after ^ving 19 his third hit, a sin^ to Milt May, and two walks. Rdiever Mike Proly struck out Joel Youngblood but walked Tom OMalley to force in May. Craig Lefferts then came in and got Darrell Evans to ground out and ad the threat

Lee Smith, the fourth Cid> pitcher, took over in the ei^th inning and allowed one hit in earning his 11th save.

Bruno Successful In U.$, Ring Debut

Chicago

Iaiiie^.9-7

613 3 13 0 13 0 2 1

6    4    4

1

Minton    2    10    0

, . .    . .    __    MDavis pitched to 2 batten in 7th

place and his job was re-    PB-joavis T-2 47 A-13.335

Youth Baseball

Bobe Ruth leoguo

Nash County.......9

Martin County 4

Nash County rallied for nine runs in the fifth and sixth innings and pulled out a 9-4 victory over Martin County in the second round of the Babe Ruth League District Tournament underway at Guy Smith Stadium Saturday.

The win left Nash as one of two unbeatens in the tournament. Nash races the winner of Saturday nights Pitt County-Greenville game tonight at8;30p.m.

Martin, losing its first game after a first round bye, meets the winner of last nights Tarboro-Greene County game in a losers bracket today at 6 p.m.

Martin scored first in the contest, getting one in the first and adding two in the fourth. Nash then rallied for three in ^ the filth and scored six more in the sixth. The other Martin run scored in the seventh.

Shelton Grant led the Nash hitting with two, and was the only player on either team with more than one.

Associates to defeat at the hands of Exchange in a two-day period.

Moore, in going the distance for Exchange, struck out six

CHICAGO (AP) - British heavyweight champion Frank The Bomber Bruno made a successful American debut Saturday by scoring his 17th RERBBso consecutive knockout, fkwriog 2 2 4 2 Mike Jameson of San Jose,

0 0 > > Calif., at 1:30 of the second

0000    ,

0002 round.

The Jamakan-bofT) Bruno virtually lifted Jameson off the canvas with a vicious left hook to the temple and then sent him to the canvas with a looping right. The fight was carried live on British tdevi-sion.

Brunos victory was the third of the afternoon for a contingent of British champions who appeared on a fight card at Giicagos DaVinci Manor.

Earlier, British

and walked only one.        .        :

Exchange got all it needed welterweight champia^yd

in the first inning, scoring four

fimPQ Mnnrp tirifh a Austm of Mwaukce at 1:07 of

times. Moore opened with a walk and Duain Williams cracked a two-run homer to get things started. Maurice Battle followed with a solo homer to raise it to 3-0. Chris Bland singled with one away and Grant Harman walked. Doug Hill then singled in Bland with the fourth run.

The other two scored in the s6cond

Carlos White led the Exchange hitting with two.

Exchange will now face Sportsworld in the City Championship, a best-of-three series, starting Monday at 6 p.m. at Elm Street Park.

Sportsworld 21

Coca-Cola.........6

Sportsworld, the regular season champ in the North State League, left little doubt as to its claim with a 21-6 romp over number two

the 10th round In another scheduled 10-rounder, British featherweight champion Barry McGuigan of Belfast, Northern Ireland, scored a first-round knockout against LaVim McGowan of Davenport, Iowa.

Brunos manager, Terry Lawless, said be was pleased with his fighters performance.

We still have to wait about a year before we sod Bruno against one of the top contenders, he said. But in my opinion, be will be a champion by 1985.

Bruno said he developed his strategy after watchii^ films of Jameson.

He only likes to fight a minute of each round, so it was my strata to let him wear himself out, Bruno said. Thats exactly what be did today.

Bucs Threaten To Withdraw Offer

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The Tampa Bay Buccaneers and quarterback Doug Williams still stand $200,000 apart in contract negotiations, and the National Football League club says their offer of $400,000 per year will be withdrawn when training camp opens next Friday.

The St. Petersburg Times reported Saturday that Phil Krueger, asstant to Bucs President Hugh Culverhouse, said he has informed Williams agent, Jimmy Walsh, of the teams position.

1 told Jimmy his (Williams) value to the team drops if hes not here, Krueger said of training

Pitt County 10    Coca-Cola in the finals of the Krueger said of training

CirAAnwillA    Q    leagues post-season tourna- camp, which starts for rookies

   ^    ment Saturdav    quarterbacks    on    July    15.

Pitt County pushed over a run in the top of the seventh to eke out a 10-9 victory over Greenville in the Babe Ruth League District Tournament here last night.

The win moved Pitt County onward in the winners bracket of the double elimination tournament, facing Nash County tonight at 8:30 p.m. Greenville falls into the losers bracket and will face Washington this afternoon at 3:30p.m.

Greenville scored first, getting a run in the bottom of the first, but Pitt tied it up with one in the second. Pitt then charged ahead with four runs in the third inning, but Greenville came back with two in its half of the frame to trail, 5-3. Two more Greenville runs in the fourth tied it up at 5-5.

Pitt moved back into the lead with three runs inthe fifth, then added one more in the sixth. Greenville again rallied, scoring four times in the sixth, to knot it once more at 9-9.

But in the top of the seventh, Pitt came up with the winning run. Fred Bryant led off with a walk and stole second, moving to third on an error on the play. He scored on Brian Joyners single.

Greenville was unable to get

ment Saturday.

Sportsworld will now meet surprise Tar Heel champ Exchange in the City Championship, a best-of-three series which starts Monday at 6 p.m. at Elm Street Park.

Coke jumped into the early lead, scoring three runs in the top of the first inning. Sportsworld, however, came back to score four in its half of the inning. Coke tied it up with one in the top of the secoi^.

But in the bottom of the frame, Sportsworld came back with four more, taking an 8-4 lead. Jason Wing and Tim Moore each reached on fielders choices that left two men out and Jamie Brewington singled. A wild pitch let Wing score, and Jerry McAllister followed with a three-run homer to put the game away.

Sportsworld added five more runs in the third inning, another five in the fourth and three in the fifth. Coke added one each in the fourth and sixth innings.

Kevin Yarrell led the Sportsworld hitting with five, while McAllister had three, and Dee Williams, Moore and Ledowick Johnson each had two. No one had more than one Jor Coke, which got only three.

t

In compiling the list to top

any kind of a rally going in the ,    i    L    i        

bottom of the frame this time hiRcrs, ^e league left off the name of Chns Brown of

bottom of the frame this time, going down in order.

Martin Anderson led Pitt with three hits, while Bryant and Joyner each had two. Sterling Edwards had a pair of hits to pace Greenville.

Little Leogue

Exchange   6

First Federal 0

Exchange, which finished in fourth place in the regular season standings of the Tar Heel Little League, pulled off its second straight upset Saturday, downing First Federal to win the tournament title, 6^.

Daryl Moore hurled the shutout victory, giving up only two hits, both of them to Frankie Pu^. First Federal, which had finished second in the league, followed regu-lar-season champ Carroll &

Wellcome, who hit .400 for the year.

Prep Loogua

SNOW HILL - Greene County eased past Washington, 7-6, in the losers bracket of the 13-year-old Babe Ruth League (Prep) District Tournament Saturday afternoon.

The loss eliminated Washington and sent Greene into a Sunday afternoon game against the winner of the Nash County-Martin County game, being played later on Saturday ni^t. Pitt County and Greenville were meeting following that contest in a winners bracket game.

Two games are scheduled to be played today, with the championship decided on Monday night.

quarterbacks on July Hes ciHning off a knee injury.

The Bucs position is strengthened by the recent trade with Cincinnati for quarterback Jack Thompson, a backup behind Ken Anderson with the Bengals but expected to be a starter with Tampa Bay if Williams does not come to terms.

Williams, a fifth-year pro, has been a starter since joining the Bucs as a first-round draft choice in 1978. He reportedly was paid about $120,000 in 1962, the last year of his original contract.

The former Grambling star repwtedly was seeking a new a^ment that would pay him $850,000 per season, but told the Times Friday that he had lowered his request to $600,000

Saufer Takes Miller Pole

WEST ALUS, Wis. (AP) -Jim Sauter, the veteran short track driver from Necedah, Wis. outdueled some of NASCARs best Saturday, when he won the pole position for Sundays Miller 200 stock car race.

Sauter, driving a 1983 Pontiac Firebird, circled the one-mile track in 30.796 seconds good for a speed of 116.898 mph. That edged out Darrell Waltrip, the defending Winston C(^ champion, who qualified his 1983 Camaro at 30.858 and 116.663 mph.

The car felt super right from the start of practice, Sauter said. And its always nice to do wdl when all the stars are around.

Waltrip fared best of the six NASCAR drivers who had entered the Miller 200, which is an American Speed Assocation sanctioned event, scheduled to start Sunday at 2 p.m. CST.

Bobby Allison, who currently leads the Winston Cup standing, qualified eighth fastest in a 1983 Firebird at 30.864, and Joe RUttmann qualified ninth at 31.152.

David Pearson was 10th in a 1983 Camaro at 31.302, Mark Martin was 13tb at 31.546, and Jody Ridley was 18th at 31.623.

t.

a season for five season.

The Bucs have offered $400,000 a year, giving the quarterback a choice of $1.2 million fix three years or $2.1 million for five seasons.

Krueger told the newspaper he was not aware that Williams had revised his demand. They have never said that to me, but I felt that was the figure (Williams and Walsh really waided), said Krueger.

The Times quoted an unnamed source as saying the Bucs might have been willing to meet the $600,000 asking price if the player had lowered his request before the Thompson trade.

Williams, who said hes not likely to revise his price again, countered by saying: If they (the Bucs) had come tip with $600,000 ri^t from the jump, none of this would be (happening).

The quarterback said he talked with Krueger a week ago and was Udd I was free to deal with another team. Williams said he has not done so, although there have been r^rts in recent weeks that he has entertained offers from the rival United States Football League.

There are a lot of teams that need quarterbacks in that league, he said.

Williams admitted the Bucs (rffer constituted a lot of money, but said he still didnt believe it was fair. He cited recent $1 million contracts signed by the San Diego Chargers. Dan Fouts and Denver Broncos John Elway, the first selection in this springs NFL draft.

Fouts has done a lot more thin^ than me, but I dont believe hes $600,000 better, said Williams. And I think Ive thrown more passes than Elway.

(Tiuck Noll, the Pittsburgh Steeler coach, has a perfect record in the Super Bowl, four victories in as many tries.

OUCH!!!

San Franciscos Tom OMalley falls to the ground alter fouling a tiall off his foot during the sevoith

inning Saturday against the Chicago Cubs at Candlestick Park. The Cubs beat the Giants 4>2. (APLaserpboCo)

Busy Hour Leaves Stars' Fuslna Dazed After USFL Playoff Win

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -An exhausted Chuck Fusina lay in the Philadelphia Stars training room Saturday afternoon, momentarily unable to move.

In the ^ of less than an hour, the Philadelphia quarterback had gone from near-disaster to gly, fnmi a moment in which he doubted himself to one of the happiest moments of his life.

With three fourth-quarter touchdown passes, Fusina brought the Stars back from a 21-point deficit to tie the Chkago Blitz 38-38, sending the first United States Football League semifinal playoff game into overtime.

Then he directed a march from his own 27-yard line and Kelvin Bryant dived over from the 1 to give the Stars a 44-38 victory, sending them into the USFL championship game next Sunday in Denver.

The fourth-quarter rally followed a Fu^ half in which Fusina was intercepted three times and fumbled once, each time setting up a Chicago touchdown.

When you have a nightmarish first half like I had, it would be easy to get down on yourself, Fusina said. I was trying not to do that.

The guys on the team wouldnt let me. Theyre the greatest bunch of guys Ive ever worked with. They just said, Hey, we still have time.

Fusina, a former backup quarterback for Tampa Bay of the National Football League, wound up completing 22 of 33 passes for 254 yards and three touchdowns. He also scrambled seven times for another 66 yards, and raced 12 yards to catch a touchdown pass from Allen Harvin on a halfback option for another score.

He bad a lot of pressure in the first half. But talk about a competitor and a winner, said Stars Coach Jim Mora about Fusina. He was fantastic.

Scott Fitzkee, who caught a 17-yard touchdown pass from Fusina, said, It might have been jitters or nervousness, I really dont know. I could tell he was getting down on himself a little in the first half.

I said to him on the bench, Hey, for^t it, baby. Just look forme.

It was a gutsy performance. He started reading coverage better and hitting the (^n man. It was an amazing performance.

'They say he cant throw.

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he cant run, but bey, weve won 16 game with Qiuck as quarterback, Fitzkee added.

Tom Donovan caught the tying pass, an 11-yarder from Fusina with 50 seconds showing on the clock.

1 was playing tight end. I ran an under pattern, about five yards, Donovan said. The Blitz inside linebackers blitzed and (%uck hit me earty as he always does on that play.

Chicag) Coach George Allen said, Its the fir^ time in my coaching career that we hxA the ball away seven times and still lost. Usually, when you

STILL HAS JUMPER

NEW YORK (AP) - Walt Frazier, a star on two NBA championship New York Knick teams, lives in New York and is a sports agent.

When I get the urge to shoot a few baskets, he said. I go to a YMCA and while Im shooting think back to my playing days. Ive still got a good jump and a few moves. Its like riding a bicycle, you never really lose your skUI,

have five turnovers, you win.

The Stars just got their momentum going and we couldnt stop tbm.

The Stars will play the winner of Sundays Michigan-Oakland game for the USFL title next weekend.

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Women Add Two Golds For America

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) Carol Menken-Schaudts basket with 13 seconds left wrapped up the United States womens 88415 victory over Yugoslavia Saturday and lifted the Americans into the gold medal game of the XII World University Games.

Meanwhile, Cecelia Fernandez pushed the U.S. gold medal total to four mi the ninth of 11 competition days. The 20-year-old from the University of Southern California won the womens singles tennis cfaaropkMzship by defeating Soviet Olga Za^va H 6-1,6-2.

The only other U S. gold medal winners had been swimmer Bnice Hayes, dnro* Louganis and shot putto* Michael Carter in the poorest U.S. showing ever in these games.

Fernandezs victory marked the first American gold medal since Louganis and Cartm* won their titles Wednesday.

The Americans basketball triumph pushed their record to 5-1 and earned them another shot against Romania, 4-0, in the championship game at 11 p.m. EOT Sunday.

Romania handed the U.S. women their only defeat in this round-robin tournament' 87-71 'Hiursday.

The victory also helped ease the sting of Canadas 85-77 upset of the heavily favored U.S. mens squad Friday night. The U.S. men took on Cuba in the bronze medal game Saturday night.

Menken-Schaudt, a 6-foot-5 center from Ore^n State, led the Americans with 25 points, sending Yugoslavia into the brcmze medal game Sunday night

Her field goal provided the United States with an 86-83 lead, rendering a basket by Yugoslavian Cvetana Deklava with four seconds left mean-in^ess.

Jasmina Perazic paced the Europeans with 21 points while Deklava added 18. It was the first defeat in five games for the Yugoslavians.

Mary O^wski, a forward MIb 'Tennessee, scored 16 points, while her schoolmate. Lea Henry scored 10 of her 12 points in the first half, helping keep theAmericans within three pointi of Yugoslavia. /ree'*throws by

East Germans Win Cycle Title

CARSON, Calif. (AP) -East Germany won its second title in the Murray 7-Eleven International Cycling Invitational Saturday when Mark) Hemig beat West Germanys Gerhard Strittmatter in the individual pursuit.

The East German went the 4,600 meters in four minutes, 49.13 seconds as Strittmatter clocked 4:52.45.

Racing is being held over the new 333.33-meter outdoor, concrete Olj^pic Velodrome track at California State Uni-versity-Dominguez Hills.

The same oval will be used for the cycling in the 1984 Olympic Games. Members of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee used the current event as a model.

Ales Trcka of Czechoslovakia, who lost to Hernig in the semifinals, came back to beat Michael Marx of West Germany in the contest for third place.

Last week in another international race here, Hernig captured the points race title. This time, that honor went to his teammate. Lutz Haueisen. Another East German rider, Hans Puhl, who is the defending world diampion, placed only sixth in the poins race Friday ni^t.

Haueisen scored 31 points as he and four other lapped the remaining 14 riders in the race.

Second went to Martin Penc of Czechoslovakia with 25 points, followed by Manfred Donike of West Germany with 20, luri Lupolenco of the Soviet Union with 19, and Leonard Nitz of the United States with 14.

Nitz finished second to Sergei Kopilov of the Soviet Union in the one-kilometer. As the competitors compete against the clock, one at a time, Nitz was the lOth of the 14 entries to ride. He took the lead with a time of one minute, 8.021 seconds for the 1,000-meters.

Kopilov, more noted s a sprinter but also with a pending world record of 1:00.9 in the kilometer, then came through with a 1:06.371 to win.

His time was the fastest ever by a cyclist in the United States.

David Weller of Jamaica was third in 1:08.120.

Menken-Schaudt gave the Americans the lead for the first time, 67-65, with 9:11 left in the second half.

Menken-Schaudt was unaware of the importance of her basket that provided the three-point cushkm.

I didnt know the score or how much time was left, she said. But I knew we were in tnmble and I had to get qpen. I made sure I checked the scoreboard after I made it.

Jill Hutchis(M), the American coach, knows what her team must do to aven^ its earlier loss to the Romanians.

All of their players are ^)od perimeter dmoters so weve got to play tougher perimeter defense, said the Illinois State mmitor.

Meanwhile, Larry Ellis, the American mens Olympic

track coach, chastised the U.S. Olympic Committee fw scheduling the National Sports Festival so closely to these games.

EUis, Princetwi Universitys coach, hinted the Americans lack of success here was tied to the 1983 scheduling conflict.

Ellis said during a news conference Saturday that the USOC is very much involved in both the national festival and the World Federation of University Sports (FISU) meet.

The festival concluded on Sunday, July 3, the third day of competition in the University Games.

The festival originally was to be held later in the summer, Ellis said. Now both competitions are much too close together. Our athletes

have to choose one over the other.

EUis says its too difficult for athletes to appear in both meets. Americans Megan Neyer in diving and Leo Williams and James Bar-rineau in the mens high jump, for example, tried both meets. AU fared poorly here.

Why didnt the United States send its strongest team here? EUis rq>eated a question. Part of our conflict was the festival was so close to Uie university games. If the festival was earlier, we could have sent better athletes.

EUis said, The USOC has to look at the calendar a litUe more closely so we dont have a conflict again.

The American coach said the U.S. track and field athletes arranged their own

Cruising Along

Members of the crew of the American 12-meter yacht Liberty relax between practice races Friday off Newport as they turn up for the Americas Cup trials being held here. Malin Burham of San Diego was at the helm of the yacht. (AP Laserphoto)

Counterfeiting Charges Against Ex-LSU Gridder

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Former Louisiana State University football star Dr. BUly Cannon Sr. was arrested on counterfeiting charges Saturday, federal authorities said.

U.S. Attorney Stan Bardwell said federal agents seized more than $2 mUlion in counterfeit $100 bUls in connection with the arrest.

Cannon, 46, winner of the Heisman Trophy in 1959 and a 10-year veteran of the American Football League, was scheduled for arraignment at 5:30 p.m. CST.

The complaint charges Dr. Cannon, Charles Whitfield, also known as Oscar Olsen (of Baton Rouge), and Timothy Melancon, of Thibodaux, La., with knowingly conspiring to possess and deal in counterfeit $100bUls.

Bardwell, in a prepared statement, said Whitfield and Melancon were arrested Friday night. DetaUs of the arrests were not immediately avaUable.

The $2 million in counterfeit currency was seized in the search of Asian International, Ltd., a Baton Rouge business, Bardwell said.

These arrests are the result of a eight months of intensive investigation by the Secret Service and the office of the U.S. Attomey...into the printing and distribution of counterfeit United States

currency in this area, BardweU said.

The prosecutor said the case would be presented to a federal grand jury within the next 10 days.

The grand jury has been investigating counterfeiting in Baton Rouge since November, 1982, and has previously issued indictments which have resulted in three convictions and the seizure of three vehicles and over $200,000 of counterfeit money, Bardwell said.

Cannon, who entered LSU in 1956, is remembered best in Louisiana for his 89-yard touchdown run which beat Mississippi on Halloween night in 1959, the year he won the Heisman Trophy.

Hotly recruited by professional football. Cannon became pro footballs first $100,000 player in 1960 with a three-year, contract with the AFLs Houston Oilers.

In his first season Cannon scored only once for Houston, but gained 844 yards. In the first AFL championship game he caught an 86-yard touchdown pass to lock up a 24-16 victoty and the Most Valuable Player trophy - an award he also got in the next years championship.

In 1%1 he led the league with 948 yards, including 25 carries for 216 yards and three touchdowns against the New York Titans - a game during

which he also caught five passes for two more touchdowns and 115 yards.

In all, he accounted for 331 of the Oilers 473 yards that day.

A back injury during a 1%2 game left him with virtually no lateral movement - which was never his strong suit. Club officials accused him of goldbricking and Cannon asked to be traded.

Oakland gave the Oilers three players for Cannon in 1964. Coach A1 Davis used him during his first season with the Raiders as a flanker, then switched him to tight end.

In the Raiders championship 1967 season. Cannon led the team with 10 touchdown catches and helped win four close games. He made all-Pro that year for the first time since 1962.

Cannon retired from pro ball in 1970 and has since worked as an orthodontist in Baton Rouge.

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competitive schedules this summer involving five major meets the East Germany-U.S. dual meet in Los Angeles June 25-26, the festival, the University Games, the World Championships in Helsinki Aug. 7-14

and the Pan American Games in Caracas Aug. 14-28.

We said they didnt have to compete in all of them. Ellis said. To do that would be devastating. Frankly, Jd rather have a crowded

calendar. It gives some of our other athletes a chance to compete internationally.

Ellis also took a verbal jab at Edmonton newspapers for calling this competition the sham games.

He said, "I hope people don't lose sight of the real reasons of these games - to bring students together to compete, to break down barriers and develop frienddiips. Its not the Olympics. Its not the World (TiampionshijK.

Marino Set To Learn

MIAMI (AP) - Former Pitt quarterback Dan Marino, declaring himself ready to learn from starter David Woodley. Saturday si^ied a multiyear contract with the Miami Dolphins.

Terms of the pact were not released, but team owner Joe Robbie said they were appropriate for a first-round draft choice.

Marinos signing with the National Football League club followed weeks of negotiations, Robbie said.

The Dolphins are pleased to announce that all the is have been dotted and all the ts have been crossed and Dan Marino has agreed to play quarterback for the Miami Dolphins, said Robbie. We expect a long association and we look forward to many years of top production and Super Bowls.

We have been in contact with Marinos agent, Marvin Demoff, two or three times a week for the past few weeks, added Robbie. I want to express my appreciation to Marino and Demoff for the way the negotiations were conducted.

Marino, accompanied by his parents and Demoff, said he was anxious to start working out with the Dolphins when training camp opens Sunday for rookies hoping to join the defending AFC champions.

Im looking forward to -starting camp and hopefully Ill be able to contribute, said Marino, the Panthers all-time leading passer with 8,416 yards. Basically Im very pleased with the way the negotiations went. There were no hard times.

Although he made a token

overture to the United States Football League, Marino said there was never any doubt he wanted to play for the Dolphins.

Marino also said he had no regrets about not being drafted by his hometown Steelers.

In a way Im glad the Steelers didnt draft me because this (^ns up new horizons. said Marino, who was drafted 27th overall. As far as the USFL franchise in Pittsburgh, in my case Ive always wanted to play in the NFL and play for a quality team.

Marino ^id he will wear No. 13 for the Dolphins, the same number he wore in high school and at Pitt. Marino is one of three Pitt players along with Tony Dorsett and Hugh Greene to have his jersey retired.

Its been a good number for me, said Marino. Its a unique number.

Robbie said the signing of Marino means the DolpW have either signed or come to agreements with all their draft choices. No. 2 pick Ron Charles of Syracuse said he will sign Monday, and the team announced the signing of third pick Charles Benson of Baylor on Friday.

But kicker Uwe von S^chamann and veteran backup quarterback Don Strock have not signed.

Robbie admitted he was concerned about Strocks free-agency, particularly because the USFL is actively seeking quality quarterbacks.

Im going to give Don a call today and see if we cant come to an agreement, said Robbie. Serious negotiations

with the free agents and veterans in their option years will begin when the players get to training camp. We hope to sign the option year players so there wont be any free agents next year,

The Dolphins go into train-ing camp with four quarterbacks: Marino, Woodley, Strock and third-year quarterback Jim Jensen.

We think we now have the greatest depth at quarterback of any NFL team, said Robbie.

Marino did not seem fazed by the competition.

Its the best thing for any athlete, said Marino. At college there was (quarterback) Rick Trocano for two years. David Woodley is a quality quarterback and I

think Ill be able to learn a lot from him

Marino, who finished fourth and ninth in the 1981 and 1982 Heisman Trophy balloting, led Pitt to an overall record of 39-5 in 44 starts and passed for more than 200 yards 25 times on his way to becoming the T schools all-time total offensive leader with 8,953 yards. He also set school records in completing 674 of 1.167 passes for 79 touchdov^ns. In his senior year .Marino passed for 2,251 yards and 17 touchdowns.

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B4-The Daily Reflector, GteenvilJe, N.C.-Sunday. July W. 1983

Wockenfuss Laughs Last

North State Champions

Sportsworld capturea the North State Little League championsh^ this year. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Parham Stanley, Jay Kuykendall, Troy Clemons, Jason Wing and Ledowick Johnson; second row. Doc Williams,

Kelvin Yarrell, Tye Fickling, Galen Brinn and Walter Davis; third row, head coach Ron Wing, Jamie Brewington, Tim Moore, Jeremy McAllister and assistant coach Jack Parker. (Reflector Photo)

Tar Heel Champions

CarroU & Associates captured the championship of the Tar Heel Little League this year. Members of the team are, first row, left to right; Hank Thompson, Mitchell Brown, Travis Williamson,

Chad Adams, Jayson Smith and Marvin Gay; second row, Michael Sutton, Julius Smith, Toure Claiborne, Howard Moore and Joel Daughtry; third row, coaches Bill Williamson, Grant Jarman and Eric Jarman. (Reflector Photo)

Woody

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Chips and putts from area golf courses;

Greenville Country Club

On Ladies Day, a double elimination event was held. First place went to Put Carter, while Diana Barwick finished second. Dardie Longino finished third.

A Best-Ball-of-Pair event was held last Monday. Reg and Betty Akin finished in first place for the tournament, while Reid and Joan Hooper took second. Ted and Barbara Ellis finished third, with Betty Akin and Becky Howard in fourth. Fifth were Diana Barwick and Harriette White.

The Junior Club Championship was held last week, with Will Mackenzie taking the 8-and-under division. Joel Fickling took second place. In the ten-year-old division, Chris Warren took first, followed by Meredith Lee. Teague Tripp won first place in the 11-year-old division, with Robert Baggett second. In the 12-year-old divison, Brian Wille won with Mitch Mitchum as the runner-up. Gray Blount was the winner of the 13-year-old divsion with Thomas Gardner second. For the 14-year-olds, Burt Aycock took first, with David Lee second. Mike Herrin won at 15, with Tad Castellow second. Chris Evans won at 17.

First place in a Junior-Senior event, first place went to the team of Diana Barwick, Cam Smith, Gray Blount, Drock Vincent and Valerie Vincent.' Second place was won by Boyd Lee, Talbot Green, Gil Gardner, Meredith Lee and Jeff Barwick. Finishing third were Harriette White, Stephen Home, Hunter Blount, Thomas Gardner and Todd Fickling. Ed Atkinson, Cam Evans, Mitch Mitchum, Robert Baggett and Steven Bell finished fourth with John Hill, Tyler Hill, Hannah Hill, Grainger Hill and Ifes Mackenzie finishing fifth.

On Sunday, July 17, the Carolina Dairies Ice Cream Open will be held at the club. The junior tournament is open to boys and girls ages 3-8.

A pro-junior tournament will be held on July 21.

Indian Trails Country Club

The Indian Trails Country Club held a tournament to follow a series of junior clinics recently. Taking first place in the junior division \vas Mickey Adams with a 34 over six holes.

Eddie Adams was named the most improved male golfer during the clinic. Taking the girls division with a 39 for six holes was Erin Tyndall, while Lslie Potter was named the most improved.

A Ringer Tournament is planed for junior golfers, ages 6-18, in early August. Junior members wishing to participate may sign up in the pro shop.

Ed Mewborn, Ted Bender, Bernice Bender, George Saleeby and Drew Harper took first place in a Winner Take AH mixed shootout superball tournament. They finished with a ten-under 62.

Upcoming events at Indian Trails include: July 12, Mens Association; July 13, Mens Stag Night; July 18, Womens SUg Night;- July 19, Mens Association; July 26, Mens Association; July 30-31, Member-Member.

Brook Valley Country Club Danny Hammond shot his best round recently at the Brook Valley Country Club. He carded a 35-3772. Charlotte Spain had her best ever at Brook Valley with a 40-43-83. Don Skinner had his best with a 37-41-78, while Evelyn Ward recorded her best of the year, 43-42-85. Bobby Bullock recorded his best ever while playing with Doug Parker, a 42-36-78.

The team of Charles, Martha, Mike and Simon Moye in the July 4 Family Spectacular with a nine-hole score of 30. Second went to Walker Lee, Betsy and Lee Allen with a 32. Third, decided on a card matchoff, went to Chuck, Carol, Russ and Ben Edwards, also with a 32. Fourth was taken by Kelly and Scott Kee, also with a 32.

The next Jack and Jill will be held on Wednesday, July 20. Please sign up at the pro shop bulletin board.

Farmville Golf and Country Club Farmville Golf and Country Club recently held its club championship with Gary Hobgood taking first place. Joe Jenkins finished second with Lloyd Lyles finishing third.

In the first flight, Donnie Langston took first place, followed by Jim Burke and Burt Warren. The second flight was won by Tommy Cobb, with Nelson Tugwell second and Jim Lancaster third.

Steve Holloman won the third flight, followed by Marty Hobgood and Ralph Mozingo.

Lee Abbott made an eagle at the Falling Creek Country Club in Kinston recently. He made the shot on the par 4,18th hole. He was playing with pro Carl Beamon, who shot a 65. Abbott shot 67, including a 30 on the back, birdieing 13, 15, and 17. The 18th is 405 yards, and Abbott used driver and four-iron.

*

By The Associated Press The Oakland As stole fve bases against Detroit catcher John Wockenfuss, but Wockenfuss had the last laugh -he stole the game.

The 34-year-old veteran, used mostly as a designated hitter, made a rare start behind the plate Friday night and slammed a three-run homer with two out in the bottom of the eighth inning to lift the Tigers to a 3-2 vict^.

Earlier, the As ran wild on Wockenfuss, with three of their steals helping set up both their runs.

I just stunk out there tonight, said Wockenfuss, who never came close to throwing anyone out, although he cau^t Mike Heath straying too far off second base in the seventh inning (when Heath broke for third, it went down as a cau^t stealing). It was embarrassing. The first time since Ive been b^ I beard people say, You stink, youre no catcher, youre too old. Of course, I couldnt blame them. I did stink.

But Wockenfuss had the last laugh with his homer off reliever Steve Baker.

I figt^ if I didnt do that they might start throwing stuff at me, Wockenfuss said. I was just trying to put the ball in play. Id heard enough boos.

Elsewhere in the American League, the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Texas Rangers 8-5 in the opener of a three-game series between the division leaders, the Seattle Mariners downed the Baltimore Orioles 3-0, the New York Yankees clubbed the Kansas City Royals 9-2, the California Angels pounded the Boston Red Sox 9-3, the Milwaukee Brewers edged the Chicago White Sox 4-3 and the Cleveland Indians trounced the Minnesota Twins 10-4.

With Oakland leading 2-0 behind the four-hit pitching of Tim Ck>nroy, Enos Cabell led off the Detroit ei^th with a walk, bringing on Baker. One out later* Lance Parrish singled Cabell to third and, following a strikeout, Wockenfuss belted an 0-2 pitch from Baker into the i^per deck in left field for his fifth home run of the season.

Doug Bair worked 1 1-3 innings in relief of starter Dan Petry to pick up the victory. However, Aurelio Lopez struck out Carney Lansford with the bases loaded to end the game and record his I3tb save.

Oaklands Rickey Henderson stole three bases, giving him 10 in his last three games.

Blue Jays 8, Rangers 5 At Toronto, Willie Upshaw slammed a three-run homer and scored three times. After Damaso Garcia singled and Garth lorg walked in the fourth inning, Upshaw drilled a pitch from reliever Jon Matlack to give the Blue Jays an 8-3 lead. It was Upshaws 16th homer of the season and increased his RBI total to 51.

Jim Clancy held the Rangers to five hits, including solo homers by Mickey Rivers and Billy Sample, before being relieved by Randy Moffitt in the seventh. Toronto took a 5-3 lead with three runs in the third, chasing loser Danny Darwin.

Ranee Mulliniks doubled, moved to third on a single by Upshaw and scored on a wild

Blues Sale Near Complete

ST. LOUIS (AP) - A confident Harry Omest says the only hurdle Idt to clear for his groins plan to buy the St. Louis Blues is negotiating a lease on the Checkerdome with the Ralston Purina Co.

Although Omest and the groups attorney, Louis B. Susman, of St. Louis, declined to comment Friday on the status of the negotiations, Susman said the company has been very cooperative and we have a good dialogue going.

The California businessman told reporters Friday that he and at least 10 St. Louis investors were prqiared to offer $3 million, plus a |m>-missory note of betwemi 12 million and $5 million for the National Hockey League club.

In addition, Omest said the investors would put up $3 million in working capital to operate the team.

Novice Tennis

The fourth Novice League tennis match of the season was played Friday.

Wachovia Bank defeated University Book Exchange, 24-9, and Arlington Self-Storage edged out Greenville reation, 21-20.

pitch. Lloyd Moseby douUed Upshaw home and, after Jor^ Orta walknl, Matlack walked Ernie Whitt and Dave (Filins folk)wed with a run-scoring grounder.

Marinos 3, Orioles 0 At Baltimore, Jim Beattie pitched a four-hitter for his secmxi cmi^lete game in 14 starts. Richie Zisk opened the Seattle fourth with a single off loser Storm Davis and was forced by Pat Putnam. After Putnam reached second on a grounder, Jamie Allen walked. Third baseman To(kl Cruz made an error on Dave Hendersons grounder, loading the bases. Putnam a{^-ently was picked off third by catcher Rick Dempsey, but Cruz failed to handle the throw. Rick Sweet then walked, forcing in the first run. Putnam singed in the sixth and scored on a single by A1 Cowens and Seattle added a nm in the eighth on a double by Zisk and a single by Flitnam.

Yankees 9, Royals 2 At Kansas City, Butch Wynegar drove in four runs

with a single and two triples and ^eve Balboni celebrated his return to the major leagues with a home run, two singes and three RBIs. Shane Rawley scattered 10 hits while the Yankees knocked out nemesis Larry Gura with six runs, in the fifth. It was only the fourth time in 14 regu-lar-season decisions that the Yankees had beaten Gura. Balboni, who was called up from the Intematkmal League during the All-Star break, homered tor a 1-0 lead in the second inning and Wynegars bases-loaded triple highli^tedthebigfifth.

Angels 9, Rm Sox 3 At Bo^ Rod Carew and Rick Burleson drove in three rims apiece to lead California. The Red Sox had runners in scoring position in six of the first seven innings but Bruce Kison blanked them until Carl Yastrzemski hit a two-run homer in the eighth, his third of the season. The An^ls had a four-run third inning off Dennis Eckersley, including a two-run single by Burleson, and a five-run ei^th, during

which Carew had a two-run sin^e.

Brewers 4, White Sox 3 At (^cago, Paul Molitmr, Cecil Cooper and Robin Yount homered in the first two innings for all the Milwaukee runs. Molitmr opened the game with his seventh homer and, after Jim Gantner doid>led, (hooper slugged his 17th off loser LaMarr Hoyt. Yount hit his 12th homer in the second inning. Bob McClure was the winner but departed in the seventh after allowing six hits, including a home run by Carihm Fisk, and five walks.

Indians 10, Twins 4 At Miimeapolis, Clevdand scored six times before the first batter was retired in the first inning, capped by Gorman Thomas three-run homer. That made it e^ fw Bert Blyleven, who fired a five-hitter and blanked the Twins until the ninth, \riien they scored four unearned runs. Loser Frank Viola yielded all 10 runs in 3 1-3 innings, tying a club record for the most runs allowed in a

game.

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The Daily Reflecutr. Greenville, N.C.-Sunday. July 10,1063-B-7Friday's Area Youth Baseball Results

Bob Ruth Uogue

LittI Uogu

in the fifth and one in the

Nash County 15 No one had naore than one

Washington 6 hit for either team.

Nash County pushed over _

five runs in the first inning and went on to record a 15^ victory over Washington in the first round of the 14-15-year-old Babe Ruth League District Tournament which got underway Friday at Guy Smith Stadium.

Nash moves into the winners bracket of the tournament, and was to face Martin County, which received a first round bye, on Saturday.

Washington fell into the losers bracket and plays Sunday against an opponent^p be determined.

After scoring five in the first inning, Nash added one in the second, six more in the sixth and three in the seventh. Washington scored three times in the first inning, once in the second, and twice more in the seventh.

Jeff Morgan and John Adams led the Nash hitting with three each, while Jeff Epps, Jerry Edwards and Phil Bryant each had two.

Donald Tyler had two to pace Washington.

Pitt County........6

Tarboro...........0

Pitt Countys Mike Elks tossed a two-hit shutout as the Pitt County Babe Ruth League All-Stars downed Tarboro, &4) Friday in the first round of the district tournament.

Elks lost his bid for a no-hitter in the fifth and gave up a second hit in the seventh. He struck out four and walked three along the way.

Pitt got ail it needed in the first inning, scoring three times. Steve Mills led off, reaching on a walk. He then stole both second and third, scoring on Randy Mills double. Mills took third on a wild pitch and Elks walked, stealing second. Mills then scored on Lee Hardees sacrifice fly. Brian Joyner singled to score Elks for the 3^ lead.

Pitt then added one in the second and two more in the sixth.

Randy Mills had two hits to pace Pitt County. No one had more than one for Tarboro.

Pitt was to face Greenville on Saturday, while Tarboro was to meet Greene County in a losersbracket game.

Exchange.........4

Carroll & Assoc...... 3

Malcolm Wilson hit two home runs to guide fourth place Exchange to a 4-3 victory over regular season champ Carroll & Associates and into the finals of the Tar Heel Little League playoffs Friday.

Exchange was to meet First Federal for the title on Saturday.

Carroll & Associates pushed over two runs in the top of the "^first, but a homer by Wilson

scored Cox.

First Federal added one in the third, and four more in the fourth. Wellcome scored one in the second, two in the third and one in the fourth.

Lewis led the First Federal hitting with four, wdiile Bolen had three and Pugh, Dyer and Dansey each had two. No one had more than one for Wellcome.

Graenville.........7

Greane County____.1

Eric Jarman allowed only two hits as he pitched Greenvilles Babe Ruth League All-Stars to a 7-1 victory over Greene County Friday in the first round of district tournament play.

Jarman had a shutout going until the fourth, when Greene scored its only run. He also gave up his first hit in that inning.

Greenville scored four times in the third inning to put the game on ice. Larke Weatherington led off with a walk and moved up on a wild pitch and an infield out. He scored when Sterling Edwards singled. Tyrone Jones got a hit and both runners moved up on a wild pitch, scoring when Jarman doubled. A balk moved Jarman to third and he scored when Robbie Erhmann singled.

Greenville added two more

Games Still Scheduled

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) - A Pan American Games Organizing Committee official says the Caracas event next month will begin on schedule despite 'construction problems.

The 1983 Pan American competition is scheduled Aug. 14-28.

Ruben Mijares, press coordinator for the Venezuelan event, said via tel^hone on Friday, The facilities will be finished on time. We are installing the track in Olympic Stadium now and expect it to be completed in about two weeks.

The spokesman expects all of the venues to be completed within two weeks.

Mijares also denied a statement by a local organizing committeeman for the Worid University Games that the Venezuelans approached the Canadians about switching the Pan American event to Edmonton.

Ernie Miller said the Ed-mcMiton group had been asked to take the Pan American Games and move them back to October. Miller serves as director of information for the XII WoK^ University Games.

got Exchange on the scoreboard in the second. Exchange added a second run in the third, while C&A came up with one in the fifth for a 3-2 lead.

In the bottom of the fifth, however. Exchange picked up two runs and gained the win. Duain Williams reached on a fielders choice that left one down, and with two away, Wilson send his second homer out of the ball park to give Exchange the 4-3 lead it took to win.

Wilsons two homers led the Exchange hitting, while no one had more than one for C&A, which got only two off the pitching of Williams.

First Federal 11

Wellcome.........4

First Federal, which finished second in the regular season standings, moved into the finals of the Tar Heel Little League playoffs with an 11-4 romp over Wellcome Friday.

First Federal was to meet upstart Exchange, which upset champion Carroll & Associates, in Saturdays finals.

First Federal pushea over two runs in the first and then added four more in the second to put it away.

Billy Bob Anderson led off the second, reaching on an error that let him go on to second. Trey Dansey singled him to third and a double steal pushed Anderson in. John Bolen walked, but was cut down at second on Richard Lewis grounder. Lewis stole up, and Dansey scored on Frankie Pughs ground out. Michael Cox walked and Maurice Dyer singled in Lewis. Another double steal

Sportsworld 12

Optimists.........2

Regular season champion Sportsworld moved into the finals of the North State Little League playoffs with a 12-2 romp over the Optimists Friday.

Sportsworld was to meet H2 Coca-Cold in the finals on Saturday.    ^

Sportsworld scored three times in the first inning and got all it needed. Tim Moore walked and Jamie Brewin^n reached on a fielders choice. Dee Williams then doubled in both runners. He advanced on the relay home and scored on Jeremy McAllisters single.

A Tim Moore homer accounted for two more runs in the second, while Sportsworld picked up three in the fourth. Four more crossed in the fifth, two on a homer by' Brewington.

Both of the Optimist runs scored in the third.

Brewington    led    the

Sportsworld hitting with three, while Ledowick Johnson, Moore, Williams    and

McAllister each had two. No one had more than one for the Optimists.

Coca-Cola ........5

Union Carbide.....2

Coca-Cola scored five times in the fifth inning and pulled out a 5-2 victory over Union Carbide to reach the finals of the North State Little League tournament on Friday.

Coke faced regular season champ Sportworld in the Saturday finals.

UC took the initial lead, scoring once in the third inning.

But in the fifth. Coke rallied for all five of its runs. Sean Frelke reached on a walk with one out and Derrick Clark was safe on an error. Derrick Hines doubled, driving in both runners. He then scoi^ when Andy Miller doubled. Mike Smith, Kevin Jordan and Todd. Taylor all walked, forcing in

Miller and a walk to David ONeal brought in Smith with the fifth run.

Union Carbide picked iq) one more in the sixth.

Hines had two hits to lead Coke, while Bill Turcotte had three to pace Union Carbide.

Prep leogue

Greenville.........9

Martin County.....0

SNOW HILL - GreenvUIes 13-year-old Babe Ruth    All-

Stars vaulted to a 9-0 victory over Martin County Friday in the district playoffs.

Greenville was to face Pitt County in the winners bracket Saturday night in    the

tournaments third round.

Greenville got all it needed in the first inning scoring two times. Tom Moye reached on a two-out walk and Robbie McDonald reached on an error. Chris Bender also reached on an error, allowing both runner to score.

Greenville added one in the second and six in the fifth to wrap it up.

Moye tossed the shutout, allowing two hits.

Tony Evans led the Greenville hitting with two.

Pitt County 26

Greene County.... 19

SNOW HILL - Pitt County outlasted Greene County, 26-19, Friday night in its opening District 13-year-old Babe Ruth League tournament game.

Pitt was to face Greenville Saturday night in the second round. Greene is to face Washington in a losers bracket game.

Details of the game were not available.

Winterville Leogue

Pizza Inn  .....14

Aid. & S'land.......1

Pizza Inn downed Aldridge & Southerland, 14-1, Friday night in the second round of the Winterville Little League tournament. Pizza Inn meets Edwards Auto Sunday as the two are the last remaining unbeatens in the double elimination tourney.

Scott Brock hurled the win, and no one on either team had more than one hit.

Pizza Inn scored seven times in the first inning to put the game away. It added four in the second and three in the third. The lone A&S run

scored! the second.

Edwards Auto......9

Thompson Ins......5

Edwards Auto took an early lead and gained a 9-5 victory over Thompson Insurance In

the second round of the Winterville Little League tournament Friday.

Edwards scored three times in the first and added two in the second. Thompson scored once in the first and picked up

two more in the second. Edwards put the game away with three in the fourth, adding one more in the fifth Thompson closed out its scoring with two more in the sixth.

Ronald Wilder, Brian

Bullock and Andy Tetterton led the Edwards Auto hitting with two each. Bullock homered in the fourth with one on, while Tetterton had a three-run homer in the first and a one-run shot in the fifth.

Babe Ruth All-Stars

Greenvilles Babe Ruth League All-Stars are currently hosting the district tournament. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Van Alston, Larke Wetherington, Rodney Harris, Travis King, Axel Smith, Chris Stokes, Monty

Atkinson and Tommy Rosche; second row, coach Tom Watkins, Curtis Perkins, Tyrone Jones, Sterling Edwards, Ervin Best, Eric Jarman, Tom Taylor, Robbie Ehrmann and manager Jim Mullen. (Reflector Photo)

Prep All-Stars

GreenvUIes Prep League All-Stars are currently competing in the district tournament at Snow HUl. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Dallas McPherson, Curtis Jones, Mark Holloman, Bobby Bell, Bryan Pierce, Terrence Cherry, Tony

Evans and Ray Gaynor; second row, manager Blanks Walker, Tom Moye, Jeff Mahoney, Robbie McDonald, Chris Bender, Mike Kelly, Jason Lee, Billy Carr, and coach Harry Kelly. Not shown is coach Dallas McPherson. (Reflector Photo)

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Cowboys Volunteer To Cooperatej With NFL Cocaine Investigation

DALLAS lAP) - Four Dallas Cowboys have volunteered to cooperate with authorities conducting a cocaine investigation, team president Tex Schramm said.

Defensive end Harvey Martin, defensive tackle Larry Bethea and. running backs Tony Dorsett and Ron Springs have been mentioned in connection with the probe. Schramm said Friday.

Schramm, who said he had no indication that the four were involved in any irregularities. said he had no details of the investigation.

1 was told about it by our National Football League security petle in New York, and that four players, through their attorneys, had talked to authorities on the basis of tell us what you want to know, Schramm told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from his home in Dallas.

The New York Times reported today that the four players had been mentioned on FBI wiretaps in connection with an investigation as users of small quantities of cocaine. The Times said it was not clear whether the players were heard or mentioned on the tapes.

I have no direct knowledge of the story, Schramm said. I do know that the four players have been in touch with the authorities because their names were mentioned in some case.

Schramm said he had not talked with the four.

I dont intend to. because I hadnt heard anything I didnt know,Schramm said.

"I have no indication that they are suspected of any illegalities, he said. Weve been aware of this. Its not a new situation. Were aware of it.

Dorsett told the New York Times in telephone interview from Shreveport, La., that he knew nothing about such an investigation but said, Im sure if Im questioned Ill cooperate.

He declined to comment on a report that he had been identified as a user.

The other players could not

be located for comment.

Martin and wide receiver Tony Hill were subpoenaed Wednesday to testify in the case of Lauriberto Ignacio, who was indicted by a federal grand jury in April for allegedly conspiring to smuggle cocaine from Brazil to Texas, U.S. Marshal Qint Peoples said.

Schramm said of that case that he had no idea of what the purpose behind having them (Hill and Martin) testify is.

But Schramm said that he was concerned about whetlr the players testimony would have an adverse effect on other team members.

Neither Martin nor Hill could be reached for comment and it was not known if they had received the subpoenas.

Dan Guthrie, a Dallas

lawyer specializing in drug cases, said Martin recently hired him and that his client would acc^t the subpoena.

Guthrie told The Dallas Morning News that its my understanding that his (Ignacios attorney) purpose in calling him (Martin) was to corroborate his clients story.

Ignacio, 39, is scheduled to stand trial Aug. 1. He has been jailed since his arrest March 30 in lieu of a $50,000 bond.

If any of the Cowboys want to show up and testify under oath in court, its going to be interesting, Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher L. Milner said.

Milner said the charges against Ignacio were p^ of a larger federal investigation into Brazilian cocaine smuggling that began last year with

the arrest of Elias Murback.

Murback and three others were charged with smugging cocaine paste from Brazil to Dallas for processing in one of the few cocaine late discovered in the United States. All pladed guilty to lesser charges in plea bargains that include an a^eement to cooperate in the investigation.

Martin and Dorsett have been questioned during the past year by federal drug agents, the Dallas Times Herald reported Friday. The names of Martin and teammate Ed Too TaU Jones were mentioned in court testimony eariier this year involving convicted cocaine dealers.

No charges were filed against any of the players and all denied involvement with drugs.

Education Requirement Keeps Mount Out Of Coaching Post

LAFAYEHE, Ind. (AP) -Rick Mount, one of the most celebrated players in Indiana basketball history, has been turned down for a high school coaching position because he never received a college degree.

Im kind of disappointed, but at the same time, rules are rules, Mount said of the decision by Commissioner Gene Cato of the Indiana High School Athletic Association.

The former All-American at Purdue University and five-year veteran of professional basketball is 26 hours short of completing his undergraduate work at Purdue. The rejection of his application to become coach at Lafayette Central Catholic Hi^ School was announced Friday by Supt. Paul LaRocca.

Youve got to respect the IHSAAs rules, and I have nobody to blame but myself, Mount said. 1 was looking forward to the opportunity to coach, and at the same time complete my degree at Purdue.

OUTDOORS

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Joe Albea

But now Ive got to start over.

Mount, 36, said he will send resumes to the Converse, Wilson and McGregor sporting goods companies in hopes of landing a job as a sales representative.

Mount had run a sporting goods store in his hometown of Lebanon since retiring from pro ball in 1976. He recently sold the store and said he wanted to return to basketball as a coach.

He inquired about an assistant basketball coaching position at Iowa State University under Coach Johnny Orr, but Mount said Friday that job had been filled.

I wish things had worked out at Central Catholic, Mount said. However, I would not try and do anything to hurt the IH-SAA, and I will live with their decision.

According to the IHSAA Handbook, only certified teachers can coach varsity basketball or football in Indiana. Emergency status for coaches who do not have college degrees may be granted for other sports.

Mount was Indianas Mr. Basketball in 1966 and was the first high school athlete on the cover of Sports Illustrated. The 6-foot-5 shooting guard

was a two-time All-American at Purdue, where many of his Big Ten Conference records still stand, including a 34.8-point career average.

Mount dropped out of Purdue before graduation in 1970 and signed with the Indiana Pacers. He played with Indiana and three other teams during a five-year stint in the old American Basketball Association, retiring in 1975. He made a brief comeback attempt the next year, but he said he lost interest in playing and returned to Lebanon where he opened the sporting goods store.

Cato, a longtime friend of Mount, said, Emotionally, 1 wish the decision could have gone the other way, but in this issue, I could not allow myself to become emotionally involved.

Id like to help Rick Mount in any way I can, but there are 400 basketball coaches in this state who have paid their dues by completing their degrees, and we just couldnt make an exception.

Had Rick been able to finish his degree during a summer school session, we could have possibly granted Central Catholics request, Cato said.

Outdoor Education Workshop Slated - Teachers and leaders of youth groups are reminded of the last re-maingin outdoor-environmental education workshop to be offered this summer. It will be offered from July 18-22 at Holmes State Forest between Hendersonville and Brevard.

The workshops are being done in conjunction with the Outdoors North Carolina program of the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development. Workshop leaders include personnel from the Wildlife Commission, N.C. Forest Service, other natural resource agencies and private conservation organizations. Participants will receive the continuing education credits from N.C. State University for attending a workshop. This workshop is also supported by the N.C. Department of Public Instruction.

Activities will include field investigation in forestry, wildlife and soil and water conservation. The program will also stress working these topics into the classroom at all grade levels.

The registrations for the workshop in $10. For more information, or to register for the workshop, contact the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, Rick Estes, Division of Conservation Education, 512 N. Salisbury Street, Raleigh, N.C. 27611, or call (919 ) 733-7123.

King Mackerel Tournament - The Wrightsville Beach King Mackerel Tournament had been scheduled for September 22-25. Last years tournament attracted 340 boats, ranging in size from 16-75 feet and representing anglers from eight states. An even larger fleet is expected for this years tournament, so if you are interested you might want to register early.

For registration or more information you may write the Wrightsville Beach King Mackerel Tournament. P.O. Box 659, Wrightsville Beach, N.g.28480.

Fishing Report - This past week showed good fishing in a number of spots on the coast. Out of Oregon Inlet the chopper bluefish (12-15 pound class) have been real active. Normally the blues will move out into the deeper water when the hot months of June and July come around. This year however, they have remained in close throughout June and are still hanging around.

Ed Holland of Winterville reports large Spanish Mackerel have been active around Bogue Inlet. Also in Bogue Sound, small grey trout and flounder are being caught. Small croaker can be caught out of Swanquarter and Hoboken in Pamlico Sound, but to my knowledge grey trout have been non-existent.

Local News - Barney Barret and his brother Bill were both awarded citations for two Spanish Mackerel. The fish weighed 8 pounds and 7>* pounds respectively and were caught out of Bogue Inlet on board the C-Cat.

Citation Fish

Baraey Barnett (right) and his brother Bill of Greenville, were both awarded citations for these two nice Spanish mackerel. The fish weighed 8 and IVz pounds respectively. They were caught out of Bogue Inlet.

Net Catch

Bobby Case of Greenville, right, and Harvey Taylor of Bethel show off this fine lOV^ pound gray trout they

caught while fishing in Cheaspeake Bay. They dipped the fish up with a net rather than catching it on hook and line. (Reflector Photo)

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Ryan 'Struggles' Through 12 Strikeouts

By The Associated Press Even when Nolan Ryans curveball isnt working, hitters dont get a break.

Though struggling with what he called an ineffective curve, Ryan still managed to strike out 12 batters in eight innings Friday ni^t to help the Houston Astros beat the New York Metse-3.

I stru^ed the entire game, said Ryan after edging back in front of Steve Cariton in their season-long battle for the all-time strikeout lead. The Mets probably wont agree, but my curveball was ineffective about 50 per cent of the time.

It was my fastball that bailed me out. I went to it when I got behind and, fortunately, it saved roe.

Ryans strikeouts boosted his career total to 3,573, four more than the Philadeliriiia left-hander.

In other National League action, Cincinnati beat Philadelphia 3-1; Atlanta edged Montreal 6-5; San Diego ni^ied St. Louis 3-2; San Francisco turned back Chicago 4-1 and Pittsburgh stopped Los Angeles 4-3.

Ryan, who orginally broke Walter Johnsons longstanding record of 3,508 strikeouts eariier this season, moved ahead of Carlton for the fourth time since taking over first place on the all-time list.

Ryan, 8-1, who has won five games witlKMit a loss in his last six oidings, allowed five walks and gave up two Mets roBS in the third before set-tlmg down. His 12 strikeouts tied his own single-game high this season matched by three other pitchers.

Houston Manager Bob Lillis said he lifted Ryan because he felt that the right-hander, who threw 131 pitdMs, was tiring. Bill Dawley pitched the ninth, giving up ancHher the Mets AbM run on Brian Giles homer.

The All-Star break and the long layoff since my last start hampered my control, said I^. 1 havent walked that maBy since very early in the seaion.' fill Dorans two-run homer cfped a five-run rally in the

^afson Better In Difficult Situations

ATLANTA (AP) - Bob Watsoo says he plays better in difficult situations. And his statistics this year - a .403 batting average and four game-winning bits - back him up.

Watson has performed,so wdl as a pinch-hitter and substitute starter for first baseman Chris Chambliss that hes wondering now if he will go ahead and retire when this seasons over.

I entered the season with the idea this would be my last year, and I wanted to end up with a lifetime batting average of .300, Watson said. 1 thought it would take something like a .360, with the number of at bats Id been getting, to do it.

Watson, now in his 18th major league season, entered this year with a .296 career batting average.

But as Watson has played this year, his performance has improved. When I do start now, its against ie Carltons, the Candelarias, the Valenzuelas, Watson said. And the good pitchers Ive always hit well. If you compute my average against the Seavers, the Suttons, the Gibsons - the class pitchers

- Im batting well over .400. Its just one of those things

where you know theyll be around the plate. You know theyll be at their best, and Ive always done well in that situatkm,hesaid.    ,

While hes been excelling in a somewhat unexpected arena, Watson also has been dobig well at his intended job

- tutor for the younger hitters.

Watson has been the difference in my season so far, Glenn Hubbard said. Hubbard, with a career batting average of .243, was batting .300 at the All-Star break.

He keeps your head in the games, keeps you thinking about baseball, what the pitchers going to throw you. my might not seem like big things, but they are, Hubbard said.

As to whether Watson will be back in a Braves uniform next year, Ted (Turner) came into the clubhouse one day and said. Wed like to have you back, Watson said. But y^havent talked.

first inning off Mike Torrez, 5-9.

Reds3,PbiIliesl

Dann Bilardelio drove in the go-ahead run with an infield single and Nick Esasky added a tape-measure home run, leading Cincinnati over Philadelphia.

Bilardellos infield single with the bases loaded in the fourth put the Reds ahead 2-1, and Esasky rapped a solo homer, his fourth, in the sixth off John Denny, 6-5. The blast landed in the second deck in center field at Riverfront Stadium.

That ball was smoked, Price said. 1 havent seen a ball bit like that here in a long time. Thats a ^impse of the power hes got.

Reds starter Joe Price, 7-5, scattered 10 hits in 8 1-3 .innings, walking one and [striking out two. Reliever Ben Hayes and Bill Scherrer finished i^, with the latter posting his sixth save.

Braves6,Eiq[)065 Chris Chambliss knocked in four runs with a two-run homer, a solo shot and a double and Craig McMurtry scattered six hits over seven

innings to lead Atlanta over Montreal.

McMurtry, 9-5, was relieved by Steve Bedrosian after walking the leadoff batter in the ei^th. Bedrosian finished up to post his 11th save.

(Tiambliss gave the Braves a 2-0 lead in the second with a two-run homer off Cliarlie Lea, 6-5. His solo shot in the eighth put the Braves up 6-3 and eventually proved to be their winning run when the Expos scored in the ninth on A1 Olivers two-run single.

Padres 3, Cardinals 2 Pinch-hitter Gene Richards

tie-breaking single with one out in the ninth inning lifted San Diego over St . Louis.

Richards hit came off Cardinal relief ace Bruce Sutter, .7-4, and followed a one-out walk to Ruppert Jones, who stole second, (jary Lucas, 4-4, worked the final two innings to gain the victory-

Richards sin^e snapped a 2-2 tie forged an inning earlier on an RBI single by the Cardinals Darrell Porter.

Pirates 4, Dodgers 3

Jim Morrison cracked a three-run homer to lift Pit

tsburgh over Los Angeles and deal the Dodgerrtheir fourth straight loss.

John Candelaria, 8-6/eamed his fifth consecutivy victory despite giving up seven innings, incli Guerreros 18th Jerry Reuss, 6-7, tc his fourth in a row.

The Dod^rs tookp 3-1 lead into the sixth innmg. when Reuss walked leadoff hitter Bill Madlock and Jason Thompson followed with a single. Morrison then blasted a 1-2 pitch against the left field foul pole in Dodger Stadium

for his third homer Tt was a fastball, up and over the plate. said Morrison. T knew I hit it well, and 1 thought it was fair. But it stared hooking, and 1 began to worry. 1 fried body English, I tried blowing it, and 1 was fortunate it hit the foul pole. Giants 4, Cubs 1 Bill Laskey scattered six hits in 8 1-3 innings and Milt May belted a tie-breaking homer to lead San Francisco over Chicago.

Laskey. 10-7. gave up the Cubs oiilv run in the fourth on Ron Cevs RBI double. That

tied the game 1-1 but Mays leadoff homer in the bottom of the fourth, his third of the season, put the Giants ahead to stay.

Loser Dickie .Noles. 2-4, pitching one day following his release from a Cincinnati jail, hurled five innings, yielding five hits and striking out eight.

Tommy Freeman made two successful welterweight title defenses in four days in 1931. He knocked out Dick Trammel in .Memphis on Feb 5 and A1 Kober in New Orleans on Feb 9.

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B IO The DaiJy Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Sunday, July 10,1S83SCOREBOARD

Sports Colendor

i

Uditor i Vote Scheduiei are >uppliei1 b} nhook or spomonng ,itvnae> and are subject to change u ithim! notice

Today 's Sports Baseball American Legion Playoffs Prep l,eague District Touma-meni at Snow Hill Babe Kuth District Tournament Monda v's Sports Baseball Little League Plajoifs Prep l,eague District Touma . menl at Snow Hill

Babe Kuth District Tournament American l,egion Plavoffs Softball

I'lty League Aletai I'raft vs. Pantana Bob's Sunnvside Kggs vs Pair Kitvlnmics PTAvs Airborne

Industrial League Kasi Carolina l vs CIS ' Knlorcersvs East Carolina *2 lirtf,".. ille I tilities vs Empire Bru'he>=l I'arolina l.eaf vs Pitt Memorial I arulina Leaf vs Grady White TRW vs Pitt .Memorial' BarroughsAVellcome I vs Wachovia Bank Empire Brushes =2 vs Cox Arm.ature

Church league Eirstihnstianvs Faith Maranathavs Peoples Memorial vs. First Pentecostal Immanuel vs Grace Tuesdays Sports Baseball Little l> ague Playoffs District Babe Ruth Tournament Softball Industrial League TRW vs East Carolina *1 Kniorcers vs. L'nion Carbide W achovia Bank vs East Carolina

State Prep Tournament at Wilmington Stale Babe Ruth Tournament at Bayboro American Legran Playoffs Senior Babie Ruth District Tournament at Tarboro Softball Industrial League Empire Brushes I vs. East Carolina*!

Burroughs-Wellcome #l vs. Grady White TRW vs. Coca-Cola Cox Armature vs Union Carbine City League Post season Tournament Saturdays Sports Baseball American Legran Playoffs State Prep Tournament at Wilmington State Babe Ruth Tournament at Bayboro Senior Babe Ruth District Tournament at Tarboro

Conger 2-2, Kemp Bradshaw 2-3, Roy Cara wan 2-3

Subway ............270 001 5-15

Ormonds    015 120 3-12

Leading hitters; 0 Gary McGowan 2-3, Stewart Brooker 2-3 iHRl; S - Ken Littiken 34 (HR), Elmo Alexander 35, Dave Wood 35

Junmys66 270 650 020

Pantana Bobs 100 410 0-7

Leading hitters: PB Tim Wn^t 2-3 CUrt SmRh 33; J -Jerry Clark 44, Chartes Meeks 34 <HR>.JeflWagstaff34

Pair Electronics 300 000 1-4

Calif Concepts 002 033 x-8

Leading hitlers: CC - Chris Parrisher 33; PE - Kelly Par nsher 2-3 Joe Blicfc 2-3, STancil Hines 2-3.

Pbadeipnia

St Louts Chicago

PlttStMUgb

.NewVoriT

.Atlanta Los.Angeies SanDwM Houston San Francisco Cincnmati

31    37

40     3S 42 3S 42

 30 it

WEST DIVISION 50    31

47    32

42    38

41    40

40    40

3S 47

507 f, 300    2

475    4

455 5h 370 124

817 -505 2

525    74

50S    9

500    4

427 154

Sundays Sports ^ BasrtJl

.Amencan Legran Playoffs State Prep Tournament at Wilmington State Babe Ruth Tournament at Bayboro Senior Babe Ruth District Tournament at Tarboro

Bowlittg

Summwf Stowdkigs

Throurfi Friday OtyLNgDe NatonalDivisioa

W L

Jimmys 66.......17    1

MetalCraft.......11    6

PTA...............10    7

Liberty Warehouse ... 4    14

Airborne Onight...... 3    14

Pantana Bobs 2    15

Guys and Dolls

W estero Sizzlu Strikers Team *1 Holiday Shell Tar Laiiduig Seafood Team8 W e 11 Take It Aliev Oops Hi'

Fire Fighters vs Empire Brushes *2 Gradv White vs Empire Brushes

--I

Put .Memorial vs. Greenville I lililes I n ion Carbide vs W'NCT-TV Church I,eague Oakmontvs Jarvis Immanuel vs .Maranatha First Free W ill vs St. James Arlington St vs. Memorial First Christian vs Black Jack City League Postseason fournament Wednesdays Sports Baseball Little League Plavoffs Softball Industrial League Fire Fighters vs Greenville Utilities Grady W hite vs. WNCT-TA'

W achovia Bank vs. Carolina Leaf Burroughs-Wellcome *1 vs. East Carolina!

CIS vs Empire Brushes *2 I'ox Armature vs. Coca-Cola Public Works vs. Empire Brushes

City League Post season Tournament Thursdays Sports Baseball American Legion Playoffs SoftbaU Industrial League Wachovia Bank vs Empire Brushes *2 Vermont American vs Fire

Fighters

CIS'

5 vs. Pitt Memorial Burroughs-Wellcome *2 vs East Carolina 2

City League Post season Tournament

Friday 's Sports Baseball

igh game Pal Cannon and Shanra .Matthews 184. Taramv Tnpp 215 Hi senes Sharon .Matthews 537 Danny Wooten 535

RecSohfaoll

Church League

Grace    ool    404    0-9

1st Presbyterian    200    000    24

Leading hitters: FP - Garland Becton 2-3, Jeff Scarborough 2-3; G Perry Hardee 34. Tony Godley

Ml Pleasant    000    102    2-5

Church of God.......040    002    x6

Leading hitters    CG -    Mel Boyd

2 3 (HR I, MP-Joe Sasser 33..

Eaith..................562 36-22

Peoples...............100 06-7

Leading hitters:    F    - Totter

Jackson 44, reggie    Spain 44,    Mike

Williams 44; P - David Dickerson 2-3, Don Sheppard 2-3

Trinity won by forfeit over First Pentecostal

Memorial won by forfeit over First Christian.

Blackjack..........102    110    0-5

Jarvis...............300    202    x-7

Leading hitters: J - Kuykendall

33, Blanchard 2-3; BJ - C Arnold 2-31 HR I, L Dixon 2-3.

St James...........301    020    0-6

Oakmont..........305    920    x-19

Leading hitters: 0 - Ferrell 4-5, Vaughn 44, SJ - Creech 24. Bowler 24

Immanuel.............034 10412

1st Free Will...........632 002-13

Leading hitters: FF - Hachney

34. Grubbs 44; 1 - Harris 24. Camp 33.

City League

Jimmy s66 ........ 400    701    0-12

Airborne    OOO    010    0- I

Leading hitlers A - Chip Gideons 2-2; J - Ted Jordan 34. Mike

American Divisioii

Calif Concepts......14

Sunnyside Eggs......12

J.A.s Uniforms........11

Ormonds.........10

Pair Electronics  9

Subway...........7

Whittington............ 4

Divisional Champion

Industrial League

American Divirioo Public Works    17

TRW    13

Empire Brushes fl.....12

Burroughs Wellcome #111

East Carolina #1......9

Union Carbide  8

Cox Armature    7

Coca-Cola............. 6

Grady White........... 5

Enforcers    4

WNCT-TV    1

National Divisk

Fire Fighters........13

Vermont-American    11

Carolina Leaf........10

PittMemoriaJ........ 9

CIS................ 8 '

Empire Brushes #2____5

Wachovia Bank   5

Burrough-Wellcome #2. 5

G Utilities.........4

East Carolina #2.....2

Bel voir.............. 0

2

6

5

5

7

9

9

11

II

13

16

Divisional Champion

Canadians Upset U.S. Cagers, 85-77

EDMO.NTON, Alberta (,AP) - The I niled States womens basketball team got a second chance today to recover some American prestige, 15 hours after their male counterparts were upset in the XII World University Games.

Neyer, a sophomore at the University of Florida, finished fifth with 389.40 points.

Jack Donahue, an American who coaches the Canadian men, says the upset earned his team some respect.

Youve heard of the Mexican League in baseball? Well, our guys play in the Mexican League of basketball,

Donahue said after the Canadians posted their fifth victory in six games here.

Canadian star Danny Meagher, only a reserve player for Duke University, believed it simply was a matter of pride, too.

Meagher said the U.S. men ,    watched the Canadians lose to Kiwanie

lory over    J ugoslavia, M. to    Yugoslavia Thursday niglit. I

reach the championship game    Americans)    Wasli    Pirat

Sunday night.    laughing when we were get

ting beat by the Yugos. I just want to win a gold medal for Canada at home.

Ctaurclil

National I

Grace...........15

Faith Pent...........13

Church of God.........12

1st Presbyterianll

Unity...........9

1st Pentecostal........ 8

Trinity.........7

ML Pleasant........6

Peoples.........5

American DIvisioa

Blackjack......15

Memorial Baptist......12

Jarvis...........11

1st Christian........9

Oakmont..........lo

Immanuel Baptist..... 6

1st Freewill........6

Maranatha........4

Arlington St.........3

St James........o

Division Champion

Womens League

Final Standings *G reenville Travel.    14

PTA................13

Players Retreat    .12

Pitt Memorial......9

Burroughs-Wellcome.,    9

CopperKetUe......8

Fred Webb..........4

Prepshirt..........3

Wachovia Bank....... o

League champion

Jay Triano, a 25-year-old guard, led the Canadians 85-77 upset over the American men. 5-1, who now must settle for a chance to win a bronze medal tonight against Cuba.

Canada and Yugoslavia will play for the mens basketball gold medal.

The American women, 4-1, who were upset Thursday by Romania, 87-71, needed a vie

Uttlel

Final Standings North State League

Sportsworld.........15

Coca-Cola..........u

Union Carbide.........13

Optimists..........8

Ki warns.............. 6

Jaycees.............. 6

Lions..................  1

League Champion

Tar Heel League

Carroll & Assoc.......13

First Federal..........13

Wellcome......... 12

Exchange..........9

Moose.............6

True Value Hware .... 5

PepsiCola........5

League Champion

Sr . Babe Ruth

Final Standings

Jamesville .. Ayden-Grifton. Kiwanis

The basketball defeat added another dark chapter lo the Americans poorest showing in these games, which they have entered since 1965. The U.S. squads have only three gold medals, comppared with 44 for the leading Soviet Union after eight of the II days of competition.

The total medals count is 82 for the Soviets - 5 more than the Americans have won in eight days.

Even the touted American women divers, world champions Wendy Wyland and Negan Meyer, could not capture a championship. Instead, the womens 10-meter platform title went to Chinese Wei Lu, with 449.94 points.

Wyland, an 18-year-old from Clarion 'Pa.) State University, blamed herself for her Mlver medal finish, just one cek after she had won at the .ational Sports Festival and qualified for the Pan American Games.

I dont know why, but Im concentrating more on what the other divers are doing and not what I am doing, she said. I dont understand it. k|m pretty disappointed.

League Champion

Conf.

All

9

1

. 7

3

. 7

4

7

4

3

8

3

8

2

10

BostbollStondiny

Meagher scored 14 points, all in the first half, to support Triano.

Norm Stewart of Missouri, the U.S. mens coach, blamed the loss on what he termed inadequate defense.

You just dont give up that many layups, he said. Theyre not as quick as we are and theres no reason they could slide by us all ni^t.

Eric Turner of Michigan led the U.S. men with 20 points, two more than Ed Pinckney of Villanova scored.

The U.S. track and field stars fared poorly, too, with Earley Gerber of Weber State winning a silver in the mens 3.000-meter steeplechase in 8 minutes, 29.07 seconds, and Mike Conley of Arkansas taking second in the mens triple jump with 56 feet, 54 inches.

Jeff Ward of Miami (Ohio) captured a bronze medal in the mens pole vault with 18-0. Soviet Konstantin Volkov missed three shots at a world record of 19-1 in that event. .He won the gold by clearing 18-6M,.

By The AnocUlad Prm AMERICAN LEAGUE

EASTWVISION

W L

Pet.

GB

44 33

.571

42 35

.545

2

42 35

545

2

42 35

.545

2

37

513

4Vv

39 39

500

54

35 44

.443

10

WEST DIVISION

44 35

,557

_

43 36

544

1

40 38

513

34

37 37

.500

44

37 44

.457

8

33 49

402

124

31 51

378

144

FridayiGamm

Texas 5

Toronto

Baltimore

Detroit

New York

Milwaukee

Boston

Cleveland

Texas

California

Chicago

Kansas City

Oakland

Minnesota

Seattle

Seattle 3, Baltimore 0 Detroit 3. Oakland 2 Milwaukee4.Chicago3 Cleveland 10. MinnesoU 4 New York 9, Kansas City 2 SatunU/aGuaei Texas (HouA 7-S) at Toronto (Leal 84) California K Forsch 84) at Boston (Tudor 5-5)

Milwaukee (Sutton 64,1 at Chicago iKoosman6-I)

Rattle (Abbott 34) at Baltimore (McGregor94) (n)

Oakland (McCatly 2-3) at Detroit (Morris8-7) (nl Cleveland (Sutcliffe IO-3i at Minnesota iSchrom6-3i in)

>-J' at Kansas

City I Black 3-3) (nT

Sinday's Gaines Oakland at Detroit Texas at Toronto Seattle at Baltimore California at Boston Milwaukee al Chicago Cleveland at Minnesota New York al Kansas City Mondays Gamei Seattle at Boston (n)

Oakland at Baltimore lol California at Detroit (nl Cleveland at ChlcaiD (Hi NewYorkatMtaSotatn)

Toronto at Kansas Clty(D)

Milwaukee at Texas (nl

NATHmAL LEAGUE BAST DIVISION W Lai

h

Pet

526

GB

Friday's Games .AtlanU6.MaMrealS CincinnaU 3. Phdadeiptiia 1 Houston 6. New VortT San Diego 3. SL Lotus 2 Pittsbui^ 4. Los Angt.es 3 San Francisco!, Chicago 1 SatnrdavsGaM Chicago (Ramey 8-7i at San Francisco (Davis 9-21 Philadetphia (Carlton 94i at Cuiciimati (Puleo34i(ni Houston (J Niekro 5-7i at New York (Seaver54) (ni .AUama (P Niekro 44i at Montreal (Rogers 12-3) mi Pittsburgh (McWiUums 8-Si al Los Anles(A Pena7-3) (n)

S Louis (Lapoint S4i at San Diego (Dravecky 12-5) mi

Sunday a Games Atlaou at Mootreai Houston at New York PhiJadeiptiia at Cacinaati Chicago at San Francisco St Louis at San Diego Pittsburg at Los Angeles Monday'sGames AUanu at Mootreai mi Philadeipbia at Cincinaati i n i St. Louis at Las Angeles m I Chicago at San Dim (DI Pittstiirgb at San Francisco m I Only games sdwduied

Uogw leoders

By The Associated Pren American LEAGUE Batting (I95 at balsi-Carew, California, 493, Boggs. Boston 365 Griffey. New YorlT 333: Almon.. Oakland. 323. Thornton. CTeveiand. .323.

RL'NS-Yount. Milwaukee. 57 Upshaw Toronto, 3S; WWUson. Kansas CilyTM, DEvans. Boston. 53 Ward. MinnesoU,

RBI-Rice. Boston. 58; Cooper. VUwaukee. 56; Kittle. Chicago. 56; Ward. MinnesoU, S3: Ljishaw. Toronto. 51 HITS Boggs. Boston. 105 Ward. Min nesota. 98: Whitafcer. Detroit. ; Carew, California. 94; Rice. Boston 94 DOL'BLES-LNParrish. Detroit. 25:

McRae. Kansas City. 25; Boggs, Boston. 24; Mibek. MinnesoU. T^teroazard. Seattle. 21

TRIPLES-Herodeo. Detroit, 7: GWUson. Detroit. 8. Gritrui. Toronto. 6: 5 are tied with 5.

HOME RUNS-Rice, Boatan. 22: Armas, Boston. 18; KitUe. Chicm. 18; Cooner. Milwaukee. 17. Upshaw. Tteoato, 18 STOLEN BASES RHeaderson. Oakland. 45. JCntz. Chicago. 39; WWTIson. Kansas CUy. 39. RLaw. Chica). 32 Sample. Texas, 25 PITCHING (7 decisioosi-Koosman. Chicago. 6-1.    857. 3 92. RUackson.

Toronto. 8-1. 857. 4 19; Kisoo. CalifoniU. 8-2, '

769.

392

STRIKEOL'TS-Stieh. Toronto. 112 Biyleven. Cleveland. 103 Morris. Detroit 93,    New York. 88. GDavis.

Baltimore. 81. Sutton. Milwaukee. 81 SAVES4)uiaaberTy. Kansas City, 20, SUniey. Boston. 18. CaudiU. Seattle. IS. Lopez. Detroit. 12. ROavis. Miimesota. 12

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTI.NG (195 at batsl-Hendnck, StLouis 348; Knight. Houston. 335: Easier. Pittsburgh. 332. Murphy. Atlanta. 320. Dawson. Montreal. .319

KL.NS-Murphy. AUaoU. 76. Garvey. San Dim 88: Raines, MontreaL 61. Evans. San Francisco. 57. WUsoa New YortSi

RBl-Dawsoo. Montreal 65. Hendrick. StLouis, 58; Murphy, AUanU, 58; Chambliss. Atlanta. 51, Guenefo, Los AMeles.51 HTTS-Dawsoo. Montreal UN; Than. Houston. KN. Oliver. Montreal 99, Hendrick. StLouis. 94. Garvey. San

S3 Miuphy. Atlanta. 93

S Buckner. Chicago. 21; Houston. 21: Oiiver. Montreal.

W-l, W4. -V.tW, nOMU. VIUUfIlUI,

800. 328, R^ietti. New York, 10^3. 3 28. Sutcliffe Cleveland. 10-3. 789.

21. Dawson. Montreal. 20. JRay, Pit tshurgtt20 TRlPLES-Moreno. Houston. 8. Butler. Atlanta. 7; Dawsoa Montreal. 6. Raines. Montreal, 8. 5 are tied with 5.

HOME RUNSEvans, San Francisco. 19. Murphy. Atlanta. 19: Guerrero. Los Angeles. I8. Dawson. Montreal

Schmidt. Philadeinhia. 15. STOLEN BASSRmne

17;

-Rames. Montreal. 34 WUsoo, New York. 31, SSax. Los Angeles. 29; LeMaster. San Francisco. 27: .Moreno, Houston. 27.

PITCHI.NG (7 decisionsi-Ryan. Houston. 8-1. 889, 1.97. Fatcone. AtlaoU. 7-1, 875,2 SO^Mootefusco, San Diego. 7-1,

t Mf .VI-*,    WW0W61W.W,    #-l.

*75. 4 29, PPerei, AUanU, 10-2. 833,

2.46. Rogers. Montreal. 12-3. 800.2.n STRIKEOUTS-Cariton. PhUaddphia,

135. Soto Ciocumatj. 124. McWdlums. Pittsburg. 160 Berenvi. Cincmoatl 87 Rqfs. Montreal, as SAVES-Reardon. .Montreal. 13. Ltfvelle. San Francisco. 12; Bedrasian, Atlanta. II: LeSmith. ChicagD. 18: Lucas, San Diego. 9

Tron$flctk>ns

ByTheAmodMedPrem

baseball

MIL W A UKE??R*e5^RS-Named Tony Muser manager ol their Pacific Coast League alfUiate in Vancouver NaiHanal League ATLANTA BRAVES-Sent Tommy Boggs, pitcher, to Richmand of the Internationai League on a lOday re-nahiliutjoa basis.

HOUSTON ASTROS-Actnrated Mike LaCoss. pitcher from the 21-day disahled list Sent Mike Madden, pcher. to Tucson of the Pacific Coast LeuBK SaN FRANCISCO GIA.VTS-RecaUed Chili Davis, outfielder, from Phoenix of the Pactfic Coast League and reactivated Duane Kuiper, second basemaa from the disabled list Opiiooed Rich Murray, first baseman, and Chns Smilh^vnfleider. to Phoenix.

BASKETBALL

ATLANTA HAWKS-Namcd Roo Rothstein assistaat coach FOOTBALL NMNaMFoiiMLaagR

DALLAS COWBOYS-Si^ Mike Walter, linefancker. to a four-year contract

GREEN BAY PACKERS-Sipied Dave Drechsler. 0iard. to three one-year contracts.

LOS ANGELES RAMS-Sied Jeff Simmons, wide receiver SOCCER Not1hA8Mf4rwlorrrrltngw

SAN DIEGO SOCKERS-S^S^Chris Choeden. forward, and Harry McCue. midfielder, to contracto lor the remainder of Che seaaon

ORJ^EGE

PACIFIC COAST ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION-Amiaunced the addltioa of New Mexico Slate, as the tenth member o( the conference

N.C. Scoftboflfd

By The Aaaodated Prem

Cantea Lm^

Winston-Salem 13. Alexandria 1

Lynehhorg 11. Durltoffl 4

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 10,1983B-11

ADVERTISED ITEM POtlCV E.1CM ct rnese ^avemsed irems ts required to De re.idi'v ,iv<)iMt)ie for sale in eacn Kroger saw on except as specifically noted m this ad if we do run Out of an Item we will offee-wou wour rnmrp

.lowertised pnce witnm ?o days Limit one in,iiiiif.i(Ti,rpr s coupcn per item

Items and Prices Effective Thru Wed July 13, 1985

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Week's Stock Markets

NEW YORK I API - Neit York Slock Exchange trading for the week selected issues

Sales

PE hds Migb Lo* Last Cbg.

ACE    1    14 S4    J4j    33'    33^4-    A.

AMF    30    2178    16    1S>4    irS,-    I4

AMR Cp 15655 37. 35' 351^4-2' .ASA    3a    2511    S'4    64V    68>

.AblLab    1    19 3052    48V    47'4    flV-lV

AetnU    2 64    7 483*    40*,    39    39'-    'i

AirPrd    I    15 1966    48 V    47    4*

15*4 16'i + 32V 32V- V 33 33V-IV 22 V 22 V- *4 49V 50V + 1 53V 53V- *4 17V-1*4 36'- *j 27V- V 30 + V 3 - V 48V + V SlV-1'4 43 - V 46 -1 18

674-5

26*4

29V

2*.

47V

614

12    13 719    16*.

90    5310    32V

1 40    962    34*4

2 40    7 4060    22V

2 40    7 4423    51V

1 8# 14 5717 55

1334 18V 17V 1.20    5213 37    36*.

20    4700    27V

AmHes    1 10    13 13846    31*4

Am.Agr    1636    3'

ABrand    3 50    7 2729    48V

ABdCSl    1 60    12 3738    62V

AmCan    2 90    10074    43*i    42V

.ACyan    1 75    18 3544    46-    45

AElPw    2 26    10 4682    I84    17*.

AExp s    1 92    14 11789    70V    67

AFamil 60 13 744 22V 2IV 22 - V AHome    2 40    12 12381    46*4    45 V 4S*4-1V

AHoas    1    16 6030    47 V    45*4 45,-lV

Am.Mot    6663    9*    9

ANatRs3 16 7 10I5U40    38'

.AmStd 1.60 22 1180 34V 32V ATT 5 40a 8 46151 64    62',

AMPln    1 60    29 2987 104'-,    98',

Anchor    1.36    23 678    34',    31V

Anthny    44b    18 187    17*,    16*4

ArchDn 14b    18 6617    26 V    25*4

.AmPS 2 52    7 1641    24 V    24',

Arinco 40    4883    18V

.ArmWln 1 10 21 1894 28',

Asarco 40    1838    40',

AshlOil 2 40 8 1769 U38 AsdDG 2 13 3099 60'. 58V 56*4-1' AtiRich 2 40 8 21261 u52V 48 SI e2 AtlasCp 50    4 304    26V    25'4    2SV-1

Augat 32    36 1311    44,    43V    43V-V

AvcoCp I 20    10 2608    3SV    33V    33V-

Averv .90    14 1127    46    45*,    46 -i- V

Avnet S 50    31 3657    42',    41    42 -IV

Avon 2 12 11320 32V 31V 3I.-1V - B-B -Bkrlntr 92 13 24096 23V I9V 23V-1-3V BallvMr .20    9 3899    25*4    24V    25V- V

Balt'GE 2.84    7 2737    28',    27*4    28V- *4

BangP 80    90    20*4    20    20V- V

BnkXm 1 52 7 12003 22V 21V 22'4- V Bausch 1 56 25 745 54V 52V 54*4-* V

HmsUs 20 44 7325 35', 31V 34V + HonwU 3 60 10 7394 115    108',    110,-4

HospCs 40 23 5601 S5V 51V 54V-HV Hotelln    2 60    15    38    25V    2SV    25V-    V

Hoii&Int    1 65    II    2672    28    27    27'4-lV

Houlnd    2 32    14 9996    21V    20*4    20,-    V

HouNG 1 82 9 46561148', 46V 48',-HV HughTI 84 15 19964 24    20V    22VV1V

- l-l -IClnd 2.36 24 1359 47*4 45*, 47 -t-1', lUInt    1 15    16    1620    25    23*,    24V-    V

IdahoP    2 88    7    385    31V    31    31',-t-    '4

IdealB 60    1172 21', 19V 20V-6 V

17'.

27',

37V

9

38V- V 33 -f V 62V-1V 98',-6 34V + 2V 17*,+ 1*4 25V- V 24',

BaxtTr 56 21 2686 60    58*4    58',-IV

BeatFd 1 60 9 9359 26, 25V 26V-1- V

Bekef    283    8V

BelHow    96    1073    49V

BenfCp    2 9    2634    27V    26,

BengtB    20e 15    2138    9    8

BestPd    32 14    3008    35 V    33V

BethSU 60    3842    23 V 22', 22V-1*

Bevriys 28 30 4897 u44V 40'4 42 +1 BlackD 52    1520    22',    2IV    21V- *4

BIckHR 2.08 12 914 41 >4 40', 41 - V Boeing I 40 14 I30I5 45', 43V 45*4-', BoiseC 1 90 97 6994 39', 36', 38V-1 Borden 2 44 10 1082 60V 58', 59',- V BorgWa I 52 13 1701 50'-, 48V 49V-2 BosEd 2.88 8 350 27V 26', 27',-r V BriSlM si 20 15 5691 40V 39,

BrilPt 1 55e 10 189 26', 24',

Bmswk I 1046 391, 38V BucyEr 44 16 4544 16V 15',

Burllnd 1 52 24 2790 u40'4 38 Brl.Nth 1 80 15 5037 87', 83V

lUPowr 2 48 7 x7836 21', 20V 20V- V ImpiCp    403 13    12    12*4-1 V

INfO 20    4437 15    14V 15 -e V

Inexco    14    12S592uI2'4    11V    llV-t- V

IngerR    2 60    700u54V    53',    54

!nkt^ 50    2225 32V 31    31,-1V

Intrfst IJO 5 3472 21*4 20', 21 - *4 Intrlk 2 60 62 239 u38V 36, 38V + IV IBM 3 80 16 38226 122*. I18V 121', e V InlFlav I 04 18 1300 32V 31    31 -IV

InlHarv    4626    9,    8*.    9V-^ ,

IntMin 2 60 15 1739 41V 39V 40',-- ', lnl^r 2 40 17 1I387 51V 49', V-1V IntTT 2 76 10 23942 u45'. 42    45V*2V

Inl.Nrth 2.12 14 3806 040, 38V 39V-* V lowaPS 2 56 10 88 23', 22V 22V- V

JJ

JohnJn I 10 19 I 036I 49V 47V 49'. JonLgn 80 13 345 38V 38    38V- V

Josten 1 13 492 28, 27*. 27*.- , Joy.Mfg 1 40 13 4008 29. 27V 27V-2V

Kmart    1.08    14 18316    34',    33V 33V-1

Kaisr.Al    60    4277    28',

Kaneb    I 04    8 4II6u20V

KanGE    2 24    7 1881 19V

KanPU    2.56    7 1132 26

Katyln 9 1705 ul9V KaufBr .24    613 22V

18*4--    V    Kelloei 1 60 9 2823    25V

28',-    VlKenai    791    6V

39 - V KerrMc 1 10 10 6407    37*,

36V 36*4- ViKimbCl 4 20 10 2542    85'.

...... KnghtR    1 12 17 924 60

Kopers 80    1461    20

Kroger 1 88 9 1441    42',

LL

LTV    25    7900    16'.    15 V

LearPt 20 17 861 27*. 26V 27*4-6 V UarSg 1 60 12 859 46    44V 44,-lV

UaRi3s .3S 21 78 23V 22V 23V-t- V LeeEns 64 16 108 23>, 22V 23V Lehmn 1 99e    582    I7V 16V 17*4-6

Levitif 1.12 28 x134 87    83V 85*.- V

LOF 1 20 28 486 36V 35', 35*.-V LUly 2 60a 11 5418 62V 61V 61',-2 utton 1.80 122806 66'. 64, 65V-1V Lockhd    II 4560    I23V    118    UI'.-IV

Loews    1.20    8 400    163    159',    161    -    ',

LnSlar 1.90    529    31    30    30 -    V

LILCo 2.02 6 3969    16'.    15V    16V

LaLand 1 13 453    31',    30V    30V-    V

LUndn    14396    25V    23V    24V-6    V

LaPac 80b    7621    33 V    31    31',-1V

LuckyS 1.16 11 3828    23 V    22'4    22V-6    ',

M-M -MGMGr 44 27 742    15V    14V    15 -1

Macmil 70b 22 940    33    31V    32V-    V

Macys 80 16 2876    59V    56*.    57,-6    V

MdsFd 2e 1255    18V    I8V    18',-    '

MaglCf .60 20 497    35V    34V    35V-6    V

viManvl 1318 15V 14V 15V- V MAPCO 1.80 12 4896 29V 27V 28,-6lV MarMid 1 40 6 422 26>, 26V 26V- V Mamot .36 20 1637 77*. 73V 74V-IV MartM 1.92 19 2891 60*. 59V 60 -I Masco s .44 19 2504 33V MaseyF    1206    4V

MaydS    11 1931    58'.

Mayta    2a    17 757    53

8',-6 V 46.-2V rj - \ 8.-6 ', 35 V-I- V

40 - V 24V-1V 38 V- V 16',-6 , 38V-f '4 86

19V 20 - V 18', 19',-- ', 19'. 19*4- V V 25V 17 V 18V-I-IV 21*4 21V- , 25 V 25V- V S.    S',-I- V

37'4-rlV 84 -IV 5S*4-3V I9V

41,- V 15V- *<

Sears    1 52    15 18151 40V    31V    40V-V

SheUO    I 80    188MUS0V    40V    S8V-I-2

ShellT le 8 30 3SV 35V 35V- V Shrmns 60 12 4a9 25V 23V 24V-IV Sitial .90 72 1812 38    38    38V-V

SimpPt IS 1132 12V IIV IIV-V Singer lOe 5547 I7V 25 2SV-2V Sk^ine 48 38 1873 28V 26V 27 -IV SmkB 2 60 13 7653 70V 73    70 -1-2

Sonat 1.30 6 2385 33V 32V 33V-1- V SonyQl    ISe 32 19084    14V    13V    13V-    V

SCrEG    2 7 1003    IIV    17V    MV-    V

SCalEd    3 52 7 8051    35V    35 V    3SV

SoutbCo    1 70 7 14601    16    IS',    I6V

SouPcs 1.50 14 3049 35*4 33V 33V-2V Sperry 1.82 151753 41    38V 30V-IV

Squarb    1 84 15 3743    35    34    MV-    V

Soiibb    I 34M23M    47V    4CV    47 -    V

StMia    2.40    8 18775 3SV    31    3Mh- V

StOInd    2.80    8I5067OS6    51V    SIV-FIV

StdOOb    2.60    112171 u54    68V    m-l-2V

SUuK:h 1.44 171636 24V 22V VV-F V SterlLW I 12 12 5332 26V 2SV 20V-V StevnX 1 20 20 TOO 22V 22    22V-F V

SunCo 2.30 II 3063 utt*4 43V 46 -F2 Sybrao 106 152 774 27*, 26V 27V- V Syntex 1.40 14 5070 57V 55 SCV-Fl Svsco .32 181345 r 31    30V- V

- T-T -2.04 6 1016    23    22V    23

2 60 14 1602 75 300 14 17 1447 U12V 19 IS87I SIV IS 138 30V I 24 838 79V

TECO

TRW

TacBt s

Talley

Tandy

Tndycft

Tektnu

Teldyn

Telex

35

83V

56

19

41

Burrgh 2.60 25 3493 55, 53V 53',-3V iMcbrl nl.80 17 4577 u23*.

19*4

29,

41,

21

23*4

20 - V

3OI4-IV

434-.V 21V-F ', 23'.,-F V 55V 56V- V 34'4 34V-1V 81 -3V 34*4-F V 36 V- V 30 -F V 55 V-F 5 *4

40V-1V

13V-F 74*4-F *4 38 + V 17'-4- V 33 -IV 42,+ ', 33',- V 13*4- '+ 23 + *,

- C-C -CBS 2.80    16 2746    66V    65    65>-l

CIGNA 2 48    7 2646    48,    47',    48V+ ,

CPC Int 2 20    8 3485    38',    37'    37*4-

CSX 3 12    10 4670    70V    66    S7,-3V

Caesar    3791    16V 15*4 15*4-1',

CRUg 48    1780    30V 27', 29',+ V

CamSp 2 20 10 889 51    49,    49',-IV

CapCits 20 20 517 131', 146', 148 -3V Caring g 28    996    18V 17, IIV- V

CarPw 2 40    7 2653    21*.    2IV    2IV- V

CartHw 1 22    14 1364    22V    2IV    22V- *4

CastlCk    4526    15*4    14V    14V

CatrpT 1.50    7040    4SV    45V 46 - ,

Celanse 4    461    63'4    61V S3 - *4

CenSoWI 78 6 4271 IIV 17V 18V CnllPSl 52a 9 3175 14. 14V 14V-V CnSoya 84 9 2124 15    14V 15 + *4

CentrDt 1416 27V 25V 26 -2 Crt-leed 251 990 23    21V 22V+ V

CessAir 40    2116    30V    29V 29*4- V

Chmpin 40 45 4868 25V 23V 23V-1V ChamSp 40 32 1645 IIV lov IIV- V ChartCo 1 14 1776 12V 11*4 11*4+ V Chart wt 380 6    5>4    5*4+ V

Chase 3.5Q 7 7073 53'. 51    51'4-2*4

ChesPn 1 84 11 6090 38*4 37'4 37V-1V CNWst    1899    41V 39', 39V-2*4

ChiPnT    S3    16*.    16    16V +    V

ChrisCs 38 158 23    22*. 22*.

Chrvslr 31 47143 31V 29', 29',-2*. Cilicrp 1 88 6 32331 39', 38V 37V-2V Citylnv 1.80 10 2728 36*. 35    35',-!V

ClarkE 1.10    902    33V    32V 33V- V

ClevEl 2 J8 7 3478 20V 20'., 20V- V Clorox 1.04 13 2184 33V 3ZV 31V-V Coastal 40 to 3)08 031V 30*4 30V- V CocaO 2 88 12 14178 58    47*, 48V-1V

ColgPal I 28 9 7919 22, 21*. 22',- V ColPen 1 40 12 2702 27', 25', 2SV-2V Coltind 1 80    1021    43' 42', 42*.+ V

ColGas    3 02    7 970    32',    31V    32V +    V

CmbEn    1 84    8 1921    38',    35V    37*4 + IV

Comdr s    21 7500    53'.    49,    51 -2V

CmwE    3 7 11899 25*.    25',    2SV

Cmsals 15 2780 45*. 42V 42V-2', ConsEd 1.88 6 5269 22V 21V 22V- *4 ConFds 2.32 7 2997 42*. 41*4 42*,- V CnsNC    2 9 747 u3I*4    29*,    31V + 1

ConsPw 2 44 7 7661 20',

CnUCp 2 60 11 4509 31V CntlGrp 2.60 9 1390 43V Contlll 2 21 4341 21V ConlTel 1 64 II 4077 24 ClOata .60 14 3291 59 Coopr 1.52 21 2022 35*,

ComG 2.32 17 1970 84', II CrockN 2 40 10 696 u35    33,

CrwnCk    11 947    36*,    36

CrwZel I 1517 30V 29*4 CurlW 1 20 13 852 u55*4 49V

-D-D-DanaCp 1    60    30 1668    43',    40',

DarlKr 3    84    10 9353    66',    63',    64V-2V

DataGn    49 1433    57V    53*,    53*,-3V

Dayco    16 138 328 14    13

DayHud    1.20 17 3329 75',    71

DayH wi    13 38    36,

DavtPL 2 7 3575 17V 17V Deere 1    5757 34V 32*,

DeltaAr 1    6113 44V 42',

Dennys 64 13 4349 34', 32*,

DetEd 1 68 7 3913 14 I3V DiamS 1.76 12 22764 23', 22',

Digilal 20 12976 119*, 115', IIS'a-S'., Disney 1 20    20 3072    67    64*,    64*.-2'/4

DrPepp 84    38 4308    16    15    15V +    ',

DomRs 2 40    7 3555    21V    21    21V

DowCh I 80    21 12148 34    33    33V-    V

DowJn s .60    36 1369    53*,    52 V    52*,-

Dresr 80 118 11234 u23V 21V 22V + V duPonl 2 40    13 8562    47V    46*,    47',-    V

DukeP 2 28    7 9428    22V    22',    22,+    V

DuqLt 2    9 1832    16    15V    15*,-    ',

EastAir    7022 IIV    10*.    IIV-

EastGF 1.30    8 2970 23V    21',    21.-    V

EsKod 3a 11 17151    73V    70V    70V-2V

Eaton 80    5877    43'.    42',    43    + V

Echlin 64 16 5944 U22    19, 21V+1V

ElPaso .68 II 13035 21V 18*. 20V+I EmrsEI 2 10 14 2793 61', 60', 60*.-Enserch 1.60 10 3103    26    25    25    -I

Esmrk si 84 II 1464    75',    73*.    75    - 'i.

Ethyl s .85    10 2197 u24V    22',    23

EvanPI OTt    2553 ul9    17V    17V-V

ExCelo    160    10 843    37 V    35*.    35'4-2V

Exxon    3    7 20665 35 V    33V    34'.

- F-F -

FMC    1 80    9 1108    42V    40V    41V-1*,

Fairehd    80    14 1565    22'.    21V    21V-*,

Fairfds    24    13 318    31'.    29*.    31'. + !

Feders    2800    7*.    6

F'edNM 16    10900    25V    24

FedDSt 2 20 13 x2272    65V    63*.

FnSBar    245    8',    7*.

Firesln 60 31 2857 20',

FBkFla I 08 9 22 23'.

FtChrl 80    3010    29*.

FslChlcl 20 7 5116    261,4

Flnlsle 2.24 8 746 42 FleetE s 30 26 3089 37*,

FliglSf 16 24 176 35,

FlaPl. 3 60 7 6320 35*.

FlaPrg 192 8 5549 18V FlwGen    1335    15V

Fluor 80 13 6369 22V FordM    17370    55V    52V    55 -IV

ForMK 2    40    14 1188    48*.    47V    48V- '.

FrplMc    60    28 3327    25',    24'.    24V- V

Fruehf    40    |155    35V    34    34V-1','

- G-G -

GAF    .116I 755    16,    16'.    16V- V

GTE    2 92 911712    42*.    40',    42*. + !'.

Gannett 180    19 1208    69'.    65'.    65'.-3*.

GnDyn    1    18 7521    55    53',    53V-1V

GenEl si    90    13 11507 54'.    52'.    53'.-!'.

GnFds 2    40    8 2751    45V    44V    44.

GnHous    20    15 144    27V    26V    26V- *.

Gninst    .50    19 4229    56*.    54'.    54',-!',

GnMills    2 04 112712    55V    54V    55'.+

GMot 2 40e 15 25024    71*.    70 V    71V-1'-

GPC    16    2009    9*.

GoSlgnI I 68 14 4525 u50 GTire I    50b    45 1075    33V

Gensco    1198    9>,

GaPac    60    13256    28

GerbPd 148 II 1688 :m Getty 2    60e    8 6655    70',    67'i

GibrVn    1783    I2V    IIV

Gillette 2 30 10 2264 45    44'.

GIdNug 20 4288 85'. 78*. 82'.

GIdNg WI    3253    17',    16    16',

Gdrich    1 .56    529    41    39',

Goodvr 140 10 7946 31V 31 Gould 172 20 5552 41'-. 40' .

Grace 2 80 11 6293 48. 47 GlAlPc 22 4421 12. 11V GtWFin 40 27 2795 23*. 22',

Greyh    120 117132    26V    24'-.    25V-l'i,

Grumm 1 60 18    1.159    62    59'.    59V-3V

GlfWst -75 11,56.52    28 V    27',    28 *'- *.

GuKOlI 2.80 8    12645    u38',    36    37, + !',

GIfStll 1.64 7    1720    14',    14    14'.+ V

Gulfl'td I 32 8    1728    27    26V    26V- *.

- viHRT    385    6*.    6',

Halbtn I 60 II    18.366    u43V    40'.

Harlnd    76 20    414    44',    43V

Harms    88 25    6082    47*.    45',

HartH    I 18    212    52V    51',

llarlH WI    I    u26'. 26'.

HeclaM 32 2517 23', 21

31*.

4V

36

51V

22

32V-4*.

58 - *. 52 V + V 23V +1'. 63*. 65'.- ', 57*. 57'.-2. 36, 36'4-7*< 46V 46V-1, 29*. 29*4-1 44'.-2*. 93V- V 54 V + V 16 V + , 14,

84'. +IV 24V- V 30.- V 14 V- V 87 -3*4 25V 25V 26A, 27'.- V 68    S9V-2

66    66    -I*.

129', l32'.-2*. 49*.+ 1 A.

81,

24*.

30V

I4't.

86

6*.-IV 25V- V 64*.- V 7*.- V 20*.

22*,- V 21V 29'.- -V 23*. 2SV + 1V 41V+ V 35V-2*. 34,-35 V- V 18*,- V 14 21*.+ '/.

19,

22*.

41

34V

34V

35

18

14V

21

McOnl s I 13 6783 66V McDnD 1.42 10 2204 59V McGEd 2 II 1856 43V McGrH si 08 21 1654 48 Mead I 2886 30,

Melvil S 16 3767 46V 43',

Merck 2.80 17 3943 95'. 92>,

MerLys II 19896 uS6V SI,

MesaP n 9 32598 ul7*. 15*.

MidSUt 1.70 7 5610 15    14*.

MMM 3 30 16 6648 85V MinPL 2.40 6 256 25 Mobil 2 10 12961 31,

MohkDt 18 1425 14,

Monsan 4.20 12 7130 89V MntDU 2.24 7 106 25V MonPw 2.68 7 895 27*.

Morgan 3.70 7 5375 71 Mor^ 1 60 6 724 67V Motrola 1 60 29 4144 135 MtFuet 2 60 8I40IUS1V 48V NN

NCR 2 60 12 2831 114, 108', 109 -6V NL Ind 1 11 11019 19V 17V 18V+ * NabscB 2.28 8 7533 39*. 38*. 31V- *< NatCan 1 8 337 25    24*.    25

NatDist 2 20 16 1444 28 V 27V 27*.- V NatFG 3.44 9 122 u34*.    33V    34V-    V

NatGyp 1 48 30 2333    32V    30V    3IV-V

NSemi    8400    51.

NatlSU 25    3889 26V

Natom 80    14018 25*.

NevPw 2.72 6 x1371 26*.

NEngEI 3.20 7 1420 35*.

Newntt I 211574 56V NiaMP 1.02 6 2M8 16V NorlkSo2.10S9W S7V Norteh 08 10 368    I3V

NoAPhJ I 70 12 695    64

NoestUtl 38 6 4201    I2V

NlndPS 1.50 15 1708    13*.

NoSlPw 2 96 7 2111 32*.

Nortrp 1 80 39 706 89*.

NwstAir 80 506 3152 SIV NwIInd 2.68 10 1649 44*.

Norton 2 S3 4251 40V NorSim I 06 23 13221 34V Norwst 1.80 11 1376 35V -0-0-OcciPet 2.50 90 5095 24V 23,

OhioEd 1 80 8 2209 14*.

OklaGE 1.84 7 4676 18',

Olin 1.20 14 837 3IV Omark 1 04 39 91 28',

ONEOK 2 40 9 343 27V OwenC 1.20 26 2426 40'.

Owenlll 1 68 29 2835 35*.

PPG 2.36 14 6H 62*. 63V- V PacGE 3.20 6 5208 29V PacG wi    265 14,

PacUg 3 7 806 33'.

PacPw 2 16 1 2239 22'.

PanAm    20III    8

PanhEC 2 30 7 4496 37 Parson I II 827 25 Penney 2.16 11 x7985 60'.

PaPL 2 40 7 3016 21'.

Pennzol 2.20 II 4629 42V PepsiCo 1 62 17 12529 35V 34 35V- V PerkEl .50 29 5321 34 V 32V 32V-1V Pfizer s 1,16 19 13120 43 V 41V 41V-3 PhelpD 3304 29V 27V 29V + V

7JV    73V-1V4

13V    13V

II    12V + 1V

49V    V-1V

IIV    IIV-IV

78V    7V

14 3320    167V    161V    I6IV- V

17 5978    30V    2SV    30 + V

Tennco    2.72    7 6822    41V    39V    4IV + IV

Tesoro    40    6    1681    17V    15V    liV + 1

Texaco    3    7    12958    3SV    34V    3SV+ V

TexEst 4 10 II 3966 59    56V    S8V+I

Texlnst 2 23 5318 124    116V 121 +2V

Texlnt 191 9146 8V 7    7V+ V

TxOGas 32b 19 8328    50    47*.    49',+ V

TxPac    35 24 31    31V    3V    3V-1

TexUtil 2.20 6 4919    MV    MV    24V- V

Textron I    80 14 2229    M    32    32V- V

Thrillv s    46 23 4613    M    B    M + V

Tigerfn    12174    II    8V    9V-2V

Timel    I 29 33(8    72V    70V    71V- V

TimeM    2 18 1027    79V    77V    78V+1

Timkn    1 80    621    66V    65V    6SV-1V

Tokhm    .54 18    473    2SV    MV    26V- V

Tosco    5    9531    I4V    12 V    14 +1V

TWCp    134177 M 32V 33V- V

Transm I SO 9190 27V V 27V- V TnmscoI B 8 29M 4IV 39V 39V-2V Travlerl.(e 8 4X1 38V 29V 30V+ V{ TriCao I53e < 18    27*.    27V- V

Trico .1(23 x783 lOV 9V 10 + V TvicsEP 2. 8 757 2V 27V 38 - V --U-UAL    21 3186 40V MV 38V- V

UMC 68 731U3U16 I4V 16 +IV DNCRes    SE    7V 7 7V

USFG    3.84 II IMI    51    50    SOV+    V

UnCarb    3.40 17 540    68    0    0V-1V

UnEIec    l.M 617M    14V    I3V    I3V-    V

UnPac    t.K178Ml    MV    56    51 +    V

Uoifoyl    MB78    14V    I3V    14V

UnBnid zmiBS 20V 23 +IV

Mutual Funds

NEW YORK (AP) - Weekly Investing Nnpaaies givinf the higiL low aad laa prices for tfie week with the net change Iran the previoiis week's last price. All quotatwos, supplied by the Natmial Asnciatton oi Secwities Deaters, Inc.. reflect net asset values, at which securities could have been sold

USGyps 2.40 17130 S9V V 0V-2V UShMl .31U 50 UV 17V I7V- Vi

USSIeei I    850    25V    MV    MV+ V

UnTedi 2.0    12100    71V    79V    79V-1V

UnlTel 1 71    9 4277    21V    MV    21V+ V

Unocal 1 8 XI4737 37V 33V 0V+ V Upiotin 2.28 14 130 M V (1V-2V LSUFE .0 6 80 MV 23V 23V- V Bfl 2.M 9150 22V 21V B

Vanan s MBB0 61V S9V S8V-2V

1    -w-w-

Viactev 1.0    11 SM    V    39V    V+ V

Wackht 44b    19 225    MV    MV    2SV + I

W^Mrt M0 29S4 0V 78V 8IV + IV WalMtwi 579 41V 39V 41V + IV WalUm IJO 1038H 39    37V MV-IV

WraCm I 11 18735 27V XV 27V- V WanirL 1 0 14 1756 31V 29V 29V-IV WshWt 2.0 7 70 19V 19V 19V- V WelUF 10 7102 0V 36V 37V WnAirL    1330 6V    5V    6V+ V

WUnian 1.0 13 270 0V 0V 4SV-1V WestgE 1.0 10 680 0V 46V 47V-2 Weyerii 1.30 131 MZ7 37V 3SV MV-IV rtpl 1.0 12X77 S3 51    51 -1

Wbittak 1.0 13100 31V 31V 31V-V WiUiam 1.M2O430 0    23V MV+ V

WinDx 158 14 40uStV 57V S1V+3V Winnbg IOC 36130 20V 19V 19V- V Wolwth 1.0    S60U37V MV 3SV

Wynns 0    10    20V    19*.    19V- V

-X-Y-Z-Xerox 3 11 1108 47V 0V 46V- V ZaleCp 1.26 0 51 30V 29V 29*.- V Zcnittfll    401 XV    24V    25V-1V

Copyright by The Associated Press 190.

0*

24*.

24*.

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^Market Analysis-

OtiW JOIMS JO liKiuslri.4ls

.liitv 4 H -18.03

High 1220.65 Low 1207.23 Closed 1207.23

1230-

>

(0

1215 ?

o

1300

125a

i2oa

115a

iioa

li.

T W T F

105a

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M A M J

1983

Market In Brief

NYSE Issues Consohdaled Trading

FudayJuIvS 198.J Volume Shares 79.645.560 Issues Traded

1.988 Up 630 Unchan

Down

NYSE IrxJex

96.89-S4P Comp

167.08 - 48 Dow Jones Ind

4P 1,207.23-3.21

AcornFd n ADV Fund n AfutureFd n AIM Funds: CeovYld Greenway HiYield AlianTch AlphaFlid n AtnBirthTr AmExpGtb n American Funds Am Balan AmcapFd AmHuU BondFd Fundmlnvs GrowthFd IncomeFd InvCoA NewPmpFd TaxExpt WshMutlnv Amer General; Cap Bond Enterprise HiYldlnv MuniBond VentureFd Comstock Fd ExchFdn FundOfAm Growth n Harbor Fd Pace Fnd ProvidentFd Amer Growth AmHeritge d Am Invest n Am Invine n Am medAsc n Am NalGrth Am Natlnco Amway MuU Analytic n Armstng n Axe Houghton: Fund IncomFd StockFd BLC GUiFd BLCInco Babsonlncm n Babsonlnvt n BeaconGth n BeacooHUln Berger Group: lot Fund n 101 Fund n

HW Low LMt (30

SB B.0 B.O-T7 B.I2 21.91 21.91- 52 U.X 18.0 18.47- .0

14.0 14J8 14.0- .0 14.78 14.M 14.0-.16 N.0 18.41 N.41- .0 B.M S.I8 0.39- X 2732 XJ2 M.82- O I7.X 17.44 17.44- .33 15.52 15.44 15.44- .23

TasFiee Cap TNT n Cardinal CeotGth

Chancellar Group NwDecd TaxMid CentryShrn Charter Fund n ChpsdeDotlr n ChestnutSt n High Yiekt Income Option

6.0 6.0 6.96- M Tax Mangd

16.70 16.53 1631- .15 COLUMM^ n 10.19 10.15 10.15-.iColumbGrthn

17.0 I7.X 17.58- .0|Comwlth A&B 33J7 33.0 33.75- X Coniwlth CU>

11.10 11.81 11.01- .10 8.79 8.73 8.73- .11 140 14.0 140- .21 U.77 12.0 a0- .a

11.0 11.72 11.72- 33 14.37 1437 14.27- 19

10.0 18.41 10.41- 12

11.0 11.B 1132- IS 837 8.79 8.83- .0 9.59    9.0    9.0-    .0

935 9.79 9.79- .13

Bo^on Co:

Fndath ^th Buflft Bear Gp: CapCRhn

Calvert Graup:

piity n

Incon Sicial n Calvin Bullock:

'd

CanadianFd DividenlSlir HUncofihr Maathlylncm Natn WdeSec

27 91 27.0 0.65- 0 18.71 10.71 18.71- .0

12.0 12.54 12.54- .11 M.17 19. M.IO-F .01

17.0 1734 1733- 10 Il.M 11.31 11.31- 14.x 1330 1434+ .14

190 1932

15.17 15.0 11.0 18.33

19.31- 16 15.00- 33 18.36- 16

13.0 13.0 13.0+ .04 I9.X I8.M 19.34- S 9X 9.13 9.21+ .0

3.0 3.0    3.40-    04

11.0 1I .M 11.65- .12 IIX 1133 I133-.IS 1031 10.73 10.73- .12 9.73 9.71    9.71-    .0

10.    9.M    9.90-    37

1238 12.16 12.17- .17 15X 15.14 15.26- 11

14.0 13.0 13.90- .18 0.M 0.0 4150- .0 14.79 14.0 14.79- 0 33.x 33.x 33.58- 71 1117 I6.M 1180- .10 X.71 M.0 X.SC- 12

5.74    5.71    S.73-    .0

10.0 9.M 9.80- .0 4.M    438    433

12.x 12.04 U.25- 01 11. 1138 11.29- 0 a.10 0.M 0 90- .32 IM 638    638-    16

21.x 21 X 21.X+ .0

7.0    7.    7 06- 0

136.14 10.0 10.0-1.0

1031 1018 10.20- 10

10.39 10. 10.29-18

4.0    4 0    4.63-    .0

1134

19.53

16.x

I.X

16.0

19.

16.51

I.X

16.00- 65 19.38- M 16.56- . I X- .01 14.0 14. 14.33- .13 IS.W 14. 14.95- .0 16 78 16 0 16.72- 13

B.43 B. B 30- 31 15.M 15.0 15.51- .16

Co^wite Graup:

Fund n Tax n OoaconlFdn ConsteUGthn CoutMiRInv n Copley n CkMintryCapGr Dean Witter DevlGth n DivGth HiYld IndVaki NCRac Tax Ex Delaware Graup: Decatur loc DelawareFd OekhesterBd TaxFreePa DelU Trend DepstCapn DepstTr n DirectCapn DodgOxiBal n DodgCoxStt n DrexIBurnh n Dreyfus Gip:

A Bondsn

B.44 23. 23.36-

11.0 t8.M 18.99-I3.M I3.X 13.26-21B B.W B.OO-17. 17.18 1734- .11 0.B 0.M 0.11- .0

7.0 7.44    7.44-    .04

1 194    194-    II

9.x 9.M    9.55-    .0

23.0 23.x .S0- .0 12.19 12. 12.10- 31 X. X.0 X.40- 0

1.41    141    1.41-    .0

2.0 I    1.99-    O

10. 10.74 10.76-11.74 11.0 11.0-

6.    6.57    (.0-    .0

. 0. X.18- 0 X.83 0 65- X

7.M    7.0    7 0- 01

5.    5.94    5.+    01

19.57 19.41 19.41- .0

10 10.24 1035- .0 12 37 12. 12.25- .17 14. 14.83 14.83- .12 13.64 13.0 13.43- . 8.61    8.0    8.57+    .10

9 9.93    9 0- 0

16.0 16.24 16.31- .10 M.0 24.64 24.0- M

7.0    7.0    7.93-    .14

6.0    6.M    6.84-    .0

17 0 17.19 17.40- .11 11.91 11.75 11.75- 19

18.0 17.0 18.0+ 15 1.14    1.12    I.I4+    .01

0 76 27.x 0.x- .23 S.0 .93- 14 1816 18.0 18.0- 21

13.44 13. 13.36- 18

Weekly Stocks In Spotlight

MARKET ANALYSIS - The Dow Jones 30 Industrials Index closed Friday at 12073, down 18.03 from the previous week. (APLaserptoto)

NEW YORK (AP) - Yearly high-low, weekly sales, high, low, closing price and net change of the most active stocks trading for more than 81:

LewSata Hlfb Low Last Oig. 0V 6V Chrvslr    4,714,300 31V V ',-2V

70V    49,    ATT    4,615,1    64    XV    XV-    IV

41    llVPhibSs    4.002,4    0V    0    35V-2V

17V    10    MesaPn    3.2X.8    17V    15V    16V +    V

V    21V    Citictp    3313.1    V    MV    0V-    2V

I24V    59V    IBM    3.02.6 IBV    118V    121V+    V

S,    30    Schlmh    2,1,S    XV    XV    57 +    2V

39V    GMot    2,502,4    71V    70V    71V-    IV

liFV    Prime s    2,4K,7W    23V    19V    19V-    3V

16    BkrinU    2.4,6    23V    19V    23 V+    3V

22',    IntTT    2.3043    0V    0    0V+    2V

16',    DiamS    2,276,4    23V    BV    23 +    V

32V    AtlRich    2.1,1    XV    0    51 +    2V

24V    Exxon    2,0,m    0V    0V    MV

2V PanAm    2.018.1 8 7V 7V- V

14V    HughTI    1,996,4    24    XV    BV+    IV

10',    MerLys    1.9,8    XV    51V    XV +    V

23V    StOlkil    1,977,5    V        XV-    V

V    Mobasc    1,995,1    BV    21V    BV+    I

II    SonyCp    1.90,4    14V    13V    13V-    4

75V 30'4

27

4')4

26V

XV

'5*4

T,

24V

17',

Dreyfus Leverage No. Nine n Spedlocm n mExmpI D ThirdCntry o x EagleGthS& Eaton Vance: EHBalancd EH Stock Growth HiYieid Inc Bos Invest

11.0 11.76 110- .04 7.79 7 n 7.73- .0 11.10 II 04 11.04- .13 1.04 7.0    735-    .

II41 1134 11.34- 0

&

'oMvl

VS Income VS Sped Eberstadt Graup: Chemical Fd x EngyRes Surveyor    x

EngyUtU n Everpeen n Evrgni n    X

FannBuroGt n Federated Funds Am Leaders ExchFd n Hi IncmSe TaxFrae USGvtSec FideUty Grotg); Assellnv n CorpBond n

171 8 0    8 65- .0

110 13.B 13.38- .0 I.X 8.x 8.56- .0 4.77 4 72    4.72-    .0

8. 8.0 8.83+* .H

8.0 8.x 8.31- M 0.B M.91 0.00- . U.0 12.0 12.40- .0

unavail

15.0 14.0 15.0+ .0

Co^

Cootraf

fralnd n DestinyFd n Bqutlncm n ExchFdn Fredffl n

American Stock Exchange

What The Stock Market Did

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Advances Declines Unchanged Total issues New yrly hghs New yearly Iws

Weekly Stocks Ups And Downs

Two NEW YORK (AP) - The following list This Prev Year Yean shows the New York Stock Exchange Week    Week    ago    ago    stocks and warrants that have    gone    up

7    7    941    W    the most and down the most    in the

1,1 1,278 80 1,112 past week based on percent of change. 2    10    20    201    No securities trading below    X or    RIW

2,178 2,1 2,01 2,112! shares are included. Net and percenUge 175    216    0    31    changes are the difference between    last

10 week^s dosing and this week's closing UPS

10

22    227

WEEKLY AMERICAN STOCK SALES

Total for week Week ago Year ago Jan I to date 1982 to date AMERICAN BONDS Total for week Week ago Year ago

0,20,0

0,7,O

15,310,0

I.241,0.0W

7X,9.0

5,8,0 7,0,0W 3,820,0

DOW Jones Averages

NEW YORK (AP) - The foUowing g)ves the range of Dow Jones averages Tor the week ended July 8.

STdCK AVERAGES Open High Low (3oie Chg Ind 12lr1220.65 120.23 1MT23-18.03 Trans 576 16 5X.0 575. 575.28-11. Utils 1.0S 1B.34 I. 129.29+ 0.37 65 SUs 483.81 4n.79 483 81 4 90- 6 81 BOND AVERAGES 20 Bonds 72.75 72.91 72.12 72 12-1.20 Ulils 70.0 71.0 70. 7006-1.X Indus 74.x 74 X 74.18 74 18-0.79 COMMODITY FUTURES INDEX

10 145.81 10 K 145 45+O.X

Weekly Stock Dollar Leaders

NEW YORK (AF) -The foUowing is a

_

SCM 2    12 498    37V    ',    37 + V

Safwy s 1.0    8 5522    27    26',    *4- *4

SlRegis 1.12    30 2364    29S.    27V    27',-l.

SPeInd I 14 6203 U30    28'x    29'x+ V

SchrPlo I.X    13 6048    47',    44',    47'+2'4

Schlmb .    13 28915    u59',    X'4    57 +2V

ScottP 1    15 1595    24V    .    23'4    24 ~ %

SearleG X    18 13027    49'4    45V    45-!',

The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded

Name    Totftll) ,<^(bdf) Lut

IBM    8364,!    302    121V

Amer TkT    82X.75I    0151    XV

Gen Motors    *177,07 25024 71V

Schlumbrg    tlX,OW 215 57

DigitalEq    tIX,60 12976 116V

PhibroSal s    $10,0    4004    0V

Chrysler    810,1    47143    V

East Kodak    *l,272    17151    70V

Citicorp    tlB,8S7    32!    0V

MerilLyn s    *10,(0198    XV

AtlRichfld    *IM,S70    21!    51

InlT&T    *IM,40    2390    0V

FordMot    *93,5 17370 0

Hutton^F s    *,834 17376 XV

Honeywell    *0,627 7394 IIOV

8'4

47*4

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Merculs    1 32    I 6259    ,39V

MewlPk    .30    28 74M    91

Holiday    M    28 6172    57V    X*

HollyS    I    XI    45,    44

6'- *4

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45',    V

51', X - V

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38    X'4~1V

89', 89V-P, MV-IV XV- ,

The companies

we represent

tsm

insure all types

of vehicles.

Call us for a quote.

EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY. INC.

Phone 752-4323 P.O. Box 3785 2739 East 10th Street Greenville, N.C. 27834

Name Last

+^?+

Pd.

NtMineSv

lOV

Up

B.1

Mobil Home

6V

9*.

+ 1 + IV

Up

Up

18.6

16.4

EnterraCp

19*.

+ 2*.

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16.2

Marcade

5V

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Up

IS.8

Pac Tin

I6V

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15.7

Bakerlnll

23V

+ 3V

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15.6

Farah Mlg

0

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15.6

MobwRub

8V

+ 5V

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15.5

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21V

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Up

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14.3

142

BlairJn i

0

+ 4*.

13.9

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17V

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Up

13.7

Buttes Gu

11V

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13.1

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13.0

Pengolnd PubRck Ind

3V

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11.9

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11.8

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11.5

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11.3

ChockFON

8',

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11.2

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23V

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DOWNS

Name Last

St

Pd

NutriSy n

19V

OH

8.9

Tiger liri

9V

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OH

19.6

McGraw Ed

3(V

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16.7

NtMedCare

15V

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OH

16.6

PrimeCm s

I9V

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OH

15.9

InterReg

20*.

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144

Fedders

6V

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on

14.3

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18V

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Off

129

Coachmn s

av

- 4V

on

125

Nat Homes

7V

- 1

on

12.3

GATX Cp

31V

- 4V

on

12.2

Kollnior

8V

- 4V

on

12.2

DMG Inc

3V

- V

on

11.8

WurUtzer

7

- V

on

ll.l

dHRT Indt. v]Revere(^

6V - V Off lOV - IV OH

10.9

10.8

Anacomp

15V

- IV

on

10.6

CCACorp

48V

-5V

on

10.0

AMRCorp wt

21V

- 2V

Off

9.9

Lowes 1

27V

- 3

OH

9.8

RepAir wt

3V

- V

Off

9.4

Flowerind s

17

- IV

OH

9.3

LLE Rltyn

12V

- IV

OH

9.3

LomN Fin

V

- 5

OH

9.3

Vendo O)

13V

- IV

Off

9.3

WinterJack

11

- IV

Off

9.3

NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock Exchange trading lor the week sdected issues:

M1|0 Lo* Lut Chg.

0 UV lOV 10+-^

Saiu

PE bdi

Adons .lOtX 30 . .

AdRusl s .10 a 120 *4     -I

Adobe    JO I* 9u26V    MV    2SV+    V

Aed^    14 5 4V    3,    3V-    V

Aflins ,M21 0 43*4 43    43V+ V

Altec    10 IV    IV

Amdhl s    20 10 16 0V    V

AMotln    .015 I 0V    XV

ASciE    20 lOV

Ampaln .12 7 I2tt 5V Armtrn 13 16 Asamr g 0    7    39V

AtlsCM 1418 3V AtUs wt 7V Banstr g.80e    10    6\

BergB s .0 21 80 31V V V-BowVal .15    170U0*,    BV 0 - V

BradNt    10 470 V    0V    0V-    V

Brascngl. 179 u27,    27V    27*.+    V

ChmpH    U 3069    6V 5v

CircIK 74 1613 S ConsOG    339    9V

Cooklnt .SOe 29 0 TV CoreLb .160 S32ul9V Cross 8 1.1019 20    31V

CnitcR    16 UK    8V

Damson    19 480 ul2V

DatPds .16 010 XV DomeP DorGas

9V

4V

15V

0V

3V

7

6V

IV V-1 36V- V 10

5V- V 15++ V MV+ V 3V 7 - V 6*4+ V

Dynlctn 2Se    10 IMI    15V    14V    15',+ V

FdResv    30    IV    IV    IV+3-16

Fdmnt .10    18    14X U27*.    BV    0V+3V

FlukeJ .8410    4    XV    30*4    XV+IV

FrontHd .2 0 3 21V 20V 20V- V

GRI GntYI g GoldW GldFld Gdreh wt GtUCh

19120 UI3V 3 20V 734 ISV 9 2V 219 IIV 463 uMV

IIV

19

14V

2

9V

61V

MageUan MuniBond n FideUly n GovtSec n HilncoFd n HiAYidd P Ud Muni n Mercury Puritan n SdErw n SdFndn SdHlthn SelMeUn SdTech n SdUtU n Tbrilt n Trend n FiduCap n Fndatn Grwth Founders Groiq>: Grwth n Incom n Mutual Sped n Foursq n Frankun Group: AGE Fund DNTC Growth NY Tax CIptionFd Utilities Income Stk USGovtSec Resh Capitl Resh Equity CalTFr FdofSW Funds Inc: Comrceinc InvQual PiiotFund Sunbit GIT HYId n GT Pacific n GatwyOptn n Gen Elec Inv: ElfunTr n ElfunTxEx n S&Sn SkSLongn GenSecurit n GinlelErisa n GBT Fd n Growthlnd n GrdnPkAv Ham HDA HartwdlGth n HartwllLevr n Herdd n Horace Mann n Hutton Group: Bond n Emergn Gwthn ISI Gravp:

Growth Income Tnist Shares IndustryFd n Int Investors Invstlndictr n InvestTr Bos Investors Group: IDS Bond IDS Disc IDS Growth IDS HiYidd IDS NewDim IDSProgr InvMutJ IDSTaxEx Inv Stock Inv Sded Inv Variabl LoprComS4 n IntenuU n TaxFreen MassFd _ LeggMason n , LenmnCap n

120 12.0 12.46- .0 12.0 12. 12.0+ . 19 19. 19.80- 21 . . X.88- 11 0,0 47,01 0.24- .

15.0 15.01 15.01- .31

1622 18. 16.06- a

11. 10. n.9-M21 M.H M.OO- .

12.B 12.15 12.15- .13 9. 927    927-    .M

8.x 8.M    8.34-    .11

0.0 0.14 0.25- .11 6 83 6.0    6.76-    .16

X24 X.94 X.03- Q

13.0 13. 13.29- .18

15. 15. 15.60- .8 . X.0 .0- . 44.1# X 0.59- 0 U.94 1222 12.91- .13 30. 30.x X.S7- .

6. (. S O- .X . .3S- .0 9 0 9.0    9.3S-    16

8. 8.85    8.85-    W

1122 II. 1128- W 8.13 8.    8.00-    .

14.16 14. 14.00- .

13.0 13 13.30- .13 10.51 10.18 10.0+ .24

16. 15. 15.90- .8 21 94 21.0 21.83- 20 15.41 14.84 15.8+ .16 0. 8.x X.S3- . 13.12 13. 13.11- .M

9.    9.    9.80-    .11

. .3I .3t- .0 19. 19.61 19.(0- .17 5.38 S O 5.34- .01

10.0 10.0 10.0+ .01 14.x 14.0 14.46- 16 1122 II. 11.12- .17 MB 0. X.1S+ . 11.0 11.0 11.81- 01

3.81

041

120

10.

7.

5.0 2.

7.0

3.    3.80-    .01

0. 0.26- . 12.0 12.30- .14 9. 9.96- .

6    6 99- .

5 47    5.47-    .0

2. 2.08- .01

7 B 7.23- .0

12.0 12.x 12.0+ .10

6.0    6.    6.91-    .0

(.43    6.42    6.43+    .0

17. 16. 16.83- 10

10.0 10. 10 65- .0 9    9.0    9 76-    .0

14.0 14.x 14.59- 0 17.16 17. 17.06- a 10. 10.B 10.B- . 1S.X 15. 15.8+ .04

15. 15.77 15.0- .

24.81 24. 24.64- .0

11.01 10. 10.96- K 0.0 0. 0.05- . 10.72 10.0 10.0- . 13. 13. 13.+ .01 0. 0.0 0.0+ .

12.91 12. 12.0- . .M .0 .0- .16 19.0 19.73 19.0+ . 6.71    6.M    6.70-    .0

16.x 16.0 16.36- .X

43.91 43.41 0.41-1.16 2X.10 20.0 2X.a+1.14

X.0 X.41 X.44- .

10. 10.0 10.0-13.0 13.x 1364-15.x 15.0 15.0- .0

6.x 6.x

3.0    3.

10.0 10.0 8.0 8.x

15. 14. 1.63    I.

6.56- .03 3.65- .03 10.35- 04 8.72+ . 15 13+ 10 1.60- .

I2V+1 19V+ V 15 -1 2V

GIfCdg M 4983UI6V 14V I5V + 1V Hollyd .24 II 86 13V 12V 13V+ V HouOTf2.19e 510 13 IIV IIV-IV fiSShlSfv

6 - V 21V-IV 8V+ V 7V

18V+1V 3IV+ V 8V + 1V IIV + IV 8V4-2V 940 5 411-16411-16-616 1617 814 16V 15*4 5V- V

21V

8V

7V

17V

30V

7V

lOV

8

Weekly Amex Dollar Leoders

NEW YORK (AP) -The following is a list of the most active stocks basM on (he dollar volume.

The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded.

TotftlQM) Salu(lMM) LaM 8,SS2 720 X *0,319 010 8 81,963 8092 8V *II,m 720 ISV *I0,4X (IX 16V *10,3 330 29*4 ,40 25 0V 0.5 4963 I5V 0,045 lOa 0 W.7X 016 9V

IIX

911

14MU10V 9V 10 + V 5XU3IV 8V 30V + IV

x(l 5V 4V 5 + V 1

6V X 9V 15V 4V V

21

0V + 1 9*4+ V 16V+1V 5V+ V 11-16 21V MV+2V V-2V -IV

Husl g IS Im^U gi.M

IntgEn tntSknt 06e

KeyPhs .8 0 25 0V Kir^    016    lOV

MCOHd    314MUI7

MCORs    19    7MU5V

Marndq    4X    11-16

Marmpf2.0 I 21V Mrshln    147    0',    3SV

MediaG l.M 13 143 XV

MicfaSg 1.8 8 28 0V 8 MtchlE    .24 17 330    XV    S',    29V-2V

NKiney    100    6V    SV    6 +    V

NtPatnt 124 104 SV 26V 0V-2V NProc    .55el8x3MB    21    21V-    V

Nolex    8    115 4    3V    3V- V

NARoyl    .812    IX ISV    ISV    I8V

NoCdOg    S0U17V I5V 17 +iV

Numac g    2u21    19V 20V + V

OOkiep    2M 17V 17V    17V- V

OzarkA    8M61X    I7V    16V    I6V+    V

PatlCps .0 8 7    41V    41V    4IV-    V

PECp    19t 7130    3V    2V    3 +    V

PetLew    I2 4I0UI6    13V    16V + 2

Pittway 1 II 8 XV XV XV PrenHa 1.0 16 645 >, 57V +2 Ransbg .72 41 30 8V 0', 2SV- V ResrtA 8 720102', 0V X +1V Robntc    M    2*4    2V    2V-2V

SecCap    11    38 13    12V    12V-    V

Solitron    01    lOV    lOV    lOV-    V

Suiuirs    .0 21 2M    I2V    11V    12V

Stuidnc    370 u9V    7V    8V+    V

TIE    0 108 71V 0-5

TIEwi    0    XVdXV    0V-2V

TchAm 2 3 8*4 8V 8V TchSym 0 284 24V BV BV-I Telsphn 116 24 8 V 18 V 18V-2 V Txscan 813U 8V 21 BV+ V Tran    I2X    2V    2V    2V+    V

TranEn    603    SV    4V    4V+    V

TubMx    108    2    IV    2

UnFood    .811 68    10    9    9V+    V

UnivRs 40 22XU9V 8    8V+ V

Vemit .12 17 81 17V ISV 17 V + V WangBs .10 0 80 40V XV MV-IV

Goldfund n GNMA Ihc n Growth n ,    Research    n

' - > Lindner n

LoomUSayles: Capital n Mutual n LordAbbdt: Affiliated Bond Deb DevdGth Income ValuAppr Lutheran Bro: Fund

WmC wt Wthlrd Wstbrg .0 WstnSL WichIU WwdeE

675 OVdSV 178 IIV 10*4 191 14V 14 IN 8V 0 IX 6V SV 50 u 9V SV

8V- V I1V+ V 14V + V 0 -2V 6V+ V 9V + 1V

Copyright by The Associated Preu 198

12.34 12.a 12.23- .22

4.x    4.8    4.88- .

9.    9.81    9.81- .11

B.49 B.34 B.34- .0 3.    3.0    3.0-    X

11.51    ll.X    Il.X-    .8

7.    7.    7.91-    .

11.8 11.31 11.31- .16

3.51    3.49    2.49- X

B.84 B X B.84- . 8.18    8.12    8.12- .12

11. II.M 11.84- 18

8 8    8.49    8.50-    .21

5.42    5.0    5.38-    M

7.0    7.8    7.8-    .10

14.11 13. 13.99- .24 18.18 I8.M 18.M- .8 0.0 0. 0.0- .8 110 II 84 11.91- .

12. 12.76 12.83- . 40    4.47    4.+ .11

7 72    7.    7.60- .10

II. Il.X 11.8- .14 8.M 8.8 8.54+ .0 18 18. I8.X- .8

0.0 013 0.13-1. 18 18 71 18.71- .0

9.79    9.71    9.71- .14

1120 11,15 II 15- M 10. 10.0 lO.X- M 3,10    3.    3.09-    X

9 17    9.15    9.16

14.15 14.0 14.0

Income

8.x

8.

8.65-

,11

Municipal

USGovtSec

7.13

9.10

7.12

901

7,12-

9.01-

X

.21

MassFinancl:

MIT

12.

12.84

12.86-

.18

MIG

15.

14.

15.01-

8

MID

9.41

90

9 36-

.13

MCD

13.

12.

12 96-

.22

MEG

168

16.21

168-

18

MFD

15

15.

15.80-

.8

MFB

12.x

12.

12-

.21

MMB

921

9.19

9 19-

X

MFH

7.x

7.0

7.+

.

InlTrBd

10.15

10.11

10.11-

.18

Mathers n

24.74

24.0

24.50-

.8

Merrill Lynch: Basic V^alue

140

1473

14,75-

.14

Ci)ital

8.13

8.x

8.13-

N

Equl Bond

11.21

11.12

11.12-

.12

Hi Incpm

8.8

8.8

8.16-

Hi]^alty

IntTerm

10.0

10.49

1049-

13

10.0

10.0

10.0-

.10

UdMat

9.x

9.81

981-

X

MunHiYld

9.11

9

9.00-

.04

Muni Insr

7.04

7.x

7.x-

.X

Pacific

13.8

13.04

138+

10

Phoenix

11.84

11.8

11.79-

.01

SciTech

9.0

9.

9.W-

II

SpVal

14 8

14.12

14.8

Mid Amer

7.72

7

7.72-

.

MjdAmHiGr MSB Fund n

6.0

B.3I

6.21

B.W

6.0-

B.15-

02

.15

Mutual Benefit

14.0

14.12

14.17-

.11

MdwIGvt n

10.16

10.11

10.11-

.11

Mutual of Omaha

America n

9.72

9.x

9.N-

.15

Growth

(.0

6.48

6.48-

.12

Income

8.44

8.40

8.40-

.12

Tax Free

9.

9.8

9.8-

.11

Omega fund n OneWilliam n

14.12

14.

14.08-

10

11

2164

2169-

.8

, Opnenheimer Fd: Dired

S.

821

8.79- .

eqinc

10.

9.

9.96-

19

Oppenhffl Fd

16.

IO.X

lOJO-

Hl^Yidd

Option

19.0

0.15

19.41

8.

19.41- .8 0.80- .13

Special T&get TaxFree is

M.16

21.

7.N

0

21.

7.

M.OO- .0 21 0- 0 7.67+ M

Aim

M.0

24 18

240-

.01

Tune

1614

15.

15 99-

24

OverCouOtSec

0.

0.0

0.+

51

Paramt MuU,

13,8

13.

1365-

15

PaxWoridn

11.8

11

1146-

0

PennSguare n PemiMutual a

9.31

6.49

9.0

6.

9.0-

6.

.11

PermPoct

12.x

12.40

12.0+ .

PhilaFund

10.

108

10.0-

.10

Phoenix Series:

BdanFd

12.

11.11

11.91-

.16

CvFdSer x

8.8

8.

8.00- .0

Growth

15.8

15.15

15.15-

.18

HiYidd

10.01

9.x

9X-

.

StockFimd

15.

14.

14.90- 14

PCCapit

13.8

13,8

13.8+

X

Pilgrim Gro: ragrim Fd

13M

13.0

13.8-

01

MagnaCap

6.8

623

6.24-

01

Magna Incom

1.0

8.31

8.31-

W

Pioneer Fund:

PioarBd

9.13

9.x

9.x-

.11

PionrFund

22.31

B.M

B21-

.13

Pionrllinc

17.21

17.x

17.17-

X

PknrUIlnc

I2.K

12.8

12.81 +

X

Planndlnvst

21.

21.x

21 X+

X

Plitrend n

16.x

16.8

18 73-

0

PRECMetaln

21.

823

3I.OO+ .14

Price Funds:

Growth n

15.

15.8

15.8-

.8

Gwthlnc n

13.x

12X

U.M-

21

Income n

8X

8.N

8.40- X

Inti n

12.74

12.

12.66- X

NewEra n

18.8

11.

18.17-

.10

NewHoriin n

8.81

8.N

8.75- .15

Tax Free n

8.

8.0

8.0-

X

Pro Services .

MedTecn

13.10

1301

13.04-

15

Fund n

10.8

10.

10.65-

21

Income n

9.x

8.x

8X-

8

Prudential Badie:

Equity

14.

14 13

14.16-

16

GvtSc X

9

984

9.84-

17

HiYidd

108

100

10 23-

X

HYMuni

13.81

13.0

13.0-

Option

1574

15.

15,60-

22

15.x

14.81

14.81-

.8

9.

98

9.76-

.8

Balanced

9.0

98

9.29- 13

Bond

631

68

6.26- 10

Common Stk

17.21

17

17.12-

.16

Growth

18.76

1851

18.51-

47

Sequoia n

34.51

34.8

34 30-

24

Sentry Fund

0.0

012

0.28- .21

Sbearson Funds:

ApprecUtn

HtYldd

17

19.43

17.

19.0

I7.X-

19.0-

18

IS

HgMun

13.8

13B

13,a-

16

ShrmnDean n

9.N

9.II

9 61 +

0

SierraGrth n

16.23

16.16

16.19- 15

Siena Funds: Capital

13.

12

12 99-

16

Incom

7.8

7.N

7,68-

12

Invest

15.8

15.16

15.16-

8

S^ n Trust Sh

1522

1501

15X-

.18

10.

10.8

10.8- 15

Venture Shr

118

llX

11.75- 04

SmthBarEqt n

16.

16,8

16.78-

15

SmthBarl G

10.14

IO.X

10.10-

X

SoGen

16.

15.94

16.05-

Swstnlnvlnc n

4

4.N

4.M-

.04

Sovereign Inv

18.B

18.15

18.17-

.12

sute Rond Grp:

,

Commn Stk

6.0

6.0

6.0-

Diversitd

6.0

6.8

6 30-

W

Progress

11.0

1121

11.31-

X

SUtFarmGtti n

II.

11.61

ll.X-

.10

SUtFarmBal n

14.71

I4.X

14.x-

.21

StStreet Inv:

ExchFd n

M.46

.

056-1.43

Growth n

57.x

X.0

X 83-

Invest

8.x

8 10

814-

40

Steadman Funds;

Amerind n

4.13

4.

4.12-

01

Associated n

1.04

I.X

1.03- 01

Invest n

1.76

1.74

1.74-

X

Oceanogra n

7.

7.x

7.x-

16

Stein Roe Fds:

Balance n

24

24.

24 50- .16

Rond n

891

8.x

8M-

17

CapOppor n

0.x

0.31

031-

74

Stock n

0.24

24.

24.95-

81

SteinSpFd n SteinTax n

17.45

170

17.41-

.8

7.8

7.71

7.71-

10

Univrse n

B44

0.31

B31-

.0

StrategCap

8.49

8

847

Strateglnv

11.0

10.

11.X+

17

StrattnGUi n x

1874

10.57

18.71-

23

SunGrwth

13.0

1321

1321-

.0

TaxMngUU Templeton Group:

I4.X

14.x

14X-

13

Foregn

10.24

10 13

lO.B

Globe

041

0,15

0.17-

.15

Growth

9.8

9.21

9.8-

W

Worid

120

12.8

12.0-

W

Transam Cap

11.

1I.X

11.53-

16

TransamNew n

8.

8.0

8.55-

X

Traveirs Eqts

12.8

12.

12.65-

18

TudorFd n

0.81

0.x

0.67-

.45

20th Century:

Growth n

17.x

16.84

16.84-

45

Select n

8.

8.8

8.8-

61

Ultra

10.04

9.x

9.x-

21

USGvn

0

X.

28-

USAA Group:

Grwth n

16.91

168

16.85-

15

Income n

10.64

10.

1060-

12

Snbltn

19.x

I9.B

lO.X-

24

TxEHYn

11.

II.

11.85-

TxEITn

11.0

II.0

11,0-

.

TxEShn

10.0

10.0

10.25-

X

Unified Mgmnt:

Accum n

7.8

7.8

7.8-

X

Gwth n

17.

17.

17.85- .18

Inco

13.

13.34

130-

M

MuUn

I2.X

12.48

I2.X+

X

United Funds:

Accumultiv

10.41

100

100-

8

Bond

5.x

S.61

5.61-

11

InUGU)

I8.X

10

18.-

01

(^t Income

13

I3.X

13.-

15

FiducSh

011

32.81

B.81-

.

High Income

14.

13.

13.99-

.14

income

13.12

I3.X

13.x-

0

MunicpI

6,0

60

60-

X

NwCcpt

5.8

50

58+

.

SciEngy

1191

11.8

11 79- 8

Vanguard

21.0

21 11

21 14-

34

UidSvcGold n

9.17

8.8

9.11 +

13

Value Line Fd

Bond n x

12.

11 K

1186-

Fund n

15.

14

14,90- a

Income n

7.43

7.0

7.0-

13

Levrge GUin S^ISit n

0.04

2181

2181-

8

18.45

18.24

18,24- .0

Vance Exduuige

64. 8. 64 31- 14

4 0,50%

Current Yield

JBmunicipa

DeposBst 1 n

43.16

X.

43.+

.14

Divers 1 n

.X

30-

12

ExchFd 1 n

1. 1 I 8+

.24,

ExchBst 1 n

.46

8

.+

FiducEx 1 n

.X

5915

M51-

W

SecFidu f n

X.0

X.

X.61-

0

Vanguard Group

Explorer n IndexTrust n

44.0

440

44 44-

.0

8

8.8

8.81-

.22

Comint

24X

24.8

24X+

06

GNMA n

9

9

9.05-

14

IveslFund n

18

18.64

18.+

01

Morgan n MunHiYd n

14.0

14.18

14.21-

.10

918

9.12

912-

.13

MuniShrt n

15.18

15.16

15.16-

X

Munilnl n

10.

IO.X

lO.X-

12

MunlLong n

0.44

9.0

90-

.14

^alDivI n

16.57

16.0

16 51 +

.04

^IDvlI n

8.

8

8 05-

04-

SnrtTrm n

9

9.

9 90-

.

ComUS n

0

0.8

046-

.26

Wellesley n

120

12.71

12.8-

.11

Wellington n

13

12.

12.90-

.13

IGBondn

8 12

8.

8.06-

11

HiY Bond n

9.

9.01

9.01-

.

Windsor n

12.64

12.0

12.59+

.01

Venturlnco

11.14

II.

11.09- .

WallSf Growttr

IO.X

9.

9.89- .15

WelngrtnEq n Wlsclncm n

43

43.

43.55-

3.8

373

3.8- .

Wood Strothers:

deV^M n

47.

46 48

46 48-1.0

Neuwirth n

081

0

0.8-

34

PineStr n

14.10

13

13.M-

27

nNo load fund, fPrevious day's quote Copyright by The Associated Press

0

MUNICIPAL BONDS

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INTEREST IS FREE OF All FEOERAl TAX MAY BE SUBJECT TO APPIICABIE STATE TAXES BONOS OFFERED IN $5000 DENOMINATIONS

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Wall Street Expects Sharp Gains In Corporate Profits For Quarter

By CHET CURRIER AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) Wall Streeters are looking for plenty of pleasant news in the next few weeks as corporate America posts its earnings results for the second quarter of the year.

Companies in such important industries as retailing and auto manufacturing are expected to show strong gains for a penod in which the economy rapidly picked up sp^.

By the governments initial flash -estimate, the gross national product grew at a 6.6 percent annual rate, adjusted for inflation, in the April-June quarter. We suspect that this estimate will be raised once data for June are in, said the Value Line Investment Survey.

The investment advisory service projects overall earnings growth for the full year at 20 percent-plus, with similar gains in prospect for 1984.

The impiications of a healthy recovery for corporate profits are exciting, said Edward J. Gibson of First Albany Corp., a regional brokerage firm based in Albany, N.Y., in a recent market commentary.

During recessions, companies learn how to control costs. They get along with fewer employees and lower inventories. As recoveries get under way they remember what they learned and stay lean. Consequently, the profitability of additional volume which develops with a recovery is often extraordinarily high.

We think that the usual estimates of a 20 percent gain in corporate profits this year will turn out to be low.

Of course, no one expects the news to be uniformly bright. One of the first companies announcing its results for the quarter. Caterpillar Tractor, said Friday it lost $92 million.

In technolo^, Texas Instruments is on record with an estimate that it will show a loss of as much as $100 million for the quarter. And in the still-depressed energy sector, Hughes Tool said Friday that it too will post a quarterly loss.

Even if analysts high expectations for profits in generai are fulfilled, there is no assurance that the stock market will re^nd with unbridled enthusiasm. With its dramatic rise since last August, many observers agree, the market has already anticipated a great deal of favorable news.

After the rise in interest rates over the last two months, there are some doubts stirring about promts for further earnings progress six months to a year from now.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dropped 18.03 points to 1,207.23 in the past week, for its third consecutive weekly decline.

The New York Stock Exchange composite index fell 1.02 to 96.89, whUe the American Stock Exchange market value index was up 1.02 at 245.72.

Big Board volume averaged 79.16 million shares a day, against 75.02 million the week before.

High real interest rates are going to slow the recovery early next year unless a major shift in Federal Reserve policy occurs, an unlikely development at' this juncture, contends the father-son team of economists S. Jay Levy and David Levy. "Current interest rates are discouraging capital investment, they said in their newsletter Industry Forecasts.

Indeed, doings at the Fed may distract investors from making any sort of distinct response to companies second-quarter results. Wall Street has been looking ahead warily for some time to the monthiy meeting this Tuesday and Wednesday of the policy-setting Open Market Committee, anticipating some move by the Fed to rein in the recent growth of the money supply.

Wall Streets preoccupation with the Fed can seem downright obsessive. But many analysts argue that it makes eminent sense at a time when the central bank is confronted with the challenge of trying to keep inflation at bay while promoting the recovery, all the while working to avert an international debt crisis.

WHIRLING - Wind power machines rotate in the wind in the Altamont Pass hills in California, producing electrical power for California utilities and consumers. Altamont Pass has become the nations most important wind power center, but residents of the area - just as at an experimental wind power machine near Boone - have complained about the noise levcj of the machines. (AP Laserphoto)

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 10,1W3-B-13

'Jedi' Thefts Score Piracy

HOLLYW()OD (AP) - Two thefts by gun-wielding film pirates of prints of Return of the Jedi last week underscore how the lucrative lure of the home video market is Increasing the stakes for movie bootleggers.

Its not uncommon to have a burglary, but this is the first time weve had two thefts by gunpoint, said Richard Bloeser, director of the Motion Picture Association of Americas Film Security Office.

At least three other burglaries of the blockbuster Star Wars sequel also have been reported since its release, Bloeser said, probably a record for such a shprt period.

In the past, pirates worked mainly by bribery or stealth to obtain 35mm studio prints and copy them onto 16mm film. Their clients were mostly wealthy residents of the Mideast, Africa and other areas where American films were scarce and popular.

There werent that many homes with I6mm projectors, Bloeser said, estimating reported thefts at 30 to 40 a year.

But with 30 million video players in homes worldwide, and 10 million expected in the United States by 1984-85, the potential for profit is skyrocketing.

Every one of those homes is a potential customer for the pirate, Bloeser said. Were talking about estimated losses as high as $700 million a year.

Consumers are not sympathetic to the problem, he added.

All they can think about is, The motion picture industry makes millions of dollars a year, so why should I worry? Its like cheating on your income tax and making false insurance claims.

First-run, smash hits like Jedi - which has grossed more than $153 million since it opened six weeks ago are particularly attractive because legal tapes are unavailable.

FBI Special Agent Larry Dick, who heads a whiteKiollar crime squad investigating film piracy, said a good-quality video of Jedi can fetch up to $200.

Groin. Sovboon Futuros Closo Lowor Cool Ship Christened

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By KEITH E. LEIGHTY AP Business Writer

Grain and soybean futures prices closed mostly lower Friday on the Chicago Board of Trade, but July corn posted a new high amid concern about deliverable supplies.

The July and September corn contracts were the lone exceptions to declining prices, as most of the record stocks of corn are tied up in government programs and cannot be sold, said Cliris Stewart, a grain analyst with ACLl International in White Plains, N.Y.

Although the Agriculture Department has estimated there will be a surplus at the end of the current marketing year of more than 3.3 billion bushels, only 409 million bushels can be marketed. The USDA has reported that 1.7 billion bushels are in the

CHICAGO (AP) The range ol com modity (uturea Uiis past week on the Chicago Board of Trade was :

Wk. Wk. Open U, Ctt.

5.000 bu minimum; doUart per buihel

Jul    3.411/4    3.35'.    3.35^4    -.03^4    2,060

Sep    3.53    3.46^4    3.47    - 04'i    17,722

Dec    3.70    3 62^4    3.63'i    - 03'^.    17,905

Mar    3.78i<i    3.71'4    3.72    - 02^4    4,727

May    3.79'ii    3.72':i    3.73'4    -.02    1,670

Jul    3 65'-4    3.57'i    3.62    + 00*4    731

Fri to Thurs sales 08.884 Total open interest 44.815 CORN

5.000 bu minimum; doUan per buabel

Jul    3 30'^    3.17'4    3.29*4    + 10+4    11,098

Sep.    3.05    2.96'4    3.05    +.06'-4    33.141

Dec    2.82    2.70+4    2.784    +.03+4    70,352

Mar    2.884    2.784    2.854    + 03's    20,797

May    2.94'4    2.85    2.914    +.03    5,465

Jul    2.98    2.884    2.944    + 034    3.888

Fri to Ihurs sales 170.442.

Total open interest 144.739.

OATS

5.000 bu minimum; doUan per buabel

Jul 1.524 1.474 1 49    -014    361

Sep    1.504    1.534    1.544    -.02    4,305

Dec    1.724    1.654    1 67    -.014    3,284

Mar    181    I TS    1.764    - 01    510

May    1.86    1 81    1.81    -004    90

Fri to Thurs sales 4,979 Total open interest 8,550 SOYBEANS

5.000 bu minimum; doilan per buabel Jul    6.24 4    5.97    6 184    + 08    4.794

Aug    6.294    6.04    6.22'-.i    +.064    16.038

Sep    6.374    6.104    6.314    +.074    7,483

Nov    6.53    6.24    6.444    + 074    41,997

Jan    6.66    6.36    6.584    +.084    6,139

Mar    6.774    6.504    6.714    + 084    1,874

May    6.874    6.574    6.81    + 08    583

Jul    6.96    6.66    6 89    + 08    637

Aug    6.93    6.75    6 88    + 07    208

Fri. to Thurs. sales 242.889 Total open interest 79,753 SOYBEAN OIL

80.000 IbSj^ doilan per lOO lbs

Aug

Dec Jan Mar May Jul

U_______________

Total open interest 53,514 SOYBEAN MEAL 100 tooa; doUan per too

Jul    180.00    I710    179.20    + 2.80    2,487

Aug    181.30    174.50    179.70    +2.10    10,280

Sep    184.00    176.00    182 40    +2.70    6.154

Oct    186 50    178 00    184.50    + 3.00    3,759

Dec    192.00    182.50    189 30    + 2.90    11.222

Jan    193.50    185.20    191.90    +3.40    4,423

Mar    197.50    190.00    196 30    + 2.80    1,497

May    200.00    194.50    199.70    + 2.00    175

Jul    204.00    197.00    203.00    +5 00    120

Aug    204.00    200.00    203.10    +1 40    10

Fri to Thurs sales 59,823 Total open interest 40,127

20.09    19.(l0    19.77

20.10    1910    19.77

20.22    19.30    19.91

20.35*    19.45    20.05

20.66    19.70    20.32

20.85    19.90    20.50

21.10    20.25    20.80

21.35    20.50    21 03

21.55 20.75 21.25 +1.22 21.50 21.32 21 32    + 24

to Thurs sales 68,198

+ 41    4,435

+ .31    14,859

+ 28    5,980

+ 26    5,624

+ .29    16,797

+ 30    4,513

+ 35    951

+ .26    223

126

farmer-owned reserve and the other 1.2 billion bushels are tied up under the Commodity Credit Corporation loan program.

Corn in the farmer-held reserve can be released if the price that farmers receive reaches $3.15 a bushel for five consecutive days. The price was $3.12 Thursday and the five-day average was $3.09.

In futures trading Friday, corn prices declined slightly early in the session as farmers increased sales slightly prior to the opening.

The July and September contracts recovered, though, as no traders who have commitments to deliver corn against the July contract have said they intend to do so. The contract expires July 20.

Com for delivery in subsequent months was lower, as the hot, dry weather that was expected to put the crop under stress this weekend now appears to be likely to help the com grow because sub-soil moisture is good, Stewart said.

Wheat prices were under pressure as farmers in the Great Plains states are continuing to make excellent progress with the harvest, Stewart said, and the weekend weather should be helpful.

Wheat settled W cents to 3'/i cents lower with the contract for delivery in July at $3.35% a bushel; com was IV4 cents lower to 3% cents higher with July at $3.29% a bushel; oats were 2% cents to 3% cents lower with July at $1.49 a bushel; and soybeans were 4/4 cents to 6% cents lower July at $6.18% a bushel.

Live cattle and frozen pork bellies were mostly lower and live hogs were mixed on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange as the markets remained in a well supplied situation, said Chuck Levitt, a livestock analyst in Chicago with Shearson-American Express Inc.

The cattle slaughter was ad^uate to meet demand, which appeared to be sluggish, said Levitt, and the hog slaughter ran 15 percent ahead of the same week a year ago.

The slaughter of 308,000 hogs Friday and the schedule for 75,-000 hogs to be slaughtered on Saturday surprised

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many traders, Levitt said, as they had bid prices up from their lows in late trading on speculation that the hot weather over the weekend would discourage marketing.

Pork bellies sank to new life-of-contract lows for the second consecutive session despite slightly higher prices on cash wholesale markets. Levitt said a lack of retailer interest to promote sales of bacon, which is made from pork bellies, has been pressuring prices.

Live cattle settled 0.08 cent to 0.15 cent lower with the contract for delivery in August at 61.67 cents a pound; feeder cattle were 0.10 cent to 0.25 cent lower with August at 63.62 cents a pound; live hogs were 0.35 cent lower to 0.30 cent higher with July at 46.47

cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies were 0.95 cent lower to 0.80 cent higher with July at 54.20 cents a pound.

Precious metals prices were steady on the Commodity Exchange in New York as the market tried to assess the significance of Thursdays rally, said Jack Boyd, vice president for commodity research with Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. in New York.

Prices had rallied Thursday after unconfirmed rumors surfaced that Brazil was unable to meet its foreign debt payments.

In trading Friday, gold settle 40 cents to $2.60 lower with the contract for delivery in July at $428 a troy ounce; silver settled 20 cents lower to 5 cents higher with July at $12.065 a troy ounce.

QUINCY, Mass. (AP) -Ship horns blew and red and white balloons rose into the air as the wife of House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr. christened the first coal-fired, coal-carrying ship built in the United States in more than 50 years.

Mrs. ONeill was the designated sponsor of the ship, built to transport U.S.-produced coal up the East Coast to New England Electric power plants at

Somerset and Salem.

The ship was built through the efforts of three companies, New England Electric, General Dynamics Quincy Shipbuilding Division and Keystone Shipping, a Philadelphia-based firm that builds and operates American vessels.

The two power plants the ship will serve generate electricity for more than 1 million customers in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New Hampshire.

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Consumers' Confidence Reflecfed In Buying

ByROBERTBURNS AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) - The evidence is in: Consumers are once again in a spending mood, encouraged by a better job market, new tax breaks and relief from high inflation.

In department stores, car lots and real estate offices across the country, the long-awaited turnaround in consumer sentiment is paying off in hi^er sales.

Economists say that means the fledgling econom-ic recovery may be longlasting.

Auto companies are seeing dramatic gains. The major companies said this past week that sales in the final 10 days of June soared nearly 39 percent above year-earlier levels - their best performance for that sales period since 1979.

Also, the big retail stores reported double-digit increases in June sales. Many said home furnishings and major appliances were particularly good sellers, an indication that people are more willing to take on new debt.

Monroe Greenstein, a retail analyst at the investment firm of Bear, Steams & Co., said the sales burst was a sign that consumers not only are less shy about going into debt, but are confident that better economic times are ahead.

One of the prerequisites for the consumer to spend is improvement in his confidence, said Fabian Linden, director of consumer research at the Conference Board, an industry-supported group that regularly monitors the economy.

Confidence in the economy had been undermined by the recent recession, Which began two years ago as hi^ interest rates stifled businessmen and consumers alike. The recession, the worst since the 1930s, apparently ended as 1983 began.

Now, with fewer workers being laid off and more being called back to the job - and with peoples take-home pay on the rise again, consumer confidence is surging.

The Conference Board said this past week that its measure of consumer confidence rose in June for the sixth straight month, and that its survey of consumer spending plans showed that people are more eager to make major purchases.

Earlier, the University of Michigan said its monthly survey showed consumer confidence in May at the highest level in more than a decade.

Businessmen seem to share the new enthusiasm. The Conference Board also said its measure of business executives confidence in the direction of the economy climbed to a record peak in this years April-June quarter.

That indicates a very strong belief among executives that economic conditions not only have improved but will improve further in the near term, said Lora S. Collins, director of the boards business conditions analysis.

That optimism about the economys direction may have been supported further by the Labor Departments report Friday that the nations unemployment rate fell to 10 percent of the civilian labor force in June from 10.1 percent in May.

The report said 1.2 million more people had jobs in June than the month before, pushing total employment above the 100 million mark, to 100.1 million. The number of people classified as unemployed dropped by 46,000, to 11.1 million.

Business Notes

STATION MANAGER

L. Gene Gray, president of radio stations WGHB-WRQR-FM, announced that John Moore has been promoted to station manager of WRQR-FM in Farm ville.

Moore has been employed at Farmville Broadasting Co. since 1973 and has serve! in various capacities, including co-host of the morning show on WRQR.

The new manager is a native of Pitt County and resides in Farmville.

CREDIT ROSE

According to weekly figures released by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, bank credit at 19 large commercial banks in the Fifth District rose $71,048,000 in the week ended June 22, raising bank credit outstanding to $43,227,838,000.

Total loans, adjusted - total loans exclusive of loans to domestic commercial banks - were up $213,394,000 while total investments were down $142,346,000.

Nonfinancial loans increased $76,683,000 as a result of respective gains of $43,167,000 in personal expenditure loans, $22,234,000 in all other nonfinancial loans, $20,934,000 in agricultural loans and $17,894,000 in commercial and industrial loans.

Included in the district are North Carolina, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina and most of West Virginia.

OFFICERS ELECTED

William Jerry Sutton of Hampton Industries Inc., Kinston, has been elected president of the Eastern Carolina Chapter of the National Association of Accountants for 1983-84.

New vice presidents include: William Ford, Planters National Bank, Rocky Mount; Ron Mueller, Hampton Industires; Bill Langley, Wachovia Bank & Trust, Greenville; and Kevin Greene, East Carolina University. Cecelia Scott and Brenda Ennis, both of Hampton Industries, were elected secretary and treasurer, respectively.

Lee Hyche of Empire Brushes, William Mister of ECU, and Wetzel Smith of Eaton Corp. were elected to the board of directors.

Past president Curtis Howell of Greenville Utilities was named director at large.

STOCK SPUT

Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. directors proposed a five-for-three stock split to be effective in October and increased its cash dividend rate for the 49th consecutive year, reported A Dano Davis, company president.

Davis said sales of the largest southern based retailer are predicted to reach $7 billion and a new peak in earnings is expected when final figures for the fiscal year ended June 29 are available.

Increased monthly dividends of 21.3 cents per share on present common stock for July, August, September and October were declared by the board. The previous rate was 20 cents per share or $2.40 annually.

GROUPBOUGHT T.L. Edwards, president of Fresh Way Foods of Greenville, announced that the firm recently acquired the Express Way Convenience Group of Rocky Mount from Langleys Convenient Marts Inc.

Edwards said there are 12 Express Way stores in eastern North Carolina, bringing the Fresh Way group to 39 stores. He said the new stores will continue to operate under the Express Way name for the next several months.

PCE MEETING The Coastal Plains Chapter of Professional Construction Estimators will have its monthly meeting Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Carlton House, U.S. 301 Business (213 N. Church St.) in Rocky Mount.

NAMEDTO POSTS Kathy Hardie was appointed media buyer and client services representative for Van Laan & Associates, an advertising, marketing and public relations firm based in Cary.

Ms. Hardie, an account executive with WYYD-FM prior to joining the firm, graduated from East Carolina University with a business administration degree.

TOTALSREPORTED Family Dollar Stores Inc. reported Uiat for the third quarter ended May 31, sales were $66,530,228 or some 31 percent above sales of $30,698,033 in 1982. Net income was $3,879,469 or 56 percent above net income of $2,492,049 for the comparable 1982 quarter.

For the nine months ended May 31, sales were $194,706,685 or 27 percent above sales of $153,210,757 for the first nine months of the prior fiscal year. Net income was $11,201,822 or 43 percent above the $7,817,953 for the 1982 period.

The discount store chain has 624 stores in 13 southeastern states.

CONaUDED PURCHASE Closing was held recently on the previously announced purchase of the stock of Uie Fast Fare and Zippy Mart convenience store chains by Crown Central Petroleum Corp. of Baltimore. The chains were formerly owned by Sun Co. Inc. of Radnor, Pa.

Fast Fare and Zippy Mart currently have 642 outlets in six southeastern states. Total revenues for both chains in 1982 were $328 million.

The Fast Fare and Zippy Mart stock will be held by F Z Corp., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Crown. Each of the store chains will retain its own identity, although they will be managed from a newly-established Ralei^ headquarters office.

RECORD PROJECTED Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. reported that its projected insurance sales for the first six months of 1983 total a record $164 million or 63.4 percent more than the same period last year.

During the first six months, Northwestern said it collected $93.4 million of life insurance premium, up 21.5 percent over the same period a year earlier. The total includes $66.3 million of premium on permanent life insurance plans, a 20.3 percent increase over the first six months of 1982, the company said.

EMPLOYEES PARTICIPATED

Virginia Electric and Power Co. said it had the largest number of employees participating and raised the most money of any corporate employee team in the nation in the 1983 March of Dimes WalkAmerica campaign.

The 3,386 walkers representing Vepco teamwalk raised almost $215,000, more than twice the amount contributed by the next highest utility, said Vepco.

MAGAZINE DISTRIBUTED - Workers for the the Pitt-Greeoville Chamber of Commerce prepare Whos Who In Business in the Pitt-GreoivUle Chamber of Commerce for distributkm to the chambers 90Q members. David Duffus (standing), chairman of the board of the chamber, said the lOOiiage

publication, which lists chamber members in alphabetical order and by classification, will be used as a buyers guide as well as a business directory. Workers above are, left to ri^t, Jodie Louya, Stephana Bell and David Giordana. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Strikes' Timing Hurting Brazil

BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) -A strike by many of Brazils refinery and metal workers threatens to wipe out recent economic gains and nun a debt-crippled governments efforts to regain the confidence of sk^tical international bankers.

Between 60,000 and 70,000 workers are on strike in scattered areas of this vast nation.

A government court (te-clared the strike illegal and, although no direct action has been taken against the strikers, an army division is on alert in Sao Paulo, Brazils largest city.

The strikes were sparked by government measures to cut public spending and reduce inflation, now running at 127 percent annually.

Shigeaki Ueki, head of the state-run oil company Petrobras, put losses for first two days of the strike, which began Wednesday, at $1 miHion.

Ueki has ordered the immediate import of $25 million worth of petroleum products, such as gasoline and diesel fuel, as a hedge against possible shortages from the strike.

Brazil, Latin Americas largest country, is struggling to pay off a foreign debt of $90 billion, the largest in the Third World.

Bakeries To Be Sold Under Trade Settlement

THOMASVILLE, Ga. (UPI) Flowers Industries Inc. announced Friday it will sell two bakeries in a tentative settlement of a 1980 Federal Trade Commission complaint that accused the company of trying to eliminate competition.

The bakeries - in Gadsden, Ala. and High Point. N.C. - must be sold within 30 months, and their brand names Sunbeam or Battermaid in North Carolina, and Hometown in

Alabama also will be sold, said an FTC spokesman in Atlanta. The sales must be approved by the FTC.

Future acquisitions within 200 miles of current Flowers plants also are subject to the approval of the FTC as part of the settlement, the company said.

The settlement is open to a 60-day public comment period before it can be finalized.

Flowers acquired seven bakeries between 1973 and

1980, and the complaint is an outgrowth of FTC investigations that began in the early 1970s into Flowers acquisition practices, said the FTC spokesman.

The complaint claimed that Flowers eliminated competition and increased baking industry competition in several markets.

Flowers senior vice president C M. Wood said the Alabama bakery was acquired in 1972, and the North Carolina bakery acquired in

1977. Both bakeries are average size facilities, he said, adding that Flowers does not break out individual production figures.

Wood said Flowers will not be withdrawing from the markets served by the bakeries, but will continue to serve them from other facilities.

This is not a ruling or guilt or innocence, said Wood, but a ne^tiated settlement by both sides.

We are pleased to finally resolve a matter that has been proceeding formally or informally for over ten years, said Flowers president Amos R. McMuUian.

With the' divestitures. Flowers will have 28 remaining bakeries, and is expected to have sales this year of $550 million, said Wood. The company is involved in the manufacture of baked ^lods, snack foods, frozen foods and food ingredients.

LENDING INCREASED

Savings institutions in North Carolina experienced net savings inflows and increased lending activity during May, accoring to the Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta, the regional credit reserve bank for savings institutions in the Southeast.

Net savings inflows amounted to $45.2 million compared with outflows of $3.3 million for the month a year earlier. Gross inflows,..which include new deposits and interest added to accounts, totaled $1,038.3 million and were partially offset by withdrawals of $993 million.

Lending activity was above the year-earlier level, as mortgage loans totaled $171.8 million compared with $34.4 million in 1982.

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Tribute Book Has Been Joy To Compiler

By CAROL TVER Reflector Staff Writer Greenville resident Bob Hungate brings joy and dedication to whatever he does whether iVs guiding the management of the family hobby shop business now thriving in four cities, playing with any or all of his nine grandchildren, tending his immaculately beautiful yard, or researching the history of the bomber group in which his brother Ernest served during World War II.

His research of his brothers war experiences began as a loving effort to put in order and save for posterity some pages from his brothers wartime diaries and some of his brothers letters home given him by their mother, Lelia E. Hungate of Norfolk, Va.

In reading the letters and the diary and scrapbook and other papers that Ernests widow, Carol, let me have, Hungate said. I realized that it would be good to team up pages of the diary that told of the same events and impressions as the letters. Ernest went on 34 bombing missions over Germany, France and Hungary between June 4 and Oct. 2,1944, and he almost always wrote a letter to our parents right after he got back. He also made concise daily or nearly daily entries in his diary. These were little notes to himself, often more about a movie plot than about a bombing mission and often somewhat illegible. I decided to transcribe the contents of each diary page out beside each pasted-on page itself so it could be easily read.

Project Keeps Growing The tribute to Ernest has now reached 199 oversized pages and is still growing. Hungate continues to make contact with people who knew his brother during the war and to find new sources of information about the 96th Heavy Bombardment Group of the 338th Bomb Squadron of the Eighth Air Force. All new information is duly entered into the book.

He has worked many, many evenings on the book and calls the project, The most fun Ive ever had in my life.

Ernest and Bob Hungate grew up in Norfolk, Va., during the Great Depression, Bob says, and never knew they were depressed. Ernest went off to Virginia Polytechnical Institute to study to be

an engineer right after high school, but soon entered the Army Air Corps, leaving behind an envious and admiring four-years-younger brother who wanted nothing more than to follow in his path. Bob did enter the Air Corps later on, but never got outside the United States before the war ended.

After some training in the states, Ernest joined the %th at Snetterton Heath Airfield, Norfolk County, England, as a navigator. His unit sustained the largest loss of planes of any of the more than 100 bomber groups that regularly flew missions over Europe during the war. He was never seriously injured nor captured. He returned to the States toward the end of the war, finished his education as a mechanical engineer at VPI in 1947, married in 1951 and became the father of three sons. He spent his working life as an air-conditioning engineer, mostly in Greensboro, N.C., and was the holder of three patents for inventions in the air-conditioning field.

In all the years after his missions, Hungate says there was only one time that his brother ever talked about his experience. That was an into-the-wee-hours talk while both were on leave shortly after Ernest returned from England. In the privacy of their room, by referring to his diaries, Ernest was able to recall for Bob the details of his experiences. He left nothing out, in my opinion, Hungate recalls. Not only did I receive his complete recollections of each mission, but all the datails of the various escapades of a 22-year-old in the prime of his life.

Ever afterward. Bob says, Ernest seemed to have no desire to talk about the war years. He died in 1974 following surgery for a brain tumor.

Farflung Contacts

Little did Bob Hungate know when he started pairing diary pages and letters of the experiences the compilation would hold for him. He has learned of organizations devoted to the history of various bomber groups and the Eighth Air Forc and has acquired books and documents and arm bands and patches available for further illumination of every mission in which his brother participated. Through letters and phone calls, he has met many persons as interested as he in the preservation of these memories.

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ERNEST HUNGATE...(second from left) posed with some of his fellow members of the 96th Bomb Group about which Greenville resident Bob Hungate has compiled a history centering around his brother.

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AN EFFORT OF GREAT PLEASURE...is one way Bob Hungate (pictured) describes the compilation of information and memorabilia about his brother Ernests bomber missions during World War II.

Only a few weeks ago he was thrilled to receive a letter and some new mementos from John Greene of Rochester, N.Y., a man Ernest Hungate went to his grave believing had died behind enemy lines. In truth, Greene told Bob Hungate, he and his fellow crew members were shot down oyer Nuremburg, Germany. He was nearly beaten to death by a German civilian, saved by a German soldier and spent the remainder of the war in a German prison camp.

New Historical Information

He was able to share with Jim Bryer, a newly made friend in St. Louis, Mo., about 30 pages of historical material, for Bryer to use in preparing a speech for an aeronautical society. Bryer wrote back to thank him and say that three of the documents Bob had sent had delighted the history buffs he was addressing because they were ones not previously known to them. He also shared two recollections about Ernest one about his having a pencil in his hand destroyed by. flak during a mission, yet being uninjured; another about his mathematical calculation of a shortcut enabling their plane, running late, to catch up with a squadron headed for Germany.

Hungate has learned that the Eighth Air Force holds a reunion each year. This years will be held in October in Houston, Texas. He also has learned of an English organization called FOTE

(Friends of the Eighth), headquartered near Snetterton Heath, which exists to be a friend to American veterans of the Eighth Air Forces. Tours are arranged of major sites of interest to the Eighth each year and Hungate hopes that he and his wife, Nell, can take this tour later on. Hes also delighting in the writing of Roger A. Freeman, an Englishman who writes about the history of the Eighth Air Force, and hopes to meet him some day.

Not For Sale

Hungate states explicitly in his book that it is not for sale, only for giving away. He plans to have a few copies printed and give one to each of his brothers sons, to each of his own three children, and to various friends of his brother that hes met through the project. He also plans to place a copy in the East Carolina University Library and with various historical organizations that might have a direct interest.

Hungate wrote in his preface for the book: It (this project) has been an effort of great pleasure because of the memories it has recalled and sincere love for my brother Ive been able to express. If my children and grandchildren, at some future date, can know Ernest Cornell Hungate better and can, to some small degree, experience the adventure he went through, then they will profit by the knowledge.

AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE INSIGNIA PATCH...S included in the book.

Anyone wishing or having information to share about any member squadron or, group of the Eighth Air Force or the Eighth Air Force itself is invited to contact R.B. Hungate, 504 Westchester Drive, Greenville, N.C. 27834, The address of the Eighth Air Force Historical Society is Box 3556, Hollywood, Fla. 33023.

BROTHERS AND FELLOW SOLDIERS...Bob (left) and Ernest Hungate posed together near the end of the war.





C-2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July lO, 1983

Candlelight Wedding

Takes Place Saturday

Brenda Arlene Pena of Greenville and JaiTies Jay Jester of Roanoke Rapids were united in marriage Saturday evening at 7:30 in a candlelight service at Our

Redeemer Lutheran Church. Father Jerry Sherba of St. Gabriels Catholic Church and the Rev. Graham Nahouse officiated at the double ring ceremony.

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MRS. JAMES JAY JESTER

At Wits End

By Erma Bombeck

Have you any idea what fear was rated No. 1 in a recent survey among adults?

Speaking before a group.

Thats right, the anxiety of standing before an audience beat out fear of death, fear of failing, fear of heights and fear of alienation. (Come to think of it, they all mean the same thing.)

It (Kcurred to me that this year a virtual army of amateur speakers will, for the first time, take to the podiums to conduct club meetings, volunteer seminars and instructional classes.

How do the professionals handle it?

*Demand a podium capable of supporting a dead body (yours) up to 187 pounds. Throw yourself over it, being sure to hook your arm over the microphone so you wont slip away.

Adhere to the old wives tale, Feed a cold crowd, starve a speaker. It cuts down on spitting up.

Insist on a table near the restroom. For some unexplained reason, speakers have a kidney wish.

Never read a speech. Use note cards which serve a double purpose. You can rearrange them to fit your audience and in the event the person who introduces you uses the jokes on your first eight cards, use the sharp cutting edges on your wrists.

Believe me, I know what you are going through. A couple of years ago, my son brought home a mimeographed memo from school announcing that the principal was having 12 parents in at a time to engage in dialogue about the future of the school.

At the be^nning of the meeting, he announced that before the session was over he wanted to hear from EVERYONE. If they didnt volunteer, hed call on them. One by one, I watched them get it over with. Questions on what the administration was doing to raise standards of education...could he please interpret the test scores in relation to those given the previous year...did he feel that schools were becoming isolated or were they addressing themselves to alternatives, such as technical or vocational classes.

As a profession speaker, I wafted until he caUed iqmn me. Then 1 casually poked myself in the eye with a green felt-tipped pen and stood up to reveal the back of my dr^ which was super-bonded to my body. I opened my mouth to discover my tongue had dried up, causing my lip to shrink. I cleared my thi^t, foled my arms over my chest (the green ink would never wash out) and asked, Yes, do the nuns really shave their heads?

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The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Ramona Pena of Brooklyn, N.Y. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. James B. Jester of Greenville.

A program of wedding music was presented by organist Lois Hoot. Cora Lee sang Ave Maria, One Hand, One Heart and The Lords Prayer.

The bride was given in marriage by her mother and escorted by the father of the bridegroom. She wore a candldight gown designed with a Queen Anne neckline and reembroidered alenctm lace bodice with seed pearls. The full chiffon skirt and cathedral length train were accented with alatcwi lace. The long fitted sleeves featured calla style cuffs in re-embroidered alencon lace with seed pearls. For a headpiece, she wore an arrangement of silk ivory and lavender flowers and a chapd length veil of illusion. She carried a bouquet of white orchids, stephanotis and English ivy.

Sherry McMahon of Win-terville served as honor attendant. She wore an A-line iced lavender skirt with a deq) lavoKler raglan sleeve silk top accented with a mauve cummerbund. She carried a purple orchid accented with stephanotis and English ivy.

Greg Jester of Greenville, brother of the bridegroom, served as best man. Ushers were David Jester, brother of the bridegroom, Thomas Coghill and Mike Waters, all of Greenville and Samuel Mills of Louisburg.

A rec^tion with dancing and a buffet was held to honor the couple after the ceremony at the Greenville Rotary Club. Mrs. Eileen Wilier coordinated the ception and was assisted by Helen Whichard and Fran McKinney.

The parents of the bridegroom entertained at an after-rehearsal barbeque at their home. Other parties and showers were given in honor of the couple.

The bride received a degree in fashion illustration from the Fashion Institute of N.Y. and is a graduate of Mitchells Hairstyling Academy. She was employed at Tlie Salon. The britte-groom is a graduate of J.H. Rose High School and East Carolina University, where he received a masters degree in education. He is employed by the city school system of Roanoke Rapids.

After a wedding trip to Williamsburg and the North Carolina coast, the couple will reside in Roanoke Rapids.

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Engagement Announced I    T / J

LELA CAROL DAWSON...is the daughter of Mr I    * ^

LELA CAROL DAWSON...is the dau^ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jake W. Dawson of Route 6, Greenville, who announce her engagement to John Frankie Singleton Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John Frankie Singleton of Route 3, Washington. An Aug. 28 wedding is planned.

Ms. Clark To Give Talk

The Welcome Wagon Club of Greenville will have its mee^g Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. at the Brot Valley Country aub.

Margaret Gark, of Sheppard Memorial Library, will give the program at the luncheon meeting. Her topic will be Current Best Sellers.

Reservations should be made by 9 p.m. Monday by contacting Mary Ernst at 756-8117 or Carol Lahn at 752-8882.

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August Weddings Are Planned By Brides-Elect

TAMMY DENISE STANCILL...is the daughter of Mr. ana Mrs. j.w. Stancill of Ayden, who announce her engagement to William David Harrell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Harrell of Gates County. The wedding will take place Aug. 20.

SHERYL ELIZABETH GLADSON...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David E. Gladson of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Stephen Earl Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Carl Scott of Greenville. A Sept. 20 wedding is planned.

JULIA WARREN HOUSE...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. House Jr. of Plymouth, who announce her engagement to Wilbur Martin Barfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis E. Barfield of Plymouth. The wedding is planned for Aug. 14.

DONNA CAROL FULFORD...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Francis Fulford of Fountain, who announce her engagement to Alexander Walton Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Franklin Long III of Rockingham. An Aug. 13 wedding is planned.

Spices Have History Of Use For Warding Off Diseases

UNION BE.4CH, N.J. (AP) - When you bite into a cool, refreshing peppermint candy, do you kill germs that can cause bad breath? Is that entrancing cologne youre wearing protecting you from disease

It might be, says Dr. James Morris, a member of the American Chemical Society and a project biochemist for International Flavors and Fragrances in Union Beach. Most fragrance materials arent as powerful as chemical disinfectants, but some do have a measurable antibacterial and antifungal effect. Peppermint oil was re

cently shown to be one of the most potent flavoring, he said. A team of biologists at Gorakhpur University in India reported that the oil kills a fungus that causes lung disease and ear infections.

Peppermint also works well against other fungi that cause animal diseases and spoil food. Tests showed that peppermint is twice as strong as quintozene, which is used to protect seeds from fungus, and up to seven times as potent as other antifungal chemicals.

According to Morris, people have used spices and perfumes against microor

ganisms for centuries. The Israelites of the Old Testament did not have water to spare to clean clothes, so they used perfumes to keep them clean. When sacrificed animals were burned the smell was terrible. The Israelites purified the temple by burning incense, a practice which has been adopted by the Catholic Church and others.

Spices were also used against plagues, Morris adds. In uW 1600s, physicians treating plague victims wore leather beaks stuffed with clove, cinnamon and other aromatics to ward off infection.

Obviously, these people didnt know microorganisms caused disease, Morris says. A doctor who wrapped a perfumed rag over his face didnt know that a cloth and possibly an antibacterial perfume would prevent his contracting pneumonia. He knew it made his work less offensive; it covered up the bad smell. Later on. someone might have noticed that doctors who wore masks didnt become sick.

Morris says that many fragrances and flavoring are chemicals called terpenes, which are not very attractive to microorganisms. He and his colleagues

have tested more than 500 fragrance materials and have found that more than 200 of them show some effectiveness against microorganisms. and that 64 fra

grance materials suppress microorganisms that can cause b^y odor, yeast infections and staph infections.

Clove-flavor, musk, sandalwood, lemon-scent and

a few others were as strong as carbolic acid, a common antiseptic, Morris says, but none were as strong as soap disinfectants. Peppermint oil, which worked so well against fungi, did nothing against bacteria.

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Samuel Robert's Fall Ultrasuede Showing is Here!

Wednesday, July 13th from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Ultrasuede ... machine washable for the practical you ... sleek and chic for the elegant you!

Belk Tyler of Greenville invites you to a trunk showing of Samuel Roberts entire fall ultrasuede collection. Come in and meet Michael Platos, the Samuel Robert New York representative. Join us in our Regency Room for informal modeling and refreshments.

A. Belted and slim ultrasuede coat with convertible cuff detailing. In mushroom, marine blue, gray flannel and strawberry. Sizes 6 to 16, 500.M.

B. Slim but easy ... the basic skirt in ultrasuede. Mushroom, marine blue, gray flannel and strawberry. Sizes 6 to 16, 196.00. Matching tucked front blouse. Sizes 6 to 16, 76.00.

C. Ultrasuede 25" basic blazer. Sizes 6 to 16,

324.00. Ultrasuede skirt. Sizes 6 to 16, 196.00.

Both in mushroom, marine blue, gray flannel and strawberry. Pure silk stripe blouse in gray/ red, blue/spice combination. Sizes 6 to 16,140.00.

Please note: all items may be special ordered in sizes 4 to 18 and in any color offered by the company for fall '83.

Shop Monday through Saturday 10 a.m. Until9p.m.-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





C4-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C -Sunday, July 10,1903

Couple Marries In Ceremony Saturday

Miss Grimes Weds Mr. Jones Saturday

STOKES - Teresa .Ann Greene of Greenville and Paul Richard Stilley Jr. of Woodbridge. Va. were united in marriage Saturday at 3 p.m in the Sweet Gum Grove Free Will Baptist Church. The double ring ceremony was performed bv the Rev JohnD Hdi.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Shirley Bowen Greene of Greenville and the late Kenneth E Greene. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs W Sherrill Johnson of Stokes and Paul Richard Stilley Sr. of Middlesex.

.A program of piano and organ music was presented by Gail Crisp of Stokes Darry l Mitchell of Greenville sang Tf" and "The Wedding Prayer"

The bride was given in marriage by her mother and escorted by her brother. Michael Greene She wore a white forinal gown of sheer organza and chantilly lace. It was designed with an empire waist band and back bow. lace covered bodice and Queen Anne neckline with a lace border and scattered seed pearls. The full sleeves of organza featured a floral Chantilly lace design and matching lace cuffs. The A-line skirt of organza was designed with double tiers of lace bordered flounces and lace edge that flowed into a chapel length tram. She wore a walking length illusion veil edged in rosepoint chantilly lace. It was held in place by a Juliet headpiece trimmed in chantilly lace beaded with pearls and rhinestones She carried a cascade bouquet highlighted with a purple throated orchid corsage

Paula Tetterton of Bethel, sister of the bridegroom, was matron of honor and wre a , formal gown of white taffeta overlaid with floral printed organza of pink and orchid flowers The open neckline featured a ruffle outlining the off-shoulder bodice and scooped back. An orchid cummerbund with attached bow encircled the waistline of the skirt bordered with

MRS. PAUL RICHARD STILLEY JR.

double ruffles. She carried a spring bouquet complemented by a cymbidium orchid.

Bridesmaids included Connie Greene of Greenville, sister of the bride, and Sylvia Stilley of Stokes, sister of the bridegroom. They wore orchid gowns of organza over taffeta. The bodice featured an open neckline with double ruffled flounces and scooped back. The full skirt was adorned with a bow at the waistline. They carried identical spring bouquets.

The stepfather of the bridegroom was best man and ushers were Joe Lassiter of Woodbridge, Va., cousin of the bridegroom, and E.J. Barbour of Smithfield, uncle of the bridegroom.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor CU.ME FOR DESSERT Angel Cake a la Mode Brandied Cherries

BRA,\D1ED CHERRIES For unwrinkled cherries, resist all temptation to stir in the sugar quickly

1' : pounds dark red sweet cherries, stemmed and pitted I about 4 cupsi 2 cups sugar 1 cup brandy

Into a straight-sided crock or similar utensil turn cherries, sugar and brandy DO NOT STIR Store covert in a cool dark place Each day. using a large spoon, turn cherries over in the liquid, but do not stir. Continue this process until sugar is dissolved and the cherries are as brandipd as you wish - this will take many weeks or much longer When ready, keep covered in the refrigerator. Makes an excellent dessert topping. Cherries will not retain their original color

DELI PICNIC Cold Meats & Potato Salad Cole Slaw & Pickled Beets Carry-alone Cake PICKLED BEETS My sister Phyllis has a new version of her standard recipe Two i-pound cans sliced beets

cup cider vinegar . cup sugar 10 whole cloves 2-inch piece stick cinnamon 1 teaspoon ground allspice

Dram tjeets 'ave liquid In a medium .saucepan bring beet liquid, vinegar, sugar, cloves,

cinnamon and allspice to a boil: boil 2 minutes. Pack beets into a 1-quart jar: pour boilmg liquid art spices over top. If there is not enough liquid to cover beets make up the rest with boilmg water. Chill for several days to allow flavors to blend before serving.

MORNING COFFEE Oatmeal Muffins & Coffee

OATMEAL MUFFINS My sister Phyllis favors this recipe from a new book written by two professors of nutrition.

1 cup plain low-fat yogurt G cup oil

1 egg

IG cups flour G cup quick-cooking rolled oats

2 tablespoons sugar

2 teaspoons baking powder G teaspoon baking soda

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Grease muffin tins lightly or line with cupcake papers. In 2 2-cup measuring cup, measure yogurt and oil: and egg: stir to combine. In a bowl combine remaming dry ingredients. Add yogurt mixture to flour mixture, stirring approximately 25 strokes. Fill muffm tins to the rim. Bake for 20 minutes. Yield: 8 large muffins.

From "Nutrition for the Pnme of Your Life by Annette Natow & Jo-.Ann Heslin i McGraw-Hill).

The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of orchid organza desired with cap sleeves. The mother of the bridegroom chose a formal powder blue silkylure polyester gown with an organza jacket.

Stella McLawhorn of Ayden directed the ceremony and Janita Ross of Ayden presided at the register.

A reception was given by relatives of the bridegroom Dana Bowen of Ay-den gave out rice bags. Eve Lassiter, aunt of the bridegroom, served cake and Libby Bowen of Ayden poured punch.

After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will be living in Woodbridge, Va.

The bride is a graduate of J.R. Rose High School and w'Ul be attending Northern Virginia Community College. The bridegroom attended North Pitt High School and is employed by Ace Plumbing Co. of Virginia.

An after-rehearsal dinner was given by the bridegrooms aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lassiter of Woodbridge. Va.

WLNTERVILLE - Constance Ophelia Grimes of Kinston and Kennie Levis Jones of Trenton were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at two oclock in the Good Hope Free Will Baptist Church here. The doubte ring ceremony was performed by theRev W.H.MitcheU.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ernest Grimes of Winterville, and parents of the bridegroom are Mr and Mrs. Willie W ilson Jones of Trenton.

The bride was given in marriage by her brother, Lee Ernest Grimes Jr. She wore an ivory qiana gown fashioned with a mandarin neckline. The sleeveless gown was designed with a chantilly lace yoke, insert bodice and full circular skirt with the hem finished in rows of chantilly lace. She wore a matching lace chapel length mantilla veil and carried a white Bible covered in roses.

Valadia Grimes of Lum-berton, sister-in-law of the bride, served as matron of honor. She wore a violet gown with spaghetti straps, fitted bodice and an A-line skirt. The gown was accented by a pleated sleeveless jacket with a mandarin tie collar. She carried a rainbow-colored chrysanthemum.

Bridesmaids were Camilla King, cousin of the bride, and llyene Grimes, sister of the bride, both of Winterville, and Brendette Jones of Charlotte, sister of the bride. Each bridesmaid wore a pink or blue gown with a ribbon tie belt and back and front scooped necklines with lace

HARD AND SOFT HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (AP) - The difference between so-called hard and soft water is that hard water contains more minerals than soft, according to researchers at a natural spring water company.

All natural waters have some mineral elements, but to be considered soft there must be less than 100 parts of solid material per million parts of H20, say the Moun-

triro. Hiey each carried a chrysaoUiemum matching the color (rf tbmr dress.

Flower girt was Chetoca King of Winto^iUe, cousin of the tHiite. She wore a pink gown trimmed in white lace and ruffles with matching ribtxms. Urian Mattocks of Nav Bern, s(m of the bri<te-groom, served as ring bearer.

James Willie III of Winston-SaloD, nephew of the bridegromn, was best mao. Ushers were Ronald WUlie and Randall Willie, both nephews of the bride

groom from Durham, and Befeard Grnes (rf Win-terviUe, brotbm- of the bride.

A pro0^ (rf wedding muc was presented by organist Roger Ingram. Sdoists were Calvin Henderson and Clifton Smith, cousin of the bride.

A Meption was 0ven by-the pallnts of the bride in the cburd) fellowship ball following the ceremony.

Refreshments were served by the pareats of the bride after the rehearsal. A luncheon was giv by friends and several parties were

given in honor of the couple.

The bride graduated from St. Augustine CoUe^ with a special education degree and attended ECU. She is employed bv Caswell Center,

Kinston. The bridegroom attended St. Augustine College and is presratly enrolled at Lenior Community College in the associate arts program. He is employed by Caswell Center.

After a" wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside in Kinston.

^ on ''<!

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Couple Marries On Saturday

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C -Sunday. July 10,1983C-5

MRS. IRVING LEE SMITH III

Births

MitcbeU Born to L/Corporal and Mrs. John Alan Mitchell, Newport, a daughter, Shannon Arline, on July 3, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Williams Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Atwood Williams, Windsor, a daughter, Casey Nicole, on July 3,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

DeLuze Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John Michael DeLuze, Route 8, Greenville, a daughter, Xenia Kamaria, on July 3, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Peterson Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Westley Maybon Peterson, 103-E Lakeview Terrace, a daughter, Tracy Anita, on July 3, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Hoggard Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Tony Warren Hoggard, Rich Square, a son, Randy Warren, on July 4, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Rdiinson Bom    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

James Richard Robinson, Ayden, a daughter, Jami Leigh, on July 4,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Price

Bom    to    mr.    and    Mrs.

William Molloy Price, 110 Greenway St., a son, Brian Steven, on July 4, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Meek

Bom    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Robert Henry Meek Jr., Washington, a son, Robert Henry III, on July 4,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Jones

Born    to    Mr.    and    Mrs.

Ronnie Lee Jones, Jr., Branches Estates Lot 24-C, a son, Brandon Lee, on July 5, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Holloman Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Richard James Holloman, 126 Ripley Drive, a son, Brent James, on July 5,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Roberts Bom to Mr. and Mrs. LaVem Dale Roberts, 2410-A E. Third St., a son, Vernon Chadwick, on July 5,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

SANDWICH MAKINGS

STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) - To avoid the monotony of the brown bag lunch, vary sandwich fillings and bread, suggests Dee Ann Hess, a Registered Dietitian at Oklahoma State University.

Wholewheat, bran and pita bread add extra nutrition as well as provide a change, she points out. And, occasionally, forget the sandwich and try soups, stews or spa^etti, she adds. Wide-mouthed, insulated jars make it easy to carry a hot lunch from home.

AHOSKIE - Frieda Virginia Register of Greenville and Irving Lee Smith III of Robersonville were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at three oclock in the First Baptist Church here. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. James E. Langford.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Enos William Rogister Jr. of Woodland. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Lee Smith Jr. of Robersonville.

A program of wedding music was provided by organist David Robertson of Ahoskie, pianist Anita Thompson of Greenville, and flautist Debbie Rawls of Greenville. Soloist was Bland Baker of Ahoskie.

Escorted by her father, the bride wore the wedding gown worn by the mother of the bridegroom. The gown was fashioned of ivory silk mist taffeta. Re-embroidered alencon lace circled the scooped neckline and the skirt extended into a chapel train. Lace appliques accented the midriff and the flared chapel length skirt. She wore a bridal hat overlaid in re-embroidered alencon lace beaded with pearls. A silk flower ac

cented the flipped side of the brim. Waltz length illusion fashioned the hat. She carried a cascading bouquet of white butterfly roses and ivory daisies accented with English ivy and picot edged ribbon.

Nita Rogi^er of Raleigh served her sister as maid of honor. She wore a formal gown designed by Phyllis for Bianchi fashioned with an open neckline, miniature roiled shoulder straps and a fitted bodice of ivory linen. The waistline was encircled with cerise grosgrain ribbon, from which fell the modified A-line skirt in a contrasting shade of azqre linen. The sleeveless gown was complemented with a short ivory eyelet jacket enhanced with short sleeves. She carried a garden nosegay of pink gerber daisies, snow crystal chrysanthemums and babys breath tied with ivory ribbons.

Bridesmaids were Teresa Dilday of Kinston, Darlene Gifford, Cindy McNeill and Jody White, all of GreenvUle,

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Marsha Mizelle of Ahoskie and Cheryl Swearingen of Snow Camp. Each bridesmaid wore a gown and carried a nosegay identical to that of the honor attendant.

TTie father of the bridegroom served as best man. Ushers were Charlie Smith of Greenville, Robert Smith and Dennis Smith, all brothers of the bridegroom, and Dennis House, all of Robersonville, Greg Mosley of Ahoskie and Reid Bullock of Greenville.

The wedding was directed by Mrs. Carl D. Taylor of Ahoskie. Mrs. John Powell of Ahoskie presided at the guest register.

A reception was given by the brides parents in the church fellowship hall following the ceremony.

A bridesmaids luncheon was given Friday by Mrs.

Carl Taylor at her home in Ahoskie. A rehearsal dinner was given Friday by the family of the bridegroom at the Holiday Inn in Williamston. An afterrehearsal party was given at

BUSY SEASON EXPECTED

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -Southern Californias Orange County is expected to have one of its busiest tourist seasons ever, according to the Anaheim Area Visitor and Convention Bureau.

Despite recent inclement weather, over 30 million vacationers are expected to come to the greater Anaheim area in 1983, most during the summer season.

the Ahoskie Youth Center by Mr. and Mrs l.L Smith Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Erskine Love Jr., Mr and Mrs. Douglas Morgan Padgett, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dews and Mrs. Dennis Torbet McLawhom. grandmother of the bride. The bridal couple was entertained with several other parties and dinners before the w.edding The bride is a graduate of Ahoskie High School and received her B S. in nursing from East Carolina Universi

ty. She is employed by Pitt

County .Memorial Hospital. The bridegroom is a graduate of Roanoke High School and attended East Carolina University. He is employed by Robersonville Products' After a wedding trip to Bermuda, the couple will reside in Greenville

Eastern

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C-6-The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 10,1903

Bratton-Eley Wedding Vows Are Solemnized

Double Ring Ceremony Performed In Elkin

RALEIGH - St. Marys Chapel here was the scene of the wedding ceremony of Pauline Elizabeth Eley and Thomas Jackson Bratton Saturday at high noon. The Rev. Roger Thompson performed the ceremony.

A program of wedding music was presented by Mrs. E L. Norton, pianist, and Crystal Hearn, who played the clarinet. Both are from Raleigh.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Eley of Jackson and Dr. Mary Jo

Bratton of Greenville and the Rev. Jesse Melville Bratton of Cedar Bluff, Va.

The bride was given in marriage by her fafier. Her honor attendant was her sister, Mrs. James Tunstall of Louisville, Ky. and bridesmaids were \|fs. David Eley of Beaumont. Tex., sister-in-law of the bride, and Katherine Bratton of Raleigh, sister of the bridegroom.

The best man was Jess Melville Bratton III of Columbia. S.C., brother of the

MRS. THOMAS JACKSON BRATTON

Cooking Is Fun

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor COCKTAIL PARTY Sardine Spread & Crackers Vegetable Platter & Dip Choice of Beverages HELEN RIDLEYS SARDINE SPREAD This may also be used as a filling for tiny cream puffs. 3^4-ounce can brisling sardines, drained 3-ounce package cream cheese

2 tablespoons mayonnaise 2 tea^ns lemon juice *'4 cup minced scallions ' 4 cup minced parsley Salt to taste

Mash sardines: with a ^n beat In cream cheese, mayonnaise and lemon juice until blended; stir in scallions, parsley and salt. Cover tightly and chill. Makes 1 cup. Serve with crackers or toast squares.

DINNER FARE Poached Salmon & Potatoes Peas 4 Cucumber Relish Cherry Strudel 4 Coffee CUCUMBER RELISH May be served at once or stored overnight in the refrigerator.

1 large (Hunce) cucumber, pared and sliced thin 1 small (3-ounce) onion, sliced thin 1'2 teaspoons sugar 1 tablespoon cider vinegar '2 cup plain yogurt 2 teaspoon salt Pepper to taste Fresh mint, coarsely chopped

In a medium bowl, toss together cucumber, onion, sugar, vinegar, yogurt, salt and pepper. Turn into a serving bowl; cover and chill. At serving time garnish with fresh mint. Makes about \\ cups.

bridegroom, David Eley of Beaumont, Tex., brother of the bride, and James Tunstall of Louisville, Ky., brother-in-law of the bride

Mrs. Ballard S. Gay directed the wedding.

The bride wore a white silk organza gown featuring a V-neckline and sheer yoke. The fitted bodice and neckline were covered in matching lace. Motifs of lace trimmed the entire sleeve and the bouffant skirt and chapel train had rows of Chantilly lace trim. Motifs of silk Venise enhanced the skirt. She wore a derby style hat with a pouf of illusion and fingetip veil cascading in the back. The brim was trimmed in crystal pleating and turned up with silk flowers. Lace and seed pearls covered the crown and brim.

The bridesmaids each wore white silk organza gowns featuring a fitted bodice with one shoulder. A ruffle with red piping trim accented the scoop neckline and covered the shoulder. A ruffle with red piping trim cascaded down the side from the waist to the flounced skirt. Red taffeta cummerbunds accented the gowns. They each carried a long-stemmed red rose.

The bride graduated from St. Marys Collage, Katharine Gibbs School in Boston, Mass. and N.C. State University. She made her debut in 1976. She is an administrative assistant at the N.C. Department of Agriculture.

The bridegroom graduated from Lees McRae College and N.C. State University. He is a landscape designer with Allied Landscapes in Raleigh,

The couple will be living in Raleigh.

The parents of the bride entertained at a luncheon at the Hilton Inn after the wedding. Mr. and Mrs. David Eley and Mr. and Mrs. James Tunstall entertained at a dinner at the Hilton Inn on Friday and the mother of the bridegroom gave a rehearsal dance also at the Hilton.

A luncheon was held at Sisters Garden of Eating in Raleigh given by Mrs. Howard Bloom, Mrs. James Beasley and Mrs. W.P. Morris.

ELKIN - Susan Kaye Page and James Alexander Chatham, both of Greiville, exchanged wedding vows Saturday afternoon at four oclock in the First United Methodist Church here. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. James G.Lupton.'

Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde U. Page of Rwita 1, Elkin, the bride was escorted by her father. Mr. and Mrs.

Alex Chatham Jr. of Elkin are parents of the bridegroom.

The bride wore her motl^rs waltz length wedding gown of lace over satin styled with a high stand-tq> collar. Umg lace sleeves ended in peaks over the hands and the bouffant skirt of tulle over satin was accented with lace. She wore a wide brim silk braided ^raw

hat adorned with satin ribbon, babys breath snd stat-ice. She carried an arm bouquet of calla lilies.

The bride is a graduate of East Carolina University and also did ^aduate studies there. She is a sales representative with Computers Di^lays Inc. in Greenville.

The bridegroom is a graduate of East Carolina University and is a market manager with Cal^ Corp.

Eva H. Jenkins of Greenville was matron of honor and bridesmaids were Barbara Chatham of Hickory and Suzanne C. Tate of Asbeboro, sisters of the bridegroom. They each wore a sleeveless street length linen dress which featured a V-neckline and matching belt. Each carried a longstemmed white rose.

Honorary bridesmaids included Judy Swientoniewski of Suffolk, Va., Emily Scott of Wilson, Marty Peterson, Patricia Byrum and Julie Hicks, all of Greenville.

The bridegrooms brother, Paul G. Chatham, of Lexington was best man and ushers included Clyde U. Page II of Greenville, brother of the bride, Giff

Fisher of Pinehiirst and Steve Motsinger of Elkin.

A program o (h^ music was presented by Kent Gif-fin.

A recq)tk)n, givoi by the brides parrots, was held at the Cedarbrook Country aub.

Renting Makes Wedding Plans Pleasant

'The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip to Salvo.

The bride and bridegroom entertained the wedding party and out-of-town guests at a dinner following the rehearsal at Klondike Farm in Elkin

MRS. JAMES ALEXANDER CHATHAM

Engagement

Announced

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lewis Speight of Snow Hill announce the engagement of their daughter, Janice Marie, to Kenneth Edward Whaley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Whaley of Ayden. The wedding is planned for July 29.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Sunday, July 10,19-C-7

MRS. ERIC HAROLD WAHNEFRIED

Miss Ward Speaks V ows

HURST, Tex. - Catherine Slade Ward and Eric Harold Wahnefried, both formerly of Greenville, were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at one oclock in Peace Lutheran Church here. The Rev. Walter E. Waiser officiated.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry P. Ward of Goldsboro. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Harold G. Wahnefried of Sterling Heists, Mich.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of ivory lalique taffeta designed with a cape collar and edged with schiffli embroidered lace. She wore a wreath of ivory and blue silk flowers in her hair and carried a matching bridal bouquet.

Mrs. Glenn Robinson of Bedford, Tex., served as honor attendant. Thomas F. Bavec of North Richland Hills, Tex., was best man. Following the ceremony, the brides parents entertained at a reception at the home of the couple.

The bride is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is employed by Motorola, Inc. in Fort Worth, Tex. The bridegroom graduated from Valparaiso University and is employed by Harris Graphics of Grapevine, Tex. Both the bride andihe bridegroom are former employees of

Eaton Corp. in Greenville.

After a wedding trip to the Texas coast, the couple will reside in Bedford, Tex.

Engagement

Announced

Mrs. Minnie Edwards of Greenville announces the engagement of her daughter, Eunice Faye, to Alfred Ray Tyson, son of Mrs. Rosa Taylor and Clifton Pitt, both of Farmville. The wedding will take place Aug. 6.

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Florida, Epcot, Disney World July 19-24, Aug. 23-28, Sept. 20-25,

Oct. 18-23, Nov. 22-27, Dec.27-Jan.1

California (22 Day Motorcoach Tour).   ...................August    6-27

Busch Gardens.............................................August 8

Nashviile, TN..................... Sept.    15-18,    Oct. 6-9, Oct. 27-30

Texas 8i The West.................... September    17-27

' Hawaii (Vltll: HUo. Koni, Maul. Lanai, Kauai. A Honolulu).......Sept. 21-Oct. 3

Memphis-Nashviile............ Sept.    21-25,    Oct.    19-23

Canadian Fall Foliage   ...............................  Sept.    24-Oct.    2

OurkSIGracaland. Euraka Sprlnga, Paaakm Play, Mountain Music Jamboraa. ChurchM Downs)...........................................     Qct.    1-9

Nova Scotia (Now Brunswick, P.E.I., Halllaa).......................Oct.    1-9

PA Dutch........................................!...........Oct.    6-9

New England Fail Foliage  ................................Oct. 8-16

N.C. 81 TN. Mountains......................................Oct.    13-16

New York............................................November    17-20

Atlantic City And New York...........................November    17-20

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Save 40% Handyphone Full Feature, Extension Telephone ............Sale    14.90

Save 50% Thousands Pairs of Spring & Summer Shoes. Bandolino, Garolini, Van Eli, Pappagallo, Amalfi, 9 West..... Sale 11.00 to 35.00

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Theres More To Life Than Youthfulness

She Needs A Snappy Reply

By Abigail Van Buren

' 1983 by    Press    Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: My husband is a long-distance truck driver. When hes home he eats constantly. He doesnt like to eat alone, so I have to eat with him. In addition to the meals I make, he brings home treats like fried chicken, ribs, pizza, etc. He loves ice cream and puts away a quart at one sitting. (I can imagine what he eats when hes on the road!)

In the five years weve been married, hes gained 80 pounds and Ive gained 70. I never say anything about his belly, but he says plenty about mine. When hes watching TV he snacks on potato chips and drinks beer. His eating drives me to drink. (Wine. More calories.)

I love to dance, but he doesnt take me anywhere anymore because hes ashamed of the way I look. Now hes threatening to dump me. Im so far gone (fat), dieting is out of the question. I dream about being thin again.

What should I do?

BEING DUMPED IN IOWA

DEAR BEING DUMPED: Begin by seeing your physician for a thorough checkup. Then locate the nearest Overeaters Anonymous chapter and attend a meeting. (Ive attended some, and have found the group to be incredibly loving, caring and understanding.) You need support and encouragement from people who have been where you are now. Please go. Get yourself in shape, then go to work on your husband. And if he doesnt follow suit and shape up, you might want to dump him!

DEAR ABBY: Recently 1 met an interesting professional man at a party. (Im a woman in the same profession.) We hit it off rather well and he asked for my phone number. A few days later he called and asked me to have "a drink with him that evening. I declined, saying I had an invitation for cocktails and dinner.

Abby, its been years since I accepted a date for a drink only, but I still remember how humiliated I felt, sitting in a cocktail lounge, nursing a drink, and hoping the guy would decide I was worth a dinner too.

Please give me a snappy reply to let a man know that I think a drink only invitation is tacky and insulting and I'd rather not hear from him again.

NOT THAT NEEDY

DEAR NOT: Why bother with a snappy reply? Just tell the man how you feel about a drink only invitation, and you wont have to worry about hearing from him again.

DEAR ABBY. I am going to give your readers (if you print this) some information I paid a psychiatrist $15,000 for not to mention the hours I put in on his couch.

1 was a respectable married woman, married 18 years. I had great kids and a terrific husband a handsome, successful businessman, admired by all who knew him. Im sure he never cheated on me.

My problem? I cheated on him with so many men in the last 15 years, I cant count them. My idea of a great afternoon was picking up a man and going to bed with him. If you think my husband was a slouch in bed, youre wrong. He satisfied me sexually. So what did I need these other men for? I wasnt looking for sex; sex is what I gave them in return for a little warmth, intimacy, affection and a few compliments.

My husband never touched me, held my hand or kissed me unless we were having sex. He never told me I looked nice. He never gave me a compliment. He never said, I love you. I needed it so desperately, I found strangers who provided it.

So, Dear Abby, please tell husbands and wives everywhere that if their spouse is cheating on them, they arent necessarily looking for sex. They may be starved for affection. I was. Sign me . . .

HAPPILY DIVORCED IN NEVADA

Color Analyst To Speak

Colorful Me by Palsy Garzik, color analyst, will be the special feature of the Greenville Christian Womens Club luncheon at the Greenville Country Club July 19 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30p.m.

Special music will be presented by Andrea Winter, violinist, and Carol Ann Tucker, soloist.

Wilma Horton of Raleigh will be speaking. She is listed in the Guiness Book of World Records and Ripleys Believe It Or Not. She was detained in 1976 by Russian customs for carrying a Bible.

A free nursery will be provided at The Memorial Baptist Church. Reservations for luncheon and nursery should be made with Faye Barber at 756-3610.

By JENNIFER JUERGENS

NEW YORK (AP)-At 51, Elissa Melamed, Ph.D., has a few gray hairs, a few wrinkles - and the body of a Jane Fonda. She says aging is difficult for women today, but she doesnt seem to be having any problems.

But there was a time when she wondered whether she had been clinging to faded youth, and whether other women felt ambivalent about aging but were afraid

or

ELISSA MELAMED

ashamed to say so.

Middle-age women are bombarded by media images (in TV commercials) who are not too terribly exciting ladies to identify with, and we either pour our money into cosmetic surgery or buy the idea were over the hill and give up, says Ms. Melamed.

We need some women who look fantastic, who are fantastic, with gray hairs and wrinkles, with the signs of normal aging, she says.

A psychotherapist, Ms. Melamed created a con-ciousness-raising group in New Mexico for women over 40 and has discussed the problems of aging with women in this and other countries. She talked to academics, actresses, farm wives, housecleaners, lesbians and nuns, women ranging in age from 21 to 94.

She has put it all in her book, Mirror Mirror, The Terror of Not Being Young.

There are 35 million American women over the age of 45, but they are not the only ones who find the idea of aging difficult. It is also painful for younger women who realize that their attractiveness, their social worth and their value will diminish with time, she says.

Being older is a problem for both men and women, but looking older is womens special problem, Ms. Melamed says. In our society, it is acceptable for men, but not for women, to age. Men grow distinguished:

women get older.

A mans prime corresponds to his economic pe<^, at age 40 or later, whereas a womans prime corresponds to her reproductive peak, her 20s, she points out.

Today, Ms. Melamed says, women earn only 59 percent of what men earn, partly because many women are absent from the labor force between the ages of 25 and 35 when advancement is most rapid. That absence also reduces retirement benefits, which are geared to continuous work histories, she says.

Economic security is important in dealing with aging, she notes.

Women who live for men and wrap their lives around that role end up more depressed and unhappy and their husbands dont necessarily stay with them any longer, she says.

Some men leave their wives for younger women. Often older women will find that 25 years of faithful service carries little or no economic security.

Were in a time of transition, though, Ms. Melamed says. On the one hand, the youth trip is more intense than ever. Were spending $3(X) million a year on cosmetic surgery and $3 million on face creams alone.

On the other hand, the aging population is better educated and realizes they have a right to be who they are.

Women have become more independent, she says, adding that she stresses the importance of independence and a career to her three children.

What makes us happy is involving ourselves in something larger than our own little lives, says Ms. Melamed, who has been an educational consultant and psychotherapist for the past 25 years and is also working for nuclear disarmament.

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Fashion Flash For Fall

SWEATSHIRTING IS hot news for falls cool days, and whats even hotter is multiple layers in contrasting colors. Begin with the great American classic, the pullover hooded sweatshirt; look for contrasting colors such as raspberry and gray or black and red. For him, sweat vests look great over denim jackets, worn open or closed as the weather dictates; khakis are rolled up with just the right amount of sock showing. For her. the look with 7/8 jeans and layered socks. (At The Gap Stores.)

Younger women with children dont have the time to do the things older woman are free to do, she says, while older women who do have the time underestimate themselves and their potential.

Ms. Melamed says women need a sense of purpose in life. Because of tbe womens movement, women can make contributions of the same validity men have made.

People feel that unless you look young you cant be healthy, alive, exciting or attractive. Its nonsense. One of my great missions in life is to break this constant connection between everything wonderful and youth.

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Officials at a state psychiatric institute say that while anhedoniacs sense no pleasure, they are not necessarily sad or depressed. Sev-erai studies indicate the problem may be related to an imbalance in brain chemistry.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Sunday, July 10,1983-C-9

Program On Conservation Of Historic Works

LOOKING AT THE SUN - Five-year-old James Adams of Lawrence, Ga., watches the rain recently from behind a plastic-covered window frame. The rain showers postponed a planned day of outdoor activities for the lad. (AP Laserphoto by Ben Baxter)

ByPATFERGUS Associated Press Writer COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) - Their tools are paint brushes, cotton swabs, microscopes and infrared cameras.

They bend to their tasks for long hours each day in a studio on the shore of Lake Otsego cluttered with easels, light tables, laboratory equipment and fading artworks of centuries ago.

Theyre the students of the State University of New Yorks graduate program in conservation of historic and artistic works - a select group of serious, a^iring conservators who have come to this tiny, central New York town from around the United States to learn techniques of preserving past treasures.

One of just a handful of art conservation graduate programs in North America, the Cooperstown program accepts just 10 students each year for its three-year course of study from a field of usually 70 or so applicants, says F. Christopher Tahk, the programs coordinator of academic affairs.

To become a member of this elite group of graduate students requires an unusual combination of studies as an

Shakespeare For Kids Book

BROTHERS REUNITE - Rock and roll stars Phil, left, and Don Everly of the popular singing group, the Everly Brothers, plan to reunite at a September concert in London. It will be their first joint appearance in 10 years. (AP Laserphoto)

Events At Mariners

Carole Longmeyer, president of Gallopade Publishing Group, has announced the publication of Bill S; Shakespeare for Kids by Mary Lou Kennedy of Kinston.

The book is part of Gallopades Tomorrows Books for Todays Children series.

Bill S; Shakespeare for Kids is printed on parchment notebook paper, and is filled with facts about the playwright and the Elizabethan era and theater. It is illustrated with art executed in ray crayon by North Carolina illustrator Priscilla Rhodes.

Persons interested in more information on the book and how it can be ordered may write to; Gallopade Publishing Group, P.O. Box 1537, Tryon,N.C., 28782.

BEAUFORT - Four events are scheduled at Hampton Mariners Museum in Beaufort for the coming week. These are;

Monday - Opening of the Waterfowl Decoy Heritage photographic exhibit with photographs by Neal Conoly of Wendell. To show throu^ August.

Wednesday - A miniexhibit of traditional decoys for waterfowling, to show through Augusts.

Wednesday - A field trip to the Croatan National Forest to study wildflowers and carnivorous plants, 9 a.m. to 12;30 p.m. Reservations required, call 728-7317.

Thursday - Lois Beckwith of Smyrna demonstrates carving of wooden shorebirds in the Thursday at Twelve series.

Wildlife Stamp Show Exhibited

ATLANTIC BEACH -Mark Williams of Knightdale, an avid nature-lover who collects wildlife stamps, prints and waterfall stamps, is exhibiting his collection at the Bogue Banks Library located at the Marine Resources Center in Pine Knoll Shores.

The exhibition is open to the public and will be on view through July 17.

$3,000 Gift

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WILMINGTON-TheNew Hanover County Museum Foundation received an unexpected gift of $3,000 from the Wilmington Womans Club to help save the Blockade Runner Museum Collection.

Frances Devane, club president, explained the club raised money through their annual Coastal Living Trade Show.

The New Hanover County Museum Foundation still needs $14,000 to pay for the Blockade Runner Museum Collection. Portions of the Civil War collection will be returned to the owner if the amount is not paid by Dec. 31, 1983. Donations are tax deductible and should be made to the New Hanover County Museum Foundation, 814 Market St., Wilmington, N.C. 28401.

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undergraduate. Students who are accepted into the program should have strong backgrounds in art history, studio art and chemistry as well as some work experience in the area of conservation, says Tahk.

Tahk himself came to the art world from science. A chemistry graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he holds a doctorate in organic chemistry from the University of Rochester as well as a masters degree from the Cooperstown pro^am.

Scientific equipment his students have at Uieir disposal includes the X-ray powder diffraction unit he obtained with a National Science Foundation

unique and pisitively identifiable as a human fingerprint.

Nearby, another student exulted over her creation of a rare blue pigment made, more or less, according to a recipe used by Renaissance artists. In another part of the lab, a high-power stereo microscope showed distinct layers of paint and fiber on a paint chip barely visible to the human eye.

And, placing a painting before an infrared vidicon camera revealed an artists experimental positioning of a girls hand, later rejected and painted over. It also

revealed the paintings title, which the artist had written on the back of the canvas.

The Cooperstown facility also has less s(^histicated, but equally effective, equipment, some of it developed here. There are vacuum tables in the paper conservation room which enable conservators to clean delicate paper artifacts without soaking the object, and a heat table in another room

Richlands Show

grant.Using that device, one student tested a minute particle to determine what kind of mineral was making it difficult for her to clean an artifact. She found the answer in the pattern with which X-rays scattered off the sample - making a design on film thats as

Writers To

Meet Tuesday

Clay Artists Meet Tuesday

The July meeting of the Clay Artist Guild will be held at 7;30 p.m. Tuesday at the home of Sheila Lapointe. For directions call 757-1785 or after 5 p.m., 746-2623.

Topics for discussion are the Guilds Bylaws, building facilities and grants. The meeting is open to all clay artists in the Pitt-Greenville are, with all interested in this art form welcomed.

RICHLANDS - An exhibition, Working Woman; 1890-1910 is currently being shown at the Onslow County Museum, 2 Hargett St., Richlands. Among items in the exhibit are womens fashions from the turn of the century, and tools used in past yers by women in the home and the office. Photographs of women at work in fields, in hospitals and factories constitute part of the show.

Additonally, lecture programs at 2 p.m. on five Sundays - on July 20, 24, and on Aug. 7,14, and 21 will be given.

used to apply wax to art works.

Students do the conservation work under the close supervision of the Cooperstown faculty - five specialists in different conservation disciplines who ^help diagnose problems and prescribe remedies.

The artifacts they work on come from museums, historical societies and private individuals, and range from badly damaged antiques pull^l from local attics to treasures as impressive as a 16th-century Spanish church tabernacle in carved wood covered with gold leaf, sent in for cleaning and repair by the State University

Admission standards are high and the work for those accepted is rigorous, Tahk says, but students normally receive grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Mellon Foundation that cover most of their costs during the two years of studio work and third year of internship.

According to Tahk, 98 percent of the students who have graduated from the program since it began in 1969 today hold permanent, full-time jobs in the business.

Most of those jobs are in museums or regional conservation centers. Some graduates eventually go into business for themselves.

n

The Greenville Writers Club will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the home of June Taylor, 1008-B Forbes St.

Through the courtesy of the Family Dentistry Association, those attending may park in the associations parking lot adjacent to Forbes and across the street from Ms. Taylors home.

Showed In Festival

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -David A. Harrawood of Greenville, N.C., a leather crafter, was selected to appear in the sidewalk sale divison of the 17th annual Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts.

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The Cherokee Myth Of The Great Buzzard In The Sky Creator

DEMONSTRATE BASKETWEAVING -    community in the 1750s, the viUage is staffed

Cherokee women in the Oconaluftee Indian    with Indimi guides and artisans, and is opoi

VUlage in Cherokee demonstrate the tradi-    from mid-May through October,

tional art of weaving. A replica of a Cherokee

Scholarship To NCSA

1.Flashdance, Irene Cara

2.Electric Avenue, Eddy Grant

3.Time, Culture Club

4.Every Breath You Take, The Police

5.Lets Dance, David Bowie

6.Beat .It, Michael Jackson

7.Always Something There to Remind Me, Naked Eyes

8.Shes a Beauty, The Tubes

9.TooShy,Kajagoogoo

10.'Tamily Man, Hall & Oates

Sibby Ellen Anderson, a 1983 graduate of Ayden-Grifton High School, has been selected to attend the summer session in drama at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem.

Active throughout high school years in drama and music. Miss Anderson has performed in Ayden Theater Workshop productions, and with the Ayden-Grifton high school based Curtain Players. She has also been

active in a choral ensemble, the Aydren-Grifton Gospel Choir and the N.C. Choral Society. For two years she sang in the N.C. All-State Chorus.

Additionally, she was a member of the student government and the Science Club.    ^

Daughter of William and Dorothy Anderson of Win-terville. Miss Andrson plans to attend the University of North Carolina this fall.

ByDENIMcINTYRE Cherokee Tribal Travel ftPromotkm

It was the Great Buzzard who made the Smoky Mountains, back when the worid was all mud and the animals lived in the sky.

A Cherokee myth tells how the Great Buzzard flew low across the earth until his tired wings began to strike the ground, beating the mud into peaks and valleys. Fearing that the whole world would be mountainous, the other animals called him back. But the Cherokee people have always lived in the hills shaped by his wings, and today part of that rug^ land is North Carolinas Cherokee Indian Reservation.

Each year thousands of visitors come to the reservation (or Qualla Boundary, as the Cherokee call it) to see traditional Indian life recreated at Oconaluftee Indian Village. They pack the Mountainside Theater to watch the historical drama Unto These Hills," and they tour the modem Museum of Cherokee History.

But to really know Cherokee country you have to leave civilization behind. Climb an old trail to a hidden waterfall. Look for arrowheads or munch wild raspberries by a trout stream. Then youll begin to understand why the Cherokee loved this land enough to fi^t for it, and how they flourished here for 10 thousand years before the first white men encountered them.

The mountain ridges are crisscrossed by trails that once linked dozens of Indian villages. Cherokee travel was mostly on foot, because horses were unknown until after European contact. Now visitors to the Boundary can hike or ride horses along paths where Indian trading

Carolina Today

The Carolina Today calendar for the coming week is;

Monday - 6:40 a.m., Helen Beard and Dr. Willis Martin on baldness; 7:15 a.m., how to make a crab pot; 7:25 a.m., focus on fitness; 7:40 a.m.. Dr. Harold Deitch, A Trip to Poland.

Tuesday - 6:40 a.m., healthbreak; 7:15 a.m., Rusy Walker, the Aurora Fossil Museum; 7:25 a.m., a Greenville City school program; 7:40 a.m.. Dr. Allan Bowyer, the no smoking clinic.

Wednesday - 6:40 a.m., Betsy Owens, the N.C. Peanut Growers Association; 7:15 a.m., Emmie Whitley, turkey at its best; 7:25 a.m., focus on fitness; 7:40 a.m., Carolina Country Day School workshop.

Thursday 6:40 a.m., Ben Robinson, a new sweet potato product; 7:15 a.m., how to restore an antique car; 7:25 a.m., the Employment Security Commission; 7:40 a.m., a home economist with help for your home.

Friday - 6:40 a.m., Ed Tetteron, state tournament. Tar Heel League; 7:15 a.m., a ECU Summer Theater guest; 7:25 a.m., focus on fitness; 7:40 a.m., plant doctor Eddie Harrington.

BUFFETT TO BE AT CAROWINDS - Singer song-writer Jimmy Buffett will be in concert at Carowinds, near Charlotte at 7 p.m. July 17, accompanied by the Coral Reefer Band. His most recent album is Somewhere Over China, and he is best known for his single, Margaritaville. Ticks for the Buffett concert are $4 in addition to the $11.95 general, admission price to the park. _  \

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parties and warriors once walked.

You can see deer, black bears and wild bogs in these woods, as well as a host of small game and songbirds. Trout still dimmer and flash in the streams that race down narrow mountain valleys, and fishing on the Boundary is one way to commune with the Cherokees past.

For tips on how to cast, what size line and hooks to use, or even how to cook your fish, Albert Bradley of Bradleys Campground is the man to see. A native-born ' Cherokee, Albert is a walking archive of fishing lore who still remembers his first homemade pole.

It was made of river cane, and had horsdiair for line, he says. Horsehair was all we used back then. Youd look for a white horse

- my uncle had one called Bob. Take two or four strands from the horses tail and tie knots in them. It works just fine.

Before horsehair, hemp was the only kind of line the Indians ever used, Albert says. Their hooks were most likely small bones from fish or squirrels. As for bait

- well, thereve been worms in the ground since the earth was made. They probably used lizards and crawfish too.

Brook trout is native to these parts, Albert says. A brook trout bom in the wild will just about jerk the pole out of your hands. The first rainbow trout were brought from California back in the

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5.Tn Times Like These, Barbara Mandrell

6.The Closer You Get, Alabama

7.Fool for Your Love, Mickey Gilley

8.Pancho and Lefty, Nelson & Haggard

9.I Always Get Lucky With You, George Jones

10.Snapshot, Sylvia

1880s, and the brown trout is even more recent. Now weve got steelheads, too -thats a northern trout from up around Wisconsin and Michigan. And the lakes around here are full of bass and bream.

Fishing is available on the Boundary every month except March, and a tribal permit can be purchased for $3.50 per day or $11 for five days.

While the men hunted and fished, Cherokee women tended fields and collected berries, mushrooms, nuts and roots from the forest. The Cherokee used nearly 400 wild plants in medicine. According to tribal mythology, human diseases were invented by the animals in revenge for mans cruelty. But the plants, who have always been mans friends, promised to provide remedies for all his ailments. Every tree, shrub and herb had a use, if only we knew it.

Women also wove baskets and made sturdy bowls and pitchers from pottery clay. No matter how far back in the woods you go, you can find shards of Oierokee pottery side by side with flint arrowheads.

There are other traces of mans presence in these hills, dating from the time after white settlers came to Cherokee country.

In the Great Smoky Moun-tians National Park, adjacent to the Qualla Boundary, there are scores of old wagon roads and drovers trails. Along these trails, if you know how to look, you can see traces of stone building foundations. Imported boxwoods and daffodils mark spots where pioneer homesteads once stood. There are also more than a hundred cemeteries.

The Cherokee creation myth says that in the beginning everything was water. Then the earth grew from a

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piece of mud, and was suspended by cords from the sky. When the earth is worn out, the cords will break and

it will sink back into the ocean. But the earth is not yet worn out, and a trip to Cherokee country proves it.

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'A Little Night Musicls The Next Summer Theater Offering

A Little Night Music, the broadway musical hit of the early 1970s, is to be the next musical offered by the East Carolina Summer Theater.

The play is slated to run for six performances from July 11 to July 16 at 8:15 p.m. nightly in East Carolina Universitys McGinnis Theater.

A Little Night Music ran in New York for over 600 performances and received six Tony Awards including best musical of the season.

The story is based on Ingmar Bergmans Swedish movie Smiles of a Summer Night. Noted for all its songs being in waltz-time, the show is set amid the silver birches of a chateau in Sweden at the turn of this century during one of those enchanted white nights in summer when the sun doesnt set and people go joyfully mad with music and dancing all nightlong.

The curtain opens with a

quintet of actor-singers inviting their audience, with a wink, to join in on the fun and follies which wind up in a midsummer night madness. The characters are city people in all kinds or romantic discombobulations, who sort out their mismat-chings over the course of the undarkened night of festivity-

Amanda Muir and Lee Evans are playing one of the entangled pairs - two old flames who meet again after a long time and take fire once more.

Ms. Muir is well known to Summer Theater audiences in eastern North Carolina, having appeared in Side By Side By Sondheim, George M, Company, and Bell, Book and Candle, with Robert Foxworth who now stars in the CBS-TV series Falcon Crest.

Lee Evans is making his East Carolina Summer The

ater debut in A Little Night Music. He has performed with the Santa Fe and Boston opera companies and in numerous off-Broadway and regional productions includ-ing Show Boat, Camelot. South Pacific, and Kiss Me Kate. He recently returned from touring in Lehars operetta Land of Smiles.

Also appearing in the musical are veteran New York actors John Kuhn and Babs Winn, a native of Greenville. Area audiences will recognize Ed Glenn, Catherine Rhea, Janet Noyes, Fred Johnson and Catherine Wafford as the quintet of singing actors who follow the story from overture to final curtain call.

Send in the Clowns, the song that Frank Sinatra added to his repertory after A Little Night Music, is one of the shows better-known song hits. Some of the

other tunes include A Weekend in the Country, The Glamorous Life, and The Millers Son.

Edgar Loessin, Summer Theater Producer, is direct-ing the production. Broadway veteran Mavis Ray is choreographer.

According to Summer Theater General Manager Scott Parker, there are still a number of tickets available for each of the three remaining musicals.

In addition to A Little Night Music, the Summer Theater is also presenting No, No Nanette July 18-23 and Theyre Playing Our Song July 25-30. All performances begin at 8:15 p.m.

Tickets may be purchased at McGinnis Theater on the corner of 5th and Eastern streets Monday through Saturday or reserved by calling 757-6390.

TWO OF THE NIGHT MUSIC CAST ... Lee Evans is making his debut in this weeks production of A Little Night Music, which opens for a six-night run on Monday. Evans is a veteran of many musicals. Also in the cast is Greenville native Babs

Winn, familiar to area audiences for ECU roles in previous years as well as last weeks Pippin. Ticket information is available by calling 757-6390.

The Shakespeare

At Sunday In The Perk

Festival Under Way

Sweet Adelines To Sing Today

Members of the Eastern Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines is the attraction to provide entertainment in todays Sunday in the Park series, beginning at 7 p.m.

For the lady singers of Sweet Adelines, todays concert will mark their debut performance before a large Greenville audience.

The concert will be held at the Sunday in the Park site, on the grassy slope between East Third and East Fourth streets on the east side of Reade Street. Patrons are reminded to bring along items to make for easy listening - such as folding chairs, pillows, etc.

The Sunday in the Park concerts are open to the public without charge. They are funded by the city of Greenville and scheduled through the Recreation and Parks Department.

For their program Sunday, the Greenville Adelines will be singing old and not-so-old favorites such as Wait Til The Sun Shines, Nellie, Sentimental Journey, Memories, and Let Me Call Your Sweetheart.

At present there are 22 members in the East Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines, and the organization has a standing invitation to all area women who love to sing to join the group whether or not they read music. Meetings and rehearsals are held each Monday at 7 p.m. at Memorial Baptist Church, 1510 Greenville Blvd.

The local chapter was organized in the fall of 1980 by Mary Koonce and received its charter last September. Janet Rodgers is the chapter president, and Carolyn Ipock is musical director.

HIGH POINT - The seventh season of the North Carolina Shakespeare Festival opened Friday with Shakespeares Two Gentlemen of Verona. Next on the bill is Steinbecks Of Mice and Men, which will open July 15, to be followed by Moss Harts Light Up The Sky, opening on July 23. The final production of the season will be Eugene ONeills Long Days Journey Into Night, which will open July 29.

LADIES TO SING TODAY ... Members of the    group in a large public performance, wiU get

Eastern Carolina Chapter of Sweet Adelines    under way at 7 p.m. at the Sunday in the Park

W1 be the Sunday in the Park attraction    site east of Reade Street between East Third

today. The concert, the first debut for the    and East Fourth streets.

Ticket information and reservations may be secured by writing to: High Point Theater, 220 E. Commerce St., High Point, N.C., 27262, or by cailing 887-3001 from 12:30 to5p.m. daily.

sisSnui

Monday July 11, 1983

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Cinderella' Opens In Manfeo

MANTEO - "CindereUa, Cinderella, the 1983 Lost Colony Childrens Theater production, opened Wednesday at the Marine Resources Center in Manteo, and will play each Wednesday morning at 10:30 and

Summer Revue

LITTLETON -SWonderful, SMarvelous, SGershwin, a musical revue featuring the music of George Gershwin opened Friday at the Lakeland Art Center in Littleton and will run each Friday and Saturday through Aug. 13.

Tickets for the show only are $6, and for the dinner (begins at 7 p.m.) and show (at 8:30 p.m.), tickets are $13.50. For more information and reservations call 586-5577.    f

each Saturday afternoon at 1:30 through Aug. 17.

Tickets are $2 at the door, with children under 3 admitted free of charge.

A modern adaptation of the classic fairy tale, with original music by Rosalind MacEnulty, Cinderella, Cinderella is rich in humor, and relies heavily on full audience participation. To help in accomplishing this rapport, director Barton Breen has cast a group of six warm-up people to sing songs and play games with

the audience before the show. Children will be invited onstage to play parts in the show.

Sonja Hodges plays the title role, with Gary Hackenburg as the prince. Others in the cast are Dan Berman as the king; and Beth Jones as the stepmother; and Kim DeShazo as the fairy godmother. Robin Brooke is one of the stepsisters, and Robert Ruffin doubles as the other stepsister and also as Duke Ferdinand.

KSPYOtlRBANK MIHEMLM OFYOURHAND lUnURSADffii;

Hospitality House

NEW CHAIRMAN RALEIGH - R. Peyton Woodson III of Raleigh has been named chairman of the North Carolina Symphony Board of Trustees. He succeeds Nancy Bryan Faircloth.

In addition to electing Woodson chairman, the board also approved a budget of $2,843,370 for the 1983-84 seson, an increase of $77,914 over the current budget.

Actress To Be

TV Show Guest

Babs Winn, a young actress who played the role of Fastrada in Pippin, will be the Friday morning guest on Carolind Today in the 7:15 a.m. timeslot.

Ms. Winn will talk about the third East Carolina Summer Theater production, No, No, Nanette which will open in McGinnis Auditorium on the ECU campus on July 18 for a one-week run.

WASHINGTON, N.C. - Sunday at noon TV-7s Hospitality House features creative Down East natives Louise Shingleton Shivers, Celina Tumage and Emily Andrews.

Hostess Kay Currie interviews Mrs. Shivers, a Wilson native and author of Here To Get My Baby Out of Jail. Published by Random House, the novel is set in the North Carolina tobacco country in the depression year of 1937.

Mrs. Turnage and Mrs. Andrews will represent Expo 83, an annual craft fair held in Morehead City. The fair was held yesterday and continues today. They will demonstrate English smocking on the show.

Hospitality House is WITN-TVs talk and public interest show seen each Sunday from noon until 12:30 p.m.

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Young Actor Is Eager To Do All Of It'

A TRIO OF DANCERS... of the French groi^, Compagnie de Danse LEsquisse are shown in the dance, Terre Battue. The three, left to right, are Joelle Bouvier, Regis Obadia, and

Jean Poiriez. The LEsquisse company is one of five modem French dance companies to be in performance this week at the American Dance Festival in Durham.

French Dance Groups In Durham This Week

DURHAM - Five French modern dance companies -in a week of performances titled Dance From France - will make their United States debut at the American Dance Festival in Durham this week.

The companies are appearing as part of an exchange with La Danse a Aix, the modern dance festival in Aix-en-Provence, France. The debut has been made possible by generaous grants from Citibank and the Association Francaise dAction Artistique with the collaboration of the Cultural Services of the French Embassy to the United States and the French Minstry of Culture.

This is a very important project for all of dance in France, said Susan Buirge, artistic advisor to La Danse a Aix.

Charles Reinhart, director of the American Dance Festival, and Stephanie Reinhart, associate director of the festival, viewed over 50 French dance companies on a trip to France last October to select the five featured companies.

Theres been an explosion in new developments in French modem dance in the last five years, Reinhart said. Its a good thing they have fast trains there... and, at that, we didnt even scratch the surface.

No one had any idea there was so much great dance there.

Five companies were

eventually selected to represent the wide range of dance styles.

Ballet Theatre de LArche on Monday and again on Saturday will perform May B, a powerful theater-dance piece based on the plays of Samuel Beckett. This is not Swan Lake, says Reinhart. In addition to Beckett, theres a touch of Goya. Youll never forget it.

Compagnie de Danse LEquisse and Compagnie Karine Saporta will share the stage on Tuesday and Wednesday, offering different programs each night. On Tuesday, LEquisse will do

Remember

TOP TUNES 40 YEARS AGO Your Hit Parade July 10,1943

(The number in parenthesis following each song indicates the number of weeks the song has been in the top ten listing).

1. Youll Never Know (10)

2. Coming In On A Wing And A Prayer (10)

3. In The Blue Of Evening

(7)

4. As Time Goes By (17)

5. Dont Get Around Much Anymore (16)

6. Lets Get Lost (9)

7. Taking A Chance On Love (17)

8. All Or Nothing At All (1)

9. Johnny Zero (3)

10. It Cant Be Wrong (15)

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"Terre Battue and Karine Saporta will do Escales, a high voltage dance, with an exotic palm tree center stage. On Wednesday, LEquisse will do Tete Close and Karine Saporta Hypnotic Circus.

Karine Saporta is a young choreographer who has studied with Merce Cunningham and Alwin Nikolais. LEquisse company is a group with two choreographers, Joelle Bouvier and Regis Obadia. Joelle Bouvier and Regis Obadia, according to U Monde de la Musique, are the two best dancers that have appeared on the scene in 1981. Imagination, inspiration, physical technique, presence, power: they have it all.

These Tuesday and Wednesday performances will be in Reynolds Theater in the Bryan Center on the campus of Di&e University. All other performances are in Page Auditorium on the Duke campus.

All performances are at 8 p.m.

On Thursday and Friday, Compaigne Dominique Bagouet and Caroline Marcade et Compagnie will do Insaisies and Pierre Robert, resectively.

For further information or tickets, call the American Dance Festival box office at 684-6402.

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer My entire family enjoys music and dancing, so Im doing what Ive always liked to do, sing and dance, declares Donnie Thibodeaux, 'vho performed the cocky-dumb but thoroughly energetic role of Lewis in Pippin this past week. Thibodeaux will be seen next in No, No, Nanette, the third East Carolina Summer Theater production which opens at McGinnis on July 18.

Thibodeaux, a 24-year old native of Ville Platte, La., recalls that No, No, Nanette was the first musical I ever performed in other than high school productions, so Im happy to be once more cast in that show.

One reason Thibodeaux is pleased to be in Greenville this summer is the fact the role of Lewis in Pippin is my first major role to date. Before this. Ive mostly been a song and dance man in the chorus of musical shows or helping in shows as dance captain. Typical of such appearances were those with Donald OConnor and Eve Arden in Little Me, and a production of Marne in Florida.

Of his Lewis role in Pippin, Thibodeaux says, Its a fun role, that of a spoiled brat who quite frankly dislikes his brother Pippin. Hes definitely a wimp, although hes energetic and stupid. Hes something of a stereotype, but a dancing-singing person, so naturally I enjoy doing the role.

Its a great pleasure also to be working with Babs Winn. Shes a delightful person, a fine performer. Babs and I knew each other in New York, in fact she was the only member of the cast and crew I knew when I came to Greenville for the summer theater.

I got to know her through her husband, Rodney Freeze, Thibodeaux says. Rodney and I recently worked together for five months on a pleasure cruise ship, the S.S. Veendam, which cruises to Bermuda from New York and in the western Caribbean from Tampa.

William Booth, the founder of the Salvation Army, was bom in 1829.

Thibodeaux notes, It was the first time ever Id been on a big ship. I love it, it's actually more a paid vacation than work. Im still surprised someone will pay you for something thats so much fun.

Aboard the ship, he worked in four musical reviews, and now Im still affiliated with the Holland-American Lines as a production assistant for their shows.

After high school graduation from Evangeline Parish Academy, Thibodeaux studied pharmacy in a Louisiana college, then transferred to Houston. At Houston, I took

dance as a physical education course, then appeared in a spring musical. I knew then I was hooked, what I wanted to do. Soon he was performing in Houstons Six Flags theme p^; and since has been devoting his time to the pursuit of a full-fledged stage career.

So far, Ive had no importunity to do anything except musical comedies, but I want to do all of it, drama, comedy, television, films, choreography. Im eager to get into all of it, Thibodeaux declares. I even hope someday to have my own night show, perhaps a Vegas type night club review. That

would be great, a real challenge.

Now a second-year resident of New York, Thibodeaux says New York City is a wonderful place to live in. Its also the hardest place of any to live in. The first year was difficult, hard to adjust to. The main thing was to find friends. Most young pe(mle going to New York go through the same thing, the loneliness bit. But its funny bow it works out. You make ohe friend, then another, the circle keeps widening. Here, Ive gotten to be a friend of Scott Evans, who plays Pipjpin in this show, and he lives in New York. Thats the way it goes.

Naturally, he adik, I always enjoy going back home to Louisiana, being with my family, seeing friends, but once I got to Houston, and later even more so in New Y(h, I realized I was meant to live in a large city. Its exciting.

Greenville has been a wonderful revelation for me, a return to the friendly attitude of Southerners. Lots of people have recognized me outside the theater, stopped to talk. I like that. The staff, the crew, everyone here is cordial and helpful, and the mechanics of the McGinnis theater are simply marvelous.

I hope to make a repeat

visit to Greaiville for next years summer theater, Thibodeaux avows. Its a great experience, and a fine place to work in. Id love to comeback.

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CLAD IN HIS BREASTPLATE... is Donnie Thibodeaux, who played the role of Lewis, one of Cbariemagnes sons in the recent summer theater production of Pippin. He will appear in the upcoming production of No, No, Nanette. Thibodeaux hopes to return to Greenville for next summers season. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)_

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C -Sunday. July 10, 0-C-13

A Review

HUSKING ... a Currier & Ives lithograph after a painting by Eastman Johnson, was published in 1861. The work is included in an exhibition, The Four Seasons of Rural Life opoiing

Monday and continuing throu^ Sept. 15 at the N.C. Archives Building, 109 E. Jones St. in Ralei^. (Photo courtesy Rudo-Finn & Rotman, Inc., New Yiurk)

Currier & Ives Show On View At The N.C. Archives Building

RALEIGH - The Esmark (^illection of the Four Seasons of Rural Life, an exhibition of 86 lithographs produced by Currier & Ives, will be on view at the North Carolina Division of Archives and History in Raleigh beginning July 11 and continuing through Sept. 15.

The exhibition provides an intimate look at the nature and quality of life in rural America in the mid-19th century. It includes scenes of family and small town life, farms and landscapes that reveal why America was often call the New Eden.

The exhibition has been made possible through the support of Esmark Inc. and its North Carolina-based

subsidiaries, Swift & Co., Fujicone and Rola. The Division of Archives and History, an agency of the N.C. State Department of Cultural Resources, where the exhibit is being shown, is located at 109 E. Jones St. Archive hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, from 1 to 6 on Sundays, and closed Mondays.

Currier & Ives described themselves as publishers of cheap and popular prints for the American people. The firm was active between 1833 and 1880 and their hand-colored lithographs were designed to both appeal to popular taste and provide the same coverage of current events that photos bring to

newspapers and magazines today.

Currier & Ives also published decorative prints ranging from samplers and pastoral scenes to portraits and still-lifes. Collectively, these lithographs provide a close look at the lifestyles, culture, tastes and values of America in the mid-to-late 19th century.

The Four Seasons of Rural Life contains many of Currier & Ives most p(^ular prints including works by such artists as Arthur Fitzwillam Tate (Maple Sugaring), Eastman Johnson (Husking), and George Durrie, one of the foremost painters of New England farm life.

Virtually every work in the

exhibition reveals a world where there existed a balanced, integral relationship between man and mother nature. A number of the works are reminiscent of the harvest scenes of Bruegel and the idyllic world of Edward Hicks, yet throughout the scenes are uniquely American.

The exhibition also contains sets of works such as the American Homestead and The Farmers Home series which show how family life is directed by the phenomena of nature.

The Esmark Collectionof the Four Seasons of Rural Life documents an American way of life and reflects many of the values placed on family, home, work and community that still persist in our society today.

Journal Of Back Road Travels

By PAUL RAEBURN Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) -William Trogdon was running. Out of work and with a failed marriage behind him, he climbed into his 1975 Econoline van in Columbia, Mo., and drove east. A man who couldnt make things go right could at least go, he thought.

In his pocket were four gasoline credit cards and $26. All that was left of his savings - $428 - was stowed under the dashboard.

When he returned three months later, he had a stack of notebooks filled with the makings of Blue Highways, a thoughtful book which quietly describes the people he met along the way. Because the trip had made him feel close to his Osage Indian heritage, he used his Indian name -William Least Heat Moon -on the books cover.

The book began as a

personal log, Heat Moon said in an interview. 1 was simply trying to get away from things that were going wrong in my life - running, in essence. It was not until he returned home that he realized he had material for a book.

Heat Moon is a quiet, affable man. His phrases are direct, his diction refined. He projects an appealing honesty. His face is adorned with wire-rimmed glasses and a neatly trimmed beard.

He does not seem the kind of person who talks easily to strangers, and he confe^ed there were moments of deep loneliness during his travels.

The only time it wasnt lonely were those moments when somebody would open up and share a part of t^eir lives with you, he said.

Heat Moon began his trip with no itinerary. Taking a volume of Walt Whitmans poetry and a copy of Black Elk Speaks, he made one

BLUE HIGHWAYS - William Trogdon, also known as William Least Heat Moon, is the auttKtf of Blue Hi^ways, a book which describes a three-month journey he took eastward from Columbia, Mo., after he had lo^ his job and his marriage had failed in 1978. (AP Laserphoto by Aian Borrud)

rule; He would travel only on the roads marked as thin blue lines in the Rand-McNally road atlas, narrow blacktop roads made obsolete by expressways.

He and his van made a great circle tour of the United States - east to the Atlantic, west to New Mexico, north to Oregon, east again to Maine, south to Chesapeake Bay and finally homeward to Columbia.

He found the America -and the Americans - that were supposed to have disappeared.

People like Thurmond Watts of Nameless, Tennessee. When Heat Moon pulled up to Watts shuttered general store. Watts refused to let him in until Heat Moon said, Dont want to buy anything. Just a question for Mr. Thurmond Watts. If this is Nameless, Tennessee, could he tell me how it got that name?

Watts explained how, at the urging of the post office, he and his neighbors met to decide on a name you could properly address a letter to. When they couldnt agree on a name. Nameless is what they became.

In March 1978, when Heat Moon began the trip, his marriage to a part-Cherokee woman had degenerated to what he calls the Indian wars. His job, teaching English at Stephens College, had been eliminated because of declining student enrollment. He was 38 years old.

By the time he returned in mid-June, broke and owing $1,200 on gasoline credit cards, he had decided to assemble his notes into a book. It was to be yet another trial for him, one that would last almost four years.

He got a job in the county courthouse and began writing on weekends. In nine months he had the first draft half-finished, and he was exhausted. One ni^t he lost his temper and started banging his typewriter with a shoe. 1 thought, God, Im losing my mind. I knew 1 had to quit the book or the job, and 1 decided 1 would stay with the job.

A few months later the book took hold of him again. He quit the job to work on it full time, and soon ran out of

/

money. He took a job on a loading dock from midnight to six in the morning, three nights a week, and spent all day writing. That went on for three years.

The biggest change 1 had to make was getting control of the narrator, he said. There was a great deal more personal information in the first drafts than there is now.

After Heat Moon finished the seventh draft, the book was rejected for the llth time.

Thats when I hit bottom, he said. He decided to rewrite the book one more time. A week later 1 was on the loading dock one night -it was extremely hot and unpleasant out there - and it dawned on me whats wrong with that book is that Im trying to write purely from my Anglo background. The minute I realized that, it just clicked in my mind.

The next morning he changed Trogdon to Least Heat Moon - his fathers name is Heat Moon, his older brother is Little Heat Moon.

Suddenly the voice of the narrator felt right. From that point on 1 was sure it was going to get published sometime.

Through the years of writing, Heat Moons life has changed. He is married again and is working on a new book, a complete history of a single county in eastern Kansas. It will be different from Blue Highways.

My goal is to find every historical and geographic and geologic, a^nomic detail I can in this particular area, he said. Impossible, but its a goal.

Author Loves His Home County

Rockin^iam County. By Lindley S. Butler. Raleigh, N.C. Dq)artmeflt (Cultural Resources, 1982. 92 pages, paperback, illustrated.

Rockingham County was named for the English Marquess of Rockin^am and was carved in 1785 from the north half of Guilford County. It lies in the undulating hills of the piedmont, twrderingon Virginia.

In this brief history, Dr. Butler touches on the earliest

Art Loan Debate

By SAMUEL K(X) Associated Press Writer ROME (AP)-The Italian artistic world is embroiled in a highly char^ debate: Should Italy rent its poorly kept artistic masterpieces to wealthy foreign museums in return for restoration and money?

The mayor of a tiny central Italian town kicked up a storm recently by proposing to lend its best known artwork - a I5th century fresco of the Virgin Mary to New Yorks Metropolitan Museum for three months.

The Metropolitan, in return. would restore the work, the Madonna del Parto by Piero Della Francesca, and provide an unspecified amount of money to the town of 1,900 people.

The town council of Mon-terchi enthusiastically approved Mayor Marcello Minozzis proposal, but it was later turned down in Rome by Culture Minister Nicola Vernola, whose authorization is needed for export of any artwork.

The prop(^ was subject to criticism because it had been conceived not as part of a cultural exchange but for minor economic reasons which the central government could have taken care of, Vernola said. The town authorities claimed, however, that the government had ipored their repeated pleas for help.

Vernolas aides said the approval of Minozzis request might have opened a floodgate of similar suggestions from financially hard-pressed small com-muniti^and museums.

The ensuing debate has divided Italian art and museum experts over how Italy should take care of tens of thousands of artworks in disrepair or stored in safe deposit boxes and never seen by the public for lack of space and money.

known Indians who raomed its hills and goes on from there to describe its land and resources, its people, and its history.

William BvTd, surveying the land in 1728, declared: Happy will be the poeple destined for so wholesome a situation, where they may live to the fulness of days . with much content and gayety of heart. Byrd named his 20,000 acres, which he acquired a little later, the Land of Eden.

By his treatment of the subject, it is obvious that author Butler agrees with Byrds assessment. Butler is a native son of Rockingham County, and his love of the land and its people, so evident in his writing, gves the reader a warm feeling and a desire to see it for himself.

The first white settlers were mostly English, Sc(R-ch-lrish. arid German, who were primarily small farmers with few, if any, slaves. They settled along the Dan River and grew grain, tobacco, cattle, pigs, and sheep. These early settlers used the river for transportation and commerce.

With the creation and naming of the county, local governments were formed, and justices of the peace dispensed punishment for offenses. Time in the stocks, whippings on bare backs, and public hangings were common.

The population of the county grew and was - and still is - evenly divided between urban and rural. About 20 percent of the population is black.

Butler traces the formation and growth of Rockinghams towns; the little village of Wentworth, the county seat; the largest town, Reidsville, and Madison; Leaksville, Spray and Draper, which in

1967 were consolidated into one city and named Eden.

The author also describes the growth of three major industries that provide the base of the county 's economy - tobacco, textiles, and the Miller Brewery, which employs more than 1.000 people.

Butler acquaints the reader with the host of prominent and distinguished men and women who call Rockin^am County, home: the Reids; the .Moreheads. Gov. Luther Hodges; Supreme Court Justice Susie Sharp: the Leaks. Campbells, .Murpheys. and Brodnaxes; and so many others who contributed to the

building of the economic. edixatkMial and religious life of Rockingham County

In his history of the county, Butler fails to mentkm anything about the numerous mill and factory workers -about theu- living conditions or relationships with tbeir employers. This would have made the book complete

U)A WOOTEN TRIPP

I.Mrs. Tripp, a retired school teacher living near Pactolus, has had numerous articles published She is a member of the Greenville Writers Club and is a creative writing student at Pitt Community College)

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#

TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE CALL 757-6390 FOR RESERVATIONS AND INFORMATION

Featuring the popular tunes: "Send in the Clowns, "The Glamorous Life", & "A Weekend in the Country". Amid the silver birches of a chateau in Sweden at the turn of this century, during one of those enchanted "white nights" in summer, when the sun doesn't set and people go joyfully mad with music and dancing all night long.

   AJL

Happy Hour Tom Jones Bruce Frye Walter Plemmer Golden

Oldies

9:00 until.. 5*7 & 11 until.. LateNite

Shrimp

11 until..





Camel Sponsored Expedition Leaving For Borneo

SUNSET ON THE ROANOKE SOUND - Hot hazy days of summer aloog the North Carolina coast can provide great oppoctunties for poetic simset shots along the states Older Banks. Hoe, a ke hird steps through shallow water in search (rf his evening meal as the sun d^ into the west. (AP Las^lAoto by Chuck Liddy)

By BETSY J.ANNESE Public Rdatioas

R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.

WINSTON-SALEM -Cemral Borneo, one of the last unexpkwed places on earth, is the tarj^ (rf an ambitious eight-week jungle expedition scheduled to be^ ininid-July.

Rick Rid^ay, 33, of Vaitura. Calif., known for his climb of K2, the %cond-highest mountain in the w^d, is the lead.

Rkigeway's four-man team wiU:

Work its way to the headwaters of the treacherous Kapuas River in north central Indcme^ Borneo, an unmapped region inhabited by wild animals, poisonous snakes, insects, and it is believed, natives who have never seai a Westerner.

Carry supplies and large inflatable rafts through 70 miles of dense, untracked jungle.

Descend the Kayan River, believed to contain white water as fierce as any in the world.

Named The Great Borneo Traverse, the adventure is being sponsored by R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company as the Camel Expedition 1983. a follow-up to the sue-

Backpacking, Rafting Trip Set For August

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will offer a program of backpacking and wfaitewater rafting on part of the Appalachian Trail and Nan-tahala River as they run through the Nantahala National Forest in western Nwth Carolina.

The trip wiU take place Aug. 11-14. Participants must be 18 years of age. Cost of the trip is $80 and includes transportation from GreenviUe, all equipment except shoes, clodiing and toiledies, and ail meals on

the trail. An additional expense of $10-$15 can be exited to cover meals while traveling to and from the trail.

The program is geared for the begmoing and novice backpacker, and an arienta-tion and discussion session will be held prior to the trip.

Participants will hike fve to seven miles on the Appalachian Trail each day from Bumingtown Gap to Wesser and end the trip with a guided raft trip on the Class 11, III and IV

Nature Program At River Park North

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department is contimiing regikration for the River Park North Day Camping experience. This is a new program this year designed to give children a nature type camping expereience.

The natural setting of River Park North on Mum-ford Road provides young people an outstanding opportunity to study the environment and natural resources of the area.

Included in the camping schedule is fishing hiking, canoeing, paddleboating.

an

gems, crafts and overnight cam{H)ut.

Youths ages 8, 9, and 10 may attend either or two sessions - July 18-22 or Aug. 1-3; and youths ages 11, 12, and 13 may attend either the July 11-13 session or the one for July 23-29.

" Camp size is limited. Each session lasts one week and meets from 8 a.m. untU noon. On Thursdays, children will meet back at the p^ at 7 p.m. and camp overnight.

For more details and for registration call 752-4137, extension 200 or go to the Administration Building 2000 Cedar Lane.

at

WEB OF STEEL Workers created a interesting mid-air

silhouette pattern last week as they prepared a light tower for

the Fourth of July entertainment near the Washington Monument for a fireworks show and a performance by singer Wayne Newton. (AP Laserphoto by Jim Fiedler of the Washington Times)

Whitewater rapids of the Nantahala River.

Part of Thursday will be spent driving to Aj^achian Trail in the North Carolina mountains, and participants will set out on the trail that afternoon. The group will hike and camp on the trail Friday and Saturday, and raft the Nantahala Saturday afternoon. The grrap will return home Sunday.

Those who would like to take part in the hike (MT ward more information should caO Bill Twine, Greenville Recreation and Parks Department, 752-4137, ext. 201.

Architect Show

NEW YORK - Lars Sonck, Architect, a retrospective organized by the Museum of Finnish Architecture, will be shown at New Yorks National Academy of Deagn beginning July 7 and continuing through Sept. 4.

Part of the Scandanavia Today festival, the exhibition has been expanded for its appearance in New York. The works being shown cover Soncks career from 1893 to 1956.

The ac^my is located at 1083 Fifth Ave., New York. Hours are noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sundays. Admission is $1.50, free from 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays.

ButfeHly Facts

Most butterfly populations require very specific habitats. In fact, some species depend largely on only one native plant for both food for the caterpillar and nectar for the adult butterfly. The varied natural habitats in the West and the mild climate of the South have nurtured a rich array of species. Although three-quarters of all U.S. species exist only west of the Rockies, Texas is the leader in butterfly varieties, with 311 distinct species and 153 subspecies.

Butterflies have been around some 150 million years.

The average butterfly in its full-blown adult stage lives only one or two and can thrive just about anywhere except on tidy lawns and a^[)hait. It is a creature of enormous variety; there are some 700 species and 1,500 subspecies in the United States. With few exceptions, such as the monarch which flies virtually everywhere, butterflies generally establish very localized populations, according to National Geographic.

Strong winds scattered embers from a burning warehouse in downtown Toronto in 1904. The first started shortly after 8 p.m. and within three hours almost the entire wholesale area of the city was in flames. More than $11 million damage occurred before the wind shifted and the fire was extinguished.

cessfol Camd Expeditnn 1981-82, the Mount Everest Grand Circle, also sponsored by Camel dgaiettes.

Joining Ridgeway will be John Locg. 29, Santa Monica, Calif., a wdl-known rock climber; Jim Bridwell, 38, Squaw Valley, Calif., famed mountaineer, and Jim Slade, 35, OaUand, Calif intema-tknal river guide.

Camel sponsors adventure expeditions because of what they stand for rhaiipnging the unkoown, unlocking the mystories (rf the uneqdored, seeking ex-pehoices and vi^ that release the human adventurous spirit. There have always been the few who have had to explore the oceans, tr^ the deserts, climb the mountains, said Marty Orlowsky, vice president, marketing for Reyndds Tobacco.

Their successes and travail have invariably touched the sense of adventure that exists in everymie.

Expedition members will leave Los Angeles July 15 and fly to Jakarta. Indonesia, where they will v-ganize their equipment and supplies. They will then fly to Pontlanak, a terminus on the west coast of Borneo, then proceed upriver on the Kapusas River by riverboat, small pwoerboats and finally by dugout canoe. After hacking through 70 miles of jungle, the team will board

rafts for the treadwrous descent of the Kayan River.

While most d the trip will be a struggle against nabffal barriers such as river and jungle, the team also antkn-pates encQuntering Dnyak tribesmen who have never seenaWedemer.

These people have abandoned the ritual of headhunting, said Rk^ay, but you still have to be careful aboik human encoudors. There is always the possSnlity of violating tribal customs or taboos witboik realizing it, and sine situatkms cmi become diffleult Bd we dont expect aiqr i^oMeins with the people.

The expeditk expects to complete its journey at Tanjan, a village on the east coast near the moikh of the Kayan River, about two

Popcorn Thooter

Popcorn Theatff, a film and book pn^ram for rising 5th, ^ and 7th graders, will meet for its second session of the summer Tuesday from 3;3Q-5 p.m. in the Chihlrens Room at 9iei^)ard Memorial Library. In additkm to free popcorn and films, those attending will be introduced to and can select from a large group fo new junior novels. The featured film will be P.J. and the Presidaits Son.

raomhs after leavk^ Pon-tianak Dving much of ttus time, there wfl] be tittle posdbility d contact with the oittside wwid. Asked what they would do in the event d serkxs mjury or illness.

Ridgeway replied, WeU have to do the best we can. This team has been chosen fmr tbdr resourcefulness and each member has proved strength d will and great skills.

Althou^i Bwneo mensmes approximatdy 600 miles across, foe vagaries d river and jun^ travel wiU force foe expnlition to covo- as many as 2,080 miles bdore the travose B compided.

FOOD SUPPLY ... Mmnbers d the Camd    Dayaks sun-ctsed in the manner shown by this

Expedition in Borneo will eat mostly idiat the    native on a platform by a riverside,

natives eat, such as wild boar meet dril by

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OWNED A OPERATED BY: ALTON SPAIN

MONDAY-THURSDAY S A.M.4 P.M. FRIDAY a SATURDAY I A.M.4;30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY

WE WILL GLADLY ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS & WIC VOUCHERS. QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

SHOPEZE

OWNED A OPERATED BY: SHOP EZE FOOD STORES. INC. MANAGER: BURGESS STEVENS

MON. THRU SAT. 8 A.M.-9 P.M. SUN. 9 A.M.4 P.M.

VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS





Founded During The Early Years Of The Roosevelt AdministrationEmployment Security Commission Is 50 Years Old

THERE'S ALWAYS SOMEONE WATTING... in the reception area of the Greenville Employment Security Commission Office to be served. Some rqwrt in to register for unemployment benefits; others await their turn for job

interviews; some come for testing to determine their best employmrat chances; and others are veterans, primarily of the Viet era, who are seeking employment.

AGRICULTURAL JOBS . . . play a si^ficant role in the overall employment picture in the Greenville labor area of Pitt and Greene Counties. Seasonal farm work accounts for a variety of jobs in cultivating and harvesting area crops such as

tobacco and cucumbers. Tj^ical of summer employees are Drew Rumbley, left, and William Earl Braswell, topping and suckering tobacco on the S. A. Paramore farm.

Text And Photog

Back in the early days of the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, at a time when America reeled from the economic woes of the Great Depression, Congress enacted into existence a number of public a^ncies to deal with unemployment, workers security, and public assistance.

In 1933, under the provisions of the Wagner-Peyser Act, the Employment Service was established. With rather meager funding, each state created an agency to cope with the problems and needs of widespread unmnployment.

In North Carolina, the fiven the agency was

the Employment Security Commissiofl.

Over the past half century, the ESC has been the agency primarily concerned with providing employment to those seeking work through a state network that now numbers over 90 locations in local, branch and itinerant offices.

The Greenville office of ESC was established in the fall of 1937. For the next 38 years, the office periodically moved from one to another location until its own building was constructed in 1975 on Bismarck Street.

A few highli^ts of the Greenville offices history, provided by the current manager, James Hannan, reveals that 24 years ago, in 1949, the minimum wage was still only 35 cents an hour.

Another factor cited by Hannan is the situation that existed in manpower-short America during the years of World War II. From 1942 through 1945, Hannan comnaents, the manpower shortage was so acute that the War Manpower Administration required all employers to channel their needs for people to fill jobs through the ESC. This created some discontent, as some employers felt that the government had no ri^t to regulate their hiring practices. Quite often, an

employer had to wait for some time to get a suitable person to fill a job.

Today, the Greenville office of ESC serves thousands of workers in the Greenville labor area - Pitt and Greene Counties. A staff of 15 permanent personnel and at the moment, nine temporary on-call workers, handle a wide range of services. Getting jobs for those seeking employment is the major function of ESC, but there are many other services provided - special assistance to military veterans, particularly those of the Viet Nam era; giving tests to determine an applicants proficiency; job orientation and providing information on jobs outside the Greenville labor area; providing individual and group counseling; and referral of applicants to the best source of training for specific types of work.

ESC also hanules a heavy seasonal demand for agricultural workers, drawing both on local manpower and

itinerant labor sources. Another important function is processing applications for unemployment benefits -which in the past few years has been an increasingly important part of ESCs role.

Much of the success weve had in helping people

find jobs has been the cooperative attitudes of employers in Greenville and in Pitt and Greene Counties, Hannan says. Without their cooperation and assistance, ESC would never be able to provide what people want-a job.

Jerry Raynor

Sites and Managers

Since the Greenville office of the North Carolina Employment Security Commission first opened in September 1937, the office has had five locations before having its own home in its own building at 3101 Bismarck St., which opened in 1975.

The first site for ESC was in the basement of Sheppard Memorial Library. From there, it moved in 1940 to a space over Dieners Bakery at 815 Dickinson Ave. The third location move, in 1942, was to the Fifth Street building that now houses the College Shop. The next two moves took the office to 521 Cotanche, then to 1002 Evans St., which now houses the Nautilus Health Club.

In the 46 years that ESC has been in operation in Greenville, more than a dozen persons have headed the office. Several of the managers filled short-term interim positions.

The first in charge was Robert B. Cobb, a branch manager who filled in until W.G. Cherry Jr. came in as the first manager in November 1937. Persons who have been managers for other than interim periods since then are: Arnold F. Barwick, 1938-41; Leroy Miller, 1941-42; Robert F. Pease, 1942-44; Mrs. J.B. Spilman, 1944-51; William B. Dillingham, 1951-1967; Uoyd Nooe, 1968-1972; and James Hannan, 1972 to date.

VETERAN REPRESENTATIVE ... for the ESC is Don Anders, seated at left. Anders talks to a Viet era veteran. Buddy Conner, who

has been hired by ESC to help work with veterans as well as perform other administrative duties.

GOES OVER STUDIES ... James Hannan, ri^t, manager of the Greenville ESC office, over newly received statistics with Alien, ESCs

4

placmnent supervisor

and assistant manager. Keeping updated on employment possibUiUes and unemployment statistics is an important part of ESCs functkm.

AN INDUSTRY EMPLOYER ... The GreenviUe Cable Television Company is one of many small and large industry employers hiring personnel through the local ESC office. Cable TV supervisor Trudy Fleming, seated, explains filling in a customer form to a new employee, Adele Gardner Bland, standing.

1

INTERVIEWING JOB APPLICANTS ... is one of the major functions of the Greenville office of ESC. Here, interviewer Ruth Phillips,

right, interviews job applicant Debra Stevenson for a possible job at Pitt County Memorial Hospital.





Lampshades Provide Quick Perk To Any Room

By BARBARA MAYER APNewsieatures

Has the sparkle gone out of one of your rooms? If the room still conforms to your needs and taste, but seems a bit faded and dull, perhaps it is time to change the lampshades.

Lampshades play the same role in the home as fashion accessories do on the person. Change, in both instances, can lend new appeal to the same old outfit.

Unlike fashion accessories, however, lampshades tend to go unnoticed once they are in place and the novelty has worn off. Over the years, as they slowly become mildly unattractive and dingier, one loses sight of how much a change would contribute to the rooms improvement.

Different shade styles tend to go in and out of fashion, so a change can serve to give the room a more current appearance. Not long ago. for example, the high-fashion shade was the straight-sided drum, but nowadays the slope-sided empire shape is being shown on more expensive, hi^-fashion lamps.

The very exaggerated shallow shade known to some as the coolie because of its resemblance to the Chinese hat is one of the most popular looks at present. Pleated designs which once had the edge over smooth shades are also less stylish than they used to be, according to one lampshade designer.

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First floor Basement Garage

Sq. Ft. 2,055 2,063 517

By Jerry Bishop

This well designed French Pro-vencial design is a beautiful home. The brick, diamond windows, cupola. Shutters, and color scheme all blend together perfectly. The floor plan of the At

tica, is equally desirable. The three bedrooms are served by two full baths and there is a half-bath combined with laundry, next to the family room. Sliding glass doors in the family room open onto a patio at the rear.

TO ORDER PLANS FOR THE ATTICA

Pkasc send me the sei(s) checked helm:

5 sets (Minimum Const. Pkg.) $70

1 set (Study Pkg.i ..................$35

Additional sets.................$15    each

ADD $4.25 FOR POSTAGE AND HANDLING

Materials List And Energy Saving Specifcation Guide Included ORDERS SENT L'.P.S. OR PRIORITY MAIL

AMOl'NT ENCLOSED. I saw thb house in the _

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Make check or monev order order payable to and send to;

CNITED FEATLRE SYNDICATE (DEPT. 6-A| -C- fN (V 200 Park Avenue, .New York, N.Y. 10166 V ^ ' A

AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION I SERVICE I

SERVICE M    M A A

garden linm

Q. How can I tell when my watermelons are ripe? (R.M., Rockingham)

A. The ground spot of a mature watermelon changes from white to yellow, and the sound made by thumping the melon with your finger changes from a metallic ringing when immature to a soft, hollow sound when mature. Another sign of maturity is the tendrils, which change from green to brown and begin to dry.

Q. A gray, dusty fun^s is covering the tips of my crepe myrtle branches. What is this fungus and how do I get rid of it? (O.F., Greensboro)

A. Powderly mildew fungus is a powdery, fluffy white to light gray fungus growth on succulent stems, leaves, buils and flowers of many ornamental plants. Crepe myrtle, phlox, rose and zinnia are especially susceptible. The fungus can controlled by spraying with benomyl (Benlate) according to directions on the label.

Q. What causes white, pithy spots just underneath the skin of ripe romatoes? (L.H., Greenville)

A. Stink bugs will cause this type of damage. They can be controlled by spraying malathion or endosulfan (Thiodan) according to instructions on the label.

Q. All summer I have had large patches of a yellow, sticky substance resembling egg yolk, ^wing in mulched areas. The growth is rapid, sometimes expanding to 12 inches or more withing hours. If left alone, it dries to a dark brown or black powdery substance, but never seems to grow back in the same place. At times it has grown into the foliage of plants and shrubs. What is this and is U^re any way it can be prevented? (C.A., Conover)

A. The growth you described Is probably a slime mold, which is a fungus that grows on decaying organic matter. Slime molds suddenly appear in warm weaSer following heavy watering or rains. They generally do not cause damage and disappear under adverse conditions. Thus, most people do not try to control them. However, they can be killed by spraying the contaminated area with practically any fungicide that is labeled for the site where the slime mold is growing. You can also try raking the fungus away or washing it off with water. Be sure to follow directions on the label before applying any pesticide or chemical.

Supplied by the N. C. Agricultural Extension Service

One of the advantages of replacing shades as a means o perking up the deccM- is that it is a rather simple and inexpensive s^. A lar^ vai^ of ready-made shades is available in wi(tely ranging prices. In addition, custom shade workrooms will re-cover an existing frame with virtually any material you may select. Do-it-yourself shade kits and patterns are also availaUe from craft and sewing centers.

Ready made lam{^ade materials include silk, linen, burlap, parchment and various fibrous materials as well as paper and glass (which requires special fittings and is useful only on certain types of lamps).

Additionally, wallpa{r and cotton print fabrics even sheeting - can be applied through lamination or sewing to a shade form so the shade can be coordinated to wall, window or u{Aolstery treatments.

The material selected should naturally conform to the type of lamp base - formal materials, such as silk, with formal bases and informal materials, such as buriap, with simpler, more primitive bases.

Silk - nowadays the real thing is rarely used - is considered the most formal shade material. Polyester and other synthetics which mimic silk are preferred because they are less expensive and ^and up better against fading and dirt abrasion.

Also formal in feeling are the shiny, opaque black and red paper shades which are often found ( Oriental-style lamp bases.

The more heavily textured a fabric is, the less formal. Burl^ the color of a brown paper bag on a rough potto7 base is a look highly prized in counti7 interiors at present.

Also in vogue are cut paper shades which reproduce those found in (xrionial Amalean homes in the 19th century. Small, frigged floral-pattern shades are also turning up in coimtry interiors.

Besides the matoial which is used, shades differ in method of construction. Tliey can be glued togi^r the less expensive method or sewn. Since sewing a shade is almost as complicated as sewing a blouse, prices for sewn shades are higher.

Recently, Howard Sbattuck, design director for Paul Hanson limps, offered some guiddioes for redecorating with lampshades. Pit^iortion, be n^ is all-important. However, only visual examination can determine if the proper pro^rtion has been observed.

He suggests taking the lamp base with you when you select a new shade. Shattuck says that many consumers tend to put too small a shade on a lamp. So, once you have selected the shade you think is right, try the lamp with the next size larger

shade before making a selection.

Keep in mind, however, that the shade should not overpower the table. A general guideline is that the shade at its widest should not overhang the table.

Most people tend to sdect shades in beige, off-white and white. Its a sensible choice, since these cdors are the least obtrusive and allow more li^t to penetrate into the room. However, if the lamp base is in the same color range, exercise care. Select a shade that is at least a few shadb darker or lifter. The shade should provide cmitra^. If it is only slightly darker, it wUl simply look as if the shade is old and soiled.

For uniformity, select the same color and shape shade for all the lamps in the room. Or opt for only one unusual shade to highlight one lamp so as not to present too confusing a jumble.

Regardless of what sort of shade you buy, make sure you take the plastic covering off when you get it home and on the lamp. The plastic is designed to keep the shade clean until it is used - not afterwards. Its counterproductive to leave it ( because the cover prevents beat from escaping and the beat will cause the shade to darken and deteriorate more quickly, said Shattuck.Mobile Home Low Aims At More Safety In Wind

By DOROTHY GAST Associated Press Writer

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Arkansas ranks first in the nation in killer tornadoes, yet thousands of mobile homes in the state are vulnerable to destruction even in thunderstorms because the law doesnt require that they be strapped down or set on a foundation.

A measure approved by the 1983 Legislature says new mobile homes bought from dealers must be strapped down, but the legislation doesnt apply to manufactured houses already in place.

Wed like to see people who live in them now strap them down, said Lane Kidd, executive director of the Arkansas Manufactured Housing Association, which

lobbied for approval of the requirement.

The new Arkansas law requires the use of metal straps which cost about $500 for the average mobile home.Regulations approved in 1976 by the federal Department of Housing and Urban Develi^ment have resulted in sturdier construction of mobile homes. Such construction, Kidd said, provides a gi^t deal of wind resistance if people are willing to provide a few more dollars to anchor them.

In a telephone interview recently, Kidd said anchored mobile homes were as wind-proof as most frame homes in the South. About 25 percent of Arkansas manufactured bmnes are anchored, he said.

Allen Lee, area manager of the National Weather Service in North Little Rock, said Arkansas had ranked second in the number of tornado deaths from 1916 to 1982, with 1,118-

ON THE

.HOUSE

By ANDY LANG APNewsieatures

From various sources come these bits of information of interest to the home owner:

The concept that families who purchase mobile homes are in the lower socioeconomic class is disputed by the Manufactured Housing Institute. It says a survey conducted by the independent research firm National Family Opinion Inc. showed the median income of buyers of new manufactured homes (mobiles) is about equal to that of all U. S. house purchasers, $16,881. Other statistics disclosed ihat more than 60 percent of the buyers of new manufactured homes are under 40, whereas people over 60 years of age bought 30 percent of the homes. The buyers in the survey paid an average of $21,861 for the homes.

A reader, commenting on our reply to another reader about caring for an old wooden salad bowl, says a mistake was made in advising her to rub the bowl with vegetable oil. Ruth Collamer says she has done decorative arts for years as well as restoring old wooden items and that vegetable oil is inclined to produce a rancid odor in time. Her advice is to clean the bowl with denatured alcohol and then rub it with mineral oU.

What should a home owner look for when shotting for fine plumbing fixtures? Richard Mather, a vice president of American Standard, says to choose classic lines and colors. Very deqi or strong colors may have an instant a^)eal, Wt more standard, neutral colors will be less Litrusive and lend themselves to color accessorizing as one changes color perspectives. As for style, says Mather, the cleaner the lines, the longer they will satisfy current style. And comfort is primary. Mather thinks elongated styles in toilets and bidets are more comfortable, with whirlpools, whether standard or out-sized, a definite part of the future in terms of luxury and comfort.

When undertaking a major home-improvement project, Marilyn Bethany says it is important to assemble all the players early in the game. Writing in Home Magazine, she says this should be done no matter how large or small your design, since conflicts among specialists are common and expensive. Its wise to choose one key professional at the start and let him select or at least approve the others. When interviewing such a professional, savs Miss Bethany,

look for any telling details of his or her personality and qualifications, including clothes, portfolio, length of time in business, etc. If the interview goes well, ask for references and inquire into all aspects of the professionals on-the-job performance, check with the Better Business Bureau and check with the local clerk of the court as to whether the professional has ever been listed as a defendant in a lawsuit. If all this sleuthing seems excessive, she says, consider what the alternative might cost you in dollars and mental anguish.

Getting ready to buy a house, old or new? There are companies that will in^t it for you to determine its condition. Generally, such companies make a complete inspection and then give you a written report. But even if you dont have the overall inspection, the Plumbing, Heating and Cooling In

formation Bureau advises a checkup of the plumbing system, which it says can be done for between $45 and $100, depending on hourly plumbing rates in your area. During the inspection, the plumbing contractor will evaluate the age and condition of the hot-water heater, faucets, toilets and drains. He will check to see if there is good water pressure and note whether there are any obsolete units for which there might be a replacement problem. Besides giving you a written report on all this, he should include an estimate of what it should cost now and in the future to keep the system in good working order.

(Do-it-yourselfers will find much helpful data in Andy Langs handbook, Practical Home Repairs, which can be obtained by sending $1.50 to this newspaper at Box 5, Teaneck, NJ 07666.)

ByANDYLANG APNewsieatures Q. - I am preparing to build a concrete block retaining wall. I know the footing should be at least one foot wide and one foot deep, but I have now been told it should be deeper than that in our area because the frost line is more than 12 inches. How can I find out if the information I have received is correct?

A. - Check the local building codes for that data and, if you cant find it quickly, have someone in the town office find out for you. The frost line in some localities is sometimes lower than one foot.

Q. - Can I install a new electric wiring circuit in our house even though my knowledge of electricity is limited?

A. No. Even if you are an e^rt and have the capability to handle it, local electrical codes may forbid it.

Q. - We bought an old wooden bureau that 1 decided to refinish. 1 thought it had a varnish finish and decided to clean the bureau with denatured alcohol before going to work on removal of the varnish, but I quickly discovered the alcohol was dissolving the finish. I stopped what I was doing and left everything that way. How do I handle the rest of the job? 1 still want to get off the old finish and then apply varnish to the bureau.

A. - The fact that the denatured alcdml began to remove the finish shows the finish was not varnish but shellac, since alcohol is a solvent for shellac but wont disturb varnish. To complete the job, apply more alccrfiol and continue the rubbing process, as the shellac softens, remove it with clean rags or, if necessary, steel wool. When all the shellac is off, sand the wood and get it ready for a new finish. Remember alcohol should not be used where there is a lack of ventilation. If, after the shellac is off, the wood is darker than you want it to be, you may have to bleach the wood. Follow the directions on the container regarding rinsing, then refinish.

Q. - Can a lacquer finish be made to Icxrii new again? 1 hear this can be done with lacquer thinner. How?

A. - Brudi lacquer thinner across the grain of the finish, then with it. When this is thoroughly dry, go over the finish with a very fine grade of steel wool and some paste wax.

(The techniques of using varnish, lacquer, shellac, stain, bleach, remover, etc., are detailed in Andy Langs booklet, Wood Finishing in the Home, which can be obtained by sending 50 cents and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Know-How, P.O. Box 477, Huntington, NY 11743. Questions of general interest will be answered in the column.)

Mississippi recorded 1,130 during the period. Arkansas was first during the period in the number of tornadoes that killed peqple, with 193, Lee said. Texas was secmd with 186.

This past year, for 1982, as I recall 25 percent of the deaths associated with tornadoes were pecle living in mobile homes, Lee said. Mobile homes have a tendency to coU^ (m themselves and blow down a lot more than a frame structure.

Lee said an unancbored mobile home could blow down in winds of 45 mph. In Arkansas, he said, probably 30 percent of the thundostorms could produce winds of 50 mph. A great percentage of the thunderstorms have the

potential to blow down mobile homes on a daily basis, be said.

He disagreed with Kidds comment that anchored manufactured homes were as wind-proof as most frame homes. A mobile home strapped down and on a foundation probably would withstand winds of 70 mph, be said. In a frame house, some shingles would be blown off in 70 mph winds, and there might be some upper frame damage, Lee said.

The weather service recommends that people get out of a mobile home if a tornado is approaching, Lee said. Some states have passed laws requiring mobile home paiks to provide storm shelters, he said.

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from the Carroll Rightar Instituto

FORECAST FOR SUNDAY. JULY 10,1963

GENERAL TENDENCIES. The early part of the day is excellent for inculcating yourself with the finest mental and spiritual tenets and principles that are available but the afternoon and evening finds delays and obstacles.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Do whatever will remove that tense condition at home but.later do not be forceful. Be sure to safeguard basics.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Meditation is wise in the morning. It may not be easy to get together with a good friend as you had planned to do.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You can figure out the best way to handle a financial problem tomorrow, so make notes in order to remember every detail.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Self improvement is on your mind early but later the situation at home makes this a bit difficult for you to do.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Meditating very early is wise but later you find it hard to extricate yourself from worries. Figure out how to get rid of them.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Morning is the best time to meet with a friend and coming to a fine agreement for later it would be too difficult to do so.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) The morning is best for being out in public since later little could be accomplished. Put practical affairs aside for a while.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Listen to the advice of a wise person today and then later do nothing that can jeopardize your good name.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Use only your good judgment if anything important comes up, since your hunches are not very reliable today.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Try to understand persons around you who are very sensitive and dont criticize them. Don't be annoyed.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You find it hard to plan for the coming weeks activity, so just let it unfold as it will be ingenious.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Early make that appointment of a pleasurable nature for next week, then get busy and please the one you love.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be one of those charming young persons to whom study comes very easy and will absorb a great deal of information which can be valuable upon reaching maturity when many a problem has to be faced and solved.

FORECAST FOR MONDAY, JULY 11,1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: The morning finds you with a good chance to get into putting across the various ideas and plans which you wish to project. Home pleasures can bring comfort.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You have many property and financial affairs to take care of during the day, but plan to be with kin later in the day.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Morning is fine for handling communication and reports in a unique way. Later, you have time to visit a good friend.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You can handle some monetary matter well. After lunch study your financial position very carefully.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Study how to gain personal wishes early in an ingenious manner, then get your appearance toned up.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Plan how to gain cherished wishes early in a dramatic fashion and then later you can carry through with regular routines.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Make sure you ask advice of a good friend. Forget that group meeting you wanted to attend.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Have a good breakfast and then get right at the activities that can bring you greater prosperity in the days ahead.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) You are inspired early how to handle responsibilities in a very charming way, so get busy and do just that.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Find some up-to-date system for handling your career work and get the advice you need from an expert, also.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Good day to sit down with a partner and either make a new agreement or revise an existing one, then follow through on it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Study that technical magazine well for the right answer to some problem and then get the assistance of a co-worker.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You early understand how best to rid yourself of some anxiety and feel freer, and then you can be happy with the one you love.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY .... he or she wiU be full of affection and bring joy to those around him, or her, so give as fine an education as you can afford, so that your progeny can become successful and independent quite early in life.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

S 1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Funeral Reflects Southerner's Life

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Death is a mirror of life in the South, a University of Mississippi professor says.

Charles Wilson is preparing a book on the subject which he says will show how Southerners reflect their lifestyle in the way they face the loss of their family member or a friend. It is due to be published in about two years.

"Funerals are related to the whole fabric of life in the South, he said.

The feeling is most apparent in the death of of a Southern hero. Wilson says, whether it in the present or in the past.

An estimated 200,000 people turned out for the funeral of Jefferson Davis, the only president of the Confederacy. And, untold thousands lined the streets and the highways earlier this year for the funeral of Paul "Bear Bryant, the long-time football coach at the University of Alabama.

Southern customs are even more evident in private funerals, Wilson said, ranging from the jazz marching band in New Orleans to the 'I

simple farm funeral in which burial takes place in a plot on the family land.

In contrast to the other parts of the country, open casket funerals still are common in the South, along with a wake in the home.

However, Wilson said that use of funeral homes was becoming more common in the Southern states, especially in the urban areas.

However, for the most part, the local clergyman is far more important in the funeral process than is the funeral director.

Wilson said that Southern funeral services are not directed to the family, to bring them consolation in their loss, or to the soul of the dead person. C

"Funerals are sad, melancholy events, Wilson said.

They also are strongly evangelistic, aimed at converting the living to a more religious life. The sermon and the hymns are designed to get the living to think about death, and their chances of meeting the Lord when they go.

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D-4-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 10,1983

Ctoaswotd By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS

1 Coagulate 5DriU 9 Excavate

12 - Hashanah

13 Stuntman Knievel

14 Wall climber

15 Competent

16 Placid

17 Fire; coUoq.

18 Ninny

19 Opponent for Frazier

20Cro(*ed 21 Belief 23 Snow runner 25 Confuse 28 Was selfish

32 Excuse

33 Let up

34 Infamous marquis

36 Sportsman

37 Trawler need

38 Sought office

39 Kermit, e.g. 42 polloi

44 Computer input

48 Pitcher part

49 Cod, e.g.

50 Devilish

51 Perform

52 Burden

53 Bun

54 Argon," e.g.

55 Defeat

56 Hill insects

DOWN

1 Beach critter

2 Timber wolf

3 Norse city

4 Universe start, perhaps

5 Turned into

6 Track

7 Burger topping

8 Shade tree

9 Cut into cubes

Avg. soiutiofl time: 23 min.

mm

BOy\J AWL ALLCL

-MLElElr

|L QLiL ILAVA

_PRAY

A NNQYBFA^I SO APAL lIr OADS

I lxiigr:i:esilIS

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T A L L nJBIC OC AM E WBAL POSE E AS ^

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Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

10 Infamous czar

11 Peer -

20 Goodmans

time

22 Playground feature

24 Aussie mammal

25 Naughty

26 Corrida cheer

27 Soldiers

29 Festive

30 Paris season

31 German article

35 Fuel gas

36 Father

39 Banner

40 Costa-

41 Chooses

43 Work

45 Bards river

46 Pinball mishap

47 well that ends well

49 Com holder

25

26

40

27

49

35

42

43

23

28

36

38

24

33

20

10 11

29    30

45

46

47

CRYPTOQUIP    7-9

H IWTMLWN FMB LYNMW MLVHFV TE-VTLHEA NYE IMFVWT DN PLMBDLHPAT.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip: COULDNT AN IRRITATED CYCLOPS COUPLE SEE EYE TO EYE?

Todays Cryptoquip clue: V equals T.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Sii^e letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

IM3 King Features Syndicate, Inc

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

@1963 Tribune Company Syndicate. Inc

DIG FOR DUMMYS ENTRY

DEAR READERS: We have had many requests over the years for those hands that we consider to be our favorites. That makes quite a list. For the time being, therefore, we are devoting the Sunday column to a series of famous hands. At the end of the series, we will go back to our weekly question and answer column.

North.South vulnerable. South deals.

NORTH

05 4

AK 76532

J73 WEST    EAST

KJf098632^7 103    762

84    QJ9

8    KO10642

SOUTH

A4 AKQJ985 10

\ 9 5 The bidding:

South West North East

2 '    4 4    5 . Pass

6 ' Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead: Eight of .

Our good friend, the late Alphon.se J. "Sonny" Moyse, IS remembered best for the acerbic wit with which he edited Bridge World Magazine lor so many years. He espoused the 4 3 major fit for Its often overlooked potential as a suitable game contract, and waged a vigorous campaign against the weak twobid. His accomplishments were so many and varied, that we often forgot what a shrewd card player he was. This was one of his favorites, and ours. It is from a rubber bridge game at the lavendish Club in .New 4ork, one of Sonny's favorite haunts.

No one could accuse Sonny of being shy in the bidding. Once he got a positive response, he did not care that he had a potential misfit and four losers in his own hand. He bid the slam with the confidence of a man who expected to make it.

West led his singleton club, and Sonny felt that he had seen better dummies. It seemed that there was no way that he could avoid losing two tricks in the black suits, since there was no way to get to dummy to enjoy the diamonds even if he could set them up. Or so it might seem!

.After some thought, declarer found a way to make his contract if West had, indeed, led a singleton club. He won the ace and drew three rounds of trumps. .Next came a diamond to the ace, followed by the king of diamonds, on which declarer sluffed his ace of spades!

Declarer ruffed a diamond in hand to set up the suit, and then led a spade toward the queen. West was sunk. He rose with the king of spades to prevent the queen from winning, but he had nothing left in his hand but spades. His forced return of that suit provided declarer with an entry to dummy to take all the sluffs he needed on the high diamonds.

Send any questions for this column to: Charles Goren and Omar Sharif, care of this newspaper. Each week a prize of a copy of the new Goren's Bridge Complete, a $9.95 value, will be awarded for the question judged the best received.

Charles Goren and Omar Sharif personally cannot personally undertake to answer all questions submitted.

Life As It's Lived

By GAIL MICHAELS

The monscers are dancing in our living room, Zachary informed me ysterday morning. Tell them to leave.-Poor monsters. They may not have any other place to dance. Why dont we leave them alone?

Zachary looked shocked. You know that no one is sposed

to dance in that living room. Andspecially monscers. I want them out.

What if we tell them to do their dancing in your room?

I just matte them get out of there. Thats why thfeyre in the living room.

Then why cant you tell them to get out of the living room?

Because they might be mad. And they might scare me.

But, Zachary, surely youre not scared (rf monsters, are you?

Yes, I surely am, he said decidedly.

Not only did I find his fear rather difficult to understand, but I was astounded at the depth of his ingratitude. After all, his monsters have been acting as his scapegoats for weeks. When I asked him what little boy spilled apple juice on the floor and didnt tell Mommy, he looked completely blank. It wasnt a little boy, Mom. It must have been a monscer.

Monsters must have pulled up by the roots the marigolds in Megs garden. Monsters must have shoveled the ashes in the fireplace into the asparagus fern, then made little boy handprints on the sofa to implicate the only little boy in this house.

And monsters definitely were responsible for lathering the cat with Phillips shaving cream.

The monsters even tried to help when Zachary wanted to go

out to the pizza place for supper one night.

No, were going to eat here, I told him when he made his request. Daddy will be home soon, and hell be too tired to go out."

But Daddys not coming home, he said.

Yes, he is.

Zacharys eyes became very round. Oh, no, he isnt. The monscers ate him. So we have to go get pizza.

Now Zachary has been told repeatedly that he is responsible for keeping these monsters in check, but despite all his efforts, they still get out of hand occassionally, especially wlten Zachary is angry. When he told his father, who was in the middle of a reprimand, to hush up and found himseli in bed as a result, he sobbed, But the monscers made me say it!

Although he was obviously wounded by my skeptisicm, I was expecting the same re^nse when I reprimanded him recently for dashing up and down the aisles of a fabric store and putting several bolts of material at grave risk.

Ra-a-a-ar! he said in answer to my first warning.

My second warning was a bit more severe. I held him by the shoulders and explained that, if he continued to misbehave, he would forfeit a long awaited lunch of fast food.

But I cant st(^, he growled. Im a monscer.

Now that I am inclined to believe.

Am

Etch ol these advertised items is required to be readily available (or sale at or below the advertised price in each AAP Stora. aicapt as specifically noted in this ad

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PEANUTS

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NUBBIN

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Our Family Rates

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Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of S200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.

Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Classified Ads 752-6166

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3 Line Minimum 1-3 Day&.. 45' per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

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DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. .Tuesday3p.m. Thursday . Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday.. .Wednesday 5p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector . cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 10,1963-D-5

024

Foreign

1977 DATSUN B210 Needs some work, but still runs Has Ut.OOO miles $1000 758 7964    _

1978 FIAT SPIDER Convertible 1800. marine blue, higb mileage, AM FM stereo, luggage rack needs new top and trunk fid painted $2700 firm or 19 payments of $157 23 Call 758 03l8eveninos_

1979 MAZDA RX7 Limited Edition Low mileage Loaded with all options $7200 752 3766or 752 0741

1980 DATSUN 210. 2 door hat chback. SL package, automatic, air, new tires, excellent condition $3950 756 6588 after 5 30 pm_

1980 DATSUN 4 door stafionwagon. brown, radial tires. AM.'FM. automatic, air, 25,000 miles, clean.

$3850 After 5 p.m . 752 7793_

1 1980 HONDA ACCORD, 2 , door'hatch, AM FM cassette, air,

! cruise control 746 2640 alter 5 30 i 1982 TOYOTA WAGON 5 speed,

' loaded, low miles Make offer ; 756 7417._

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002

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16' JOHNBOAT with 9'j horse power Johnson E xcellent condition $7001irm 758 0277 _

17' BARBOUR BOAT, 135 horse power Mercury, trim tilt, tilt trail er $900 or best otter 758 2128_

1976 19' MFG boat. 135 horsepower .Evinrude with power till and trim. Need a friend or more permanent depth finder, radio equipped, ski relationship? Well established club i ladder and other accessories Call

for friends Write    PO Box 1628,    | 756 0970_

Santord. NC 27330---, CRUISE BOAT with cutty cabin

tX flAA f"ACU I fyAKjC and head Boat has never been used l_YIVO    lor registered Has top, side,    and    aft

No credit or employment needed    24    I curtains Outboard motor    not    in

hou_$eCY.'4^_. '0^ ^9:?_'eluded $4295 Galvanized certified

tandem trailer available with boat.

007 SPECIAL NOTICES woo Caii 94^941-------------

FREE! Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. No purchase necessary _

26' LUGER SAILBOAT, 1979 Trail er, motor, head sleeps 5, 3 sails. 757 0634

WE PAY CASH for diamonds Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mall, Downtown GreenyiMe

010

AUTOMOTIVE

RENTAWRECK Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save 752 2277_

1034 Campers For Sale

!COX POPUP CAMPER Sleeps 6 i Includes sink, ice box, elecfrical and water connections also water ; holding tank, new top and 2 new

spare fires $800 752 3812_

POPUP CAMPER Sleeps 6 In eludes sink and ice box electrical and water connections Needs new top Good bottom and tires $600 736 8492 or 752 5124_

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will oav too dollar.

TENT FOR 8 PEOPLE, $25 825

5781.    _

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops 250 units in stock O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774    _

SELL YOUR CAR    the    National    12' SHASTA    TRAVEL    trailer,

Autofinders Way!    Authorized    sleeps six, has    stove, ice    box    and

Dealer in Pitt County.    Hastings    closet In excellent condition    Call

Ford. Call 758 0114    758 8747

012

AMC

YOUR AD COULD BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS SPACE

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

1973 GREMLIN Low mileage, excellent condition. Leaving ine Country, must sell! $725. Call 756 4262 after 5 p.m.

1979 AMC CONCORD DL Wagon, 4 speed, high highway mileage, good condition. Best otter 752 5027._

013

Buick

REGAL 1976. 2 door. Extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden. 746 3141.

1979 BUICK REGAL Silver AM/FM stereo, cruise, power win dows. 1 owner Good condition High mileage. Make otter. 756 8539_

014

Cadillac

1977 COUPE DeVille Loaded with options. Bronze Very nice car. $4500. 758 4988    _

1981 CADILLAC Coupe Deville Loaded with options Priced to sell. Call BB&T William Handley 752 6889.    _

015

Chevrolet

CAMARO 1981. good condition.

good condition. Call K Chevrolet, Avden, 746 3141

Fully equipped. Call Rex Smith

Sales. 756 7

vr

PUBLIC

NOTICES

MALIBU, 1972, 2 door, 307 V 8, automatic, excellent mechanical condition, $800. 355 2579._

1968 CAROLINIAN CAMPER for

sale. $1000 Can be seen at 121 Blount Street, Winterville. 756 8610

1972 WILDERNESS OVERCAB

camper for Pickup. Sleeps 4, gas stove, 20 gallon fresh water holding tank, sewage holding tank. AC or DC hook up. Good condition. Sacri-tice $650. 753 5287._

1977 27' ALUMLITE 5th Wheel, $7,000 1982 equipped truck, $10,000. 758 6582.

1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times Sleeps 8 Roof air, awning, fully self contained $5300 negotiable 756 8539._

036

Cycles For Sal

MOTORIZED ULTRALIGHT air craft. In good condition. Asking $3,000 or best offer. 355 2970

1976 HONDA 360 T Good condition. Low mileage. $400. Call 752 6083 after 5.__

1979 YAMAHA MC650 SPECIAL

F xcellent condition. $1,000. 756 7396.

1980 YAMAHA 650 MAXIM Good condition Must sell.'$1500 or best offer Call after 4 p m at 267 2571, Faison_

1981 HARLEY FLT Accept older Harley as partial trade $4700. 752 8445atter 5p.m._

1981 HONDA 400CM Just tuned. 5.000 miles, tall backrest, luggage rack, 2 helmets, wet suit. Excellent condition Serious calls only $1600. Niohts 746 3335.

MONTE CARLO 1974. In

condition Fully equipped. 746 3141.__

mint

Call

1964 CHEVROLET BELAIR. good condition. 94,000 miles Best otter. Call before 2p.m., 758 6674

1971 CHEVROLET stafionwagon Fair condition. Make otter 756 8427.

1972 CAMARO Clean. Call 752 7461.

1981 KAWASAKI KZ 550 A2. Excellent condition 6,000 miles, $1400. Call 752 1628 alter 5._

1981 SUZUKI GT550L. 12,000 miles. 1972 Ford E300 Van Call 756 0991.

1982 YAMAHA, 650 Heritage Special, low mileage $1400. 756 6 781 after 6 p.m._

039

Trucks For Sale

SAT I sRy N Al1SfoV?DE D UNDER G S 44A 2

Joe Cullipher Chrysler Plymouth, Inc., 3401 S Memorial Drive, Green ville, N.C., will offer for sale at public auction on July 15, 1983, at 10 a.m. the following vehicles.

1. 1972 Chevrolet S.W., Serial No. 1L35R21230791

2.    1975 Pontiac, Serial No. 2K57W5A10380.

July 3, 10, 1983

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of ROBERT PARKER, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against saicf Estate to present them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is Post Office Drawer 15, Greenville, North Carolina 27835 0015, on or before the 30th day of December, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned This the 30th day of June, 1983 Michael A Colombo Post Office Drawer 15 Greenville, N.C. 27835 0015 July 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983

016

NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estafe of EDNA W PAYNE, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the under signed, whose mailing address is Rt. 2, Box 431. Greenville, North Carolina. 27834, on or before the 30th day of December, 1983. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make im mediate payment to the undersign ed.

, This the 30th day of June, 1983 Elmer S. Payne Rt.2, Box 431 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Michael A. Colombo JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH & BLOUNT Attorneys at Law Post Office Drawer 15 Greenville. N.C. 27835 0015 July 3, 10, 17, 24, 1983

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed proposals, so marked, will be received in the office of the Director of Greenville Utilities Commission, Greenville Utilities Building. 200 West Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina, until 10:30 a.m. (EDST), on July 28, 1983, and immediately thereafter publicly open ed and read for the furnishing of: 1,500 LF of 4" PVC Pipe and 5,5 LF of 6" PVC Pipe

Instructions for submitting bids and complete specifications tor the equipment or materials to be provid ed will be available in the office of the Superintendent, Water/Sewer Systems, Greenville Utilities Building, 200 West Fifth Street, GreenvMle, North Carolina, during regular office hours.

Greenville Utilities Commission reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to waive informalities. GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION July 10, 1983

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JASPER ELBERT HARDEE, DECEASED

NOTICE TOCREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the estate of JASPER ELBERT HARDEE, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of Jasper Elbert Hardee to present them to the undersigned Executor, or his attorneys, on or before January 11, 1984, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment. This6day of July, 1983.

ARDENJ HARDEE Route 1, Box 57 Grimesland, NC 27837 Executor of the Estate of Jasper Elbert Hardee,

Deceased Gaylord. Singleton, McNally & Strickland Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 July 10, 17, 24, 31, 1983

1972 NOVA 307, air, AM/FM cassette, new paint and interior. Excellent condition $1000 758 6670 after 6p.m Hal Moore.

1979 CHEVY CHEVETTE Metallic blue. Excellent condition. 4 speed with air, AM/FM $1995.758 4155

2 EXECUTIVE DRIVEN CHEVROLET CITATIONS

1981 4 DOOR white hatchback, 4 cylinder, power steering and brakes, air conditioning, AM FM and cruise control Each slightly over 55,000 miles $4250 each. Call 753 2631 days only_

CHEVROLET CONVERSION Van

1979. Excellent condition. Low mileage Call 746 3141

1968 4x4, LONG BODY, 3 speed Call 795 4889_

1971 CHEVY 350 Cubic inch. New paint. Excellent condition. $1900

firm. 756 4329_

1974 CHEVROLET, 3 + 3, 3/4 ton, air condition, power steering, cruise Excellent condition. $240u 756 4254 or niohts, 756 2892

1975 DODGE KARA VAN $1795 Can be seen at Lazy Acres Nursery or call 758 5757 after 6._

1977 DATSUN pickup truck Mag rims, roll bar, $2.000. Call after 6 pm, 752 5984_

Chrysler

1977 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 2 door white, blue interior. All electric, new tires, brakes, and shocks. New carburetor, all rubber hoses new. Excellent running con dition. Clean in and outside Can be seen at Hastings Ford_

1977 FORD Econoline Van automotive, AM/FM cassette stereo. Air, cruise control, CB radio, carpet, 66.000 miles. Good condition Great all purpose vehi cle $2400 Call 757 3338.    _

1979 CHEVY work van. Straight shift, 6 cylinder 758 4199._

1983 SILVERADO

Loaded. Call 752 9420.

short bed

017

Dodge

1981 DODGE OMNI Miser, 20,000 miles, owner left tor overseas. 4 speed. $4,000. 752 4978._

040

Child Care

018

Ford

RESPONSIBLE PERSON to keep 2 children in my home, Monday through Friday 8:30 to 5:30 Transportation required 756 7761 after 5 30____

GRANADA 1982. 4 door. Fully equipped. Ford Executive Car. Cafl Leo venters Motors, Ayden, 746 6171.__

1046

PETS

LIKE NEW, 1983 Ford Escort GT, 2 door, 2200 actual miles. 4 speed, air, power steering, AM/FM stereo. clean. $6500. 75f 4956 after 6

1969 GALAXY FORD Fully loaded $300. 758 2910_

1973 FORD PINTO Runabout, air, automatic Make otter. 756-8539.

1975 MUSTANG II Must sell. 3436    _

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS SUPREME 1982. Extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Avden, 746 3141 _

DELTA 88 1977 White, 4 door, automatic, power steering, cruise. Excellent condition. One owner. $3300 Days 752 6117, nights 756 3807.

1972 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS, 350 cubic inch, 4 barrell, automatic, keystone wheels, white with black too, $1250. After 7 p.m., 756 6983.

1977CUTLASS, $2100 757 3100

022

Plymouth

1973 SATELLITE, 1 owner Excellent condition. $1300. 757 3100.

1975 PLYMOUTH FURY 318

engine, beige. 1 owner, 74.000 miles. 74^2326_

1978 HORIZON Air. automatic. AM/FM Excellent condition. Call 753 2245 alter 6 p.m_

024

Foreign

A GOOD BARGAIN 1975 Fiat SL128, AM FM stereo, excellent condition. $1,000. 756 0183._

HONDA PRELUDE, 1 980, automatic, AM/FM cassette, great condition $6,000 757 3367 after 5

TOYOTA COROLLA 1982 4 door, automatic, air condition, good con dition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden, 746 3141

TOYOTA CRESSIDA 1983. Silver/blue metallic Full power, 6,000 miles. Priced to sell. 747 8493 or 756 3228__

1969 PORSCHE 911 COUPE

#119122146 White, 64.000 miles, good condition $7500. Call 355 6881 8 To 10 p.m., Greenville._

1 973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good. $1700. Call 758 2300days

1974 MERCEDES 240D 4 speed, air conditioning. AM/FM stero cassette with dual Craig speakers. Excellent condition. Can be seen at A-1 Doctors Park, Greenville. 447 8253

1975 DATSUN B210, new paint and interior. 1976 Datsun truck Both in good condition Call 753 3570

1975 TOYOTA Corolla. 5 speed, very

id CO          "

9076

good condition. $1350 or best otter. 752

AKC BASSET HOUNDS 7 weeks old. 3 males, 3 females Tri colored. Shots. $150, 1 443 3308._

AKC DOBERMAN puppies. Tails clipped Wormed Males, $90. Females, $80. 946 7881_

AKC GREAT DANE puppies. 2 females, 11 weeks old Must sell. Price negotiable. 756 6197.

AKC REGISTERED Collie pups tor sale. Champion bloodlines Blue Merles, sabtes, and tri color. $225 male; $200 temale. 756 9280 after 6.

BULLDOG puppies tor sale, $50. Call 746 4432._

FOR SALE: Special AKC Cocker Spaniels. Basset Hounds and Miniature Schnauzers, $100. Also Pomeranians for sale. Call Bullock's Kennels, 758 2681.

FOR SALE: AKC Shepherd pup pies, 6 weeks old. colors black. Black and tan. Call 752 3735 or 758 4669._

SCHAUZER YORKIE

old. $150. call 752 7194

3't months

051

Help Wanted

BOOKKEEPER/RECEPTIONIST needed tor local Law Office. Expe rience required in bookkeeping, payroll, and accounts receivable. Please send resume to PO Box 802, Greenville, NC_

BOOKKEEPER NEEDED 20

hours per week. Call Shelly Joyner at 758 1610 before 6 or 752 1578 after

BOOKKEEPER Need skilled person who is honest and reliable Light typing involved. Pleasant working conditions Call Susan, 758 0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel Service_ _

BORED! BROKEI BLUEI Sell toys, gifts until December. Fun job. party plan, free $300 kit. No collectino. no delivery 753-2534.

BUYERNEEDED Degree desired in forestry. 2 to 3 years experience needed in cruising timber and buying and reselling cut lumber and timber Outstanding opportunity $25K $30K Fee paid Call Ted. 758 0541. Snelling & Snelling Personnel Service    _

CABINETMAKERS At least 3 years work experience in high quality woodwork. Apply at General Woodwork, Inc., Highway 258 North, Tarboro, NC or call Ike Terrell at 823 1681._

CASHIER

Convenience store. Good at mosphere. Steady employment. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive_

CHAUFFER WANTED Must be at least 18 years of age Must be tree to travel with elderly gentleman All expenses paid Write Chauffer, PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC 27834.

COMBINATION FOOD SERVICE and delivery Apply In person at

__ Ernie's Famous Sufas & Piiza, 911

1975 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER Wh Memorial Drive Monday, $750 Call 758 1403 days. 756 9355 | Tuesday, and Wednesday from 2 30 nights._.11,_' to4:3Qp m. only_





D-6-Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C Sunday, July 10,1983

051

Help Wanted

COMBINATION clerk/warehouse person needed. 40 hour work week. Send replies to Clerk/Warehoose, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834.

TER PROGRAAAMERS All

Super company. Benefits, id Call Jonn at Heritage

COMPUTER levels Fee paid Personnel, 355 2020

CONTINUING EDUCATION

Specialist, Division ot Community Health Service, School of Public Health Position specializes in planning, organizing, implement ing. and evaluating continuing edu cation and technical assistance

programs sponsored by the School of Public Health, giving particular emphasis to programs for Public Health Nurses in the state Involves

extensive work with public health agencies. School faculty, and Division staff to assess health related training needs and plan, develop, and present programs to meet these needs. Minimum qualifications: Bachelor of Science in Nursing and Master's degree in health, education, or related field, three years ot experience in con ducting training needs assessments and designing, teaching, and evaluating continuing education programs for public health or related organization. Starting sala ry about S20.000 depending on training and experience. Send re sume by July 25, 1983 to Richard M House, Acting Director, Division of Community Health Service, School of Public Health 201H, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, or call 919^66 2248. Equal Opportunity E molover

COUNTERPERSON Learn all the ins and outs of inventory control and counter sales. Can move up quickly into management. Electrical and plumbing back

ground helpful Outstanding enefits. Career opportunity Car

benefits. Career opportunity Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snefling & Snelling Personnel Service

051

Help Wanted

OVERSEAS, Cruise Jobs $20.000    S60,000/year    possible.    Call

805 687 6000 Ext. J 8752_

PARTS COUNTER PERSON Ford

farts experience necessary, xcellent advancement opportunity to parts manager position for the right person. Call 756-4272

PAYROLL CLERK Outstanding opportunity for qualified person to handle quarterly tax reports, insur ance. and payroll responsibilities. Call Gertie, 758-0541, Snelling & Snelling Personnel.

PLUMBER NEEDED At least years experience. 756-7961._

Town ot ion 5,000, 9 Man Desirable. Hi-

POLICE OFFICER Plymouth, Population Department, NC Desirable. High School Grad. Salary Negotiable. Contact Floyd Woodley. Chief of Police, 132 East Water Street, Plymouth, NC 27962 (Phone 793 46^)_:_

PROFESSIONAL RN OPPORTUNITIES

John Umstead Hospital is a 650 bed JCAH approved state supported Psychiatric hospital that offers in tensive and confinued treatment for adults, adolescents and children. It

DIRECTOR OF ENGINEERING

and Inspections. Responsible tor the over all supervision of the cities engineering and building inspection functions. Requires Bs in Civil Engineering and North Carolina PE Registration. Must have con siderable municipal engineering experience. Salary $30,389 to $40,74/ depending on qualifications. Submit resume/application to Personnel Director, City of Greenville, PO Box 1905. Greenville, NC 27834. Application deadline August 19, 1983 EOE/AA M/F_

EDUCATIONAL SPECIALIIST wanted Master's degree in special education (emotional disturbances) and/or vocational education. Posi tion involves developing and im

flementing a psych oeduca ional/vocational program tor eight emotionally disturbed adolescents. Experience required Must have North Carolina G teaching certificate. Send resume to: Cheryl Barnes, M Ed., Director ot Day Treatment, Pitt County Mental Health Retardation and Substance Abuse Center, 306 Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, NC 27834_

EQUIPMENT OPERATOR II to

operate backhoe. frontend loader, and tandem axle 13 speed transmission dump truck. Must have valid NC class B drivers license and prior experience on this equipment. Starting salary $199.60 per week Apply at Personnel Office. City of Greenville, Municipal Building, corner of West 5th and Washington Streets, Greenville, NC bv Friday July 15. EOE/AA M/F

EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN

to work with established firm. Excellent opportunity, good benefits Please call 756 3240 for interview

is located approximately 15 miles north ot Durham, 25 miles north of Raleigh and is near the Research Triangle Park

Opportunities now available are: ^NIT NURSE DIRECTOR Masters in Nursing with 3 years administrative experience and 2 years of clinical experience in Nursing Psychiatry.

NURSE SUPERVISOR II

N C License and 3 years nursirig experience including one year in Charge Nurse Roll.

LEADNURSES

License and one year of tessional nursing experience

For more information contact

051

Help Wanted

SALESPERSON NEEDED Auto sales experience preferred Excellent company benefits. Call 756 4267    _

SECRETARY - For small chain of

treschools. Apply in person at 313 ast 10th Street. No phone calls Please

WANTED:

ex^rience.

^-------- Must    have

:all 7526124. ask for

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming. cutting and removal. Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

I I T r K. wr rk.rr^irL ww-----

Carpentry, masonry and roofing^ 35 years experience in building. Xall James Harrington after 6

752 7765.__

BABYSITTER Will babysit in your home. Second and third shifts. Reasonable rates. After 1, 758 7053.

BRICK AND BLOCK WORK Repairs or additions. 11 years experience. Call 8256591 after 7 p.m.

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 9123 day, 756 1007 night.__

EXPERIENCED with terminal and alzheimers patients. Days or nights. Excellent references. 758-5773.

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood ind metal. Equipment formally of )ip and Strip. All items returned vithin 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call for free estimate. Days 756-9123, Nioht 756 1007.

Recruitment Coordinator^ Personnel Office

John Umstead Hospital

Butner.N C 27509 (919) 575-7943

An Affirmative Action Equal  Opportunity Employer

HAVING A PARTY? Hire a iug t~Kgler. Great for kids parties. Call V ^ob, 758 2198._

PROGRAMMERS, systems analyst, and other specialists in EDP area needed. Career op portunities. Outstanding salaries. Fees paid. Call Susan. 758 0541. Snelling S. Snellino Personnel

PSYCHOLOGIST WANTED: Master's or Doctorate in psychology Position, involves group psychotherapy, identifying problem behaviors and designing, implementing and monitoring behavior management programs for a psychoeducational/vocational program with eight emotionally disturbed adolescents. Experience required. Send resume to: Cheryl Barnes. M Ed.. Director of Day Treatment, Pitt County Mental Health Retardation and Substance Abuse Center, 306 Stantonsburg Road, Greenville, NC 27834

REAL ESTATE BROKERS

We have two empty desks and are interviewing applicants. North Car olina real estate brokers license

FLORAL DESIGNER Experience necessary Send resume to Design er, PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC

HOME IMPROVEMENT SALESPERSON

Represent one of world's largest retailers. Position available cover ing Eastern Carolinas. Commission only with draw account. In home selling experience helpful but not necessary. Must be sell starter and have own transportation. Earning potential: $25,006 to $50,000. Train ing program, leads furnished. Career position. Contact Al Pierce, 1 800 22 5511 or send resume to P O Box 725, Concord. N C 28025.

lAMSEEKINGAN INDIVIDUAL TO LEARN MY BUSINESS

PART TIME

Busy manager in nationwide orga

ation '    .........

strong e

workings of this successful organ!

nizafion Is seeking an Individual esT

who has str

I desires to learn the

zation. The Individual selected must be willing to accept sales training and have desire to qui ' accept major responsibilities.

Ford or Danny at 756-4254 7 pm pm only_

IF QUALITY OF GROWTH IS IMPORTANT TO YOU

Consider joining Shasta Beverage: We are looking for a fop qualll individual who likes a challenge and

enjoys a teamwork environment. We have an immediate need for a sales representative for the Greenville area. In exchange for your experience we offer excellent compensation, medical and dental coverage, employee stock purchase plan and the opportunity to con Iribute to significant, lasting busi ness accomplishments.

To respond, we invite you to send resume including salary history to:

PO Box5447 Charlotfa, N C 28325 An Equal Opportunity Employer

required. Experience desirable but not absolute required. Willingness to worj(. ability to get along with people, professional attitude and ethical ideals necessary Generous commissions and listing fees. All replies strictly confidential. Call Jack Duftus, Duffus Realty, Inc. 756 5395

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752-5583

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driyeways. Call

752 7341,__

I WILL KEEP children in my home at anytime. Call 758 5822._

LAWNAAOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 after p.m., weekends anytime.

FURNITURE

3 PIECE BEDROOM suit. 754-0621.__

067 Garage-YardSal*

NEW PITT COUNTY Fair Grounds Flea Market open Saturday t til S. Sunday I til 5. Outside dealer spaces $2.00. Inside spaces $6.00 Call Bill 746 3541, Mike Fair Grounds 758 6916

YARDSALE

Saturday,July 16th

9:00AAA.-1:()0P.M

H.L. HODGES CO.

210E StIlStlwt

Sale Items Will Be Found On Our

Sidewalk AND In Our Store.

Inventories will be reduced to prepare for new fall merchan dise.

Discontinued and overstocked items will be discounted.

Don't miss the outstanding savings.

Come Early Before Everything Is

Sold. Thanks For Supporting Usf 5

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman

Stables. 752-5237.    _

LEATHER REPAIR

North Hills Saddlery, 746-2134.

073 Fruits and Vegetabies

CORN yellow Senica Chief. $90c dozen. We pick. B ABU Pick Hassell. 795 4646.

FRESH CORN for sale, Senica Chief. $1.00 per dozen, 756-7209

PEACHESII Excellent for freezing

"'iKh

ry and

miles North of Bailey, Highway 581

and canning. .You pick! Fincl Nursery and Peach Ochard

North. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m Monday through Saturday. 235-4664.

MICROCOMPUTER REPAIR Fast, reasonable service on various makes Call COMPUTIME, 355 6687.__

NEW CONSTRUCTION Additions and remodeliM repairs. Services guaranteed. 3/ years experience. Honest and dependable. Work by the hours or contract. State license 5807. 946 9730 6 to 12 p.m., Wilbur Tetterton

PAINTING interior and exterior Free estimates, work guaranteed References 12 years experience 756 6873 after 6 P.m_

PLUMBING Specializing and re modeling of baths. State License 47037 C^l 752 1920or 746 2657

QUALITY PAINTING, Interior and exterior. Carpentry and gutter re 1822 after 6

pair. 524-4822 z

>p.m.

SANDING and finishing floor Small carpenfer jobs, counter top Jack Baker Floor Service, 756-28 anytime, if no answer call back.

SHEET ROCK hangers and finish ers Call 756 0053.

REGISTERED DENTAL Hygienist for a very busy dental practice. Please send resume to 'Dental Hygienist', P O Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27835

RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION Supervisor Experienced required. Send past experience summary. Salary plus frinoe benefits plus bonus available. Mail to P O Box 859, Greenville, N C 27834._______

RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, Director of Nursing. 943 2111

RN'S AND LPN'S. Are you inter ested in giving real patient care to those who are in need? We have a good employee benefit package We have a good salary scale. If inter ested call Director of Nursing. 792 1616, AAonday Friday, 9to3.

ROUTE SALESPERSON Must be 21 years of age. Machine A Welding Supply Company, 307 Spruce. Greenville, 7^^

SALES

REPRESENTATIVE

Due to increase in business Carolina Model Homes is looking for 2 self motivated sales people needing to make money. Good commission, draw and company benefits. Call for appointmenl between 9 and II A Mand3to6P M at 758 3171.

IF YOU CAN sell but feel uneasy about your future growth within j/our present employment, here's

start of a new career. Starting now, right now, you can turn your present selling skills into a stable, well paying jifetime career as top

earning display sales professional at Taylor Publications. Call 919 633 5106 for interview. 208 Pollack Street, New Bern, N C

Life

INNOVATIVE COMPANY INFLATION PROOF INDUSTRY

In search ot two representatives for the local area tor dynamic and career minded men and women, we offer:

Competitive Products No Overnight travel No Capltarinvesfment Group Medical, Dental. A Insurance 3 Year Training Allowance, Plus Bonus Pay and Expense Allowance

Best Training Program In the Industry

Excellent Opportunity For Managerial Advancement

Send Resume to:

Representative P O Box 1967 Greenville, N C 27834

_E    6    E_

INSTRUCTOR/EVALUATOR IN adult handicapped program serving the mentally and physically hand' capF>ed Candidate should have 4 year degree in an instructional area, preTerably Special Education. Will accept candidate experienced in human service related field it qualified in Instruction. Position available August 1st. Applications accepted thru July 15th to

sr'Wrtft

Community College an Equal Op porlunlty/Afflrmatlve Action Employer_

MANAGER

For convenience store and gas combination $20,000 with com mission Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive.

(MANAGER TRAINEE Land a position with this rapidly growing company and move up tasf Excellent benefits College back

ground Retail experience helpful Salary range $9,000 to $13.000 Call 'usan. 758-0541, Snelling A Snelling

ersonnel Service

MANAGER TRAINEE Personality and super ability to succeed will land you this one Work with a company that is exploding with expansion. Call Gertie. 7* Snellino A Snellino Personnel

10541,

MANAGER TRAINEE/RETAIL

Fun job! If you can work well with people and handle responsiblity this Is an opportunity of a lifetime. Call Gertie, 758-0541, Snelling A Snelling

=ersonnel Service.

NEED 5 PEOPLE full time to work In our business. Must have car, neat appearance, and be willing to work If you want to earn $20,0d0 and up, call 758-0600 (Monday 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. for Interview _

NEEDED A part time auditor. Experience necessary. Apply front desk at the Ramada Inn

NEEDED 4 CPAs with experience at 3 resort areas plus 2 cost accountants with manufacturing

experience Super salaries All fees pal^ Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling A TPty"!! **T7sonnel Service_

S>0RTS-/IAINDED MEN & WOMEN

SALES OPPORTUNITY Earn $18.200 24,000 first year on salary plus semi-annual performance Bonus. $25,000-$35.000 2nd year potential National sales firm seeks an outstanding person for local area, selling sports related items. Profit sharing plus excellent benefit package. Previous sales experience and two years college preferred. Send resume to:

Tom Cox 5001 Rolling Oak Lane Charlotte. N C. 28212

Equal Clpportunity Employer M/F

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

NORTH ^A^^LI^A't FINEST The RALEIGH ANTIQUE EX TRAVAGANZA Show and Sale. Jul) 15, 10 a.m. 9 p.m., July 16, 10 a.m. , p.m., July 17, Noon-6 p.m.. Civic Center. Over 150 quality dealers displaying ANTIQUES AND OLD COlLECfTIBLES ONLY! $2.50 admission $2.00 with this ad. DEALERS AND COLLECTORS

DON'T MISS IT! 919 924 8337,

919 924 4359, 919 924 8956._

J A J ANTIQUES at Woodside. 756 1133. Open AAonday Friday, 10-5. Closed Saturday and Sunday through Labor Day. James Allen and Jenny Move

TRUE ANTIQUE PINE bureau. $225. 5th chair of matching 4 sold from Show-N-Sell, $25. Blue salt glaze pitcher and bowl, $70. Call 756 5952_-

100 YEAR OLD 4 door refrigerator Good condition. Call Grifton, 452 4178

X 43" OAK TABLE, excellent condition, $125.Xall 756 7203.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for Mle. J P Stancil, 752 6331.

065 Farm Equipment

SALES 2 to 5 years experience needed, plus a desire to work hard in order to make lots of money

Salary plus commission. Expected income first year $20K-$2SK Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling A Snelling

PersonneLSeryltf.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

For national known gift and sta tionery lines. Eastern NC and Eastern Virginia Straight com mission. 217 Deer Creek Drive, Matthews, NC 28105

SALES TRAINEE Exciting oppor tunity for the aggressive and mechanically inclined. Full year paid training program tor a Pitt County resident. Some college preferred. Excellenf benefits. Call Jamie. Heritage Personnel, 355 2020_

SECRETARY RECEPTIONIST

"BEE" busy in this buzzing office, honey of a job. Public confact offered. $10.41X1 to $14,500. Call Gertie 758 0541, Snelling A Snelling Personnel Service

SECRETARY Exciting and fun place to work. Be a part of this youthful organization. Good skills and bookkeeping background needed. Call Gertie, 758 Snelling A Snellino Personnel.

SERVICE WRITER needed Expe rience preferred Abilify to com municafe with public a must. Call

SPEECH LANGUAGE CLINICIAN Part time position. Farmville Child Development Center on site, direct service, and family con sultatlon. 15 hours per week. Send resume: Speech Clinician, PO Box !3, Farmvnie, NC 27828._

Minute

:.T

TEMPORARY

SR TYPISTS!

Services offers you: Unique Fringe Benefits Top Pay 'Flexible Schedule

Call us for an appointment We Are Not a Fee ,^ency

MANPOWER

TEMPORARY'

SERVICES

ll8Reade Street

757-3300

BOAT TRAILER tires and rims f 8" rim $5.69, 12" rim $10.49, 4.80x8/B range tire $16.49; 5.70 x 8 C range $26.95, 4.80 X 12 B range $23.49, 5.30 X 12 C range $32 95. Tubes, valve stems, hubs, spindles and other boating supplies In stock. Agri SuDolv, Greenville. NC 752 3999.

FOR RENT Two 10,000 bushel grain bins. I5 per bushel. Located approximately 4 miles west of Winterviile. Call 756 5097 or 756 9315._

INSECT PROBLEM? Solve them with a bug buster from Agri Supply. l'/> acre attraction area $92..49; L acre $74.95; Vi acre $57.49. Re-

tlacement bulbs in stock. Agri upply, Greenville, NC 752 3999.^

ONE ROANOKE tobacco tier with top. $340. I tobacco rider with racks, $125. l Boom, $60.746-3301

TOBACCO CURING SUPPLIES Taylor twin scale hygrometers $29.95. PVC hygrometers $13.49. Barn door gasket material $31.95 per 100'. We carry parts to repair hygrometers, plus barn racks and repair parts for racks (Powell A Dixie). Agri Supply, Greenville. NC Z52J999.

074

MiSCellBfWOUS

AIR CONDITIONER Save $200! 8,000 BTU, used one month, exceent condition. $160. 756 7178.

AIRLINE TICKET - Raleigh to San

Francisco on Juiy 14 - 1 way. $160. Call 355 2566._

ALEXANDER DOLLS for sale, new. 8" Beth. Meg. India, $50 each. Netherlands pair, $95. Lord Fauntleroy, $80. 20" Victoria, $65. 756 0416._

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale. Call B J Mills. Authorized Appliance Service, 746 2446 at Black Jack._

AM/FM 8 TRACK car stereo. LadiesTo speed bike. Call 752 9354.

BEDDING&WATERBEDS

y pay retail when you can save to '/2 and more on bedding and

Wh

up .. -___   ,

waterbeds. Factory Mattress A Waterbed Outlet (Next Plaza), 35S_2626.

to Pm

BLACK VINYL sofa and chair with coffee table, $40. 2 ton Coleman central air for mobile home, $100. 757 1068.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 919 763 9734.

BUILDINGS!I Special Purchase. All steel clear span. 30' x 40' x 10' $3,987. 50' X 100' X 16' $13,263. 100' X 150' $39,151. FOB Factory. Call 1 800 848 2988 until 7 P.m

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work

CHINA CHEAP Two 5-piece place settings, Springdale by Lennox. RetalTs $99 per seHIng, will sell for $50 per seHing. 758 5345. Also enamelled iron kitchen sink with dralnboard. best offer

CHROME

Blue/rust flowered king si bedspread and 2 pair of matchi

$50.

_ AND GLASS etagere.

lue/rust flowered king size

drapes. $35. Slide'^projector - Befl icfHo

lowell slide cube

355:1138..

new bulb.

CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Televisions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

CRAFTIQUE mahogany drop leaf dining table, 72"x47", felt pad, 8 mahogany chairs, 756-1530.

DRESSER CAN BE used as 2 night Stands; porch chair, needs repair.

355-6974

DRYER, 840. Black and white portable TV, $25. Stereo receiver, 830 Call 7467-6774.__

ELECTRIC range, harvest gold, good condition. $iy Call 355-2354^

074

Miscellaneous

LAWNMOMfERS New and used for sale, parts and service, trade-ins accepted. Rentals on lawn garden and equipment. Call 7S6-0090 nights

LAWNAAOMfER for sale, $50

758 3431 after 6    _

Call

MARY KAY cosmetics. Phone

756-3659 to reach your consultant for a facial or reorders

METAL DETECTORS for an exclt. ing and profitable hobby. Call for a free catalog, 756-8840. Baker's Sports Equipment. PO Box 3106

MOVING MUST SELL Hotpdnt refrigerator with ice maker, good condfllon. $200 firm. 758 7984.

MOVING

Side-by-slde frost free ltd deep freeze com-2 years old, sold for

refrigerator and deep freeze com binaflon, only 2 years old, sold foi new $1350. like new, only $450. 19'

portable color tv, excellent working condition with automatic color anc tint control, only $15a 25" color console tv in beautiful lean s.....

yiiyj

________Early    Amer

le cabinet and much more,

$25. 756 0492

MUST SELL Four piece western living room suite, 1 year old. $400 746-:87after6p.m

MUST SELL Chest freezer. 23 <;vbl<; fgot. ffffg.2a:<>?1.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper AAovers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

NOW FORMING - Christian band Need backup singers, guitar players, drummer, pianist. If inter ested call 757-6830 between 8-5 or 75g41?5aftgr5:?9

ONE 5 gallon aquariums with hood and accessories. $20. 758-5665 after

5.    _

POOL TABLE. Ebonite, 4x8' Excellent condition. $400.355 6050

PORTABLE Sears washer/dryer, excellent condition. $300. Call 758 9851.__

PORTABLE DISHWASHER

sle. Exm

 xcellent condTtion. id'cycie

wash. $165. 758- -

13479.

REFRIGERATOR, gas heater, and electric stove for sale. 752-7095 anytime.

REFRIGERATOR dorm/apartment size. 4.5 cubic foot. Excellent conditon. $80. 758 2054,

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Ren! shampooers and vacuums at Rental

sjpooers _

Tool Company

SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quail ty printer. 5 months old. UsNl 1 month. In mint condition. $550 752 3980from9a.m.to5:p.m.

SOFA FOR SALE 84" green Herculon plaid, good condition. $75. Call after 6. 756

STEREOCITY

Now open featuring Marantz-Sansui-Sharp-and other brands. We offer quality components and match sj^tems at discount prices. We finance In our store. Call Mike Edmundson, Sales Manager at Stereo City, 757-0451, located 2808 East 10th Street.

A Division of Furniture World

THEATRE SEATS, $2.00 each. Some with cushions. Can be used in boats, churches or recreational facilities. 756-5400 or 758-4031

TOBACCO STICKS for sale. 746-6916.

Call

TRADITIONAL SOFA - lime green, low back. Priced fo sell Call 752 7798 after 5 and weekends.

USED COPY (MACHINES IBM II, 25 copies per minute. Best offer! 756 6167grF58 7a088ttQr4

USED HEATING SYSTEM, price negoflable. Call 756-8803 after 5 and 99e9ltends.

USED UPRIGHT 16 cubic foot >rWMr,$13i,Ctl^4W

WHITE WEDDING GOWN, veil and crinoline, size 9/10, excellent condition. $75. Call 752 1231

WOMAN'S DIAMOND wedding

bond. gPOdBTlCT Cjgijil:.4ag:_I

WOULD LIKE to buy used window and central air conditioners that need repair . 746 2446

1 HONDO II ELECTRIC guitar. I Peavev amplifier, 1 AM/FM 8 track car sfereo with 20 watts power booster, and 2 6x9 speakers. Reasonably priced. 758-2029!_

1 USED 460x18 motorcycle tire and inner tube, $25. 1 set of lowering blocks, fits Honda 750. 1969-1976; $if Call 756-3912.__

19" COL(3R TV Renf to pwn. $23.11 per month. Furniture World. 757-

^1.  _

48" X 65" steel windows for masonary bulldirra, 8 lites each, $25 :h. Two 30 gallon new gas water Iters, $40 each. Pool table. 4'x6', QO7M,:^4

HORSEPOWER TILLER with extra attachments, push plow, portable dishwasher, 25^' black and white tv. garden planter with extra Plates, 524 4913.

ENGLISH SADDLE, used, needs some work. $50. (Tall 756^5 after 5:30p.m.

ETHAN ALLEN Royal Charter 6

elece library unit, solid oak, retails 1100 will sell for $1500. Call 756 9273 after 5.__

FOR SALE: Sharp SF 811 copier with stand. 24 copies per minute. Handles 8'/}x1l, f/ixU and 11x17 aper sizes. Royal SE 5010 electric iter, correcting capabilities, arately or

II sell deal. Call niohts

'1067 days; 792

FOR SALE: Vj interest in an experimental aromatic bi-plane. $2.000 or best offer. 355-2970

FOUR 15" Goodyear Arriva radiis. 4,000 miles, asking $275. Call Z5*:.B(I47,

FRIGIDAIRE electric range, self

cleaning with clock and timer, very good condition, almond color, $350. 758 5665 after 5 p.m

FULL SIZE BED, maHress, and box springs. $40. 758-8482

TRACTOR SUNSHADES Alum! num colored to reflect the sun's heat. Bonnet type, 48" wide $69.95. Fender mounting brackets $15.49. Mounting brackets for tractors without lenders $22.49. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999

WANTED TO BUY Peanut hay rack. Good condition. Call after t p m., 752 3792._

126 LONG TOBACCO racks for sale $iOO^acK. )>hooe 757 3467

066

FURNITURE

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $29.26 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757 0451.

GEORGE    SUMERLIN Furniture

Shop. Stripping. Repairing & Refinishing. (Formerly of Eastern Carolina    Vocational Center)

Located    next to John Deere

Equipment Company on Pactolus Highway. Call 75/-3509._____

HEATHKIT H89 computer. Call355 2523.8 a.m. 5p.m.

$800.

HUNDREDS OF USED kitchen cabinets, doors, windows, ranges, bathroom fixtures, furniture, shelving, display counters, floor tile, lots more. F 8, J Salvage, 2717 West Vernon Avenue, Kinston, 522 0806

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memo-rial Drive. 756 6417.___

075 AAobile HomM For Sal

ALL NEW QAKWOODS reduced for July "Red Tag" sale. Prices on all new Oakwood homes at our sales centers In Greenville and Wilson have been slashed. Call or stop by today! Greenville 756-5434, Wilson 291 7BR)._

NOMONEY 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.

CROSSUND HOMES

630 West Gloving Boulevard

NO MONEY DOWN

July Special Only

SINGLE WIDE....$8z495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995

(Loaded)

Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, AAonkeys

FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRAOEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

7Q? \a(g$trwfivMig Bwigvgrd

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4747after 6 p.m.. Jim Hudson._

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.__

CALL US AND SEE why people are coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings. Call 823 3834, 9:30 to 5:30 or by ap pointment

COLOR TV

Want one? Check out ColorTyme. check out ele-Rent, check out Curtis Mathes, and then check out Furniture World. We rent to own for less money than any store In Greenville. 757-0451. Remember that Furniture King will not be undersold. He don't plav._

EARTH TONE plaid sleeper sofa, quen size, $200. Green_Early Amer

lean couch, $100 drapes 758 3592

Brown floral

FURNITURE! FURNITURE!

THE FURNITURE KING has it all! 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

STAFF

PHYSICAL

THERAPIST

ST FRANCIS XAVIER Hospital Is a private acute care 362 bed hospital located in the coastal rewt area of hisforic Charleston, SC We are currently seeking a qualified, experienced Registered Physical Therapist for a full time position    The Physical Therapy

Department Is an Integral part of the hospital and our sfaft Is orga-nuod to handle new techniques on patient rehabilitation with special attention housed on the difficulties of each Individual case We offer an excellenf benefits program and competitive salary. For additional mformation, please confact the PersOTnel Department:

St. Francis Xavier Hospitai

SrS^c''5?i?1

(803-7236194)

i?_m/f/h    .

FURNITURE: new, used and an

tiques. Mar Js & Westbrook, 1211 South Evans, Monday-Friday 12-6. 758 2853.    '

MATTRESS WORLD at Furniture World. We keep a truck load all the time. We finance. For the lowest price on bedding, visit Furniture World, 2808 E Toth St. or phone 757 0451.

RECLINERS We have 50 to choose from. Barcalounger and Catnwper. We finance In our store. Phone 757-0451 or visit the 'Furniture King' at Furniture World. 2808 E 10th 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 b 10th St. Phone 757-0451

RENT TO OWN Three 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 7i7(M51.

SOFA, LOVESEAT and chair, burgundy with floral print, 2'/i years old, $450. Coffee table, $25. Stereo system, Sansul receiver, Sony speakers, and BSR turntable, $20(). Call 758 5026 Monday aHer 8:30a.m.    _

TRADITIONAL SOFA and chairs to nialch. Green, like new. $450. Call ' ' 6953._

LEASE EXPIRED

MUST SELL iNVENTORY AT GREAT SAVINGS!!

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday In Shop 11 a.m. '

For After Hours Call Home 7:

-5p.m.

ntment

1507

Kerosene

Wood Stoves All Brass Items

Glass Fireplace Screens

And Much, Much More To Select From

The Little Fireside Shop Rod Oak Plaza 2*4 By-pa West

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

TrISIW

FAIMILY HOUSING

Stop in and see why we are the fastest growing (Mobile Home dealer in North Carolina.

In Town

075 AAoblle Homes For Sale

TAKE UP PAYIMENTS on 1903 14x52. Lots Of axtras. Already sat up qfU9Lt!7?8i9yeftTr5

14 WIDES (or as low as $170 par month. Call or come by Art Oellano Homes. 756-9B41

1973 HOLIDAY 2 Ml baths. $5,000 825-1461.

1973 12x65 2 bedroom, 2 full baths, eye-level oven, fully carpeted, furnished. Equity $2, mts $134 m

over payments

I nnonth.

Imatelv 2'/ years owed. 758 7

carpeted, and taka

iisr

im 11x4 HOLIDAY Equity and assuma loan. Call 752-9354.

1973 2 BEDROOM, I bath, very good condition inside and out Ciau rocoHeoe. $5800 firm. 758 4021

1975 CHAMPION 12x40. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, under pinned, air conditioning. Sat up fn Branches Trailer Park. 756 Sfoor 758 7392

1971 12XM CONNOR, 2 bedrooms Must sell, will sacrifice dowi

will

.jsume

per month. Call 752

1979 14x60. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments of $1. Call Lawrence afAH Dellano Homes. 756-941._

1900 LANIER deluxe mobile home. Large country kitchen and living area. Washer/dryer, dishwasher. Central haat and air. Sorne aquity and assume loan. 752 9593

1982 AMERICAN home 24 x 60, 3 bedrooms, great room, 2 baths. Must be moved. Call 752-5310

193 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $140.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales. North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068.

REDMAN doublewlde. 'ave, sfereo,. paddle fan.

dows, masonite and shingle roof 5,5.

owav _______ ^_____ _

fireplace, garden tub, storm win

with 5 year warranty. $25,^5. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756-9841. _

24X52 USED doublwide. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841

093

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS FOR SALE Nightclub downtown Greenville area, comar of Cotancha and 5th Street Excellent location for club, pizZa parlor or restaurant. Includes sound system, cash registers, coolers and drink boxes. Call Jerry Rhodes, 752-4606, 752-0241. or 752-4992.__

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

NIGHT CLUB - Eastern NC Prof itable.

AUTO ACCESSORIES and toys Eastern NC Profitable.

LADIES LINGERIE SHOP Eastern NC

SERVICE STATION on busy thor oughfare In eastern NC Established over 20 years. Prof itable. Priced to sail.

(MOTORCYCLE SHOP - (Major line. Profitable. Some owner financing. Eastern NC

On busy highway - Morehaad City

3 MOBILE HOMES 2 and 3 bedrooms. Priced from $5600 to $8900. Have air and Mpliances. Call Mary davs 752-3000. lights 756-1997.

076 AAobi le Home Insurance

MOBUlEHOMEdWNER Insurance - the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realhy, 752-

077 Musical Instruments

BLACK FENDER Stratocaster

electric guitar. $475.    758    4111,

extension ._

FOR SALE

Splnot-Console Plano Bargain Wanted: Responsible party to take over low monthly payments on ^Irwt^^w.^Can be semjocally

n^lt Manager: PO Box 9)4,-NC 28126

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO Needs a

little work. $300 or best offer.

H7Wener7,etkfyM

TRACewiND Family housing

703 WMt Greenville Blvd.

atrita_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

RESEARCH

TECHNICIAN

Needed for cancer research laboratory in Medical School. Requires Bachelor's Degree in biology or related field. One year of additional related education beyond the Bachelors Degree and or experience in cell culture and biochemical techniques desire.

Salary commensurate with training and experience.

Submit detailed resume to:

PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT

East Carolina

University

GREENVILLE.

NORTH CAROLINA 37834 919-757-6352

AniiiiidOiipvniiniii AllirmntnPAif^iunLniplo^r'

ECU

USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Yamahas, Wurlitzars, etc. The Music Shop, Greenvllla Square Shopping Center, 756-0007

WURLI ggrk

iLITZER HOME electric or-3kyWd:$1300.825 5781

YAMAHA PIANOS and discount prices makes Piano 8. Organ Distributors a great place to WMpI 329 Arllnfltoa Boulevard. 355 6002._

060

INSTRUCTION

I NEED TUTOR for Administrative Law class. Call Abdulla, 752 6586 anytime.

MICRO-COMPUTER TRAINING for home, business, children and lucational applications. Only at -UTIMrCall355 6687.

062    LOST AND FOUND

MINATURE SCHNAUZER Salt

S^ndlS E?at^ R oY fy99-7<?i

PUT E)aRA CASH In your pocket today. Sail your "don't needs ' with ifveCI

an inaxpensi

lassifled Ad.

093

OPPORTUNITY

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT

for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, X

can Gary

LtST OR BUY^your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, NC 757-0001, nights

PIZZA SHOP Eastern NC

PIZZA SHOP Profitable.

SHOE SHOP - Greenville. Several tine lines of ladles shoes. Good location. Some financing available.

CANDY SHOP - Excellent location. Eastern NC

CONVENIENT STORE Eastern NC Very profitable. Some financing.

PRINT SHOP Eastern NC Well established, profitable. Priced to sell.

SEA FOOD.,- Profitable, grossing $500,000. Eastern NC SOme financing available.

NOVELTY SHOP - Greenville. Very profitable.

THE MLM COMPANY Eastern NC Very profitable, token investment nefeded, will train.

local management

Plus many others.

CONFIDENTIAL BROKERS

756-0664

"i^1lf^llg^'p"lRSONNEL.

A National "Temp" Service with 15 offices throughout the Carolinas will locate an office in GREENVILLE Prior sales experl ence preferred plus sufficient operating capital for start up. Con tact John Fanning, Uniforce Tem-porary Personal fSiO) 437 3300.

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has othar Interests, Call 758 0702._

FURNITURE STORE for sale in the Roanoke Rapids area. 10,000 square foot store. Fully stocked Ex

xcellent business. Selling due to Mners response fo Cyr al Delivery, Roanoke Rapids 7^70.

sllfng _ _ owners health. Will sacrifice. Send ise to Cynthia Fowlar, Gener-

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North' Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years expenence working on ch

^ _ ______ .    king

limneys and fireplaces Can day or nlqhf. 753 3503, Farmville.

TOPSOIL AND SAND for sple. Septic tank Installed. Rogers (Ton-structlon Company, 746-4780, Ayden. NC

104 Condominiums For Sale

2 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM,

)'/i baths. FHA 235 loan assumption at 6%% interest ($296.47 monthly payment) 355 2286.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

104 Condominiums For Sale

LEXINGTON S(3UARE, . bedrooms. 1 year old. FHA 235 assumable loan. Phone 756 7935.

109

Houses For Sale

ASSUMPTION Only 9Vi% FHA! Lovely bewxxxm, 2 bath home, intercom system, garage door opener, really nice loi. Aldridge & Sutherland 7S6-3S00. Jean Hopper

ATTRACTIVE Contemporary! Wooded lot in nice subdivision. No city taxes. Excellent floor plan. 3 large bedrooms. I'/z baths, greatroom/flreplace. Heat pump. Loan assumption. Possible owner financing of some equity. $59,500. Call 756-8171._

ATTRACTIVE brick veneer ranch. Carport. Almost 1300 square feet. Newly decorated, paint, wallpaper, new vinyl, almost new carport over hardwood floor. 3 large bedrooms, 2 full baths, kitchen with all appliances, refrigerator, stove, dish washer and garbage disposal to remain, kitchen bar plus good size breakfast room and utility, fenced in back yard. Trees, trees, trees. $40's. Call Davis Realty, 752-3000. 756 2904, 756 1997.

AYDEN Perfect for 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!S)0 W G BIr * -

756 3000.

alount & Associates,

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank financing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge A Southerland. 756-3500, nights 756 57)6.__

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

880'sAUP LOVELY AREA and lovely home. Located in prestigious Easthaven on a large wooded well landscaped lot. TrMitional 2 story home with oversized living room, unique fireplace, den with adjoining dining area. Downstairs bath and study with built-ins. Kitchen with almost new dishwasher and refrigerator remains. Four bedrooms, 2 baths upstairs. Custom built with cedar lined closet, laundry chute, sp|it gas heat, central air. Reduced to $89,000. Call today.

RUSTIC BEAUTY A touch of country in Windermere. Over an acre o1 wooded lot surrounds this cedar home built for the warm of heart. Four bedrooms, three baths, cozy kitchen with eat-in area and separate dining room. Garage plus large tronr porch and wooden deck out back. 1216% loan assumption. Call today. Low SlOO's.

AYDEN Large traditional home avallavie across from the Ayden Golf and Country Club. Over 2800 square feet of living space with large family room and game room. 3 bedrooms, 3Vi baths. Lots of extras plus 2 car garage. Walking distance of pool and golf course and tennis courts.

REALTY WORLD CLARKBRANCHJNC. REALTORS 756-6336

Sharon Lewis . ON CALL .. 754 9987

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Maria Davis ..........756 5402

Gene (3u inn..............,.756-6037

Tim Smith.................752-9811

John Jackson..............756 4360

Teresa Hewitt............. 756 1188

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal HousingQpoortunltv

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

25ZL.

TYPEWRITER BUSINESS machine - small computer techni clan. Retired Borrougns employee' seeking similar person to form partnership in rwair business, in gulrlas held confidential. Write to Partnership. 305 PInewood Road, Greenville. NC 27834._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Coigios Into Cleaning

1900 Dickinson Ave.

Across From Ormond Whoiesaie Announces The Addition Of A

MOBILE POWER WASH

Removes mildew to prevent deterioration on masonite homes, metal siding, mobile homes and tractor trailers.

We Clean Anything!

Owner: Robert Coggins

Phone 752-8334 Or 758-4904

JULY IS TRUCK MONTH AT PHELPS CHEVROLET

Over 50 Units To Choose From

Prices Start at

*5995'"

Plus Tax





The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C-Sunday, July 10,1983-D-7

109 Houses For Sale

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

SO't-SM's

available with 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths and over 14S0 square feet of liviiM space. This home has a large family room with fireplace, seoa rate utility room and an eneray

sin'?sur'

PLAN YOUR BARBEOUE on the patio in this unique and livable plan nearly IW square feet. Buder pays points for fixed financ [ng. Complete this fall in excellent location "Camelot", exceeds E 300 standards. Call now and select your decor. Offered at $63,800.

RAGLAND ACRES 1iv,% fha loan assumption available in this brick ranch in Winterville. Two full baths and formal dining room plus

SSK."Sl.lgJi?/

RED OAK 4 bedrooms offered in Rf    square    feet

with fenced in back yard and plenty of room in all large rooms. Recently painted and ready for occupancy.

INVESTMENT POTENTIAL This brick ranch is in immaculate con dition and located in Red Oak. Over 1600 square feet. Presently leased Best offer. Priced in low $60 s.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

7M-3M

Sharon Lewis . ON CALL . 756 9987

Teresa Hewitt..............756 1188

Ray Holloman..............753-5147

Gene Quinn............. .    756 6037

AAarie Davis    756 5402

Tim Smith.................752-9811

John Jackson ..............756 4360

Toll Free 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunitv

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

S30's&$40's

THE CHOICE is yours! Assume the existing loan of 9'/4% with total payments of $314.48 or seller will pay points for a new loan. Conve nient to the hospital. Mid$40's.

FHA 235 loan assumption. Wooded lot in Oakgrove. Offered at $41,500 includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead end street. Income should be under $21.000 Call today.

NEW LISTING Save time and money and assume this FHA loan of 8V2% with payments of $292.87 on this 1500 square feet home conve niently located to the university. Spacious great room with fireplace, dining room, fenced-in back yard with a garage. Offered in the $40 s.

WELL KEPT and cute as a button. 2 bedroom, 1'/j bath townhouse in Windy Ridge. Includes drapes downstairs, glass fire screen and refrigerator. Priced in the mid $40's and convenient to the pool.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Sharon Lewis . ON CALL .. 756 9987

Teresa Hewitt..............756 1188

Ray Holloman.............. 753-5147

GeneC^Inn................756-6037

MarieDavis................756 5402

Tim Smith.................752 9811

John Jackson .............. 756 4360

Toll Free! 800 525 8910, ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$IO'S

CLUB PINES 87/4% loan assump tion available on this lovely home in Club Pines. Extra large den with woodburning stove. All formal areas, garage, built-ins, intercom system antf much, much more. $2,500.

CLUB PINES Luxury abounds in this new 3 bedroom home com pleted in June. Wet bar, extra molding and excellent floor plan. Decorafed in style. Offered at $81,600. Excellent financing available at 12% Shaded back yard.

DREXELBROOK Immaculate best describes this 3 bedroom home with all large rooms and spacious back yard not to mention the rear screened porch. Over 2000 square feet In one of .Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and roof. Call today. Offered in the upper $80's.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.

REALTORS

756-6336

Sharon Lewis ON CALL .. 756 9987

Teresa Hewitt.............. 756    1188

Ray Holloman.............. 753    5147

Gene Quinn................756    6037

Marie Davis................756    5402

Tim Smith.................752    9811

John Jackson ..............756    4360

Toll Freel 800 525 8910. ext. AF43

An Equal Housing Opportunity

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109 Hou8(P8 For Sale

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

9'A% VA LOAN . available in Griffon with total

assumption

payments of less than $350.00. This home has 3 bedrooms, I bath, family room with fireplace. Home is heated and cooled by heat pump. Call today. Offered at $40,000.

WEATHINGTON HEIGHTS 3 bedroom ranch with fenced back yard and assumable loan if you qualify. Flexible terms to suit your financial needs. Call total for your personal showing. Offered in mid $40's with nearly T250 square feet.

NEW OFFERING Immaculate home in Fairfield. Winterville schools. 1114 square feet. Extra large .carport and storage area. Low utility bills with heat pump. Fenced pet area plus deck ana patio doors. Offered at $46.900 and owner will pay points. Excellent opportunity for first time buyer.

NEW OFFERING This charming brick ranch features over 1250 square feet of living space with 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, a cozy kitchen and great room. PLUS, a 16 x 27 workshop, 6x8 storage shed and a covered pafio in the rear. Priced to

sell at $45,900

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC. REALTORS 756-6336

haron Lewis .. ON CALL

eresa Hewitt............

Ray Holloman............

Gene Quinn..............

Marie Davis..............

Tim Smith...............

John Jackson

. 756 9987 .756 1188 .753 5147 . 756-6037 756 5402 752 9811 756 4360

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43 An Equal HousingOpDortunitv

CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR

$70$

LOW LOW INTEREST on new

construction. If your income is under $29.000. 97'4% is available in June for a limited time. Homes from $40,000 to $72,000, Call today. Great opportunity for first time buyers.

FARMVILLE Beautiful 4 bedroom home with 2 bedrooms upstairs, two downstairs. 2 full baths with formal living room and dining room. This home has a rustic den that will make everyone feel at home. 2 car carport with lots ot storage. Walk ing distance to all schools. Call today Low $70's.

REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC. REALTORS 756-6336

Sharon Lewis Teresa Hewitt. Marie Davis... Ray Holloman. Gene Quinn ... Tim Smith John Jackson

ON CALL

756 9987 756 1188 756 5402 .753 5147 756 6037 ,752 9811 756 4360

Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

TWO NEW HOMES under con structlon In Orchard Hill Sub division. Just being started, you may still pick out colors, etc for these floor plans which feature walk around fireplace, dining area, great room, nice kitchen, three bedrooms, two lull baths. Seller pays all discount points and closing costs on FHA VA financing plans. Prices start at $54,900. Call for more information.

THE PRICE HAS BEEN greatly reduced on this great buy at 1103 Courtland Road in Orchard Hill Subdivision. A real bonus Is the extra large lot (most of which is fenced in), lots of room for pets or a garden. Good floor plan with living room with fireplace, kitchen eating area opening onto a deck, three bedrooms, two full baths. Garage. Possible VA loan assumption with balance of approximately $45,500. Priced at $51,W0.

NEW LISTING near the University, schools, churches and college all nearby this one owner home at 802 Fores! Hills Circle. Many features such as a separate den or study with fireplace, large foyer and formal living room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Nice hardwood floors throughout. Located on a wooded corner lot. Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area priced at $72,000.

IN A CLASS BY ITSELFI This custom built home has lots of extra's worth paying extra for. Like a kitchen skyfighf, wood stove insert, ceiling tan, extra large deck and many other features. Great room with fireplace, dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, large heated utility room. $63,500.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

30 X 60 DESK

M69

uioiiMiirFisEiiuiniiiini.

Corner of Pitt & Green St.

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION

ENERGY EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATIONS SPECIALIST

$14,581-$19,594

Creative, energetic person is needed to fill vacant position in the Energy Services Department. Work will involve designing and implementing programs to reach teachers, students, various classes of utilities customers and community groups. Excellent written and oral communications skills essential. Knowledge of basic energy concepts desirable. Arts/graphics skills a plus. Minimum of four-year degree in education or communications-related curriculum required; two or more years experience in field pertaining to education or communications desirable.

Apply in person at the Personnel Office, 3rd Floor, Greenville Utilities Office Building, 200 W. Fifth Street, Greenville, NC 27834.

"An Equal Opportunily Employar"

ATTENTION

TOBACCO FARMERS SPECIAL PRICES!

Now Available Taylor Tobacco Equipment

1.00 2-row pull type

Including:

1 New 230 MF, 10 hours, $7000.1 harvesters 2-row self-propelled harvesters Cutter Bars (Tipn Head) $2000.00 per row Bulk Barns Trailers

Taylor high crop sprayer, reguiarly $23,000. Now $15,000. Equipment Can Be Seen At

LUMBERTON SALES CO.

205 E. 1st St., Lumberton, N. C.

CONTACT OSBORNE TAYLOR

Diai (919) 738-2421 Day Diai (919) 739-7357 Night

109 Houses For Sale

BELVOIR Cute as can bel Great kitchen with lots of cabinets and large dining area, pine panelled den, 2 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, carport! $30's. Aldridge Southerland 7M^3500; Jean Hopper 756-9142

BY OWNER 6 room house and lot. 2 miles from Wellcome Middle School. Less than $20.000.752 6267.

BY OWNER n'7i% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den, gas heat, central air, fenced backyard. 107 Azalea Drive. Z56J281

BY OWNER A lovely older home. Close to ECU Well built. Will consider financing. Call 752-3804.

CAMBRIDGE Great opportunity buyer. This 2-story 3

for smart bedroom beaut' owner said

beauty h d "Sell!" & Southe

is reduced and Don't miss it!

Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500; JeanR&par 756 9142.

CAMELOT Energy efficient solar heated home wifh heat pump backup. Lovely floor plan faatures huge den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, garage. Exceptionally nice kitchen. Aldridge & Sutherland 756-3500. Jean Hopper 756-9142.

CHARMING is just the word for

this all brick 3 bedroom cottage! Living room wifh fireplace, pTne panelTed den, 3 bedrooms, detached

garage/workshop, beautiful lot! FHA assumption. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

BROOK VALLEY Located at 218 Churchill Drive on the 17th Fairway. Over 3600 square feet of heated area alone. In addition there is a basement area downstairs for hobby or rec room. Floor plan offers formal living and dining rooms, large kitchen with big eating area, family room with fireplace, four bedrooms, three full bath:

double garage. Other extra's too numerous to mention. $175,000.

VISIT COLONIAL Williamsburg. Right here in Greenville sits this lovely two story modeled after a Williamsburg home. Located at 105 Windemere Court on a lovely wooded lot this home offers over 2500 square feet of heated area plus a big double garage. Large foyer, formal living and dining rooms, family room with fireplace, nice kitchen with eating, area, tour bedrooms. 2'/4 baths, large deck. $116,000.

GREAT LOCATION for the sum merl Everything Is convenient to this great location at 1113 Hillside Drive in the Elmhurst area. Located on private street this home features four bedrooms, living-dining area, large kitchen and

eating area, play or rec room. I'/z baths, covered patio. Great location. Owner ready to deal. A lot of

house for $59,900.

NEW LISTING Great buy in popu lar Westhave II Subdivision. Immaculate ranch at 111 Bay wood

Lane features foyer, living room, familv

 spaclou!

with eating area, three bedrooms.

formal dining room, family room with fireplace, spacious kitchen

two full baths, deck, outside workshop or storage area. Nice yard. Priced to sell at $79,900.

BRAND NEW AND READY for

you. Located at 1003 Cortland Road in convenient Orchard HIM Subdivision. Spacious plan features large living room, kitchen-dining area with custom cabinets, three bedrooms, two full baths, carport and storage area, deck, unique oil or wood fired central heating system. Lovely Inferior. $54.500.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sale

BEAUTIFUL WILLIAMSBURG

masonite siding home with bay window, carport. Almost 1600 square feet, winterville School dis tnct. 2 heating systems (heat pump) electric baseboard heat, atlic fan, 3 large bedrooms, 2 full baths, cozy den with fireplace, formal areas (living room and dining room), kitchen with all extras plus handy utllily. Good neighborhood. Owner musf sell, no reasonable offer refused. Assume FHA loan plus equity. Payment $420.41 PITI (Equity less _than $20,000.) Won't last Ioim!

Realty. 752 3000, 756-2904.

Call Davis 756 1997.

scaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Several quality features. $60's. Call 756 3837 aHer 5 p.m .. except weekends.-

COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East. 1740 square feet living area, plus 440 garage, double lot. Too many extras to list!! $74,500. Bill Williams Real 1 state. 752 2615.

COUNTRY HOME needs love and tender care, about 8 miles from Greenville. One story farm house with vinyl siding. Central heat, den .with fireplace. Could have wrap around porch. $35,000. Call Dav^ Realty. 752 3000. 756-2904. 756-1997.

COUNTRY LIVING 13 miles west, three bedrooms, two baths, spacious living room. Swimming cmi, detached garage, large lof Estate Realty Company, 7n-5058, Billy Wilson, 758-4476, Jarvis or DorllsMllls. 752 3647.    _

DO YOU NEED FOUR bedrooms for less than $60,000? Large family room, two baths, carpeted, central

-. carpet__. ________

corner lot. Estate Realty 752 5058, Billy Wilson, 758-4476, Jarvis or Oorlis Mills, 757 3647.

air.

Company,

DUPLEX REDUCED Assume 9%% to qualified buyer. Rented (each side $200). Positive cash flow. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, utility, family room, hat pump. Good investment. $48,000. (Javis Realty, 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997._

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Walking distace of univsersity. 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, central heal and air, deck, patio, double garage, attice converted into large room.Heeds decorating. Only $427500. Call Davis Realty, Grier Rental. 752 3000, 756 2904. 756 1997.

FAMILY NEIGHBORHOOD near Third Street School. Large wooded lot on dead-end streef Nice 3 bedroom being rennovated in and out. Low $30's. 12% FHA available. 756 8926.__

FHA

Lake

 ASSUMPTION

Glenwood, Bryant Circle. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home, with fireplace, .9 arre lot. $69,000. Call Echo Realty. 524 4148or 524 5042

SALE BY OWNER 1108 E

14th St., 2100 sq.ft., 3 to 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal areas. 234' street frontage. Large rolling grounds with many trees. Central heat and air. 8% assumable loan plus equity. $415 PITI $79,900. Phone 758-4988.

GRAYLEIGH Under construction.4 bedrooms, 3 baths, possibility of 5th bedroom or gameroom, garage. Located on a corner lof. Call W G Blount 8, Associates at 756 3000 for UqlailsarHjl price._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ARMY SURPLUS

CAMPING    SPORTING

MILITARY GOODS Over 1000 OiltprenHlprTis

ARMV-NAVY STORE

1501 S Evans

SUPERVISOR ICU/CCU

Position availabie for a Nursing Supervisor of a 12-bed ICU/CCU. A minimum of three years experience in clinical/critical care nursing and one year experience in a managerial position. B.S. Degree in nursing preferred. Salary negotiable, excellent benefits. Forward resume to: Personnel Department, Wayne County Memorial Hospital, Box 8001, Goldsboro, N.C. 27530 or call (919) 731-6050. EOE.

109

Houses For Sale

GREENVILLE BOULEVARD PerfKt location for professional

couple! Easy access to anywhere in town. Living room with fireplace, 2 bedrooms, office with Ives, large eat-in kitchen. _ :k. AldridM & Southerland 56 35<X>, Jean Hooaer 756 9142.

HORSESHOE ACRES 3 bedroom featuring great room with fireplace and built In book shelves. 2 large tile baths, dining room, kitchen,

 Located on 3/4 acre lot.

. W G Blount a Associates, Z5L3990:

HOUSE FOR SALE by owner. 3 grooms. Located on Mumford Road, beside VFW 2 large lots. Call ZStMSL___

6 ROOM HOUSE to be moved. Call 756 0461._

LAKE GLENWOOD Beautiful corner lot provides perfect setting for this all Wick 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Williamsburg colors, lovely floor plan with air formal areas, double garage, huge patio. Aldridge & SoutherTand 7M 3500; Jean Hopper 756-9142._

LookWhafs Home!

New house under construction in beautiful Baytree. Country charm with city convenience in this comfortable, affordable house with a touch of luxury.

CALL 758-6410

Diversified Financial Services, Inc. or your REALTOR

LYNNOALE Exceptional home features all formal areas, 4 bedrooms. 2 full and 2 half baths, office and playroom. Best price you'll find in this area! Aldri<(^ & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142.__^

MODULAR HOME on brick toun dation. Over 1400 squre feet. Spacious kitchen, has attractive kitchen island and breakfast area. 3

large bedrooms. 2 large baths, good size den. All applainces remain. $43,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 756 2904. 756 1997.__

MOVING TO WASHINGTON? Then you must see this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, ranch style home for sale by owner. Great room, laundry room, heat pump, on '/2 acre lot. Extra nice at $44,^, 2 adjoining lots tor $3500. 946-5260 tor appointment

NEWHOMES-mOOO

Recently Completed

3 Bedrooms, IV2 Baths $1350 Down $435 Per Month Total

East Carolina Builders 752-7194

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109

Houses For Sate

OVERTON 4 POWERS 355-6500

$49,900 - Looking for a home in the country? Check our new listing. Only $49,900. I'/i stories, 4 bedrooms, 2'/3 baths, large country size kitchen with dining area, taml ly room, large outside storage building, aluminum siding, exteri or, porch, 1900 square teef, carport and central heat and air.

$35,900 - Listen to this! Brick ranch with newly painted exterior. Big back yard Versatile floor plan. 2 or 3 bedrooms, fireplace, appliances furnished. needswork and decorating.

$41,5(X>- Like to work out of your home? This home otters that possibility. 3 bedrooms, iVj baths, garage. Front and back yard, completely fenced In.

$62,900 - We're proud to offer you this super nice home. Absolutely immaculate inside and out. Versatile plan. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, dining room, carport and beautiful extra large backyard. Central heat and air. Located r>ear all schools.

$30,900 - You won't find a better buy anywhere. Make an otter and you'll see. Payments approximately same as rent.Appliances furnished. Why not build equity and enjoy the interest tax writeoff.

$44,500 Wildwood Villas. A great place to live! Unique three levels provides lots of living area. 1484 square feet . 2 or 3 bedrooms, family room, l'/j baths, heat pump, thermopane windows. Conveniently located near university.

$42,900 - Join the new trend! Take hold of this distinctive condo in excellent location. Quiet, wooded cul-de-sac near university. Possible VA loan assumption ot $38,000 Save on closing costs. Hurry, this otter won't last Iona

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

To Buy Or Sell A Business In Coofidence

contact Harold Creech

The MarkeCplace, he

2723 E. 10th St. 752-3666

For All Your New And Used Car And Truck Needs, Come To HASTINGS FORD. Ask For DALLAS TRIPP And Ill Get You A Good Deal. Well Sell Your Car Or Truck For You. Call Me At 758-0114.

MAINTENANCE REPAIR MECHANIC

Immediate need for industrial maintenance repair person with minimum of 5 years experience in the foiiow-ing areas:

Diagnosing mechanicai, hydrauiic or pneumatic pro-biems in various types of machine toois; repairing or repiacing defective parts; erecting, instaiiing and aiign-ing aii types of machines and equipment; performing arc and gas welding.

Please send resume to:

Human Relations Department

TRW, INC.

P. 0. Box 8088    Greenville,    N.C.    27834

Or Call 919-758-7411 Or make application through the Employment Security Commission, 3103 Bismarck St., Greenville, N. C. 27834.

An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

HASTINGS FORD MAKES 13 LUCKY DURING OUR 13TH BIRTHDAY SALE

Any New Ford Car Or Truck On Our Lot During July

NO DOWN PAYMENT NO OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENSE

Through Special Arrangements With Red Carpet Lease

We are now celebrating our 13th Anniversary. Now is the time to take advantage of this money saving opportunity. All you need is approved credit and you cn drive away a new Ford with no out-of-pocket expense. Better hurry, with deals like these, our inventory wont last long!

Offer Ends July 20,1983

HastingC

[FORD    U

Tenth Street & 264 By-Pass

Dqaler No. 5720

758-0114 Greenville, N. C. 27834

109

Houses For Sale

NEW LISTING Shaded lot. 3 bedroom, 1'j bath brick ranch. Large family room, also features approximately iOO square feet de tached garage and workshop, excellent location. Call now to see this one. Call June Wyrick. Aldridge S. Southerland, 756 3500, nighls 756 5716

109 Houses For Sale

NEW LISTING $48.900. Spacious 3 bedroom. 1>'j bath home, formal living and dining room Convenient location Call June Wyrick. Aldridge & Southerland. 756-3500; nights 756 5716

NEW LISTING University area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining roorn, kitchen. Assumable loan. Sales price. $41,000. Call Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500. or Sue Dunn, 355 2588

NEW LISTING Take advantage of this brick veneer home in one of Greenvilles most attractive neighborhoods. Beautiful wooded lot. Over 1500 square feet heated area. Screened in porch. Carport, outdoor storage building, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, dining room, living room with fireplace. Home needs repairs. Painting and decorating. Want last long. $59,900. Call Davis Realty. 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Rent To Own

CURTIS

m 111

756-8990

No Credit Check

NEW listing Doll house almost new. Brick veneer ranch in country. Tastefully decorated in earth tones. 3 bedrooms. 1<'i baths, outside storage. Assume FMHA 10^ loan, plus equity $41.500. Call Oavis Realty. 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997.

NO MORE RENT $1200 or less will get you settled in about 7 or 8 weeks m this small, starter home located on a large lot 2 bedrooms, den, kitchen, T bath. Only $23,500 Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997_

OAKDALE 120 Holiday Court Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms. IVj baths, living room, kitchen with dining area, den Located on large corner lot $37.500 W G Blount & Associates, 756 3000_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NMitY 200 MOM.E MOME$ 8W0US D0UBU8 w> b* oU to tht

JULY 16. 1$$3 ROWAN COUNTY FAMOROUNDS SALISBURY. NORTH CAROUNA Don t miM tha complole iHjuKlitKwi of now and uiad mob4o homot ALL 1977 1983 modoK AKcloonodand raody to go ALL SELL TO THE HIGHEST BIOOER Buy on* or Mvofil Save ihouaandi ol donara Vwwing thrso days prior to aale Tarmt caih or guaranlaad bank let ter of credit Oaalara invitad Salt tKnalOa m Sat July 16aiRowan County Fairgrounds. Salifbury. North Carolina

Call lor detallad brochurt 17041 633-6632 Wbatla Mobla Homa Auction Company NCAL No 3082

$

SOLID SALES OPPORTUNITY

$

Exists in the Greenville area. North Carolina company needs part time and full time sales people. Immediate management potential for qualified person. Sound sales background preferred but will consider a self starter we can train. Must be willing to work and learn all areas of our business. Personal Interview only. Male or female may apply.

THIS IS NOT INSURANCE

CALL DON KINARD 1-800-532-1030 Monday, July 11,10 AM to4PM

Mercury Marquis

r, tan and brown, beige

cloth interior, loaded, 22,000

SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Oldsmobile Firenza

4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.

1982 Lincoln Continental

Loaded with digital dash. One owner, 26,000 miles. Metallic ^reen, dark green leather interior.

1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup

Beige, with beige vinyl interior, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 11,000 actual miles.

1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon

Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo.

1981 Datsun Truck

Diesel, short bed. Black with black interior, 5 speed. 22,000 miles.

1981 Subaru

2 door, burgundy with tan vinyl interior, 5 speed, air, AM-FM stereo, 19,000 miles. Looks new.

1981 Datsun 4 X 4 Truck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior,

1981 Plymouth TC-3

Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.

1981

4 door, miles, one owner.

1981 Datsun 210 Wagon

Light brown with light brown vinyl interior, 5 speed, AM-FM radio.

1980 Ford Fairmont

Two tone blue, blue vinyl interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, one owner, 40,(K)0 miles.

1980 Buick Skylark Limited

Yellow with light brown velour interior.

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix

Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control. Dark green with saddle landau roof, saddle vinyl interior, 42,000 miles, one owner.

1979 Dodge Aspen

4 door. Special Edition. Beige with tan leather interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, 39,000 miles.

1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale

4 door. White with blue velour interior, 58,000 miles, one owner, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks, looks new.

1978 Olds Delta 88

4 door. Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.

1977 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

4 door. Silver with burgundy vinyl roof, burgundy interior. Loaded, 54,000 miles.

1977 M^ury Marquis Brougham

4deorfT^hr^k^j^h white vinyl top, blue cloth interior, 29,000 actual miles.

1977 Datsun 280-Z

Yellow with black interior, 5 speed, air condition, AM-FM radio. Nice car.

1976 Buick Skylark

2 door. Burgundy with white interior, white landau roof, automatic, air, AM-FM stereo.

DISCOUNTS UP TO S2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators All Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty

1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded. White with tan top and matching tan interior.

1983 Olds Cutlass Calais

Loaded. Light gray fern, bucket seats.

HOLT OIDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115





D-8-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C Sunday, July 10,1963

109 Houses For Sale

HOUSE FOR SALE by owner. In Farmville with wooded lot. FMHA assumable loan tor qualitied buyer 753 5445atter 6___

OVERTON & POWERS 355-6500

S38.S00 The luxury ot an older home is so much space How wondertui to have 2120 square teet! Home has living room, family room 4 bedrooms, carport, 16 x 24 garage or workshop Wood stove for the economy minded and much more

 Kennedy Estates Ayden is

the location ot this home

109 Houses For Sale

$34,500 ---------- ----------------

 _________ _______ home Newly

Cainted exterior 3 bedrooms, 1'j aths. garage, etc Located in a nice neighborhood on quiet street.

$65.000 I'm just recently painted on the outside. I am a large very I well built home with 1897 square ' feet 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, double Mrage and! fenced in backyard. Take a look { today    ,    j

$79,900 Did you know an 8'3% VA | loan still existed? Ideal location in ^ country No traffic and plenty ot ! play room 2856 square,,feel 4; Bedrooms. 2' i baths, extra large j recreation room, family room with fireplace, formal dining room, large i utility area Heat pump, 28 x 40 | detached building, ideal for I workshop, beauty shop.    i

$31,500 Just married and I transferred makes this affordable condominium for sale. Ready for occupancy. 2 bedrooms. 1'3 baths. Near pOol for your summer en loymenf

$64.900 We invife you fo fake a look af our new lisfino located in a very nice, quiet country subdivision 3 bedrooms. 2' 3 baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, heat pump, etc Sel ler has moved and needs to sell

OVERTON & POWERS 355-6500

$64,900 Take advantage of this great buy! Sellers have relocated and need to sell. Beautiful country subdivision Wintervllle school dis trict 3 bedrooms,2 baths, great roopn with fireplace, formal dining room . double garage. You'll like this house!

$142,500 Don't wait another minute to call about this beautiful Williamsburg home 5 bedrooms. 3 baths, forami living and dining rooms, den with fireplace, double garage, large outside storage build inq. Owner must sell. Will sacrifice.

QUALITY CAN be easily detected in this well decorated 3 bedroom. 2 bath home cisoe to Greenville. Large corner wooded lot provides attractive setting for fne bay window in kitchen and beautiful great room with fireplace and woodstove. Price reduced to $68.500. Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 756

2904. 756 1997_

RED OAK Reduced and ready for )per! Excellent floor

109

Houses For Sale

REFRESH YOURSELF in the swimming pool and enjoy this well built home in excellent neighborhood close to schools and shopping 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, good size kitchen. Only 69,900 Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997._

RIVERHILLS Lovely 3 bedroom, 2<'3 bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat pump. Call June Wyrick. Aldridge & Southerland. 7S6-3M. nights 756 5716._

RUSTIC CONTEMPORARY in Candlewick - super location tor medical school and hospital. This home is like a hunting lodge in the mountains great room with vaulted ceiling and fireplace loft/bedroom. Tt baths, master bedroom with fireplKe, one acre lot. Many extras. Aldridge A Southerland 756 3500. Jean Hopper 756 9142    _

smart

plan, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, detached garage and dog run Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500. Jean Hopper 756 9142

SITUATED ON A WELL land scaped, wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms. I3 baths, large kitchen, I family room wifh fireplace, heat I pump, huge attic, (could be con I verted in (age office or etc.), patJo.

wired for 220. Needs some

752 3000, 756 2904,

REDUCED TO $19,000 3 bedroom mobile home with appliances on approximately 1.2 acre lot in city FYesently able to place more trail ers on lot (can put 3 more trailers if hooked on to city water and sewer, cost approximately $1400). God investment. Want last long. Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 756 2904, 756 1997._

Davis Realty, 756 1997

SITUATED ON a beautiful wooded lot in the country in a beautiful neighborhood . Almost like new one story home wifh 1500 sware feet home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large den with firwlace and dining area, sir

heat pump ^ly $65.900. Calf Davis Realty, 7^ 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO CREDIT CHECK Foment less than $400 per month. Owner will finance most of equity Starter home on large lot in country 3 bedrooms, central heat, wood stove, deck, good size lot for gardening. Only $34.500 Call Davis Realty. 752    756    2904, 756 1997_

STRATFORT Right in the heart of

iti

jvely I

bedrooms. 2 baths.

town, but situated on

uiet.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

a qui

wooded lot in lovely area. 3 large den with fireplace, carport, plus a huge screened porch! Aldridge A Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

lV>

ON DEMAND 4-WHEEL DRIVE

GL 4WD Hatchback

Take on rough roads with Subaru On Demand 4-Wheel Drive." The flick of a lever provides that extra measure of safety and traction. And the exclusive Dual Range'transmission provides the durable versatility to take you over any road in most types of weather.

SUBARU.

INEXPENSIVE. AND BULT = TOSTAYTOATWAIi:    =

Subaru Of Greenville

605 W. Greenville Blvd.

Greenville

Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885

GREAT

UsedGarVahRs!

Slock No.    Description

4199-A 1970 Olds Cutlass Convertible 4355-A 1978 Ford Futura 4368-A 1980 Mercury Bobcat Wagon 4392-A 1980 Mercedes 300 SO 4427-A 1980 Ford F-100 Pickup 4459-A 1983 Toyota Clica 4470-A 1982 Chevrolet Camaro 4472-A 1978 Ford LTD 4508-A 1979 Toyota Clica 4514-A 1980 Honda Prelude 4531-A 1981 Pontiac Trans-Am

4535-A 1981 Toyota Tercel

4536-A 1981 Toyota Starlet 8214 1982 Toyota Wagon

8260 1982 Toyota Corolla

8261 1982 Toyota Corolla 8271 1982 Toyota Corolla 8274 1982 Toyota Corolla 8276 1982 Toyota Corolla

8282 1982 Toyota Corolla

8283 1982 Toyota Corolla

8284 1982 Toyota Corolla

8285 1982 Toyota Corolla 8289 1982 Toyota Corolla 8297 1982 Pontiac Grand Prix 8308 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

8315 1982 Olds Cutlass

8316 1982 Olds Cutlass

8318 1982 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

8319 1982 Buick Regal

8321 1982 Toyota Corolla

8322 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

8323 1982 Olds Ciera

8324 1982 Olds Cutlass

8325 1982 Pontiao Grand PrIx

8326 1982 Chevrolet Chevette 8331 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

,    8332     1982 Chevrolet Chevette

7083 1982 Toyota Truck 7092 1981 Toyota Truck 7114 1979 Ford LTD

7125 1982 Cadillac De Ville

7126 1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

7130 1982 Toyota Corolla SR-5

7131 1980 Toyota Corolla

7132 1978 Chevrolet Monza

Everything Is Priced To Sell!!

109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228

109

Houses For Sie

WANT TO OWN iww home?

Build it yourself and save. No down payment. 100% financing, easy

credit terms. Homes from under $20.000. 9.9% financing available. For more information call 040-3220 collect. A Pathway Home

WE'D LIKE TO put you into itils Contemporary cedar siding hotne. Located on a large wooded lot with

\v.r

1200 sou

relaxed living. General Electric heat pump, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace in greatroom, sliding glass doors open on to a wood deck, enclosed single car garage. $49,900.

Call Steve 3S5172T

Evans A Associates

WESTWOOD Terrific home lovely lot! All formal areas, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, covered patio, garage. Can also be rented! Aldridge A Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142

WINTERVILLE SCHOOL district No city taxes. Beautiful neighborhood. Brick veneer home with 1375 squre feet. 3 bedrooms, ivj baths, central heat and air, woodstove. Beautiful wooded lot. $56,900. Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 756 2904. 756-1997

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room. 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with B' pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable Tv, 7 years old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 750-0144 or 752 7663

2 BEDROOM LOG HOME in private wooded setting. 17 minutes South of Greenville. Serious in-ouirers. Call 524-4782 after 5 p.m

3 BEDROOM, m bath, GE heat

rump, fireplace with insert, pay 13.m and assume 7<4.% loan. Payments ot $305.05. PITI 756 5212.

111    Investment Property

For The Best In

DUPLEXES

Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders 752-7194

RETAIL STORE building for sale in small eastern N C Town wifh established tenant and long term lease. Contact Aldridge A 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. $ja,000.355 2060.

113

Land For Sale

APPROXIMATELY 12 ACRES of

land 3 miles east of 61

now priced for immediate sale.

Highway 33. Ottered for sale before but now pric Call 752 1783.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton, Co,

113

Land For Sale

S7 ACRES located near Ayden on Highway 102 East. Young Pine timber. Location ntap available. Priced at $450 per acre. Call W G Blount A At$ociates. 756-3000. Evenings call Bob Barker. I-97S-3179._

115

Lots For Sale

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY

2424 s. Charles Street 756-6666

Broker on call:

Tony Mallard 7SM81

BROOK VALLEY - '/i acre heavily wooded lot. slopes down to lake in back. Has had Percolation test. $22,000. #55.

HIGHWAY 43 S'/j miles north of Vanceboro, 1.27 acres wooded, no restrictions. $5,000. #572.

HORSESHOE ACRES Blacksmith Lane, Two lots, at very reasonable prices. Call offiice for lot sizes or map. #498.

ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION Sev era! nice lots in this new subdivision. Drop by the office for map of the subdivision. Prices $7,500 and up.#567.

CORNER LOT in a country subdivision is almost an acre in size and is beautifully wooded. It has Simpson water, and is priced at .900. #54.

115

Lots For Sale

Vk ACRE Located MsproximaNMy 3 miles from Greenville off New Bern Highway. lASOQ. 75A7709.

BEAUTIFUL ACRE wooded homesite. 8 miles East of Grwpyl!l8-1U.5W.-^419iS_

EVANSWOOO - RESIDENTIAL lots from $9,800 $12,500. ^11 W G piguntaAiwigtt, 756 3900.

$10.!

BRANDYWINE Tviio extra large lots, one on a corner, $>riced at $9,000 and $11.000. #44.

STATE ROAD 1728 approximately I'/} to 2 miles from Cherry Oaks. 5 cleared lots priced from $11,000. Possible owner financirra. Subdivision map in our office. #53.

CHERRY OAKS #228 Beth Street. A^roximately 115x172. $12.000.

STATE ROAD 1760 across from Parker Overton's Lake, Simpson. Approximately 31 acres of mostly wooded land with a pone. Owner will finance with 20% down for 5 years at 10% $50.i)00. #551.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Safe

Model S-1 Special Price

$12250

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

560 s. Evans St.    752-2175

BROWNIE MOTOR SALES

Corner of 14th street And FarmvHle Blvd.

Brownie Tripp

Herman Hill

752-0117

1979 Chevrolet Blazer 1981 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

1979 Pontiac Wagon 1981 Ford Thunderbird 1977 Mercury Comet

1977 Toyota SR-5 Pickup

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

1980 Datsun280-ZXGLP 1980 Chevrolet Citation 1975 Plymouth

AUCTION

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

Hubs 4 Way Restaurant Saturday, July 16,1983 - 9:00 A.M. Location: Hwy 92, 4 miles south of Beihaven, N.C. at Sidney Crossroads

Mr. and Mrs. Hub Griffen are tired. They are going to retire after many years of service. Entire stock and equipment will be sold.

Sale Conducted by

COUNTRY HOYS AUCTION AND ALTY CO P. 0. Box l.i')    Ajihirujton, Norlli C.iroli

PltorH- 'iji, fjUU '    Stdti'    Ltense    N,,.

OOUC CURKINS I CrMnvillt, N.C. 75M875

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

HANRAHAN MEADOWS - located on State Road 1110 between Ayden and Griffon. Mi acre lots, cleared, $500 down, balance of $3500 financed at 12% APR with monthly pay moots of 892.17 a month. Call 752 7333 or 756-2682. Restricted to permanent sinole-famllv dweHinos

LARGE LOT in Baywood. $17.500. Aldridge A Southerland 7S6-3S00: Hpor

Han

75A9142.

GIVE US A call soon. Wed like to help you place a classified ad in this newspaper today. Call 752-6164.

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classifi

sitiad avery day.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

115

Lots For Sale

LOT FOR SALE. 95*146. I^iew Beach. South Creek near Aurora with or without 1979 mobile home. 2 bedrooms. 2 bathrooms, a r^ Excellent condition. Nice fruite trees. SMtic tank. well, low taxas. Access to the water. For more information call 1 322 5419

Lowest Single Family Lot Prices In Greenvillel

If you are looking for at wooded lots within tnecj^J you must soe BAYTREE

for affordable. J limits.

you most soe BAYTREE Prices

start as low as $11.000.

751-4410

THE PINES m Ay^. 130 x 100 corner lot. Excellont location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious ne^borhood. 5^0.500. Cali Moselcy-Marcus Raalty at 744-2166 for full details.

AydSl'Tftari*dljS^

South. Call 756 2602or 752477.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

115

Lots For Sale

AAACGREGOR CWWHS, 3.f 8CY beautiful wood^ Aldridge * Southerland 7SA3S00; Jean Hoppar 756 9142.

Greenville. *6,500 firm. Call Davis Realty. 752 3"nn, 756 2904, 756 1997

financing with sznall dowm (Vg;

2814. Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye Bowen 75A5258. --

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton. Co.

752 6116

S&S REPAIR SERVICE, INC

Cnty. Rd. 1125 Wintervllle. N.C. 756-5989 (Day or Night)

LONG HARVESTER

Large inventory of parts Obsolete and rebuilt parts 12 volt hoist and repairs Field service offered Tobacco trucks and dollies

WELDING

All types welding Portable equipment Steel fabrication

WISCONSIN ENGINE

Factory built parts New engines Rebuilt and exchange engines

MACHINE SERVICE

Complete machine shop Line boring

Heavy equipment rebuilding including idlers and rollers on bulldozers & draglines

HBSi CARS ARE PREOWNED...BUT

WPWmi7

SHOP THE REST,...BUY THE BEST'

1982 Pontiac Grand Prix

Slate gray rittt blue clom interior, blue padded landau top Extras include bit wheel, air condition, stereo radio. M0 split seat, wire wheel covers. 24 .(XX) miles.

1982 Pontiac Trans-Am

SperkUng red metallic with velour trim. Tilt wheel, cruise control, powwer windows, power door locks. AM-EM stereo cassette. lO.om miles, local trade, like new

1982 Chevroiet Citation

4 door, silver metallic with burgundy winyl trim Power steering and brakes, automatic, air. radio, cruise, clean car

1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wagon

Light jade with cloth trim Power steering and brakes, automabc. air condition, AM-FM radio, local trade

1981 Olds Delta Royale Brougham

Dark blue with velour trim, options include tilt wheel, cruise control. AM-FM aterep. wire wheel covers. 33.000 miles

1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme

Silver metallic with blue cloth trim Power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio, rally wheels.

27.000 miles

1981 Datsun280-ZX

2 plus 2. Bronze metsllic with tan leather trim Power steering, powwer windows, cruise, control, automatic. AM-FM cassebe.

38.000 miles, sharp car.

1981 Dodge Aries K Wagon

4 door, tan with tan vinyl interior Automatic, air condition, stared radio. 23,000 miles

1981 Datsun280-ZX

Burgundy metallic with velour interior, power windows, cruise control. AM-FM stereo with cassette. 36.000 miles. 5 speed transmission.

1981 Buick Century

4 door, dark blue metallic with blue vinyl interior. AM-FM radio, cruise control, wire wheels. 34,000 miles.

Before You Trade Your Used Car

Qao He

WE BUY GOOD CLEAN LATE MODEL USED CARS

Or We Will Sell It For You

1981 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

Slate gray with padded vinyl root and gray trim, tully equipped. 30.000 miles

1981 Pontiac T-1000

5 door hatchback. Silver metallic with blue vinyl interior, power steering, automatic, air condition. AM-FM stereo. 20,000 miles, one local owner

1980 Fiat Spider Convertible

White with dark red interior AM-FM stereo with cassette, 5 speed. 31.400 miles, sharp sports car

1980 Mazda RX-7

Silver metallic with burgundy trim. 5 speed transmission, air condition, stereo, local trade

1980 Olds Delta Royale

Dark burgundy metallic with burgundy vinyl top and trim. Extras include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control. AM-FM stereo. 80-40 split seats, air. wire wheels.

1979 Toyota Clica Uftback

White with blue vinyl triin, 4 speed transmission, air corxJilion, stereo radio

1979 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

Silver metallic with gray leather trim Equipped with most factory options Local t'ade

1979 Buick Skylark

Light green with tan vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio. 50,000 miles

1979 Pontiac Bonneville

4 door, dark blue metallic with blue vinyl top and blue velour trim. Options include till wheel, cruise control, AM-FM cassette, air condition, rally wheels. 57.000 miles, local trade

1978 Cadillac Sedan De Ville

Oerk green metallic with leather trim Equipped with moat factory options including wire wheel covers

1978 Olds Cutlass Cruiser Wagon

Medium blue metallic with blue vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, tilt wheel.' cruise control, luggage rack. 55.000 miles, trade-in

1976 MG Midget

Burgundy metallic with a new black convertible lop and black vinyl trim, 4 speed transmission. 32.000 miles, local car

Dickineon Ave.

Brown-Wood, Inc.

752-7111

ITS HERE NOW!!

HIW m TOPAZ.

Drive Topazand see what a new, enlightened approach can do for your driving.

TOPAZ GS

7355.00

Manufacturers Suggested Base Retail Price

NEW MERCURY TOPAZ

Front-wheel drive

New High Swiri Combustion engine

Excellent fuel economy

High-tech. Affordable price

EAST CAROLINA

LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC West End Circle    Grccnvllle.    N.C.

GMC

TRUCKS

756-4267





ine uaily ttttector, Greenville. N.C.-Sunday, July 10,1M3-D-9

117 Resort Property For Sale

BEAUTIFUL WATER FRONT

fropcrty in Beaufort County, NC acre, kjna frontaoe on South Creak with fresh water pond. 3 bedroom modem house. * years old with deck, pier, garage and privaqt. STO.OOO. some financing at Rk 75^001 i)r75a<703

lake royale, wooded

waterfront lot. with excellent view, apprdximatefy W acre. Adjacent to Facreationar.3SS^74

ING FOR a place on the I or Pamlico Rivers? Call us have many waterfront lots. and noobile homes for sale, obinson. 964-4711. Woodstock

ealtv, 943 3352

2 NEW HOMES ON Pamlico River, water front lots with bulkheads. 3 bedrooms. IV> baths, large kitchen and family room, large closets. Built for year round comfort, with heat pump, air condition and fireplace. Owner will finance 10% at good interest rate for 10 years. Excellent location, 2 miles below Bath, NC at Bayview. Vance Oygrtqn, 7S6-tf7pr9^ 2701

3 BEDROOM cottage for sale at Bayview. Call 746-6171

ayview

923 3771

or weekends

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call t3^I3 between land 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any siie to meet your storage need. Call

121 Apartments For Rent

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, frigerator, dishwasher, disj.... and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located lu^off 10th Street

Call 752-3519

121 Apartment For Rent

NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 2 bedrooms. l<7 baths. No pets. 752 3152 or 752 6715. ask for John or Bryant

NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms. 1 mile from hospital-med sposal I school Really nice. S300. Deposit, ' lease. 825^4931

LARGE 4 BEDROOM apartment. 2 full baths, fireplace. 13I0A Myrtle and Call

NICE ONE BEDROOM apartnrtent available August I. 2 blocks from campus. All modern appliances. Heat pump. Central air. 7^5609.

Avenue. S340 per month. Lease and deposit required. No pets 355^^2544 or 7564)49_

LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

at our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498. Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom lownhouse apartments. 1212 Redtanks Road. Dishwasher. refrigerator, range, disposal included: We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus. No pets. S215 a month. 756 3W3_

size to meet your storage need. Call i

LOVE TREES?

WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease. 20.000 square feet available. Will subdivide. 756 5097 or 756 9315.

121 Apartments For Rent

AVAILABLE LATE JULY New 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. Range, refrigerator, dishwasher, and hookups. *310. Couples pre ferred. Lease and deposit No pets 7564746

, Experience the unique in apartment 1 living with nature outside your

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

^ er. washer/dryer hook ups. cable

AZALEA GARDENS i

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

At I 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 ifngles. No pets.

I

] Contact JT or Tommy Williams 756 7815

:    Cherry    Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses With V/i baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, 'xs, patio, free cable TV, Iryer hook-ups, laundry tennis court, duo

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups. cable TV,wall t windows.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    1    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd. 756 5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ebmpactors, patio, free cable TV, Washer dryer hook ups.

ADom. sauna, tennis o Wouseand POOL. 752 1557

EASTBROOK AND

VILLAGE GREEN * APARTMENTS

327 one. two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments. Ibaturing Cable TV, modern appli Axes, central heat and air condi Boning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid service. *70 week. Call 756 5555, Herltaoe Inn AAotel

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

9AII utilities Cable TV *30 day leases Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates starting *250 month and up

756-5555 The HerItage Inn_

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart-eients. carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to greenvllle Country Club 76 6869

RIFTON AREA New centrally i    huted and air conditioned; 1,    2 and

I    3 bedroom apartments. 12    miles

Irom Kinston, 17 miles    from

.    Greenville. Handicapped    units

6    available. Rent starts at    *190.

Adjusted leases available for stu-dants. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 a.m., AAonday through Saturday. Bfttce 524 4239; home 54 4821.

NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG AAANOR BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS

Features

2 large bedrooms

V/i baths

Thermopane windows

E-300 Energy efficient

Heat Pumps

^cious floor plan

Beautiful individual Williamsburg interior

Patios with privacy fence

Washer/dryer hookups

Kitchen appliances

Custom built cabinets

CALL 756-7647

Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns of today's paper

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances. *210. Call 758

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent

ONE BEDRQOM. lOth Street. *140 per month. Call Ervtai Gray. 524--*146 gr 524 50^

RENT FURNITURE; Livina. dining. bedroom complete. *79j0 month. Option to Buy. U-REN-CO.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

754-

tar RIVER ESTATES

1. 2. and 3 bedroonris. washer dryer hook ups, cable TV. pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Cimplex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOTICE

Byrds Automatic Transmission Service in Bell Arthur, approximately 6 miles west of Greenville, N.C. would like you to know that you can get most automatic transmissions rebuilt for $250.00, warranted 12,000 miles or 12 months whichever comes I first. You get a handwritten warranty signed by Leroy Byrd, I the owner. I cannot promise you one day service and take a chance on overlooking something minor that could show up after your warranty has expired. Remember, there are a lot of transmissions rebuilt that didnt need it in the first place.

I

I

I

L

Call 756-2053

Greenville's Finest Used Cars!

(Located At Honda Store)

1981 Honda Accord LX

Blue. 32,278 miles, 5 speed transmission, air condition, just nice!

1981 Honda Civic 1500

Air condition. 5 speed transmission, red. AM-FM stereo with tape.

1980 Chevrolet Chevette

2 door. White, 4 speed transmission, one owner.

1980 Volkswagen Sport Truck

Red 5 speed transmission, like new Real nice.

1980 Ford Granada

2 door. Red and white, one owner, wire wheels, automatic. AM-FM stereo.

1980 Chevrolet Citaton

Gray and black, tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, power door locks, stereo radio, sunroof.

1980 AMC Concord Wagon

Tan Luggage rack, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo

1980 Jeep CJ-5

Renegade. Blue. Just like brand new.

1980 Toyota Corolla

Automatic transmission, air condition, blue.

1979 Honda Accord

Beige, automatic transmission, air condition.

1979 Toyota Corolla

SR-5 Hatchback. Green, excellent condition, 5 speed transmission

1979 Dodge D-100 Pickup

6 cylinder, straight drive, excellent condition, 28.000 miles, wine

1979 MGB Convertible

Like new, 47,800 miles, green with black convertible lop. AM-FM stereo

1979 Pontiax Lemans Wagon

Automatic transmission, air condition

1978 Mercury Bobcat

Red with black interior. Inexpensive to own.

Bob Barbour

3300 s. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500

1977 Olds 98

4 door. Blue with blue vinyl roof, full power.

1977 BMW 3201

2 door, red, AM-FM stereo, air condition.

1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Gray Real nice car

1975 Volkswagen Beetle

Convertible. Just like brand new.

(Located At Volvo Store)

1983 Renault Alliance

1000 miles. Get a brand new one at a used price.

1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans

Maroon, maroon vinyl top, fully equipped with tilt wheel, cruise control, sport wheels.

1981 Cadillac Eldorado

Leather interior, sunroof, all the options.

1980 Buick Century Limited

Loaded with options, 32,000 miles.

1980 Ford Thunderbird

Sun roof, digital dash, power windows, power door locks, tilt wheel, cruise control.

1980 Volkswagen Rabbit

Diesel. Air condition, good mileage, very inexpensive.

1980 AMC Concord Wagon

Nice car. Well taken care of.

1980 Renault LeCar

Air condition, stereo radio.

1980 Olds Delta 88 Royale

Brougham. Has every option available. Low mileage, like new.

1979 AMC Jeep CJ-5

Renegade. Low mileage, nice Jeep.

1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Silver. Runs great, like new.

1976 Ford Thunderbird

Power windows, power seats, air condition.

BobBarbour

V()L\m.VK'Jeep Rcnaull

117 W. Tenth St./Grcenville/758-7200

ATHOLTOLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

We Are Overstocked With The New 1983V2 Nissan Trucks

4 X4s, Deluxe, MPGs, Standards A Variety Of Colors And Over 25 To Choose From

Up To $1500.00 Discounts And An Unbelievable 8.8% Financing Rate Available On All Units

Hurry, While The Selection Is Good!

HOLTOLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.      756-3115

The Real Es/

REDUCED FOR IMMEDIATE SALE BY OWNER

Wonderful location in Grifton-2 blocks from school, 1 block from park, in center of town. Three bedrooms carpeted, study-sewing-game room, greatroom with exposed beams and vaulted ceiling, parquet floor, floor-to<eiling brick fireplace with optional gas log hook-up. bath, kitchen. All new paneling throughout, carport, patio.

Call 524^689 Or 522-6350

Or Reply to P.O. Box 455 Griffon, N.C. 28530

534 CRESTLINE BOULEVARD This lovely 5 year old, two story brick Williamsburg home has 3/4 bedrooms, 2% baths. Youll love the spacious rooms, especially the 25'7"x17'2 " Great Room with fireplace S large eat-in kitchen with built-in appliances plus formal dining room. The 2400 square foot area is equipped with two heat pumps Attached double carport & storaqe area. Portion of back yard has board fence. Assumable 9/i% V.A. loan makes this a very attractive buy Reduced to $99,500.

Open House Every Saturday & Sunday 1-5 P.M.

Weekdays call for appointment, 756-8953

I PRICE DROPPED!!!#

Y    Lynndale

A once in a lifetime opportunity! Owner must sell in ^ the next 4 weeks. Make an offer today. 3000 square A

feet, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal areas, den with T fireplace, double garage, extra large outside storage A ^ building.    

t

# OVERTON & POWERS

^    355-6500    

CAMELOT

Brand new home in Camelot Subdivision with light cream siding and soft blue trim features 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Walk-in closet in master bedroom. Custom-built cabinets in kitchen, separate dining room. Great room with fireplace. Ready to move in. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs.

The Evans Company

Call 752-2814

OR

Faye Bowen 756-5258

Of Gfeenvile, Irx:.

701W. Fourteenth St.

Winnie Evans 752-4224

OPEN HOUSE TODAY

2-5 P.M.

Lot 265 Hanell Street Cherry Oaks

Over 1700 square feet of living area. Excellent floor plan. 12% FHA financing available. Custom construction in this 3 bedroom ranch plan. See it today.

Sharon Lewis Hostess

REALTY WORLDa

CLARK-BRANCH

REALTORS

756-6336I

(D

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0

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3

(D

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JEANNETTE COX AGENCY

REALTOR 756 1322

ISICrcenvilK Blvx

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO GREENVILLE

Cill 756 1323 Of Vif P 0 Box 667 Grwville NC tor xoor re copy 0* "Mom for Living . a monftuy publication pacxeo witn picturn. afail$ ano pnces ot nomes and avaiiabielocaiiy

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO ANEW CITY

Get your free copy ot Homes For Living", in the city you are going to Know the real estate market before you get there Your copy is in our office We can help you buy. 'sell or trade a home any place in rhe nation

OPEN HOUSE SUN DAY 2-5

REDUCED BY OWNER. RARE OPPORTUNITY!

3240 sq. ft. Ownsrs relocation makes available this unusually spacious, pMlared Southern Colonial. Move-in condition. Split rail tence encloses approximately 2 acres, 2 horse stalls, 3 out buildings, fireplaces, gracious entrance hall. 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, library, excellent closet apace, famity room. Easy commuting distance, just east of Greenville. I.L Blose, M.D., Home. 7584239 or 757-2663    $76.500.

Directions: Turn right on 33 to Simpson, go to Gallowsy Road, turn left 115mHes.

/cHtfyimaU In

752-3000 NEW LISTING AND

OPEN HOUSE 2;30-4:30 P.M

Lyle Davis, REALTOR

DOLL HOUSE. Brick ranch, almost new, tastefully decorated in earth tones. Spacious country kitchen and breakfast area, handy utility and outside storage. Approximately Vi acre lot.

DIRECTIONS TO HOUSE; Get on Highway 33, bear to right at Simpson turn off (State Road 1755). go 3 miles on State Road 1755, take right Galloways Cross Road -(E & M Grocery), 8th house on left. Sign in yard.

Call Davis Realty, 752-3000,756-1997,756-2904

NOW

Is The Time To Build Your New Home

Build Itow While Interest Rates Are Bown Build Now Before Material Prices Increase

Let Bowser Construction Company Quality Construct Your New Custom Home. We Have Building Lots Available In The Following Subdivisions:

Club Pines Bedford Lake Ellsworth Cambridge

BOWSER

1^

The Name Of Quality Call Now For Details

756-7647





D-10-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 10.19C

121 Apartments For Rent

LAKOk 2 BEDROOM duplex Good location 70S ano 707 Hooker Rood Stove refrigerator central heat

and air washer dryer hook carpeted Lease and deposit. pets S275 3S5 2544 0T 7Sa^>49

Xo

TWO BEDROOM apartments

 .    .    W

Insurance a Realty. 7S2 27S4

availaOie No pets. Call Smith ilty.

TWO BEDROOM townhouse. errergy efficient Excellent location. S310 per month 757 0001, 7S3 a01S

TWOBEDR(X)AA

APARTMENTS

Near ECU Most utilities included S27S up Available immediately 7M-049lor75*-7a0H)eforp.m.

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom. I'} bath townhouses Available now S295 month.

9 to S AAonday F riday

756-7711

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space Arlington Boulevard, 3.000 square feet Only S3.60 per square foot For more information. call Real Estate Brokers 7S2 434>

FOR RENT Prime retail space. Arlington Boulevard. 4S00 square feet J4.25 per square foot. Call 7& 5097

756 9315 or

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie Smith at 946 5M7_

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty. 756 3500. nights Don Southerland 76 5260.

127

Houses For Rent

HOUSE FOR RENT in Ayden. 3 bedrooms, living room, bath, kitch en, 2 porches. Call 746 3674

, HOUSES AND apartments in Greenville Call 746 3204or 524 3100

WOOOLAWN AVENUE 2 blocks from campus 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.

extra storage or study area up appliances furnished, ofl street parking. S375 a month. De

stairs.

posit required. Call 752

I BLOCK FROM CAMPUS and

town. 505 East 4 th Street. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, lots of room. S400amonth plus deposit 750 0174.

2615 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3

bedroom, central heat, air condi

tioner. garage, nice neighborhood. Families only. Lease and deposit.

129

Lots For Rent

VILLAGE TRAILER Park. Ayden. Paved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection. First month free or we pay moving expenses. 746 2425 or72 tl40._

133 AAobile Homes For Rent

SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes 5125 and up. No pets, no children. 75 0745or 756 9491._

2 AND 3 BEDROOMS Was^, dryer, air. carpet. No pets. Call 756 0792

! BEDROOM AAobile Home for rent :all 756 4687_

2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children Call 758 4857.

2 BEDROOM trailer, IW baths, air, no pets 756 6005

2 BEDROOM FURNISHED mobile home tor rent 752 5635

2 BEDROOMS - Furnished, washer, dryer, air condition, good location. No pets 756 oeoi after ?p^

60X12, 2 bedroom, washer, air, $170 per month, 575 deposit Available now. Call Tommy, 756 7815_

135 Office Space For Rent

EAST lOtti STREET Private, all utilities, furnished. 575 per month. 756 7417

FOR RENT 2500 square feet. Suitable tor office space or commercial. 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756 8111.__

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Ti

Tommy Williams, 756 7815. 5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass Plenty of park ino. Call 758 2300days._

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH I bedroom condominium, oceanfront, families only 756 4207 or 726 3869

BEECH MOUNTAIN condo tor rent by the day. week or month. Tennis, golf and swimming. Call 946-3248

ays, 946 0694 nights.

CONDO AT ATLANTIC BEACH: 3

bedroom. 3 bath, special weekday rates of 560 per night. Oceanside, pool and Jacuzzi, tennis Call 758-4111 Bev

EMERALD ISLE, 3 bedroom beach cottage. 5265 per week. In August.

HOUSES FOR RENT on Pamlico River at Bay view. NC Weekly rates 919 923 2281._[_

LAST CHANCE tor summer, 2 bedroom townhouse (Pineknoll Shores) on ocean 2 pools. Everything furnished, even freshly Iront^ sheets Available July 17th - 24th, August 14th 31st. 752 2579.

TOPSOIL BEACH, Sound side. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dishwasher, washer, private pier. 5300 a week

753 3435._

138 Rooms For Rent

BEDROOM AND sitting room, private ' j bath share shower, cooking/laundry,, pool, tennis available Female or couple. 5175 month/5125 deposit plus first month down 756 8073

ROOMS FOR RENT Call from 9 a m. 9 p.m., 752 6583

SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges Across from ECU 525 per week includesall. 752 7278

142 Roommate Wanted

PROFESSIONAL FEMALE to

share nicely furnished 3 bedroom, 2 bath house, 4 miles from hospital. Non smoker 5150 plus halt utilities. 758 6298.__

ROOAAMATE WANTED, to share trailer located on Belvoir Highway 5110 a month - includes rent, electric, and phone. Call Kay at

1 TO 2 ROOAAAAATES wanted tor 2 bedroom apartment Split rent and utilities. Available immediately. Call 756 5352    ^

144 Wanted To Buy

ABOVE GROUND swimming pool, under 5400. Call 754 8926

BEASLEY LUMBER Products will pay up to 5150 per M for good grade standing Pine Timber Also top prices paid tor good grade Pine I delivered to Scotland

Call Gene Baker 826 4203

Neck mill. 826 4121 or

Phone 757-3467

148

Wanted To Rent

PROFESSIONAL MATURE couple desires country rental in Greenville area Fonvlelle 105 Beagle Trail, Wilmington. NC 28403or 7f9 0178after 6n m

WANTED TO rent room/rooms in family house. Use of kitchen and bath or simitar Preferably un furnished/furnished Acceptable single lady. 758 0932, Ms. Smith

WILL RENT reasonably priced house In PJ County. 1212 B South Cotanche. Greenville 752 7184

The Real Estate Corner

make AN OFFER!!!

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

2 bedroom. I'j bath townhouses Excellent location Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer dryer hookups, pool, tennis court

756-0987

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately 752 3311

1 BEDROOM apartment. Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn 5215 758 0635 or 756 0545

2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen i applianes furnished, totally electric, 5325 month Call 756 7647    !

2 BEOROOM townhouse. carpeted. | central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer'dryer hookup. 295 i 108 Cedar Court. 7ft 3311_ j

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central : air. carj>eted. appliances. 5275 a I month Bryton Hifls 758 3311_ i

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near ECU ' on Stancill Drive Central air, j i ran^^retrigerafor. hookups. 5275 j

704 EAST Thirp Street. 2 bedrooms. I , 2 blocks from ECU Stove and : refrigerator Lease and deposit 5260 756 1888 9 to 5 weekdays

Owner must sell. Price slashed $64,900 to $62,500.

You cant afford to miss this opportunity. Beautiful brick home on comer lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great ^ room with fireplace, formal dining room, double garage.

OVERTON & POWERS

355-6500

w.g. blount & associates

REALTORS - DEVELOPERS

756-3000

FOR RENT Nice convenient , neighborhood. Formal rooms, den. { 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air, raised patio. 12 month lease and , deposit required. Available August I 1. Families preferred. Call Realty ' World. Clark Branch. Realtors. 756 6336 or AAarie Davis 756 5402

Cypress Creek Towijljoiijes

MODELS OPEN EACH SATURDAY & SUNDAY

   e-

BAYWOOD: Unique 3 bedroom contemporary located on a beautiful wooded lot. Stone fireplace. 2112 baths. Decks. Kitchen to delight the most avid connoisseur. 8135,000.

GRAYLEIGH: Under construction. 4 Bedrooms 3 baths, possibility of 5th bedroom or gameroom, garage, located on a corner lot. Can choose your own colors and decorate to your own taste. Call for price and details.

GRAYLEIGH: Beautiful Williamsburg featuring 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, living room, formal dining room, den with fireplace, deck and garage. 8110,500.

STOKES: Stately Southern mansion located a short distance from Greenville. Completely renovated. 4 bedrooms, Z'h baths, 4 fireplaces, screened porches. Must see to appreciate. Owner anxious to sell. Any reasonable offer will be considered.

CLUB PINES: Brick two story featuring great room with built in cabinets, fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, dining room, kitchen, garage. 884,500.

VILLAGE EAST TOWNHOUSES: Near the University. Brick townhouses featuring 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths, outside storage, patio, kitchen with all appliances. Special financing. Call for details. 841,900.

DRESDEN PLACE CONDOMINIUMS: Close enough to walk to class. Located at the corner of 11th and Charles St. Two bedrooms, V/2 baths, kitchen with all appliances, living room/dining combination. Good loan assumption. 843.600.

ROBERSONVnXE/STOKES AREA: Large Colonial with pecan grove located on Highway 903. Completely renovated. 4 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, formal areas. Can be financed Federal Land Bank. 869,900.

HORSESHOE ACRES - Price Reduced! Owner ready to sell. 3 bedroom home on % acre lot. Great room with fireplace, 2 tile baths, kitchen, dining room, garage. 862,500.

Bob Barker.....975-3179

BUI Blount.....756-7911

Betty Beacham. 756-3880 Stanley Peaden. 756-1617

PINERIDGE SUBDIVISION

3 miles from hospital and East Carolina Medical School. 110 Hunters Lane contemporary designed, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, fireplacerheat pump, fenced-in backyard, storage, centipede grass and more. $57,500.

Call For Appointment 752-9231

"cHttfunait in ikiSlali"

752-3000

OPEN HOUSE

2:30 - 5:00 PM

204 PRINCE ROAD

Enjoy Your Private Pool This Summer And Relax In This

3 Br., 2 Bath, Well Cared For Home. Formal Areas, Den, Eat In Kitchen, Attractive Yards In A Nice Neighborhood. Make This A Terrific Package At Only

$69,900

MARY WARD, HOSTESS

^ By-Pass - Church Of Christ Church Trte Right Into Eastwood Sub. - Emerson Rd. Left On Nichols - Right On Prince.

Call DAVIS REALTY, 752-3000 or Mary Ward, 756-1997 or Lylo at 756-2904.

TWO GREAT BUYS

OWNER HATES TO LEAVE! Job requires a move and his loss can be your gain. Great location in popular Westhaven III Subdivision at 111 Baywood Lane. Immaculate; floor plan features foyer, formal living and dining areas, a great kitchen with breakfast area, family r(wm with fireplace, three bedrooms, two full baths, nice deck off family room, separate workshop or hobby area. Carport, beautiful lot. $79,900.

BRAND NEW LISTING! Located at 102 Graham Street in popular College Court Subdivision. Conveniently located to schools, churches, parks, this excellent home features formal living and formal dining room family room with fireplace, nice kitchen with eating area, three spacious bedrooms, 2 full baths. Lovely yard with lots of room. Owner has eye on another home Ready to deal at $69,500.    f    

THE D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012    355-6414

Check out our other fine listings under classified

OPEN HOUSE TO

' V    .    ^    m

DAY - 3:30 to 6:30 PM

HARRIS-REDDin HOUSE

635 Cotanche Street - QreenvHle

The Public Is Invited To Visit This Local Landmark During A Free Open House July 10 From 3:30 to 6:30 In The Afternoon.

The Greenville Area Preservation Association Is Trying To Attract Private Investors Or Groups To Purchase The House Only And Move It To Another Location For Adaptive Use And Preservation.

Make Your Offer On The House Only In Writing Before July 29. House Must Be Moved From Present Locatton Before The End Of August. Write:

The Harris Redditt House

P.O. Box 3503 QreenvUle, NC 27834

OPEN HOUSE

This Sunday 2-5 P.M.

Directions: Go towards Bethel past Hwy 903. take next paved road on right ami follow the open house signs.

Hostess: Dianne Vlfhitehurst

HIGNITE, REALTORS

756-1306

JEANNEHE

AGENCY, INC.

NEWLY LISTED!

EVERYTHING YOU COULD ASK FOR!

Marvelous family home glowing with warmth and personality on almost an acre lot. Brick rambler features three large bedrooms, 2 baths, formal rooms, family room with fireplace, fenced in backyard - all in mint condition. $64,500.00.    \

BUYING OR SELLING, THINK: JEANNEHE COX AGENCY, INC.

WE SELL GREENVILLE

COUNTRY-4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, stables.............................. .26 aCICS

LYNNDALE4 bedrooms, .3 1/2 baths, playroom...........................$147,800

LYNNDALE4 bedrooms, .3 baths, playroom...............................$ 142,900

RIVER4 bedrooms, great room, pier, sandy beach ...............'. . $ 140,000

FOREST HRXS-4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, sun porch .......$133,900

LYNNDALE3 bedrooms, 3 baths, playroom...............................$ 120,000

BROOK VALLEY4 or 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room...............$119,000

BROOK VALLEY-4 bedrooms, 3 baths, garage    $ 109,000

CHERRY OAKS4 bedrooms, 31/2 baths, farmhouse .........$107,500

COUNTRY4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths. Florida room ......... $103,000

CLUB PINES-4bedr^0VJ^/2 baths, garage    $101,900

BROOK GREEN4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, contemporary .<*.................$ 100,000

COUNTRY4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, 31/2 acres .......... $99,400

aUBPINES-3bedrooi^CA^t^hs, great room.......................$91,500

CLUB PINES4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, garage..............................$89,900

BETHEL4 bedrooms, 21/2 baihs, beautiful moldings and floors................$89,900

COUNTRY4 bedropms, 21/2 baths, 3 aae lot on lake......................., $89,900

TUCKER ESTATES-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage............................$89,900

LAKE ELLSWORTH-3 bedrooms, IVi baths. Contemporary, NEW LISTING $89,500

CHERRY OAKS3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage...................... $85,300

WESTHAVEN3bedrooms, 21/2baths, garage.....................  $85,000

STRATF(MID3bedrooms, 2baths, contemporary...........................$82,900

WESTHAVEN I3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, Williamsburg, NEW LISTING.........$82,500

STRATFORD3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Salt Box.............................$81,900

TUCKERESTATES-4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, fenced yard.............$79,900

QUAIL RIDGE3 bedrooms, 2 baths, flat ...........   $79,900

CLUB PINES3 bedrooms, 2 baths, playroom  ......................$72,000

CHERRY OAKS3 bedrooms, 2 baths, playroom.............................$ 71,000

WINDY RIDGE-4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, NEW LISTING....................^ $69,900

CHERRY OAKS3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, 101/2% loan assumption............$69,900

RED OAK3 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened porch................  $69,500

LAKE GLENWOOD3 bedrooms. 2 baths, great room................  $67,500

RIVERHILLS-3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Ranch, NEW LISTING .............. $64,500

UNIVERSITY-Duplcx, 3yearsold, excellent investment.......................$64,000

OSCEOlA-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, NEW LISTING .....  $60,900

TUCKAHOE3 bcdroorn^(0^i^s .corner lot ............. $60,500

COUNTRY3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room................................$52,900

HIGGSOlder home converted into four apartments................. $35,000

BLUE BANKS5 acres, wooded, surrounding lake.  .........................$60,000

HOLLY HILLS11/2 acres, wooded lot on lake........... .................. ..........

Jeannette Cox Agency, Inc.

756-1322 Anytime!

Jeannette Cox, CRB, CRS, GRI 756-2521 Home

Alice Moore. REALTOR 756-3308 Home

Valerie Dragoon 756-7171 Home





FOR SALE BY OWNER

Racwitly remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch less than 1/4 mile from Eastern Elementary School and recreatiorul parks. Beautiful carpet and hardwood floor combination. Largo living room, sunny kitchen wHh plenty of cabinets, separate dining area, cozy den with fireplace. Laundry room with storage area. Picturesque, enclosed back yard with 6 foot naturally weathered fence to give privacy to your 1I'X38' inground pool. Almost a years supply of pool chemicals and seasoned wood for next winters' fires included - a steal at $59,999.99!

75S-13S5 before 7:30 AM or after 9:30 PM Sunday Anytime 'The Real Estate Corner

HOMES-AT-A-G LANCE

SSO.OOO AND UNDER

South Forbes.....................$23,000

Fix-lt-Up..........................$23,000

University........................$25,900

Fourth Street   ..................$29,000

Stokes.......................;...$31,900

Condominium....................$32,000

Condominium....................$32,500

Broad Street......................$35,000

Belvoir Highway..............  $36,000

Paris Avenue.....................$39,500

Hillsdale..........  $39,900

Hardee Acres.....................$40,500

Townhome..............  42,900

Greenbriar.......................$44,500

Pamlico Beach.....................$45,000

University........................$45,500

Country Squire............MID-FORTIES

Edwaras Street...................$47,000

Duplex...........................$47,900

Circle Drive.......................$48,500

Slay Drive .................$49,500

Duplex...........................$49,900

$50,000-$70,000

.$51,000

Windy Ridge

Pamlico Beach....................$51,500

Pleasant Ridge...................$51,900

Edwards Acres .............$52,500

Maryland Drive....................$52,900

Edwards Acres...............  $54,600

Ayden............................$55,000

Hillsdale..........................$55,000

Lindell Road......................$55,000

Coghill...........................$55,500

Brentwood.......................$55,900

N. Eastern Street.................$56,500

Edwards Acres....................$56,500

Country..........................$56,900

Pleasant Ridge  ............$57,000

Windy Ridge......................$57,500

Greenwood Forest...............FIFTIES

Pineridge.........................$57,500

University........................$58,500

Near Hospital.....................$58,900

Belvedere........................$58,900

Rfth Street.......................$59,500

Hardee Acres.....................$59,900

Red Oak..........................$59,900

E. Wright Road....................$59,900

Horseshoe Acres.................$62,000

Camelot..........................$63,000

Westhaven.......................$63,900

Bayside Shores...................$68,000

Camelot............   $69,900

   $70,000-$100,000

River Hills \..................$72,500

Condominium ..S\................$72,500

Cherry Oaks .................$72,800

Brook Road.......................$73,900

Giifton.................... $75,000

Forest Hills.......................$75,000

Stratford.........................$76,500

Cherry Oaks......................$78,500

Highway 43 South............ $79,500

Drexelbrook  ..............$79,000

Tucker Estates...................$81,500

Westhaven III.....................$82,500

Club Pines........................$84,500

Camelot..........................$84,900

Columbia, N.C....................$95,000

Brook Valley......................$99,900

$100,000 AND ABOVE

Club Pines.......................$105,000

Quadraplex......................$130,000

Lynndale........................$137,900

McGregor Downs................$150,000

Lynndale........................$160,000

Lynndale........................$165,000

Country Club....................$185,000

Holly Hills.......................$250,000

LOTS

Camelot...........................$9,500

PInewood Forest  ........$16,000

Red Oak...........................$9,500

Commercial......................$20,000

Ayden.............................$7,000

Four Acres, Bethel................$40,000

Office Open 1-5 Today. Sue Henson On Duty. During Non-Office Hours Call 756-3375.

DUFFUS REALTY, INC.

756-5395

MoBeUtf-lNarcuB ftsaltg

Your Way to Better Living

Office 746-2166

$19,900. LOVE A BARGAIN? The location is the very best, but this home needs the tender loving care of the do-it-yourself addict. 3 bedrooms, bath, living room with fireplace, den, eat-in kitchen, garage and detached workshop.

$38,500. NEW LISTING. QUALITY, CHARM AND CHARACTER in a prestigious neighborhood. 2 story older home with 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room, dining room, kitchen, central heat and detached garage. $29,900. GREAT STARTER HOME ip the country. 2 bedrooms, large kitchen with double oven range, central heat, wood stove in den.

$36,000. KENNEDY ESTATES. AYDEN. Brick home has den, 3 bedrooms, bath, nice lot.

$45,(HK). 3 bedroom brick ranch, immaculate condition, living room, dining room, large kitchen, den with wood stove, detached workshop, fenced well landscaped yard. Ayden.

$43,500. Brick ranch on a tree studded lot. 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, large den with wood burning stove, eat-in kitchen, dining area, heat and air. Ayden.

$43,500. OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE. Older home boasts 3 or 4 bedrooms, big family room,^kitchen with pantry, central heat. Situated on a corner lot with plenty of trees. Ayden.

$47,500. DESIGNED TO FIT your family needs. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room with fireplace, spacious kitchen, family room, large back yard. Ayden. $56,500. UNIQUE HOME IN GRIFTON. Big lot with trees. Home has 2 fireplaces, 2 bedrooms, Texas size living room, screened porch, basement.

$67,500. AYDEN COUNTRY CLUB. Large 4 bedroom brick home with 2 baths, heat, air, den with fireplace, attached garage.

$65,500. WONDERFUL NEIGHBORHOOD. Conveniently located is this 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch, family room, kitchen, 2 car garage, and workshop.

$54,900. ONE GREAT BARGAIN. Ready for immediate occupancy is this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch. Family room, utility room, kitchen, screened back porch, well landscaped fenced back yard.

$35,000. AYDEN. Home converted into nice duplex. Each side has 2 bedrooms, living room, bath and kitchen.

$38,000. FOURPLEX. Ayden. Three 2 bedroom apartments and one 1 bedroom. Loans can be assumed. Shown by appointment.

$10,500. THE PINES. 130x150 corner lot in excellent neighborhood. Paved streets, curb and gutter.

ON CALL TODAY Louise H. Moseley GRI 746-3472

NEW LISTINGS

1011 DOGWOOD FARMERS HOME loan assumption. 3 Bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, fenced back, excellent condition. $39,900. Listing Broker-J.C. Bowen 756-7426

SR123 MAURY WAITING FOR A BARGAIN? 3 Bedrooms, living room, family room, eat-in kitchen, carport. Wooded lot. Low 40s. Listing Broker - Ray Everett 758-9549.

JAMES STREET FOR JUST SZZ.OOlf you can own this 3 bedroom home. Living room, family room, fireplace, garage, and carport. Wood stove insert. Listing Broker-J.C. Bowen 756-7426.

ROUTE 1, BOX 725 CLOSE TO SHOPPING. 3 Bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, diriing room, fireplace, outside storage building. LowSO's. Listing Broker-J.C. Bowen 756-7426.

102 RIDGE ROAD POSSIBLE FHA loan assumption. 3 Bedrooms, living room with fireplace, garage, and patio. Low 50s. Listing Broker - David Heniford 758-0180.

THREE WOODED lots on paved road.

TWO LOTS on Greenfield Blvd.

COMMERCIAL lots - approximately 200x150. Owner financing available.

RELOCATION SERVICES AVAILABLE Buying or Selling

CENTURY 21 B FORBES

2717 S. Memorial Drive Greenville's First Century 21 Location

Lem Wallace, BROKER ON CALL 756-7008

Jennie Crumpler, BROKER........... 756-0237

J.C Bowen, REALTOR, GRI..........756-7426

756-2121

David Heniford. REALTOR............ 758-0180

Ray Everett, REALTOR..............758-9549

Blanche Forbes, REALTOR, GRI......756-3438

EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

Come On Out!

EDWARDS ACRES OPEN HOUSE

2 To 5 Today

Directions: From intersection of 264 By-pass and Tenth Street, Take Highway 33 East, 2.8 miles to Edwards Acres. Turn Right at Edwards Acres (Britt Road). Fourth House on left.

756-5395

GREENVILLE, N.C.

10V2% APR, FHA OR VA, 30 YEAR FIXED RATE

Yes, 10V2% APR, FHA or VA, 30 year Fixed rate financing on these pretty ranch homes in Edwards Acres. Closing costs are paid by the seller. Edwards Acres is a planned community of curving streets and cul-de-sacs, wooded and unwooded lots. Edwards Acres is only a short distance from Greenville city limits. These homes sell for $54,600 with a fireplace. The homes are carpeted and all rooms are light and bright. The dining area is just off the kitchen and living room with sliding glass

doors to the wood deck. The kitchens are pretty with their cabinetry, formica and floor covering. The homes feature three bedrooms and IV2 baths. The baths are connected both to the hallways and master bedroom for convenience and privacy. The wood deck is perfect for those spring and autumn evenings. Garages are paneled so that they can be converted to a recreation room or den at a later date. Heat pump and central air, of course.

MEMBERDuff US Realty, Inc.756-5395 Anytime

RELQ

WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION





I>l2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Sunday, July 10,1963THE REAL

ESTATE CORNERCEDARDALE LOG HOMES

SOLID CEDAR BEAUTY

AFFORDABLE RUSTIC ELEGANCE

WHY CEDARDALE?

^ MOnTHEBN WHITE CEOAR MO HOT NO TEHWTES FINEST TONGUE t GROOVE LOGS NO AIR MFa.TRATION ^ POST A BEAM CONSTRUCTION STRONGEST KNOWN TO MAN MODERN MANUFACTURMG FAOUTY - ]0 DAY DELIVERY i*- ENERGY EFFICIENT HIGHEST REACTOR OF ALL WOOD OUTSTANDING DEALER OPPORTUNfriES

756-2121

2717 S. Memorial Dr.

B. FORBES AGENCr

Greenville's First Century 21 Location OFFICE OPEN TODAY 1-5

Each Office Independently Owned and Operated

Nestled in the trees is this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Super great room, spacious deck. Truly a beautiful contemporary home. Near ECU at 1906 E. 9th Street. Priced at $79,000.Aldridge r* Southerland Realtors

756-3500

Or Ray Spears - 758*4362

THE WINNIN COMBIIIATieN FOR AU YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS

The name Tipton has been synonymous with Quality Home Building in the Greenville area for over 25 years. Now, weve joined forces with the nationwide marketing experts at CENTURY 21 to provide the most effective real estate services possible.

If youre buying or selling real estate, youll want to check with CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates first.

Tipton experience plus CENTURY 21 clout... the winning combination for all your real estate needs.

OnluQ^nm21TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

105 W. Greenville Blvd.    Phone    919-756-6810

RESIDENTIAL/COMMERCIAL/INVESTMENT/FARMS/PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

29.500Near E.C.U.1st Street, rental. 4 bedrooms, down payment of $5,000, payments less than monthly rent. Good tenants.

45.000Duplex. University area. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath each side. 49.900106 Emma's Place. Duplex, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath each

side. $400 per month income.

55.000Grimesland. Service station with 5 acres of land. T9.

55.000DUPLEX $6,000 per year income, close to ECU, good condition, excellent return. C12.

59.500-Riverfoluff. Duplex. 1550 square feel total. 2 bedrooms each side, assumable financing, balance of $37,000.00. Age 2Vy years.

65.000Commercial building. Dickinson Avenue. 8640 square feet heated, large paved parking lot.

220,000Eight unit apartment building, walking distance from E.C.U.. Excellent construction, low maintenaiKe.

205.000Homes of this caliber are not available in the Greenville area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Route 9, the home has 3800 square feet, sits on 4 acres of land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential lor 5, formal areas, huge famHy room with fireplace, recreation room, many extras.

149.900LynndaleCedar farmhousa. 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer, stained hardwood floors, 2 tireptaces, solar hot water heal, kKchen with Jenn-Aire. many exias.

121.900Lynndale4 bedroom two story in this fine area. Formal entry foyer, living room, dining room, kitchen with many extra features, playroom for the kids, deck, much more!

100.000Forest Hills. Wonderful area, 5 spacious bedrooms, almost 4,000 square feet of heated area. Huge tamOy room with tire^aca, remodeled kitchen. Ideal for the family.

99.500Tree Tops. The country lifestyle with city convenience. 3 bedrooms including master suite, office, great room with fireplace, formal dining room with stained hardwood floors. Almost new and immaculate. Only a transfer makes this home available.

98.500Rock Springs. Over 4,000 square feel of elegance, including 5 bedrooms, 3 full bafhs, and 2 half baths. Formal entr)^8|e^9te^s IIBttonal design. Kitchen equipped fontyilgorJiA wim anny breakfast area, banquet sizel^Ak^nlMiB^MFporf area.

91,000Farmville. Located in one of the finest araas. this home ' is a delight. Beautiful entrance foyer, formal areas, pecan paneled family room, two fireplaces, 9 foot ceilings, and much more.

92.500-Brook Valley. Unbelievable contemporary styling! View of golf course from elevated deck. Family room with cathedral ceiling, 3 bedrooms, 3 lull baths, private office. Guaranteed to knock your socks off!

92.500-Brook Valley. Beautiful location in this desirable area.

92.500Brook Valley. Attractive 2 story in this wonderful area. 4 bedrooms, 215 baths, formal entry foyer, living room and dining room.

92.500-Assumable VA loan! 2 story traditional home located in Tucker Estates. 4 bedrooms, IVj baths, lovely kitchen with Jenn-Aire range, family room with fireplace and formal areas. Only 3 years young.

I smimui

YILLUGE

L0W40% 2BPBMH

ALDRIDGE & SDUTHERLAND Phone 756-35DD

Shenandoah Village Townhouses Begin At $39,900

Builder Pays Discount Points And Closing Costs

Down Payment Only $2000.00

Monthly Payments Comparable To Rent

Over 1,000 Square Feel Of Healed Area

Excellent Location

Frost Free Refrigerator With Ice Maker

G.E. Appliances

Professionally Landscaped And Decorated

No Exterior Maintenance Or Landscaping

Private Patio

With Conventional Financing, Buyer Paying Closing Costs, Price as low as $36,500.

89.900Brook Valley. Dramatic contamporary ranch! 3 bedrooms.

2 lult baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace, deck, playroom and beautiful fancad back yard.

19.900Peace and quiet. Beautiful home on over an acre sized lot. 2100 square feet of heated area, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, lar|^ lamHy room with firsplaca. formal araas, doubts garsgs. Low intarest financing avsHaMa.

89.500Over 5,000 square feel within walking distance of the downtown area. Excellent house for fraternity.

87.500Pamlico RNor. Beautiful permanent home only 25 mHes from OreenvHle! On the water with pier, 3 bedrooms, 3 beths, huge lamMy room with cathedral calling and tiraptaca. Deck circlee home wilh screened porch, full baaemenl-garage.

82.500Rustic contemporary situalad on 1 .sera wooded lol. Large great room with vaultad ceiling and fireplace, with loft overtookinig room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge deck, garage and storage room. Just lovely!

79.900Glenwood. More for the money! Huge 4 bedroom ranch on tremendous comer lot. Formal araas, famHy room with fireplace, fenced back yard.

79.900Aydens finest! Over 2500 square feet of healed area, with extras too numarout to mention! 4 bedrooms. 2 fireplaces, huge rac room thats fantastic! Must see!

79.500Country living with convenience. Abundant acrsage with beautiful Williamsburg, located only 5 miles from GreenvHle. This 4 bedroom home could be the one! Call for details.

79.500606 Eleanor Street. Unique contemporary in Cherry Oaks.

3 bedrooms, ZV baths, large great room with fireplace and garage.

79.500Cherry Oaks. Sunken great room wilh fireplace, feeling of space as great room opens into kitchen with eating area. 3 bedrooms, including master suite. Really super interior!

79.500Camelot. Dramatic contemporary on haavHy wooded, private lot. The beet is In every room, from kitchen with buUt in nUcrowave and Jerm-AIra, to the spacious bedrooms with wonderful view of downstairs den, or the trees outside. Includes double garage and plenty of decks.

79.000Contamporary Wooded, private setting. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, high ceilings. 2 fireplaces, spacious deck under shady trees. If you are a contamporary lovar, youve got to see this one!.

78.900Tucker Estates. WiUlamsburg! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room with fireplsce, kitchen with eating area, well decorated, better hurry on this otw!

78.000Cherry Oaks. 9% assumption! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken grert room wHh old brick fireplace, siate foyer, super floor plan!

77.900Tucker Estates. Beautiful Wllliamsburg!3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, formal areas, huge kitchen with separate eating area. lamUy room with fireplace. Ell.

76.900Griffon Country Club. Well buHt custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial. Formal areas, large den.

74.900Once in a iifetime. Unlqus contemporary locatad within walking distance of E.C.U., yet setting in aacluded area on the river. Lots of glass (insulated) and deck. Very special!

74.500Lake Ellsworth. Large 4 bedroom. 2 bath ranch. Formal living room and ining room, den with fireplace, roomy kitchen with separate breakfast area. Assumable loan with low equity. J45.

72.OOUniversity area. Located in solid rssidantial area but stHI close to E.C.U. 3 bedrooms, 215 baths, formal areas, cozy family room, kitchen with many nice features, beautiful lot.

69,900Camelbt. Custom built by ona of the best. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Grsat room with fireplace, modem kitchen with all the goodies. Decorated to a T.

56,900Cambridge. Really special 2 story In this convenient location. 3 bedrooms, 215 baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, deck for these delighttui aveninga!

51.500Brentwood. Roomy brick ranch In excellent ares! 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas and den with fireplace.

59,566Red Oak. Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, super kitchen, double garage, 6% assumebie financing.

56.500Double your pleasure with a two story home! Beautiful fanced backyard, den with firepiMM, huge eat-in kitchan, 3 bedrooms, great condition.

5a,000-Rotary Stn caHings room, mod'

older home. High tkna. Formal dining

69.900Lake Glenwood. Well kept ranch style home on large comer lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal araas, den with fireplace, kitchen with convenience and breakfast area. Double garage and patio.

09.900Stratford. Charming, convenient, privatecan you ask for more? 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with bay window, huge screened porch, much more!

67.500Westwood. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in mint condition. Larga don with fireplace and buUt-in dask and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.

66.900Ragland Acres. Roomy 3 bedroom brick ranch in this desirable area. Modem kitchen with eating area, formal dining room, huge great room, private office and more!

66.900Red Oak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, traffic free drdo. 3 bedrooms, 2 full bathe, formal areas, family room with fireplace.

66.500Oskhurst. Beautiful split level in this quiet, popular area. Huge famHy room with fireplaco with room lor playroom or offlca. 3 bedrooms. 215 baths, formal areas, fenced back yard.

66,000Country Living. Yet only a couple miles from Greenville city limits, or the industrial park. This Southern Coiontal has the charm of another lime. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, famHy room with fireplace, modern kitchen.

65.900St. Andrews. Convenience is the name of the game. Close to everything. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room with flrepKe, 12% assumption with low equity.

65.900Lake Ellsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suite, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with fireplace, bnmeculata interior.

65.900Oeltwood. Assumable loan, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, formal living and dining rooms. Completely remodeled

57.900Red Oak. 4 bedroom ranch lUia this one is hard to find. Formal entry foyer and Hving zoom. famUy room, garage wHh automatic door opener. Now the best part, 915% assumable loan with low equity. Better hurry*.

57.900Eastwood4 bedrooms,(torrific area and super price! Family room with fireplece, kitchen fit for the gourmet, fenced back yard, and quiet dead-end street!

55.900Wefthavan. 10% assumebla loan. 3 bedrooms, formal araas, cozy den. kitchen with eating area, garage, wonderful area!

95.900Ayden. Choice brick ranch on largo fancad, corner lot. 3 , bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with firapiace, kitchen

with eating area. A lot for the money!

55.900Hardee Acres. FHA 245 10%! Yea, you can afford H. Cuta as a button, 3 bedrooms, 115 baths, beautiful deck and pool. Dont mlas it!.

55,650UiHveraHy area. 4 bedrooms, 2 fult baths, central heat and air. Family room, largo kitchen wHh eating area, ttracthra bungalow styling.

55,000Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, 2 fuH baths, den with firapiace, formal Hving room, lanced back yard, double detached garage.

54.900Qrilton Country Club. Belter than new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home at the Country Club. Features beautiful great room with cathedral ceHing and fireplace, spadout dining area, and inviting deck. MO.

54.900Warren Street. Quiet area wfthin walking distance of university. Large ranch with maintenance free aiding. 4 badrooms, 2 batha, hug# kHchen with aatbig araa, graat room with firapiace.

53,500New Uating. Charming aH brick ranch in Pleasant Ridga. 3 badrooms. 2 baths, graat room with flrapiaca, kitchan wilh many buHI-lnt. Almost naw!

52,500-UnlversHy arW^HjnLe albefoom. 115 bath brick homa. LargalUidMkMMh LmmM lot. carport.

51.000-0rchard HUIs. Affordable brick ranch with many nica fsaturat, lamHy room, kitchen with roomy breaklast area, 3 bedrooma, 2 full baths and dock!.

49,900Griflon. Lovoly brtck ranch, Hving room with firaplaca, formal dining room, largo kHchen, 3 bedrooms, mova-in condHion. M11.

kitchen, family room with fireplace, rec room, naw carpet throughout, huge back yard.

65,500Four bedrooms in this atlordaMe price range. Located in Lake Ellsworth, with pool membership available, interior features formal araas, famfly room with fireplaco and roomy kitchen with separate eating area. A real bargain.

65,000915% VA loan assumption. 3 bedrooms, 215 bath 2 story. Don with fireplaco and formal areas. Beautiful landscaped yard.

73,500Camelot. Solar heat supports highUghta this fine home. Formal living room, kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full batha. Call us for more details.

64.900The Pines Aydan. Nearly 2000 square feet on a beautiful wooded lot. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, living room with (Ireplaca as well as a den with fireplace. 2 car garage and extra insulation Installed overhead and underneath the floors.

64.900Camelot. Very attractive split level in this popular area. Family room with fireplace, formal araas, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Possibla rent with option, also.

64,500Horseshoe Acres. Naw homa under construction, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, graat room with fireplace, formal dining room. Still time to pick colors.

49.500ECU araa. 4 fNwitna.K luU lAthd famHy room, kHchen wHh eating alMAWHir&alDLBfcampus!

49.500Unhreraity area. 2 story frame house with the Southern Colonial accent. 3 bedrooms, 215 baths, famHy room with fireplace, charming home.

46.900Colonial HeiJRi. ^^^lioiiidj^^ths, brick ranch in this fine ai^^ftnHyJrlom Irttll space, kHchen wHh separate eatllI*i #iiH k Ak ^r.

40.900Memorial Drive. Cute 2 story, 3 badrooms. kitchen wHh eating area, (amily room.

46.900Convenient location, dose to schoola and shopping, very attracthra bungalow styling. 3 bedrooma, famHy room with fireplace, excellent condHion.

41.500Singletree. Cute ranch! 3 bedrooma, country kHchen, lamUy room with chimney for woodstove. E-300!

47.500Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, bath, famHy room, kHchen with eating area. Only minutes from QreenvHls.

47.500UniversHy Area. Wall to waU charm, stucco style, private back yard, 3 bedrooms, lamHy room, kHchen wilh breakfast nook, garage.

47.500QrHton. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch. Living room wilh flrapiaca, excellent condHion, energy aflicient. WUI considar rent with option.

46,5S0Pamlico BeqM\Sdffllyi| Is 4 badrooms, 2 full Mbs. larg^^^ff    hiarfroni,    privata

46.000-Qreenbriar kHchen landscaped 45,900-BHtmore. D

ranch. Graat room, dan, beautifully

from campus. 2

ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND JUNEWYRICK................756-5716

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-528-5832, Ext. 335D

756-3500

Aldridge fir* Southerland Realtors

LOOKING FOR A HOME?

Dial PHONE A HOME and leam all about our newest listings 24 hours a day!

cplioji A

756-5522

63.500RIvar Hills. Charming brick ranch on heavily woodad privata lot. 3 badrooms, 2 lull batha, formal areas, den with fireplace. Really special!

63.000Westwood. Excellent all brick ranch on wall landscaped lot. All formal ireaa, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, garage, covered patio. Owner wHI sell FHA, VA or conventional.

62.900RIvarhHls. Spill level with 3 badrooms, 215 batha, and attrsctlvaly landscaped woodad lot. The fireplaca-bookcase wall In the family room and tha large greenhouse window in the kitchen make, this home special!

92.500Forest Acres. 3 bedrooms, 215 baths, formal areas, family room with firaplaca and wood Insert. Beautiful wooded lot!

59,9poWright Road. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in this convaniant araa. Formal entry foyer, formal living room, family room wHh fireplaco, deck.

50.900Contemporary close to schools and shopping. Decks and glass galore! Huge great room, step saving kHchen, two largo bedrooms, 2 full baths, loft araa and full basement.

50.000Camelot. Ideal location in growing neighborhood. 3 bedroom contemporary ranch. Entry toyer, formal dining room, great room with woodstove, wooded lot, wood deck, E-300; energy efficient.

59.000Ragland Acres. Large 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiat cul-de-aac. Well landscaped, lawn, doubla carport. Interior fealuras 3 bedrooms.' 2 baths, kitchen with eating area, den with flrapiaca. 016.

59.500Singletree. Almost new brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, famHy room with fireplaco. fenced back yard with detached double garage. Assumable 915% financing.

badrooms each ahta, recently remodeled. Rent $500.00 a month.

45,0lK!QraonbrlarSuper neat, well kept brick ranch. Immaculate Interior and landscaping. 3 bedrooma, 1V5 baths, fancad back yard.

45.000Bolvoir Area, tastetuily decorated 3 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch. Great room wHh firapiace. kitchen wHh many axtraa.

45.000Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home. Living room with fireplace, pine paneled den, garage and worktop. J33.

42.500Hardee Aeree. 3 bedroom, 115 bath brick ranch located on quiet, traffic free circle. The kHchen is oulatandino, cozy den, super Interior!

42.500Colonial Heighls. Cuta 3 bedroom brick ranch. 1 bath, kitchen with eating area, shady, fanced back yard. Cl.

42.500Farmvllla. 3 bedrooma, 2 full baths, formal Hving room, famUy room with fireplace, carport, aaaumabia financing.

41.500Farmar's Homa aaaumptlon avaHabia on tMa 3 badroom, 115 bath brick ranch wHh carport. Til.

41.000Aydan. You cant baat tMa one for price and conditlonl Ovar 1500 aquara faet, aN brick, 3 badrooms, many sxtra faaturss. Call for appolntmant to sae this fin# homa.

39.500Jsffsraon Drivs. AssumaMa 10% financing, payments Ilka ranti 3 bedrooma, bath, kitchen wHh eating area, taataf uHy decoratad Interior, detached garage.

39.000E.C.U. Area. 3 bedrooms, dan wHh firsplacs, formal dining room. Could ba tiarlar home, or Invastmant property.

31.000Colonial Haights. 3 bedroom bungalow for the young coupia. FamHy room, kitchen wHh eating araa, baautHul woodad kH.

36,506CharmingCuta bungalow |ust outsMa the cHy IlmHs. 3 badrooms, family room, kHchen wilh eating area. Pina paneling, paean trees, excellent condHion.

39.000UnlveraHy area. Cute 3 badroom, 1 bath bungalow. Walking distance from campus. Partact tor rental or firat homa.

2 bedroom homa

34.900Eaat Gum on lovely (

32.900Kennedy Estalas. Farmers Home Assumption. Low equity. 3 badrooms, Jbalh, brick exterior, one car garage.

27.900Macaragor Downs. Over 3 acre wooded buHdlng alte in this fina araa.

26.900W. 13lh Street. First homa buyers, or Invastmant. 3 bedrooma, large kHchen and lamHy room. Has bean rented for $250 per month.

10.900Mobile home and lot.

Pagay Morrtaon.

Dick Evans.....

Jean Hopper ... Sue Dunn......

.756-0942 JuneWyrick. .758-1119 Myra Day. .. .756-9142 RaySpeaia.. .355-2588 Allta Carroll.

.756-5716    JtffAklfklgc..........  355-6700

. 524-5004    Iris Camion................................746-2639

.758-4362    MlkcAhfatdge..............................756-7871

. 756-8278    Don Southerland...........................756-5260

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'^'^'^'^'k'k'k-k'k'k'k'kit'k'k-k'k'k'k'k'k'k'k'k'k'k'k'k'ki(i('kiriri(ifirir'k'kit'k'k'kif'k'kit'kifk'kiriritir''k'k'kiriritir'k'kiri(itirifTHE CENTHy a* SYSmi S^LLS MORE HOMES THAN ANY 0THERREALES1ATE SALES ORGANIZATION.

__Call    One    Of    Our    Neighborhood    Professionals Today!OPEN HOUSES Sunday 2:00 - 5:00

II Scott Sireol. Windy RIdgo CONDOMINIUM LIVING IS GREAT!

You will delight in each discovery of custoni teatures built into this lovely condominium Extra large bedrooms and individual baths, greatroom with fireplace, buill-ins in dining room and bedroom Come by and see what it would be like not to have to cut grass-just enioy the pool, play tennis and relax Offered

tlTBfackamithLjne.

HorseahooAciM 'SAVE CLOSING COSTS! Assume this FHA 11V4S assumption with payments of S4t0.82 PtTI. Bonus! Sellers are willing to finance part of the equity needed at a reasonable rale. 14S0 Square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room. Conveniently located to the hospital. You must see this one-tike a brand new house! U5.M0 Hostess;

Mary Stevenson Chapin

203 Avakm-Cainelot

OWNER TRANSFERRED. This 3 bedroom, 2 bath home of 1624 square feet formal areas, den with fireplace offers spacious yard with split rail fence, energy saving heat pump plus a carport! Great location! COME ON BY! $62,900

Ann Bass

l12HearthsideOf.

EVERYTHING IS HERE! You won't rind a better place to raise your family ihan in this spacious two story four bedroom home in Club Pines The large family room with fireplace and sunnv eat-in kitchen will be perfect ror informal living, and more formal gatherings in the large living room and separate dining room Take the lime to browse through this one! Ml.900

Pal Hartkopf

509 Crestline Blvd. IMPRESSED youll be when you enter the foyer of this four bedroom home. Skylights, Casablanca fan and greenhouse are just a few of the extras Master bedroom has its own deck for those romantic nights. Owners have been transferred. Available immediately Offered at $89,900

NEW LISTING; $37,900 - University Area. Nice 3 bedroom K    formal    areas,    family room, nice kitchen, and 1

^ priced to sell. See this one today, it won't last long! No. 573.

NEW LISTING $71,900 - This 2714 square foot home offers 3 l^rooms upstairs with 2 baths and formal areas and den with fireplace. Downstairs can be used as a private area for that older kid that likes privacy and music, or a guest area with it's own private bath. Take a look at this one. No. 574.

NEW LISTING $63,900 - EASTWOOD - A convenient location. This 1571 square foot 3 bedroom brick ranch, with formal areas, den with fireplace, spacious eat-in kitchen, main bath with lots of elbow room, carport and a.very spacious attic. Call for your appointment today. No. 575.

NEW LISTING $62,500 - CAN BE HAD for a reduced price. I'm a 3 bedroom ranch with low assumable loan. I offer all formal areas, den with wood stove, eat in kitchen, closed in detached garage is not included in square footage, could be a workshop. Chain link fence in back yard, & separate fenced double dog run. No. 576.

143,500 - SUPERIOR EXECUTIVE HOME - This home is only for those with champagne taste! Exquisite three story traditional in prestigious Bedford. Formal areas, 4 bedrooms, hugh family room with adjoining solarium, finished room over garage and unfinished third story are just a few of the features. No. 552.

139.900 - BUY YOUR BEST HOME now! This 4 bedroom showplace in Lynndale has to be seen to be appreciated! All formal areas, den with fireplace & walk-in wet bar for entertaining, large kitchen with dining area, and many extras. No. 407.

135.900 - UPPER BUCKS! Dont miss your chance to see this home in Lynndale with 4 bedrooms, a playroom, formal areas, den with a fireplace, and a wet bar. Formal and casual entertaining are easily achieved in this prestigious home. No. 341.

109.900 - PRESTIGIOUS GRYLEIGHI This 2400 foot 4 bedroom has been reduced just in time for summer *un. See the formal areas for entertaining and the spacious kitchen for that special lady in your life. Double garage and Savannah style porches. All for $109,900. No. 530.

110.000 UNDER CONSTRUCTION in Club Pines, This 4 bedroom will be loaded with all extras including all formal areas, large den with fireplace, wrap around porch, sundeck and circular drive. No. 528.

97.000 - FOR THE SELECT FEMALE. Out of the pages of your better decorating magazines comes this two story home in Club Pines. Spacious greatroom with french doors leading to a deck. Designer kitchen featuring custom cabinets and desk for planning. Located on a shaded wooded lot. Call for mere details. No. 256.

N.SOO-THIS BEAUTIFUL HOME ha|MIM! Perfect location near jolf course and perfect to||ur t family who demands quality and space. Ote Kd^^^^y room with fireplace, spacious kitchen, l^l^#iilf areas. This is the perfect dream home, with a ln^tirljTry landscaped lot. No. 482.

N.900 - SUPERBLY LOCATED on one of the most desirable ots in Club Pines. Offers spacious living areas, modern kitchen with all conveniences. Very tastefully decorated. A special home for special people. No. 500.

n in Club Pines. This ujBers on a shady lot ng room, & spacious lome justice. Call today for

94,000-NEW LISTING

lome by one of Gj eatures a dreamy amily room. Words your private showing?

93,900 - BROOK VALLEY BEAUTY Loaded with everything you could want. 4 bedrooms, and 2 full baths, kitchen with all ap-iliances including Jenn Aire range, trash compactor. A Must Sell! Reduced to. No. 553.

93,950 CHERRY 0

gvely custom four and Must Sell! Beauti

ly with pride in this rs have transferred No 292.

's most prestigious 'er, including all for-s, back screened in

3.900 TEE OFF in the backyard ottfM^eautiful 4 bedroom tome in Brook Valley. GMjgMmrnw a fireplace, large ledrqom downstairs ^c^^k^^^tfwwith a sunken tub. k;reened in porch in    ^at    for    casual    entertaining.

This Williamsburg beaA^s priced for quick sale. No. 533.

19.900 - treat YOURSELF! Impressed youll be when you inter the foyer of this four bedroom home in Club Pines. Skylights, casablanca fan and greenhouse are just a tew of the extras. Master bedroom has its own deck for those romantic summer nights. Owners transferred so this can be yours NOW. No. 481.

15.900 - OWNER SAYS SELL! Dont miss your chance on this jeautiful home in Cherry Oaks. Located only a stones throw rom pool and tennis courts with /j acre corner lot. Its just waiting for you and your family to move in and make it home. No. 360.

85.900 - PRETTY-PERFECT AND PRESTIGIOUS - Williamsburg design home now under construction by one of Greenvilles >est builders. Youll love the floor plan, greatroom with ireplace, formal dining room, and three bedrooms. Buy now and you can choose appliance colors, wall papers, etc. No. 549.

5,900 - GOOD BUY CITY! HELLO COUNTRY! This two story home just past Cherry Oaks offers 4 large bedrooms, enormous kitchen, formal dining and a greatroom for casual enter-aining. All located on a football field size lot. No. 346.

85,500 - CLUB PINES This elegant home offers 3 bedrooms with 2 baths, den, office, or study, living room with fireplace beautiful mantel and built-ins, main bath is 13x11 with dressing area, 31x7 patio with azaleas and trees surrounded by fenced in yard and a winding walk through the trees. No. 524.

5,000 TEN ACRES OF LAND, and over 2000 feet of house, make for a good buy. Located south of Greenville, in the county, this new house is just waiting for you. No. 160.

64.900 4 BEDROOM, 2 bath contemporary. 2000 square feet of sheer space. Cathedral living room, dining room with skylights, master bedroom with private deck, and gourmet kitchen, and comfy den are just a few of the extras. Call now. No. 556.

emories in this lovely , all formal areas, and >t. Owners have moved

84,500 CHERRY OAKS^

one and half story two car garage, and anxious to sell

. No. 478

75,900 SOUTHERN CHARM describes this roomy plantation style home. Featuring white columns, spacious grounds^ stables, split rail fences, and an assumable loan. This beauty needs a good look. No. 451.

See Our Other Lots For Sale In the Classified Sections.

81.900 - LETS BE PRACTICAL! Every day you wait to buy a home it is going to cost you more money. Invest now and reap the rewards. This home may be perfect tor that decision and is located in Club Pines close to shopping, churches, schools, and yet nestled in the trees on a quiet picturesque street. Lots of space for the growing family is offered by the four bedrooms floor plan with eat in kitchen, formal dining room, and warm sunny family room with fireplace. No. 477.

81.900 NEW WILLIAMSBURG HOME in Westhaven IV. Every detail done to perfection. Greatroom with a fireplace, formal dining area, spacious kitchen with an eat in area. Located on a wooded lot in a most prestigious area. Buy now and choose your own wall papers, carpet, etc. No. 550.

79.900 - YOUR HEART will melt when you see this adorable home in Colonial Heights! This home features 3 bedrooms, walls of built in bookcases, separate dining room, and large laundry center. Mom will love the abundant cabinets and pantry in the kitchen. Bar-B-Qs will be delightful in this enormous backyard. No. 438.

79.500 WHEELCHAIR READY! Thats right-this 2300 square foot home in Cherry Oaks was built to accomodate a wheelchair. Extra wide halls & doorways. Large open living, dining, & kitchen areas. Screen porch and a carport. No. 212.

79.500 - ONE OF A KIND! This new listing just abounds in quality throughout. Beautiful parquet floors, exquisite custom built woodwork. Large master bedroom, 2V2 tile baths, formal dining, intercom, central vacuum, and fenced yard. Plus an expandable walk-in attic. Loan is assumable. No. 563.

79.500 RUSTIC CEDAR FARM HOUSE This listing in Tucker Estates offers superior construction. Pewter light fixtures and period wall paper give the home a Williamsburg flair. Floor plan is a reproduction of the owners Grandmas home and lends a touch of nostalgia. Owners transferred and regret having to sell. Call now for your private showing. No. 441.

79.500 - STEP INTO COMFORT, with the plush new listing in Tucker Estates. Offers custom kitchen with breakfast area, large mud room for kids to enter. Shelter for your car plus formal dining room and 3 bedrooms. No. 565.

78.900 - OWNER SAYS SELL!! Moving from Greenville and wants to buy another in Virginia. You will love the interior of this spacious 3 bedroom home-and thats not all-the location is ideal with swimming pool less than a block away. Make them an offer Now! No. 505.

74.900-DREXELBHOOK - Oi areas. This brick rai mal areas, den with porch. Lots of shade

76.900 - PRACTICALLY NEW! Only a year old with energy saving heatpump, formal areas plus den. Located in a great neighborhood for walkihg, riding bikes, swimming, playing tennis. Call for showing. No. 423.

74.900 STATELY OLDER HOME in Bethel. Havent you always loved those beautiful older homes on Main Street? Now you can own one! The owners of this 2900 square feet home have priced this one to fit your pocket. Call today! No. 455^

74,800 COLONIAL ELEGANCE - This two story home has everything you could want. Four or five bedrooms, all formal areas, family room with fireplace and much more. Best of all it is located outside the city limits for the plantation feeling! No. 520.

73.500 - THIS CONTEMPORARY honp^OUT OF THE ORDINARY! Features three begngrA, St-iBkitchen with built-ins, greatroom with fi^^af al^    decks out back and a workshop^^^^Apffiis located on a heavily wooded lot in Cameloi^ make it even better it has been reduced! No. 488.

72.900 - ENGLEWOOD - They dont nr|Mkomes like this one any more. Fine construction^j^^iAf Acorating has made this comfortable homejn jfbd^mdpKomprised of 4 large bedrooms, 2 full cerarlk||^^imrmal areas, 2 fireplaces, screened in porch, ant^ROTn back. Landscaped to perfection. No. 562.

69.900 SUPER STAR Thats what youll be when you own this beautiful contemporary home located in Cherry Oaks. Can't beat the kitchen for work ability and space. Greatroom with fireplace, three bedrooms and a beautiful lot. No. 479.

69.900 - NEW LISTING: BELVEDERE - This two story home, nestled among the trees is the answer to your home buying needs. It features a foyer, formal areas, plus a cozy den. Owners regret having to leave this 3 bedroom charmer. No. 555.

69.500 MINUTES FROM INDUSTRI^MRK! If you like a large wooded lot, an acre to bejp^,muftiuble garage, a roomy master bedroom,    p^room    with    its own

bar and a kitchen wl^%%y^tBBce imaginable, this house is for you! Call on thlAne because It has It all! No. 403.

69.500 - COME HOME TO SOMETHING SPECIALI This one of a kind V/t story ranch has room galore. Send the kids upstairs to the playroom while you relax In the large greatroom with fireplace downstairs. Lots of attic storage behind the secret bookcase entrance". Really unique. No. 507.

68.900 COUNTRY COMFORTS abound in this new offering just minutes from town in a quiet subdivision. It is nestled on a corner lot and features a sunny eat in kitchen with a bay window, formal areas, cozy den and a spacious walk-in pantry. Owner says sell, so help us out today. No. 541.

66.900 - BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, wood siding home with deck. Energy Efficient. Vaulted ceiling In greatroom with fireplace, spacious one car garage, ear-thtone colors, unique indirect lighting. No. 467.

62.900 - RECIPE FOR HAPPINESS - Take one nice 3 bedroom home, add a den with fireplace and formal areas and you have the makings for years of sweetness for a family. Spacious yard with a split rail fence. No. 499.

65.900 - USE YOUR IMAGINATION and turn this quality built 4 bedroom in the University Area into a palace. This 2337 square foot beauty features two sunrooms and a hot tub in the large back yard. Call the office for more details. No. 558.

65,000 - IF YOU WANT QUALITY then we have what you are looking for-an exceptional 3 bedroom home in beautiful Forest Acres. You can sit on the screened in porch and view your acre plus private wooded property. No. 311.

64.900 - HIDDEN AMONG THE TREES is the beautiful contemporary on almost 2 acres. Features 26 foot great room, beautiful kitchen with all modern appliances and 3 roomy bedrooms. Excellent areas for entertaining. No. 529.

62,700 - CONVENIENT TO THE HOSPITAL - this home has 1600 square feet, chair rail, wainscotting, beamed ceiling in greatroom, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and low utilities with its heatpump. Excellent condition. No. 447.

61.900 - DAYS FRESH! Charming brick rancher, three bedrooms, 2 baths, beautifully groomed. Den with fireplace, half attic is floored and has plenty of storage. Located in beautiful Lake Ellsworth. Make a point to see this one today! No. 504.

64.900 - DELIGHTFUL 3 bedroom, 2 bath with over 1800 square feet. Has greatroom and formal dining room, and a pretty kitchen. Partially floored attic. See it now! No. 415.

mce to buy this three Ing' room that has ith an energy saving lht another house and

61.900 - BELVEDERE - Dont mis yc bedroom brick ran beautiful hardwoodhsipri spSlpsl wood stove. Owner must sell now. No.!

61.500 - 3 BEDROOM, V/z bath Split Foyer in Rosewood. All modern appliances in kitchen, plus a living room, foyer, and family room. Has a heatpump for low utility bills, plus an attic fan and outside storage shed. No. 546.

59.900 - CLOSE TO EVERYTHING plus owner has just painted and recarpeted the entire house-like new. Be one of the first to see this 3 bedroom brick ranch. No. 515. Reduced to $59,900.

59.900 COLONIAL FARMHOUSE - Three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas and large detached workshop. Island in kitchen. No. 389.

59.900 NEAR HOSPITAL this California Farmhouse is situated on a shady, private, lane and features a den with fireplace, living room, detached workshop. 2 ceiling fans and lots more. Its priced right and the owners are ready to deal. No. 389.

59.900 CONTENTNEA CREEK - Dont miss your chance to see this lovely home. If away from the hustle and bustle of city life is where you want to be, then this is the home for you. No. 511.

59.900 SMACK DAB in the middle of one of Greenvilles best areas. Belvedere, this 3 bedroom home has all your family will need. Formal living room and a den with a fireplace, kitchen with a breakfast nook. Double garage. No. 513.

58.500 - WINTERVILLE - Looking for the perfect home? Well this could be it. On three acres of land. Three bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace. Even has a space for that summer garden. Better hurry. No. 503.

57.900 NO QUALIFYING TO ASSUME LOAN - low down payment, low interest rate! 3 bedrooms, deck and carport. Call today. No. 508.

57.500 - INTERESTED IN IN-TOWN? Here is a very fine in-town home in excellent location on a heavily wooded lot. If you want privacy but the convenience of being close to schools, shopping, etc. then this is the house for you. 1 Vz story contemporary with large loft upstairs. Call for more details. No. 506.

56.900 - ASSUME THIS FHAJiTt4N(ytLIFYING. Truly one of the cleanest home|Mbu4Vlrai/B sA. sh green landscaping, 3 large bedroorA^LillAa^^BriAiy kitchen & dining room, greatroom withJipral^Low down payment. No. 557.

56.500 - A PASTORAL SETTING is a lovely rural area combined with every modern convenience a home owner could want. That is what makes this country home the place to be. Just 3.5 miles from Industrial Park off Hwy. 11. Newly listed-so phone now. No. 543.

55.900 - SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! ON THIS FIXED rate assumption you can save closing costs and initial investment. Owner is wining to help you with reasonable terms. Spacious greatroom with dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Conveniently located near the hospital. No. 535.

54.900 - UNIVERSITY AREA Attention Professors! This older home is within walking distance of ECU and is loaded with character and charm. This 4 bedroom home offers you space ^^ore. All formal areas, fireplace, and a gourmet kitchen. No.

54.900 - ENJOY THIS FLOWER filled yard with room for a city garden. Spacious family room, three bedrooms, den with a fireplace and all located in College Court. No. 470.

54.900 SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE CONDO. Has many extras such as 2 large bedrooms with private baths. Craft fireplace insert keeps you snug in the downstairs greatroom. Louvered shutters at every window. Really special. No. 436.

54.900 - CONVENIENT TO UNIVERSITY - This four bedroom 2 bath home of 1820 square feet is ready for occupancy. Freshly painted inside. FHA 8% assumption with payments of $238.68 PITI. No. 537.

53.900 - ENJOY SUMMER in the freshly painted home located in Bethel. Features three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace and a garage. No. 467.

53.900 - OWNERS SAYS SELL So they are sacrificing this 3 bedroom, 2 bath double garage home on a large country lot for a great price. Call now for your appointment to see it. No. 294.

53.900 - WHISPERING PINES CONTEMPORARY - For the small family, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, plus a greatroom, dining room, and kitchen with appliances. Wood stove in the fireplace to keep you warm next winter. Come out and take a look! No. 554.

52.900 - BEST VALUE IN TOWN. Owners are rady to move and want quick sale on this three bedroom, two full bath home. Offers excellent floor plan plus large den with fireplace. No. 445

49.900 OWNERS HAVE OUTGROWN this two bedroom two bath home in College Court. Excellent condition! Extra insulation, refinished hardwood floors, knotty pine den, and lots more. No. 440.

49.900 - REDUCED! Owners say SELL! Beautiful 3 bedroom 1 bath home in Colonial Heights reduced. Great VA 11/2% assumption. Total payments only $422 per month. Better hurry on this one. No. 518.

49.900 - FHA LOAN ASSUMPTIQ|f cfl^with payments of $402.89 PITI. This 3 be(^|^rc^n^wcneBonly five years old with fireplace in grea^MirBwitl K^V^and energy saving heatpump. Great neigl^BlBll^nalocated just 2 miles from Carolina East Mall. No.^.

49,500-THREE BEDROOMS. IVz baths, spacious den, and priced below $50,000. Your family can move right in and enjoy it now. No. 472.

48.500 - CHARMING & DELIGHTFUL. Expect to be envied by your friends when you bu/this like new brick ranch in Ayden. Hardwood floors have just been refinished. New paint job inside and out. Plus it has an assumable FHA loan. No. 517.

47.900 Where can y^<0#i^iAnrlB%y with cathedral ceil-N ^ ^94*** and    F^^^Dall    for more details.

46.500 CANT GET mARTED? Who says you can't? This may be the break youve been looking for. Sparkling clean home in University area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, central air, dishwasher, built in microwave, and MORE! If this sounds like you, call now No. 566.

46.500 - NEGOTIATE? Sure! Owner wants to move soon. Three bedroom home with hardwood floors in nice neighborhood. Large fenced backyard, large eat in kitchen. No. 501.

46.500 - UNIVERSITY AREA - just one block from ECU, the older home is comprised of 3 apartments. A real money maker. No. 405.

45.500 - STOP RENTING - This cute home can be yours for just a little money down. You can have the pride of ownership yet payment cheap as rent. Located in University Area. Be the first to see the solarium in this home. No. 497.

44.900 - FRESH AS A SPRING BREEZE! You wont believe your ears when we say that a Farmers Home Loan assumption is available on this beauty. Take a drive today and see for yourself how lovely this country home really is. Located on Stanton Drive. No. 471.

44.900 - SELL THE CAR, youll be able to walk every place from this lovely bungalow in the University area. Living room is large, featuring fireplace with bookshelves on each side. Large kitchen, sun porch and 2 or 3 bedrooms. New gas furnace and well maintained home. No. 444.

44.500 LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME? Then look no more. This three bedroom home is perfect for the small family. Call today for more details. No. 510.

43.900 ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES! Heres your chance to own that 4 bedroom home youve been wanting tor under $50,000. This brick ranch offers you very roomy kitchen, Vh baths plus carport. Large corner lot located only a tew blocks from school. No. 545.

43.000 - EYES WILL SMIIlM^An fl%ee this immaculate 3 bedroom house withmeBpulMjn leJniversity Area. Priced to Sell! No. 570.

41.900 LOVE A FRUIT ORCHARD? Then this is the home for you. 3 bedrooms, formal areas, greatroom with fireplace, and plenty of fruit trees, plus a grape arbor. This is a home for fruit lovers. No. 465.

$40,900 - REDUCED, owner financing and it's beautiful! The owner is leaving and really wants to sell this beautifully decorated 2 bedroom Townhouse with full basement. Take one look inside this immaculate home and youll be ready to buy at this low price, and owner will help you finance the equity. No. 408

39.500 - SUNNY LANE This home will bring sunshine info your family. Three bedrooms, eat in kitchen, and much more. No 495.

39.900 - VALUE PACKED! Come see how far a dollar can still stretch in the 3 bedroom ranch. A hugh 4 car garage 26x30. A comfortable home at a very affordable price. No. 502.

38.500 - COLLEGE COURT Handy man special - needs some paint here and there. Three bedrooms, wooded lot. Owner will finance FHA. No, 394.

37.900 - THIS HOME needs an owner now! Call for all the details and well work out the financing for you. There's a home for everyone, and this one may be for you. No. 509.

33.900 UNIVERSITY AREA This neat starter home could be just for you. It features IVz baths, central air, and the owner will consider any offer. Come take a peek at a good investment. No. 459.

30.800 - TAKE A LOOK at this well kept older home. New heat pump and central air, 3 bedrooms, formal areas. Charming! No. 452.

35.000 - NEW LISTING: Great starter home. If you are looking for your first home, or a retirement home, this one is for you. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, combination family room dining & kitchen, with nice pantry. Ceiling fan for these warm days. Call and let us show you this comfy home in Ayden. No. 560.

30.800 - QUAINT AND GOZY and only $30,800 is this two bedroom ctndo. Conveniently located to shopping and campus. N1544.

28.000 - RENTING YOUR MONEY AWAY? If you want your own place, have we got the place for you! And it comes with a 12x12 workshop to give you a place to spread things out. No. 564.

11.000 - WHAT A BARGAIN - Located on SR 1334 about 20 minutes from Greenville, this home is unfinished, but is just right for the handyman looking for a deal. Call us for details. No. 204.

$27,000 - HANDYMANS SPECIAL. Put your many talents to work on this 2400 square foot home in good neighborhood.

OnluK

756-6666

2424 S. Charles St.

FOR SALE-THATS RIGHT! We are going to build a new office to replace our old one. House Station has been great. We just need more space! Office has two restrooms, two conference rooms, kitchenette, two offices down and three offices upstairs. Drop by for your personal showing or call for more information.

BASS REALTY





D-14-Tbe Day Reflector. GreenviUe, N.C.-SuwUy, July 10. l

THE QUIZ

Answers Below

THE WEEKLY QUIZ IS PART OF THIS NEWSPAPERS SCHOOL PROGRAM

baseball

(10 points for each question answered correctly)

1 Baseball's top players met recently in the annual All-Star Game. From I960 through 1982. the (CHOOSE ONE: National. American) League held a 22-2-1 record in All-Star play.

2 Shortstop Robin Vount ot the MiKsaukee Brewerb vsas named the American Leagues Most Valuable Player in 1982. Outfielder ..?. won last year'{. MV P honors in the National League.

a- AI Oliver b-Dale Murphy c-VViliie McGee

3 In 1982 Rickey Henderson ohhc Oakland A s broke the major league record tor stolen bases in one season. He finished the >>eason with a total of..?. stolen bases

a-% b-119 c-130

4 Major league team owners are scheduled to choose a new baseball Commissioner to replace incumbentwhose contract espires August 12th.

5 Many sports writers believe that Pam Postema.

now working at the Triplc*-A level in the

Pacific Coast League, will become the first female in the major leagues.

a-umpire b-plaver c-coach

Prices Effective I Mon.-Wed.

July 11-13

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newspicture

\

(10 points if you answer this question correctly)

Several veteran hurlers. including the pitcher and batter in this game, has e a chance to enter the record books someday as the all-time major league leaders in career strikeouts. Tom Seaver of the New York Mets. left, and batter of the Philadelphia Phillies hold seven Cy Young Awards between them.

newsname

hall of famers

(10 points if you can identify this person in the news)

This 37-year-old California Angels first baseman has batted over .300 tor the past 14 years, including 9 years at 331 or better, and a high of .388 with the Minnesota Tw ins in 1977. Name him.

(2 points for each question answered correctly)

1 The major league pitcher with the all-time record for career victories (511) also holds the record for career losses (315). Name him.

matchwords

(4 points for each correct match)

Match these major league players with their teams:

1-Dave Slieb

a-Milvvjukee Brewers

2 holds the major league record for lowest lifetime earned run average (2.37) and the largest number of shutouts (110). Before the 1983 season began, he had also held the all-time career strikeout record for 56 years.

a-Grover .Alexander b-Walter Johnson c-Bob Gibson 3Babe Ruth began his major leaguecareer asfor the Boston Red Sox.

a-a pitcher b-a catcher c-an outfielder 4 (CHOOSE ONE: Frank Robinson, Hank Aaron) is the only player to win baseball's MVPaward in both the American and National Leagues.

5holds the major league record for highest batting average in a season since 1900.

a-TyCobb b-Ted Williams c-Rogers Hornsby

2-Oizie Smith

3-Ben Oglivie

b-Houston Astros c-Toronto Blue jays

roundtable

4-Eddie Murray

d-St. Louis Cardinals

5-Nolan Ryan

e-Baltimore Orioles

Family discussion (no score)

Should the designated hitter rule remain in effect in the American League, or should it be dropped? Why?

YOUR SCORE: 91 to 100 points TOP SCORE! 81 to 90 points Excellent 71 to 80 point* Good. 61 to 70 points Fair

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aoouNe Coupons Tuesday, July 12, only, on all food orders $10.00 or more. Manufacturers coupons will be redeemed for double the face m value on purchase of the product as stated. Restrictions; Redemption ^    value may not exceed purchase price. Maximum face value allowed

before doubling is 50. Coupons over 50* may be redeemed for face value only. No cigarette, drink, free Hem coupons or trial sizes eligible for double value. LimH 15 coupons per customer per day. Limit one coupon per Hem per customer. No rainchecks available during the I special double coupon days. Example:

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North Carolina's 12,000 Historic Sites Dropping Out At Fast Rate

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% GALLON PAPER CARTON

ByEUSSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer HILLSBOROUGH, N.C. (AP) - The sun hasnt burned the morning mist off the field when Dr. Roy Dickens and his students start unloading their shovels and sifters from the trucks for another days work.

For the next eight hours, the group will shovel dirt, haul dirt, sift dirt and scrape dirt with trowels while down on their hands and knees. They will work in an open field with temperatures in the 90s, pluck ticks off their arms and legs and keep an eye out for snakes. They wUl report to work five days a week for six weeks.

Ilie labor is all in the name of science. Dickens, an archaeolo^st with the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, and his dozen anthropology students are uncovering an Indian village near Hillsborough in Orange County.

Dickens says the work is the only way to save the past. Archaeology, and all the manual labor that goes with it, is the only way to preserve our past, said Dickens, 45, head of the Anthroli^logy Departments research laboratories at UNC. When these sites are destroyed, the past is gone. Theres no other way to save it.

According to the state Department of Archives and History in Raleigh, there are about 12,000 known archaeological sites across North Carolina. The sites, which include Indian villages and burial grounds, are being destroyed at the rate of more than 200 a year.

The 12,000 figure may not come close to the actual number of sites in North Carolina, said Steve Claggett of the Archives Department. What we have are sites turned in by professional archaeologists and knowledgeable amateurs that we have verified. We have no way of knowing how many sites exist that have never been reported to us.

For that rea^n, we really can only guess at how many are being destroyed every year, he said. I would say that 200 is a very conservative estimate.

Dickens said most of the ancient sites are damaged by pot hunters - amateur archaeologists looking for arrowheads or beads or Indian artifacts they can sell.

The whole flea-market mentality has invaded the field of archaeology, he said. People think archaeology is glamorous, that we dig up gold and treasures, so they think theyll find some of it, too. Their digging and punching around often completely destroys a chunk of history that we cant ever reconstruct.

Archaeologists also run into problems after a site has been identified. State law doesnt require a landowner to allow scientists to dig on property where a site is reported. Federal law requires contractors who are receiving federal funds to allow archaeologists to work on a site if one is discovered.

However, Dickens said courts often rule in favor of contractors who complain that state archaeologists are costing them money.

They (the constractors) say to the judge, You want me to hold up construction so they can look for arrowheads? Ill be bankrupt, Dickens said And it works. It seems that when M archaeological project is weighed against a contractors time and money, history loses.

UNC researchers started work on the HUlsborough project in 1938. Digging continued on the 20-acre area with WPA (Work Projects Administration) workers during the first part of World War II but stopped in 1941.

Archaeologists returned to the site for first time in 22 years this summer.

The field, owned by a Hillsborough businessman, is located in a curve of the Eno River. The 13th century Indians who occijqiied the area farmed the land.

Digging on the site is precise. Researchers first survey the area. Then squares where students will dig are measured and

/

laid off with string.

The group then begins shoveling or snitting away the grass and underbrush. NexL they shovel up all the plow zone or soil that has been disturbed by plows over the years. All that dirt is sifted by hand, with dl bits of rocks, bone or pottery put in sacks and labeled to be analyzed later in the lab.

After the plowed soil is shoveled out, students skim the top off the next level of dirt with flat shovels. Then they get down on their hands and knees and carefully scrape away another level of soil with sharpened trowels.

As the troweling progresses, round black marks where poles for houses stood become visible. Large dark circles where garbage pits and burial pits were located show up.

Archaeology is something thats fun to talk about after youve done it, but its just backbreaking work while youre doing it, said Dr. Trawick Ward, a archaeological researcher with the Anthropology Department. Its rewarding when you can see what youre accomplishing, but you have to love it to stay with it.

The structures Indians lived in on the Hillsborough site were round with dried mud exteriors and thatched roofs, the project has shown. Eight to 10 people Uved in the houses. The village was surrounded by a stockade fence.

After digging and troweling is complete in a square, Dickens photographs it for it a slide catalog and a student sketches the layout on graph paper with all the features such as post marks or burial pits drawn in.

'The current excavation ties in a 1941 map of the project.

Graduate students who supervise the project are paid $50 a week. Undergraduate students get six hours credit for their work. They are graded on what they learn from the dig and the notebooks they keep on the project.

You might h^r a lot of people say this is a hard way to make $50 or six hours of crediL but its the only way to really get hands-on training in archaeology, said Susan Holmes Wilson, a graduate student from Wilmington.

Dickens is one of only a few archaeologists who allow under^aduate students to participate in field trips.

This is usually limited to graduate students, but my thinking on it is that a student needs to get a feel early for what archaeology is all about, he said. I think students learn more in the field than they do reading about it in the classroom.

Artifacts turned up in the Hillsborough project will be analyzed in the lab, with a report on the findings published near the end of the year.

Meanwhile, Dickens said the department will apply for a National Science Foundation grant to continue the project next summer.

What we want to do is uncover anj^ing that is here to be found, he said. Only when the dig is complete can we say with any certainty how many people lived here and for how long. For now, all we have are a few pieces to a big puzzle.

EACH

99

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Miss Universe Makes Great Role Model

ByRnthTbompaoD

There are some ttaiogs that, if not sacrl, are at least basic to the major league paradings of comely females competing for big titles and lucrative prizes.

Having a name host who is regularly associated with the pageant helps. So do guest entertainers. Consider this weeks Miss Universe Pageant, 1983. Bob Barker is back for his 16th year as master of ceremonies. (Aiding him is Joan Van Ark, back for the second time.) Guesting are Jon Dukes of Hazzard Schneider and Jose Luis Rodriguez. It all happens Monday July 11, with CKs live coverage from the Kiel Auditorium in St. Louis, Mo., starting at 9 p.m. (ET) when one of 80 women from around the globe will be crowned by the outgoing title-holder, Karen Baldwin of Canada.

So much for the basics. Each of the major leape pageants has its own individuality. For instance, one has gone so far as to rule the word pageant out of its lexicon. Two insist that beauty is not a factor. And while others are proud that big winnings must be tied to scholarship awards, the Miss Universe organizers are proud that their winners are not told how to spend their loot.

A Miss Universe executive says a title-holder could just take the money and run. But she shouldnt. Winning implies responsibility for personal appearances, travel and inciting favorable interest in keeping the event perking along into future years. A spokesperson says Karen Baldwin has been a dream come true. Shes treated it like a job, a very demanding job.

For Miss Baldwin, From the time I got to the finals - last year they were in Lima, Peru its been a wonderful experience. Yes, we had our language barriers, but somewhow all of us managed to understand each other and kid and joke. I now feel I have friends in 80 coun-trir^ I correspond with some ar w vited to Miss Belgi-

U. , V ,-Ui. Ig.

F ' 11 her pleasant manner, shes r mained disciplined. Ive met (ther winners whose figures bulged a bit after a year on the bmiquet circuit. Not Miss Baldwins. She is as sleek as when she won, with a tiny waist enhancing her 5-foot-lO frame. Ive given up on diets. I eat what I want but only a little of everything and I love to exercise.

Bob Barker and Joan Van Ark will host CBS coverage of 1983 Miss Universe Pageant, to air live from St. Louis on Monday, July 11.





TV-2-The Daily Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Sunday, July 10, ISO

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Special Greetings

During the recent on-location taping of the wedding between characters Tom Hughes (played by Justin Deas) and Margo Montgomery (actress Margaret Colin) for the serial As the World Turns," Mar^ret got a couple of special surprises. The day of taping was Miss Colins birthday, so lunch was interrupted by the arrival of a giant birthday cake, with cast and crew joining in a chorus of Happy Birthday to You. But later, during a break in the taping, several people noticed a small plane circling overhead, trailing the message Happy Birthday, Margaret" behind it. The plane and message were a gift from co-star Justin Deas.

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10:45 (NICK) A Night At Astis American soprano Ashley Putnam hosts a visit to Astis, the landmark New York Italian restaurant, where guest artists, waiters and the maitre d and even the owner join customers to sing operatic favorites. IIMO The Kii Is Coining (9 Movie Straw Dogs (1972) Dustin Hoffman, Susan George. A man and his wife attempt to remove themselves from violent American society, but discover that a peaceful surface can hide underlying savagery. (2 hrs., 15 min.]

Richard Gere, Vanessa Redgrave. Several American soldiers become involved in romantic affairs while stationed in England during World War II. (R) (2 hrs., 50 min.)

(9 mrv Griffin Guests: Rita Coolidge, cardiologist Dr. Ger-shon Lesser, Steve Guttenberg, an exhibit of Chinese art. Dr. Jay Lehr. (1 hr.)

O O Movie Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story (Part 1) (1980) Michael Beck, Telly Savalas. After teenager Clarence Carnes is sentenced to life in prison for a murder that resulted from a gas station robbery, he conspires with other inmates on an elaborate plan to escape from the infamous Alcatraz penitentiary. (R) (2 hrs.)

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9:050 Week In Review

9:300 O The Jefieraom Florence meets singing star Gladys Knight when she goes to an exclusive beauty salon for a treatment that she hopes will enliven her lifestyle. (R) . lOHMB Ben Haden (9 News

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Trapper becomes involved in political red tape when a high-ranking Soviet diplomat (Theodore Bikel) requires liver sur-(R)(lhr)

SchnOer 0 The Good Neighbors (HBO) Baddy Hackett Live k Uncensored The outrageous, unpredictable comedian performs his adult nightclub act at Resorts International in Atlantic City, New Jersey. (Ihr.)

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0Gcae Scott 0TwUightZoiie (SHOW) Movie Private Lessons (1980) Sylvia Kristel, Howard Hesseman. A housekeeper has an ulterior motive for providing her employers teen-age son with his first sexual experience. R (1 hr., 30 min.) (ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Movie Grease 2 (1982) Maxwell Caulfield, Michelle Pfeiffer. An English student at a 60s American high school has to prove himself to the leader of a girls gang whose members can date only those of a gang of greasers. PG (1 hr., 55 min.) 11:050 Jerry Falwell 11:150 Jack Van Impe 11:80 OCHS News 11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Opera' Guests: Roberta Peters of the Metropolitan Opera; Grace Bumbi7, the first black to sing at the Bayreuth Festival in Europe and soprano Wilhemenia Fernandez, featured in the French film, Diva.

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O Jim Whittington 0Two Ronnies 11:35 0 Entertainment This Week Featured: Brooke Shields documentary; Rod Stewart prepares for 15-country tour, Leonard Maltin presents his summer movie roundup. (1 hr.)

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By Mkbele Maffci

dear MICHELE: ^*^3^

Don on Diane Sawya? JONES, GOLDSBORO, N.C.

TO JONES IN GOLDSBORO: CBS Morning News co-anchor Diaoe Saw>-er was bom December 22 in Gby w. ^*7 She received a B.A. degree from WeD^

Massachusetts, in 1967. TTie daughter of a jutje teatto Diane completed one semester of law school at^niva^ erf Ixwisvate before she decided on a career in televisioo. Prior to S at ^ Sawyer worked for tlKi lxon Admm^

STta    office October 1970 through August

1974 She joined CBS News as a reporter in the Washington bureau in August 1978 and was named a correspoodent m February ISdO. From August 1980 to September 1981, she set^ , as a CBS News State Department corresponde^ In that capacity, she reported on numerous statesmen, world leaders, varyiiw issues aixl events. dear MICHELE: Please tdl me somebbg about Ihri sexy

Ted Wass, who was recently on I Was A MaU Order Brid^aad

Baby Sister. Pve abo seen him on remas of Soap. Where is he from? D. HAMMONDS, DURHAM. N.C TO D. HAMMONDS IN DURHAM: Bom in Lakewood. Ohw, on October 27. Ted Wass spent his early years there until his family moied to Glen Ellyn, a suburb of Chicago. The son of John Wass, a retired pharmaceutical saksman, and Gail Wass, Ted has an older brother, Bob, who is an independent producer in Hollywood. He studied for three yean at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, graduating with bonon and becoming the

first actor to receive the Patrick Hoy Scholanhip Award. He left

the windy dty and headed for New York, where he was soon cast as the understudy for the leading role of Danny Zuko in Grease. After a six-month stint with the show, Ted ^ed to Los Angeles and was featured in several guest-stam^ roles before landing the Daimy Dallas part in Soap." Wass is also a singer and composer.' He began dance training as a youn^r and for eight yean performed with a rock band as lead singer and bass'guitarist. After that he spent five years training to sing the classics. His off-camera pursuits include scuba diving and fencing.

DEAR MICHELE: 1 would Hke some hdonnatioB oi Crystal Gayle. BOBBY DOTSON, THOMASVHJJ; N.C.

TO BOBBY IN THOMASVULE: Dont It Make My Brown Eyes Blue made her one of the nations top vocalists, and Crystal Gayles blue eyes and beautiful voice have made her an audience favorite ever since. Bora in PaintsviDe, Kentucky, on January 9. 1951, and reared in Wabash, Indiana, Gayle has successfully crossed over from country music, wherein her roots lie, to p<^, disco, jaa and soul. Loretta Lynns little sister has garnered many of the industrys most coveted awards, including the 1978 Grammy Award for Best Ciiuntry Female Vocalist Pffformer of the Year, the Academy of Country Music Award for Best Female Vocalist, the 1979 American Music Award and the 1980 Country Music Association Entertains of the Year, (kyks breakthrou^ single was Ive Cried (the Blue Right Out of My Eyes), written by her sister Loretta. She is married to her manager Vassilios (BiB) (iatnnaot.

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O Love, Sidney Laurie uses Sidney as her model when her soap opera character undergoes a sex-change operation. (R)

O Little Hook On The Prairie O a Square Pegs a Camp Meeting, U.SA a Frontline 'Sanctuary A look is Uken at a network of individuals and institutions in the United SUtes providing food, shelter and hope to illegal aUens who have fled oppression in Guatemala and El Salvador.

SN) piLtographers Eye {SBOW} Bairy Manihnr. In The Roimd Manilow performs a selection of his hits, including Mandy, I Write The Songs, Cant Smile Without You and "C(^cabana. Taped at Pittsburghs Civic Arena. (2 hrs.) (ESPN) BUIiards Willie Mosconi vs. Luther Lassiter (1 hr.)

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(HBO) Campoi Comedy Comedian Joe Piscopo hosts this showcase of collegiate talent -selected from a natioowide search by New Yorks Catch A Rising Star comedy club -Uped before a college audience at Tufts Univasity. (1 hr.)

(NICK) The Tomorrow Pe^ The Vanishing Earth The Tomorrow People turn their attention to a seria of disasters, unaware that Ginge has disappeared. (Part 1)

(USA) Movie The Last Days Of Dolwyn (1949) Edith Evans, Richard Burton. A wealthy woman coma to the aid of her impoverished Welsh hometown, but later causa its destruction. (2 hrs.)

1:05 Movie Fun In Acapulco (1903) Elvis Praley, Ursula Andress. A nightclub entertainer works as a lifeguard during the day and finds ample time for romance. (2 hrs., 5 min.)

S:30 O Family Ha Alex secretly usa his fathers money to play the stock market after writing a well-received paper for an economa class. (R)

O 0 For Monbers Only Three country-club golf caddia (Joe Davis, Kevin Hooks, Stephen Furst) try to have fun on the job while avoiding the wrath of the clubs pompous manager (Robert Mandan).

(SPN) Moneyworks (NKK) Hm Third Eye Into The Labyrinth There is one last chance to save Rothgo. (Part 7) 9:090 700 Gnb Featured: As The World Turns sUr RiU Walter tells how she got bad reviews when she married a real life minister. (1 hr., 30 min.)

Merv Griffin Guats: Debbie Reynolds, Dr. Morton Walker, Camilo Sato, Rene Auberjonois, a visit to the New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street. (1 hr.) Q O Movie Alcatraz: The Whole Shocking Story (Part 2) (1980)

O 0 Miss Universe Pageant Bob Barker and Joan Van Ark host the 32nd annual edition of the international beauty pageant, featuring guat stars Jose Luis Rodriguez and John Schneider (live from the Kiel Auditorium in St. Louis, Mo). (2 hrs.)

0 JimBakker

0 Great Performances

"Bridesbead Revisited; Et In Arcadia Ego Based on Evelyn Waugh's novel. Captain Charla Ryder returns to Bridesbead Castle in 1944 where he recalls his friendship with Lord Sebastian Flyte nearly 20 years earlier. (Part 1) (R) Q (2 hrs.)

(SPN) Mefraii& AA. Fiction: The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 2) / Night Music: From The Heights Of Montmartre / Tele-oria: Horsa Of The Sun (Part 1) / Artview; Frances National Heritage / In Performance: Monsieur Albeniz (4 hrs.)

(ESPN) NFLs Greatest

"Bie Game America (HBO) Movie Rocky lU (1982) Sylvester StaUone, Carl Weathers. World heavyweight champion Rocky Balboa suffers a personal crisis when a younger, hungrier fighter challenga him for his crown. PG (1 hr., 40 min.)

(NKQ Twyla narp Scrapbook:

1N5 - 1N2 Excerpts of modem dance choreographer Twyla Tharps work include clips of figure skater John Curry, football player Lynn Swann, ballet dancers Mikhail Baryshnikov and Peter Martins. (1 hr., 5 min.) lMINews 0 Lota Samran Teaching (SHOW) Biaarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything youve ever seen.

(ESPN) The World ^wrtaman

Antarctic Expedition / Kayaking Guats: Beverly Johnson, Dr. Walter Blackadar. (1 hr.) (USA) Watersfciing Masters Barefoot Championships (from Cypress Gardens, Fla ). (1 hr.) 10:05 (NICK) New World Baikt The debut of the New World Ballet Company, performing in association with the 1982 New World Fatival of the Arts in Miami, is presented. (1 hr., 20 min.)

10:100 News 10:300 Star Tinie 0 Jerry Savelle (SHOW) Movie The Happy Hooker Goa To Washington (1977) Joey Heatherton, George Hamilton. The irrepressible Xaviera Hollander journeys to the U.S. capital and uncovers some very sensitive secret documents. R(l hr. 29 min.) llMOeOOO00News Odd Couple 0 tatrodoctk To Life 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circu

(ESPN)SportsCenter (HBO) Dolly In Concert Country and pop singing star Dolly Par-ton performs such hits as Jolene, Here You Come Again and 9 To 5 in this concert taped at the Dominion Theatre in London, England. (1 hr.. 30 min.)

(USA) Hot Spots Featured: Bad Sneakers: The John Neal Band (from The Outdoor Cabaret in Wilmington, Del). (1 hr.)

Tbe DaUy Reflector. Greenville. S C -Sunday. July 10. liKJ-TV i 11:050 Woman Watch Featured 2:45 (HBO) Movie Eye Of The

Virginia Snyder, private investigator, Ellen Molnar. fragrance expert and perfumer. Kathryn Sullivan, astronaut. llJSfNKX) Nightcap Amma-tion Guests; Ralph Bakshi. Larry Elin, Don Bluth.

11:300 Another Life Oe0ABCNewsNightline Kojak

O O The Best Of Canon Host Johnny Carson. Guats Alan Alda, David Brenner. (R) (1 hr.)

O Hart To Bart Jonathan and Jomifer become the targets of a ruthless couple who will do anything to acquire their newly purchased antique car. (R) (1 hr., 10 min.)

O Charlies Angels 0 The Blackwood Brothen 0 Doctor Id The House 11:350 The Catlins IMOO Bums And Alkn 0 AnBakker

(SHOW) Movie Rocky III' (1982) SyWater Stallone, Carl Weathers. (1 hr., 40 min.)

(ESPN) PKA FnU ConUct Karate (R)

(USA) Radio 1990(B)

1M50 Its A Long Way To Octo-ba Sportcaster Red Barber nar-rata this special inside look at the Alanta Brava Division-Winning 1982 baseball season. (3 hrs.)

13:300 Jack Bemy OOneOnOne a Mor Real People Nevn

O e Late Night With David I/fttfrman Guats: comedian Gary Muledeer, actor Dabney Coleman, musical-glassa player Gloria Parker. (R) (1 hr.) a The Rockford Fila Starsky And Hutch (HBO) Movie "The Soldier (1982) Ken Wahl. William Prince. (1 hr., 30 min.)

(USA) Sports Probe 12:400 Colombo A winemaker (Donald Pleasence) prevents his brother from selling the family business by killing him. (R) (1 hr., 20 min.)

1:0001 Married Joan O Rat Patrol ONews OFaithline (SPN) Travellers World (USA) Boxing (R)

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OO NBC News Overnight Mission: Impossible (SPN) Movie "Mystery Liner (No Date) Noah Beery (1 hr., 20 min.)

(ESPN) Inside BasebaU(R)

1:40 (SHOW) Movie "Friday The 13th (1980) Betsy Palmer. Adrienne King. (1 hr., 38 min.) 2:000 Bachelor Fatha ONews

(I) Private Secretary O CBS News Nightwatch 0 JimBakker (ESPN) SportsCenter (HBO) Some Call Them Freaks Richard Kiley hats this look at famous human odditia, using still pbota and dramatic portrayals to tell the storia of Tom Thumb, the Elephant Man and others.

3:300 Life Of Riley O All In The Family O0News

Needle (1981) Donald Sulher land. Kate Nelligan (1 hr . 51 nun I 3:00O 700Clnb ONews

0 Robert Scfanlkr (ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Spring Highlights (R)

(USA) Gymnastia USAIGC Womens Quarterfinals (from Reading. Pa ). (R) (2 hrs )

3:050 Movie Doctor Ehrlicfa s Magic Bullet (1940) Edward G Robinson. Ruth Gordon (2 hrs. 10 min.)

3:15 (SHOW) Baxarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything youve ever seen 3:30QNews

3:45 (SHOW) Movie "Six Pack (1982) Kenny Rogers. Diane Lane. (1 hr.. 45 min.)

4:00 ONews 0 Today With Lester Snmrall 4:15 (a*N) Movie Phantom Of The Desert (No Date) Tom Tyler, Jack Perrins (1 hr.) 4:300 Roa Bagley O AH In The Family 4:40 (HBO) Campus Comedy Comedian Joe Piscopo hats this showcase of collegiate talent -selected from a nationwide search by New Yorks Catch A Rising SUr comedy club -Uped before a college audience at Tufts University. (1 hr.)

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0 Camp Meeting. U.SA.

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(ESPN) NFLs Greatest Ummi im AFC Pbyoff Game Pittrtwrgh Steelers vs. San Diego Chargers (HBO) Gibe Kapiaa As GroKho Kaidan portrays the legendary comedian in a one-man show uped at the Smothers Theatre (rf Pepperdine University in MaUbn. California. (1 hr., 30 min.)

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(SPN) Scuba World

fighters led by Eleaxar ben Yair

(Peter Straass) establishes a camp within the fortress atop Momt Mmada, from which they mtend to battle the Roman Tenth Legk commanded by Gawral Flavias Sva (Peter

OToole).(Partl)(R)g(2hrs.)

Merv Griffia O S ReniMtoa Steek 0 0 Movie Defiance (1980) Jan-Mkhael Vincent, Theresa Saldana.

0AnBakfcer

0 I IfrHir Dr. Judsoo Randolph, a pediatric smgeoo, is proisied in a preview of this non-

fictkn series dealing witt the professiooal and private lives of doctors. (1 Iff.)

(SPN) TMefriKe AA. Qne-riiJi- Hunan, Too Hunan / Entracte; Georges Mdies / Fictioii; The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 2) / Night Maskr. From The Heists Of Ifctinartre"(4hr8.)

(SBOW) Movie Zapped! (1982) Scott Baio, FiDie Aames.

(NKX) JoH|* Pm Ptf^ Stieks Aad Bonei Anne Jackson, Tom Ahbedge and Cliff ^ Young star in David Rabes biting pUy about a Wind Vietnam veteran. (2 hrs.)

90 BasebaU AUanU Braves

SSSCSSS'

(1982) Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland. A ripiante moves to Us Angeles to continue his fight against crime. R (1 hr., 35 min.) ll48(I)News O0SLEbewh(re 0LerterSHonOTeMhiig 0SMdlArabia (USA) Don Deyudale-s Bas^ The former Dodger pitching

great looks behind the scenes of

Americas national pastime. (R) 18:38 B Star Time BJotaOateen (USA) &orts Look (R) U48O0OBO00News OddOoBle BTheLaH^cs '

0 Monty Pythons Flying Oreas

(SHOW) Lovii Friends And Perfect Couples (ESPN)SportsOenter

TV Chatter

By Paly Vi

DEAN MARTINS family, incbidiiig ex-wife JEANNIE, joiDed him n London to celebrate his birthdiy and attend the opening of his solo appearance at tbe Apolk Theatre. During a pSicooference DEAN admitted he is trying to pcnuide jEjU^INIE to give their marriage anotiier chance. (As the song

says - love is better the second time arwmd.)

TV actresses, who have created some of the worlds most

famous secretaries, will compete on July 15 for The Celebrity

Seoetary/SierTa Typin Champiniwfaipi. to aid the Juvenile Diabetes FoundatkirCash prlies totaling 110.000 wfll be

coiKrilmted to the cause. Amoi tboae participating in the event

win be Bensons DBM CONN, Maimixs GAIL FIffiER, Chpitols JUUE PARRBH. W to 5i ANN WELDON, Sinoo k Smoni JEA?INE WILSON and Teachers Onlyi JEAN SiART. Speed and accuracy wffl be judged.

(HBO) bride BoxMg (NKD Giurt Porisi Great Writers Featwed: Walt Whitmans ASMByMysdf.

(USA) Hot SMs "The Alan Marni Band (from Koodies in Pleasantrilk, N J). (1 hr.)

11J8(N1CK) Nightcap New Forms In The Broadway Musical Guests: Marvin Hamlisch, Stephen Schwartz.

llJOBAaethcrLife

eeeABCNewsNightnae

Kojak

QBTheBeriOfCarua 0 Qriacy 0 Charlies Aageb 0IifeABew 0 Doctor b The Boom (SHOW) A New Day b Eden Greg And Lauren Plan Marriage    

(HBO) The Who Tour 19H The naal Show The Whos North American farewell tour Uped at the Toronto Maple Leaf Gardens features sudi Who classics as "PinbaU Wizard, My Gen-eratioii." See Me, Feel Me and Who Art You? (1 hr., 30 min.)

1240 OBume And ADen 0JimBakker

(SHOW) Movie PapiUoo (1973) Steve McQueen, Dustin Hoffman. (2 hrs., 25 min.)

(ESPN) CFL FoothaU OtUwa Rough Riders at Winnipeg Blue

Bombers (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.) (USA) Radto 1188 (R)

12450 The Catibi 12J80JaekBey eOneOuOM e More Real Peopfe Newi

O 0 Late raght With David Lettermaa Gue^ boxer Rand Tex Cobb, reporter-author Sidney Son (Read All About lt).(R)(lhr.)

0 The Rockford Flki 08tanb Aid Hitch (USA) WatenUbg Masters Barefoot Champioaships (from Cypress Gardens, Fla ). (R) (1 hr.)

18410 Movie Savage Pampas " (1967) Robert Taylor, Ron Ran-delL(2his.,5nim.)

18:480 McMiUan 14801Married Joan O The Real McCoyi ONewi

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(SPN) Paul Ryan (RBO) Movie Tarzan, The Ape Man (1981) Richard Harris, Bo Derek. (1 hr., 52 min.)

1480 My little Margie ONewi

O0 NBC News Oveni^t

0|fiirioa:lmpoaiMe

0TheCamens

(SPN) Movie Gang BuUets (No

Date) Anne Nagel, Robert Kent

(NICK) Apinst The Odds "Beethoven And Bessie Smith These two musicians advanced and expanded their musical forms -Beethoven's genius in classical composition stunned 18th century Europe and Bessie Smith elevated the blues to an art form.

8:35 0 Between Gama / News

9400 700 Chib OO0 Masada In tbe year 70 A.D., a band of Jewish freedom

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WEDNESDAY EVENING

7:00

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Gloria

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Taxi

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Movie; "Pnme Suspect"

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BaeebMI: Atlanta Braves at Ptwladetpliia Phillies

RexHumbard

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Movie; "Victory"

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Movie; "Friday The 13th. Part III"

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Movie; "Beach Girts"

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8:350 Father Knows Best 7:000 Boms And Allen OGood Times OABCNews(

Threes Coo. . OOTheJeffersoos O Jokers Wild O Entertainment Tonight 0 Sanford And Son 0 The Kroeie Brothers MacNeU/Lehrer Report (SPN) Medicine Man (ESPN) Horse Racing Weekiy (NICI9 Yon Cant Do That On Television (USA) Radio 1990 7:05 Green Acres 7:300Dol>ieGillis O OTk Tac Dough O P.M. Magazine MA*SH O Alice O Family Feud Threes Company Barney Miller RexHumbard ThisOld House (SPN) Money Talks (ESPN) SportsCenter (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Sports Look 7:35 0 Baseball

8:00OISpy    ,    .

O 0 The Fall Guy Colt and a feisty stunt woman (Dana Hill) try to clear a well-known actor (Tab Hunter) who has been charged with murder. (R) (1 hr.) Movie "Prime Cut" (1972)

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Lee Marvin, Gene Hackman. A syndicate hit man is dispatched to rub out an ambitious gangster who is trying to eliminate the competition in the Midwest. (1 hr., 31 min.)

O O Real People Featured: a tribute to plane<rash hero Lenny Skutnik; Rocky Horror Show fans; animal trainer Ray Berwick; two high-fashion models in New York City, a man who plays selections by Mozart on wine glasses; garage sales. (R)(lhr.)    ^

o 0 Archie Bunkers Place Camp Meeting, U5A.

All Creatures Great And Smalin

(SPN) American Baby Featured: six months old; good books.

(SHOW) Movie Friday The 13th, Part Iir (1982) Dana Kim-mel, Paul Kratka. Unwary teenagers travel to a remote cabin at Crystal Lake, the stalking grounds of a deranged monster who wears a hockey mask. R (1 hr., 35 min.)

(ESPN) Inside The USFL (HBO) Movie Haywire (1979) Lee Remick, Jason Robards. The disordered and turbulent life of the Hayward family as they struggled through the emotional upheaval of fame is seen through the eyes of a family member. (2 hrs., 25 min.)

(NICK) The Tomorrow People " The Vanishing Earth Who is the mysterious Steen? (Part 3) (USA) PBA Bowling "Kessler Open' (from San Jose, Calif ). (2 hrs.)

8:30 00 Gloria (SPN) Nikki HaskeU (ESPN) Auto Racing "24 Hours

ofLeMans"(R)(lhr.)

(NICK) The Third Eye The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer The daughter of a medium, Cassie does not want to follow in her mothers footsteps. (Part 1) 9:00 0700 Hub 000 Masada Increased Judean attacks and pressure from Rome force General Silva to mount an attack on Masada by building a ramp along the side of the mountain, a task further complicated by the desert heat and the disapproval of his beloved Jewish slave Sheva (Barbara Carrera). (Part 2) (R)

8(2 hrs.)

o The Facts Of Life O 0 Movie "Prime Suspect (1981) Mike Farrell, Teri Garr. A responsible citizen's life is shattered when his efforts to help police solve the murder of a young girl backfire and make him the chief suspect in a series of related killings. (R) (2 hrs.)

Jim Bakker

Jukebox Saturday Night (SPN) Telefrance U5A Tele-Stories: Horses Of The Sun (Part I) / Artview: Frances National Heritage / In Performance: Monsieur Albeniz / "Cine-Qub; Human, Too Human / Entracte: George Melies Life And Work (4 hrs.)

(NICK) Vienna PhBharmonic Orchestra A profile of the orchestra since its establishment in 1842 and a performance of works by Beethoven, Mozart and others. (1 hr.)

9:38 O O Buffalo Bill Bill reluctantly accepts a job as a used-car salesman after the TV station unexpectedly cancels his talk show.

(ESPN) PKA FuU Contact Karate

1048 Newi o o TIk News b Tie News

From New York City, a repertory cast including Michael Davis and Sinnon Jones presents a live, lighthearted look at major events of the day.

Lerter Sumrall Teat^ing ^HOW) Movie Beach Girls (1982) Debra Blee, Val Kline. A teen-age girl's friends help her to loosen up so they can get on with having fun at the beach. R (1 hr., 30 min.)

(NICK) Richard Strauss 1884 -

1949 A portrait of the German-born composer is presented. (1 hr., 5 min.)

(U^) Gkdf Intemaonal Challenge Fifth round. (1 hr.)

10:300 Star Time 00 Taxi JohnAnkerberg (HBO) Howard Hugbes: The iwiiU story Home movies, still photos, letters, documents from previously secret files and film clips provide the substance for this investigation of the life of the reclusive billionaire. (1 hr.) 10:35ONew8    _    ,

ll:OOOeOOOO0News Odd Couple Bible Pathways

The DaUy ReOector, GreenviUe, N C -SuixUy, July 10,1983-TV-7 bysUnders during shoo- J:15 (HBO) Movie Lookin To Gej

Out" (1982) Jon Voighl. Ann-'' Margret. (1 hr. 45 min.)

2:300 Life Of Riley O All In The Family Q0News (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:45 (SPN) Movie My Son, The Hero (1943) Patsy Kelly, Ros-coe Kams. (1 hr., 25 min)

3:000 700 Gub ONews

Lowell Lundstrom 3:10 (SHOW) Movie Friday The 13th, Part III (1982) Dana Kim-mel, Paul Kratka. (1 hr., 35 nnin.)

3:300 News RexHumbard (ESPN) Horse Racing WeAly

(R)

4:000 News How Can I live?

(ESPN) PKA Fall Contact Karate (R)

(HBO) Movie Friday The 13th, Part II (1981) Amy Steel. Joha^ Furey. (1 hr, 27 min.)

(USA) WatersUing Masters Barefoot Championships (from Cypress Gardens, Fla ). (R) (1 hr.)

4:10 (SPN) Movie "Intrigue In Waltz Time (No Date) Carl Esmond. (2 hrs., 20 min.)

(USA) Hot Spots "Orleans ' (from The Tallyho in Wilmington, Del.). (1 hr.)

11:05 (NICK) Great Paintings Featured: Egon Schieles Woman With Two Children.

11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Masters Of Photography Guests: photojournalists Alfred Eisenstaedt, Cornell Capa and Roman Vishniac examine black and white photography as an art form.

11:300 Another Life

O O 0 ABC News Nightline Kojak

O O The Best Of Carson Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Liza Minnelli, Dr. Paul Ehrlich. (R) (1 hr.)

O >olice Stwy A deputy police chief (Glenn Ford) tries to cope with various pressures while investigating the deaths of inno

cent ,

touts involving his officers (R)

(2 hrs., 30 min.)

0 Charlies Angeb Sound Of The Spirit Monty Pythons Flying Circus

(SHOW) Bizarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything youve ever seen.

(HBO) Movie Rocky III (1982) Sylvester Stallone, Carl Weathers. World heavyweight champion Rocky Balboa suffers a personal crisis when a younger, hungrier fighter challenges him for his crown. PG (1 hr., 40 min.)

11:350 The CaUina 12400 Bums And Allen JimBakker

(SHOW) Movie The Pirate Movie (1982) Kristy McNichol, Christopher Atkins. (1 hr., 40 nnin.)

(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing (R)

(USA) Radio 1990 12:050 Movie Emergency Room (1983) Sarah Purcell. LeVar Burton. (2 hrs.)

12:30 OJeck Benny OOneOnOne O More Real People New8

O O Ute Nif^t With David

Letterman Guests: Today cohost Jane Pauley, actor-comedi-an Billy Crystal. (R) (1 hr.)

The Rockford Files 0 Starsky And Hutch (USA) Pick The Pros 1:00 01 Married Joan O Heres Locy ONews Gene Scott (SPN) First Nighter (USA) Don Diysdales BasebaU The former Dodger pitching great looks behind the scenes of Americas national pastime. (R) 1:15 (HBO) Buddy Hackett: Live k Uncenswed The outrageous, unpredictable comedian performs his adult nightclub act at Resorts International in Atlantic City, New Jersey. (1 hr.) 1:300 My Uttle Margie ONews

00 NBC News Overnight 0 Mission: Impossible (SPN) Movie Where The Trail Divides (No Date) Tom Keene. (1 hr., 15 min.)

(USA) Sports Probe 1:40 (SHOW) Movie "Raw Force (1981) Cameron Mitchell, Geoff Binney. (1 hr, 25min.)

2:00 O Bachelor Father ONews

Private Secretary O CBS News Nigbtwatch JimBakker

(USA) PBA Bowling Kessler Open (from San Jose, Calif ). (R)(2hrs.)

2:050 Movie ' The Bad Seed " (1956) Nancy Kelly. Patty McCormack. (2 hrs., 40 min.)

4:300 Ross Bagley O All b The Family The Blackwood Brothers 4:45 Winners

(SHOW) Bizarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything youve ever seen.

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Tic Tac

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Joker's Wik) Tic Tac

Ent Tonight

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Fame

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CBS Reports

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Baseball: Atlanta Braves at Philadelphia Phes

Power

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Wild America

Catalog

Movie: ' Challenge To Be Free

JimBakker

Diamonds In The Sky

LSumraN Eagle's Nest

Cosmos

Tetefrande USA

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SportsCentw PGA Golf: British Open

HBO Movie Ruckus'

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Black Beauty Tom People |AgamstOdds Performers'Showcase

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Inside Bojing Movie: "Six Pack'

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(ESPN) Inside The USFL (HBO) Video JiAeboi (USA) Cartoon .(DIDreamOfJeannie 1:300 Love nat Bob OOABCNewsn Andy Griffith^ OONBCNews OOCBSNews Good Mem America ' OWdlife Safari (SPN) First Ni^ (ESPN)Sportvomffi (HBO) Movie "Ruckus" (1980) (NICK) What Will They niink Of Next?

6:350 Father Knows Best 7:000 Bora And Alien

OGood Times OABCNewin Threes Company OOTheMfersoos O Joker's Wild O Ekitertainment Tooigbt 0 Sanford And Son 0 Spiritaal Awakening OMacNeU/Lehrer Report (SPN) Pet Action Line (ESPN)SportsCenter (NKX) KidsWrites (USA) Radio I960 7:050 Green Acres 7:300DobieGillis OOTicTacDoogh 0 P.M. Magazine M*A*SH OAlke OFamUyFend 0 Threes Company 0Bamey Miller 0 Power Unlimited 0 This (Md House

(SPN) Personal Compater ^BOW) Movie Challenge To Be Free (1975)

(ESPN) PGA Golf (NICK) The Adventares Of Black Beauty (USA)BaseMl 7J50Baseball 14101%

O O 0 Masada Falco (David Warner),

po Fame A retarded singer (Jinuny Osmond) falls in love with Julie, and a magazine pinup of David causes difficulties in his teaching career. (R) (1 hr.) O O Magnum, PX A woman (Sylvia Sidney) posing as Robin Masters hif^ school English teacher toms out to be a KGB agent bent on assassinating a former freedom fighter. (R) (1 hr.)

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Previews Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at whats new at the movies.

(SPN) Travellers World (HBO) Not Necenarily Ite News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric takeoff.

(NICK) The Tomorrow People

The Vanishing Earth Helpless, the Tomorrow People fear the world is doomed. (Part 4) 1400 mid America Watching Wildlife Naturalist Marty Stooffer tells where, when and how to look for Americas wild animals in their natural surroundings. (R)

(SPN) Sharper Image Living Otatog

(HBO) laride Boxing (NKX) Against Ihe Odds Henry Ford And Robert Oppm-beimer Forces far beyond their control were unleashed by these two men - Henry Fords revolutionary assembly line production made automobiles affordable for almost everyone and Robert Oppenbeimer headed an intelectual assembly line dedicated to the production of the atomic bomb.

MIO 766 Clab Featured: Maxine Andrews tells bow her famous life left scars that needed healing. (1 hr., 30 min.)

Merv Griffin Guests: Andrew Tobias, Southern Comfort Jazz Band, Jm J. Bullock, mystery guest, Ana Alicia, Maria lU^-

rnti. (1 hr.)

O Gimme A Bnak Nell hopes to make a fortune by becoming a door-to-door salesperson for a vacuum cleaner ctxnpany. (R)

OOSimoo A Simon A.J. falls for a beautiful woman (Cristina Raines) suspected in the murder of a magazine publisher who included her on his list of 10 Sexiest Ladies. (R)(l hr.) 0JimBakker

(SHOW) PygmiliOD Peter OToole is Prof Higgins, Margot Kidder is Eliza DoUttle and John Standing is Col. Pickering in this performance of George Bemaid Shaws classic comedy chronicling the professors efforts to make Eliza presentable to society. (2 hrs.)

(HBO) Movie Six Pack (1982) Kenny Rogers, Diane Lane. A race-car driver turns a sextet of juvenile car strippers into a winning pit crew. PG (1 hr., 45 min.)

(NKX) Performers Showcase: Beethoven Piano Concerto No.

3 In C Minor Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli joim conductor Carlo Maria Giulini and the Vienna Symphony Orchestra for thi^rfcHTnance. (1 hr.)

9:360 O Cheers Diane decides to use her role as an entrant in the annual Miss Boston Barmaid contest to speak out against such competitions. (R) 164600020/20 News

O O Hill Street Bhwa Joe is

suspected in the death of a physically-abused prisoner, Ray becomes jealous of Henrys new promotion, and Joyce must choose between her career and Frank when she is offered a prestigious job in Washington. (Partl)(R)(lhr.)

O O CBS Reports Tbe Plane That Fell From The Sky Correspondent Bill Kurtis talks with federal investigators and the passengers and crew of Flight 841, a Boeing 727 that went out of control and plummeted 33,000 feet in 44 seconds on ^ril 4,1979. (1 hr.)

0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 0 Cosmos

(ESPN) SwiAuning McDonalds International Invitational (1 hr., 30 min.)

(NICK) The Greeks The main themes in Greek culture, from the Mycenaean Age in 1300 BC to the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, are traced.

(USA) Sports Probe 1040 estar Time OBigk'sNest*    '

(USA) Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at San Francisco Giants (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.) lO450News

114OOOOOOO0News

OddCoupk 0 Today In BiUe Prophecy 0 Monty Pythoni Flying Cbcna

(SHOW) Loving Friends And Perfect Coqila

(HBO) Movie Zapped! (1982) Scott Baio, Willie Aames. A high school science^ genius uses his accidentally acqoired psychoki-netic powers to improve his love life.R(lhr.,35min.)

(NKX) Handmade In Anaerica Artist and craftsman John McQueen of Alfred, N.Y., explores contemporary ideas through the ancient craft of basketmaking.

1145 (raCK) Nichtcap Nine - Ihe Broadway Musical Guests. Tommy Tune, Maury Yeston. 11400 Another Ufe O00ABCNewiNightliiie Kojak

O O The BeM Of Canon Host. Johnny Carson. Guests: George Segal, Rich Kail. (R)(l hr.)

O Trapper John. MJ). Gonzo shocks kis co-workers by announcing hes engaged to marry a beautiful ^wtographer (Madolyn &nith). (R) (1 hr., 10 min.)

0ChtrlietAiels

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O Doctor la lie Hoane (SHOW) A New Day Id Eden A Proposal For Francie (ESPN)%rtsOenter 11:350 Ihe Catlin 12400 Bane And ADen 0JimBakkcr

(SHOW) Movie Grease 2 (1982) Maxwell Caulfield, Michelle Pfeiffer. (1 hr., 55 min.)

(ESPN) PGA GoH British Open First round (from The Royal Birkdale Golf Oub in Southport, England). (R) (2 hrs.,

30 min.)

12450 Movie LoU (1971) Charles Bronson, Susan George.

(1 hr., 55 min.)

12:300 Jack Benny OOneOnOne O More Real People News

O Late Night With David Lettemian Guests: comedian Richard Lewis, former baseball team owner CMrlie Finley. (R)

one Rockford Files OStarskyAodHntch 12400 McChmd 1145 (HBO) Movie Eye Of The Needk (1981) Donald Snthcr-land, Kate Nelligan. (1 hr., 51 min.)

14001 Married Joan O The Real McCoys ONewi

OJewU Voice Broadcast (SPN) Sharper Image Uviag Catakif

(USA) Pick Tbe Pros (R)

1:300 My Uttle Margie ONews

O NBC News Ovemiglit OMiirioirlmpoiribie OGood News

(SPN) Movie Riot Squad (No Date) Richard Cromwell. (1 hr., 10 min.)

(USA) Baseball California Angels at Baltimore Orioles (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

2400 Bachelor Fhther ONews

Private Secretary O CBS News Mghtwatch

O Movie Dangerous Exile (1958) Louis Jounlan, Belinda Lee. (2 hrs.)

OJimBakker

(SHOW) Movie The Happy Hooker Goes To Washington (1977) Joey Hepthertoo, George Hamilton. (1 hr., 29 min.)

1500 Life or Riley OADbTheFhmily OONews (ESPN)8portsCaiter 140 (SPN) Movie Dangerous Assignment (No Date) Greta Nis8en.(lhr.,30min.)

(HBO) Movie Under The Rainbow (1981) Chevy Chase, Carrie Fisher. (1 hr., 38 min.)

3400700 Ctab ONewi OJerryFslwen 345 (SHOW) Movie Rocky HI (1982) Sylvester Stallone, Carl Weathers. (1 hr., 40 min.) 340ONews

(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing (R)

4:00 O News

O Movie Its A Great Life

O The Camerons (IXA) Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at San Francisco Giants (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

i'lO(SPN) Movie Arizona Bound (1941) Buck Jones, Tim McCoy. (1 hr., 5 min.)

440 (HBO) Movie "Fighting Back (1982) Tom Skerritt, Patti Lupone. (1 hr., 40 min.)

4:30 Cl Ross Bagley O AO In The Family OHowCanlUve?

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FRIDAY EVENING

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SPN

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WCK

USA

7:00

BumsiAllen

Good Times

ABC News

3's Company

Jetfersons

JeAersons

Joker's Wild

Eiit. Tonight

Santord

Green Acres

Larry Allen

MacNed

Computer

7:30

DobleGillls

Tic Tac

Magane

M'AS-H

Akca

Family Feud

Tic Tac

3's Company

Barney Miller

Andy Griffith

Camerons

Old House

Movie; "Si Pack"

SporlsCenter

Movie

Do That

Radio 1990

8:00

Superbook

Benson

8:30

Swiss Family

At Ease

6 Mandrell

The Saint

The Powers Of Matthew Star

9:00    9:30

10:00

700 Club

10:30

star Time

Masada

Masada

Merv GriMin

Knight Rider

Roots The Next Generations

The Dukes Of Hazzard

The Dukes Of Hazzard

Benson

At Ease

Dallas

Dallas

News

Eischied

Eischied

Falcon Crest

Falcon Crest

Masada

Movie "Bless The Beasts And Children

Camp Meeting, U S.A

Wash Week Wall St Wk

Home Based Business

Paper Chase

Jim Bakker

Vict At Sea World War I Europe

News

L Sumrall

Ben Haden

Telelrance U S A

Movie "Body Heal

PGA God: British Open

Inside Boking

Black Beauty

Sports Probe

Buddy Hacked

Tom People Third Eye

Swimming

Boxing: Eddie Mustala Muhammad vs Michael Spinks

Artist And Athlete

The Creation Of A Ballet

Boxing

1:40 O Tic Tac Do^ eOOOOfDNewi

0BerltafcU^ Update SOoctorWho (SPN)TdepiMaeAactioo (SHOW) Movte Sii Pack (1M)

(^) Movie Breakthrough (179)

(OSA)Cartoooi Mi OI Dream Of Jeaimte IJIO Love That Bob OOABCNewan (B Andy Griffith ^ OONBCNewa OQCBSNewa S Good News America S Wildlife Safari (NICK) What WUlTliey Think Of Neit?

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Alex Haley's saga of a black American family continues in 1882 in Henning, Tennessee, with the marriage of Tom Harveys daughter Cynthia to Will Palmer; Tom Harvey a descendant of Kunta Kinte, forbids his daughter to marry a man he considers to be too "white (Parti) (2 hrs.)

o (D The Dukes Of Hazzard

(R)

Q) Camp Meeting, U,S.A.

Washington Week In Review (SPN) Home Based Business (SHOW) Paper Chase Cinderella The plight of a single mother struggling to raise her child, support them both and attend law school touches Hart, his fellow students and even the forbidding Prof. Kingsfield. (1 hr.) (HBO) Buddy Hackett Uve A Unceiisored The outrageous, unpredictable comedian performs bis adult nightclub act at Resorts International in Atlantic City, New Jersey. (1 hr.) (NICK) The Tomorrow Peoide The Blue And The Green Carol and Kenny are representing Earth on the Galactic Federation Council, and as far as they know, Stephen and John are the only Tomorrow People left on Earth. (Parti)

(USA) Boxing From Madison Square Garden. (3 hrs.)

I4S(D Movie Bless The Beasts And Children (1971) Bill Mumy, Barry Robins. Six problem boys try to stop the senseless destruction of buffalo by freeing a herd scheduled to be shot for sport. (2 hrsJ

in a Swim Family RoMam

O a At Ease Valentine and Baker are ordered to use bizarre tactics in a n^jotiating sessMW with the participants at a nude camp^nrama. (R) a WaO ftreet Week Hail To The Chief... Economic Advisor Guest: Dr. Martin Feldstein,

chairman. Council of Economic

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(NICK) The Third Eye 'The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Cassie visits the local graveyard to prove that she has no power to summon spirits. (Part 2) 9:000 700 Gub O O O Masada After a meeting in which he comes to trust Silva, Eleazar still finds that he cannot place equal faith in Rome, and the two adversaries return to their respective camps to prepare for the final onslaught. (Part 4) (R) (2 hrs.) (B Merv Griffin O Knight Rider Michael pits KITT against an arsenal of sophisticated weapons after he uncovers the illegal sale of military nerve gas to terrorists. (R) (Ihr.)

O Dallas Various Ewing family feuds brew at Southfork as J.R. and Sue Ellen march down the aisle of matrimony for the second time. (R) (1 hr.)

Q) Jim Bakker S Victory At Sea (SPN) Telefrance U5A Cine-Gub: Human, Too Human / Entracte. Georges Melies /

Fiction: The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 2) / "Night Music: From The Heights Of Montmartre (4 hrs.)

(SHOW) Movie Body Heat (1981) William Hurt, Kathleen Turner. A smalltime Florida lawyer is persuaded by his lover to murder her husband. R (1 hr., 55 min.)

(KBO) World Championship Boxing Eddie Mustafa Muhammad vs. Michael Spinks in a scheduled 15-round fight (Live). (2 hrs.)

(NKK) Artist And Athlete: The Pwiuit Of Perfectioo The parallels of artistic and athletic endeavor are explored against the backdrop of the 1980 Lake Placid Winter Olympics. (1 hr.. 5 min.) f;WeridWirI UN (B News OSBidded O Fidcon Crest a Lester Sumrall Teactiig m Evope: The Mighty Conti-Mfll

(ESPN) Swimming McDonalds International Invitational (1 hr.)

lINSNewf

(NKX) The Creatk Of A Ballet: The Overgrown Path Jiri 1 Kylians work "The Overgrown Path is filmed in rehearsal b<ginning with its initial stages through to actual performance. (1 hr, 20 min.)

10:30 estar Time BenHaden 11:00 o e O O O (D 0 News

(BOddOoupk Q) K-Dimensioo Magazine e Monty Pythons Flying Circus

(SHOW) Movie Private Lessons (1980) Sylvia Kristel, Howard Hesseman. A housekeeper has an ulterior motive for providing her employers teen-age son with his first sexual experience. R (1 hr., 30 min.) (ESPN)SportsCenter (HBO) Movie The Soldier " (1982) Ken Wahl, William Prince. A ruthless CIA agent is sent to neutralize a Soviet-backed terrorist plot to hold the Mideast hostage with nuclear explosives. R (1 hr., 30 min.) (USA) Ni^t Flight Featured: Jimmy Cliff / David Johansen / Wrong Side Of The Road. (4 hrs.),i

11:05 0AU In The FamUy

11:25 (NICK) First Editioa Guest: Bob Gottlieb, editor-in-chief of Alfred A. Knopf publishers.

11:30 OAnothv Life Oe0ABCNewsNightIine (BKojak

O O The Best Of Carson Host: Johnny Carson.

O Police Story Two policemen (Tony Lo Bianco, Don Meredith) investigating a robbery are aided by a woman being threatened by one of the criminals. (R) (2 hrs., 15 min.)

O Movie SLifegUide Doctor In The House (ESPN) CFL Football Winnipeg Blue Bombers at Edmonton Eskimos (3 hrs.)

11:350 The Catlins

12:00 O Bums And Allen S) Jim Bakker

12:05 0Ni{^t Tracks

12:300 Jack Benny OOneOnOne ORockNRoUTonite (BFM-TV

O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: Amy Carter, actress Teri Garr, comedian Jay Leno. (R)(l hr, 30 rrtin.) OStarsky And Hutch (SHOW) Movie Zapped! (1982) Scott Bak), Willie Aames. (1 hr., 35 min.)

12:35 (HBO) Moyie Cat People (1981) Nastassia Kinski, Malcolm McDowell. (2 hrs.)

1:0001 Married Joan O Heres Lucy OZoULevitt (SPN) Nikki HaskeU 1:300 My UtUe Margie ONews

0 Evening AtThe Improv 0 Heritage U.S.A. Update (SPN) Movie Boy Of The Streets (1937)

The Daily ReOedor, GreenvlUe, N.C.-Sunday, JulylUSK-Tt^

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I N S U I 8 I C f c 0 M r 8 1 f

Monday-Friday Daytime Cont.

(Continued From Page 4)

(1973)(Thu) Grease 2 (1982) (ESPN) Intonational Track And Field (Mon) Softball (Wed) (HBO)Camelot(Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Fri) The White Lions(1981)

(NICK) Todays Special (U^) Are You Anybody?

2:300 At Home With Beverly Nye (Moo) Family Chef (Tue) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Geaning Up Your Act (Thu) Together: Shir ley And Pat Boone (Fri)

(B Insight (Fri)

OO Capitol

0 The Lesson (Moo) Oral Roberts (Tue) Pattern For Living (Wed)

(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (Moo) Japan 120 (Tue, Thu) Scandinavian Weekly (Wed) Holland On Satellite (Fri)

(SHOW) Movie (Mon) "Six Pack" (1982KFri) Carbine Williams (1952)

(SHOW) Mark Twain Theatre (Wed)

(ESPN) To Be Annoonced (Tue) Billiards (Thu) Inside The USFL (R)(Fri)

(HBO) Movie (Thu) Under The Rainbow" (1981)

(NICK) Dustys Treeboose (U^) You; Magazine For Women (Mon, Toe, Fri) Womans Day USA (Wed, Thu)

3:000 700 Gnb OO0GeneralHospital (BPopeye And Friends OO Fantasy O0 Guiding U^t 0PTL Seminar 0 Teaching Students With Special Needs (Mon, Wed) Programming For The Gifted (Tue, Thu) Over Easy (Fri)

(ESPN) Swimming (FYi)

(HBO) DoUy In Concert (Moo) (NICK) What Will They Think Of Next?

(USA) Sonya 3:O50Fantime 3:30 3) The Flintstooes 0 Reading Rainbow (SPN) HeUo Jerusalem (Wed) Travellers World (Fri)

(ESPN) PKA Full ConUct Karate (R) (Thu)

(HBO) Inside Boxing (Tne)

(NICK) You Cant Do That On Television (Mon, Wed, Fri) Kids Writes (Tue, Thu)

3:350 Heckle And Jeckle And Friends 4:00 O Another Life 03) Tom And Jerry O Happy Days Again O Incredible Hulk O Whitney The Hobo O The Waltons 0Alke 0Cartoons

0 Today With Lester Sumrall (Moo) Kenneth Copeland (Tue) Time Of Deliverance (Wed) Calvary Temple (Thu) Ford Philpot (Fri)

0 Sesame Street (R)n (SPN) Intonatiooal Byline (Fri) (SHOW) Movie (Thu) Odyssey Of The Pacific (No Date)

(ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) (Tue) Instructional Series (Wed) i--(HBO) Dr. SeussThe Cat In The Hat (Tue) Little Orbit, The Astro Dog (Fri)

(NICK) The Adventures Of BUck Beauty (USA)AUveAndWeU!

4:05 0 The Pliotstones (SHOW) Movie (Wed) Legend Of The Wild (1980)

4:15 (ESPN) Instnictiooal Series (Wed)

4;30OBuUseye O Whats Happening!!

OMork And Mindy O Leave It To Beaver O Little House On The Prairie 0 Heres Lucy 0 Wonder Woman 0 Signs (X The Times (Wed) How Can I Live? (Fri)

(SPN) Paul Ryan

(SHOW) The Gold Bug (Mon) A

Little Bit Different (Tue)

(SHOW) Movie (Fri) "Oliver Twist" (1975)

(ESPN) Hydroplane Racing (Mon) CFL Football (Tue) Soccer America (Wed) Top Rank Boxing (R) (Fri)

(HBO) National Geographic Special (Mon) Little Orbit. The Astro Dog (Tue) Fraggle Rock (Wed) Magic Hosted By Shari Lewis (Thu)

(NICK) The Tomorrow People (Continued On Page 12)

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Saturday Daytime

SMOAQblVnunUy ONifkt Tracks 0 Eagles Not (STO) Movie Triple Trouble (1950)

5:Ne Another life ONei fiTelefltorv

STodaTbBibiePro|)hec7 5:45 (SHOW) Paper Chase i-N e The Blacfcmod Brothen eSNews O Incredible Rdk e Cheat Space Coaster ZoiaLevitt (ESPN) IiBide The USFL(R) (HBO) Movie Haywire (1979) Ul 0 Jimny Boastoa Oatdoon OEknerfency (DVegetaMeSoq)

O little Rascals 0 Captain Eangaieo 0Dr.Sti^iles 0 Pirate Adveatares (ESPN)Soriiiiiiifeg 7M a life In TV Spirit BSattfeyFVhoan (DNewabag OaCartoou 0ABettcrWay OCaptaiaKaBpvoo 0JimBakfcer (SPN) Post Time (SHOW) A little Bit Different (NHX)Pinwheel (USA) Sports Look 745 0 Between The lines 7:150 Rocky And Friends , 7:M01VRock O0The Jetsons

940OTVLesKin 3) Incredible Hoik OOSmnrfi

O0MeatbaDs Spaghetti 0 Circle Sqaaie S loride Bosioess Todar (SPN) Good Earth Jonal (ESPN) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (U^ Yok Magavine For Women

9:N0 Weekend Gardener O00Pae-Man O 0 BiV Baany / Road Rmner

0baideTVck

0LapQiilti^

(SPN) Sewing mtk Nancy (SHOW) Movie Guys And Dolls" (1955)

(ESPN) PGA Golf (USA)AliveAndWeD!

10410 Movie Transatlantic Tnnnei(1935)

B 0 O Scooby Doo / Pappy

(RB)    ne

Inside Story

(NHX) Stani&y Lights! Camera! Action!

1245 0 Movie His Kind Of Wmn-an(1951)

1400 Movie Seven Guns To Mesa (1950)

(X) Movie Dracula, Prince Of Darkness (1966)

0 Sta IfiOion DoOar Mtt BPnttPMtGolf O Movie The Dolly Sisters (1046)

S.

JSiiMilliooDoilarMan BAmnySwaggart 0Ma^O(OPainti^

(SPN) Name Of TV Game b Golf

(USA) Movie Brewsters Mil-Uons(1945)

10:300 O TV Gary Coleman Show

OOTVDafces 0 Magic Of Decorative Paint-

0 Father Bertoincd 0Snpersoccer (SPN)FVttciallBqMry (ESPN) cn. Football 14O0BaMbolIBMh 0HeriyfeU^ Update

SSi2fS^1902)

(NKE)AgainMTVOddi 2400 Lone Greenes New INl-

JTreehonseChib O Big Bine Marble (SPN) Scuba World (ESPN) Soccer America (USA) Sports Prote 7:350 Baseball Bunch 0400 Contact O 0 0 Superfriends 3) Popeye And Friends * OOTVFlintstones OO Popeye A Olive 0 Mr. Mnstacbe And Company aSpokesman (SPN) Match Bass Pishing (SHOW) Movie The Girl Who Had Everything" (1953) (ESPN)SportsCenter (USA) Scholastic Sports Acade-my

O.450Starcade 1:300 Mamu

0 O 0 Pac-Man / Little Ras-cab/Richie Rich 3) TV Jetsons OOIV Shirt Tales O O Pandamoninm 0 Contact 0 Under SaU

(SPN) Jimmy Houston Ontdoon (HBO) Movie Clash Of TV Titans (1981)

(USA) Co-Ed 8:350 Movie The Winning Team" (1952)

Good Life (HBO) Movie Hanky Panky (1982)

10:350 Movie CapUin Blood" (1935)

11400 O 0 Morfc A Mindy / Lveme A Shirley 3) Movie TV Amazing Spider-Man"(1977)

O O Incredible Hulk / Amax-ii^Vider-Man

O O Bugs Bumiy / Road Runner

0JimBakker 0 Wok Through China (NICK) KidsWrites 11:300 Great Chefs Of New Orleam

(9^ Connie Martinson Talks Books

(NICK) TV Tomorrow People 11000 TV Westeraen OO0Golf O Bugs And Company OThnndarr O0Sonl Train 0 Jack Van Impe 0 Bits, Bytes And Buzzwords (SPN) TMepbone Auction (SHOW) Movie PapiUon (1973) (ESPN) TV World Sportsman (NICK) You Cant Do TVt On Tdevision

(USA) Movie South Of Pago Pago (1940)

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O Movie Kiss TVm For Me" (SPN) Home Based Business (SHOW) Pygmalion (NICK) livewire 1460 Movie The Square Shooter (1935)

3) Movie Frogs" (1972) a Athletes bActioo (SPN) Scandinaviao Weekly 3.450 Movie Captains Of The aouds(1942)

1-3600Southern Sportamn aZob Levitt 0 American Adventure (ESPN) International Diving (HBO) Movie Haywire (1979) (NKK)SpedalDeUvery 4400 Wyatt Earp OO&ortsPlni 0 TV Road To Los Ameles 0PTianb(^HUibh)

0 Victory Garden (SPN) Mediterraneao Echoes (USA) Pick TV Pros (R)

1300 Wagon TriUn OO^wrtsBeat OSportsPhB

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(NICK) Yon Cant Do TVt On Televisioo

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JSonl Train OWhite Shadow OWrestUiw O0LPGAGolf 0 Eagles NeM 0 Woodwrights Shop (NKX) Against TV Odds (USA) USA Presents: TimeOnt Theater

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ASK ME ABOUT TV

By Val Carew

BAD NEWS. GOOD NEWS - Is it true that "Fame" has been canceled for next season? Is it possible it might move to another network Why didn't Doris go with the cast to London J.G., Harrisburg. Va.

NBC did cancel the series. However, there is a plan to prodnce new shows, which wonid then he syndicated to local stations. Despite the low ratings it was opposite Tom Sellecks Magnum, P.I. the show had a lot of loyal fans. The syndication deal is not definite, and the package, if put together, may not be aired nntil after the first of 1984, bat it is a distinct possibility. Valerie Landsburg, who plays Doris, was under the weather when the cast went to London. However, she joined them on a later tour.

Valerie Landsburg

WHERE'S J.AIME -Where can I write Jaime Lyn Bauer, who was on "The Young and the Restless" -M R.. Chicago. 111.

Write Jaime in care of her press agents Susan Patrico-la, 9100 Sunset Blvd., Suite 215. Los Angeles, CA 90069. Jaime left the soap only to be cast in a nighttime soap, "Bare Essence. which

Jaime Lyn Bauer

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aDMIRER I would like to write James Stewart, who I admire as an actor and an American. Where can I do

it M.A.. Pleasanton. Texas

Write him in care of Schaefer-Karpf Prodnc-tions, 12711 Ventura Blvd., Stndio City, CA 91664. Stewart has made a film, called Right of Way, for tVm and it will be shown on HBO. Mark the letter to be forwarded.

(Do you have a question about TV? Write Val Carew at 200 Park Avenue. Room 602. New York. NY 10166.)

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Spots This Week

SUNDAYS SPiMlTS JULY 10,1983 1100 Putt Putt IIJO Sports PhB 100 World University Games Over 5,000 athletes from 97 countries gather to compete (from Eklmonton. Alberta). (5 hrs.)

4 00 SportsWorid Schedoled: boxing - Thomas Hearns vs. * Murray Sutherland in a 10-round middleweight bout (live from Atlanc City, N.J.); Survival of the Fittest Mens River Bridge Duel (from Sun River, Ore.) (1 hr., 30 min.) iWOTarHedPortiait

MONDAYS SPORTS JULY 11,1983

8;00OBasebaU

SATURDAYS SPORTS JULY 16,1983

12:000 Golf "British Open" Third round (live from Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport. England). (2 hrs.)

1:000 Putt Putt Golf 1:30 O Baseball Bunch 2:00 O Greatest Sports Legends O Baseball Regional coverage

Saturday Evening

of Montreal Expos at Atlanta Braves or Texas Rangers at New York Yankees. (3 hrs.) 2:300 Rodeo Superstars Championship 3:30 O Southern Sportsman 4:00 O Sports Plus 4:300SportsBeat 5:000 Wide World Of Sports Scheduled; boxing - Wilfred Benitez vs. Mustafa Hamsho in a 10-round middleweight bout (live from Las Vegas, Nev.); the World Invitational High Dive Challenge (from San Diego, Calif). (1 hr. 30 min.)

O Wrestling 11:300 Wrestling

Hearns ^ Title On The Line

Thomas Hearns will risk his World Boxing Council 154-pound title when he faces James Hard Rock" Green in a scheduled 12-round junior middleweight championship fight, airing on NBC's SportsWorid, Sunday, July 10 (4-5.30 p.m.). The bout will take place in a specially constructed stadium in the parking lot of Caesars Boardwalk Regency in Atlantic City, N.J. Marv Albol and Dr Ferdie Pacheco will caD the action.

Hearns, the 24-year-old "Motor City Cobra from Detroit, won the WBC super welterweight (junior middleweight) title last December 3 with a performance against Wilfred l^nitez that earned him a majority decision. In the early rounds, Hearns used his 78-inch wingspan to hold Benitez at bay. Later, Benitez rushed headlong into his tormentor, but was unable to score heavily. By the end of 15 rounds. Hearns had woti more through tactical fighbng (a technique normally used by Benitez) than by his power.

In 1980, Hearns kayoed Pipino Cuevas to capture the World Boxing Association welterwaght

crown, But after three successful title defenses, he was stopped in round 14 of his title unification bout in September 1981, against Sugar Ray Leonard The lanky 6-1 Hearns has an 'impressive 36-1 pro record that includes 32 knockouts Green, a 25-year-old who earned his nickname Hard Rock" because of his well-defined physique, is a legitimate 154-pounder who is ranked among both junior mid-dleweights iNo, 6) and mid-

dleweights (No. 9). Although Green is only 5-5 and will be operating with an 8-inch reach and height disadvantage against Hearns, he has a history of cutting taller opponents down to size.

In his most impressive outing. Green upset top-ranked middleweight Wilford Scypion last March to earn a unanimous decision. The Newark, N.J.. fighter, who is undefeated as a junior middleweight, has a 17-2 record with 10 knockouts.

Labonte Gearing Up For Talladega

/URBORN^

With

Door-To-Doof Scfvice Phone Locally

758-0696

Terry Labonte has to be questioning one of stock car racing's favorite truisms as he eyes the 1983 Talladega 500, which will be run at Alabama International Motor Speedway at the end of this month.

" You have to be around at the end of the race in order to win" goes the saying. Labonte has been around at the end of the last four Winston Cup events at Talladega, yet, he is still looking for his first win at the World s Fastest Speedway.

The only driver to have completed all 88 laps in the last four races at Talladega, Labonte has come awfully close to victory.

I'll bet nobody has evo" lost four straight races at the same track by any closer margin that I have at Talladega," said the Corpus Christi, Texas, native. Its

RENT-TO-OWN

NO CREDITORS CHECKED!

really frustrating."

Labonte's string began in the stirring finish to the 1981 Talladega 500, when Ron Bouchard swept past both Darrel Waltrip and Labonte in the final 200 yards to win Labonte was third, three feet behind Bouchard, and one foot back of Waltrip,

In the 1982 Winston 500, it was Waltrip. Benny Parsons. Labonte and Kyle Petty in a last-lap shootout, which Waltrip won. Labonte was second by less than a car length

A mad, six-car scramble for the checkered flag in the 1982 Talladega 500, saw Labonte finish fifth, two car lengths behind Waltrip.

'1 figured third place was where I wanted to be on the white flag lap, but Cale (Yarborough) miscalculated the laps and thought it was the final lap, and made his move too soon. When he started around me, it broke the draft and 1 wasn't able to get into a challenging position on the final lap," Labonte said.

Labonte was one of the seven drivers in the lead draft at the end of the 1983 Winston 500, but was some 200 yards behind winner Richard Petty, finishing sixth.

" Talladega has been one of my favorite places to race, and we seem to have the 188 laps down pat. It has been frustrating not to win there yet, but as long as we are around at the end, well have a chance to come out ahead in one of those multi-car scrambles that have become so famous at Talladega," Labonte said.

SATURDAY

EVENING

7:00

7:30

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

O

iSpy I

Movie The Bullfighter And The Lady

Sing Out America

O

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Hee Haw

T J Hooker

Love Boat

ABC News Cioseup

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Love Boat

ABC News Cioseup

(D

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MASH

Movie Breakout

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Page Five

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Ditf Strokes i

1 1 Sliver Sp

Ouincy

\

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Knight Rider

1

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Movie: Same Time. Next Year

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Hee Haw

Walt Disney

Movie "Same Time. Next Year

0

Wrestling

T J, Hooker

Love Boat

1

ABC News Cioseup

0

Wrestling

Baseball Montreal Expos at Atlanta Braves

News

0

God's News

Rock Church

J Van Impe

Jim Bakker

j Kenneth Copeland

0

Movie

Nature Of Things

A Horseman Riding By

! The Avengers

SPN

Japan 120

Telelrance U S A

SHOW

Movie Papillon"

Movie: Summer Lovers

ESPN

SportsCenler

Billiards

CFL Football: Hamilton at Saskatchewan

H80

Movie

Movie "Hanky Panky "

1

Store s 1 Ith Anniversary

NICK

Sp Delivery

Special Delivery

Third Eye

Samson And Delilah

USA

Sports Probe

Sports Look

Ovation

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

6:000 The Monroes (DKungFu OOOONews

Q) The Blackwood Brothm Sneak Previews (SPN) Holland On Satellite ' (HBO) Movie " Clash Of The Titans (1981)

(NICK) Reggie Jacksons World

.    4)    Co-Ed

6:05 Wrestling

6:30 O Austin City Limits Encore ONews OO NBC News OCBSNews 0 Reflections In Search Of...

0 Breath Of Life 0 Movie The Poseidon Adventure (1972)

(SHO^ Movie "Papillon (1973) (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments

(USA) Yon: Magazine For Women

7:00OISpy O 0 Hee Haw O Carolina Saturday d) Threes Company O Dance Fever O Knight Rider OSoUdGold 0 Wrestling

0 Gods News Behind The News

(SPN) Japan 120 (ESPN)5portsCenter (NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Sports Probe

7:300 More Real People M*A*l*H O Americas Top Ten 0 Rock Church (NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Sports Look

7:350 Baseball

8:000 Movie "The Bullfighter And The Lady (1950) Robert Stack, Gilbert Roland. A Broadway producer decides to learn bullfighting in order to collect stage ideas. (2 hrs.) o O 0 TJ. Hooker Hookers investigation of a murder leads him to an unsolved case and a reunion with a beautiful former flame (Rebecca Holden). (R) ( (1 hr.)

(i) Movie Breakout (1975) Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland. A Texas bush pilot accepts a womans challenge to rescue her husband from a Mexican jail. (2 hrs.)

O O Diffrent Strokes Willis gets a different and disturbing insight into his part-time job at Mr. Drummonds corporation from an unemployed friend (Erik Moses). (R)n O0WaltDisiMy(R)(lhr.)

0 Nature Of Things (ESPN) BUliards Willie Mosconi vs. Jimmy Caras (R) (1 hr.)

(HBO) Movie Hanky Panky (1982) Gene Wilder, Gilda Radner. An innocent architect who was framed for a murder and a woman whose brother committed suicide under mysterious circumstances are thrown together in a dangerous game of intrigue, PG (1 hr., 45 min.) (USA) Ovation "Whicker s World Down Under / "Stalin and Russian History / "The Florida Everglades (2 hrs.)

8:300 O Silver Spoons An overbearing egotist (John Reilly) who was once involved with Kate crashes his plane on the Stratton estate. (R)

0 Jack Van Impe (NICK) The Third Eye " Into The Labyrinth There is one last chance to save Rothgo, (Part 7) 9:000 O 0 Love Boat The crew members are asked to decide the case of a landlady (Anne Meara) suing her tenant (Jerry Stiller), a professor (Sam Jaffe) learns that a former student (Bettye Ackerman) is taking over his job, and a magician (Dick Van Patten) interferes in his daughters new love affair. (R)n(lhr.)

O O Quincy A skeptical Quincy is teamed with a psychic investigator (Kim SUnley) to find a psychopathic strangler.

(R)(lhr.)

O 0 Movie Same Time, Next Year (1978) Alan Alda, Ellen Burstyn. Two people carry on an unusual extramarital affair by meeting at the same resort for one weekend each year over a period of several decades. (R) (Viewer Discretion Advised) (2 hrs., 30 min.)

0JimBakker 0 A Horseman Riding By (SPN) Teiefrance U5.A. " Cordon Bleu Cooking: Filet Of Sea Bass / " Film / " The Roads Of Exile / "In Performance: Le Cadi Dupe (3 hrs.)

(SHOW) Movie Summer Lovers (1982) Daryl Hannah, Peter Gallagher, Two American col

lege students spend a free-spir-itd summer on a Greek island "R(l hr , 40 min.)

(ESPN) CFL Football Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Saskatchewan Roughriders (3 hrs.)

(NICK) Samson And Delilah Jon Vickers and Shirley Verrett star in this Royal Opera House at Covent Garden production of Saint-Saens opera. (2 h(rs., 40 min.)    '

(Continued On Page 12)

^100,000

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X10.S

'r,

80

109

'.i

40

18.5

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Need Hie liwuiance now. when you can'l eflotd large piemluma?

H you have a lamlly...li you are a young proleatlonal . ll you have bualneia In-uiance needa. you ahould know aboul oui ECONOLIFE 20.

Thu It a policy that combine* the beat leatuie* ol permanent Inaurance with rate* low enough to compete with term Inaurance. Unlike term, however, the premium* level oH after 20 year*.

David L. Harrell 103 Oakmont Drive Greenville, N.C.

919-355

Georgia International Life

msunnq    u nfld

Just what you*ve been looking

fOTaaa

a printer

who will take the time and has the know how to help you get your printing done... right!

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211 W. 9th St. 752-5151





Saturday Evening Continued

(Continued From Page 11)

10:00 OSiiM Out America O e ABC News Ckeeup

Alias John Blake" The exploits of journalist Peter Watson, who assumed a false identity to go undercover in the art world and gather information about smuggled and stolen works, are documented. (1 hr.)

(ENewi OO Monitor QKemeth Copeland STheAvengers (HBO> The Comedy Stores 11th Antiversaiy The West Coast nightclub's anniversary is celebrated with performances by Richard Pryor, Robin Williams, Jimmy Walker and Sandra Bernhard, as well as op and coming young comedians, taped at several Comedy Store sites. --Aril hr.)

(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents 10:M() Page Five 10:SS(DNews

11:M O Rock Ctarch Proclaims OeOO0News

(SOddConple Sin Touch Twilight Zone (SHOW) Bizarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything youve ever seen.

(HBO) Not Necesurily The

News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric takeoff.

(USA) Night Flight Joe Cocker / Last Dance at The Dillo / REO Speedwagon (4 hrs.) 11:11000ABC News 11:300 Solid Gold OWres^

d) Movie Mysterious Island ^J1961) Join Greenwood, Michael * Craig. Five men escape from a Confederate prison and encounter strange creatures on an island in the South Seas. (2 hrs.) O O Saturday Night Live Host: Bruce Dem. Guest. Leon Redbone. (R)(l hr, 30 min.) OONews

0 Movie Flaming Star (1960) Elvis Presley, Barbara Eden. A 19th-century, part-Indian family is caught in the middle of an Indian uprising. (2 hrs., 15 min.) 0 Lowell Landstrom 0Two Ronnies (SHOW) Movie Beach Girls (1982) Debra Blee, Val Kline. A teen-age girls friends help her to loosen up so they can get on with having fun at the beach. R (1 hr., 30 min.)

(HBO) Movie Six Pack (1982) Kenny Rogers. Diane Lane. A race-car driver turns a sextet of juvenite car strippers into a winning pit crew. PG (1 hr., 45 min.)

11:380 AO In The Family

11:40 (NKX) (keat Paintngs Featured; Goyas The Naked Maja.

18400 Beyond The Horiiao: UB. / Juan Magazine OunnceFhver 0Movie

0 JimBakker (SPN) Looking East (ESPN) PGA GoH British C^ Third round (from The Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England). (2 hrs.)

12480 Night TTacka

12:380 Soul lyain O Movie The 3,000 Mile Chase (1977) Cliff DeYoung, Glenn Frnxl. (2 hrs.)

OSoIidGoU 0The Story

1:480 Movie The Million Eyes Of Su-Muni (1967) Frankie Avalon, George Nader. (2 hrs., 15 min.)

24eOAllInTheFamUy O Night Tracks (Confd)

0 JimBakker (SPN) Movie The Payoff!

(1942) Lee Tracy, Twn Brown. (1 hr., 30 min.)

1400 The Americu^

O Ebony / Jet Celebrity Showcase

O Christopher OoaeUp OPTLCM)(Spaaiah)

(SPN) Joe Burtoo Jazz 1.48 (SHOW) Movie Friday The 13th, Part II (1981) Amy Steel, John Furey. (1 hr., 27 min.)

140 (HBO) Movie Friday The 13th, Part III (1982) Dana Kim-mel, Paul Kratka. (1 hr., 35 min.)

1:30 0700 Club ( Movie Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde (1941) Spencer Tracy, Ingrid Bergman. (2 hrs.)

O Music Magazine ONews

2:3OO0News

248 (SHOW) Movie Lunch Wag-) on (1981) Candy Moore, Chudi McCau. (1 hr., 30 min.)

148 (HBO) Movie Puitentiaiy II (1982) Leon Isaac Kennedy, Ernie Hudson. (1 hr., 50 min.) 1400 Heritage Singers QRezHumhanl (ESPN) CFL Football Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Saskatchewan Roughriders(R)

(USA) Night Flight Joe Cocker/ Last Dance at The Dillo / REO Speedwagon (R)

3400a.Do

d) Movie ilie Big Country (1988) Gregory Peck, Charlton Heston.

OAObTheFamUy' OPhUArms (SPN) Movie Lady Thier (No Date) Feliz Alymer. (1 hr., 30 min.)

4400WesthrookHoqiital OOONews

O Night TTacks (Cantd)

O D. James Kcniiedy 448 (SHOW) Bizarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than uything youve e^_ seen.

4:800RoaiBagley (SHOW) Movie Guys And Dolls (1955) Frank Sinatra, Jeu Simmons. (2 hrs., 30 min.) 4:48(HBO) Howard Hu^ Tte Inside Story Home nmvies, still photos, letters, documents from previously secret files and film clips provide the subsUnce for this investigation of the life of the reclusive billionaire. (1 hr.)

Monday-Friday Daytime Cont

(Continued From Page 9) 4:35 0 The Addams Family 8:000 Chain ReactioD O d) H*ppy U*ys Again eO Beverly Hillbillies

O Peoples Court OTheJeffersons 0100 Huntley Street 0 Mister Ro^(R)

(SPN) Life Of Riky (Moo-Wed)

Barbara Carrera and Peter OToole are just two of the stars of the ABC miniseries Masada. The historic drama airs on four consecutive evenings beginning Tuesday, July 12.

(SUUSM rocrvf ikt nflit lo mikt UM-muwtt -fiimti i

Telephone Auction (Thu) Looking East (Fri)

(E^N) Sportswoman (Wed) Auto Racing (Thu)

(HBO) Movie (Wed) Odyssey Of The Pacific (1981)

(NICK) The Third Eye (Mon, Wed, FH) Against The Odds (Tue, Thu)

5:08 OGcmer Pyle 8:300 Lets Make A Deal O More Real People OGomerPyle (S Star Trek ONews OLie Detector O Andy Griffith O0 Peoples Court O Reading Rainbow (SPN) Public Defender (Mon-

(SeSw) Benji Takes A Dive At Mariiieland(Mon)

(SHOW) Movie (Tue) Guys And Dolls (1955XThu) Popeye (1980)

(ESr) Australian Rules Foot-ban (Moo) Vics Vacant Lot (Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Mon) Clash Of The Titans (1981)

(HBO) Dr. SeamTlw Cat In The Hat Cu) Fraggle Rock (Fri) (NKX)Livewire 8:380 Starcade (Moo) Baseball (Tue) Bewitched (Wed-Fri)Roberts Is Queen

Former Charlies Angel star, Tanya Roberts, will play the title role in Shewa, ()ueen of the Jungle. Production wiU be-gln in Mexico and then move to Kenya.12

days ofSALEJULY 11 thru JULY 23

WHY- Sale periods seem to us to be long drawn out, awkward periods for both the store customer and the store itself. No one ever seems to know when the sale is going on or where it ends. Service to the customer sometimes becomes a forgotten matter. The customer and the salespeople both get tired and disgusted.

WHO- YOU, the customer, are the one who will benefit because from DAY ONE of our sale you will get the lowest possible prices. We will only take markdowns once and prices will be as low on DAY ONE as on DAY TWELVE.

WHAT- Unbelievable bargains on 1st quality mens clothing all chosen from our regular stock. Our sales do not represent manufacturers mistakes or special manufacturer closeouts. On our sale you will only find our regular top quality merchandise offered at greatly reduced prices by our experienced sales staff.

''fOcarance will be (or cash only oi your credit

card. All akerations arc extra.    yurcreaK

STORE HOURS:

Domtown-8:30-5:30 Monday thru Saturday East Mall and Tarrytown Mall Monday, Thursday, Frlday-IOA.M. til 9 P.M.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday-10 A.M. til 6 P.M.MENS WEAR

Downtown Greenville Carolina East Mall Tarrytown Mall - Rocky Mount





I treat or snack.

*NMM

pkstes for parties and Ichen cleanup.OUR MOST POPULAR EVENT

We Honor...





WwPPW ^^QOOlIZof.

^^euumoft.

h    '-fe'^-

Otolce of Of D" olkcillne batteries. VA V.

DItpotoble Voeuuffl Cleoner

2-5 bogs per pkg.

Fit many different llioikes orKl models.

weaters. fine ,jiPw*wes.*hto stretch-^^itd.faciig. shrinking.

Hot '

Lightweight trash can of| wipe-ciean plastic; venlent 20-gaMoni

6" Or " Chrome Reflector lowl

saving round or % bowls. Fit rTK>st electric ranges.

Wstic "canvas. can| ba cut to size. Good for kg. projects. I0^xl3v^. flMFor

lOOiPOH Top Knee-high^

Nyton/spondex. Sandal tOot or reinforced toe. Mtoses'or queen 9-11.

2(1-12)





pKihtt. Save. For

*Nalt

32-o* leed tea mix. Summertime drink that pleatet.

Nalwl.

. Polyester/cotton tee In a variety of colors. loyt'SIZM 2 For IS

Choice of 8-02.* sliced, chunk or crushed. Save.

For camp-Are, baking, treats.

Long-lasting suds, yet gentle to hands. Save at K mart.'*

The Saving Place

OUR MOSTPOPULAR EVENUflyg;

Handy l-pleee

Plastic containers In I-. S 2-, 3-, and 4-quart ^ sixes; Nds. Many uses.

foam disposable^ Hold6.4-oz.hotor drink. Save nowli

or table setting.

Regular Or All-sheer Panty Hose    Chlnet Disposable Plates

Nylon panty hose with nude heel or sandal foot. Misses' S/M.MT/T.

Pkg. of 35, lO/i com- S i partment plates or ^ 50, BV plates.

Dark tanning lotion with sunscreen, or tanning oH. 8 oz.*

H.OI.

1-gol.

Great for summer picnics and sport outings. Choice of colors. Save.

Hand-washable stuffing for pillows and crafts. White.

Ntwt.

Pkg. Of 10 Tubular Hangers

Standard-size plastic hangers in a variety of colors. Save at Kmart.

18-oz.ray Of Cookies

Choice of chocolate chip, suaar gems, or frosted spice.

1641. Oz. Removes mldew stain instantly. No mess.

For bath and kitchen. Heavy-duty cleanser for heavy-duty stains.

Ntlwl.

Box of 200, 2-ply 9.25x8.28" sheets. Stock up and save.

Convenient package of 5 disposable razors at low, K mart price.

Easy-to-grip, clear alass mug holds Pkg. i9-fl.-oz. drink.

rlMil 1919li rlMIII91

Choice of 5x7" or 8x10 $ | frame. Full-strength ^ glass, acrylic border.

l-oi.* teented Bowl Deodoronf

Pleasantly scented, solid deodorant to EOi harw on toilet bowl.

lndoor/<

With 12 polypropylene, washable bristles. Durable, flexibie broom.

Umtt

ir Broom 4.S-oz.' Oreen OI

Whole or sliced mushrooms. Add a nice touch to your recipes.

Nt wt

Good for home and office, too. Launders iJar out of clothing.

Hm.

Special Awortnrwnt ,

tfereo Comlte Topdt in Wide Vorlely or AifMi And TNIet

Choose from rock, country western, show tunes and many, ft many more. Enjoy musical entertainment at low K mart ^ price. Similar songs and artists available In aN K mart stores.

, With 128, 8x10" pages; give children hours of color and game fun.

rely Pringed Bath Towels In i

lirsty cotton/polyester towels, in a voHSty of stripes and solid colors, wlH brighten up the bathroom. 22x42." 12x12 Mcrtching Wosheloth With Hemmed Idge.. 2 For $1

3 0-12)





ir glass 000/$O 1-C| relish tray, w jor

4(1-12)





SK^.plas- $i| tic decanter. I

5(1 12)





box with tray.

Sturdy tackl box

6(1-12)

pock $2

flashlights.

termlrwl battery.





;cdrd$a or letter troy. I

from e<lWgs, H88IBki6B^iO $4^ Knife-pleat vinyl lamp shade In 74**^ tt to fit your nnood. ^yle.iBiFor w.    empire, or 16" deep empire*.

1- 17" hardwood boucWIPfQmp with $A fabric-over-vinyl lamp shade. Save!    w

Ea.

i-pack Foccil*110/24 or 135/24 color    Timex    or    Sunbeam    electric    alarm    $|S    Mens    cl

pnht fMm, ISO lOO.'Stock up now. clock, or Westciox hand-wirKi model, w stopwat

mrithS4 A    Fertilizer stakes for trees and shrubs. $4

IV    K-Gro - Houtepkint Sticks, Pkg. of SO........3 rkgs. $2    I

'wall mirror.

10

16x20

Walnut-flnish $' wall album.

24x42 'cut $A n loop rug. w

Ity stool. 30.

utH>$i|i|

2-pock "Disc fHm. 30 exp.

deom^Dlanter ^5 vegetable dust.^2

rame hanger.

24x36" car-$0 pet remnant. wEa.

Reversible rug. Save.

2.3

18x30

Polypropyl- SJi ene mat.    

lear-skin-loqk rug of modacrylic/$2Q Bamboo waste-

polyacryllc. Polar, grizzly or panda.

'Ea. basket. Save!

and grass killer.

FI oz.

32-oz.HarKl Sprayer Bottle. Slj

144-oz. plastic 5 O watering can. w

rug$:$E varied ttyles. e#Ea.

45-pc. sewing needle kit, or travel O $ A B/W TV; AM/$^4 A sewing kit foron-the-spotrepairs. WFor FM radio. I Iw

Kitlerles not Included

Idhewim

Color'^ $04* Portable. I

Style and mfr movvofy

Color $Oi TV set. W*

'^'^'t'onary

f Paint A $4 books. 4Ci For I

(A8IO

Honey^ear$4 pop-up books. Ea. I

table of durable A    Electrlk^AA

4taFor m broom, mw

plastic in choice of colors.

Modular

stereo.

e* M ^ Cart for

124

Unassembled In Corton

luartz $Q Travel alarm sport watch. O dock. 21^x2^.

U Conyenierit-size Carousel *' mi- <290

crowave oven with five settings.

"Speed-curl curling Iron

2-speed, 1250-watt hair dryer, m

-pc. extension phone.

^32' sp(x>ls* of $A gQXKly plastic $ A thread on rqcKt^xA Ithad caddy, dm

*yt.petmm9naipm^ '    '

Playing A cards. 4la

Decks

Biock^orid-wrme with Instant picture and sour

style and mir. may voiy

Take wW) price

Light we lgWt$K stereo headset, w dIo/headset.

Botteriei not Included

. AFTIR

carafe, rebate

Rebate llmlled to mlr s sllpulalion

7x35mm binoculars.

Vinyl cassette carrying case.

Votive

candle.

iSBBSI

Blank VHS video cassette tape with$0 long-term performance reliability. W

*7

IICE

   AFTER

tier.    REBATE

Rebate llmlled lo mli s illpulatlon

Replacement $ A air filter. Save. ^

Pistol Power 1250'" dryer.





'PothloiiToiMOr Paiili.    \

Jxwely topt In wonderful ityfat of    \

'polyotter, blendti or classic pulk>n Yoer ^porits of polyester. Color choice. Choice

Wwes* Poshlen lios

Crossovers, padded, more. Edsy-core tab )2b4C

rtcs. 3:

Save

BMni or brief panHet of cotton or nytan. Mbses mes S-X

WllpeeSiiioelB, fOpeOrPcmlB Smoe&^ or topt of eaiy<aie ^ tabil^ w pqrm of knil polyeiter. Vdur

.$ Choice

4$

Hearty Submarine Sandwiches With Fixings On A Large Bun.

AvQOD'e Oniy in Slo^uo DMMCat-'Sien

8A(4&12)





Look for this 48-pg. Super Sale circular in your mail. If you didn't get one, come to Sears for your copy now. HURRY, SALE ENDS SAT., JULY 16

1

I

Sporty octivewear for men!

For sport or casual wear crew and V-neck pullovers and pull-on shorts. Popular colors with contrast striping. S-XL.    _

Reg. $6.99-57.99 ea.    2    for    10

Ask about Sears credit plans

SALE STARTS MONDAY, JULY 11

29

99

29

25-33% OFF

Cling-alon hosiery

Reg. $2.99

p9

44

99

All kids' winter outerwear on sale!

.    25%    OFF

Sears Best jackets

26

99

A Reg. $36.99 boys jacket, sizes 4-7

each

conventional pantyhose

Save on all styles from pantyhose to knee-highs and thi-tops.

B. Reg. $39.99 girls' jacket, sizes 7-16

99

Hurry over and save a bundle on all our outerwear for kids. Sears Best jackets for kids feature water-repellent outer shells, insulating interlinings and thick pile lining.

1/3 OFF

Crossover lace Bras

m

C.    $36.99 Girls'jacket, 4-6X................26,99

D.    $39.99 Boysjacket, 8-12...............29,99

E.    Reg. $39 99 Boys jacket,    8-16...........29,99

Reg $8

;29

5:

ea.

Natural cup B,C; Contour cup A,B,C,

26

99

26

99

lots more styles on sale!

F. Reg. $59 99 Girls coat sizes 7-14.......44.99

G. Reg. $34.99, Boys zip-otf sleeve jacket

S2....................................25.99

Big Boys jackets are not available for this sale.

United Features Syndicate, Inc

1/3 OFF

Very Impressive Panty

Briefs, hip-huggers or bikinis of Antron III nylon with cotton-lined crotch. 4,5,6,7 or S,M,L. $7.50 pkg. of 3 ... 4.99

Extra srze bnels pnced higher Sale ends July 23

Sport shoes for the family

i99

E Walt Disney Productions

pr.

Nylon and sueded split-leather uppers, rubber soles. Sizes for men, women, big boys and youths. Special purchase. Limited quantities.

Winnie-the-Pooh tan shoes are not available for this sale.

Snoopy and Winnie-the-Pooh shoes *3 off

Cotton duck uppers with toe guards, rubber soles. Machine washable. Sizes 5-12. Reg. $11.99 g99

Winner II Jr. shoe for kids *3 off

Nylon and sueded split-leather upper, rubber sole and toe guards.

Reg. $12.99    Q99

Special

purchase

Cotton denim jeans, terry tops

Zip up real value with our five-pocket navy denims in misses    IT    00

sizes. Quantities are limited.

Save 50% on our terry tops of polyester in many styles solids and stripes. In misses sizes.

Reg. $10 ea.........................4.99    ea.

In our Sportswear Departinenl

\

Ir I

SAVE *8 on poplin dresses

Polyester and cotton poplin Reg. $26 dresses some combined with T799 spun polyester. Many styles, col- I m each ors, details. Misses, petites sizes.

In our Dress Department

SAVE >3-*4 on Kids' Levi's fashions

Jeans: $18.99 teen sizes, 14.99; $20.99    $16.99    jeans,

girls', 7-14, 16.99; $13.99 girls', 4-6x, 10.99;    boys' 8-14

$12.99 boys', 4-7,9.99    12^^

Tops: $12.99 boys', 8-12,8.99; $13.99 feen sizes. 9.99; $11 99 girls, 7-14, 8.99; $12.99 girls', 4-7, 9.99; $10.99 boys'. 4-7, 7.99

Glowing 14K gold chains in herringbone, rope, cobra and serpentine link styles. In an assortment of weights and lengths. Choose yours today and save!

Jewelry enlarged to show detail Gold chains, rings, earrings are available in larger stores only.

Sears pricing policy; If an item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value.

Sale prices shown in this section are in effect through Saturday Delivery not included in selling prices of all items in this circular Sears has a credit plan to suit most any need.





CLOSEOUT 40% OFF

on our famous RoadHandler radials

AR78-13 whitewall and old tire, Reg. $94.99 ea

56

99

/ \

plus S1.90 Federal Excise Tax ea. tire

rtoadHanaier

?6 -adiai

May 3e    Regular

suOstitjtec    j    price ea

0'    I    w*iiiewali

Sale I plus F E T pnce each and pid tire

AR78-13

P165 80R13

94.99

56 99

1 90

BR78-13

P175 80R13

1 10199

61 IS

2 05

DR78-14

P185 75R14

1 14 99

68 99

1 97

ER78-14

P195 75R14

1

1 1999

1 99

215

FR78-14

i P205 75R14

124 99

74.99

2 27

GR78-14

' P215 75R14

129 99

77 99

2 32

HR78-14

I P225 75R14

13499

80 99

2 60

GR78-15

i P205 75R15

1

13499

80 99

2 46 /

HR78-15

1 P215 75R15

13999

83 99

2 67

JR78-15 1

P225 75R15

144 99

86 99

3 05

LR78-15

P235 75R15

151 99

91 19

323

Two steel belts for strength and long wear. Low rolling resistance helps save gas. Radial design adds quick handling. Quantities are limited.

B 30% OFF tough belted tires

99

Take advantage of great savings now on our SuperGuard 25. Features 2 fiber glass belts for good tire mileage and 2 polyester plies for a smooth, comfortable ride.

A78-13 blackwall

and old tire    __

Some Super-Guard 25 Tires W "V Plusesi 67 are available in larger stores only.

C Smooth riding bias-ply tires

A great low price on a tire with such a long wearout warranty. Polyester pijes offer smooth-riding comfort. Special purchase, quantities are limited.

34

*88

PI 55-80012 whitewaH plus $1.29 F.E.T. ea. and 4 old tires

21,000-mile 1 wearout warranty ,

wearout warranty

S..De'G..a'0

25

Wd, be 5.i6sMuiea lO'

Re:ju a-p-cfea D aOAd

Sa e C -e ea ba fea

eac- 3-1(1 ,0 iie

A^8-l3

j P165 80B13

4999

34 99

1 67

s;s-i3

= *'5 '5B13

- .

-

D"3-i4

Pi 85 75B14

63 99

44 '9

2 00

E'3-M

P195 75814

65 99

46 '9

2 08

F'S 4

P205 75B14

66 99

46 89 .

2 23

G'8-14

P215 75B14

69 99

48 99.

2 40

G'9-'5

_P20575B15

7499

52 49

2 44

hb.16

P215 75B15

76 99

53 89

2.66

Guarasmar 2i

i May be substituted lor

Sears price each whitewall

plus F E T each ana old tire

P15580D12

600-12

$22

1 29

P15580D13

'155-13

$25

1 4b

P1658OD13

A78-13

$28

1 50

P17580013

B78-13

$30

1 59

P185 80D13

C78-13

$32

1 70

P195 75014

0E78-14

$36

1 96

P205 75014 ^

' F78-14

$39

2 13,

P215 75D14 1

1

G78-14 j

$43

2 26

P22575014 j

H78-14

$45

2 46

P21575015

G78-15

$43

2 36

P22575015

H78-15

$45

2-53

P235 75015-

L78-15

$48

2 79

'Fede'ai EidSe Ta

Limited warranty against tire wearout.

For the specified miles, Sears will replace the tire or give a refund charging only for the miles used

Sears so

OMNmUn C XPLOSIVK

Am i Ai't f 4    .w*        V*    nt

CAUTION

ACIO-POISON

SAVE *25

on Sears 50 car battery

39

Installation

included

with

trade-in

Comes ready to start fast with a powerful 450 amps of cold cranking power. Groups 24,24F, 74. Also available in Groups 22F and 72. Regular $64.99.

other Sears car batteries start as low as 34 99 with trade-in

$10 OFF Marine/RV batteries

For motors with no charging system: trolling motors, outboard motors and RV applications.

Regular $75.99 to $85.99

65to75

99

with trade in

SAVE $50 on 8 X 10-ft. camping tent

Sleep up to 4 adults in this durable tent! Polyester and Regular $i 69.99

cotton roof and walls, polyethylene floor.

if Sleeps 6..............149.99

$199.99 9 X 11-ft. tent $219.99 10x13-ft. tent. Sleeps 8............169.99

119

stakes

included

SAVE $30 on 6 X 8-ft. tent

Polyester and cotton roof; polyester walls. 2 nylon Regular $109.99

screened windows with outside storm flaps.    70^^

$129.99 8 X 10-ft. tent........................ 109.99    /    T    stakes

$ 149.99 9 X 12-ft. tent................. ......129.99    included

SAVE 1/2 on

35 AAAA automatic SLR camera outfit

Auto camera with 50mm f2.0 lens, 135mm telephoto lens, auto flash, strap and gadget bag..

'Camera was $186.99 in 83 Spring Catalog.

Rag sap phcm of accastohM total $130.96 in Sears retail stores While quantities last

Reg. sep. prices total $:m.95*

164

95

Sears professional-quality floor jack

iy2-ton. For the do-it-yourself mechanic. Heavy-duty all-steel chassis for stability. Ball-bearing swivel rear casters for positioning under car.

Was $199.99

99 ,

WhHg^uantities^^

Heavy-duty shocks

Fit most American-made cars, many imports Reg. $11.99

Installed

Q88

^ man

X-Cargo carrier

Adds 15 cu. ft. of luggage space on car-top. Fits most cars.

Reg. $79 99    69

Speed control available in larger stores only.

INSTALLED

Speed control

Autocruise". Maintains steady speed.

Reg. $179.99

H 1 099

Limitad warranty on muffler for as long as you own the car. including labor, if mufflaf bought installed.

Muzzier muffler

Fits most American-made cars. Alumi-nized for long life.

Installation        A99

extra    I    y

Muzzier Muffler ^vailable in larger stores oi^

>AVE 60on 10-speed racing bike

Ultra lightweight bike has strong lugged Regular $239 99 manganese steel frame. Shimano | 7A99 Tourney brakes. Partially assembled. 1/7

SAVE M 50

Atari computer

Reg. price $549.99

Sale price $499.99 Mail-in rebate $100 Your cost

39999

Computer and phone are available in larger stores only.

SAVE *20

ColecoVision game

Comes ^with Donkey Kong game. Fun for the entire family.

159

Reg $179.99





1

SAVE *10-30

on Craftsman lawn

care equipment

$79.99 Edger-trimmer.

^-HP motor 59.99

$239.99 Weedwacker*. Gas trimmer... 199.99 $69.99 Weedwacker*

trimmer  .......49.99

$69.99 Bushwacker* Hedge trimmer.. 59.99 $79.99 Power blower. 1.0-HP. 2-speeds, 59.99

More lawn care buys!

Not shown:

1/5-HP Weedwacker 19.88

Gas Weedwacker

Reg $129 99    119.88

*40 OFF Vac

Craftsman. 16-gal.

size tank. For wet or dry pick up.

Reg. $139.99 99

$15 OFF on a grill

o Grill with versatile grid $ that tilts to vary cook- ing temperatures.

Reg $59.99    4488

Gnf requifss some assembly

14314

$80 OFF Bugwacker"*

50-watt electronic insect killer lures up to 125 ft Reg $179.99

99

69571

Garden hose

Va-in.xSO-ft. Rubber woven around vinyl inner tube. Craftsman. Reg. $24.99    15

6647

Garage door opener

SAVE $70. Va-HP; over 500 digital codes. 4/j-min. light delay.

Reg. $209.99 ,1?9

Sale ends July!

on 11 Vi-ga. chain link fence fabric when you buy fittings, posts and top rail at reg. price. Sale ends July 23

1*HP air compressor

$200 off Craftsman compressor. 7.0 SCFM at 40 PSI/100PSI max

Reg. 599.99 399S

1/2 OFF Routar

Craftsman. 1-HP. Has no-load speed of 25,000 rpm.

Reg. $89.99

4499

1542

*6 OFF sprayer

2-gal. capacity. Galvanized steel tank. Easy-fill top. Reg. $24.99

18

Pull 6-yMT warranty agalnat cracking or breaking

6307

32*gal. trash can

Special purchase! Per-manex* can with full 6-

KOTI.T'

Sale ends July 23 V

35713

*40 OFF chain saw

2.3 CID gas engine. 14-in. bar. Solid-state ignition.

Reg. $229.99 18999

Sale ends July 23

10% OFF

Continuous guttering

Fabricated on the spot. We'll go to any length for you.

YOUR

CHOICE

SAVE

F39.47

on Craftsman portable power tools

59

99

each

7V4-ln. circular saw. 2-HP. No-load speed of 5400 rpm. With combination and car'bide-tip-ped blades. Versatile. $99.98*

Varlable-speed scrolling saw. V2-HP With blades. Blade will pivot up to 360' in any direction. Edge guide. $107.35*

3-in. belt sander and case. 1-HP. Develops ;load speed of 1300 ft. per minute. 3x4.7-in.

ding surface. $io5.98*

O-

23201-4

32337

$2.49, 3x21-in. sanding    S25.47*..Pack of three

belt. Choice of F.M.C or    74-inch circular saw

XC............ea. 1.49    blades    14.99

Reg sep pnces total

100 to500

on rugged Craftsman riding equipment

10-HP electric-start lawn tractor. Iso-Vib engine mounts. Transmission features 3 forward speeds plus reverse. 36-in. twin-blade floating mower deck. Reg. $1099.99

16-HP electric-start garden tractor. Twin-cylinder engine. Transaxle with Vari-Drive* system; 3 forward speed ranges plus reverse. Spring-assist master lift Reg. $2399.99

Rbgistersd trademark ol Emerson Electric Co

999 1899

SAVE ^80on Craftsman

4.0-RP Eager-l* 20-in. mower

Mechanical compression release for easy starting. Automotive-typie air filter. E-Z oil fill 'n drain with dipstick. With Permanex* rear bag catcher.

$39999, 22 in propelled bagger    329    99

Reg $329 99

249

99

15525

Airless sprayer

Hurry for this special purchase! Sprays latex, oil-base paints, stains and varnishes.

While quantities last

7999

Spray gun, available in larger stores only.

1/2 OFF exterior latex

Economical 1-coat house paint helps you protect all exterior surfaces. In 5 colors.

Flat finish, reg. $11.99

5

^gaHon

SAVE *6-*7

Sears quality 1-coat paints for Great American homes like yours!

Weotherbeater latex

Our fine quality exterior paint available in 46 colors. Outstanding durability.

Satin finish, reg, $19,99

12

99

gallon

Easy Living latex

Our best interior paint in 23 washable, colorfast colors. Excellent hiding.

Matte flat or ceiling white, reg. $15.99

$17,99, Eggshell enamel

9

99

gallon gal 11.99

For one-coat results, all Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed

79005

93955MM

M





4-

SAVE *141

17.0 CU. ft. refrigerator-freezer with Spacemaster^ interior

SAVE *100

21.0 cu. ft. refrigerator-freezer with automatic ice maker

Regular $699.99 While quantities last

i

558

Sold for $799.95 in '83 Spring General catalog

699

99

white

All-frostless 12.24 cu. ft. fresh food section with adjustable Spacemaster^ interior. 4.75 cu. ft. freezer. Porcelain-on-steel liner, textured steel doors help hide fingerprints, on rollers to move when cleaning. Power Miser switch helps save energy. White.

Refrigerator in selected colors.......................$568

Icemaker for this refrigerator available, priced extra

All-frostless ... no messy defrosting ever. 15.0 cu. ft. fresh food section with twin crispers and meat pan for special storage needs. 6.0 cu. ft. freezer with interior shelf. Textured steel doors and Power Miser switch helps save energy. Ice maker hook-up extra. While quantities last!

43901

19.0 su. ft. capacity

Frostless. 12.20 cu. ft. refrigerator, 6.80 cu. ft. freezer section.

White only 599

VReg. $749.99

I

18.0 cu. ft. capac^y

13.90 cu. ft. refrigerator, 4.10 cu. ft. freezer.

Reg. Sep.    White only

prices total    C O 099

S699.99    Dot

Ice maker hook-up extra

SPECIAL

PURCHASE

22.2 cu. ft. side-by-side with Spacemaster interior

While quantifies last

799?

White

All-frostless. 14,73 cu. ft, fresh food section, 7.50 cu. ft, freezer Porcelain-on-steel liner. Rollers.

A special purchase/though not reduced is an exceptional value

43241

SAVE 60-90l

upright or chest freezer adds shopping convenience

13.1 cu. ft. upright with thinwall foam insulation and adjustable cold control.

99

Almond

Reg. $429.99 Sale ends July 30

12.0 CU. ft. chest has DynaWhite epoxycoated lighted interior. Key-eject lock.

99

Reg. $429.99 Sale ends July 30

369:

DynaWhite epi Cey-eject lock.

339:

Almond

Sears nationwide service dependable, prompt, courteous

22138/12128

of these advertised items isTeadily available for sale as advertised.

Stretch fooo dollars. Take advantage of specials.





Black/white TV with 5-in. diag. meas, picture. Batteries extra.

WNe

quantities

last

Super Chromix* black matrix picture tube Solid state electronic tuner is accurate

59999

Special purchase console color TV

Big, 25-in. diag. meas, picture. Precision quartz electronic tuning. Feature-packed infrared remote control. Shielded cable TV connector, sharpness control. While quantities last.with remote control.

Big, 19-in. diag. meas, picture! Electronic tuner. Full one-year in-home warranty service against defects on parts and labor. Of the 5 best-selling TV brands, only Sears has it!

Sale ends July 23

One-button color adjusts AFC, color, tint, brightness, contrast.

4205

Sars VCR s designed to pand opportunities for your personal in-horrte TV viewing and not for any usage wtiich migni violate the copyright laws

*220 OFF

Closeout on Sears video recorders

47999

A. 3-day Beta VCR, was $699.99

B. 1 -day VMS VCR, was $699.99

SAVE

91947

SAVE

M20

Cook a whole meal

J

Compact

stereo

systems

Choose system with cassette and 8-track or with two cassette decks.

in this microwave

Regular $399.99

179

91885

Reg. $299.99

99

each

Sale ends July 30

91886

Cook foods fast on days when you're in a hurry. Reheat leftovers, too! Large-capacity, 1.4 cu. ft. oven. Removable oven tray cleans easily. Oven light. Menu guide.

Sale ends July 30

88641

COOK

CONTROL

*200 OFF stereo

AM/FM stereo, cassette deck, record player. 2 speakers.

OOQ99

Reg. $109.99 ZtT \Sale ends JuIjfOO

$20 OFF stereo Stereo cassette recorder. Headphones. Batteries extra.

CQ99

Reg. $79.99 J 7 Sale ends July 30

Whole-meal cooking, cooks up to 3 foods at same time.*

'In accordance with instructions

Variable power, 90 to 625 watts for a range of cooking needs.

Use convenient electronic touch controls to activate settings.

Sensing probe helps your foods cook to preset temperature.

32601

$30 OFF upright vac

Powerful suction, beater bar brush, edge cleaning, 4 heights.

Reg. $109.99 79 sale ends July 30

Carpet cleaner

Steam-type carpet cleaner tor professional-looking results.

12999

13402

SAVE *70

2.0 peak HP Power-AAate" vac

SAVE

6-stitch free-arm sew head ^80

4 utility and 2 stretch stitches Reg $239.99 plus a built-in buttonholer.

Easily converts to a flatbed. IJ

Power out deep down dirt with strong 2.0 peak HP suction (.70 HP VCMA) and beater bar brush. Active brush-to-wall edge cleaning gets those tough-to-clean areas along walls and in corners. 3 heights.

Reg. $229.99

|99

Sale ends July 30

SAVE 100

Kenmore gas grill with dual controls

Match-free ignition, just push the button and the burner ignites. 373 sq. in. cooking area, plus 87 sq. in. warming rack tor rolls and vegetables. Redwood side shelf. Dual controls for separate flame settings.

Reg $299 99 Unassembled

199

99

Sale ends July 30Each of these advertised items is readily available for sale as advertised.





Special Purchase touch>on lamps

199

49;

Brass-plated or ceramic table lamps in marbleized or solid color jug styles.

While quantities last

Lamps available in larger stores only.

Touch

any

metal

partfof

instant

light

SPECIAL

PURCHASE

Carpet with fine quality features found in our

Carpet and decorator rugs *14.99 sq. yd. not available in Concord,    ai:.*..

Danville, Goldsboro,    MiSty    GlOW

Greenville, Rock Hill. Special    "799

# sq. yd.

Misty

.Glow

Sculptured Premium soil-resistant nylon plush pile. In 7 vibrant multicolors; our regular line Misty Glow comes in 10 colors.

Available while quantities last

A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value Cushion and installation extra

1/2 OFF Imported decorator rugs

Jacquard-woven Marra-sheen.

$119.99 4x6-ft rug 59.99

S239.99 6x9-tt rug ... 119.99 $399.99 9x12-ft. rug 199.99

$400 OFF 5*pc. dining room suite

Country style dining room with Reg. $899.99 oval table and one 12-in. leaf. 4 49988

side chairs

$649 99 Sofa $599.99 Sofa 449.88    399.88

$200 OFF 84-in. living room sofa

Country style sofa with wood trim. Reg. $599.99 Floral print nylon cover.    39988

$549.99 Loveseat...........349.88

SAVE

50-^300

on bedding in your choice of firm support

Twin mattress or box spring. Reg. $119.99

Gently firm Deluxe bedding available in a choice of polyurethane foam or innerspring.

$179.99 Full mattress or box spring .....119.88

$449.99 Queen size bedding set..............349,88

$549.99 King size bedding set................399.88

Firm Luxury bedding

$219.99 Full mattress or box spring 149.88

$499.99 Queen size set  .......399.88

$599.99 King size set.............449.88

188

Twin mattress or box spring Reg $159 99

Ultra firm Perfect Dreams

$299.99 Full mattress or box spring 169.88

$699.99 Queen size set...........499.88

$899.99 King size set.............599.88

11Q88

Twin mal

I I M orboxsf

mattress spnng Reg $229 99

Bedding not available in Concord, Greenville. High Point and Rock Hill.

r', , '4    ,

Hurry in now for fabulous savings on sheets, comforters, towels and more. Check our Super Sale mailer for details!

>7

SALE!

Twin size canopy bed and selected matching pieces

Your choice Reg.$199.99-$239.99

169

88

Choose from Homestead twin canopy bed with rails and frame, vanity desk, large hutch, student desk, or single dresser.

Storage chest,

reg. SI 99.99.....149.88

Mirror, chair (not shown), nightstand on sale $299.99 Twin size storage bed..............199.88

Ask about Sears credit plans

SAVE 30%

on ready-made draperies

Chico open-weave draperies

18

89

Regular $26.99

Handsome pinch-pleated draperies in a rainbow of colors. Unlined for an open, airy look. 48x84 in., pair. Others also on sale:

$29.99 Sherbet textured, 50x84., in., pr, 19.99 $29.99 Rhapsody jacquard. 50x84 in., pr., 19.99

Available in made-lo-length sizes, up to 108 in long $6.99 Spindrift semi-sheer panels of soft polyester batiste. 40x81 in., each

............ ....now 5.49

Sears Best Heavy Duty Rod, 30-50 in., center draw ...............15.99

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back

NC:

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.

SHOP YOUR NEAREST SEARS RETAIL STORE

Burlington, Charlotte, Concord, Durham, Fayetteville, Gastonia, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Greenville Hickory, High Point, Jacksonville, Raleigh, Rocky Mount, Wilmington, Winston-Salem Columbia, Florence, Myrtle Beach, Rock Hill Danville, Lynchburg, Roanoke    KY:    Ashland

Barboursville, Beckley, Bluefleld, Charleston

W.





Cool Meal...Great Deal!

,//2'o^i

,fe-

V, V*- '





i

lieat \&ursdf to a Cod Meal...and a Gieat Deal!

Tempting Rib Eye Dinner

With Free Freshtastiks Food Bar

2 for $6.99

Coupon expires

8/14/83

Coupon good

All day 7 days a week

Offer includes entree, choice of potato or vegetable, piping hot bread, and all you can eat from our FRESHTASTIKS FOOD BAR. Good for all members of a party at participating Bonanza Restaurants.

\AUJVBLE COUPON

Tempting Rib Eye Dinner

With Free Freshtastiks Food Bar

2 for $6.99

Coupon expires

8/14/83

Coupon good

All day 7 days a week

Offer irvludes entree, choice of potato or vegetable, piping hot bread, and all you can eat from our FRESHTASTIKS FOOD BAR. Good for all members of a party at panicipating Bonanza Restaurants.

WUBBLE COUPON

Bountiful

Freshtastiks Food Bar With Diet Pepsi

Bountiful

Freshtastiks Food Bar

With Diet Pepsi

1 for $2.49

Coupon expires

8/14/83

Coupon good

1 for $2.49

Coupon expires

8/14/83

Coupon good

All day 7 days a week

All day 7 days a week

Offer includes a Diet Pepsi plus a lot more than just a salad bar! Its a giant array of garden fresh fruits and vegetables. . . fresh breads. . . hot soup. . . even desserts. Coupon good for all members of a party at participating Bonanza Restaurants.

\iVULl\BLE COUPON

Offer includes a Diet Pepsi plus a lot more than just a salad bar! Its a giant array of garden fresh fruits and vegetables. . . fresh breads. . . hot soup. . . even desserts. Coupon good for all members of a party at participating Bonanza Restaurants.

\AUMLE COUPON

Delicious Chopped Steak Dinner

With Pepsi &. Free Freshtastiks Food Bar

Savory

Steak & All-You-Can-Eat Shrimp Dinner With Free Freshtastiks Food Bar

2 for $5.99

Coupon expires

8/14/83

Coupon good

1 for $6.99

Coupon expires

8/14/83

Coupon good

All day 7 days a week

All day 7 days a week

Offer includes entree, choice of potato or vegetable, piping hot bread, all you can eat from our FRESHTASTIKS FOOD BAR, and Pepsi. Good for all members of a party at participating Bonanza Restaurants.

WJL1\BLE COUPON

Offer includes entree, choice of potato or vegetable, piping hot bread, and all you can eat from our FRESHTASTIKS FOOD BAR. Good for all members of a party at participating Bonanza Restaurants.

VUJLABLE COUPON

Head for Bonanza mstead.

GOOD ONLY AT PARTOPAUNG BONANZA RESTAURANTS.

GREENVILLE, NC STATESVILLE, NC

S20 W. GreenvUk Blvd.    621    Sullivan    Road

GOLDSBORO, NC N. WILKESBORO, NC

2714 Cashwell Drive 421 W. Paric Shoi^Mi^ Center

A'6067'P Advertising tupplemtt to Greenville Reflector and Shopping Guide. Wilkesboro Thursday Magaziiw, Statesville Record Landmark,

and GdtUxxo News Argus and Scope.





THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GREB^VOL^ N.C

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4 J^Jk (i'''^-Y    ,iJ^

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someone who seb kwewone peisonbut it's 'r^ .hmternowf# '

S*rr*

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<4.





: E

SMFTH FLLXING HU \^1.NS

Jadyn Smith has long wanted to break into feature films, but. her success in TV nK)vies and miniseries threatens to keep her on the small screen a while longer. NBC was desperate to get Smith for a four-hour sequel to last season's smash Rage of Angels to run during the

SINATRA SEND IN THE V^.ARTS

February 1984 ratings sweeps. But she wanted close to $1 million, and NBC wasnt that desperate. So now for a lot less money (something around $300,000). but with a lot more enthusiasm, Smith will do a four-hour miniseries

of Ernest Hemingways A Farewell to Arms. No network is yet signed, and the series could be syndicated instead. Smith. 34, will be in heady company playing Nurse Cathe rine Barkley, the role played on saeen by Helen Hayes in 1932 and Jennifer Jones in 1957. Tm ready to try my wings on a quality piece of acting/ says the former Charlies Angel. I want to put as much perfection into it as I can.

Associates of Frank Sinaia have been quietly hawking what could be a multimillion dollar property: the entertainers autobi^aphy. However, the associates have also been hinting that the proposed autobiography might not be a tell-ali work but more likely a collection of the 67-year-old Sinatras "philosophical thoughts. And that idea is not exciting much interest among American publishers. As one publishing source noted, We wouldn't pay a hell of a lot for Mr. Sinatras philosophical musings; who cares what his philosophy is? But if he wants to produce a real autobiography, warts and all, bidding for such a work would go through the roof.

Unless lawyers can work out a settlement, one of the most sensational trials in U5. history will take place sometime later this year in a Los Angeles courtroom. At issue is a feud among the heirs to the estimated $100 billion fortune of oil magnate J. Paid Getty, who died seven years ago. Lawyers are desperately hoping to avoid an open court battle, which would reveal an intricate web of family backbiting, sordid relationships and double dealing. The story is so nasty, says one lawyer familiar with the case, it makes the Ewings of Dallas look like Sunday school teachers.(i

Vbu would think after 30 years together Pm Skaoa and Art Gartasel would have no secrets. Previous accounts have them meeting in sixth grade. But Garfunkel says now, "After all these years. Paul finally to|d me, 1

i*;- '

actually knew you in the fourth grade. I kept tabs on you. I knew you were the singer and I would sing with you someday. The duo is now preparing for their first U.S. tour since 1971 and first studio album since 1970s Bridge Over Troubled Wafers Says Garfunkel, 41, Tve realized that in the end. life comes down to perhaps 20 special moments. Its important to me now to know that

the people are out there, and that maybe we provided one of those mornents for a lot of them.

#

David Bowie, with a movie (The Hunger), a top album (Let 's Dance), a $17 million recording deal and his first [}S. tour in five years, has never been hotter or happier. Part of the reason, he now admits, is kicking a longstanding cocaine habit. 1 was the speed king of LA.." Bowie. 36. says. "I loved everythinf th^ got me speedy. Suddenly realized that there were long periods of time I couldnt remember. It took me three years to get myself cleaned up. " Rumors to the contrary, -however, heroin was never part of his trip: There has never been any connection be tween myself and that drug, he says.

#

Steven Spielberg is doing 904 sit-ups a day and Hanrtoon Ford is

bench-pressing 350 pounds, up from 80 just months a^. They, along with TeriGarr. Margot Kidder and Ja Lee Curtia, are getting physical, thanks to Jake Steinfeid 25. the newest ' trainer to the stars. They're all mentally keen, says Steinfeid, and want to have that same e^ physically. Steinfeid supervises his routines in half-hour housecalls and gives the clients workouts to do in their hotel rooms when traveling. Perhaps to say thank you. Spielbei^ gave him a part in his Raiders sequel. Indiana Jones.

r

%

Senator Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) insists hes not running for President. But for some reason hes substantially stepping up his "work-

3i>!E CDKE *A5 IT

ing dinners at his McLean, Va., home. Each dinner focuses on one topic with e.v perts invited from such fields as arms control, education and women's issues Guests have ranged from James Woolsey, former undersecre tary of the Navy, to Chr\sler president Lee lacocca. Kennedy spokeswoman Melody Miller says the Senator wants to play a powerful role in the Convention and is preparing to be creative with his issues. Please remember, Miller adds, the Senator is not abdicating politics."

1

-^By Robert Windeler. Ernest Voikman, Eliot Kaplan. Kathleen Maxa and Jane Otten-berg.

ALNNED> CONVLVTIONAL POLTTTG

Cover illustration by Bob Alcorn; inset photo by Penelope Breese/Gamma-Liaison.

1983 FAMILY WEEKLY. All rights reserved





Here comes

BRIGHT

The taste that outshines menthol.

It not only tastes fresher while you smoke It even leaves you with a clean, fresh taste.

7 mg. "tar", 0.5 mg: nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.

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My.-

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wHwism

DON'T UWBSnW

By John Travolta

Ive always been crazy about women, ever since I was a little kid. In my family women were special my mother. Helen, and my sisters, Ellen, Margaret and Annie, gave me lots of affection. Even as I got older and most boys started to go through a sta where they thou^t girls were yukky, 1 thought they were terrific.

That doesnt mean I always understood theni, though. When I was about 12 I had a crush on this girl who liked another boy. One day, all of a sudden, she decided to be my ^rlfriend and I was thrilled, but within a few weeks shed gone back to him. I think shed only had a passing fancy for me because 1 was a flashy dwcer and had a new navy suit.

I finally got a steady girlfriend when I was about 14, and that relationship had the usual complications and confusions that teen romances have. Her family was better off financially than mine, and I wanted to try to impress her. That first summer we were together my family bou^t a new liner for this stand-up swimming pool that we had, plus a new refrigerator though it wasnt actually new. We always got secondhand models, but this was the first one we had that was squared off and modem looking, rather than one of the old-fashioned rounded kinds. Well, I had brought this girl over to my house one day, and I nonchalantly looked around and said, "Gee. my father has sure spent a lot of money lately, new pool liner, new refrigerator. To try to further impress her. a few weeks later when 1 was over at her house for a barbecue chicken, hot dogs, hamburgers I announced, At our house we

eat steak every night of the week (whidi was sort of true, because my feuher always felt food came first and he had a pas^n for steak). I didnt know that it didnt matter to her.

With Margaux Heminguxiy: Tm as vulnerable as the unman is.

The funny thing is that love and romance have seerned in some ways to ^ more complicated and confusing as fve gotten older. When youre a teenager a love rdationship is so special and idealistic, but when you get into your 20s you start discovering that there are lots of people in the world and you have lots of options: career options, romantic options. Vbu get involved in a certain life style, and it can be difficult to get into the swing of a committed, one^o-one rdationship. I think I actually found steady relationships easier when I was younger, im still a searcher, someone who seeks love with one person but its harder now.

Some of the confusion has to do with the times. I think the womens movement has been very important, but 1 havent liked the defensiveness on the part of some women thats come along with it. Its not that I think such feelings

4 FA-MILY WEEKLV JULY lO I9S3





are inappropriate, but Ive observed that sometimes there is a defiance that seems to be applied as opposed to real. I wish those women could assert them-selv without giving up all the great qualities that are so individual to a woman.

I'also think that we shouldn't put so many rules on what each person in a relationship should do for the other and instead just go by the individual cases. If the man cooks better than the woman, maybe he should do the cooking. and if she doesnt mind doing the laundry and he hates it, maybe she shduld do that. But at the same time, if th^ want a more traditional relationship thats O.K., too. I just dont think we should say it should be this way or that way. It has to reflect what each individual has to offer and how it can all be balanced..

I think that things would be a lot less confusing if two people in a relationship were open with each other about what they wanted. I think many women want their men to be not just their lovers but their friends as well, and to be devoted to them in a way that is more than just bringing home a paycheck. They want in men some of the qualities they find in their girl-

Idling with sometime lover-sometime friend Marilu flaxi} Henner.

friends the ability to be affectionate, supportive and a good listener

I suppose thats really what a man wants from a woman, but its easier expected from a woman and easier gotten from her. too. Its hard for men to be that way, even with other men. We sometimes suppress our emotions: we often think its appropriate to be affectionate in bed with a woman but not anyplace else.

Women have an ability to speak out and be heard. Theyre more verbal. And sometimes it becomes a case of the squeaky wheel getting the grease. Because ev^n though women can be very tolerant and patient, its sometimes hard for a man to express his real feelings. With so many men I sense that below the surface there's a much more loving, caring person than

there appears to be. I think women have to really help men express themselves, uncover these emotions, let them be different.

I know, for instance, that in some relationships Ive had with women there have been parts of me I wish I could have revealed but couldnt. One is a certain childlike quality, a need to be really toasty and totally affectionate in a' way that might not seem at all macho. I

can experience being them? One thing I liked about Tootsie and Victor/Victoria is that they showed what kind of discovery there is in living like someone of the opposite sex. Its like back massages. You cant give a good one unless youve had a back mas^ and know whats pleasing. Even with making love, you have to know what a woman likes and what feels good for her. So its important to discover, to find

With Grease co-star Sewton-John and (right) kite mother Helen: 7 hand steady rdatkmships easier when I was younger."

suspect many men wish they could express certain needs to a woman, like Im lonely or, Qve me a hug" or, Please hold me" but theyre afraid women only want to see the macho part. Because of this a man sometimes becomes father and only father, and I think thats bad, just as its bad for a woman to be mother and only mother. Sometimes she needs to be father, just as sometimes the man needs to be mother.

After all, how can you really know what the other sex wants unless you

3 s: -WHAT WOMEN THINK THEY KNOW ABOUT JOHN

Ann 'IWivolta, Bister John totally adores and respects women. I think the independence and assertiveness that he saw in our mother and in us, his sisters, helped to give him the respect and admiration that he has for women today. (Mlvia Newton-John, otvstar, Greaae and Second Chance. He is very supportive as an actor and as a friend. He has a wild sense of humor so working with him is great fun."

Marilu Henner, longtime friend: Ive watched hirp grow from a sensitive, sweet, caring, young boy to a strong, sexy, just as sensitive, just as caring, intelligent and special man. He truly loves women: he zeroes in on their uniqueness. Nancy Allen, co-star. Blow Out. Besides being a lot of fun, he is warm, generous, kind, funny, loving, cuddly and very smart and there are a million and one more adjectives to describe him.

"He really likes women: you can feel safe with him. You cannot work with him or spend a lot of time with him without falling in love with him."

Cynthia Rhods, co-star. Staying Alive "Hes aware of people's feelings. And of course hes gorgeous. If a woman likes someone who has a great body, is good looking, caring and sensitive, then shell like John

Margaret Travolta, sister He regards women as people, not sex objects. Hes going to make a terrific husband and terrific father. He's great with my kids

out about what each of you needs. Its the only way that there can be pleasure and honesty and understanding.

I know that some women have perceived me as the macho guy in control, but thats not really the case. Im as vulnerable in a relationship as the woman is. I want to meet someone halfway: Im not there to control things but to experience what there is to experience.

Of course when it comes to expressing needs in a relationship its going to make a world of difference if both of you can talk easily about such things. The problem comes when one person in a relationship is able to communicate well but the other isnt or neither one of you can. If thats the case, then you have to find ways to make it safe for each other to communicate. You cant be critical of their truth, or judgmental if you really want them to be honest with their feelings. You have to give them the space to express themselves. In certain cases you may have to ask that person what there is about you that inhibits communicating with you. Is there a fear youll think less of him or her? You have to make it as safe as possible.

What turns up when you can communicate with each other can surprise you. If you discover that you have standards and prerequisites that are different than those of the person youre involved with, it may predict problems. But if you can free yourself and experience what that other person is, you may find that the joys of that person far outweigh the negatives. Sometimes you need to remove yourself from what you think are your priorities and look at what is.

When you communicate in a relationship, you also discover things about yourself. One of the biggest things I learned from a woman I loved was that when a problem occurs in life you simply have to deal with it. At one point there was some conflict that had come up with her, and I asked, What if that happened to me?" and she said, Youd simply have to handle it." My tendency had always been to avoid proWems. The solution suddenly seemed so simple.

When it comes to women, I certainly dont have all the answers for myself, but Im trying. Im working on it. Im asking a lot of questions of women, like, "How do you feel when you do this? What do you do when that happens to you?" And Im also actively trying to make it understood what a man goes through, because I dont think a woman always knows.

And I guess I should confess that, basically, 1 react well to women who are crazy about me. RV

John Travolta's new him. Slaying Alive, directed by Sylvester Stallone, opens nationally this week He is currently reteaming with Oliiia Sewton-John in his eighth film, a romantic comedy teniatneh titled Second Chance

Familvweekiv. JILY 111. 19W 5





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DO COSMETICS COLOR HRST IMPRESSIONS?By John E. Gibson

TRUE OR FALSE?

1. Full lips produce happier-looking faces.

2. The shape of your face has little to do with your personality.

3. Makeup tends to cover up an in-dividuals personality while highlighting facial features.

4. Many people can feel someone staring at them from behind their backs.

5. Your eyes offer a great deal of insight into your emotions.

6. A miserable smile means that you dont care to do anything about your misery.

ANSWERS

1. True. According to a Syracuse University study, people with full lips are considered to have happier-looking faces. Thin4ipped people are considered less happy looking.

2. False. A team of behavioral scientists at Britains University of Sussex studied the relationship between facial structure and personality characteristics and concluded that people \vith long, angular faces are more responsive, assertive and outspoken than individuals with short, square faces, who are more restrained, conforming and shrewd.

3. False. Dr. Leopold Beliak, professor of psychiatry at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, stated in his monograph, Reading Faces, that a womans makeup doesnt hide her character and personality. However, the theatrical makeup used in modeling and entertainment professions to cover flaws and mask details can even hide a persons personality and interfere with an accurate diagnosis of his character.

4. True. Seventy-two percent of the male students and 84 percent of the female students in a Stanford University study reported that they could tell when someone was staring at them behind their backs. Other research indicated not everyone experiences this feeling.

5. Thre Psychologists from Britains Oxford University and Swansea University looked at the way a persons eyes express his emotions. They categorized their observations as follows: interest-exdtement: eyes track and look, eyebrows down; enjoyment-joy: smiling eyes, circular wrinkles; distress-anguish: crying eyes, arched eyebrows; fearkerror: eyes frozen open; shame humiliation: eyes cast downward; anger-rage: eyes narrowed.

6. True. A National Institute of Mental Health study separated the dynamics of

smiles into three categories: felt smiles (spontaneous expressions of positive emotions), false smiles (de liberate attempts to appear as if a positive emotion is felt when it isnt) and

miserable smiles (acknowledgment of feeling miserable but not intending to do much about it). The researchers added that there are two types of false smiles: the phony smile (an

effort to appear animated although there are no emotions felt) and the masking smile (an attempt to hide a strong negative emotion by appearing positive). FN

Family Weexly july io i983 7





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^IME

TIME

By Marilyn Hansen

Fresh limes... when you cut them, the scent is the essence of summer. And the juice adds its own very special accent to an infinite variety of dishes. Right now is the peak season for this delicious food, so we

thought wed give you some tangy recipes to delight your friends and family.

SFAiKugy^H^niuiT

2 cape eodk diced caotaloape and iMMwydew 2 cape halved etrewberrles 2 taUeapooaa fredi lhac Jake

1 tabk

I craahul alat leaves or 1

teaspoon dried mint, crashed % teaspoon grated fresh Uase peel IM caps sparUfaif wfaUe wine, chaa-p^pic, ffaiflcr ale or sparhUnf dder Mat spngs and 6 wfaode straw-

1. Combine fruits, lime juice, mint and lime peel; cover and refrigerate 1 hour, or until thoroughly chilled.

2. Just before serving, spoon into serving bowls: pour sparkling wine over fruit. Garnish with mint sprigs and strawberries.

Makes 4 to 6 servings

UMi-SHAUOT SAUCE

2 tablespoons fresh lime Juke 1 tablespoon Dfjon mustard

1 tabksimon minced parsley

2 teaspoons finely minced shallots 14'teaspoon salt or to taste

Dash freshly ground Mack pepper '/4 cup olive oil

1. Combine all ingredients except oil in a small bowl. With a fork beat in oil 1 or 2 tablespoons at a time; blend thoroughly.

Makes about 'A cup

Note: This sauce is delicious Served on hot or cold cooked vegetables, sliced tomatoes or hot or chilled seafood.

COLDUME SOUPPLE

6 to 8 limes 6 eggs, separated l'/4 cups sugar 2 envelopes unflavored gelatin '/4 teaspoon salt or to taste 16 cups hot water 1 cup whipping cream, whipped

1. Juice enou^ limes to measure ^ cup

juice. Slice one lime thinly and reserve.

2. In top of double boiler, beat ^ yolks li^tly with whisk or beater; stir in V4 cup of the sugar, gelatin, salt and lime juice. Gradually add hot water. Cook over simmering water, stirring frequently, until mixture coats the back of a metal spoon, about 10 to 15 minutes. Chill uncovered for about 45 minutes, stirring occasionally, until mixture mounds.

S. Beat effi whites until foamy. Gradually add remaining 16 cup sugar, beating until stiff peaks form. Fold ^latin mixture into beaten whites. Fold in whipped cream. Spoon mixture into a 6-cup souffle dish fitted with a foil collar, arranging a few lime slices upright in a scallopping border around edge of dish. Chill at least 4 hours. Before serving, remove foil collar. Spoon souffle into dessert dishes.

Makes 8 servings

LIME-MELON ICE

1 cup water

1 cup tugar Oath tall or to taate

mate

V4 cup freah lime Juice 2Vi cupt cantaloupe or boneydew melon puree

2 egg whiles

1. Combine water, sugar and salt. Bring to boil, stirring to dissolve sugar. Remove from heat; chill.

2. Combine chilled syrup with peel, lime juice and melon puree. Partially freeze in

hand-crank or electric ice cream maker, following manufacturer's instructions.

S. Beat whites until foamy; add to mixture in freezer canister and complete freezing. Serve at once or store in freezer. Thaw slightly by removing from freezer 30 minutes before serving.

Makes about 1 'A quarts

Note: To still-freeze, pour lime-melon mixture into 8-inch square pan; freeze about 30 minutes, or until slushy. Spoon into mixer bowl with beaten e^ whites; beat on high ^>eed with electric mucer until frothy. Then return to freezer and freeze until firm.

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The very first works in porcelain by one of Britains most gifted miniature painters, Joan CampbellPORCELAIN MINIATURES COLLECTIONA collection of delicate little masterpieces in fine porcelain. Each bordered in precious cobalt blue and embellished with pure 24 karat gold. For Just $9.75 each.

Strictly limited edition. Advance subscription deadline: July 31, 1983.

Limit: One collection per person.

Collectors have always been fascinated by miniatures ... especially those created by English artists. For from the time of Queen Elizabeth Iwho avidly collected miniatures herselfthe English have excelled in this intricate and intriguing art form. And now, at a time when more and more people are discovering the delights of these charming works. Franklin Porcelain is proud to present an original collection by the gifted British miniaturist Joan Campbell.

A member of the Royal Sixiety of Miniature Painters. Sculptors and Gravers. Joan Campbell is a brilliant exponent of a great artistic tradition. Her works have been shown at the Paris Salon, the Mall Galleries and in major exhibitions in Europe and the United Kingdom. And her paintings are included in distinguished private collections on four continents. Now Joan Campbell has created her first collection of porcelain miniatures. Twenty-five collector plates portraying the world's most beautiful birds in extraordinary, and exquisite, detail.

Each dainty plate is small enoughjust one and one-half inches in diameterto cradle in the palm of your hand. Yet even the tiniest details are portrayed with all the per-

AV* L

fection of nature itself. The handsome Blue Jay. its deep blue plumage brilliantly accented by a branch of bright yellow forsythia .., the exotic Purple Sunbird dramatically portrayed against pale lilac wisteria blossoms... the little European Robin, its bright orartge-red breast puffed out with jaunty self-assurance. You will actually be able to see such details as the rich velvet-brown cap of the Eurasian Tree Sparrow ... the distinctive yellow wingbars of the Goldfinch ... the delicate stamens of the wild apple blossoms where the Wren perches so happily.

Meticulously crafted by skilled porcelain artisans, each plate will be bordered in a rich cobalt blue, the aristocratic color found in many of the finest works of Europe's great porcelain houses. Then, as an elegant finishing touch, each rim will be embellished with

a delicate floral design in pure 24 karat gold.

Timeless loveliness in limited edition In the tradition of classic porcelain miniatures, these enchanting little plates are being issued in limited edition. They will be offered only until the end of 1983, and will then be permanently withdrawn. Furthermore, the collection is available only by direct subscription and only from Franklin Porcelain.

The price for each miniature plate is just $9.75. The plates will be issued at the rate of one per month and you will be billed on the same convenient monthly basis.

To subscribe, be sure to mail the attached Advance Subscription Application to Franklin Porcelain. Franklin Center. PA 19091 by July 31. 1983.

So you can Jisplay these delightful miniatures to best advantage, a handsome hardwood display rack will be provided to subscribers at Ao additional vharye.

. iiu ri>

------AOVANC't    SUBSCRIPTION    APPI.ICATION------

THE BIRDS OF THE WORLD

PORCEI.AIN MINIAIURKS COLI.Et I ION

Valid only if postmarked by July 31, 1983.

Limit: One collection per person. Franklin Porcelain

Franklin Center. Pennsylvania 19091 Please enter my subscription for The Birds of the World Ponelain Miniatures Collection by Joan Campbell, consisting of twenty-five miniature collector plates in fine porcelain, each embellished with 24 karat gold. A custom-designed hardwood display case will be provided without additional charge.

I need send no money now. The plates will be sent to me at the rate of one per month and 1 will be billed S9.7.S* each, prior to shipment.

*Ftut Miitr \uies lai and 75 * for thippuiK ami handimg for rui h plat,

PtaiCH shtmn iciuul M/e u l 2' in diafnticr

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Mr.

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I    TO    ACCCrTAftCI

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State, Zip.

3145





UMETIMI

LIMI-1ACH COHSIRVI

4 cup* flBdy chopped, peded poKfaea 1 teMpooa grated Une peel >/4 cop frediliate |>d

I pkg- (1^ 0*4 powdered frail pectin

* rapg3ratotoe

>/^ cup sliced ahMMids

1. Combine peaches, peel, lime juice and pectin in large kettle. Bring to full rolling boil; stir constantly. Immediately stir in spgar. Bring to a rolling boil again and boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly

2. Stir in raisins and almonds. Skim off foam. Ladle into clean hot canning jars to within inch of jar tops. Seal according to jar manufacturer s directions.

3. Place jars on rack in canner. Process 5 minutes in boiling water bath with boiling water 2 inches above jar tops. Remove jars from canner and cool away from drafts After 12 hours check lids for proper seal.

Makes about 6 half-pints

UMI lARS

2 cupc unaifted aD-purpoae flour cup pouufered augur I cup uaaahcd batter or margurinc

2cupa augur Drata aait or to tuate '/) cup freah Urae Juke Powdered augur

1. In a medium-size bowl, mix flour and powdered sugar. Cut in butter. Press mixture into 13x9inch baking pan, Bake in 350 oven 20 to 25 minutes, or until golden.

2. Meanwhile, beat eggs at high speed with electric mixer until light and pe yellow in color Gradually add sugar and salt, then lime juice, continuing to beat at high speed.

3. Pour over hot crust and return to oven 20 to 25 minutes more, or until golden. Sprinkle at once with powdered sugar. Cool and cut into bars. Makes about 4'A dozen bars

UMETIPS

HOW TO PICK A GOOD UMI

Look for limes that are firm and smooth with shiny skins and deep green color. Keep limes refrigerated, preferably in plastic bags, and they'll stay fresh for six to eight weeks. Watch out for "bright lights" which will age limes and cause the skin to turn yellow. Theyll still be juicy but not as pretty, so use them as soon as possible.

THI UMI CURL

The intriguing shape and cool color of the lime curl is especially appealing. Start with a lime slice. Cut out half the pulp but leave the entire peel attached. Curl remaining peel toward center and hang over the rim of a glass.

UMI CARTWHIiLS

Easy-to-make lime cartwheels look very glamorous and professional. Start with a slice. Make one cut from the

center of the slice through the peel. Pick up and twist cut ends in opposite directions to create the cartwheel shape. Its a graceful garnish for hors doeuvre trays, entrees and desserts.

TNI LIMI WiDGE

A juicy lime wedge brings out the natural flavor of many foods. It has a no-calorie, no-sodium flavoring. Cut

limes into 4 to 6 plump wedges to squeeze over fresh fruits, vegetables, fish and chicken. Add a squeeze of lime to iced water, sparkling water, soft drinks and iced tea for perky flavor

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I. Oidy residenls of the U S A may partiopale Sweepstakes void where probMed by law Employees of The Quaker Oats Company its affiliates, advemsdw and promotional agencies, and their families are not eligible All Federaf. State and Local laws and regulations apply Any taxes are the sole responsibility of the Wimer Decision of the judges is hnal in all matters For a list of winners, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope after March 31 1984 to LIST " PO BOX 6233-Chicago. IL 60680 Super Zaxxon. and Pengo and Sega are trademarks of Sega Enterprises Inc 1962 Sega Enterprises me

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Rx FDR SUMMER ^EALTH EMERGENQES

By Marc McCutcheon

Along with its pleasures, summer can bring its share of troubles, including a whole slew of emei^ncy medical situations from bums to heatstroke. Some of these result from the warmer weather; others can occur any time but are more common during summer months because people tend to be more active then. One cardinal mle to follow; Remain calm. The guidelines below will allow you to deal with the problem until medical help arrives.

Choldng on food. Have the person choking stand, and lower his head. Then give him four sharp slaps between the shoulder blades. If nothing happens, use the Heimlich Maneuver; Stand behind the victim and wrap your ^arms around his waist. Make a fist with one hand and place the thumb side against his abdomen, between the rib cage and navel, grasp the fist with ytmr other hand and press with a quick upward thrust. Research shows that both methods used together are more effective than one used alone,'' says Linda Marable of the American Red Cross.

Sunstroke/ Heatstroke.

The symptoms are weakness, hot, dry skin and a flushed appearance. Qve the person cool but not ice cold nonstimulating drinks such as water or fruit juice. To lower the body temperature, ^nge the victim with cool water. You dont have to be in the sun all day to come down with heatstroke, Marable warns. You can get it from staying too long in any hot, enclosed area. Victims can

Marc McCutcheon is a freelance writer living in South Portland, Me.

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have temperatures of up to 105 d^ees, and this can be fatal." So get medical assistance imm^iately.

Burns. Second-degree burns can penetrate skin, causing blisters and swelling. Third-^ree bums have a

charred or white appearance and can sear fat, muSde and bone. For both types of bums you should call a doctor immediately. In the meantime, remove any clothing near the bum that will come off easily. If the clothing is stuck to the

bum, cut around it. Exposed bums can be covered with a sterile dressing. Never apply any ointment, as this will only aggravate the bum.

Near-drouming. If the person is not breathing, b^in mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.

Tilt his head backward slightly, pinch the nostrils shut, seal your mouth around his mouth (for a child, around his mouth and nose) and bbw in four quick breaths, then check to see if hes breathing. Repeat this technique at a rate of one breath every five seconds for an adult and every four seconds for a child. Once the per-ins breathing on his

son

own, taike him to the hospital, even if he appears to be fine. 'Usually the individual has taken water in the lui^s, which can cause pneumonia, says Todd Turriff of the Na-tkmal Safety Council.

Dm bite. should be condered rabid until proven otherwise. Immediately rinse the wound under mnning water to flush out the dc^'s saliva, then scrub the bite with gauze, soap and water, and cover it with a sterile dressing. If the wound is lar^, dont clean it just place a bandage over it. Take the victim to the hospital.

Electric shock. Never touch a victim whos in contact with a current. Instead, pull the plug at the outlet or shut off the current. Send someone for help and start artificial respiration, continuing it until the victim breathe normally.

Cuts. Race a pad of clean material over the wound and press firmly until bleeding stops. Dont remove a blood-soaked cloth to replace it; This will only cause the cut to bleed more. Instead, put a new cloth on top of the old one and continue pressure.

Food poisonuig. Food poisoning can result from a number of sources, including improperly cleaned fruits and vegetables as well as spoiled foods. If the symptoms are stomach cramps and nausea, grt bed rest and drink warm, mild fluids after the vomiting has stopped. See a physician if symptoms persist.

Unconsdoumess. If the person appe^ red or flushed, place him on his back with head and shoulders raised slightly. Apply a cold cloth to the forehead. If the victim is pale and has a weak pulse, place him on his back, raise his 1^ and cover him with a blanket. If the persons face or lips appear blue, breath seems shallow and pulse weak, give him mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. and have someone call for help. iW

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SHARING MONEY PROBLEMS WITH KIDSBy Robin Greene

As a parent you may believe it's best not to share your money problems with your children. But if youre cutting out some extras to meet rising expenses or facing the tougher problem of unemployment, your children are

Robin Greene is a freelance wriler who frequenl-ly reports on personal finance topics

going to notice. You can talk about those changes without causing them unnecessary anxiety.

How much you tell your children should depend on their age and maturity. You wouldnt tell a 5-year-old that the heat and electricity may be shut off unless it really happens, says Beth Silverman, director of human services, District 65, United Auto Workers. "But if your child is old enough to be involved in the family finances in some way. he or she is more likely to under

stand what is happening. For example, if your 10- or 11-year-old is getting an allowance, he could take part in a discussion on how to rearrange the family finances.

Your childs reaction to your money problems will depend to a certain extent on how much he socializes with others outside the family. Older children may compare their situation with that of their friends. "If many of the parents in the neighborhood are working in related fields, as would be the cast in a city like Detroit, the child will pro^bly accept the situation as nothing out of the ordinary, says Dr. Rachel Gittelman, director of psychology at Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City.

The last thing you want is for your child to feel responsible for your changed financial situation. "You dont want him to feel guilty or think, If only I were a lot smarter or better, things wouldnt be so bad, says Silverman.

Let your children know in the amplest way that things will be different but it is not their fault or their problem. At no time should the parent confide in kids and burden them with problems, says Gittelman. "In general, its best to stay simple. You can say. Were not making as much money as we used to, so for the time being we wont be able to afford this. But emphasize that in the future things may change.

It is important to reassure your children that, in spite of a change in family spending habits, they will still have a place to live, food, their friends and parents who love them. Give them constant reassurance about whats no/ going to change, says Silverman.

Theres a good chance your kids will surprise you and accept those changes as a matter of course. The loss of material things is not the end of the world for a child, says Morris Black, director of Madeleine Borg Counseling Services. Its not part of their self-image to have certain possessions, like a car. Thats their parents attitude.

If your children are old enough to understand the full extent of your money problems, you may decide to encourage them to help out. Older children may offer to find a part-time job such as baby-sitting, a paper route or dog walking.

Its difficult to find a silver lining in the cloud of financial problems. But with a positive attitude you can help your child understand. "A money problem can be either an opportunity or a threat, says Silverman. It can overwhelm the family and break it apart. Or, with positive action, the threat can pull them together, they can each draw on their own resources and come out as stronger individuals in a stronger family. W

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In a report released by the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA and published by the ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, eight commercial and test products that included a broad spectrum of insecticides were tested against a product called Roach PRL'FE.'The tests were conducted in heavily infested apartments and showed at the end of the 8 week test period that with a single application of Roach Prufe in each apartment, the roach population was reduced by an average 99.5%. By comparison, with the worst results were two widely recognized insecticides currently used in aerosols and applied by exterminators. They showed a 0% (no) reduction at the end of the 8 week tests.

Commenting in a letter, the University researchers stated: Our experience under field conditiotis has shown that when properly tilted, the Roach Prufe formula provides a degree of cockroach control that is usually superior to all other registered commercial or consumer products.

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.Alan Brite, holder of 15 U.S. and foreign patents has just been awarded the first of 3 U.S. patents pending on Roach Pri fe Brite says: Because roaches simply do not recognize Roach Prufe as an insecticide, they do not tr>- to avoid it by scattering to other parts of your residence as they do with other insecticides. Plus the electrostatically charged powder sticks to their bodies. They then carry the powder back into the walls spreading it among the other roaches. The result is you kill not only the roaches you see, but also those hiding and multiplying in the walls.

Roach Prufe is odorless, non-evaporating, non-staining and non-flammable. The powder is simply applied with a teaspoon under kitchen appliances and in other hidden areas. It can be used in homes, schfwls. hospitals, restaurants, plus new construction.

If Roach Prufe is not available at your local hardware store, the manufacturer will be glad to send it to you. To obtain a one pound container, just send a check or money order for $8.90, which includes postage. Add tax if you live in California. One pound covers up to a 9 room residence. \bull need an extra pound for a basement or garage. Send to Copper Brite, Inc.. Dept. 12 at 5147 VV Jefferson Blvd., Los .Angeles. Ca. 90016. Copies of the University test are available by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to Copper Bnte, Inc., Dept. A.    .    Brr    in,    i<>so

FROM ARCH VILLAINS TO ASSORTED HEELS

USING FOOTPRINTS TO.TRACK CRIMINALSBy Ed Remitz

Sherlock Holmes studietj them with. a magnifying glass to deduce whodunit." But in many criminal cases, footprints    and shoeprints are photo

graphed and then for^tten, or ignored altogether by unknowing investigators.

Now, thanks to pioneering research by Dr. Louise Robbins, an associate professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina, footprints and shoeprints are emerging as vital clues in criminal investigations.

The science of footprint analysis is young and needs to be explored one step at a time, cautions Dr. Robbins, who has been nicknamed Feet by her associates. But with the catalogue system she's developing, footprints one day may become as incontrovertible in prosecutions as fingerprints as long as police are on their toes when it comes to preserving them. Every print Ive found so far is different. says Robbins, a lanky, 53-year-old blonde whose favorite shoes are penny loafers.

Robbins has developed 46 measurements and catalogued 60 features relating to shape to help categorize feet. She notes such details as the curve of each toe, how each aligns with the other and how the toes' impressions change when a person is running. From a footprints length, width and depth, it is sometimes possible to estimate a persons height and weight. Robbins has even used a series of prints to describe a person's gait,

This new expertise also applies to footwear and can provide vital clues. Somebody who steps down hard with his heels first, for example, will display this trait not only in his footprints but also on his shoe .soles.

"The value of prints as evidence is not usually in identifying a-suspect at

Ed Remitz is a staff write) for The Sacramento Union newspaper in California

large, as with fingerprints, says William J. Bodziak, a special a^nt in the F.B.I. laboratory in Washington, D.C., who specializes in shoeprint and tire4read analysis. Rather, their help is in dismissing others from a group of suspects.

Robbinss findings have been challenged in court with no success. But because* of its recent heritage, the science of prints still awaits total acceptance by forensic ^^ialists, says John DeHaan, a criminalist for the California Justice Department.

Forensic scientists tend to be very careful because our work is always challenged; points out DeHaan, who conducted his own study in 1975 of shoe types and their impressions.

Criminals usually do wear shoes while committing d crime, but the barefoot culprit is not uncommon. Rapists often remove their shoes before attacking, while other criminals may attempt to muffle their approach by going barefoot or wearing socks alone.

Once you put on a shoe, its like looking at the same print information through a dirty window, DeHaan says. But even a dirty window sometimes sheds enough light.

Robbins has assisted police in 25 murder cases throughout the United States and Canada and one in Sweden. And in her campus laboratory, where she works with four apprentices, she analyzes photographs of footprints and shoeprints from aime scenes worldwide.

it was an unlikely trek from classroom to murder scene for the Chicago-born Robbins. Her work in physical anthropology documenting the appearance of ancient people by studying their remains brought her to a remote cave in Kentucy in 1972 to study a prehistoric Indian camp. She was fascinated with the more than 4.500 ancient footprints in the cave, and after learning that little information about prints existed, she initiated her own .research.

Her new career began in 1976 after frustrated Pennsylvania authorities, investigating a murder and arson with only shoeprints in the snow as clues, contacted local anthropologists for help. They were referred to Robbins.

She studied photographs of the prints and described the suspects feet.

They studied shoes of numerous suspects and finally found the match of the foot and shoe 1 described. she says. Once the man was confronted, he confessed."

Sherlock Holmes micht have considered it elementarv. FW





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HANG ON TO YOUR NIAOS

There are simply some things kids have to learn by experience; Mom. Dad and the library won t do. For one. when was the last time your child saw a working guillotine?

Talk atout being hit with an opportunity! Perigee ^ks has a new series of cut-and-assemble books called The Way Things Wrk from which readers can build working models of wonders like guillotines and catapults.

Early editions of Guilloline even included a little cardboard body the kiddies could have fun decapitating. Current editions conclude sim

ply; And now. youre all finished! Strap in a small toy soldier, turn the handle and let the blade fall. See how a guillotine actually works."

We cant wait for them to introduce Neutron Bomb.HELP!!

When you look at the new TV season, its hard to believe that there were shows around even weirder than what reached the fall schedule, i.e., Manimal (a crime solver who can turn into various animals); Just Our Luck (a TV weatherman who has a hip genie); and Mr. Smith (a talking orangutan who works as a spy).

But yes, fans, according to advertisings Dancer Fitzgerald Sample, there are pilots out there that we consider even more bizarre. And worst of all, they could show

up sometime later as midseason replacements.

Wed prefer not to stop at 13 13th Avenue, a comedy-fantasy about a father and son who discover their building is inhabited by folks who turn into werewolves, vampires and assorted monster types. The superintendent is a nasty troll who never fixes anything, and next door lives a 2,000-year-old witch with eyes for Dad.

We were also pretty shook up at the thought of having to watch Nightmares. Some sample plot chillers: A young priest on a lonely desert highway faces a driverless pickup truck"; A man battles a giant rat threatening the takeover of his home. We must confess that this show, and much of the new season as well, does sound like a real nightmare.NO DEPRECIATION ONiMYiMOrHER fNECAR

And speaking of lowlife shows, its amazing what can become valuable after a time. Theres a movement going on to glorify mundane old TV shows not nearly good enough to be classics but not quite bad enough to be camp. Its known as Video Gauche.

These shows were just sort of there " during the early days of TV, reports Video magazine. But cassettes of these bland offerings are catching on big with video buffs today and are far more popular than the original shows ever were. For example, Space Patrol; Tom Corbett. Space Cadet; Lost in Space, The Kraft Music Hall; and The Jem Lewis Show.

Lost in Space nds new place.A BURNING ISSUE

It's news to no one that too much sun can be bad for you, but now' a dermatologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center has invented a procedure that could guarantee a safer sum

hiiiiily Weekly

mer for your skin. Dr. Mark Goldgeier has developed a way to measure the ultraviolet light on a particular day, hich he then converts into an index to the proper sunscreen and clothing for avoiding burn.

Radio and TV stations are considering broadcasting (Idgeiers warnings since he says the average sunbather cant predict the amount of ultraviolet radiation getting through.

On a doudy' summer day, he says, you can stand on conaete, which reflects sunlight, and absorb more ultraviolet radiation than you would if you stood in a grassy field during full sunlightMAYBE IT'S MORE THAN SKIN DEEP

Can being less than a beauty turn you into a beast? According to an Emory University study, unattractive people are judged much more harshly than attractive people, and such discriminatory treatment could lead to delinquent behavior.

Studies have shown that unattractive people are seen as more a^ressive, antisocial and less intelligent, says Robert Agnew, an Emory sociologist. They are also liked less; their work is more likely to be judged inferior; and if they com-

Ab beauty; beastly behavior

mit a crime they are more likely to be judged guilty than a good-looking person.

Agnew concludes that these people thus can be driven to become delinquents. Because they are often treated like criminals, they are more likely to view themselves that way, he told us. They have more trouble reaching their goals and their lives are full of frustration and anger, which can easily lead to antisocial behavior. They may figure they have less to lose anyway, so why not?

Agnew says teachers should be trained to be careful not to judge by appearance, and that adolescents likely to be thought less than dazzling be taught grooming skills to improve their looks.

Gerald Ford, Barbara StanwyckBIRTHDAYS

(All Cancer) Sunday David Brinkley Saul Bellow 68. Monday Tab Hunter 52; Yul Brynner 63; E.B. White 84. Tuesday Bill Cosby 46; Cheryl Ladd 32; Milton Berle 75. Wednesday Hanison Ford 41. Thursday Gerald Ford 70: Polly Bergen 53; Ingmar Bergman 65; John Chancellor 56. Friday Linda Ronstadt 37. Satur^y Qnger Rogers 72; Barbara Stanwvck 76.

PrMMwit and PmMMmt

Patrick M Linskey

Vica PraaMant and Ad Dkador

Gerald Wroe

Viea Piaaidanl and Qanl. Mgr.

Jonatnan Thomoson

Editor

Arthur Cooper

Chairman Emariliia. Mo'ton F'ann

Managing Editor Tm Wumgar Daaign Oiractoc Rooen Alemus Articlet Editor, Kate wmie Senior Editors. Paince Adcroh Eiioi Kapian Food Editor, Maniyn Hansen Assoc. Editor.

Ma-y EHin Br jns Copy Editor. Diana Browne Research. Karen Emmons: Photo Editor. Victoria Biair Art Director. Ricnaro VaKJati Asst. Art Director Sosari Pe'ena Art, Baroara Jabion

Contributing Writers. Rooen Coies Norman tooseni Anna Summe' Kathleen Maxa ana Jane Oflenoe'S (Washingioni HoOer* Wmoeiei iLos Angeiesi

V.P.-Mfg t Dif. of Operations. Richard Miiien Prod. Dit. Christine German Planning. Michael Montemurro, Makeup Mgr. W iliam Kenny Typographer. Debra Rose

V.P Assoc Ad Dir. Joe Frazer. Jr EaMern Mgr.. Lewis G 6'een Dir. Client & Agency Relations. James B Powers Assoc Eastern Mgr. Richard K Carroll Southern Mgr. Kenneth j

Sherry Detroit Mgr, Lawrence M Finn Calif.. Persins Soerling von oer Ltn ano jones V P.-Marketing Dtr. Stanley Rosenfeid Marketing Mgr. Kent D Aessanaro. Promolion Dir.

Patricia Kyle Creative Dir, Robert Banker Merchandising Mgr. Donna Gentje Asst Mdsg Mgr. Lydia Janow

NewspaperRelations. V.P., LeeEms V.P Newspaper Services. Robert j Cnnst an Newspaper Rel Mgrs., James G Bahe' Roben H Marriott Ron Seivaggio josepnC Wise Transpon tation Mgr. Jim McCann Distribution Mgr. Pnyi is Pniero Consumer Svcs. Lnaa Mounv Admin Asst. Ba-baa Shapiro V P.-Finance. Aiian Rabmowitz Controller. James Enng-it

18 pAMii-v Weekly jlly m i98:i





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YOUR

FJkVOMtlTE

COnSMCSDAILY REFLECTOR

GREENVILLE, N.C

UTEWS

FEATURES SFORTS

PEANUTS

SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1983

Charles Schulz

WHAT'S PLAYIN6?' I WALK ALL THE WAY OVER HERE, CHARLES, ANP PUT MVSELF ON THE LINE ASKIN6 YOU TO 60 TO THE 5H0UI, ANP YOU SAY,"WHAT'S PLAYIN6?"

1

1

VDU WERE RI6HT, BUT I NEVER TH0U6MT SME LIKEP ME THAT MUCH

ANDV CAPP

by

BEETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker

IT SEEM3 IMPOSSIBLE TO PUT YOUR FEET POWW THAT MAMY TIMES





1^^    -'i

*'-idr 1

5 ^ Q ft a d ANP the^e

HOCUS-FOCUS

CAN YOU TKUfT YOUR lYISt Tkm mf at iMtt tlx ifir-MOM kt *Mrtllt iltoHt MwttN tip Mi btflMI pMMlt. NlW M*ckly CM fM fM ttwmr Onck amwin wf^uni^rWhirby Hal Kaufman

f MM0Mit(MMis -( Miitunur

wilpoo r 6u!S(u si jqBn j|joi(S s^wm^s I mio\ si i|}q|MJa 1 m)uj|(iQ

   SLOW LEARNERS!    "Uvc    and iMiti/' 'tit mM. But    ttwn again, "We learn

from _that    men never learn from_said G.B. Shaw. Fill both

blanks with the tame ItFletter word. What word?

, 9U|ieM, SI PJOIW 6UISSIUI *MX

e Math-Maglcl Think    of    a number, multiply by

three, add one. Multiply    the result by three, add the

number thought of, subtract three. Final result should equal 10 times the original number.

e Where to? A punlist traveling in Hungary renwrked he was on a TAPED BUS. Can you figure out his destination? P.S.: If s the capital city.

isaMfMg sviw uoiiiui(sa|i sih Riddle-Me-Thlt, if you cani What is the cruelest holiday? Flog Day. What dog lives in a lighthouse? The Beacon-ese. What committee delivers water? The Ways and Mains Committee.

THROW LIGHT ON SUBJECT?

Puzzle out letters line by line for answer;

First in cab, but not in hack. Second in bag, as weH as sack. Third in green, not in blue.

Fourth in color, but not in hue. Fifth in dream, as well as sleep. Sixth in look, but net in peep.

Seventh in pot, but not in pan. Eighth in woman, also In man.

Ninth in day, but not in night. These letters all seKted right, a city in Spain will bring to light.

Can you identify the mystery city?

NofaIr peeking.    PUP    SNOTI    Thart'l nuny a

above. WMch path caales burger to

DUCK SOU PI Apply colors neatiy to the scMe alxwei 1-Red 2Lt. blue. 3Yellow. 4Lt. brown. SFlesh tones. SLt. green. 7Ok. brown. Dk. green, fDk. blue. 10Orange. ItLt. gray.

Hp

at point X? n

SPELLBINDER

SCORE 10 points for using all the

two complete words:

MATRONLY

THEN score 2 points each Ibr all

found among the letters.

Try la acsfvbt least lliMnts. ^





by

Our Stor^: arn follows the boy to what he learns is ORR ABBEX

A FORTIFIEP MONASTERY ANP THE ONLY SAFE HAVEN FOR ORR'S FRIOHTENEP POPULACE. WHEN THE CHILP SIVES THE B^SSWORP THEY ARE APMITTEP. "I AM m NEW PARKER OF ORR, * ARN TELLS THE HPPLEP THR0N6. HE IS MET WITH BITTER LAU6HTER. ONE OF THE TOWNS ELPERS SHUFFLES FORWARP.

'^SO MN6 ARTHUR, OUR PROTECTOR, SENOS A BOY TO PO A /HAN'S JOB* HE SPITS. BUT THE CHILP SPEAKS UP: "J SAW HIM KILL three SAXONS."

IN THE SILENCE THAT FOLLOWS, ARN PONS HIS OFFICIAL MANTLE. "l AM THE PARKER,'* HE SAYS, /4/V!P IN THIS REALM ANP FROM TH/S MOMENT /PfY WORP/S LAW. TELL ME, WHERE ARE THE PARKER'S MEN, WHERE IS HIS GUARO?"PARKER'S MEN RISE, ANP ARN REVIEWS THE SORRY TROOP.

"// HAS BEEN A YEAR S/NCE S/R LEOPRfC, THE OLP PARKER, GAVE UPH/S SOUL,* THE ELPER EXPLAIHS, "ANP IN THAT TIME AU OF OUR STRON& V0UN6 MEN HAVE FALLEN TO THE SAKONS. EVERY N/GHT THE/R CHIEFTA/N HAS COME TO THE ABBEY'S GATE. 'SENP ME A WARR/OR,' HE CR/ES..,,

^'SENPMEA WARR/OR, ANP/F HE SLAYS ME MY MEN W/U PEPART,' EVERY N/GNT A BRAVE LAP WENT FORTH, ANP EVERY N/GNT A BRAVE LAP P/EP. "

CJLIcN

AS THE OLP MAN TALKS, A RICHLY PRESSEP FELLOW ENTERS THE HALL. ARN NOTICES THAT HE SETS PARK LOOKS ANP A WIPE BERTH. "AH THE NEW PARKER," THE MAN SAYS. "I A/Vl OSBERN, MAYOR OF ORR. I WELCOME^ YOU ON BEHALF OF MY BELOVEP PEOPLE. " THE MAYOR ALONE POES NOT FLINCH WHEN THE CRY SOES UP BEYONP THE GATES: "5ENP ME A WARR/OR.''NEXT WEEK; On? on Om

1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved.

7-/0PONYTAIL

__by    Lee    Holley





HI.GUVSM KrryCTHB?

FOOT ON A iP&JfE AS

happenepW BjaoKEN wmf .yiSSeHTiS*

THANt VOU? PEOPLE A(?E LITTEWNS .THE BEACM WITH THEM5 I WANT T>^ ALL PlCttP UP gy TOi(W)l?ROW

MXIKNCM^.IFEACH PERSON \ WEOUfiHT-O W7UL9 PIO^ UP ONE BIT OF 1 MAKEUP TRASH, TN PUCE WDULP/ lOSTERS TO BE LOOWNG GOOQf ^ REMWt? FOLKS

OF THAT/

r*B3

:C

i

I FOUNP another

231 TOGO/

POES

ONE/ HOW MAN/

KEEP

HALF

TOGO? (

LOOKIN'.' J

COUNT?

barney

GOOatE

attd

REDEYE r

I tell you I'm cmanoiw mv

WHOLE LIFESTYLE AMP ALL. YOU WANT TO KNOW IS WMAT TIME /,

-y~^

s

I'M SOINS TO START JOSSINO TODAY, REDEYE

LL 0E OUT THERE RUNMlMO UPHILL AND DOWNHILL,/

by Gordon Bess

fOR pere's SAKE!

IS THAT ALL YOU CAM SAV ?/





by Brant parker and Johnny hart

/viyeg 17U    toooc^

^0 THg HCJUSg

99...^

FOR

minuted

FLAT./

6TILU MOTcSOOP EMO^M FOI2 TME VIKIM6 OLYMPICS





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_*J?!!'!JSC:f_______1^,

SencTtorLErS SEw

c/o This Nmaspaper

Box 133. OW Oitlsu So. NewYofk, N.Y. 10113

PATTERNS $2.50 each

Add 50 tw aach

lor poataga and handttng.

Pmim No

Sua

MS

1517

a

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kfr

aaay aOlBbas aaO HnOr calan. TXnMiirbaaaian..S2JiFLASH GORDON

>lr HWOV PO/A/r OUR. INTeRPLMBTARy HRO, FLASH <^ROOP^, sevs OUT f=RQAA TUB PLANET MONOO TO FINO HIS FRIENDS.

mP^TURBRS. DALB ARPeNAND OR. 2ARKOV, LEAP AN eyJHjORER TEAM 70 UNCHARTED KKORBU-

by Dan Barry

HOED. FAIN6 unknown OPUS, THBY SURRBNOBR TOA TROOP OF ARX/NTED mtRRiORS...

FLASH eORDON'S ReSCUE MISSION FARES LITTLE BBTTER . entrapped^ TURNED ONER TO THE M/STERIOOS MASKED MASTERS...

... AND ARB LBP NTQ CAPTtWTY, THE/KNOW NOT WHERE.

WHO 16 THIS AWESOME FEMALE F6UR6 ? 0BFORE NE LEARN OF FLASH'S IMMINENT FATE, LET'S


Title
Daily Reflector, July 10, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30507
Date
July 10, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95421
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