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INSIDE TODAYGALLOWS POISEDBritons await outcome of debate in Commons over reviving execution of murderers, after a 14-year ban on capitai punishment. (Page 5)
INSIDE TODAY
1 SPORTS TODAY |
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THE LEGISLATURE
WEST TO REST
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State Senator puts off rewriting of bribery laws he believes to be unfair after request of Lt. Gov. Green who wants to avoid false impression. (Page 21)
NL President Chub Feeney upheld the suspension of umpire Joe West Tuesday, while Joe Torre announced he was fined. (Page 17)
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102ND YEAR
NO. 148
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENViLLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 13, 1983
62 PAGES6 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTSCommittee OKs Sales Tax Compromise
ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The state Senate Finance Committee today approved a one-half cent state sales tax increase to give local governments more money for water and sewer projects and public school buildings.
The bill, which incorporates parts of a House-passed bill and Senate proposals, was approved 16-3. Voting against it were Sens. Julius Chip Wright, R-New Hanover, Cary Allred, R-Alamance, and Wanda Hunt, D-Moore. A Finance subcommittee crafted the bill Tuesday a during almost four hours of private meetings.
The bill now goes to the full Senate. Should it pass, its prospects for House approval are uncertain.
I dont think anybody wants more taxes, said Sen. Kenneth Royall, D-Durham, chairman of the subcommittee that wrote the compromise. This is doing something for the state of North Carolina and for every county. If we neglect do do this, the taxpayer will pay double the amount for bonds.
Legislative analysts presented information Tuesday showing that a $250 million bond issue over four years at 10 percent interest would cost $286 million in interest payments. The bonds could be used to pay for schools or public works projects.
Royall said he doubts the House will go along with the Senate bill. If the House rejects it, Royall said, an interim study committee could consider the issue and propose alternatives in the 1984 short session.
Rep. Vernon James, D-Pasquotank, who introduced the House bill under which counties would have the option of raising the sales tax, said his bill originally mandated the increase and they (the House) balked loud and clear.
It is going to take a lot of persuading, James said. A lot of them really want the bill. When it comes to the point of take it or leave it, I dont know what kind of concessions theyll make.
Under the compromise bill, the higher sales tax would last four years, beginning Aug. 1 and expiring June 30,1987.
It would raise $113.1 million in 1983-84 - half for water and sewer projects and half for public school buildings. Each county would get $90,000 for schools and $90,000 for water and sewer projects with the remaining money to be divided by school enrollment and water and sewer nee^.
It would raise $148.1 million in 1984-85 - 40 percent for public schools, 40 percent for water and sewer projects and 20 percent to help retire debts for building projects. The 20 percent would be distributed according to where the sales tax was collected.
The bill also would allow officials to levy a motel room tax in the counties of Mecklenburg, Haywood, Buncomte, New Hanover, and Forsyth and the cities of Ocean Isle, Topsail Beach and Surf City.
Sen. Richard Barnes, D-Forsyth, was expected to sponsor an amendment that would give all counties the option of levying a motel room tax. He decided instead to request that Forsyth be added to the list of counties allowed to impose the tax.
The committee aiso adopted an amendment allowing all counties affected by the occupancy tax to collect and administer the tax themselves.
The House bill would give counties the option of raising the local sales tax by one-half cent and using the money as they
REFLECTOR
OTLIff
please. It gave the same cities and counties the power to levy a room tax as the Senate compromise, except for Surf City in Pender County and Forsyth County.
In addition, the House bill would require counties and cities to assume the $6.9 million state share of the local law enforcement officers retirement system. Local ^vemments now may choose to supplement the state contribution.
The subcommittee chose-not to incorporate a bill sponsored by Royall that would raise the state sales tax by l percent while phasing out the tax on food. Royalls bill required the money be spent for public schools and water and sewer projects.
The harshest criticism of the subcommittees bill today came from Allred, who said North Carolinians already are
taxed too heavily.
I hate to be the Senator No and represent the negative section, but I think the government has extracted enough ... I dont think the governments at all levels have been frugual enough with the money theyve got, said Allred. / Royall dismissed Allreds remarks as irresponsible, saying the Legislature would be derelict in its duties to ignore the needs of counties.
This bill does more to save the people of North Carolina dollar for dollar..., added Sen. William Staton, D-Lee. It absolutely, unequivocably does that.
Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, said he represents four counties - two of which have a Democratic majority on their board of commissioners and two with a GOP majority. Theyre all begging for this, said Redman. If we dont
pass it, the property taxes in all four will go up.
Lobbyists expressed mixed feelings about the bill Tuesday.
This will begin addressing a need that has been longstanding, said Gene Causby, executive director of the North Carolina School Boards Association.
W^ have to be pleased from the aspect that they were willing to come out with a piece of legislation to address our concerns, said Butch Gunnels of the N.C. Association of County Commissioners.
But he said he was concerned that the bill would earmark all the money for certain projects. The county commissioners have wanted as much flexibility as possible for spending the additional revenue.
Gunnels also said he was concerned about what happens when the sales tax expires.
Clerk Stabbed During Robbery
CLERK STABED IN MORNING ROBBERY - The Fresh Way convenience store located at Hooker Road and Arlington Boulevard was robbed this morning by a man who escaped on foot from the scene. According to authorities, clerk Richard Brown was stabbed three times in the stomach during the robbery. The store's safe was iqien when investigators arrived.
officers said. It had not been determined how much money was missing. In the photo at left Greenville Fire-Rescue members move Brown to the rescue truck as investigators in the right photo look over the crime scene. Browns condition was not available. (Reflector Photos by Tommy Forrest)
Chile Fermenf Seen Growing
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer ;and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
;, TRAVELERS CHECK SOUNDOFF
I would like to know why you can cash travelers checks with no difficulty anywhere in the world except in Greenville. I Just came back from a local grocery store where I was given the third degree while attempting to cash a $20 travelers check. Ive had the same experience in -other grocery and department stores here. I : suspect the problem is that the clerks dont know . any better. Somebody ought to teach them! L.G.
YOGA FEEDBACK In response to the recently Hotline item about yoga lessons, we have learned of two possibilities.
Suzanne Bolande is interested in starting classes if there is sufficient interest. She may be . contacted at 752-2937.
. The East Carolina University Division of - Continuing Education will Offer a class in the fall. : It will be held from Sept. 19-Oct. 12 from 5:30 to .6:30 p.m. in the Theater Arts Building on the ECU campus. The cost is $30. Participants will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis. Anyone interested should call the division of continuing education, 757-6143, and reserve a space.
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -Police and troops patrolled Chiles two largest cities today after a teen-age girl was killed and riot squads arrested 565 people in violent, noisy demonstrations against the 10-year-old military government.
President Gen. Augusto Pinochet tried to quash the third Day of National Protest in three monthsjvith an 8 p.m-to-midnight curfew in Santiago and Concepcion, but his security forces failed keep hundreds of young an-ti-govemment rioters off the streets of working class districts.
The nighttime disorders capped a day of turbulent protests at four universities and two courthouses, organized by Christian Democratic, Socialist and Communist leaders protesting high unemployment and a crackdown that has put
Pinochets top political and labor foes in jail.
Military authorities an
nounced the one-night curfew at midday. It was the first army attempt to suppress
the two-month-old protest movement, the first sustained political challenge to
Pinochet since the 67-year-old general seized power a decade ago.
Utilities Give Final Approval To Waste Water Regulations
By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer
Members of the Greenville Utilities Commission Tuesday night gave final approval to a set of sanitary-sewer use regulations designed to prevent the introduction of pollutants into the wastewater system which would interfere with operations or pass throu^ inadequately treated.
The new rules also provide for equitable distribution of the cost of the wastewater system. The regulations, which' set specific pollutant limitations, establish surcharges for treatment of industrial wastes and civil penalties for violations.
As adopted, the regulations also could force owners of
Public Hearings Await City Council Tomorrow
Public hearings on an annexation petition and on Zoning Ordinance amendments, as well as an ordinance that would amend the local motor vehicle license tax, are among the items scheduled for consideration by the City Council at Thursdays regular meeting at city hall.
The hearings are scheduled on a petition for satellite annexation by the owners of Colonial Mobile Home Park on N.C. 11 north of Greenville, and on proposals to amend three sections of the Zoning Ordinance.
Other items include: appointments to boards and commissions; scheduling a public hearing on a petition for satellite annexation of section one of West Hills Townhomes on State Road 1204; scheduling a public hearing on a petition to annexation sections one, two and three of Heritage Village subdivision; scheduling a public hearing on a petition to close a portion
of Taylor Street that has never been formally opened;
Consideration of a request to prohibit thru truck traffic on Greenfield Boulevard from State Road 1419 to N.C. 11; consideration of a resolution to sell a disposal parcel in the central business district project; consideration of an ordinance amending the manual of fees regarding public transportation fees and charges;
Tax releases and refunds; consideration of agreements with the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce and the Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival for promotional services for Greenville; and several miscellaneous items relative to ordinances, resolutions, agreements and the granting of an easement.
The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the third floor council chambers.
homes and buildings within the city that now use septic tanks to connect to the public sewer system if sewer service is within 150 feet of the property line.
However, GUC Director Charles Home told commission members that there are no immediate plans to force septic tank users to connect to the city sewer system. He said the requirement was included in the regulations at the insistance of the federal Environmental Protection Agency and the state Department of Environmental Management.
The commission Tuesday night also gave Horne the authority to co-sign, along with the city manager and the owner-developer of property, covenants that require our-of-city property owners requesting sewer service to file petitions for voluntary annexation in order to secure the service.
The covenant puts teeth in a joint statement of policy on development which was adopted by the city and the commission a year ago.
The policy is designed to promote the development of undeveloped areas within the city limits and areas adjacent to the city in accordance with Greenvilles Comprehensive Plan, which was adopted in October 1981.
Horne told commission members that contracts for the citys new wastewater tratment plant will be signed this week, and that a preconstruction confrence with contractors for the project will be held Thursday. He also said work on the new plant is expected to get under way about Aug. 1.
Cost of the new plant and connector lines will be $10.49 million.
In other business, the commission approved three rural water line extensions, costing a total of $150,000.
The three extensions include lines along the Old River Road (SR1401) and SR 1402 west of the new water treatment plant; one along N.C. 903, SR 1523 and SR 1524, and one along SR 1529.
In other business, commissioners approved awarding contracts for supplies to low bidders. Included in the awards were: $21,160 for 175,000 pounds of chlorine to McKesson Chemical Co., $25,348 for 304,000 pounds of caustic soda to Encee Chemical Sales, $26,208 for 468,000 pounds of alum to Koch Sulfur Products Co., $15,824 for 49,000 feet of polyethylene pipe and 360 fittings to Plexco Inc., $10,920 for 12,480 pounds of wire to Power & Telephone Supply Co., $7,522 for two 300 KVA transformers to Hesco Inc., $11,156 for two 500 KVA transformers to Hesco Inc., and $19,846 for two 1,000 KV A transformers to Mill-Power Supply Co.
Await
Rebel
Attack
JINOTEGA, Nicaragua (AP) - The army says it is bracing for another offensive by Honduras-based rebels before next Tuesday, the fourth anniversary of the revolution that overthrew rightist President Anastasio Somoza.
Commander Joaquin Cuadra Lacayo, army chief of staff in the leftist San-dinista government, said Tuesday that rebels who once served as soldiers under Somoza are gathering on the Honduran side of the border to launch a new offensive. He said they will attempt to drive to the center of Nicaragua.
But the army is ready to repel them, he said.
On July 19,1979, Sandinista guerrillas forced Somozas regime to flee, capping a revolution supported by most segments of Nicaraguan society because of the rightist leaders repressive policies and rampant corruption.
Thousands of Somoza loyalists fled north to exile in Honduras, and began launching guerrilla raids on Nicaragua late last year. A separate guebrilla movement led by disenchanted Sandinistas operates in the south.
Both rebel groups said last week they would intensify their attacks on the Sandinistas before July 19.
On Saturday military sources reported that several columns of insurgents attacked government troops in Esteli province 90 miles northwest of Managua.
Cuadro Lacayo, speaking with reporters in Jinotega, 100 miles north of Managua, said one of the rebel columns preparing for a new offensive has 1,500 to 2,000 men.
A
WEATHER
Fair tonight and Thursday with lows in the upper 60s and tomorrows hiisinlow90s.
Looking Ahead
Fair Friday through Sunday with highs in low 90s and lows in the 60s and low 70s.
Inside Reading
Page 6Area items Page 16-Obituaries Page 22 - How they voted Page Visa mill
Page 38 - Dream museum
2-The Day Rdlector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Wednetday, July IS, 3
Double Ring Vows Spoken On Sunday
The Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church was the scene of the wedding ceremony Sunday afternoon of Delores Devere Buck and Joseph Guy Carra way. The double ring ceremony was performed at three oclock.
The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Buck of Greenville, was escorted by her faer. Mr. and Mrs. Bobby C. Carraway of Snow Hill are parents of the bridegroom.
A program of organ music was presented by Randy Buck. Soloists were Angela Langley and Buck, both of Greenville.
The brides maid of honor was Kathy Norfolk of Greenville and her matron of honor was Angie Pettus of Raleigh. Bridesmaids included Brenda Carraway, sister of the bridegroom, Deborah Godley, Jerri Phillips, Karen Smith, Debbie Anderson and Tammy Hardee, all of Greenville. The flower girl was Kim Buck of Greenville, niece of the bride.
The ring bearer was Brad Speight of Snow Hill and the best man was the bridegrooms father. Ushers were Wayne and Dennis Buck of. Greenville, brothers of the bride, Tony Brinkley of New Bern, Scott Davenport, Anthony and Jerry Morris, all of Snow Hill and Derek Willoughby of Kinston.
The bride wore a floor length gown of organza and Chantilly lace over taffeta. It was styled with a chapel train and the fitted bodice featured a Victorian neckline with an illusion yoke accented with schiffli
MRS. JOSEPH GUY CARRAWAY
embroidery and organza bishop sleeves. Chantilly lace motif appliqued the sleeves and seed pearis adorned the bodice. A scalloped Chantilly lace border encircled the hemline of the gown. Matching lace motifs appliqued the skirt and train. Her chapel length mantilla of bridal illusion bordered with
Homemaker's Haven By Evelyn Spangler
Pill Home A^enl
Clean It Easy
Few people actually enjoy cleaning the bathroom, especially when the Fixtures are dirty or stained. An often asked question is; how do I keep precelain enamel clean?
The daily (or weekly) job of cleaning the bathtub is easier if you use a long-handled brush, made especially for this pupose, and water containing trisodium phosphate, washing soda or other softener, or a synthetic detergent. For a thorough cleaning, use a mild scouring powder. It is e^ially important that you choose a nonabrasive cleaner to prevent scratching the finish which will make it more and more difficult to clean.
Cooper stains (green) sometimes yield to soapsuds containing ammonia, while rust stains (yellow) may be removed by rubbing with a cut lemon.
Dont let strong solutions of household bleaches, hair bleaches, vinegar, or lemon stand for any length in poreclain enamel. Rinse thoroughly after cosemetic solutions have been used. And, don* leave nonskid mats in th ib -^ry-some cause per i' a. ,ins.
To impn \ e appearance of an extreiiH y stained or discolored tub, use a paste mixture of cream of tartar and peroxide. Scrub vigorougly using a small still brush and rinse. The result will surprise you!
Care of Fiberglass Shower/Tubs
Most manufacturers of Fiberglass shower/tub units advise against using an
Potatoes will bake faster if they are parboiled for five minutes first.
abrasive cleaner. Such products can cut through the gel-coat finsih that gfires fiberglass fixtures their ccdor and dieeh. Generally, cleaning rcommendations are to scrub with a liquid detergent, household ^ray cleaner, or an all purpose powder.
For stubbon accumulations of soap film, make a paste of baking soda and water and spread over the stained area. After several hours, rinse the area throu^y with warm water.
To keep a new fiberglass fixture looking new stains from settling in, apply a coat of good quality automobile cream wax to the walls (not on the floor) once or twice a year.
Care of Ceramic Tile Kitchen Countertops
Many p^)le are opting for ceramic tile countertops today and finding care of the grout a problem. Like all forms of cement, the grout used between ceramic tiles is somewhat porous resulting in, absorption of water and food stains.
If caught in time, care is not a major problem. Generally, scrubbing, the grout with a toothbrush dipped in a kitchen cleanser will do the trick. However, if food or mildew stains persist but paper towels into narrow strips, dampen with laundry bleach and place over Uk discolored grout for about 30 minutes. Remove the paper strips and rinse the counter-top throughly with water.
Call our office at 752-2934 for a copy of Potpourri of Home Care Ideas.
scalloped Chantilly lace flowed from a lace caplet etched with seed pearls. The grandmother of the bridegroom created the headpiece. She carried a cascade bouquet of white carnations, sonia roses, babys breath, stephanotis with ^rays of greenery tied with white taffeta ribbon.
Each attendant wore a floor length gown of chif-fonette over taffeta. The fitted sleeveless bodice featured a yoke ruffled neckline and natural waist accented with a Qower at the waist. The bouffant layered scalloped chiffonette skirt was accented with chiffon bows and the hemline was bordered with a matching ruffle. Each carried a classic bouquet of mixed summer flowers, blue babys breath tied with blue satin and velvet bows with long streamers.
The flower girl wore a matching dress and carried a decorated umbrella decorated with ^rays of mixed summer flowers.
A rec^tion was held in the fellowship hall which was flanked by shepherd crooks with bows of white satin with greenery. The refreshment table was centered with an arrangement of mixed summer flowers with a five branched candelabra bolding pink lighted tapers.
The couple will live in Greenville after a wedding trip lo the coast.
The bride graduated from J.H. Rose Hi^ School and is employed by Home Federal Savings and Loan in Greenville. The bridegroom graduated from Greene Central High School and is employed by Barnett Souther in Kinston.
The couple was given a pig picking after the rehearsal and was several showers.
Engagement
Announced
Mr. and Mrs. S.L. EUis Jr. of Jamesville announce the engagement of their daughter, Kaye Denise, to Wesley Earl Beddard, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Beddard Jr. of Ayden.The wedding will take place July 30.
June continues to be the leading month for marriages, with 290,000 niq>tials celebrated in 19ffi. January is the least paular month for getting married.
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Arts Council Has New Show Opening
iN - Four artists are being featured during in August by the Beaufort County Arts y
Reader Offers Other Advice
By Abigail Van Buren
19S3 by Unnsraal Prm Syndicala
DEAR ABBY; You recently published a letter from a man who needed to accompany his handicapped wife into public washrooma to aaaiat her. He inquired about a tactful way to do so. You suggested that he approach a woman in the restaurant (or wherever they might be) and ask her to find out if there are any women in the waahroom, and if 80 to advise them (and other women approaching the waahroom) that a man needs to go in there to aaaiat his disabled wife.
Abby, unless the wifes handicap prevented her from speaking herself (which he made no mention of), she should do the requesting herself. Hus point is made for two reasons:
First of all, your answer is prejudicial in assuming that a handicapp^ person cannot speak for her or himself.
Secondly, a woman in a public place would be far more receptive to a request from another woman (whether handicapped or not) than from a man.
KAREN C., OAK PARK, ILL
DEAR KAREN: You are right on! Hie face with the egg on it is mine. Why didnt I think of that?
DEAR ABBY: I could have written that letter signed Wants to Love Again. The writer had had silicone implants to enlarge her breasts, and a year later her breasts were hard as rocks!
I had that operation four years ago and today my breasts are so hard I hate to embrace my own children. Im an affectionate person who always enjoyed hugging my friends, but now I avoid close body contact with everyone. I am devastated.
You told Wants to Love Again to go back to the doctor who performed her operation and have it done over. Ihis is very expensive, with no help from health insurance. Also, the results cannot be guaranteed.
So many women (myself included) had this done to please our husbands only to find ourselves divorced and left with a condition that makes it impossible to engage in physical intimacy wiUi a man. Maybe it was a coincidence, but my husband stopped loving me as soon as my breasts got hard.
I would like to hear how men feel about this operation. Sign me ...
WANTS TO LOVE AGAIN, TOO
DEAR WANTS: I have said repeatedly, never have any kind of coametic surgery to pleaae another per* son only to please yourself. My mail over* whelmingly supports the theory that moat men couldnt care less about the size of a womans breasts. No man who truly loves a woman will stop loving her because her breasts got hard. (Men continue to love women who have had mastectomies.)
A reputable plastic surgeon will inform all candi* dates for silicone implants that theres a 25 percent to 50 percent chance that hardening of the breasts will occur.
DEAR ABBY: Will you pleaae tell your readers who are planning a wedding reception or a big party with live music to invite the muaidana to eat?
Traveling to the job, setting up and playing from six to eight hours is hard work, and we musicians get hungry. But we never eat our clients food unless were invited to, and brown-bagging it is considered tacky.
SACRAMENTO MUSICIAN
DEAR MUSICIAN: Request honored. And may you never play to a full house on an empty stomach.
If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter*writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
WASHING' this month Council.
The show opened Sunday afternoon in the Art Eiqiress Galk97 in the Arts Council building here. Daily hours are 9 a.m. to5:30p.m. Monday through Friday.
Exhibiting artists are Alexando* Kaszas of Gloucesto-, who is showing a stained glass cdlectioo as well as oils and pastd paintings; M(^y Everette Emanude of Washington is showing paintings of oils, acrylic, pi and ink; Carmeila Hollis of Blounts Creek is displaying new quilts, pillows and decorative painting on wood; and David Norris of Greenville, printmaker, watercolorist and has mixed media drawings.
Ms. Hollis is a member d both the Greoiville (juilters Guild and the Pamlico (^ters Guild. She teaches classes in quilting fix' Beaufwt Community Cofl^.
The council shows features chiefly eastern North Carolina artists and especially those from Beaufort County.
Cooking Is Fun
On The-" Table .
The women are doing the shopping and co(^g the meal, but who actually de-ci^ what goes on the table?
Husbands may be more in control than many think," says Sarah Hinton, extension foods and nutrition ^)ecialist, North Carolina State University. Socioli^cal data suggest that women are choosing and cooking what they feel their husbands want. We cant assume that the person who prepares the meal has complete control over what is served.
Name Tags
Made By
Coastal Uniform
Pitt Plaza, Greenville
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Pn Food Editor
SNACKTMEDEUGHT Lime Bars & Iced Tea LIME BARS Always a favorite.
1 cup all-purpose flour V cup sugar Mi-pouod stick (^ cup) butta*, mdted Topping, see recipe
In a small botri stir together flour and sugar; stir in butter until blended. Pat over the bottom of a buttered 9 by 9 by 2-inch baking pan. Bake in a preheated 350-de^ oven until light brown -18 to 20 minutes; set aside but leave ovmi control at 350 degrees. Prepare Topping; pour over crust; bake in the 350-degree oven until firm - about 40 minutes. Cool on a wire rack; cut into bars.
TOPPING: In a medium bowl stir together % cup sugar, 2
tablespoons flour and ^ tea^xxm baking powder. Beat in 2 large eg^ and V4 cup fresh lime juice until blended; stir in I'll! teaspoons grated fresh lime rind.
Eastern
Electrolysis
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Couple Speaks Vows
_ ^
On Saturday Morning
Ann Adele Roberts and ' Howard Thomas Harper were married Saturday morning at 11 oclock in a double ring ceremony performed by the Rev. Leonard Truman Wilson in - the Englewood United Meth-1 odist Church.
-Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Harvey C. Roberts of Rocky Mount and
* Mrs. Alan A. Harper Sr. of Raleigh and the late Mr.
^ Harper.
r^Dr. Stephen Wilson pres-t;^ted a program of organ ;iqusic.
>^im Maria Roberts of Rocky Mount was the honor I|i(tendant and Alan A. Z Harper Jr. of Kinston was best man. Ushers in-
* chided Robert A. Roberts of Rocky Mount and John Harper of Florence, S.C.
A wedding breakfast was held at the home of the brides parents after the . 5firemony.
After a wedding trip to TMew York, the couple will live in Greenville.
': The bride graduated from Hhrdbarger Junior College
* and attended East Carolina University. She is attending Pitt Community College.
The bridegroom graduated from Wake Technical Institute and served in the U.S. Army for four years. He is now attending Pitt Community College.
JULYi
, sales clearance a
Carolina east mall ^^greenville
MRS. HOWARD THOMAS HARPER
Bad Product? Do Complain
fice of the President, Washington, D.C., can also help, extension specialists say.
Did a product or service you purchase not live up to its billing?
If so, you have the right to complain, say extension family management resource specialists at North Carolina State University.
Let the local dealer know first. A reputable dealer will usually stand behind his or her products. Youll need to prove the product was purchased at that store, and youll need to explain just how the item or service was unsatisfactory. Be as specific as possible.
If the product has worked for a while before becoming unusable, a partial refund or reasonable replacement may be in order.
If the dealer cannot help, contact the manufacturer. The manufacturers name and address can be found on the product or in the use and care booklets. Write a courteous letter and keep a copy.
Some companies now operate toll-free hotlines for complaints, which can bring prompt results. If the telephone conversation is unsatisfactory, write a letter.
If you do not hear from the manufacturer, or if you have problems getting ordered merchandise, you may need to contact an appropriate government agency. The North Carolina Attorney Generals office in Raleigh
can often assist with specific complaints. The Special Assistant to the President for Consumer Affairs in the Of-
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The nations airlines carried 7 million more passengers in 1982 than in 1981 but lost a record $733 million, according to the Air Transport Association.
Welcome Back!
Miss Linda L. Wilder has rwenily returned after spending tvvo weeks visiting areas of Canada where she was a 19.S3 Friendship Force Ambassador from Greenville. N.C.
Miss Wilder accompanied other residents of Greenville Wilson and she relates her stay m Canada was a most rewarding experience. '
The first week she resided with her host family. Guy & Violette Letourneau of Matane. While there she took an active part in the family's activities and group outings planned by Friendship Force on Mont-Joli. Visits took place in Matane, Mont-Joli, Rimonski, a tour of La Gospesie Peninsula, and in Quebec during the Canadian Independence Day festivities.
Miss Wilder, your Godparents. Mr. & Mrs Lemon C Little and others are proud of you and express similar feelings of The Friendship Force. "We are proud to have people such as you to extend your hand in friendship, who are willing to take time to share in an attempt to build better relationships betw'een people of the world. "
God Bless You'
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4-The Daily Reflector, GnenviUe, N.C-Wedneeday, July 13,1M3EditorialsShortchanged
Pitt Countys Board of Commissioners, as so many governmental agencies are now doing, has elected to go to a self-insuring medical insurance plan for is 408 employees. The decision follows an announcement by Blue Cross that its rates for existing coverage will go iq) 52 percent for the 1983-84 fiscal year. In qpting for its self-insurance program, again to be administered by Blue Cross, the county says it wUl save $50,000 iq premiums during the fiscal year.
On the surface, it sounds good. But that savings will come at the expense of the county employees, who will be paying more for less benefits under the new program.
Under the old program, an employee with family coverage paid a monthly premium of $79.19 a month, with the county paying another $44.68. Blue Crosss 52 percent increase would have raised the employees share to $120.92; under the plan a(kq)ted by the County Commission the employee will pay $102.38, an increase of $23.19 over the 1982-83 premium level and $18.54 per month less than the cost if the 1982-83 Blue Cross plan had been extended.
For the increase, the employee will get less. A $100 deductible for each calendar year is now required. A similar dediKTtible is also required for each hospital stay as it was in the old plan but now an employee must pay a total of $1,000 under the plans major medical provision before the plan will take over full coverage of hospital costs. Under the old plan, the maximum expense that an employee could incur was $700.
Major medical, in both plans, follows the customary route with the employee paying 20 percent and the plan 80 percent.
The additional $300 liability that each employee, or a member of his family, would face for just one hospital confinement would add iq> to $122,400 more than twice the amount the county says it would save. Of course its unlikely that each^ employee will have a family member hospitalized during the year, but the potential is there when family coverage is involved.
The consultant who recommended this new program also called for the county to hire an administrator, probably a nurse, to run the program with the salary coming out of the $50,000 in savings ' and suggested that physical examinations be required for each employee. Who would pay for the examination was left in the air, but the trend is for the cost to be borne jointly or solely by the employee.
The only factor offsetting the additional cost for employees is that, under the new plan, the deductible is waived for cases of accidental injury, preadmission testing, outpatient surgery, diagnostic tests and second surgical (qjinions. Thats not enough to bring the plan back up to the level that it was.
The county is acting pnq>erly in trying to save money, but no employer and the county is not an exception can shortchange its employees and expect to maintain an efficient operation. The county apparently did so in changing its insurance program.Small-Town Living
For many years the residents of Americas small town and cities have exaulted the virtues of living in communities in which one can drive across town in 10 minutues.
The message long went unheeded as Americans flocked to the cities and the small cities showed little growth.
There has been a change. The Census Bureau reports that the nations smaller cities and towns grew more rapidly during the 1970s than did the large cities.
The statistics back it iq>. Places with populations of 10,000 to 50,000 grew 30.1 percent during the decade of the 1970s. There was only a 1.9 percent growth rate for cities of 100,000 or more p(q)ulation. There was also an 11.1 percent growth rate for rural areas, communities of less than 2,500 population, a decided trend reversal.
Those of us who live in smaller communities and rural areas have long recognized the advantages of that life style. Maybe we should have kept quiet.
Paul L O'Connor
Legislators Feel Telephone Frustration
mm
The Daily Reflector
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WASHINGTON - By publicly igniting the animosity between James A. Baker III and William J. Casey that had been quietly simmering for more than a year, the Carter briefing-book affair may accidentally force a resolution in the long-divided White House of Ronald Reagan.
More is at stake than who was r^nsi-ble for obtaining and using material from Jimmy Carters campaign. Even if the FBI investigation does not nail one or the other as culpable, well-informed insiders believe President Reagan cannot follow his instincts and avoid a choice this time. Their conduct toward each other the past two weeks means that either White House chief of staff Baker or Director of Central Intelligence Casey will have to go, according to Reagan advisers.
To the Washington establishment, that is the easiest of choices. Lobbyists, bureaucrats and especially the news media are grateful that Bakers accumulated power , blunted the Reagan Revolutions full effects and view Casey as a doddering incompetent on the fringes of power. But Reag^te conservatives see Casey as their last chance to remove Bakers restraint on Reaganism going into the re-election canuudgn.
RALEIGH - If Excedrins makers had a vending machine in the Legislative Building, theyd have made a fwtune during the recess of a recent Hotse Public Utilities Conunittee. The question of deregulating intrastate long distance calls was up f(- discussion and you could see heads throbbing through the committee room.
Rep. George Millo-, D-Durfaam, has introduced a MU that would allow the Utilities Commission to license tdecommimications companies to compete with your local phone company for your in-state long distance business. The debate is one giant headadie made up of a bunch of smaller headaches.
The major headache comes from the federal courts which have ordered the break-up of American Telephone and Tdegraph. As a result, local ptxm conqianies can no longer use the profits from long distance calls to keep local base rates low. Each phase of the tdei^xxie industry must now stand on its
own and that means om local rates are going If) while long distance rates ou^t to go down.
In North Carolina, the telejAooe companies are already seeking rate increases to cova* the nxmey theyll lose on interstate calls. Millais bill, however, focuses on the $200 millk the phone companies will lose with the loss of intrastate long dmtance. The bill will almost certainly be studied in aHnmittee for final action during the 1964 short session.
There are two essential questions that the Legislature will have to answer before next session. First, wl there be comp^tion f(- the $200 million worth of in-state long distance business? Second, who will pay the local tdephone company for the cost (g maintaining the tdephone equipment that is used for those calls?
One headadie arises fnn the possibility of cmnpetition for those in-state Ic^ distance calls. If you allow it, you risk
big rate increases i basic service. If you dont, you are doiying users of long distance the <f>portunity to save a lot of money. Millais bill drew accolades from businessma) who said this was an O|f)ortunity tar them to reduce their costs.
That leads to another headache - the options open to business. They now pay heavily fix long distaiKe data transmission. T^ can set if) their own tdecommunications networks and save money. That could drive if) everywie dses rates because the phone company loses business but doesnt cut costs.
The second questfons can give us aU a headache. Someone has to pay a local phone cmnpany whoi its equ^ment is used in long distance callhig. The Federal Communications Commission has decided to charge everybody $4 a month for the ri^t to be connected to the interstate long distance network. Millers bill would have pretty much done the same thing for in-state calls. So, before
.UUSIOIJBfUL
Art Buchwald
Explaining Your Rights
As a newspaperman I am constantly being asked by victims what their rights are when it comes to talking to the media.
I shall try to address the problem in question-and-answer form, thou^ I may lose my journalistic license for doing so.
Q; When a reporter st<^ me in front of my house, or sticks a microphone in my face, or tel^hones me in the middle of night, what is my obligation to talk to this person?
A; You have a right to remain silent, you have a right to shove the mike in the reporters ear, and you have the ri^t to hang up the telephone.
Q; Wont that make me look bad if the correspondent says on TV that ni^t, Mr. Blue refuses to come out of his Ik^ to talk to us? Or the reporter writes, Efforts by this newspaper to reach Mr. Blue were unsuccessful?
A: Not necessarily. The viewer or reader might conclude the reporter has been negligent by failing to get you to comment.
Q; What should 1 be wary of when dealing with the media?
A: The friendly young male reporter with the hearty handshake, who calls you by your first name, and says hes only there to get your side of the story, and thie starry-eyed girl reporter who reminds you of your dau^ter. Theyll murder you in a story, compared to a grizzly snarling old-timer, who has given up making a name for himself, and has no ambition to
become another Woodward or Bernstein.
Q: Who are worse to talk to, ihe print people or TV reporters?
A: Its hard to say. Print reporters have more time cm their hand before they write their stories, so they can spend time ingratiating themselves to you. They can lead you from your love of gardening to admitting you know every mob leader in Cleveland. TV reporters, on the other hand, are underpressure to get their tape to the studio, so they ask the tougher questions, and dqiml more on your facial reactkms to them, than the answers. Even if you dont say anything, theyll still show
your automob^, ^!^ the^ r^rters shout questions at you.
Q; If I talk to the press will they listen to my side of the story?
A; Theyll lii^ to it, but that cfoesnt necessarily mean it will get in print. You could say a hundred things and because of ^ace limitations only three of them mi^t appear in the newspaper. But its stiff better than TV, when rarely more than one of your statements gets on the air. If the TV people give you 15 secimds to defoid yourself youre a lucky person.
Q; How can I g^ more time?
A: By admitting your guilt. Then youll get the full minute.
Q: Suppose Im not accused of anything, iMit the media want to interview me about somebody who is. Should 1 talk to them?
A; It depends how much you want to^t on the evening news or see your name in the paper. Obviously you have a better chance of making it if you have something negative rather than pi^itive to say about the person accused.
Q; What if Im an anonymous source?
A: Yoall be quoted out not seen on TV. As far as newspaper people are concerned, theyd prefer to use your name, but theyll always go with an anonymous source if they have to.
Q; Suppose a TV station or a newspaper or magazine calls me up and says theyre doing a story on one of my friends. Is it okay to take then?
A: It d^nds how much time youve got. The reporter will ^nd three Imrs with you, and then only use one quote, usually a negative one at that. People writing book&are even worse because they have noHeadlines.
Q: If everything you say is true, why do people still talk to the media?
A: Because of ego, fear, or they mistakenly figure they have nothing to hide. Then there are those who feel^they can manipulate the story to their benefit.
Q: Is it true?
A: Not vei7 often. I think it was one of our great vice presidents, Spiro Agnew, who once said, You can manipulate some of the press all of the time, and all of the press some of the time - but you cant manipulate ALL of the press ALL of the time.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Book May Bring Resolution
Bill Casey is an unlikely hero for populist-conservatives dedicated to Bakers downfall. As Reagans 1980 campaign manager, he personally was responsible for getting Baker from the failed George Bush presidential campaign. Fellow campmgn officials saw Casey and Baker as similar figures from different generations: two very rich men who like the company of other rich people, two tenacious in-fighters unfettered by ideology.
That relationship was maintained during the Reagan administrations first year or more. But about a year ago, what one colleague describes as an estrangement set in. Under attack, from the right. Baker began eyeing Caseys job at the CIA as a safe haihor that would give him foreign policy experience. Casey knew that Baker aides were leaking Baker-for-CIA items and deeply resented it.
Casey also resented that his path to the Oval Office was barred by the presidential gatekeeper: Michael K. Dver, deputy chief of staff and Bakers close collaborator. That led to Casey grumbling inside the administratfon that the Baker-Deaver combo was (Mng Reagan a
disservice by denying him access to the full range of (pinions a president needs.
The anxiety of ardent poU-readers Baker and Deaver over public disapproval of Reagans Central American policy contrasted with Caseys use of CIA resources against the communist tide there. Casey successfuly won out against Secretary of State Geor^ Shultzs proposed concession in the Vienna arms control talks, a hard line not conforming to Baker-Deaver strategy.
Still, Baker-Casey trouble did not surface until Bakers letter to House investigators, relating his best recollection that Casey gave him the Carter briefing book. Even assuming that Baker was tdling the truth. White House insiders were stunned at such finger-pointing.
When one colleague asked Baker v^y he did it, his answer carried that quiet precision that makes him such a formidable presence: I sakl that because it was the truth and I was not about to face a perjury rap.
A less benign explanation for Bakers bluntness, bruted about at that White House, is his low opinion of Caseys ability to retaliate. One of the least articulate
figures in public life at age 70 and tamed for eccentric body language (such as chewing on his tie during a heated meeting), Casey is easy to underestimate.
It might have been a fatal mistake for Baker. Casey is not only more pugnacious than Bakers gentlemanly rivals on the White House senior staff, Edwin Meese III and William P. Clark; while Meese and Clark view such infighting with disdain, Bill relishes it (according to a Casey friend).
When Baker fingered him, Casey,s antenna quivered. His friends say he saw Baker making the same move on him that he had made, with varying results, against Meese, Clark, Alexander Haig, Richard V. Allen, Raymond Donovan, James Watt and Anne Gorsuch. Accordingly, the CIA chief went to the Wa^ington bureau of The New York Times to take the offsensive by making clear that Baker had been delegated re^)onsibility for the 1980 debate and as such must take responsibility.
Even if Reagan does not agree with that interpretation and even if FBI-gathered evidence does not implicate either Baker or Casey, it is hard to imagine how they can sit at the same Cabinet table.
you make a single long distance calf, youd be paying $8 a month ($14 a month in a couple of years) for long distance access fees. Utility Commissioner Ed Hipp argues against this and Millers bill was amended to give the conunission otbo'optkH^.
The primary optfon is to spread this cost wit over each Iwig distance call made. That creates bookkeeping problems for the telephone companies and drives up the cost of each icmg distance phone call. Again, business has the trump card of pulling out erf the public phone companies if long distance rates get too high.
Which brings us to the final headache. This issue is so conq)licated. Miller could answer few questions about his own bUl. One telephone lobbyist admitted he didnt uiKierstand what was going on. One legislator simply asked a lobbyist how be wassu{^x)6edtovWe.
Now that youve read this cdumn, take two asprin and rest.Public
mForum
Totheeditor:
In regard to the program for the academically gifted students in the Greenville City Schools, there are some main points,that need to be reempha-. sized. :
1. Academically gifted students do need special education to develop their intellectual capacities. (In my opinion, to have these gifted students become well-rounded people it is important that they do not spend the entire school day, except for P.E., with only gifted students.)
2. There is no federal aid for programs for gifted children. (Federal aid is given for handicapped children.)
3. Greenville City Schools has 14 percent gifted students (Grades 4-12). This is 497 students. This is an unusually hi^ percentage of gifted children.
4. T1)e percentage of gifted that the state will fund is only 3 percent. That leaves 9 percent of the gifted students without funding.
5. Very few parents showed up to talk about programs for the gifted on March 17,1983, at 8 p.m. when the Exceptional Childrens Committee ^nsored a meeting. All parents of exceptional children (this includes the gifted) were sent notices of this meeting.
6. No parents of these 497 gifted students spoke of the need of additional funding for the gifted in May at the Greenville City School Board public hearing on the proposed budget for the school year 1983-84. (County Commissioners do not designate money into special items for the schools.)
In conclusion, I would like to challenge the parents of the gifted and particularly the parents of the upcoming 8th graders to stop their arguing, bickering and fussing. Be willing to give time and effort to help the administration of the Greenville City Schools to plan outstanding programs for all gifted students for 1983^. Nothing constructive will be gained until parents are willing to work with the administration. Parents, it is up to you.
Martha Coffinan, member
Exceptional Children Ckmunittee
Greenville City Sdiools
Letters to Public Forum should be limited to 300 words. The editor reserves the right to cut longer letters.
Elisha DouglassStrength For Today
A rather aged bridge near my town is now being strengthened by having new supports built underneath it. This is no dout^t due to increased traffic and ^ the fact that practically ajl traffic is heavier than it wds some decades ago. t
It seems, as life goes along, that the things we have to beep* get heavier. It may be that wp are worn down slightly, or thdt the years might be taking their toU, but it does seem, sometimes, that it is harder to bear up than in former years. So we have to take a page out of the brid builders book and put added support under lifes structure. :
We really should ask
ourselves, if we are past midcfc age, whether we have ever doqe anything to strengthen aqd cultivate that spirtiual part of our lives which will live for dU eternity. This, if strengthened. Is the greatest siq>port we cw have. >
Sneezing and Wheezing
Getting shots is no fun. But at this time of year, many allergy sufferers have no choice. Ragweed season begins soon and runs into October. But many people have year-round allergies to dust, animals, foods, face powder, insect bites, and even extremes in temperature. The word allergy refers to any abnormal reaction of the bodys natural immune system. Usually, the immune system protects the body only from harmful substances. But during^an allergic reaction, the immune system responds to a substance that would normally be considered harmless, like pollen. The results can be dangerous. About 6,000 Americans die each year from acute asthma attacks triggered by allergies.
DO YOU KNOWHow many Americans suffer from some kind of allergy?
TUESDAYS ANSWER-The average person sleeps about 20 years during his lifetime.
7 i:i-8.i VKC. Inc. 19H.I
GOREN BRIDGE
lYCBARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF
61983 TributM Company Syndicata. Inc
THE DISAPPEARING TRUMP TRICK
Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH
KQ843 <7 A5 OQ
AK653
club ruff reduced the hand to this position:
NORTH K84 9 -0 -
WEST
EAST
K6
J
A1095
WEST
EAST
^KQ1087
^963
-
1095
0 8765
0 1043
7Q108
179
872
J104
087
0 10
SOUTH
-
-
762 ^7 342
0 AKJ92
Q9
The bidding;
South West North East Pass Pass 1 Pass
I ^ Pass 2 9 Pass
3 4 Pass 3 0 Pass
3 ^ Pass 4 Pass
4 , Pass Pass Pass Opening lead: King of
Italy's Benito Garozzo is recognized as perhaps the greatest card player in the game today. Heres an exam pie of his wizardry from the Common Market Championships.
The bidding is typical of his latest methods. One club was forcing, one heart was either natural or showed three controls, two hearts showed at least five spades and five clubs, three clubs showed three spades and fewer clubs, three diamonds was a spade asking bid, three hearts was negative, four clubs was a cue-bid and four spades signed off. (It took us only half an hour to grasp all this after it was written out for us.) As a result, Garozzo became declarer at four spades from the "wrong hand. (It is seldom wrong to have Garozzo declaring.)
Garozzo won the ace of hearts, overtook the queen of diamonds with the king and sluffed a heart from dummy on the ace of diamonds. The two of trumps was covered by the jack, queen and ace. East returned a heart for declarer to ruff on the table. The queen-ace of clubs and a
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Gallows Await Britain Hanging Vote
By MICHAEL WEST Associated Press Writer LONDON (AP) - Gallows in full working order stand ready for use in Londons Wandsworth Prison, awaiting the outcome of the House of Commons debate tonight on whether to recommend reviving the hangmans noose for murderers after a 14-year ban on capital punishment.
Prison governors, judges,
religious leaders - even an ex-hangman - have spoken against restoration, but Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and four-fifths of the British public say they want it back.
Voting is expected to be close on a Conservative motion advocating restoration of the death penalty and amendments specifying six categories of murder: by terrorists, of police, of prison officers, by shooting or
explosives, during robbery or theft, and "other offenses of murder.
British courts would start imposing death sentences again only if one or more of the categoby motions is adopted toni^t and a formal Act of Parliament were passed separately at a later date to repeal the 1%9 abolition.
The vote will be on free, non-pany lines with each member of the 650-seat
Seers Say Outlook For
I
World Economy Murky
PARIS (AP) - Western economists said today the industrialized West finally is reviving from a protracted recession but warned that without more private investment in factories and equipment the recovery will collapse after 1984.
The prediction was part of a semi-annual outlook on prospects for Western economies over the next 18 months by the 24-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
If the latest outlook proves accurate, it would benefit President Reagan, who faces elections in 1984. There are others in the West, notably former West German Chan
cellor Helmut Schmidt, however, who believe the current recovery could collapse before the U.S. presidential elections.
At a news conference, Sylvia Ostry, head of the organizations Economics and Statistics Department, said there were doubts about how strong the recovery would be and whether it .would last.
Though the upturn in economic activity in the United States is visible, Mrs. Ostry said the same is not true elsewhere.
She said interest rates are likely to remain high, a serious cause for concern since they tend to channel investment into financial
SOUTH
7 j
0 J92
-
Declarer cashed the jack of diamonds, discarding a club from dummy, then ruffed the jack of hearts. Now the king of clubs was led, and whether West ruffed high or low, he could score only one trump trick!
Ordered Testify In Foot Hearing
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) - Feminist Ginny Foats ex-husband and accuser has been ordered to testify this month at a Louisiana hearing where she will seek to have a murder charge dismissed.
John Sidote, a Nevada prison inmate, was ordered Tuesday to attend the hearing scheduled July 21 in Gretna, La.
Ms. Foat, 42, president of the California chapter of the National Organization for Women, was indicted on charges of robbing and fatally beating an Argentine businessman near New Orleans in 1963.
Claiming she did not get a speedy trial, she says' Louisiana authorities could have charged her in 1977 when she faced another murder charge in Nevada. That was dropped when Sidote, who said he and his wife committed two murders, refused to testify.
Hospital Awaits Test-Tube Baby
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A 38-year-old research analyst is expected to deliver the first test-tube baby from a Duke University Medical Center program in late February 1984, officials said Monday.
The unidentified womans pregnancy has been confirmed by an ultrasound test, said Dr. James Holman, director of Dukes in vitro fertilization program.
The procedure involves removing mature eggs from a womans ovary and fertilizing them with her husbands sperm in a laboratory dish. The fertilized eggs are then transferred to the womans uterus, where implantation and pregnancy should proceed normally.
The pregnant woman is among 20 women who have had mature eggs successfully removed through laparoscopy since the Duke program began in mid-February, said Holman.
He said the woman and her husband had long-standing unexplained infertility that had not responded to other types of therapy. The couple
had tried one previous in vitro fertilization at Duke that did not result in pregnancy.
The in vitro process was pioneered in England in the 1970s and Louise Brown, the worlds first test-tube baby,
About 20-test tube babies have been bom in the United States since the first U.S. clinic opened in 1980 in Norfolk, Va. The first was Elizabeth Jordan Carr, born Dec. 28,1981.
This is a revolutionary addition to the discipline of infertility and reproductive endocrinology, Holman said.
rather than tangible assets such as new factories and new equipment.
The revival of investment will be a central preoccupation of governments, she predicted, as it will be the decisive factor in keeping the recovery alive.
Economic growth is expected to expand by 2 , percent in 1983 and accelerate to a 3.25 percent growth rate in 1984.The recovery is expected to be led by the United States, where economic activity was predicted to rebound with a 3 percent growth rate this year.
Growth in the United States is projected to expand by 4.5 percent in 1984, but a slowdown to an annual rate of 3.75 percent in the second half is anticipated.
West Germanys real gross national product is expected to expand by 1.75 percent next year, compared with a 0.5 percent growth rate in 1983 and a 1.1 percent contraction in 1982.
Growth rates forecast for other major organization members in 1984 (with 1983 projections in parentheses) are: Britain 2.25 percent (1.75); France 0.5 (-0.5); Canada 4.75 (2) and Italy 2 (-0.5).
Inflation is expected to stabilize at about 6 percent, both this year and next - the lowest rate since the early 1970s - after a 7.5 percent rise in 1982, thanks to the recent fall in oil prices.
The prospects for lower unemployment were discouraging, Mrs. Ostry said. The best one can say as regards Europe is that there is likely to be some decline in the rate at which unemployment is going up.
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House deciding individually according to conscience. This means the ballot is not a vote of confidence for Mrs. Thatchers governing Conservatives.
The Commons debate starts at 3:30 p.m. (10:30 a.m. EDT) but the final outcome is not expected to be known until late tonight.
The Issue has stirred strong feelings nationwide. Opponents of restoration argue a return to hanging would push Britain back into an age of barbarity. Supporters claim execution is the only way to deter a mounting wave of armed crime and terrorism.
The debate was underscored by the killings of four soldiers in Northern Ireland today, which police sources blamed on Irish Republican Army guerrillas.
The IRA, which is fighting to drive the British out of Northern Ireland and unite the province with Ireland, has said it favors restoration of the death penalty because it would make martyrs out of guerrillas convicted of murder.
No Western European country now uses the death penalty in peacetime, although it is on the books in 38 of the 50 U.S. states.
The U.S. murder rate is nine times the British rate of 1.1 person per 100,000, but Britain is catching up. London police reported almost 700,000 violent offenses in the capital last year, compared with 400,000 in 1972.
It will be the fifth time the Commons has voted on the death penalty issue since 1974. On each previous vote a majority of lawmakers opposed restoration.
This time, death-penalty supporters hope law-and-order hard-liners among the 101 new Conservative Members of Parliament who helped boost Mrs. Thatchers Commons majority to 144 in the June 9' elections will swing the vote their way.
The gallows in Wandsworth Prison, complete with trapdoor and crossbeam for The hangmans noose, has been
kept in working order because Britain still theoretically retains the death penalty for treason, despite abolition of hanging 13 years ago.
The Wandsworth gallows was last used in 1960. One of Its best known victims was William Joyce, hanged as a traitor in 1946 for broadcasting Nazi propaganda to Britain in World War II.
Leaders of the Church of England came out overwhelmingly Tuesday against restoration. In an emergency debate at York, the ruling General Synod of the state church voted 407 to 36 for a motion deploring restoration.
Even ex-British hangman Albert Pierrepoint called hanging barbaric.
But opinion polls consistently have shown at least 80 percent of the British public favor hanging murderers.
Mrs. Thatcher said in the election campaign; I believe there are some people... who would be determined to shoot their way out of trouble but who would not do so if there was a death penalty.
Another supporter of hanging is 66-year-old Hannah Walby, mother of one of the last two people hanged in Britain.
Something has got to be done or the country is not going to be safe to live in, she said. Her son, Gwynne Owen Evans, died on the scaffold at Stangeways Prison in Manchester on Aug. 13, 1964. His murder accomplice Peter Allen was hanged at the same time at Liverpools Walton Jail.
CORRECTION
In The Sears Section That Many Of You Received In The Mail The Following Merchandise Will Not Be Available For This Sale. On Page 4 The Family Sport Shoes Advertised At 99.99 Pr. Page 5, Toddler And Litter Boys Belted Pants Advertised At 98.99. On Page 7, The Big Boys Woven Plaid Shirt Advertised At 98.99. On page 33, The KS Super Camera OuHit Advertised At 9164.95. On Page 14 The 6307 Per-manex Trash Container Advertised At 99.99 Will Not Be Available. We Regret Any Inconvenience That This May Have Caused.
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In The Area 1 Lawyer Now Says Tapes Were Stolen
Support Group To Meet Sunday
The second meeting of a bead trauma support group will be held Sunday at 3 p.m. in the rehabilitation center beside Pitt County Memorial H(^ital. Members of the North Carolina Head Injury Foundation will be present.
The meeting is for those who are brain injured and tbeir families.
a
Program Will Aid Building Fund
The Golden Link Club of York Memorial AME Zion Church will present Home Folks on Parade Sunday at 5 p.m. at the church. The program will benefit the building fund and is , open to the public.
Farmvillo Church To Hold Rovival
Fellowship Independent Baptist Church at 200 W.
Home Ave., Farmville, will hold revival services Monday through Friday of next week.
The evangelist for the services will be Dr. Bill Wingard, pastor of Calvary Baptist Church of New Bern.
A graduate of Bob Jones University, be is the founder and president of World Wide New Testament Baptist Missions Inc., serves on the executive board of the N.C.
Association of Christian Schools and is on the local board of Servicemen for Christ Baptist Mission.
Dr. BILL WINGARD
Conley FBLA Honored
The D.H. Conley chapter of the Future Business Leaders of America was honored at the 41st annual National Leadership Conforence of the FBLA held in San Francisco recently.
The Conley chapter, represented at the conference by students Ragan Spain and Deborah Hall and adviser Mary Thompson, received a Hollis and Kitty Guy Gold Seal Chapter Award of Merit.
Miss Hall is a recent graduate of Conley and served as the North Carolina FBLA state secretary for the 1982-83 school year. Spain is currently a senior at Conley and serves as vicef resident of the NCFBLA.
Alumni To Arrange Transportation
Alumni of North Carolina Central University will arrange free transportation for high school students desiring to attend an qpen house at NCCU on July 23.
For information, caU Ernest Brown at 756-0982 after 5:30 p.m. The alumni chapters monthly meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. July 21 at Browns home, 500 Pittman Drive.
Collisions Cause Light Damage
An esUmtted $1,400 damage resulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Tuesday.
Cars driven by Denise Rose Fleming of Route 1, Macclesfidd, and Kristy Michelle Hardee of Route 2, Aydoi, cdlided about 2:25 p.m. at the intersection of Dickinson Avenue and Memorial Drive, causing an estimated $400 damage to the Fleming car and $300 damage to the Harttee vehicle.
Officers said cars operated by Jack Nicholson Wright Jr. of Route 1, Greenville, and Shelby Batts Morton of Route 1, Magnolia, collided about 3:35 p.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Greenville Boulevard, resulting in an estimated $300 damage to the Wright car and $400 damage to the Morton car.
Environmental Panel Meets Thursday
The citys Environmental Advisory Commssion will hold its regular meeting Thursday at 5:30 p.m. in the first floor cmference room at city ha^. Meetings of the commission are open to the public.
Singer Soys Not Tough Enough
CARSON CITY, Nev. (API - Las Vegas pop star Wayne Newton, who is being bandied about as a possible Republican gubernatorial contender in Nevada, says hes not tough enou^ for politics.
Newton, 41, interviewed Tuesday on the CBS Morning News, said, I dont think Im tough enou^ to be a politician. Im a little too thin-skinned ... I dont like
the bureaucracy of it all. Newton said he was approached last week by Republican officials about running as a GOP gubernatorial candidate in 1986 but its not something Im interested in.
Democrat Dick Bryan is now serving his first term as governor, after defeating Republican incumbent Bob List, a friend of Newtons, last year.
By RITA BEAMISH Associated Press Writtf
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - A lawyer who first claimed to have sex tapes of model Vkki Morgan and high ^vemment officials, then said they were stolen by a reportar, should get out of the press confermce and into a court of law, a prosecutor says.
In a bizarre twist to the tale of the elusive videotapes, Beverly Hills attorney Robert K. Steinberg claimed Tuesday that the purported tapes were stolen by a reporter he refused to name. Hours later, he was ordered to produce them in court - or face a contempt citation unless he ei^lains to a judges satisfaction what happened to them.
Chief Deputy District Attorney Jim Bascue, whose office subpoenaed the tapes as possible evidence in Miss Morgans murder, said that apart from Steinbergs
statements, there ic no evidence they exist.
I think the threshold question is the very existoice of the tapes, and secondly the alleged theft of the tapes, and I think its about time that we get Mr. Steinberg out of the press conference and into a court of law to talk to a judge about these matters, Bascue said after a day of confusing statemoits about the tapes.
I think the average citizen on the street would be suspicious of the existence of these tapes, Bascue added.
Asked whether the tapes were a hoax, Steinberg said, No. He said be wished be had destroyed the tapes Monday, adding, I think its a mountain out of a molehill.
Steinberg had claimed Monday that the tapes showed six men -inclixflng the late millionaire Alfred Bloomingdale, a con-
Zoologists Insist Elephant Can Talk
MOSCOW (AP) - The official Soviet news agency said today that Batir, a baby elephant at the Karaga^a zoo, talks and that zoologists have tape recordings to prove it.
Here is the full Tass account of the develi^ment:
Once upon a time, the watchman at the Karaganda zoo discovered that the baby elephant Batir talks during the night. Naturally no one believed the watchmans story: elephants are not on the list of animals capable of imitating human ^leech.
Nevertheless, zoologists decided to check the truth of the watchmans claims. Armed with tape recorders, they went off for a night watch at the zoo. And they were rewarded. Batir spirfce nearly 20 phrases into the tape recorders. His interview was even transmitted on local radio. The elephant speaks mainly about himself and his needs. Batir is good. Batir is a fine fellow. Watar. Have you watered the elephant?
The ^ialist explained this phenomenon by noting jthat the elephant was orphaned at a very eariy
age. He was raised by humans from the time he was in diapers. He learned some of the simplest phrases from his human parents. And besides all that, they say the elephant has, exceptional hearing compared with other el^hants.
'Die Associated Press is trying to get a copy of the tape.
Karaganda is a city in Kazakhstan, the Soviet Unions second largest rqiublic located in the south coitral part of the country.
COMPLAINTS
MOSCOW (AP) - Andrei Sakharov is being deluged with telegrams and letters from Soviets complaining about an article be published in the U.S. supporting the Wests peace through strength strategy, his wife says.
The City has toinis courts at Elm Street, Jaycee Park, Evans Park, River Birb, and Tom Foreman Park for use by the putdic. To reserve a court, call 752-4137.
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gressman, two appointed administration officials and two prominent businessmen.
They supposedly were shown in sex acts with four women. Steinberg claimed Miss Morgan, 30, who was fouiMi beaten to death last week, appears on the tapes only with Bloomingdale, a friend of President Reagan who died of cancer Aug. 20.
Miss Morgan had filed a $10 million palimony lawsuit against Bloomingdale shortly before his death, claiming they had been lovers for 12 years. Most of the suit was dismissed.
After declining comment on the Uqies disai^iearance for most of the day Tuesday, a cleariy nervous Steinberg finally ^e with a crowd of r^xters who chased him to his car after be left his office.
Someone from the press corps went into my library this morning and took Urn tapes, Steinberg said. We know which one it was, and its under investigation. He declined to identify any individual.
Steinberg said he would respond to the subpoena and I hope to bring them (the tapes).
The New York Times today quoted Steinberg as saying Los Angeles Times reporter David Johnston had access to the tapes. Johnston, told of the report, called it a bald-faced lie. I have never seen or had access to any purported tapes.
Steinberg also said he believed Washington columnist Jack Anderson may have access to the tapes. In a statement released by a spokesman later, Anderson said he was in touch with
people who claim to have seen the tapes but said be was not sure at this moment that they actually exist. He declined further comment.
SteiiriDerg said earlier he got the ta^ from a woman be did not know who said they might be useful in defending Marvin Pancoast, 33, on charges of murdering Miss Morgan.
Authorities had telephoned Steinberg on Tuesday morning to inquire about viewing the tapes. A few hours later Steinberg caUed back to say they bad disappeared from a gym bag where he bad left them. Beveriy Hills pdice visited his office later to investigate the reported theft.
Steinberg, who had said be would destroy the tapes un^ less President Reagan wished to see them, also telephoned White House counsel Fred Fielding in Washington on Tuesday to say the tap^ were missing, d^uty White House press secretary Larry Speakes said.
The subpoena ordered Steinberg to bring the tapes to Van Nuys Municipal Court on July 25, when Pancoast is to be arraigned. Police say Pancoast has admitted killing Miss Morgan in the Studio City apartment they were sharing.
Steinberg said he received the tai^ after visiting Pancoast in jail Saturday and agreeing to r^resent him temporally. Arthur Barens, Pancoasts lawyer, said Steinberg never represented Pancoast.
Meanwhile, the Boston Herald reported today that although Steinbergs resume.
provided by his office, listed him as an associate dean and professOT at the law scbod of Northrop UnivCTsity in Inglewood, Calif., the schods dean said be bad never heard of him.
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IRA Landmine Takes Lives In Ulster
PELFAST, Northern litiaod (AP) - Four Ulster D^ense Regiinent soldkrs were killed aiod <me serknisly wounded today when IRA guerrillas detonated a pow-eipil landmine under a ccm-voy on a ranote country road iniN(Htha^ Irdand, police si.
t^ater, police said the naked bodies of two Roman Cottidics, both shot through the head, were found today in a car near Crossmaglen, an Irish Republican Army sttanghold in South Armagh (r the border with the Irish Rapublic. Police sources who asked not to be identified said the men were believed to*ave been executed by the guerrillas as suspected informers.
The killings came only hcurs before the British POriiament was scheduled to vote on restoring the death penalty for terrorist slayings and other categories of miirder.
The landmine explosion hihled the army vehicle into the air, blew down telephone poles and blasted a hole 40 fet wide and 15 feet deep in the main road from Belfast to Omagh near the villa^ of Ballygawley, 40 miles southwest of Belfast. The four part-time soldiers who died were part of a convoy on its way to training camp.
The Ulster Defense Regiment is a locally recruited, predominantly Protestant unit of the British army. IRA guerrillas have killed at least 135 men and women of the UDR, most of them in ambushes while they were off duty, since the regiment was formed in 1970.
The Provisional Irish Republican Armys Tyrone Brigade claimed re^nsibil-ity for the ambush in coded telephone calls to Belfast news organizations.
It claimed the Ulster Defense Regiment was a "sectarian force whose members torture, murder and hrass our people.
^For this, a number of ttem have paid the price of thie British governments Ulsterization policy, the IRA statement added.
Pasto Builds Own Legends
WASHINGTON (AP) -Legends about the origin aiKl meaning of the word macaroni date from ancient Greece through the American Revolution, according to the National Pasta Association with headquarters here.
To eariy Greeks, macaroni meant "rhe Divine Food, a gift from the gods of Olympus, given so that mankind might better enjoy the grains of the field.
One of the best-known pasta legends concerns Marco Polo, notes Joseph Lichtenberg, president of the association. Marco Polo, in the 13th century, during his travels in China, is said to have come upon pasta because one of his sailors distracted a person who was preparing bread dough. The dough overflowed and drippings in strings that quickly dried in the sun were subsequently boiled in a broth, an eariy form of pasta.
About the time of the American Revolution, Englishmen used the term niacaroni as a synonym for perfection and elegance. The term thats macaroni was hdated to deccribe anything exceptionally good. ^ when an English soldier wrote the 'song about Yankee Doodle sticking a feather in his hat, he was saying that the ;feather was an object of elegance, adds Lichtenberg.
; One legend that never had an basis of fact was that Ipasta is high in calories, he points out. Five ounces of cooked pasta contains only ^10 calories.
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Police spokesman Jim Boyd said guerrillas hidden on a nearby hill detonated the landmine by remote control under the last vehicle in a five-truck convoy.
British troops, backed by helicopters, swept into the area in a major dragnet for the guerrillas, and men from the convoy joined the hunt.
Hanging was abolished Britain in 1969, but Parliament has rejected bringing back the noose four times since 1974. However, law-and-order sentiments are running high, and vote
due tonight was expected to be close.
Security authorities have feared the IRA or its Marxist offshoot, the Irish National Liberation Army, would stage a major attack to push legislators toward supporting the reintroduction of capital punishment for terrorist killings.
The organizations are said to believe that bringing back the rope could be of propaganda value to them by creating martyrs out of IRA members executed for waging their so-called war of
liberation to end British rule in Northern Ireland.
The almost exclusively Roman Catholic IRA and INLA are fighting to reunite the Protestant-dominated province with the overwhelmingly Catholic Irish Republic to end nearly 62 years of partition.
Todays killings raised the known death toll in Northern Ireland from nearly 14 years of sectarian bloodshed to at least 2,302, 33 of them this year.
The ambush caused the biggest single fatality toll in
the province this year.
It climaxed several days of violence surrounding marches Tuesday by the provinces pro-British Protestant majority to mark the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.
In that battle, William of Orange routed King James Hs Catholic army to secure Protestant supremacy in Ireland for nearly 250 years.
Police spokesman Boyd reported that Catholic rioters in Londonderry, where the
Troubles erupted in August 1969, lobbed KW gasoline bombs at police officers and shops early today in the third straight night of trouble.
It was an anti-police riot, he said, but passions were probably inflamed by the July 12 marches.
More than 50,000 members of the Orange Order, a masonic-like organization dedicated to maintaining Protestant supremacy in Ulster, marched in Belfast and other towns Tuesday.
CORRECTION
On page 7 of the Kmart Dollar Days insert which ran in the Sunday, July to edition of The Daily Reflector, the Memorex T-120 blank Video Cassette was incorrectly featured on sale tor S8.00. The correct blank video cassette on sale for S8.00 is the SEL T-120.
Also, on page 4 of the Kmart Dollar Days insert which appeared in the Tuesday July 12th Daily Reflector and Wed. July 13th Shoppers Guide, the Duracell 9-Volt battery was incorrectly illustrated as a 2-battery pack. The correct illustration should have shown a single battery pack on sale at 2 packs for $3.00.
We regret this error and any Inconvenience this may have caused our customers.
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Liberal Arts Majors Cashing In On Computer Jobs.
ByEARLBOHN Associated Press Writer PITTSBURGH (AP) -Liberal arts majors are in a position to take advantage of an explosion in computer
careers, but many en^neering graduates are being passed over by Americas slumping basic industries, a survey of recent graduates shows.
The students who have suffered the most are chemical and civil engineers and mechanical mgineers to some degree, said Domis Ryan, director of placement
LOOK MA, NO CAVITIES! - Jasper, a 10-year-old Sumatran Ora^tan at Miamis Metrozoo, will do anything for a smile, especially since a pair of courting lowland gorillas have become the zoos main attrac
tion. Rick Barongi, the zoos primate expert, says Jaspm* is one of the most intelligait primates at Metrozoo and that he amuses himself by mimicking expressions of faces in the crowd. (APLaser^mto)
Superman Success Has Seen Collectibles Boom
DUBLIN, N.H. (AP) - As Superman has ^ne about his business chan^g the course of mighty rivers, bending steel in his bare hands and fighting for truth, justice and the American way for the ptt 45 years, the value of Siqierman memorabilia has been rising - faster than a speeding bullet, says an expert in the collectibles field.
Spurred on by the recent
Prison Term On Another Count
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Saying that a man awaiting trial for allegedly trying to extort money in the Tylenol poisonings will prey on society if released, a judge sentenced him to 10 years in prison in an unrelated case.
James W. Lewis, 36, received the sentence Tuesday on mail fraud charges stemming from a scheme to obtain ci^t caijls by using information from clients of his tax pr^aration service in Kansas City in 1981. Lewis lawyer said ah appeal would be filed.
movies, such items have never been more popular, according to Charles Jordan, editor of Collectibles Illustrated, a national bimonthly magazine published by Yankee Publishing Inc. in Dublin. Collectibles from the 30s, 40s, and 50s are at a premium, he says.
One of the most prized Superman collectibles is Action Comics No. 1, the comic book produced in 1938 containing the first adventures of the Man of Steel, said Jordan. The book has a current estimated wmlh of 820,000. The only comic book that is a competitor as the most valuable comic book would be the first Marvel comic.
Other Superman comic books are not nearly as valuable but they too are sought-after memorabilia items, he adds. Comics in good condition from the 40s generally sell for $15-20; those from the 50s for about $5; from the 60s for about $1 and from the 70s for $1 or less.
Those comic books with a unique story line are also among the most valuable Superman collectibles, said Jordan. For instance, there is one comic book which recalled the day President John F. Kennedy filled in for
Siq>erman as Clark Kent at a Superman, This Is Your Life party.
Its historical significance lies in the fact that because many comic book publishers put an advance date on their books to generate long newsstand life, the date on this particular book was February 1964 - three months after JFK was assassinated.
Last year, a man paid $1,300 at a mail auction for a brass Superman secret-compartment ring from 1939. Original artwork by Supermans creators, Jeri7 Sie^ and Joe Schuster, sells f(ff between $400 and $500 per pa^ and Superman movie serial posters bring about $600 apiece.
services and counseling at Camegie-Mellwi University. Those who seem to have a good, lively job market are electrical engineers and computer science people. Its been very characteristic of certain industries.
The decline in engineering offers is pretty wide^read nationwide. It has focused principally on the basic industriesi chemicals, petroleum, automotive and metals. Thats been counterbalanced by a pretty strong job market in the high technology fields, e^ially aero^ace and computers, he said Tuesday.
A survey of May Camegie-Mellon graduates with bachelors degrees showed job offers rose 20 percoit over 1982 for liberal arts majors and plunged 40 percent for engineering majors, Ryan said, llie school had more than 300 graduates.
The turnaround has meant the most for students from computer-oriented colleges such as Carnegie-Mellon, where computer science and statistics are required courses for liberal arts majors, he said.
They may be English majors, but they can still be technical writers. The social science people have very strong computer skills, and economics majors tend to have heavy backgrounds in computer science and man-'
One Superman collector, Danny Fuchs of Bayside, N.Y., has approximately 2,500 Siqperman comic books as well as a thousand other items, including a 1947 Kelloggs Pep Cereal poster (Kelloggs was Supermans radio ^nsor), a 7*/i-inch chrome automobile hood ornament from the 40s and a 1940 gum wrapper showing Siq)erman leaping into the air.
How valuable are the collectibles generated from the recent Suprman movies?
Items made now because of the new Warner Brothers films may never approach the value of the etuiy lectibles, said Jordan, riowever, you can never tell. If pe(^le disregard the new items, years from now they will b hard to find, therefore making them collectibles.
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agement,hesaid.
Engineering graduates glutted the job market in 1970 and 1971. But by the mid-1970s, a bachelor of engineering degree again was a ticket to a good job, Ryan said.
This year, weve had probably the largest number of bachelors degrees in chemical engineering awanted nationwide in history ... and a poor job market has made it a very bad situation, he said.
Other engineering disciplines have felt the pinch, like mechanical engineering, which tends to be very basic, and metallurgical, which is so closely tied to the metals industry and we all know whats hajqiened to the steel indu^, Ryan said.
The nations st^ industry reached a post-Depresskm low in 1983.
Hie best studmts are still getting sevCTal offers, but the average and even above-average students arent, he said.
The recession has aggravated the situation, Ryan said.
A few years ago, we had 100 to 200 mployers on a waiting list wanting to be on campus. This past year this didnt happen, he said.
But engin^ring students who do land jobs still tend to earn more than liberal arts majopS, Ryan said.
Carnegie-Mellons survey found the average starting saltfy for a chemical engineer with a bachelors degi^ was $27,500, electrical engineer $26,200, computer science major $25,000, English major $21,600, and economics major $21,400.
Ryan said educators are worried high school students will change their college plans because of the current job market.
History shows us that
these trends are momentary and that they do turn around, he said. My early
indications from employers is that well see an iqiturn in hiring. They dont see any
return to the frantic hiring we saw in the late 1970s, bid we do see an inqirovanoit.
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Accused Rapist Is Shielded By Ruling
ByJOEMAGRUDER Associated Press Writer CONCORD, NH.(AP)-A
, court ruling that shielded an
^ V accused rapist from pro-
sedition iwcause he reported
the offense himsdf coidd _help other, sex eReaders avoid punishmeiR, a prosecutor says.
T r Eugene Howland, 39,. of
f w
^Tamworth, is immune frwn
prosecutkm imder a 1979 law that bars legal action against p^le who make good faith efforts to report suspected abuses of children, according to a ruling by New Hampshire Superior Court Judge Louis Wyman.
^ Howland was arrested and charged with rape after he told state welfare officials he had sex with a 12-year-old girl. The charge was dis-
gostow To Be Low School Dean
NEW YORK (AP) -Eugene V. Rostow, a legal ll^t to two presidents and a distinguished professor at Yale Law School, will be heading to the Big Apple to become dean of New York , Law School.
Rostow, the 69-year-old Sterling Professor of Law at Yale, will take up his New York duties on Jan. 1, the
Rostow was formerly director of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency under President Reagan and served as undersecretary of state for political affairs under Presictent Johnson.
In a statement issued by the school, Rostow said he is
dedicated to the pn^ition that the most theoretical, intellectuaily demanding and philosophical kind of training for lawyers is also the most practical.
Rostow has been on the familty at Yale Law School since 1938 and was dean there from 1955 to 1965. He has written several books including Is Law Dead? and The Ideal In Law.
New York Law School is a private institution with more than 1,400 students.
HELP FIGHT INFLATION by buying and selling through the Classified ads. Call 752-6166.
missed by Wyman on June 29.
Carroll County Attorney William Paine, who said the girl is a member of Howlands household, plans to appeal the dismissal of the rape charge to the state Supreme Court. Wyman must approve the appeal.
Paine said he disagre^ with Wymans ruling but said it was intellectually justified, based on the statude. He questioned the language of the law, and said the decision could help other offenders avoid prosecution.
(Sex offenders are) de-p^dent personalities and 1 think youll find you may get a lot of them coming in and reporting, Paine said. Tliey can walk in, confess and walk out without any kinds of controls on them... I think they should be in some kind of jail.
Deanna Crawford, of the Rape & Assault Committee of the Nashua Area, blasted Wymans decision as Ulogi-cal and scary because its setting a precedent.
She said the ruling clearly violated the legislatures intent in passing the law.
A layman could understand that (the child abuse law) not there to protect the offender. Its
there to protect the concerned teacher or the neighbor, somebody who suspects that a child may be being abused, said Ms. Crawford. Theres no logic behind Judge Wymans i^-ing in this case.
Ms. Crawford also said Wyman should have sent the question to the Supreme (^ourt, if possible, before ruling on Howlands dismissal motion, f
State Police Corporal Paul Schwatka said Howland was charged with rape after he admitted having sex with a young girl. He was charged under a law Uiat bars sex with children under 13, an offense punishable by up to 15 years in prison.
Howland, who recently moved to New Hampshire from Maine, faces a similar charge in Maine, said Hazel Dillingham of the Oxford County district attorneys office in South Paris, Maine.
Ms. Dillin^am said a county grand jury indictment charges Howland with gross sexual misconduct, a felony. Ms. Dillin^am said court papers indicate the victim was 12.
It could not be determined Tuesday whether the same girl was involved in both cases.
Even if Wymans ruling is overturned it will be tou^ to prosecute Howland, the prosecutor said, because he would have to disregard a state Division of Welfare recommendation against prosecution and face possible arguments of double jei^^y.
Paine said Howland first
reported having sex with the girl to a doctor at Maine Medical Center in Portland. He said the doctor reported the case to New Hampshire welfare officials, after which Howland came over and himself contacted the (New Hampshire) Welfare (Division) on two occasions within 24 hours.
NOTICE
THE PITT COUNTY BUDGET FOR THE FISCAL YEAR 1983-84, INCLUDING REVENUE SHARING, AS ADOPTED BY THE PITT COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS, IS AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC INSPECTION IN THE OFFICE OF THE COUNTY MANAGER, SHEPPARD MEMORIAL LIBRARY AND THE PITT-GREENVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.
H.R. GRAY COUNTY MANAGER
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Youngsters Are Excited By Program In Computers
\
GROUP EXPLANATION ... Teacher Nancy Wynne explains one of the functions of an ^ple microcomputer to a group of students after they have engaged in individual expmlments with terminals.
CHECKING THE LINE... Ann Mewbom checks out students in the Radio Shack network of 16 terminals that is connected to her ctmtrol terminal.
Lynn G. Borchert, M.D.
Announces The Opening Of His Solo Practice In Gynecology, Infertility, And Reproductive Endocrinology On July 5, 1983
Sensitive Individual Care
Infertility Evaluation and Therapy, Including Microsurgical Repair of the Fallopian Tubes, Artificial Insemination, Menstrual Problems, Menopause, Excessive Hair Growth, Annual Exams, Pap Smears, Birth Control, Sterilization and Female Surgery. Dietary Counseling By Registered Dietitian Available.
By Appointment; Physicians Quadrangle, Bldg. C 1705 W, 6th St.
Greenville, N.C. 21%?A Phone 919-752-097.3
wm
By JERRY RAYNOR ReflectorStaif Writer
These young people are so excited its all we can do to persuade them to take a 15-minute break from their studies, said Kay Whitehurst, principal at Aycock Junior High School, site of a week-long Computer Camp for 80 students.
The program, which began Monday and ends Friday, has 40 students in the 8-11 age group, and 40 in the 12-15 age group.
Theres bei terrific interest in computers on the part of students. Its something theyre really keen about, Mrs. Whitehurst added.
Since no prepared computer course for students at the junior high and younger age level was readily available, Greenville schools approached Dr. Charles Coble, dean of the school of education at East Carolina University, for assistance. He was most cooperative and headed a project to devise a program suitable for a weeks duration, Mrs. Whitdiurstsaid.
The younger students attend for three hours in the morning, with the older students coming in for the same, number of hours in the afternoon.
Wachovia Corp. Earriings Rose
WINSTON.SALEM, N.C. (AP) - The Wachovia Corp. reported Monday that operating earnings increased
12.4 percent in the quarter ended June 30, compared with the second quarter of 1982.
Our main areas of strength were mortgage banking aiKl consumer laid-ing, said John Medlin, president of the firm. That tracks the housing recovery, the increase in automobile purchases and the rise in consumer spending.
Net income was $20.4 million, or $1.27 a share, up
44.5 percent over the net of $14.12 million or 88 cents a share recorded in the second quarter of 1982.
The course is divided into two sections, one dealing with Apple microcomputers, the other with Radio Shack equipment.
Nancy Wynne, a science teacher at Rose High, teaches the 1.5-bour session in Apple microcomputers. Anne Mewborn, a math teacher at Ayrock, teaches the Radio Shack l.5-hour session. Both teachers, Mrs. Whitehurst pointed out, have attended special sessions on computer teaching over the past two years and are knowledgeable in the field.
In the Apple class, which has eight units, students are
given the opportunity to work in free study individual sessions as well as in group sessions. The Radio Shack class involves a network of 16 terminals with a control unit manned by the teacher.
We expected a good response to this ^ial summer offering, Mrs. Whitehurst commented, but we had no idea of the extent of the enthusiasm the students have shown. U asked
one student, why did you give up a week of your summer vacation for sdwol work. His answer was, This*" isnt work, this is com-, puters.
Coriplete RadUtof Sortc*
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Greenville Blvd. on 264 By Pass Greenville, N.C.
tale prteae good thru Sun. MaaterCfd or Visa. Open evenings_
Etheridge Furniture Co.
Macclesfield, N.C.Phone: 827-5613THURSDAY-SATURDAY
Closed SundayClearance Sale
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All
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T.V.S M3 Above
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Example Price:
25 Console - 550.00
^Sumn
yumiyirttrni
All Furniture Sold At 10 % Above Dealer Cost
American Drew Taylorsville Kingsdown Stanley American Charms
Greens Brothers SK Chatham County Martinsville Novelty Friendship
District Court Report
James E. Ragan III idge W. Lee Lumpkin of the following during the June 20-24 if District Court in Pitt
'<5
Eari Barnes, West 4th Iriving under the influence, dismissal.
George Benson, High exceeding safe speed, pay
Odell Cannon Jr., Win-possession of marijuana, ind costs.
John Counsler, Havelock,
driving, 30 days jail sus-on payihent of $100 and
athy Ann Domey, Edith Court, conyjye malt beverage on illegal premises, prayer lor judgment continued on payment of costs.
William Brooks Eakes, Farmville, reckless driving, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol schooljpay$100fee.
Jamis David Gates II, Grifton, no registration plhte and no liability insurance, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.
Tony Pierce Harris, Ayden, reckless driving, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fe.
Arthur House Jr., Fleming Street,'assault on a female, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.
Mrs. Vandy B. Jemigan, Col-erain, worthless check, 5 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
Douglas Wayne Jobes, Win-terville, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.
Willie Montana Jones, Hopkins Drive, driving under the influence, 6 monUis jau suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school,<pay$lOOfee.
Hattjle Mae Joyner, Farmville, shoplifting, 6 months jail suspended onpayment of $100and costs.
nog^r Peter Kovaleski, Route 13, Greenville, assault on a female, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $10 an() costs and pay restitution for injuries.
William George Mathis Jr.. Kinstoji. driving under the influence, not guilty.
Cecih Rogers, Lakeview Terrace,
worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and
check.
James MacDonald Ross Jr., Route .6, Greenville, possession of malt beverage while under 18 years of age,;voluntary dismissal.
James K. Shearin, Forbes Street, worthless check (seven countsl, 30 days in each case to run consecutively, suspended on payment of cos{s and check in each case, probation one year.
Gordon Wayne Tedder, Grifton, driving after drinking, voluntary dismissal.
George Valentine, Winterville, assaulf with a deadly weapon. 30
Peggy Louise Bizzell, Ayden. dispon of secured property, voluntary dismissal.
Terry Michael Roach, Van-ceboro, driving under the influence, careless and reckless driving, speeding 106/55 and fail to stop for blue light and siren. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $500 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee. spend 72 hours in jail.
Cecil Van Rogers. Greenfield Boulevard, no operators license and expired registration plate, 5 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
George Benjamin Timmerman II. West 9th Street, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.
Irvin Wells, Carolina East Mall, assault with a deadly weapon, not guilty.
Kimberly Wells, Mount Olive, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.
Alfred C. Alston, West 4th Street, defraud innkeeper, voluntary dismissal.
Jennie Lee Baird, Elm Street, driving under the influence, voluntary dismissal.
Willie Barnes, Kennedy Circle, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
Kenneth Gregory Britt, Tucker Drive, exceeding safe speed, 60 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
Charles Wayne Cox, Ayden, hit and run, property damage, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, pay $89.50 restitution.
Robert Freeman* Deanes 11, Farmville, possession of cocaine, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs.
Timothy Keith Dubois, Wilson Acres, transport alcoholic beverage with seal broken, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.
Wanda Sue Flanagan, Route 13, Greenville, no operators license, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
Ethel Roth Hardee, Route 3, Greenville, safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal.
Jeffrey Wayne Hardee, Wedgewood Drive, careless and reckless driving, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.
Harold Smith Harrington, Route 1, Greenville, intoxicated and disruptive, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.
Steven L. Hixon, West Third Street, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.
Little Eleanor Wilson Leggett, Clement Dorm, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee.
William Kevin Harris, Winterville, safe movement violation, wluntary dismissal.
Anthony Jones, Grifton, larceny, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation l year.
Roger Clayton Jones, Kinston, exceeding safe spe^, pay costs.
John Lyerly, Grifton, assault, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs, pay restitution.
Albert Miller, Kinston, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.
Charlie Mitchell, Grifton, intoxicated and disruptive, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs..
George Alan McCarter, Grifton, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation 4 years; driving while license revoked, ,1 year jail at the expiration of prior sentence suspended on payment of $300 and costs, probation 4 years; driving under the influence, I year jail at the expiration of prior sentence suspended on payment of $500 and costs, probation 4 years.
Joseph Lee Thompson, Winterville, assault by pointing a gun, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation 2 years, surrender gun to be sold.
John Edward Vestal, Sherwood Drive, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.
Johnny James Corey, Ayden,
Elizabeth G. Jerome, Kent Drive, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation 2 years.
Dalton Granville Lilley Jr., Greenway Apartments, driving under the influence and speeding, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee; stopli^t violation, voluntary dismi.ssal.
Frank W. Moots Jr., West Gum Road, careless and reckless, IG days jail suspended on payment ol $50 and costs, surrender operators license for 5 days.
George Howard Norville, Route 4, Greenville, telephone harrasslng, not guilty.
Linwood Earl Duffie, Conley Street, forgery and uttering (8 counts), voluntary dismissal.
Andrea Wooten, McDowell Street, assault, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.
Charles E. May, Farmville, assault with a deadly weapon, prosecution frivolous and malicious, prosecuting witness pay costs.
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, July 13,1963-11
James Edward Parker, Van Dyke Street, larceny from person, no probable cause found.
Walter Willis, Fleming Street, assault on a female, 90 days jail suspended cin payment of $10 and costs.
O.C Smith Jr., Vance Street, non-support, 6 month jail suspended on payment of costs-remitted, pay t20 per week for support.
Dial-A-Prayer
752-1362
Virgil Pilgreen, Greenville, 3sauTt,l day Jail.
William Earl Tyndall, Maury,
assault on a female, voluntary dismissal; non-support, voluntary dismissal.
Charlie Whitehead, Falkland, larceny, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.
Joel Craig Williams, Cooper Street, assault on a female, vbum-
tai7 dismissal.
Francis Best Woods, Ayd assault and trespass on school bus.
6 months jail suspended on pay ment of costs.
Anthony Bryant, Fairfax Avenue, tamper with motor vehicle, 90 days
engage in affray, prayer for judgment continued on payment of
jail suspended on payment of $10( I costs.
and(
days jail suspended on payihent of costs-remitted, attend Pitt County
as Lloyi
exceeding safe speed, pay costs June Ma
John
MentajjHealth Center.
Burnell Andrews Ballard, ManiM, driving in excess of .10 pei|:fln{l blood alcohol content, 6 n]Ai(^ jail suspended on payment oCflio and costs, surrender opera-tor'^icense, attend alcohol school, pMQOOfee.
Bny Blaine Chappell, East 11th
improper passing, 5 days j^isuspendeo on payment of $10
eireiMnnf
Garaeto'
t(llien
MeBie Privett Cox, Winterville, ejtONdlng safe speed, costs.
s Ehiar Crummer, iwn Apartments, no opera-inse, 30 days jail suspended onllayment of $50 and costs.
ter Hassell Davenport, r Road, no chauffeurs voluntary dismissal, les Allen Gorham, Fountain, g, 5 days iail suspended on it of $10 and costs.
^ph Earl Johnson Jr., driving in excess of .10 blood alcohol content, 6 IS jail suspended on payment ilO and costs, surrender opera-jlicense, attend alcohol school, $160 fee.
rent Anthony Mello, Camp driving under the influ-lareless and reckless driving, lnths jail suspended on pay-iC of $400 and costs, pay $25 ion, surrender operators I, spend 72 hours in jail, ly Wayne Penland, Pan-kless driving, 30 days jail on payment of $100 and
ih Alois Poandl, Goldsboro, driving, 90 days jail sus-_ on payment of $100 and attend alcohol school, pay
t*
2** CATASTROPHIC M3LAND, Switzerland (AP) Sjiie World WUdlife Fund jMi^the Persian Gulf oil spill " I, caused catastrophic iDotion that poses a j'term threat to marine [and fresh water supplies area.
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costs, remit costs.
Ronald Emmett Allen, Route 1), Greenville, driving under tjie influence, 90 days jail suspended on payment of hso and costs, probation 1 year.
Judith J. Edwards, Emma Place, worthless check, 10 days jail.
James Ralph Garrett III, East 10th Street, exceeding speed limit, pay costs.
Rufus L. Craft, Route 5 Greenville, maintaining a dwelling for controlled substance, 6 month! jail suspended on payment of $20( and costs.
Charlie Daniels, Route 5 Greenville, bastardy, voluntary dismissal.
Charles Ray Dixon, Rountree Drive, larceny, voluntary dismissal.
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IVEMLTTE.
656B Arlington Boulevard Greenville, N.C. 27834 (919) 756-4100
Larry Thomas Lloyd, Winterville, speed, I Maye
Drive, driving under the influence.
Jr., Hopkins
6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee; improper passing, voluntary dismissal.
Evander Tracy McLaurin, Charles Street, safe movement violation, voluntary dismissal.
Elic Powell, Grimesland, driving under the influence, voluntary dismissal.
Thomas Warden Riggs Jr., Glenwood Drive, no re^tration plate, voluntary dismissal.
Patrice Sasser, Red Bam Trailer Park, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.
Vernon Lee Shearin, Stratford Arms, exceeding safe speed, pay
costs,
Donnell Harrel Taylor, Bethel, safe movement violation and no operators license, voluntary dismissal.
Edgar Battle Wall Jr., Shady Knoll, fail to secure load, voluntary dismissal.
Nathaniel Weaver, Red Bam Trailer Park, damage to real property, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs, pay $135 restitution.
Elizabeth R. Werner, Route 2, Greenville, worthless check (2 counts), 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check in each case.
Laurel Hawkins Wolford, Riverbluff Raod, no city tag, voluntary dismissal.
Raymond Earl Wooten, Fleming Street, assault inflicting serious injury, 30 days jail.
Willie Brown Jr., Ayden, injury to personal property, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and $30 restitution.
William Howard Bullock, South Charles Boulevard, passing stopped school bus, voluntan dismissal.
Edward Earl Cannon, Ayden, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs.
Mitchell Glenn Coward, Route 4, Greenville, interferring with officer, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs.
Louise Cleary Davis, Pantego, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgment continued on payment of cost.
James Wayne Dickson, Grifton, no operators license and driving under the influence, 6 months jau suspended on payment of $125 and costs, attend alcohol school, pay $100 fee
Maxwell
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Night stand priced separately at $119.95
Bedding priced separately
3 Piece Dinette
$9995
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30 round pedistal table
2 ladder back chairs
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$8995
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Covered in a saddle
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colored Solid Velvet
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J \1
Linked To Male Heart Disease
REaL cool, now - Andy, a polar bear cub named for the Mayor Andrew Young, found the summer heat just too much. To help Andy get his cool, an ice machine was
installed outside his cage at the Atlanta Zoo and now he soug^es up in ice when he beds down. (APLasnptmto)
Glenn Turner Ordered To Pay Arizona Penalty
By LARRY LOPEZ
Associated Press Writer
PHOENIX (AP) - Glenn W. Turner, of "Dare To Be Great fame, has been ordered to pay more than $2.5 million in penalties, fees and restitution to Arizona victims of a pyramid scheme called "Challenge To America, officials say.
"Our chances of collecting our judgment against him appear bleak, assistant state Attorney General Mark Sendrow acknowledged Tuesday. "The federal government has $29 million in judgments against Turner alone.
The Arizona judgment, entered July 8 by Judge Peter DAngelo of Maricopa County Superior Court, comes on top of judgments entered in April and May against Challenge Inc. and several of its officers.
According to the decision. Turner played a major role in the operations of Challenge Inc., which sold motivational courses, known as Challenge to America Adventure Series, for as much as $5,000.
Turner was ordered to make the Arizona payments by Monday.
In the early 1970s, Turner, of Goldenrod, Fla., had become a rags-to-riches entrepreneur with a conglomerate dealing in products ranging from mink-oil cosmetics to "Dare To Be Great self-help courses.
But his empire crashed in 1973-74 amid charges of mail fraud, securities violations, bilking investors in pyramid sales schemes and nonpayment of income taxes.
Turner was fined for violating regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and convicted of fraudulent sale of securities. He and his companies were
named in dozens of legal actions filed by states across the country, and the Internal Revenue Service claimed in
1978 that he owed more than $1 million in back taxes.
"Challenge To America began Arizona operations in
1979 and was sued in tember 1980 after an investigation by the Arizona Corpo-ation Commissions securities division.
Promotional literature for the program called it "chiefly the creation of Turner, and affidavits from Arizona participants showed the program used the same audio tapes as Dare To Be Great, Sendrow said.
DAngelo called Challenge a pyramid scheme, noting that 98 percent of the 4,908 courses sold within the United States as of August 1980
had been sold to Challenge salespeople.
In April, he granted summary judgment against the corporation and four Orlando, Fla., men, citing violations of the state Consumer Fraud Act. A hearing on the damages they will have to pay is set for July 20.
In June, a fifth man, Barry A. Ackel, was assessed $561,500 for his role as Challenges former state director.
Those named in the April judgment were Edward G. Rector, president and board chairman of Challenge; Dou^as L. Beekman, former president and director, and Allan Kent Oakes and Richard E. Mailman, former vice presidents and directors, Sendrow said.
Seek Cause Of Tank Explosion
LAPLACE, U. (AP) -Officials at a chemical plant were trying to find out what caused a storage tank explosion that injured 21 workers and forced evacuation of hundreds more.
Fire burned out of control for an hour Tuesday at Du Pont Co.s Pontchartrain Works on Tuesday, officials said. William Cobb, a company spokesman, said at least 15 workers were hurt seriously enough to be hospitalized.
Cobb said the blast mi^t have resulted when material being processed clogged up a storage tank.
About 450 of the plants 650 employees were on duty at
For information on voter registration, call the Pitt County Board of Elections at 7584683.
the time of the blast, which occurred in an area where the flammable chemical chlon^rene, used in making synthetic rubber, is stored, he said.
By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer Recent findings linking coronary heart disease in men with higher educatkm and better employment among their wives may signal a hiddoi danger in two-worker households, a University of North Carolina epidemiologist sa^.
There is a unifying conclusion that men married to well-educated women working outside the home are at higher risk of developing heart disease than men not married to those kinds of women, said Dr. Suzanne G. Haynes, whose study appears in the July issue of the American Journal of Epidemiology.
The study showed that men whose wives are hi^y educated and hold white^ar jobs may be more than three times as likely to develop coronary heart disease as those married to less educated housewives.
For example, men whose wives completed eight grades or less had an 8.3 percent rate of coronary heart disease. Men whose wives had nine to 12 years of education had a 15.4 percent rate, while those whose wives completed 13 years or more ran a 21.7 percent incidence.
The greatest risk, however, came with educated wives working outside the home, Ms. Haynes said in a telephone interview from her Chapel Hill office.
If youre a man married to a working woman with more than 13 years of education the rates jumped iq> to 31.8 percent, she said.
But she warned that because the research involved marriages that were well established before working women became commonplace the results should not be applied without question to married couples today.
Because of the rapid changes in social roles and marital expectations that have occurred over the past 10 years, our work needs to be repeated and our results confirmed in more updated situations to test their current meaning and to understand their importance for future generations, she said. Most p^le who develop heart disease develop
it between the ages of 45 and 64, so we cant even say what the baby boom generation is going to do.
If the study is borne out in contemporary marriages, Ms. Haynes said people should look for ways to reduce the pressures of two-worker families because they are likely to become even more conunon.
Institutions are oblivious to a phenomenon thats just all over the county, she said. The economic situation as it is today has almost dissolved the single-worker family. People just cant afford not to have two people working.
Ms. Haynes said one factor that might explain the findings was the fact that better educated working wives whose husbands developed heart disease were more likely to have had a nonsup-portive boss and fewer promotions than wives whose husbands did not develop heart disease.
In those particular families where the men were married to highly educated working women or higher educational status women, they were more likely to have frustrating work environments, she said. The women in these families were in difficult work situations and the men were helpless to do anything about it.
Ms. Haynes noted that children appear^ to aggravate the situation.
The more children that they had, the higher the rate, she said. They went from a low (risk) of 7.9 percent for men with no children, 15.2 percent for
men with 1 to 2 children and 18.5 percent for men with three or more.
The dual role of some women in raising children and working outside the home may produce more pressures on a marriage to increase the risk of heart disease among husbands, Ms. Haynes said. But she said the study was unable to confirm the popular belief that wives with superior educations or hi^ occiq)ational status may threaten their husbands self-esteem.
The findings were based on a 10-year follow-up of 269 married couples who had completed psycholo^cal and social questionnairs between 1965 and 1%7, when the husbands were between 45 and 64 years of age. The
couples were part of the continuing Framingham Heart Study, an epidemiological evaluation of 5,00a residents of Framingham, Mass., begun in 1950. Ms. Haynes said the avera^ ri$k of coronary heart disease for the entire sample was about 15 percent.
For purposes of the study,-working women were defined as those who spent at least half their adult years working outside the home. The results were controlled fpr blood pressure, anoking and serum cholesterol - i factors linked with increasd risk of heart disease. r
NOTICE
VENTERS GRILL
Is Closed For Vacation Will Re-Open July 18
Thank You For Your Patronage Have A Nice Summer
MAHRESS WORLD
EXTRA FIRRfrSETS 312 COILS 15 YR.WARR.
TWIN Set $139.95
FULL Set.......$179.95
QUEEN Set $219.95
KING Set.......$299.95
PILLOW COMFORT DELUXE 20YEARWARR.
TWIN...........$174.95
FULL...........$249.95
QUEEN.........$294.95 m
KING...........$409.95 m
BEST BUY IN TOWN
V2
Price Sale
Mon.-Thur.
11-7
Fri.-Sat,
10-8
BEST BUY IN TOWN!
Quality Since 1960
MATTRESS WORLD
1203 W. 14th St. Beside Harmons TV Phone 758-2519
st(^ smokiiK
JULY 18-22 7:00 P.M.
PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
MAIN AUDITORIUM
The popular 5-Day Plan to stop Smoking will be directed by Alien F. Bowyer, president of the Pitt County American Heart Assn., and Chief of Cardiology, E.C.U.
Group Therapy-Films-Lectures-Buddy System-Your Own control book-lt's Great! And you wont gain weight if you follow the 5-Day Plan. Materials Cost $15.
For information call 756-2014 or 757- 3002. Ills not necessary to pre^^egister.
Stop Smoking Week. July 18-22 7:00 p.m.
This is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of an offer to purchase these bonds. The offering is made by the offering circular only.
Wi% 10% 10'/2% 11%
(1 yr. to 3 yr. (3-2 yr. to 5 yr Maturity) Maturity)
(5% yr. to 7 yr. Maturity)
(7'/^ yr. to 10 yr. Maturity)
INTEREST
COMPOUNDED OR PAID SEMI-ANNUALLY
*150,000 FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS
AVAILABLE 1 YEAR T010 YEARS DENOMINATIONS 1,000, 500, '250
GREENVILLE CHURCH OF GOD
1805 Spruce Street Greenville, NC 27834
PLEASE MAIL ME AN OFFERING CIRCULAR
Greenville Church of God 1805 Spruce Street Greenville, NC 27834
Name.
Streat.
Phone (919)
752-4967 City.
.State.
A Lot Of North Carolinas Rmilies Have Grown Up With Planters.
Theres something about the place where you grew up. Especially when your roots were planted in North Carolina long ago by your father or his father. And generation ter generation, your family has built a home and a life here.
Thats how it is with Planters Bank. We made our home in North Carolina way back in 1899. Since then, weve helped thousands of families build larger houses, send kids to
de sc
college and buy new cars. And weve grown stronger, just as North Carolinas families have.
Today, Planters Bank is nearly 50 branches strong. Giving you and your family the most up-to-date financial service with the same special personal attention you deserve;
Planters Bank couldnt feel any closer to North Carolinas families. After all, we grew up together.
Planters Bank
Member FDIC
The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUJe, NC-Wednesday, July 13,1983-13
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each Of these advertised items is required to de readi ly available for sale in each Kroger Sav-on except as specifically noted in this ad if we do run out of an item we will offer you your choice of a comparable Item when available, reflecting the same savings or a ralncheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised price within JO days Limit one manufacturer s coupon per item
Means Better Meat
For Cookouts!
Items and Prices Effective Thru Sat July 16, 1983
ASSORTED CENTER AND END CUTS
Pork
Chops
108
Lb. H
U.S.D.A CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BONELESS TOP ROUND
London
Broil
FRESH PICNIC STYLE
Pork
Roast
HOLLY FARMS FRESH
Combo
Pac
UNTRIMMED FRESH DOMESTIC
Whole Lamb
Leg
Lb.
$^98
U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BONELESS BEEF CAP-ON
U.S.D.A. COV T INSPECTED GENUINE
Ground
Round
BONELESS BEEF
Stew
Meat
Its Summertime in the Kroger Carden
RED RIPE
Whole
watermelon
Salad Fixins
GREAT ON STEAKS
FRESH
Mushrooms.......
CALIFORNIA SWEET
Red
Onions...........
FRESH CRISP
Salad
Spinach............bch
GREEN TOP
Red
Radishes.........
FRESH
Florida Mangos
FIRST OF THE SEASON CALIFORNIA
Thompson Seedless Crapes
CRISP
Boston Lettuce
REFRESHING
Florida
Limes ..............Ea
FRESH
Siicing Size Cucumbers
59
3.0.M
Plant specials
FRESH
DECORATIVE
Marble
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY
Colorful Kalanchoes Queen Pothos
$g99 $R99
600 GreenvWe Blvd. - Greenvie
Phone 756-7031
copyright 1983 Kroger sav-on Quantity Rights Reserved None sold To Dealers
on
*DVfBTISCOneM POUCY
f V-0* rnpsp ,averTisefl items is requirea to oe readily avaiixiie 'Cl -..vf 111 exn Kroqer Sav on eicept as soeciticaiiy noted m I'is .Id It AP do run Out ot an item we wiii otter you your cnoice
1-omoaratjie Item Atien avaiiaoie reflecting tne same say ^
'q<. or a famcneck Atiicn will entitle you to Diircnasetne adver fiQO CrGOnVlM BIVG * GrGGnVlllG
^Pd rpm at fdP advertised once witnm $0 days umit one .witiw
u'l.iarrurpr ^ rouoon oer item
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAYNOW OPEN
Let's go Krogering for the best of every
MICKLEBERRY'S HONEY CURED
Baked $ Ham I
FRESH CHEESE OR
Sausage
Pizza
169
V SAVE 10^
LORRAINE
Swiss Cheese
TROPICAL
Pina
Colada Cake
FRENCH
Crumb Cakes
BETTY CROCKER ALL FLAVORS
Hamburger, OOC Helper ... box 09
RED OR TROPICAL FRUIT
Hawaiiwan ^ric Punch ca^nw9
DELMONTE NO SALT SWEET PEAS OR
wiide t% qqc
Kernel com <
THICK
Delmonte Catsup..
FREEZER TREAT
Zany zoo Pops_____
[DdlMK]
24-Ct.
BOX
U3
.99*
Picnic Fixin'si
SUMMERTIME FAVORITE
Chicken Salad
.*3
' DELI-DELICIUOS
Macaroni
Salad
89
ALL VEGETABLE
Kroger Shortening
MAHATMA YELLOW Bag 29^
Rice .... Buy 1 Get 1 Free
ABRASIVE
comet t),.QAC Cleanser A s. 09
CLAD SHEER STRENGTH SUPER WEIGHT
Trash Bags
BUNKER HILL
Beef Stew...
CREAMY OR CRUNCHY JIF
Peanut Butter
RAGU
Spaghetti
Sauce
$
Lb.
Can
V.
32-Oz.
JarDISCOUNT HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
RICH, ULTRA SHAVING GEL
RIGHT RIGHT GUARD GUARD
ANTI-PERSPIRANT 6-OZ. OR BRONZE 10-OZ.
Right
Guard
$209
VIDAL SASSOON AEROSOL
Hair Spray
$177
7-OZ. I
MEN'S HAIR SPRAY AEROSOL OR PUMP
Dry Look
FLUORIDE
TOOTHPASTE
Aqua Fresh
29
Tube
55
OFF
APRICOT FACIAL SCRUB
Aapri
?2
^ TOOTHBRUSH
Reach Plus
29
35 OFF HAIR SPRAY AEROSOL OR PUMP
Mink
Difference
$1
7-OzT
Can
87
CAUSON
SOFT, SILKY SKIN BATH OIL BEADS
TABLETS 60-CT.
OR CAPSULES 50-CT.
Extra Strength
Tylenol
24 HOURS EVERYDAY
thing including the price! j\
DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE 01^
Pepsi
Cola
$119
2-Ltr.
N.R.
Btl.
SAVE
30^
KROGER
MuKigrain Bread
REGULAR WISE
Potato Chips .
QUARTERS
24-Oz.
Loaf
KROGER HOMOGENIZED
7-Oz. Bag
Parkay ^ ooc whole
99^ MargarineZ^^oo^ Milk..
Gal.
Jug
$^89
2
24-
OZ.
LVS.
KROGER BUTTERMILK OR REGULAR
Sandwich Bread...
COUNTRY OVEN PLAIN OR
Sugar
Donuts... laV
COST CUTTER HAMBURGER OR
Hot Dog Buns...
ROYAL VIKING DANISH PEACH OR
Apple Filled i AC Coffee cakeV
KEEBLER TOWNHOUSE
Snack Crackers
2i99<
24
Oz.
Cup
99
79<
KROGER
Cottage Cheese..
PILLSBURY BUTTERMILK OR
Butter Biscuits. . 'm-
COST CUTTER INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED
imitation A AC
Cheese Food 99
REGULAR
Coors ct Beer . . .D cas
RHINE, CHABLIS, OR CHENIN BLANC
inglenook Navalle..
TURKEY, SALISBURY STEAK OR CHICKEN N DUMLINGS
Banquet Dinners.
WEIGHT WATCHERS
ice Cream Sandwich
REGULAR
Kroger
2-Lb.
Pkg.
19
$119
I
Kroger yi
waffles. HiJi
SARA LEE HONEY OR
Butter
^Croissants
ALL SUMMER FURNITURE.
LAWN MOWERS, GARDEN TOOLS. GRASS SEED. WEEDEATERS AND SUMMER TOYS. WHILE SUPPLIES LAST!
TUCKER 32-CAL. ROUND OR 30-CAL. RECTANGULAR
Trash Can
Reg
^7^ SAVE...$2.00
SUNBEAM 3-16 BEATER EJECTOR
Hand Mixer
$1397
$16
. ^ REMINGTON TRIPLE ACTION
Electric Shaver
$3497
WINDMERE RETRACTABLE TEETH CURLING WAND
Abra-Curl-Dabra
MR. COFFEE TIMED. AUTOMATIC
Coffee Maker
ENTER W!
WIN A MINI-TRUCK!
AN AUTHENIC REPRODCTION OF AN EARLY KROGER DELIVERY TRUCK POWERED BY A 3 H P ENGINE WILL BE AWARDED IN THIS STORE ON SAT JULY 30, 1983 NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
^ ^ _ NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
5 Q / complete details & entry forms at displays
# of Coca Cola in participating Kroger stores.
D-1
Decanter...5
REGAL K-7505 2-4 CUP POLY PERK OR K-7427 WARMER/SERVER
Hot Pot
$097
Kroger ; Charlotte,
"
I I I
iSk hUKNI. NIHILIIMO HUUKC03. m
;r Mini-Truck Contest P.O. Box 240948
otte.N.C. 28224 Attn:Advertising Dept.
Kroger Sav-on
Name -
Street . -
City ___________ _ State . .
Phone__________.
Kroger Co. Employees And Their Families Are Not Eligible.
Winners will be Notified YOU MAY ENTER THIS CONTEST AT ANY OF OUR STORES OR BY MAIL IF YOU WISH. WINNERS MUST SIGN A RELEASE FORM. MAILING ADDRESS.
Stock And Market Reports
Writer Ross Macdonald Dies
Obituary Column
By The Associated Press Grain: No. 2 yellow shelled corn steady at 3.20-3.55, mostly 3.38-3.55 in east and 3.40-3.64, mosUy 3.55-3.60 in Piedmont; No. 1 yellow soybeans firm at 6.30-6.70'2, mostly 6.43-6.61 in east and 6.26-6.50 in Piedmont; wheat 3.10-3.55, mostly 3.24-3.35; oats 1.15-1.45; barley 1.95-2.15. (New crop - corn 2.80-3.10; soybeans 6.2fr6.56). Soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 209.80-217.00. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Tuesday by location for corn and soybeans: Cofield 3.30, 6.61; Conway 3.30, 6.50; Creswell -, 6.30; Dunn 3.59, 6.55; Elizabeth City 3.20, 6.41; Farmville 3.52, 6.53; Fayetteville -, 6.704; Goldsboro 3.55, 6.41; Greenville 3.38, 6.43; Kinston 3.38, 6.43; Lumberton 3.52, 6.53; Pan-tego 3.38, 6,43; Raleigh -, 6.704; Selma 3.55, 6.60; Whiteville 3.52, 6.53; Williamston 3.38, 6.43; Wilson 3.53, 6.45; Albemarle 3.58, 6.26; Barber 3.64, 6.50; Durham 3.55; Mocks-ville 3.40; Monroe 3.60; Mt. Ulla -, 6.45; Roaring River 3.55; Statesville 3.50,6.30.
Hogs
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents to 1.00 lower. Kinston 45.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 44.75, Wilson 45.25, Salisbury 45.50, Rowland
44.00, Spiveys Corner 43.50. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 35.00, Fayetteville
35.00, Whiteville 35.00, Wallace 34.00, Spiveys Corner 35.00, Rowland 34.00, Durham 34.00.
NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks:
Low Last
AMR Corp AbbtUbs Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AraFamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T4T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeina Boise Cased Borden Burtngt Ind CSXCoiv CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Soya Champ int Chrysler CocaCola Coig Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group OdtaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLI FlaProgress FordMot For McKess Fuqua s GTE Corp GnDynam GenlElect s Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co
45
16\
36\
17<4
50'4
42^5.
45\
22
'4
31.
62'-.
27
22
46>i, 38'S. 58', 37 67\ 21 \ 64L 15
24>.
31',
48'-j
22\
25".
30'.
43'S,
42'S.
32".
47',
23
lO-S.
70
43
75
34',
20
36
18'-,
55
48".
30".
43.
53'.
52".
44".
54\
70'-,
31
48'
26".
39'.
SOI
48
34".
44.
16".
36',
17'..
50
42'
45
22
9%
31"
62'
26".
21.
45".
38'.
58'.
36',
67'.
211,
64'
14,
24
30.
48'.
22".
25'.
29".
43',
42'
32"
47'
22,
10',
69*.
42".
75
34
19".
36
18".
55".
48".
30".
43',
52',
52',
44".
54'
70
30-'.
48'
26',
39'
30
47".
34".
44,
16".
36".
17'.
SO
42".
45V.
22
9'
31".
62'..
26,
22
45.
38'.
58',
36'-,
67'.
21".
64".
15
24
31'
48'.
22
25'.
29".
43'-,
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The
Meeting
Place
EL .ESDAY 7:00 p r. -Jaycettesmeet 8:00 p r - GreenvUle White Shrine meets at Masonic Temple 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at AA BIdg. on Farmville hwy.
8:00 p.m. John Ivey Smith Council No. 6600 Knights of Columbus meet at St. Peters Church Hall
8:00 p.m. Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.
THURSDAY
10 a.m. La Leche League. Call 736-4197 to learn place.
6:30 p.m. - Jaycees meet at Rotary Bldg.
6:30 p.m. - Exchange Club meets
6:30 p.m.-BPW Club meets 7:00 p.m. - Greenville Civ an Club meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. La Leche League Call 756-4197 to learn place.
7:30 p m. - DAV and Auxiliary meets at VFW Home 7:30 p.m. - Overeaters Anonymous meets at First P*4resbyterian Church
8:00 p.m. - Chapter 1308 of the Women of the Moose
Card of Thanks
Wt) wish to take this nu'thod to thank you for all of vour kind ness during the'death of our son. Donald Anderson We thank you for your prayers which have been most consoling to all of us
Mr. & Mrs. James Anderson
GLNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculeslnc Honeywell Hosptt'p s Ing Rand IBM
Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KrogerCo Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmlnt n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB Cp NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMoir PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
RalstnPur RepubAir Republic StI Revlon Reynldind Rockwl s StRegisCp Scott Paper SealdPwr s SearsRoeb Shaklee s Skyline Cp Sony Corp Souihem Co Sperry Cp SldOilCaf StdOillnd StdOUOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp I'n Carbide L'niroyal LS Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox Cp
48
25,
3T.
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Ill'
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39
tl7\ 117 157', 157'-.
45",
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30'-, 86", 26 38". 28", 55 30N, 36'., 59", 35 28', 58", 35", 27 55', 49", 28 22 7' 20. 34", 50", 32'-, 27", 24 24", 40 28, 26", 13", 15 39', 37. 51', 50", 22V, 73' 35V 58'-, 18". 74', 65 14'. 24. 34. 40'. 44V 49'-, 46'-, 36V 60 V 34. 54
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84",
30", 86', 26. 38', 28'., 54", 30'-, 35. 59 34. 28'-, 58', 34 27V, 55", 49 27 21V 6V 20", 34V 50". 32' 26'-, 23", 24V 39V 27V 25", I3V 15", 38. 37V 51
49",
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73
35",
58',
17",
74",
64'-,
14
24V
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60
34V
54
45
47V
25V,
37V
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III
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51V
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157V
45V
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26.
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59V
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55",
49
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21.
7
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34 V 50'. 32V 27", 23", 24V 39", 28 28'/, ISV 15", 38, 37", 51'., 50V 22', 73V 35'., 58V I7V 74", 64V 14V 24", 34. 40V 44V 49 V 46', 36V 60 34",
54
45V
stock
42
51V
21V
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28V
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42",
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34",
34V
15",
56",
35V
32
28,
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37V
39 . 14V 55"/, 73V 22V 21V
40
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) - Ross Macdonald, creator of the wisecracking private eye Lew Archer and author of a series of detective novels described as the finest ever written by an American, has died at age 67.
Macdonald, whose real name was Kenneth Millar, carried on the literary tradition of Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett.
He had fou^t a long battle with Alzheimers disease and died from the effects of it Monday afternoon at Pine Crest Hospital, said Ralph B. Sipper, a family friend.
Mzheimers disease, which is virtually untreatable, causes chang^ in the brain leading to senility.
Macdonald was the author of such best sellers as The Moving Target and The Drowning Pool, which were
Following are selected 11 a m market quotations:
Ashland prC Burroughs
Carolina Power & Light Collins & Aikman Conner Duke Eaton Eckerds Exxon Fieldcresl Halteras Hilton Jefferson Deere Lowe's McDonald's McGraw Piedmont Plua Inn P4G
TRW. Inc United Tel Dominion Resources Wachovia OVER THE COUNTER Aviation 28.4-28",
Branch 23'-23",
Little Mint 1-V
Planters Bank 19" ,-19V
Driver Cleared In May Mishap
According to records at the Pitt County Clerk of Superior Courts office, there was no probable cause to charge Susan Romero Millington, 28, of 707A E. Fourth St. with driving under the influence in connection with a May 30 traffic accident 7.8 miles south of Greenville on N.C. 43, so the charges were dropped.
Mrs. Millington and her husband, Gregory John Millington, 32, were injured when the car Mrs. Millington was driving went out of control and overturned about 5:55 p.m.
SURVIVED A FALL BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - A 9-year-old boy survived a fall from the eighth floor of a building, a Belgrade daily newspaper reported Tuesday.
Benilix Plons N.C. Plant
CHARLOHE, N.C. (AP) - The Bendix Corp. will open a $35 million robotics manufacturing facility in Bessemer City and its southeast regional consumer and demonstration center in Charlotte, Gov. Jim Hunt said today.
Hunt was scheduled to make the announcements at 10:30 a.m. in Bessemer City and 1:30 p.m. in Charlotte.
The Bessemer City plant, a 160,000-square-foot facility currently employing about 35 people in a small industrial processing operation, will be taken over by Bendix Automation Group, recently reorganized to begin developing and manufacturing computer-driven design and manufacturing machinery.
The new Bndix center Charlotte, initially employing about 50 people, will include equipment showrooms and technical service and training centers for Bendix Automation customers, according to the governors office.
There was no immediate word on how many people the new Bendix plant at Bessemer City will employ, but Gaston College officials in Dallas have said they have been asked in meetings with Bendix officials to prepare to begin training 25 to 50 people annually to manufacture machines that build other machines.
The Charlotte center will sell and service Bendix Automation products including horizontal and vertical turning machines, punch presses, winding machine, robots, industrial controls and coordinate measurement systems.The center will be one of the six major domestic regional sales offices housing a combined Bendix Automation sales force. Hunt said.
Bendix merged in January into Allied Corp. of New York in a $1.9 billion takeover. Bendix also operates motor vehicle parts plants in Charlotte and Salisbury. Bendix Automation is based in Cleveland, Ohio.
made into movies starring Paul Newman, and The Underground Man, The Zebra-Striped Hearse and The Blue Hammer, - his last novel, published in 1976.
His private eye hero was also the hero of the 1975 NBC-TV series Archer, starring Brian Keith. 'Sipper, who edited Macdonalds last book, a 1981 collection of autobiographical essays titled Self-Portrait: Ceaselessly into the Past, said the writer had been very sick for the last six weeks. Macdonalds first novel, The Dark Tunnel, was published in 1944.
Archer was introduced in The Moving Target in 1949, which became Newmans Harper. .
I began as a disciple of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, Macdonald once said. My language was simple but strong, rapid and rhythmic. Over the years I devd(^ my own system of imagery, and Ive kept pushing it into new colors, trying to be vivid in new ways. In plot terms. Ive kept looking for new kinds of action.
Science fiction writer Ray Bradbury wrote in 1969 that his favorite California writer was Hammett Chandler Macdonald.
They all wrote the same book, Bradbury said, but the same book, out of their hands, over the years, became different. What started out as a hard-boiled detective adventure ended as a literature of sadness and strange endings on the California coast.
The New York Times once called the Lew Archer series the finest series of detective novels ever written by an American.
In November, Macdonald received the prestigious Los Angeles Times Robert Kirsch Award for an outstanding body of work by a Western writer.
Macdonald also wrote a collection of short stories, The Name is Archer, published in 1955, and a volume of essays, On Crime Writing, in 1973. He edited William F. Nolans Dashiell Hammett; a Casebook, published in 1969.
The writer was born Dec. 13,1915, in Los Gatos, Calif., and grew up in Canada, graduating from the Kitchener Collegiate Institute and the University of Western Ontario in 1938.
He taught at a Canadian high school and received a doctorate in American literature from the University of Michigan.
MEETING
Loving Union Tent 464 members will meet at Phillips Brothers Funeral Home Thursday at 7 p.m. for the family visitatkm of the late Jessie D. Green. All members should wear white.
OESNOTICE Pride of the East Chapter No. 524 of the Order of Eastern Star will meet Thursday at 8 p.m.
Daisy Spain, W. Matron Vanessa Sanders, Sby
Green
Birs. Jessie D. Lan^y Green, 66, of 1608 W. Third St. died Sunday morning. Funeral services will te conducted Friday at 2 p.m. at Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church by the Rev. Arlee Griffin. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill
M^^reen, a native of Pitt County, was a member of Cornerstone Missionary Baptist Church and a member of the Senior Qioir and the Sunrise Usher Board. She was also a member of the Old Eastern Star and Loving Union Tent 464.
She is survived by two sisters, Ada B. Briley of Bridgeport, Conn., and Myrtle Simmons of Philadelphia.
Family visitation will be at Phillis Brothers Mortuary from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. 'nnirsday, and at othw times atl608W.TbiixiSt.
Lea
ROCKY MOUNT - Mr. Stanley Robinson Lea, 78, died today. Graveside services will be conducted Thursday at 4 p.m. in Pineview Cemetery by the Rev.LT. WUson.
A retired tobacconist, he is survived by his wife, Mrs. Donna Sturtevant Lea of the home; a son, Stanley Robinson Lea Jr. of Greenville; a daughter, Mrs. Ann Lea Barbour of Clarksdaie, Miss.; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Donna Gark Potter of Wilmington, and seven grandchildren.
Gay-Yost Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society.
Obituary
Lucas
Mrs. Clyde Lucas Stauffer, 80, widow of the late John Jacob Stauffer, died Tuesday.
Graveside services will be held Thursday at 11:00 A.M. in Greenwood Cemetery by her pastor, Dr.WiUR.WaUace.
Mrs. Stauffer, a native of Lucarna, had lived in Greenville for the past 55 years. She was a member of the First Christian Church and was a registered nurse.
She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Herbert R. Paschal, Jr. of GreenvUle; a son, J(Um Jacob Stauffer, Jr. of Washington, N.C.; three granddaughters, Mrs. Joan Stauffer Pair of GreenvUle, Mrs. Annis P. Westmoreland, and Miss Patricia Ann Paschal, both of Atlanta, Ga.; three grandsons, John Jacob Stauffer, III, of Lansing, Mich., Herbert R. Paschal, III of Greenville, and Douglas C. Paschal of Cbailotte; and one sister, Mrs. Alma L. FerreU of WUson.
The famUjr wUl receive friends at Mrs. Stauffers home, 2501 East Fifth Street.
Arrangements are being handled by the WUkerson Funeral Home.
Paid Announcement
ATTENTION**
GREENVILLE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA Thursday, July 14,1983 - 7:30 P.M.
City Council Chambers
The Greenville City Council will consider the following items:
^ Commission-* Committee, Energy Commission, Airport Authority, and Public Transportation
Public hearing on a petition for satellite annexation by the owners of Colonial Mobile Home Park-Public hearing on amendments to the Zoning Ordinance;
Schedule a public hearing on a petition for satellite annexation of West Hills Townhomes Sec I located along SR 1204;
Schedule a public hearing on a petition to annex Heritage Village Subdivision, Sec. I, II, and III; Schedule a public hearing to close a portion of Taylor St.;
Request to prohibit thru truck traHic on Greenfield Boulevard from SR 1419 to NC 11-Ordinance to amend the Greenville Motor Vehicle License Tax;
Resolution to sell Disposal Parcel B-2 in the Central Business District Project;
Ordinance amending the Manual of Fees re: public transportation fees and charges;
Tax releases and refunds;
Agreement with Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce for promotionai services for Greenville; Agreement with the Southern Flue-Cured Tobacco Festival for promotional services for Greenville; Ordinance to prohibit contracts with city employees;
Ordinance to regulate the posting of handbills;
Ss*Co?rts***"^"* Greenville Cable TV, Inc. for a storm drainage system near the River Birch Ten-Resolution approving a grant of easement to the N.C. Dept, of Transportation for improvements to SR
reroTrShTSf-wa*^^^^ to install a water pipe line across
Resolution authorizing the City Manager to execute contracts for sewer service outside the citv limits; Agreement with Greenville Academy of Martial Arts for lease of paVking ^
The public is cordially invited to attend.
July 13.1983
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Nelson
FOUNTAIN - Mr. Raymond Earl Nelson, 48, (rf Fountain died Tuesday afternoon. Funeral services will be cimducted Thursday at 3:320 p.m. from the Church Street Chapel of &e FarmviUe Funotd Home by the Rev. Scott Sow^ and the Rev. Ed Thoraton. Burial will be in Queen Ann Cemetery in Fountain.
Mr. Ndson was a retired farmer and a member of the Mariboro Free Will Baptist Church.
Surviving are bis wife, Mrs. Carolyn Killebrew Nelson of the home; one daughter, Bites Janice Carol Nelson of Kinston; two sons, Raymond Earl Ndson Jr. of Route 2, Walstonburg, and William Hardy Nelson of the home; his' mother, Mrs. Maggie Nelson of Farmville; three sistors, Mrs. Willard Ellis, Mrs. David May and Blrs. Wayne Slaughter, aU of Farmvilk, and two brothers, David McCoy Nelson of Sballotte and Walter Daniel Nelson of Dover, Tenn.
Rives
Mrs. Lelia Hooaker Rives, 96, (Oed Saturday in Raleigh. Her funeral, service will be conducted Friday at 10 a.m. in the WUkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Susan Pate. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.
Long a GreenvUle resident, Mrs. Rives was a native of Bland County, Va., who spent her early life in WythevUle, Va. She received a liberal arts degree from Sullins College and was a public school teacher for three years prior to becoming principal of the high school at Glasgow, Va. She came to GreenvUle in 1919 when she married Leon Little Rives.
BIRS. LELIA RIVES
In 1928 she became the manager of the GremvUle
High Sdiool cafeteria. In 1936 she jc^ the staff of East Carolina University and opened dining halls t^. in 1947 she was a^ioiated dining ball stewardess and purchasing agent for the dining bi^, positioiK she hdd until her retiremrat in 1958.
For the past five years she had lived in Ralei^ and was a member of the Fairmont United Methodist Church and the Senior Citizens of Ralei^. While in GreenvUle, sh"was a member of Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church, the Patient Circle of the Kings Daughters and Sons and the Womans Gub.
Surviving are a dau^ter, Mrs. Eleanor Clark of Raleigh; a sister, Bfrs. June Parsons of Candor; five grandchildren and seven great-grandchUdren. :
The famUy wUl reeave friends at the WUkerson Funeral Home Thursday from 7:30 to9 p.m. :
AT
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THE DAILY REFLECTORWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 13, 1983Wild Ride _ , . , ..
The Phillie Phanatic jumps on the doubleheader in Philadelphia, back of AUant Braves catcher Biff Pocoroba didnt see the bird Pocoroba during a pre-game coming, but played along with the warmup prior to Tuesday ni^ts routine, (AP Laserphoto)ACC Needs Television Decision For Contracts
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -r Atlantic Coast Conference Golninissioner Bob James Mid Monday the league needs liecision soon on whether college can televise their own football games regionally.
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver refused Monday to stay an order made last year by a federal district judge that voided $281.1 million in television contracts between the NCAA and ABC, CBS and the Turner Broadcasting System.
An NCAA spokesman said the national association will appeal the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile, the spokesman said, the NCAA will seek an immediate siay from Justice Bryon White in its bid to inaintain control of the television contracts through the 1983 season.
. The crucial problem is that' were rapidly approaching the point where we have to do something, James said. We
have a contingency plan ready, but we have to provide Raycom a chance to market the schedule.
James said he would welcome a stay from White just to get through the 1983 football season without chaos.
I certainly hope we can find a way to get through this year, he said. The .only orderly way would be to grant the stay and revert back to the 1982 plan.
Raycom Sports, the Charlotte-based company that will join with Capitol Broadcasting of Raleigh in producing regional ACC football telecasts should the orderr^stand, welcomed the news.
Lets just say we are proceeding with our plans to show ACC football this season, said Rick Ray, president of Raycom. We have been clearing stations and making proposals to new clients. If this was a race wed be at the third turn and everybody else would be at the
Sports Colendor
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
yBi
Industrial League Fire Fighters vs. Greenville UtUities Grady White vs. WNCT-TV Wachovia Bank vs. Carolina Leaf Burroughs-Wellcome HI vs. East Carolina Hi
' CIS vs. Empire Brushes 2 ~ Cox Armature vs. Coca-Cola Public Works vs. Empire Brushes
n
City League Post-season Tournament y-s!
Softball Industrial League Wachovia Bank vs. Empire BrushesK2 Vermont-American vs. Fire Fighters CIS vs. Pitt Memorial Burroughs-Wellcome #2 vs. East Carolina H2
Ci^ League Post-season Tournament
Save UpTo*400> OnALLIS-CHALMERS UWN MOWERS
American Legion Playoffs
MMnorlal Dr. 752-4122
SAADS
SHOE REPAIR
Quality Shoe Repairing
113 Grande Ave. 758-1228 Nmi Door To CoNaga ViM ClMnan
Hours 8-6 Mon.-Fri. Closed Saturday
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1506 N. GREENE ST. ts2-0876 GREENVILLE
STORM DAMAGE SALE
Some Scratched Some Dented Some Motorcycles
BELOW DEALER COST
All Have Full Factory Warranty
Accessories 20% oit
Financing Available
Phillies Return To First
By Tbe Associated Press
The topsy-turvy National League East has taken another twist, and this time the Philadelphia Phillies are back on Uq).
The Phillies, who led the division for most of May, regained first place Tuesday ni^t by sweeping a twi-nigbt doubleheader from the Atlanta Braves.
Philadelphia won the (^ner in solid fashion 4-1 but then had to rally for three runs in the bottom of the ninth inning to take the second ^me 7-6.
Catcher Ozzie Virgil, whose throwing error had let Atlanta go ahead in the eighth inning of the nightcap, raced home with the winning run when Braves second baseman Glenn Hubbard threw away a potential inning-ending, double-play relay.
Were starting to get some breaks now, and well take them, said Philadelphias Pete Rose. It was really a team effort. Were playing a lot of guys, and everybody is contributing.
In other NL games, Cincinnati downed New York 6-2, Houston overtook Montreal 7-5, San Diego topped Chicago 5-3, Los Angeles beat St. Louis 3-1 and Pittsburg took San Francisco 6-2.
The Philadelphia sweep, coupled with Montreals loss, put the Phillies one game ahead of the Expos, who had
West's Suspension Upheld
NEW YORK (AP) - Joe West is history according to Joe Torre, who has a pennant race to worry about.
As far as Im concerned, the whole thing is closed, the Atlanta Braves manager said from Philadeli^a prior to Tuesday ni^ts doubleheader loss to the Philadelphia Phillies.
Torre acknowledged that he had been fined by the National League for his part in a. pushing incident involving West, who was umpiring a Braves-Phillies series in Atlanta last month. The league office refused to confirm Torres fine, citing league policy which leaves announcements of discipline to players or managers up to individual clubs. It was learned that Torres fine was $200.
Chub Feeney (the league president) had led me to believe all along that I would be fined, so it was no surprise, said Torre, who called the episode very unfortunate.
Torre had argued with West in a, runway leading to the umpires dressing room at Atlanta Stadium on June 28 after Bob Watson
had been called out on strikes, ending the game.
West, who pushed Torre during the argument, was assessed a three-day suspension to begin next Tuesday - and a $500 fine. That fine was reduced Tuesday to $300 by Feeney, due to certain extenuating circumstances.
One thing no one knows is that we (the Braves) never filed a complaint against West, Torre said Tuesday night.
Richie Phillips, attorney for the Major League Umnpires Association, who had accompanied West to a hearing before Feeney on Monday, said the umpire would accept the ruling.
I believe some form of punishment was justified and what Chub has done now is more in line with what should have been done in the first place, Phillips said. The final decision reflects recognition on Chubs part that the offense took place in an area where Torre had no right to be and there were extenuating circumstances.
been in first since mid-June. St. Louis, which has led the division for most of the season, is now two games back.
Atlanta reliever Steve Bedrosian, 5-3, took a 6-4 lead into the ninth inning of the second game and got one out before walking Mike Schmidt. Von Hayes singled Schmidt to second and Virgil drove in one run with a check-swing double.
Greg Gross was then intentionally walked, loading the
bases. Reserve Larry Milboume then hit a slow hopper to shortstop Rafael Ramirez, who flipped the ball to Hubbard as Hayes scored the tying run. But Hubbards relay to get Milboume sailed past Chris Chambliss, allowing Virgil to score.
In the opener, John Denny, 7-5, allowed three hits in seven innings and Garry Maddox tripled in two runs. Denny lowered his earned run average to 2.17, second in the NL to San Franciscos Atlee
Hammaker. A1 Holland pitched the final two innings, striking out five, for his eighth save.
Weve got a much stronger bench this year than last year and its really showing, said Philadelphia Manager Pat Corrales, who was ejected in the first inning of the second game for protesting balls and strikes. It was a good effort all night from everybody. Reds6,Mets2 Cincinnati Manager Russ Nixon, while declining to dis
cuss specifics, said the Reds game with New York was an important one for Frank Pastore.
The right-hander had not won since April 17 and had a seven-game losing streak. Nixon did not directly say it, but a bad outing may have sent Pastore back to the minors.
Pastore responded with eight strong innings and relievers Ben Hayes and Bill Scherrer got out of ninth-inning trouble. Pastore, 3-8, struck out six, walked two and allowed Danny Heeps pin-ch-homer in the ei^th, his fifth home run of the season and third as a pinch hitter.
Dan Driessens single broke a scoreless tie in the fourth inning and his three-run homer, his sixth of the season, made it 4-0 in the sixth against Mike Torrez, 5-10.
Astros 7, Expos 5
Phil Gamer, Jose Cruz, Ray Knight and George Bjorkman singed in fifth-inning runs as Houston bunched six hits to overtake Montreal.
The Astros trailed 5-3 when Terry Puhl led off the fifth with a double, moved to third on Dickie Thons single and scored on Gamers hit. A wild pitch advanced the runners and Cruz singled home Thon. Knight and Bjorkman followed with RBI singles.
Reliever Vem Ruble, 2-3, got the win while Dave Smith
(Please turn to page 19)
halfway mark.
The race began more than a year ago when Oklahoma and Georgia universities filed suit challenging the NCAAs exclusive rights to the television contracts. In August, U.S.. District Court Judge Juan Burciaga ruled that the NCCAs exclusive contract violated the Sherman Antitrust Act. The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals stayed Burciagas order so that the NCAA could appeal, but last month the federal appeals court upheld the bulk of the order.
If White grants another stay, the NCAA would remain in control for one more season while the full court decides if it will hear the case. If White refused to grant a stay, the ACC will be able to implement its one-year television contingency plan formulated earlier this summer. A number of other things could also happen.
Burciaga might revise his order to allow the NCAA to administer the football telecasts under an alternative plan known as the Window Concept for regionally televised games, allowing the NCAA to retain control.
MENS WEAR9 DAYSOFSALENow thru July 23
IT will happen ONLY twice a year for 12 DAYS ONLY
There will be ONLY ONE MARKDOWN
PRICES will be as LOW ON DAY ONE as ON DAY TWELVE
MARKDOWNS ARE SUBSTANTIAL
All sale^merchandise is from our regular stock and does not represent manufacturer mistakes or closeouts.
>
ALL sales during this period will be for CASH ONLY or your CREDIT CARD
ALL ALTERATIONS ARE EXTRA
NO GIFT WRAPPING
A SELECTION OF
SUITS..........................NOW 43510^350
Values to $520
SPORTCOATS .NOW 45.0^225
Values to $415
PANTS NOW ^22.50 to48.75
Values to $105
OUTERWEAR .NOW 27.5 10^90
Values to $180
SHORTS ..........Now41.50J21.25
Values to $42.50
as swimwear...................now41 to48.75
Values to $37.50
KNIT SHIRTS........ ....NOW *13.50 ,,'32.50
Values to $65
SPORT SHIRTS..........now44.35 J38.35
Values to $52.50
DRESS SHIRTS ...NOW 44.25 J21
Values to $42
DRESS SHIRTS Short S.'eeve. NOW 43.90 J21.75
Values to $29
NECKTIES.... NOW *8.75 ,.*16.25
Values to $32.50
as cotton SWEATERS... .now 48.35 (0^33.50
Values to $50
SHOES...... NOW ^32.65 J73.35
A SELECTION OF
A SELECTION OF
A SELECTION OF
A SELECTION OF
OF
A SELECTION OF
A SELECTION OF
A SELECTION OF
OF
A SELECTION OF
A SELECTION OF
Values to $110
You will also find a selected group of BOYS WEAR from our 10/20 Boys Shop and LADIES SPORTS WEAR at our CAROLINA EAST MALL SHOP.
STORES HOURS:
Downtown8:30-5:30 Monday thru Saturday Carolina East Mall and Tarrytown Mall Monday, Thursday, Friday 10 A.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
Bannister Sings Sweet Song For Chisojif
By The Associated Press Floyd Bannisters words were almost as hard to follow as his pitches.
The left-hander had been a major disappointment since signing a lucrative free-agent contract with the Chicago N^hite Sox last December. But Tuesday night he finally came around, pitching a five-hitter for his first shutout of the season, an 8-0 rout of the Cleveland Indians in Chicago.
When pressed for an explanation, Bannister said, Its hard to describe, but it has to do with a timing sequence and working on gaining consistency with every pitch.
Bannisters translator was catcher Carlton Fisk, who bit two homers and drove in three runs.
He was fantastic," Fisk said. Not many balls were bit hard at all and be mixed his pitches real wdl.
In other American League games, Toronto beat Kansas City H, Milwaukee clubbed Texas 9-2, Detroit n^ped California 5-( in 14 innings, Baltimore downed Seattle 3-1, New York edged Minnesota 4-3 and Seattle shaded Boon 3-2.
Decpite the shutout, in which be struck out eight and walked three in hurling his second complete game, Bannisters re
cord is only 4-9 with a 4.36 earned run average.
Managen^t has been good and I have appreciated their support," be said. Ive gotten a lot of help frun the front office and Tony (Manager LaRussa). I know I can help this did) immensely. Its important for me to go od and pitch well. I just want to make my contribution to this club."
Bannister said he attributes his bad start to not ^tting my breaking balls over and not mixing my pitches well. And concerning the criticism that has come his way, he said: It has bothered me to a certain extent, but Ive tried to
use it to my advantage. All I want todo is go out every five days and keep us in the ballgame. I want to go out and pitch aggressivdy.
Nue Jays 9, 6
At Kansas City, Willie Upshaw rapped a tie-breaking two-nm single in Torontos three-run ei^th inning as the Blue Jays, only unbeatoi team in the majors since the All-Star break, posted their fifth straight victory. Cliff Johnson drew a leadoff walk in the eighth off Steve Rmiko and KC rdief ace Dan Quisenberry saw Jorge Orta beat out a chopper in front of the plate and Uoyd Moseby beat out a bunt to load the bases. Upshaw then rapped a grounder into right dd for an 8-6 lead and Alfredo Griffm added an RBI grounder.
The Blue Jays built a 6-6 lead on iKHne runs by Barry Bonnell in the first inning and George Bell, Buck Martinez and Dave Collins in the fourth. Willie Aiko^ hit a solo homer and George Brett a three-run shot as the Royals caught up.
Brewers9, Rang^2
At Arlington, Cecil Cooper drove in three runs, Ed Romero bad four hits and Chuck Porter scattered seven hits for his first major league victory. C(^r capped a three-run fifth inning with a two-run double as Milwaukee pounded out 18 hits. With the score tied 1-1, Jim Gantner started the Brewers fifth with a
ground-rule double off loser Frank Tanana. He went to third when Paul MoUtor was safe on an oror by fhrst baseman Pete OBrien and scored on a sin^ by Rmnno. Coopers double made it 4-1 ami the Brewers wmt w to win for the 11th time in 15 games.
Tfgen5,Aogels4 At Detrmt, Wayne Krenchicki, a .125 hittm*, doidiled off Mike Witt with two out in the bottom of the 14th inning, scoring Oiet Lemon from frst base and breaking a tie that existed ance the eighth inning when pinch hitter John Gndibs sii^e scored Lemon frmn second. Fred Lynns three-run homer in the axth gave California a 4-2 leml but Detroit made it 4-3 in the sixth on Lou Whitakers RBI single.
Orioles 3, Asl At Baltmune, Allan Rami^ making his first appearance since being recalled from the minors, blanked Oakland on four bits over eight innings and Eddie Murray bit a two-run homer. Ramirez outdueled Gorman Heimueller, who allowed four hits and one run until the eighth inning of his majw league debut when Cal R^mi Jr. walked and Murray hit his 15th iKMne run.
Ramirez lost bis shutout bid when Rickey Henderscm bom^ to start the ninth. Rick Peters singed and Tim Stoddard rdieved Ramirez. Bill Almon douUed Peters to third on Stoddards
first pitch, but Davey Lopes struck out, Carney Lansfcxrd grounded out land Dwayne Murphy flied out. :
Yaiees4,Twins3
At Minne^idis, Dave Winfields ^-ol RBI sin^ and Jerry Mumphdeys two-run, twoout sin^ accounted: for three runs in New Yorks eigbtb-iuiing rally. Matt Keougb of the Yankees flirted with a no-hitter for six innings befor the Twins scored three unearned runs id the sevoith. ;
A walk and Graig Nettles infield hit started the Yankees cmneback against Frank Viola. Dave Winfield greeted Rick Lysander with an RBI sin^e. Twopits later, Ron Davis walked pinch Utter Steve Kemp to load the bases-Uid Mumidirey raj^ a 3-2 pitdi throu^ flie middle for the tying and winning runsC:
Marinas 3, Red Sox 2 >:
At BosUm, Bryan Clark, primarily; a Imig rdiever, scattered seven bits m 71-3 innings and rookie Spike Owen scf^ once and drove in the winning run.^BUl Caudill finished 19 to earn his I6tb save. Trailing 2-1, Seattle went ahead wittftwo runs in the fiffli against Mike BrOwn. With one out, Jamie AUoi sii^:abd went to third (m Orlando Mercados double. John Moses sin^e scorecLAllen to it and Mercado scored the giHiead run as Owen grounded out. :
Area Youth Baseball
Little Leogue
Greenville Little League Champs
Exchange won the Tar Heel Division of the Greenville Little League, then went on to sweep Sportsworld 12-5 and 5-3 for the city championship. Members of the team are: (front, L-R) Lee Brown, Grant Harmon, Danny Weisenberger,
Dwain Williams, Jay Cox, Kevm Sugg and Chris Bland; (back) Bob Weisenberger (manager), Jennie Stoneham, Carlos White, Daryl Moore, Doug Hill, Maurice Battle, Malcolm Wilson and VemKopping (coach). (Reflector photo)
Exchonge.........5
Sportsworld 3
Dwain Williams struck out 10 batters while allowing just five hits and Malcolm Wilson scored the eventual winning run on a wild pitch in the third inning to give Exchange a 5-3 victory over Sportsworld and
the 1983 Greenville Little League baseball champion^.
Wilson managed a pair of singles as the only batter with more than one hit in the game. Sportsworld pitcher Tim Moore struck out 12 and gave up just three bits, but walks and fielding mistakes cost his
Bench Predicted Cincinnati's Fate
ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Corre^xmdent
Johnny Bench saw It coming half a dozen years ago.
The scene was the press hospitality room at Super Bowl XI in Pasadena, Calif., January, 1977, with baseball the farthest thing from most peoples minds.
Everybody was talking about the brash, swashbuckling Oakland Raiders and their matchup against the Minnesota Vikings for the championship of the National Football League.
But Bench wanted to talk baseball.
This free agency is going to change the whole face of the game, said the rugged all-star catcher of the Cincinnati Reds, a team that had dominated the National League
throughout the 1970s, winning four pennants and two World Series.
Ive talked to our peale (the bosses of the Reds) about it. Ive warned them that if they dont take this thing seriously, if they dont loosen the purse string and pay the guys what theyre worth and fi^t to keep the talent they've got, theyre going to see the team fall apart.
If there was any man Reds bosses ^lould listen to, it was Johnny Bench, the guts of the Big Red Machine, great talent, loyal employee, team leader.
But their ears were closed. The dismemberment came in slow, agonizing degrees and reached the cracking point with the firing Monday of Dick Wagner as president and chief executive officer of the club.
Bob Howsam, who liad occupied that role during the Reds halcyon 70s, was brou^t back temporarily to ke^ the vehicle chugging but, for all his recognized basebaU acumen, Howsam must shoulder much of the blame.
It was bis philosophy - as much as Wagners that free agency was an aberration that could not endure and ultimately would destroy the game. They resolved to fight it by ignoring it.
Memories are fresh and clear of the historic setting in a New York hotel that November day, 1976, when major league executives gathered for the first free ag^nt draft.
The names of players qiting for free agency were presented much the same as list of daily specials, ready to be plucked as a housewife might select victuals at the super market.
The buyers sat around small tables with white cloths and, as each clubs name was called, a r^resentative would go to the microphone, and inUme, something like this: The Phillies pick Pete Rose.
But when the process got around to the Cincinnati Reds, Howsam or Wagner would rise and say, over and over:
The Reds pass.
Thus the bells toUed for The Big Red Machine and one of the last victims was Dick Wagner, a smart but rigid man, who, as did Howsam, misread the times.
They believed the free spenders - George Steinbrenner of the Yankees, Ray Kroc of San Diego and Gene Autry of the California Angels would choke on their greenbacks.
team the game.
Darryl Moore walked to open the bottom of the first for Exchange, and a passed ball and two wild pitches allowed him to cross the plate to trim the score to 2-1. Exchange added two more in the second, as Grant Harmon singled and later scored (m a bases-load walk by Williams. Carlos White scored the other run in the second on a passed ball.
Williams walked to the fifth and moved to third on a pair of wild pitches. A single by Wilson drove in Williams for a 5-3 Exchange advantage.
Bob Ruth_
Nosh Co..........13
Pitt Co............8
J(^ Adams ripped a two-run homer and Jerry Edwards put the game away with a three-run blast in the fifth to lead Nash County to a 13-8 victory over Pitt County Tuesday at Guy Smith Stadium for the district championship and the right to advance to the state Babe Ruth League Baseball tournament.
Nash County will begin
competition in the:state tourney Friday at Baylx^.
Adams had three hits kfour trips to the plate and sQored four runs for Nash Comty, while teammate Phil Bi^ant rapped three hits in (jve at bats. Edwards and Shelton Grant each bad two bJt$ for Nash County.
Scott Rawls blasted a-tWo-run homer in the fifth Uf imite a sbc-run rally by Pitt Comity. Rawls, Brian Joyner and Shane Adams each finished with two hits in the contest.
Nash County scmed a pair of runs in the of the first before Adams blast set the score at 4-0. Nash addexi two more in the third and three in the fourth before Pitt County got on the board in the bottom half of the inning.
Donnie Bobbitt and Sam Vines combined for the win on the mound for Nash County.
Brushcutters
AvaNabtoAt
HENDIIIX-BjUIIHIIU
Mamorial Dr. 752-4122
40,000 Expected At TitleGame I/S3B-M
DENVER (AP) - Its the first United States Football League championship game, but the attendance at Denvers 75,000-seat Mile High Stadium on Sunday ni^t probably will resemble a Denver Gold regular-season game more than a title affair.
League officials are anticipating a crowd of between 40,000 and 45,000 for the game, which pits the Michigan Panthers and the Philadelphia Stars.
Dominic Camera, USFL marketing director, said Tuesday that about 32,000 tickets have been sold for the , game. He said some 2,000 tickets were sold Tuesday, with similar amounts expected each day prior to Sunday.
Were confident we will sell 40,000, said Camera, and were hoping to do 45,000 by 6 p.m. Saturday so we wont have to invoke the television blackout in De
televised nationally by ABC.
The Gold led the USFL in attendance this season, averaging more than 41,000 in nine home games. League officials obviously were 1^ ing to capitalize on that crowd average, and on Denvers seemin^y insatiable appetite for football (the National Football League Broncos have sold out the stadium since 1%9, with 15,000 people on the waiting list for tickets), by awarding the title game to Denver.
If a turnout of 40,000-45,000 for the championship contest is disappointing to the league, officials arent letting on.
Were encourag^ by ticket sales, especially since Denvers team isnt playing, said Camera. Sales are going nicely.
The Panthers and Stars arrived in Denver Tuesday, with daily practice sessions set to begin today. Philadelphia is to work out at 10 a.m. and Michigan at 3 p.m.
The Panthers won 11 of their last 13 games to fini^ the regular season at 12-6, while the Stars had the leagues best regular-season record of 15-3.
Michigan made it to the title game with a 37-21 victory Sunday over the Oakland Invaders. Quarterback Bobby Hebert, the leagues top passer, threw for 295 yards, with wide receivers Anthony Carter and Derek Hiriloway
his primary targets. Running backs Ken Lacy and John Williams combined for 132 yards on the ground and each scored a touchdown.
The game was played in the Pontiac Silverdome before a league-record 60,237 fans, which stemmed in part from a $5 reduction in ticket prices.
In the other semifinal playoff game, Philadelphia rallied to defeat the Chicago
Blitz 44-38 in overtime on Saturday. The turnover-plagued Stars trailed 38-17 when they launched a second-half rally. Chuck Pusina fired three TD passes and Kelvin Bryant, who rushed for 142 yards, scored the clinching touchdown in overtime.
Only 15,684 fans witnessed the game in PhUadelphias Veterans Stadium, partly because team officials raised ticket prices about 50 percoit.
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Greenville Tops Tarboro In Swim Meet, 268-183
Race Winners Vary Weekly
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla (AP)-The NASCAR Winston Cup Grand National stock car racing circuit has just slipped into the secwid half of the 1983 season, but it already appears to be on its way to its most competitive year ever.
Eight different drivers have collected at least one victory in the first 16 races of the 30-event season. Buddy Baker of Charlotte, N.C. became the eighth when he won the July 4 Firecracker 400 at Daytona International Speedway.
And as the circuit heads for Nashville International Raceway and the July 16 Busch Nashville 420, only one more winner is needed to tie the record of nine different winners in a single season. The record was established in
1979 and was tied in 1980 and in 1981. Eight different drivers won last year.
Cale Yarborough, Bobby Allison, Darrell Waltrip, Richard Petty, Harry Gant, Ricky Rudd, Neil Bonnett and Baker have recorded victories this season.
There are nine other drivers with victories in previous years on the circuit who have yet to win - Terry Labonte, Dale Earnhardt, Dick Brooks, Dave Marcis, Tim Richmond, Ron Bouchard, Morgan Shepherd, Benny Parsons, Jody Ridley and David Pearson.
In the past 4Ms years, 18 different drivers have won at least one NASCAR Winston Cup Grand National race. All are still active.
TARBORO - The Greenville Swim Team dunked Tarboro 268-183 Tuesday in a league swim meet.
Summary of results for Greenville swimmers:
Eight and Under Boyi
Jeff Carstarphen - 1st 25 free 17.60, 1st 25 back 20.52, 1st 25 Hy
22.64.
David Kelly - 2nd 25 free 1.45, 2nd 25 back 23.67, 1st 25 breast 24.91.
Graham Powell - 4th 25 free 22.68,2nd 25 breast 29.27.
John Gavigan - 3rd 25 breast
35.64.
Charles Humphrey - 4th 25 breast 57.41.
Elg and Under Girls
Kara Bozik 1st 25 free 18.15,1st 25 breast 24.05,1st 25 fly 21.61.
Nine to 10
Troy Grizzard - 4th 50 free 38.79, 2nd 50 breast 52.00,3rd 50 Hy 49.39.
NtnetolOGMs
Kathryn BarhhUl - 1st 50 free 32.75,1st 50 breast A" time 42.54, 1st 50 Hy 39.72.
Sonja Downes - 2nd SO free 34.38, 1st 50 back 41.91, 2nd SO breast 47.41.
Margie Grome - 3rd 50 free 38.27, 3rd SO breast 50.68, 3rd 50 Oy 47.21.
Janelle Moore - 4th 50 free 38.71, 5th 50 breast 54.29,2nd 50 ny 42.15.
Paula Song - 5th 50 free 39.99, 2nd SO back 47.31, 4th SO breast
52.26.
11-12 Girls
Julie Song - 1st 100 free 1:09.84, 1st 100 back 1:21.21, 1st 100 breast A time 1:24.35.
11-12 Boys
Ed Clark - 1st 100 free A" time 1:00.91, 2nd 100 back 1:15.17,1st 100 breast "A" time 1:19.27.
Won Kim - 2nd 100 free A time 1:02.38, 1st 100 back M3.66,
1st 100 ny 1:15.79.
John Carstarphen - 4Ui 100 free 1:12.57, 3rd 100 back 1:22.45, 3rd 100 ny 1:35.25.
John Uhlman - 6th 100 back 1:38.36,2nd 100 breast 1:38.15.
13-14 Giris Arlene Song - 2nd 100 free 1:03.79,1st 100 back 1:14.56, 2nd 100 ny 1:18.03.
, 13-14 Boys Paul Kelly - 1st 100 free "AAA time 53.53, 2nd 100 back 1:08.24, 1st
100 breast 1:08.30.
Sellers Crisp - 2nd 100 free AA time 54.88, 1st 100 back 1:07.20, 1st 100 ny 1:05.16.
Jim Glihan - 3rd 100 free A" time 57.17, 3rd 100 breast 1:14.10, 2ndl00nyl:05il.
John Jolley - 6th 100 free 1:00.77, 3rd 100 back 1:13.88, 4th 100 Oy 1:16.25.
Marshall Moore - 6th 100 breast 1:26.13.5th 100 ny 1:16.25.
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Elway, Broncos Open Training For NFL Slate
By The Associated Press The first huddle at the Denver Broncos training camp was a massive one and only one player was in it. The rest were media .types clawing over each other trying to be the first to interview the National Football Leagues new glamour boy, John Elway.
i cant even tell the players, Broncos Head Coach Dan Reeves said wryly. 1 think when we start running, well weed them out and definitely tell which ones are players and which ones are press.
Elway, a star outfielder and quarterback at Stanford, is glad to (finally be playing football after an exhausting winter and ^ring of manipulating the Baltimore Colts and New York Yankees through the print -and electronic media.
He finally opted for the National Football League after the Colts, who made him the nations No. 1 draft pick, heeded his threat to play baseball if they did not trade him to a western NFL city. Baltimore dealt him to Denver for quarterback Mark Herrmann, Denvers first-round draft choice Chris Hinton of Northwestern and the Broncos No.
1 selection in 1984.
I just went to play some football, Elway
said Tuesday as 87 other rookies and free agents joined him at the Greeley, Colo., training site, im so tired of talking about it and all the hype.
Eric Dickerson, who was selected right behind Elway by the Los Angeles Rams, is expected to report Friday to Uieir Fullerton, Calif., camp Friday with the rest of the first-year players. The All-American running back from Southern Methodist signed on Tuesday.
Doug Williams, who has vowed not to return to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers because of a contract dispute, was placed on the 20-man negotiation list by the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League.
Sweat is the watchword at the Seattle Seahawks camp, it will be like a boot-camp atmosphere,' promised Coach Chuck Knox, who said his players will be kept busy from 9; 15 a.m. until evening.
The Steelers have been meeting with 73 players, including % veterans, since last week at their Latrobe, Pa., training base. Meanwhile, four veterans, John Stallworth, Larry Brown, Donnie Shell and Gary Dunn, remained unsigned.
The DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N C.-Wednesday, July 13.13-19
Networks Waiting On NCAA
By The Associated Press
The television networks are sitting back and waiting to see how the NCAA and the major college football teams han^e the latest court decision voiding the NCAAs $281.1 million television package.
Donn Bernstein, ABCs coordinator for college sports, said the network was keeping our options open. Network sources said, pending further court action, ABC would listen to approaches from the College Football Association, made up of many major powers, or a coalition but would not be in a position to solicit games until there was a final court ruling.
CBS already has lined up four special games under the contract - Miami-Notre Dame, Oklahoma-Nebraska, Alabama-Boston College and Florida-Florida State, for which spokesman Jay Rosenstein said the network had signed agreements with the schools.
CBS President Neal Pilson said that a coalition of majorSCOREBOARD
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Industrial
, ECU I...............101 101 2-6
,TRW................101 140 x-7
' Leading hitters; ED. Johnson Greg Wilson 2-4; T-Mac
Roebuck 2-3, Dave Haddock 2-3.
Union Car...........012 010 0-4
Entorcers...........310 010 x-5
Leading hitters: U-R. Hook 2-3,
K. Haddock 2-3; E-Spencer Dodgett2-3.
.. ECU 11 ..............000 005 0-5
Wachovia...........022 202 x-8
'Leading hitters: EWayne Edwards 2-3, David White 2-4; r "W^. Watts 4-4, R. Corbin 2-3
; Empire Brush II . . . 000 000 1- 1
; Firefighters lOl 046 x-12
] Leading hitters; EAubrey
: Harrison 3-3, Stuart Langley 2-3;
5 J'-Ueff Walter 3-4, Doug Branch j -W..
* - Empire Brush!......(13)17 22-25
, Qjrady White.............200 10-3
r- fading hitters: E-Rudy Moye 4-4, Vic Wade 4-4, Jimmy Medlin ; 4-5..
; WNCT...............000 200 0-2
Union Carbide.......510 000 x6
* Leading hitters: W-Steve
I Moazed 2-3, John Leggett 2-3;
/. UStan Kossol 2-3, Rusty Hook 2-3.
' .' 1 Church
> -Maranatha .....221 0016
* Imqianuel...........000 000 O-O
Leading hitters: M-Tim Avery
3-3, Milton Dilda 2-3.
e
' Memorial Bap......034 111 2-12
e Arlington St........400 000 2-6
t Leading hitters: M-Bill Lee 3-4,
^ Hepry Kidd 3-4; A-Todd Galloway
* 4-4.
' Jarvis..............044 231 0-14
* Oakmont...........150 402 0-12
* - Leading hitters: J-Je(f Aldridge * 4-6, Sam McDonald 4-5, Mitchell , Jones 5-5, Wes Singleton 4-5; 0 TJon Parrott 3-3, Ashley Ferrell 4-4,
Bobby Nichols2-3.
J*
i St. James...........Oil 000 l-3
* First FWB.........510 202 x-10
Leading hitters: S-Ralph Brown
* 2-6, Buddy Medlin 2-3, BUI Potter 2-3; F-Wayne Brown 2-4, Mike
* Tyson 4-4, Art Pittman 2-3.
Blackjack.........303 073 0-16
t Firt Christian......003 000 0- 3
J -Leading hitters: B-Carl Arnold
-* 4-4, J.T. MUls 3-4, Curtis Spencer
J 3-4: F-Rick Roberts 2-3.
F Womens
t Players Retreat....... 260 240-14
i- Fred Webb............600 301-10
J Leading hitters: P-L. Cox 2-3,
J Atkinson 3-4; F-Pittman 2-3.
t PCMH...............300 000 0-3
Fred Webb..........013 200 x-6
^ Leading hitters; P-White 2-3;
F-Pittman2-3. '
t Burroughs Well......000 300 0-3
} Greenville Travel . 201 103 x-7
I Leading hitters; B-M. SmiUi 2-3,
I J. Carney 2-3; G-Bunting 2-3, I Counterman 2-3, Bass 2-3.
I PTA................300 027 2-14
S Burroughs Well 103 001 0-5
I PG. Mayo 3-4, J. Moore 3-5;
I BB. Freeman 2-3, Smith 2-3.
I City
{ JAS................213 312 1-13
} Subway............201 000 5-8
* Leamng hitters: J-R.V. Vincent i 3-3, Bobby Godley 3^, Lonnie House
2-2; S-Dave Wood 2-3, Jimmy Cleamons 3-3, Randy Shipley 2-3.
iSunnyside.............452 42219
'Wmttington............012 020-5
Lea.dlng hitters: SGene
- Rackley 3-3, Craig Smith 3-4, Butch ? Talbot 3-4; W-Mark Vestal 2-2,
> Terry Lovick 2-3, Mike Sampson I 2-3.
I Pair.................062 001 0-9
z Orroonds............015 000 2-8
4 Leading hitters; P-Jack Rich-
} ardaon 2-3, Eric Sinclair 2-3, Joe i 4 RQnni 2-3; 0-Gary McGowan 2-3, 0>$tiartBrooker2-3.
fi^wtotUngton.........421 041 0-12
49^ay..... 012 010 0-4
F.**fceaaing hitters; W-Dennis 4;^iano 2-4, Mark Vestal 3^;
S-Randy Shipley 2-3, Harper 2-3
Bowling_
Thursday Night Mixed
W L
Sweet Revenge 24 12
Dew Crew.............23 13
Tar Landing Seafood . 23 13
Shon^s..............22'/i 13'/i
High Timers ...........22 14
Give Us A Break 204 154
Strugglers >...20 16
Western Sizzlin........184 174
Home Cleaners 18 18
Attic..................15 21
Hang Ten..............13 23
Hanging Gang.........12 24
Future Hopes..........104 254
Alley Cats.............10 26
High game; Ed Diehl 225, Jean Foreman 226. High series; Ed Diehl 601, Jean Foreman 612.
Boseboll Stondings
By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pet. GB
Toronto 48 33 . 593 -
Baltimore 45 , 36 556 3
Detroit 45 36 . 556 3
New York 44 37 543 4
Milwaukee 41 39 .513 6'^
Boston 41 41 500 74
Cleveland 35 48 .422 14
WEST DIVISION Texas 45 38 .542 -
CalKomia 44 39 .530 1
Chicago 43 39 .524 1 4
Kansas City 38 40 487 4'v
Oakland 38 47 447 8
Minnesota 36 50 419 104
Seattle 33 53 384 134
Tuesday's Games Seattle 3, Boston/
Baltimore 3. Oakland 1 Detroit 5. California 4.14 innings Chicago 8. Cleveland 0 New York 4, Minnesota 3 Toronto 9. Kansas City 6 Milwaukee 9, Texas 2
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W Lffl Pet. GB
Philadelphia 42 38 . 525 -
Montreal 42 40 . 512 1
St. Louis 42 41 .506 14
Chicago 39 46 459 54
Pittsburgh 37 43 463 5
New York 31 53 369 13
WEST DIVISION Atlanta 52 34 .605 -
Los Angeles 49 33 . 598 I
San Diego 44 40 .524 7
Houston 43 41 .512 8
San Francisco 42 42 500 9
Cincinnati 37 49 .430 15
Mondays Gaines Philadelphia II, Cincinnati 7,11 innings Atlanta 6, Montreal 4 Los Angeles 7. St. Louis 6 SanDiego6, Chic^5 Pittsburgh 3, San Francisco 2 Only games scheduled
Tuesdays Games Philadelphia 4-7, AtlanU 1-6 Cincinnati 6, New York 2 Houston 7. Montreal 5 San Diego 5. Chicago 3 St. Louis at Los Angeles I n I Pittsburgh at San Francisco (n i
Leogue iModgrs
By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (195 at bats): Carew, California, 406, Boggs, Boston. .361; Brett, Kansas City Griffey, New York, 333; Aikens,Kansas City. 3.
RUNS: Yount, Milwaukee. 60; Upshaw. Toronto, 59; Wilson, Kansas City, 56; Evans. Boston. 55; Murray, Baltimore, 55.
RBI: Rice. Boston. 63; KltUe, Chicago. 61; Cooper, Milwaukee, 60, Ward, Wn-nesota, K; Parrish, Detroit, 54; Upshaw, Toronto. 54.
HITS: BogK, Boston. 108; Whitaker. Detroit. 107rRice, Boston, 103; Carew, California, 102; Ward, MinnesoU, 100, DOUBLES: Parrish. Detroit, 27; Boggs. Boston, 26; McRae. Kansas City, 26; Hrbek, Minnesota, 24; Cooper, Milwaukee,22.
TRIPLES: Herndon, Detroit, 7; WUson, Detroit. 6: Griffin Toronto, 6: Gibson, Detroit, 6:9 are tied with 5.
HOME RUNS: Rice, Boston, 23; Kittle. Chicago. 20; Armas, Boston. 18; Cooper, Milwaukee. 17; Upshaw,Toronto, 17.
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakland, 48; Cruz. ChicagD, 43; Wilson, Kansas City, 40; R.Law. Chicago. 33; Sample. Texas, 28.
PITCHING (7 decisions): Koosman, Chicago, 7-1, .875,3.K, Jackson, Toronto, 7-1, .875, 4.20; Kison. CaliiOmia. 8^2, .800, 3 28; Rijmetti, New York, 10-3, 78, 3.14; Haas, MUwaidue. 0-2. 750,3.97.
STRIKEOUTS: SUeb. Toronto. 113; Blyieven, Cleveland, 103; Morris, Detroit, 97; Ri^tl. New York. 83; Sutton, Milwaukee, 83.
SAVES: Quisenbern, Kansas City, 20; Caudill. Seattle. 16; Stanley, Boston. 16; Davte, MinnesoU, 14; Lopez, Detroit. 12.
NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (115 at baU): Hendrick. St Louis, 3; KniMH, Houston. .33; Murphy, AUanU, .Xt, Oliver, Montreal, .327: Easier, Plttsbiffgh. 315.
RUNS; Murphy, AlUnU, 7; Garvey, San Di^. 6l' Raines, Montreal, 63; Evans, ^ Francisco, 62; Dawson, Montreal, 52; Wilson, New York. 52.
RBI: Dawson, Montreal, 67; Murphy. Atlanta, 63; Hendrick. St.Louls. fb, Chambliss. AtlanU. 55; Guerrero. Los
Angeles, 54.
HITS: Oliver, Montreal, 108: Dawson, Montreal. 107: Thon. Houston, 106;
Murphy. AUanta, 101: Hendnck, St.Louis, 100
DOUBLES: Oliver, Montreal, 24, Buckner. (Tiicago, 23: Knight. Houston. 23, Hendrick, StXouis, 22; CW, Houston.
21, Ray, Pittsburgh. 21. TRIPLES: Butler,,
Atlanta, 8, Moreno. Houston. 8; Raines. Montreal, 7, Dawson. Montreal. 6: 5 are tied with 5 HOME RUNS: Evans. San Francisco, 20, Guerrero, Los Angeles. 19; Murphy, AtlanU. 19: Dawson. Montreal. 17; Schmidt. PhUadelphia, 17 STOLEN BASES: Raines, Montreal, 37 Wilson, New York, 31; S.Sax, Los Angeles. 29 LeMaster, San Francisco, 28. Moreno. Houston. 27 PITCHING (7 decisions) Montefusco, San Diego. 8-1, 889. 4 07: Ryan. Houston. 8 1. .889, 1.97. Falcone, AtlanU, 7-1, 875, 297: Perez, AtlanU, 10-2, 833, 2 57; Hooton. Los Angeles. 8-2. .800, 3.34: Rogers. Montreal. 12-3, 800,2 94 STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 141. Soto, Cincinnati. 130; McWilliams. Pittsburgh. 109; R^rs, Montreal, 89; Berenyi, Cincinnati, IB SAVES: Bedrosian, Atlanta, 13; Reardon. Montreal. 13; Lavelle, San Francisco. 12: Smith, Chicago, 11. SHowe. Los Angeles. 10.
SOCCER
BALTlfc^E^mlAST^A^^ Paul Kitson. forward, from the New York Arrows for an undisclosed amount of cash and signed him to a three-year contract.
North American Socco'League .
SAN DIEGO SOCKERS-Acquired Hugo Perez, forward, from the Tampa Bay Rowdies for a first round draft
choice and an undisclosed amount oi cash
COLLEGE
ST BONAVENTURE-Announced resignation of Bob Sassone. assistant basketball coach, effective Sept 1.
USTA Tennis
Tronsoctions
By The Auoclated Pren BASEBALL American Leaew
MILWAUKEE BREWERS-Placed
Ned Yost, catcher, on the 15-day disabled list and Rick WaiU, pitcher, on the 21-day disabled list Activated Mark Brouhard,
list and Rick WaiU, pitcher.
outfielder Called up Bill Schroeder. catcher, from Vancouver of the Pacific Coast League.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Reactivated Willie Randolph, second baseman, and returned Bobby Meacham, inflelder, to Columbus of the International League National League
MONTREAL EXPOS-Recalled Bob James, pitcher, from WichiU of the American Association and optioned Tom Wieghaus. catcher, to WichiU. Dropped Jerry White, outfielder, from the 2S-man roster
NEW YORK METS-Signed Eddie Williams, third baseman, arid assigned him to Little Falls of the New York-Penn l<eague.
FOOTBALL National Football
HOUSTON OILERS-Signed Tim Joiner, linebacker, and Steve Brown, cornerback. LOS ANGELES RAMS-Sign^ Eric Dickerson, running back, to a multi-year contract.
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Signed Mike Charles, defensive tackle, to a multi-year contract.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Claimed Greg Stemrick, cornerback, off the waiv erlist
United States Football League
JACKSONVILLE BULLS-Named Lindy Infante, head coach.
HOCKEY National Hockey League
VANCOUVER CANUCKS^xtended contracto! SUnSmyl. forward.
FAYETTEVILLE, N C (AP) - Here are the resulU from the 610,000 USTA Women's Circuit at the Dark Branch Racquet and Swim Club. Seedings In parentheses.
Singles
First Round
Kathleen Cummings il), Richmond, Va , def Lani Wilcox, Las Vegas, Nev , 6-2,6^).
Cheryl Jones. Los Angeles, def. Aschara Moranon, Los Angeles, 64,6-1
Kate Gompert 15). Roswell, N.M.. def. Cindy Keeling, Sacramento, Calif, 6-2, 6-1
Maxxine Kaufman. Miami Beach. Fla . def Melissa Seigler, North Miami Beach, Fla., 1-6,7-617-55,6-2
Lisa Spain. Moultrie. Gal., def Natalia Leipus, Australia. 6-1,4-6,6-2.
Lori McNeil (6), Houston, def, Jill Smoller, Larchmont, N.C., 6-0,6-2.
Eleni Rossides, Washington, DC, def. Karen Seguso. Sunrise. Fla, 7-5,6-0.
Joy Cummings. Manchester. Mass., def Jan Blackad. Highland Park, 111., 61,6-0.
Glynis Coles. England, def. Marianne Groat. Canada. 6-2,1-6.6-3
Barrie Bulmore, Los Altos Hills. Calif ., def. Alyce Wendel, Bakersfield, Calif., 6-4,6-3.
Kathrin Keil. Albuquerque, N M , def. Cathy Claussen, Claremont, Calif, 6-3, 6-4.
Gigl Fernandez (2), Puerto Rico, def Carol Christian, San Bernardino. Calif., 6-2,3-6,6-3.
Doubles First Round
Glynis Coles-Kristie Reynolds def. Suzanne Jarrell-Kay Miyagi. 6-2,6-3.
Jill Beck-Carol Christian (4) def. Aschara Moranon-Jill Patterson. 6-2, 4-6,
6-3
Cathy Claussen-Christina Rozwadowski def. Cricket Manuel-Carol Watson, 6-0, 6-1
Elizabeth Jones-Ellen Oxrieder def. Barrie Bulmore-Shannon Gordon, 5-7, 6-3,
7-5
N.C. Scoreboard
ByTheAsaociatedPresi Carolina League
Winston Salem 8, Durham 2 Peninsula 5, Kinston
Phillies...
(Continued from page 17)
allowed just one hit over the final four innings for his third save. Smith ended the game by striking out Andre Dawson, A1 Oliver and Gary Carter.
Padres 5, Cubs 3 San Diego managed to score all of its runs in the sixth inning as Sixto Lezcanos three-run homer keyed the uprising.
Chicagos Dickie Noles, 2-5, was sailing along with a two-hitter and a 3-0 lead when the Padres went to work in the sixth. Lezcanos sixth homer followed an RBI single by Terry Kennedy and was later followed by Juan Bonillas run-scoring single off reliever MikeProly.
Eric Show, ^5, pitched a five-hitter, struck out eight and walked none in his fourth complete game of the season.
Ron Ceys 11th homer gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead in the second.
Dodgers 3, Cardinals 1 Dusty Baker, unaccustomed to prolonged slumps, seems to be working his way out of his
first-half doldrums.
Baker singled in the tying run in the fourth inning and then crashed a two-run homer, his nth, in the sixth inning to pace Los Angeles.
Baker was batting just .231 at the All-Star break, but has gone 9-for-17 with three homers and nine RBI in the five games since then. On Monday night, he had four hits, including two home runs, in the Dodgers victory over St. Louis.
Bob Welch, 7-8, who pitched into the ei^th inning, and Steve Howe finished up for his 10th save.
Pirates 6, Giants 2
Jason Thompsons two-run double keyed a three-run sixth inning that broke a 1-1 tie. He had a run-scoring groundnut as Pittsburgh added two insurance runs in the ninth.
Lee Tunnell, 3-3, allowed five hits in 5 2-3 innings and Cecilio Guante went the rest of the way for his second save.
Bill Laskey, 10-8, left after Thompsons double.
colle^ was putting together a package for presentation to the network. When that occurs well be in a position to make a decision about our plans. Pilson said.
Mondays refusal by the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appels to stay its decision upholding last years ruling by Federal Court Judge Juan Burciaga, which, in effect broke the NCAAs exclusive grip on college football television ri^ts, has created uncertainty about the television schedule for the season viliich begins in early September.
The NCAA has said it will carry its appeal to the Supreme Court, but first will attempt to get a stay of Burciagas ruling from Supreme Court Justice Byron M. White.
Some conferences and universities hope to be able to negotiate their own television deals. Others, however, are not enamored with that possibility.
We have no plans to negotiate locally, said Vanderbilt
Athletic Director Roy Kramer, because I am of the strong opinion that what we (the CFA) need is for everyone not to go off in individual directions. We need to put together some type of plan for the Division I-A schools that will control the number of appearances a team can make on TV so that we can keep the smaller schools from being damaged.
Under no circumstances would Michigan negotiate alone, Michigan AD Don Canham said, even though We could sell ours (TV rights) for a ton.
Hugh Hindman, athletic director at Ohio State, said, I dont think well negotiate on our own at all. I think there will be some sort of group.
While all parties worked on alternatives to the voided TV package, a simple bottom line emerged: There will be college football on television this fall - perhaps more than ever.
I think the pulse around the country is to stay with
what we have in 1983, said DeLoss Dodds, athletic director at the University of Texas. In the period between now and February, 1984, we have the options of looking at different kinds of packages The majority of the schools wanted the NCAA plan to stay in place this year because of the chaos that would be created if it didnt, said Charley Thornton, associate athletic director at Texas A&M. Im sure the networks feel the same way.
The consensus Tuesday was that whatever plan emerged from the final court decision would be very close to the NCAA agreement with the three networks, at least for this year. Under that plan, both ABC and CBS televise one game - or a series of regional games - each Saturday afternoon from early September through early December, with Turner Broadcasting System televising a Saturday night or Sunday game. The networks also get selected prime time games.
Sam Jankovich, athletic director at Washington State, said that while he would prefer to stay under the NCAA plan a coalition has the best chance of flying. But he said he is opposed to participation in the CFA plan, which would give more exposure to major football powers and less to middle level schools like his less.
As of Tuesday, there were three basic options for 1983 if the network contracts are voided by the court.
- A plan drawn up in June by the CFA, 60 major football powers excluding the Big 10 and Pac-10 conferences. The original suit was brought by two CFA members, the universities of Georgia and Oklahoma.
The CFA proposal, which would be for 1983 only, is similar to the NCAAs plan, though it would raise the limit on television exposures per school and allow individual contracts between schools and television outlets for games starting after 7 p.m.
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Thailand's Communisfs Suffering Severe Setbacks
SERIOUS SETBACKS - Some of the 220 hilltribe insurgents, who surrendered to the Thai army last December, raise their weapons in the air before turning them over. Internal struggles
and a government *open arms policy has spelled doom for Thailands once potent communist insurgency. (AP Laserphoto)
By DENIS D. GRAY
Associated Press Writ
BANGKOK. ThaUand(AP) - Internal stnig^es and a government (^n arms policy have brought thousands of guerrillas down from the hilltops and out of the jungles in an exodus authorities say has spdled doom for Thailands (ce potent communist insurgency.
Today there is no more revolutionary war in Thailand. Maybe they have come to a de^rate end, Maj. Gen. Lapom Siripalka, one of the countrys anti-communist strategists, said in an interview.
The re^onal news magazine Asiaweek recently described developments in Thailands 18-year-old bush war as communisms first defeat since Malaya, referring to Britains 1950s anticommunist campaign in what is now Malaysia.
The countrys Internal Security Operations Conunand or ISOC says the number of communist fighters has been slashed to an estimated 3,000 from some 11,000 in 1978 when the Communist Party of Thailand (CPT) wac riding a wave of confid^ice.
Just iree years earlier.
. ^
$6 Million House Awaits Buyer
By JOHN PLATERO Associated Press Writer
CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) - Reluctantly, Eric Blum will sell the fish tank behind the bar of a dis
tinctive home he built in an exclusive neighborhood here. The only problem is that youll have to buy the multilevel house as weD -and that has a $6 million
Eagles Uve Ai Mattamuskeet
FAIRFIELD, N.C. (AP) -In about six weeks two young eagles living in a tower at the Lake Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge in Hyde County will be put on their own for a critical phase of an eagles life.
The eagles were only a few weeks old when they came from wild nests in northern Wisconsin in June as part of
AverStotes
Responsible
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two governors who have proposed merit pay for teachers say the states - not the federal government -have the responsibility for upgrading salaries and improving the quality of the nations public sclMxds.
Govs. Lamar Alexander of Tennessee and Charles S. Robb of Virginia told a congressional task force Tuesday they would welcome Uw p^ls suggestions for winning teachers support for merit pay.
But both said the ^tes must bear the primary re-sponsiblity for improving schools and raising the salaries of teachers.
It would be about as easy for all the states and the cities to get together and figure out how to invade Cuba as it would be for the national government to figure out how to improve quality of public education, district by district, Alexander told the panel of politicians and educators.
Alexander, a Republican, has proposed giving IS percent of Tennessees teachers raises up to $7,000 a year.
Robb, a Democrat, has proposed a 20 percent raise for all Virginia teachers plus a $500,000 merit-pay pool. Under an experiment proposed by Robb, 5 percent of a school districts teachers would be designated master teachers to teach their colleagues. Under the program, the master teachers mi^t be given a $1,000 bonus, $2,500 for new equipment and a $2,500 feUowship, he said.
PETRO FACILITY PEKING (AP) - China and Texaco Inc. have signed an agreement to start a $5.6 million petroleum facility in south China, the Xinhua news agency says.
a project to resUm the endangered species to North Carolina.
Young ea^es often have a hard time, particularly in the first few weeks after they leave the nest or hacking tower, said Dr. Don Hammer of the Tennessee Valley Authority. These young birds havent had time to perfect their hunting skills, and they often starve.
Also, in a weakened and confused state, they may crash into trees or become hopelessly entangled in heavy brush. These first few weeks are critical, and radio transmitters will help us rescue the eagles if necessary. Eagles are a lot like teen-agers - theyre good at getting into trouble, but often need a helping hand to get out of it.
The U.S. Fish and WUdlife Service, N.C. State University, TV A, East Carolina University and the N.C. Wildlife Federation are partic^ting in the project.
The birds are now living in a hacking tower, named after a medieval falconry technique used to introduce birds of prey to the wild. They are housed in a large woo^ cage which sits at^ a 30-foot tower. From that , they will gradually to identify tde refuge ara as their home.
The eagles are fed fresh fish from local packing houses or road-killed deer. But the eagles never see their feeders, and so do not associate humans with feeding. The birds are constantly observed by a bidden wildlife officer.
Bald eagles return to the area where they were fledged to nest, Hammer said. We hope these ea^^es will return to nest at Lake Mattamuskeet when they are sexually mature at four to flve years of age.
price tag on it.
Actually, only the most blase would call Blums mini-sea world a fish tank. The 8,000-gallon seaquarium, filled with exotic tropical fish from around the world, is unique and experts know of none larger.
Fish and pianfj^ are my two passions in life, Blum admits, i(tentifying some of the rare spaies as they swim by two picture windows that provide visitors with an underview from the cabaret-like room into what appears to be a natural cove or reef.
Its an integral part of the houses foundation and took almost 10 months to build, put in all that plumbing and crank it up, said Blum with pbide. Imported coral and stone were hand-picked to give the seaquarium its natural appearance.
Sea water is drawn from Biscayne Bay and processed through an elaborate ultraviolet sterilization system in a nearby utility room.
While the seaquarium is extraordinary, so are the grounds and home that took
architects nine months to draw and to(A 5^ years to build.
Entrance to the two-acre waterfront estate is through a 16-foot electronically controlled gate opening onto a horticulturists fantasy.
It took 18 months to do the Iandsciq>ing alone, which includes a small rain forest. There are more than 200 different plants and trees here, says Blum, picking a fallen leaf from a flower bed, and I can name every one of them - because I picked them out.
The home is owned by Establissement Rabanne, a Liechtenstein-based corporation that commissioned Blum to select and purchase the property as well as oversee its design and construction. Blum says it was built with a particular buyer in mind, but the person died before it was finished in September 1982.
I was given free rein to build it. Im an organizer, explains Blum, a former associate producer of films.
The 20 rooms of this multilevel home provide
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8.500 square feet of living ^ace. An enclosed patio, swimming pool, waterfall and terraces cover another
3.500 square feet. To one side of the Japanese-inspired bouse is a sunken, stadiumlike clay tennis court.
Theres a third-floor office shaped like a pagoda, not far from the master suite that includes a luxurious bathroom complete with a Roman tub made of marble.
Wood, glass, stone and tile are prominent throughout the house, which is decorated in earth tones.
We used 40,000 feet of cypress and it was milled right here, Blum adds. There are more than 200 windows and 57 doors. The burglar alarm system has 192 points and took months to install.
Hes particularly proud of the cabinets and woodwork throughout the home. One windowed corridor serves as an art gallery. Portuguese cork is used on some walls, while others are covered with Korean wallp^r.
Gourmet chefs would be delighted with the spacious, weU-planned kitchen area.
Ilie two guest suites are roomy, as are the staff quarters.
The monthly electric bill for the bouse, Blum says, W1 run about $1,700. However, an economical family could keep it down to $825.
Another breath-catcher is the living room with its 35-foot-hi^ ceiling. In one corner stands a growing 3,000-pound palm tree.
Blum will contmue to live in the house until it is sold. Most of the furnishings, be says, go with the place.
Saigon, Phnom Penh and Vientiane bad fallen to communist forces - and some were predicting that Bangkok would be next. In additiim, a rightist backlash in Thailand had sent thousands of bright, energetic students into the arms of the CPT.
But two reform-minded prime ministers - Gen. Kriangsak Chomanan and Gen. Prem Tinsulanonda, who holds the post today -chan^ things.
A general amnesty was issued to all Communist Party members and sympathizers, replacing heavy-handed and sometimes brutal military operations, described by one defector as using an elephant to crush a gras^opper. ____
Die mass defections be^ last year and are continuing. The ISOC says from Dec. 1, 1982, to June 9 of this year, nearly 5,000 insurgents and supporters have taken advantage of the amnesty, which includes initial financial and other support from the government.
Laporn, the ISOCs psychological warfare chief, says the strategy will continue until the Communist Party is eradicated.
But sporadic fighting is expected to continue in remote parts of the country and from time to time larger scale military operations will probably be mounted, especially in Thailands southern ^ninsula where the ISOC estimates some 1,600 fighters are still entrenched.
But Laporn and others say
they will root out any attempts by the Communist Party to establish urban bases and will monitor possible efforts by the Vietnamese to i^lace Peking as the champion of Diailands revolutionary ause.
'Diai officials say their ^vernments policy was the key factor in this decimation of the communist ranks, but some defectors believe the internal collapse of the Maoist branch of the Communist Party was more important. They say it refused to change with the times.
The CPT had cancer and it didnt want any (q^ra-tion, says Weng Tochirakarn, a one-time student activist vlio ^nt six years with the insurgents. I dont think we really have a CPT now. It is just a group of people in the jungle with no influence on the Thai people.
Like several other defectors interviewed, Weng said his decision to bolt last year came after disillusionment with an ossified leadership ^Touting outdated Maoist slogans.
It clung^, he said, to the Maoist concept of waging war first in the countryside and then eventually encircling the cities. It failed to fashion a truly Thai road to revolution and instead looked to models the Chinese themselves had discarded.
Weng and others say the CPT was inevitably drawn Into its greatest blunder -by ignoring reality its members lost touch with Thailands impoverished
rural people. And the party wasnt helped by sizable economic improvements in the countryside.
The squabbles between different communist parties also didnt help.
Rather than joining together in a major threat against Thailand and other parts of Southeast Asia, (m-e-time allies communist China and communist Indochina turned on each other.
Chinese influence was swept out of Laos and Cambodia, once vital rear bases for the CPT. The solidly )ro-Peking CPT could expwt ittle help from pro-Soviet Vietnam and its Indochinese allies.
And China itself, courting Thailand and its friends, drastically cut its traditional support for the Thai fraternal party. The CPTs radio broadcasts, long beamed from southern China, fell silent.
In recent years, the emergence of a communist pak mai (new party) has been reMrted in northeastern Thailand. The party is reportedly influenced by Vietnam and the Soviet Union but to date has proved ineffectual.
Many of the defectors say they have not given up their goal of reforming Thai society, p^iculariy corruption and injustice in the countryside where 80 percent of the pe^le live. But they say that like the Communist Party of Thailand, a pro-Vietnamese party would not be the ri^t vehicle for change.
Cable Systems Request FCCStop Broadcasts
By NORMAN BLACK Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Communications Commission has been asked to allow cable TV systems to stop retransmitting the sisals of local religious stations.
The request, filed two weeks ago by the Washington law firm of Farrow, Schildhause, Wilson & Raines, amounts to a new attack on what is known as the must-carry rule. That rule specifies a cable TV operator must retransmit the signals of all conventional TV stations operating in his city.
If the FCC were to act on the petition, cable operators could still carry any type of religi(Nis programming they wished. But they could not be forced to do so by the operator of a local religious^ TV station.
The 14i>age petition notes the FCC has justified the must carry rule in general terms as necessary for the advancement of programming diversity and the protection of local signals. Those objectives are not sufficient, however, to ignore the First Amendment and entangle the government
in religion, the petition states.
The FCC cannot force broadcasters to air reli^ous programming, the petition continues, and thus it should not compel cable operators to disseminate religious programming against their will.
In conclusion, the First Amendment mandate that government remain neutral with respect to religion requires that the commission not compel carriage of religious television stations, the firm added.
We dont see must carry as any tj^ of establishment of reli^on, but rather a guarantee of access to another point of view, countered John Cummuta, the operations manager for the National Religious Broadcasters. I would assume and hope the FCC continues to take the view that religious broadcasters have the same right of access to the public as a regular commercial station.
The commission has shown
little willingness to reexamine its must-carry rule. Ted Turner, the Atlanta entrepreneur who owns the WTBS-TV super station, challenged the regulation almost three years ago by asserting it has the effect of forcing cable systems te subsidize broadcasters. The agency has yet to respond.
The National Association of Broadcasters maintains the must-carry rule is absolutely essential. If cable op' erators arent required to retransmit local stations, the NAB argues, those stations will lose access to the very audience that the FCC requires them to serve.
Sol Schildhause, who says his firm decided to pursue the issue on its own and not on behalf of a particular client, said Tuesday that argument ignores the fact the FCC is intruding into the operation of the media. The FCCs requirement that cable systems carry a particular kind of broadcast station, or for that matter any broadcast station, is a First Amendment violation.
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PISCATORIAL PALACE Eric Blum relaxes in the bar of $6-million home in Coral Gables, Fla., in front of an 8,000-gallon seaquarium that is a highlight of the distinctive house. Blum was commissioned by a Liechtenstein-based corporation to select and purchase the property, as well as oversee design and construction of the multilevel house.
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) - About 2,000 reservists of the 44th Marine Amphibious Unit assaulted Onslow Beach from the air and from the water during exercises Tuesday.
Helicopters participating in the exercise flew across country from El Toro, Calif.
The reservists converged on Camp Lejeune from California, Indiana, New York, Texas, Louisiana, South Carolina, Florida, Virginia, New Mexico, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Massachusetts, Washington, Colorado, Illinois and Washington, D.C.
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Senator Says Bribery Laws Unfair, Eyes Changes
ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Bribery laws that Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green is charged with breaking are unfair, a state senator says, but Green has asked that any revisions be delayed until the legislative session.
Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe, said Tuesday he had abandoned plans to rewrite the laws at the request of Green, who wanted to avoid any appearance of attempting to influence his case.
Swains comments came as the Senate Rules Committee approved a House bill amending the current law on bribing legislators. That law doesnt relate to the Green case, but Swain said it would have been an appropriate vehicle for implementing the changes he favors.
Some innocent people can be indicted, said Swain. The present law... is absolutely impossible, terrible. If somebody sends you even a pocket knife and wants to influence you, youre guilty even if you didnt know what it was for and send it back.
Green was indicted last month by a Wake County grand jury on charges of accepting a $2,000 bribe and conspiring to receive $10,000 per month from an undercover agent who hinted he was involved in organized crime.
, Green has acknowledged receiving a $2,000 check from agent Robert Drdak but said he returned it and never agreed to peddle his influence.
Greens indictment resulted from an FBI probe of corruption in southeastern North Carolina, dubbed Colcor. The same investigation resulted in indictments of Sen. R.C. Soles, D-Columbus, on federal charges of aiding extortion, conspiring to block legislation in return for a gold bracelet, lying to a grand jury and vote buying.
Green and Soles have pleaded innocent. Soles is scheduled to go on trial next week in Wilmington.
The bribery legislation, sponsored by Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, would make it illegal for lawmakers employers to threaten them with economic reprisals for failure to cast certain votes or take other official actions. The law also would make it illegal for legislators to urge the employers of other legislators to make such threats.
In an interview, Swain said he had prepared a substitute bill that would:
- Revise state conspiracy laws to limit the power of law enforcement officers to entrap individuals who were not otherwise inclined to commit a crime.
- Require corroborating testimony from someone other than the undercover agent..
- Clarify the legal definition of bribery to require that an act of bribery involves a plainly agreed-upon act rather than an innuendo, Swain said.
- Require that a bribery charge against a public official be based on an act that the official was capable of performing. Swain said that Greens indictment was based partially on an-alleged request that he obtain a liquor license, which the lieutenant governor has no authority to do.
This committee substitute is extensive and ready to go, Swain added. But the lieutenant governor and his lawyers asked that we not do anything that could be interpreted as trying to influence this body in regard to his situation.
Adams said in an interview he would support the changes Swain pressed if they reached the House in 1984.
Midwifery Bill Clears Hurdle
By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Midwives would be able to perform home deliveries with a doctors supervision under a bili scheduled for a final vote by the state House today.
The bill, which would require that midwives pay up to $100 to be licensed, received tentative' approval Tuesday despite objections from the N.C. Medical Society.
The entire impetus of this bill has come from some, and by no means all, nurse midwives who have desired to perform home deliveries and have not been permitted by the Board of Medical Examiners to deliver in the borne because it is an unsafe practice, board spokesman ;Tom Adams told the House ^Finance Committee earlier Tuesday.
Adams also warned that with only 23 nurse midwives currently registered, the proposed $100 ceiling as a licensing fee would not pay for the boards time.
However, Francis Miller of the N.C. Nurses Association noted that the licensing board was not entirely new. It is comprised of a standing subcommittee of the Medici Examiners and the Board of Nurses with the addition of two midwives and two obstetricians.
She said the panel would deal with midwives during regular nieetings at little added cost.
After the Finance Committee approved the bill, sponsored by Rep. George Miller, D-Durham, it went to the full House.
Miller said the bill would give some assurance of qualifications for those who have midwives deliver their babies.
. MOTORBIKE BOXER - Glenn Baker and Bniizer, a : ^year-old boxer, ride Bakers Honda TSOcc motorcycle. ; Sniizer has ridden nearly 40,000 miles with the 30-year-old Baker, including a five-year appearance in Kemersvilles ; :(N.C.) Fourth of July parade. Bruixer learned to ride when he : <was a pup and has falkn off toe H(mda only once. Both live in . (APLastfitooto)
Im in favor ... because (currently) someone can be indicted for bribery although no overt act was involved, he said.
The Rules Committee rejected a motion by Sen. Cecil Jenkins, D-Cabarrus, to delay the legislative bribery bill until 1984. The bill was approved and sent to the full Senate.
In other legislative action:
Corolla Incorporation
A bill to incorporate the Outer Banks town of Corolla, introduced suddenly Monday night, was sent to a subcommittee by the House Finance Committee, which in effect killed the bill.
Rep. Vernon James, D-Pasquotank, received permission of the House to introduce the bill after the House Local Government I Committee failed to act on similar legislation proposed by Rep. Charles Evans, D-Dare.
The bill stems from an attempt by under 200 Outer Banks residents to gain access to a largely undeveloped strip of land about 15 miles long north of the village of Corolla. The land is owned mostly by people who live elsewhere and have declared it off-limits to others.
Opponents of incorporation, including the Currituck County board of commissioners and environmental groups, say they fear it will lead to development of the area. Supporters say thats a decision local residents should make.
Rep. Frank Ballance, D-Warren, moved that the bill be sent to a subcommittee. Despite a warning by chairman Rep. Dwight Quinn, D-Cabbamis, that doing so would probably kill the bill because the session is expected to end this week, the
committee approved the motion.
National Guard
A subcommittee was appointed by the House National Guard Committee to write a report on the results of a lengthy probe of allegations against the N.C. National Guard and its top officer. Adjutant Gen. William Ingram.
Rep. Murray Pool, D-Sampson, was appointed to chair the panel. He has leveled a number of allegations against Ingram, including favoritism in Guard promotions and improper use of military aircraft.
The subcommittee was to report to the full committee Thursday.
Rule Revision
The Senate Rules Committee approved substitute versions of three bills that were embroiled in controversy Friday after being tabled by the Senate. The bills were revived Monday and sent to the committee.
Originally, the bills would have phased out 18,000 pages of administrative rules by mid-1985 and established legislative committees to decide which ones to keep. Supporters said the bills were needed to return the law-writing responsibility to the Legislature.
Opponents, led by Sen. Henson Barnes, D-Wayne, said the bills would create chaos by creating a full-time Legislature and usurping the governors power.
After the bills were tabled Friday, the compromise was negotiated. Under the substitute bills, the regulations still will be phased out. But state departments will review them and a legislative study commission will recommend that some be
THE LIGHTER SIDE State Sen. Marvin Ward, D-Winston-Salem, enjoys a lighter moment during Tuesdays session of the North Carolina
Senate. Members of both the House and Senate hope to end the 1983 session by the end of the week. (AP Laserphoto)
retained or updated in 1985.
After 1985, a new commission will be established that will have veto power over any new regulations. The commission will be under the executive branch instead of the legislative branch.
The bills were returned to the Senate floor.
Tax Evasion
The Senate Judiciary II Committee approved a bill making state income tax evasion felony punishable by 2-5 years in prison.
Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, said his original bill made evasion a felony but the House had changed it to a misdemeanor. He said he didnt expect the House to concur with the felony provision, but the Senate panel insisted on restoring it to the bill.
Safety Song
The House Rules Committee took no action on a bill that would establish a state song promoting safe driving. The bill was sponsored by Rep. Tom Rabon, D-Brunswick. ''
The song, Dont Speed That Car, was composed by Brunswick County radio station owner Earl Milliken, who appeared before the committee and played a recorded rendition of the song.
But Rep. J.P. Huskins, D-Iredell, said it would be improper for the Legislature to endorse a commercial product.
I dont want the committee to do any further with it, said Huskins.
Committee chairman Rep. Jack Hunt, D-Cleveland, refused to entertain motions on the bill.
Hospital Laws
The Senate approved unanimously a bill that would codify and update North Carolinas laws on public hospitals after adopting 21-19 an amendment prohibiting leasing of public hospital facilities to for-profit corporations.
The bill sets standards for establishing hospitals, empowers the Department of Human Resources to receive grants for the hospitals, provides for licensing of the facilities, sets rules for nursing homes and ambulance service, authorizes a cardiac rehabilitation program, and leaves intact the certificate of need statute that lets the state determine whether a new hospital is needed.
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How Tar Heel Representatives And Senators Voted
RoUCaU Report Service
WASHINGTON - Heres how area members of Congress were recorded on major roll call votes in the days before the Fourth of July recess.
, HOUSE SECRECY By a vote of 250 for and 151 against, the House reaffirmed that it wants a secret investigation into the doctoring of committee transcripts by House employees.
GuitarMaker
World-Famous
By CATHERINE JONES ForAPNewsfeatures
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) - When Lorenzo Pimentel came to Albuquerque in 1962 and tried to sell his handmade guitars to local music dealers, they threw him out.
The prestigious Pimentel guitars now are known worldwide - and the maker selects the music dealers who will be allowed to sell his fine instruments.
When I came to Albuquerque there were a few music stores, and I had some guitars with me that I wanted to sell, said Pimentel. The store owners said they didnt want anything to do with Mexican guitars.
Pimentel, 55, said his popularity chan^ in 1964 when a feature article describing his work app^red in a well-known music magazine.
Since then, weve been so busy that we dont sell to the Albuquerque music stores, he said. We choose the people we know are going to use the guitars and not just hang them on the wall.
Pimentel can afford to be choosy. In 1978, he was invited to show his instruments at the Smithsonian Institution in the Festival of American Folk Art.
The native of Mexico said he taught himself to make quality guitars. 1 came to the United States in 1949 and started with a violin maker after 1 ran out of funds for college, he said.
Pimentel, who completed his first guitar when he was 15, also worked as an apprentice to his older
brother who made guitars, but his brother quit the art.
I taught myself the designs. I learned the basics from my brother - how to shape them and put them together, he said. I learned to make a good, well-refined instrument, weli-sounding instrument, by trial and error.
The modest shop where the guitars are made smells of wood and lacquer. Pimentel says he uses wood from many different countries.
The way a guitar sounds is in the hands of the person who makes it, he said. Me and my brother started talking about sound. He was sure two guitars would sound the same if we used the same wood, same measurements and made them at the same time.
Pimentel said the two instruments didnt sound the same when they were finished.
If you really care for the wood and have got the feeling, the wood is going to respond, he said. If you make guitars just because you need to make a living, they wont come out good. Pimentel says he has eight sons who plan to keep the business going. My sons love the work. They are proud of what they do, he said.
Many hours of tedious work are required to make a guitar. Pimentel says his least expensive guitar, the student model, takes 20 to 25 hours to make.
The concert-classical guitar, which sells for more than $10,000 and is Pimentels favorite, requires about 120 hours to complete.
This was a defeat for Republicans, who wanted a public probe.
The dispute concerns 1982 hearings into the Environmental Protection Agency and 1980 hearings into alleged manipulation of silver prices.
Unidentified Democratic editors of the transcripts apparently changed the meaning of what GOP lawmakers said, often so as to make the Republicans sound ridiculous.
This vote was the last major obstacle to launching a secret probe of the distorta-tions by the Democratic-controlled House Ethics Committee.
'Had Republicans been victorious, they would have offered an amendment requiring the ethics panel to in-vestigae publicly unless it approved secret sessions by a record vote.
Supporter Gillis Long, D-La., said the Ethics Committee has the tools with which to conduct an ei^itious and judicious investigation. Opponent Judd Gregg, R-N.H., called the Democratic strategy a Ve^ fast-track attempt to get this matter our of (the) public eye. Members voting yes favored a secret Ethics Committee probe.
NORTH CAROLINA Voting yes: Tim Valentine, D-2, Charles Whitley, D-3, Ike Andrews, D-4, Stephen Neal, D-5, Charles Britt, D-6, Charles Rose, D-7, W.G. Hefner, D-8, James Clarke, D-11.
Voting no; James Martin, R-9, James Broyhill, R-10.
Not voting: Walter Jones, D-l.
AIRPORT The-House re-jectedj 170 for and 249 against, an amendment to limit the increase in passengers and flights at Washington National Airport.
Located minutes from Capitol Hill, National is prized by most lawmakers for its convenience. However, many area residents and officials say the airport - built nearly 40 years ago to handle pit^ planes-is unsafe.
This amendment sought to limit air traffic at National and shift some of its flight to Dulles and BWI (Baltimore-Washington International) airports. It was offered to HR
3329, an appropriatiofls bill later sent to the Senate.
Supporter Don Pease, D-Ohio, said mmbers of Congress appear self-serving when they block Federal Aviation Administration attempts to shift traffic away from National.
Opponent Eldon Rudd, R-Ariz., said National belongs to the people of this nation, and that residrats ccunplain-ing about its noise and safety have a choice not to live near that airport...
Members voting no opposed FAA plans to cap traffic at National Airport.
NORTH CAROUN A Voting yes: Valentine, Clarke.
Voting no; Walter Jones, Whitley, Ike Andrews, Neal, Britt, Rose, Hefner, James Martin, Broyhill.
Not voting; None.
SENATE FOOD The Senate rejected, 24 for and 73 against, an amendment whose effect was to cut funding for the three major federal food programs - child nutrition, food stamps, and the WIC (women, infant, chUdren) feeding program.
The vote occurred during debate on the fiscal 1983 Department of Agriculture appropriations bill (HR 3223), later sent to conference with the House.
As issue was whether money for the programs should be i^read over 12 or fewer months. S^porters of the pro-Adminstration amendment said at least $1 billion could be saved by allocating over 12 months.
Sponsor Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said this partial-year funding mechanism, which disguises bow much money we really intend to spend, is not fair to anyone involved. Opponent '^ad Cochran, R-
SHAKE-UP LONDON (AP) - Government-owned British Airways has shaken up its tq) management in a move to increase profits. Seventy executives will retire early, reducing ranks of senior management by 20 percent.
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Miss., said the amendments could deny full benefits to all those who are eligible for benefis under the law. Senators voting yes wanted lower outlays for the three food programs.
John East, R, voted yes.
Jesse Helms, R, voted yes.
CONGRESS The Senate approved, 78 for and 15 against, and sent to the White House the conference report on the fiscal 1984 legislative branch appn^riationsbill (HR3135).
Funding Congress and its
many agencies, the bill sets outlays at $1.48 billion. That is about twice what Congress cost taxpayers in 1975, but an increase of only one percent over fiscal 1983.
According to the Tax Foundation, the average Senator
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Senators voting yes favored,, the $1.48 biUion ouUay for the ,, legislatirve branch.
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Turning To HOW, AUTOCAP Or MACP For Help
By CAROLE FELDMAN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Donald Priggie faced a $6,000 repair bill when the septic system of his new home in Elgin, 111., began malfunctioning, and the builder went bankrupt.
But instead of dipping into his own pocket to pay the bill, Priggie went to HOW.
HOW the Home Owners Warranty Corp. - had insured the builders warranty on Priggies new home. When the builder didnt meet his obligation to fix the septic system, HOW paid the bill.
If I were going to buy a new house again - and there's a big if in there - I would make sure it was covered by HOW, Priggie said.
HOW is one of several programs set 14) by private industry to deal with consumer complaints. Others are offered by auto dealers, funeral directors, major appliance makers and furniture manufacturers.
Consumer representatives say the industry programs are good as far as they go, but they have drawbacks.
AUTOCAP, a consumer actiw panel sponsored by the National Automobile Dealers Association, helped Lorin Goodrich recover at least part of the repair bill for his 1979 car, whose camshaft had to be replaced periodically.
Goodrich had gotten no satisfaction from the dealership where he bought the car, or from the manu-
ACHyO(
Restaurants
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -If all 678,974 residents in San Francisco decided to eat out on the same night, everybody could be seated. ^
San Francisco, according to the National Restaurant Association, boasts more restaurants per capita than any other city in the nation, one for every 158 residents. New York, with one restaurant for every 200 people, ranks second.
The restaurant business is San Franciscos biggest industry, bringing in $870 million last year.
Fishermans Wharf harbors more restaurants than fishing boats, and sandwiched in a strip less than a mile long on Clement Street are nearly 100 restaurants. i
More than half the citys residents are unmarried and living in non-family households, according to the 1980 census. According to restaurateurs, sin^e people eat out while families eat at home.
The rise in two^:areer families also means business for restaurants. Eating out is no longer considered a luxury, but more and more a necessity, said Dorothy Dee of the National Restaurant Association.
"With both men and what used to be homemakers now in the rat race, time and leisure have become a rarity. People are not even thinking twice about saying, Lets go out for some chow, she said.
Agree To Halt Claim On Test
WASHINGTON (AP) -The manufacturer of Amana Radarange microwave ovens has agreed to stop claiming the appliance is the only brand to pass torture tests, the Federal Trade Commission says.
The agreement settled a 1982 FTC complaint charging that Amana Refrigeration Inc. of Amana, Iowa, had misled consumers in ads. The advertisements said the qven was only one of six major brands that passed the 'torture tests conducted by ithMlependent laboratory.
I the n'C said a total of ^en brands were tested $n! one other, Panasonic, Batted the tests.
pontending the ads were D0t mideadlng. Amana said h signed the a^ment to a^lold a costly legal battle. Ctoipany officials said the , We not been used in two years. Company president Henry J. Meyer said the fTC still cant document its charge the ads were mislead-
facturers regional headquarters. So Goodrich contacted AUTOCAP. As a result, the automaker finally paid for $1,400 worth of replacement parts, but Goodrich was still out $600 and all the aggravation and time without a car.
I wasnt really satisfied with the settlement, said Goodrich, who works for the International Trade Commission. But, be said, my general belief is that AUTOCAP had some influence in getting the company to pay something.
AUTOCAP is truly trying to help all parties, said Robert Fogarty, general sales manager and vice president of Siwrt Chevrolet in suburban Silver Spring, Md., who said the program encourages dealers to try to resolve consumer complaints on their own.
Its a little embarrassing to get the rug pulled out from under you in front of your peers, Fogarty said. No dealers want bad press, bad word of mouth.
Sport Chevrolet was not involved in the Goodrich case, and has never dealt with the AUT(X:ap panel. But if his dealership ever was, Fogarty said, he would be confident in the mediators ability to resolve a complaint fairly.
Third-party mediation services offered by industry, such as HOW and AUTOCAP, can provide impartial, inexpensive and quick methods of settling consumer complaints, which, when left unresolved, could result in costly court action, says Virginia H. Knauer, special assistant to President Reagan and director of the U.S. Office of Consumer Affairs.
A dissent from this view came from Barbara Warden, executive director of the National Consumers League, who said the programs appear superficial and as though they have not been thought throu^.
She questioned whether they were merely window dressing for industry, and complained they arent publicized sufficiently.
Clarence Ditlow, head of the Center for Auto Safety founded by consumer
Found Cash In Old House
BLAIR, Neb. (AP)-If the Treasury Department cooperates. Junior A. Porters new house could wind up paying for itself .
Porter decided to move a house hed bought from the city for $500, and in the process he stumbled onto some filthy lucre - wads of $50 and $100 bills stuffed in a pickle jar and jammed between the wall and the foundation sill.
The jar fell to the ground when the house was put up on jacks to be moved six blocks.
The money, possibly squirreled away by a De-pression-era farmer who feared failing banks, had seriously deteriorated, most of it crumbling into dust. Porter said.
When I first saw it, I thought someone had left something and it spoiled in a jar, Porter said recently. I actually kicked it first and when it rolled I saw it wasnt anything spoiled. I (4>ened it up and found the money.
Porter said he mailed the money to the Treasury, but because of its condition, it will be two months or more before Porter finds how much money - if any - hell get.
Unless the government replaces it, I dont have anything, he said.
He estimated there was between $500 and $2,000 in the walls, and said rumors of his becoming a millionaire were exaggerated. But the money could help pay the $10,000 house-moving cost, he added.
Festival At Clarksville
CLARKSVILLE, Va. -The annual Clarksville Summer Festival is being held Friday and Saturday at Buggs Island Lake on U.S. 58,25 miles west of Interstate 85 from South Hill, Va.
The festival, with games, competitions, and blue^ass music, will culminate with a fireworks display Saturday ni^t.
advocate Ralph Nader, said industry programs have a lot of bugs to be worked out, but even if they only resolve 10 percent of the complaints, consumers should try to use them.
Ditlow said a fr^uent consumer complaint is that the dispute settlement process takes too long.
Goodrich, for example.
was told he would have to exhaust all avenues for redress with car dealers and the manufacturer before AUTOCAP would consider the case. He said he was able to work out a compromise in which he submitted his complaint simultaneously to all parties.
Ditlow also says every program should be binding
onmdustry.
The Furniture Industry Consumer Advisory Panel -or FICAP - handles com-plaints involving manufacturing defects, quality and service, but its decisions are not binding on consumer, manufacturer or dealer.
Although the Major Appliance Consumer Action Panel
- MACAP - makes recommendations to manufacturers for settlement of complaints about such appliances as refrigerators, kitchen ranges, home laundry equipment and dishwashers, the industry is not required to abide by them.
The funeral industrys THANACAP program is binding on both the consumer
and the funeral director, but funeral directors are not required to participate.
THANACAP is billed as offering' an alternative in resolving customer complaints.
First, volunteers try to get the customer and the funeral director to work out the problem themselves. If that is unsuccessful, the case is
sent to a panel for resolution, with both parties agreeing to binding arbitration.
Generally, if consumers cannot get help anywhere else, they can turn to the Council of Better Business Bureaus, which will arbitrate any dispute between a business and a customer over a transaction unless a criminal violation is involved.
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Constructs Artificial Body Parts
DURHAM. N.C. lAP) -Jane Lupton Bahor's artwork may never win critical praise from reviewers, but for those whose faces have been ravaged by accidents or disease, her works are masterpieces.
Ms. Bahor uses her creative talents as a facial prosthetist, creating articificial noses, ears and other facial features in a laboratory at the Duke University Medical Center.
About half of Ms. Bahors patients suffer from cancer which required removal of parts of their faces. Some are accident victims and others were bom with facial defects. In most cases, prothesis is a permanent solution. For those awaiting reconstructive surgery, the process is temporary.
Some of these defects can be quite tramatic and cause a ^at deal of emotional pain, Ms. Bahor said. Added to the stigma of having cancer, theres the stigma of looking so weird. My job is to make a prosthesis that lets you look better so that you are comfortable in public.
Ms. Bahors procedure generally takes two six-hour visits. During the first visit, she paints a material used for dental impressions over the defect and covers it with a stiff bandage to create a mold. A plaster-like material is poured into the mold to create a hard base on which a prosthestic design can be built.
She does the design in wax - sculpting and carving bone lines, creases and wrinkles. Sometimes she uses photographs or impressions of facial features made before surgery.
After the wax design is complete, Ms. Bahor makes another mold from which the final silicon rubber prosthesis will be made. At that time she matches skin color for the prosthesis.
During the second visit. Ms. Bahor paints the prosthesis from a palette of colors. Several layers are used to give it depth. She also adds touches of paint to create the illusion of blue veins, freckles and age spots.
Most prostheses are anchored by adhesive, but some can be attached mechanically. An ear may be designed to include a tube which fits into the auditory canal.
Ms. Bahor recommends that the prosthesis be removed nightly to inspect for recurrance of disease and to allow air to reach the skin.
Ms. Bahor builds three prostheses for each patient. Two are for the patient and the third is kept at the laboratory indefinitely. A set of noses or ears, for example, generally runs about $300, but complicated prothesis can cost up to $1,000.
The molds are stored in the laboratory because protheses can wear out, tear, become discolored or get lost. The new prostheses last longer than five years ago, when the devices used to shrink up and discolor like the vinyl top of a car, Ms. Bahor said.
She creates everything from facial features including eyes to artificial fingers and toes. Her work also often goes beyond the cosmetic, as she creates noses which wilt filter and warm air like authentic ones.
Ms. Bahor says shes hoping for continued improvements in prothesis work.
Report Safety Bulletins Hoax
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The North Carolina Society of Ophthalmology says safety bulletins warning of eye damage to contact lens wearers from industrial electrical sparks are a hoax.
The society said the phony warnings, which have cropped up on company bulletin boards, claim sparks from switches or an arc welder fused workers contact lenses to their eyes, resulting in permanent blindness
That is a medical impossibility, said Dr. J. Lawrence Sippe of Charlotte, president of the society. Sippe said the phony bulletins were probably generated by an actual case that was blown out of proportion.
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Hotel Has Computers For Guests
ByEUSSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Guests staying in Meredith Guest House suites can do more than watch television programs when they turn on their TV sets - they can book seats on airline flights, check restaurant menus all over the country, even do their shopping.
TV sets at the luxury hotel in northwest Raleigh are tied in with in-room computer terminals. By switching on their televisions and entering their credit-card numbers, guests have access to a variety of services ranging from a complete list of airline flights worldwide to daily stock and commodities prices to computer word games.
Meredith Guest House is the first hotel in the state and one of the first in the world to have the new in-room computer program, according to Harry Pilos, executive director of the hotel company.
Were definitely pioneers in the area, Pilos said. We were so excited about the concept when we heard about it that we were willing to be guinea pigs. Its defintely the way of the future for hotels. The hotel installed the small computer terminals in 40 of its 60 suites early last month.
Pilos said operating the system is simple. First, a guest turns on his TV set and switches to a certain channel. Then he turns on the terminal and enters his credit-card number. The computer then gives printed instructions on how to find the desired service.
This system is user friendly, which means it tells the user each step to take, Pilos said. It isnt necessary to have any knowledge of computers to operate it. The cost of using the system runs from 17 cents a minute to 34 cents with a minimum usage fee of $3.
The system, produced by Quason Corp., cost about $12,000 or $300 per unit to install.
Services currently provided by the system include flight listings, world, national, state and local news, and stock lists. The hotel plans to add the restaurant listings, a travel service, catalogue shopping and a message service.
The restaurant service, for example, will be great for travelers, Pilos said. A guest can ask for a list of restaurants in Dallas, for instance, narrow it down to the type of restaurant he prefers, then get a sample menu, price list and credit cards the restaurant accepts.
Pilos predicted that every hotel in the country will offer some type of in-room computer service within the next five years.
Right now, it is unique, something extra for your customers, he said. But in five years, it probably will be a service routinely provided by every hotel and motel. It will come to the point that guests wont be happy without it.
Extra Time To Decide On Plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -National Public Radio affiliate stations have been given extra time to decide whether to-accept a plan by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to bail out the debt-ridden network.
CPB spokesman Stan L. Harrison said the deadline had been extended from Monday afternoon to Thursday morning, when the corporations board is scheduled to discuss the matter.
The original deadline was set to allow CPB officials to count station votes before the board meeting, which had been scheduled to take place on Wednesday. But Harrison said the corporation extended the deadline and rescheduled the^ard meeting when several public radio stations operated by state and local governments sought extra time to study the proposed loan agreement.
Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.
A
JO IIIC L/aU/ \<Bcvuvun;, rvv\uaww/iU. S. Operates World's Largest Visa Mill In Manila
By DAVID BRISCOE Associated Press Writer MANILA, Philippines (AP) - Packing a sheaf of documents intended to prove his financial stability, a young Filipino approached the visa window at Manilas U.S. Embassy.
The visa officer recognized that most of the documents were forged.
i'm sorry to disappoint > ou, sir. but the law really is very strict. said the American consul officer as he turned away yet another would-be immigrant at the worlds biggest U.S. visa mill.
The young man is one of more than 5,500 Filipinos rejected in Manila this year for submitting fraudulent documents to an office that grants 80,000 visitor visas and another 35,000 immigrant visas a year.
There is a backlog of 320,000 Filipinos wanting to move to the United States, where more than one million Filipinos already live.
The waiting time for Filipinos who fall under U.S. quotas is up to 13 years, the longest delay of any nationality. A teen-ager who wants to join a brother or sister in California may be past 30 before his or her petition is considered.
"I think many Filipinos feel they have a right to emigrate to America because of the special relationship our two coQhtries have, said Vernon MacAninch, a burly Texan from Waco who has reformed Manilas formidable and once locally controversial visa operation. He is the U.S. consul-general in Manila.
Filipinos learned English in an education system set up by the United States which won control of Lie islands following the Spanish-American War. They fought through World War II with the Americans. Although the Philippines became independent in 1946. Filipinos can still join the U.S. Navy, and the country hosts two large U.S. military bases.
Until this year, hundreds of people used to gather daily at the U.S. Embassy gate. MacAninch has moved the lines inside and sat people down in color-coded chairs. The embassy still serves more than 1,000 applicants a day. but now guarantees one^lay service on tourist visas.
MacAninchs reforms, his John Wayne looks and his outspoken defense of the United States have made him a favorite for club luncheons, local television talk shows and as a beauty contest judge.
its the easiest job in the world, because nearly everybody has a cousin or a brother or at least a very close friend in the United States, said MacAninch. His audiences, he said, often show detailed knowledge of U.S. immigration law.
Some Filipinos find creative ways to defy it. *
One man, to prove he wouldnt end up on welfare roles, presented a letter authorizing him to secure $135 billion on behalf of a supposed businessT,
Another showed i~ $^000 American passport in fed velvet, a material not used
U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs. Embassy officials say they sometimes recognize rented gold watches on applicants, who apparently are trying to look well-to-do.
Fraudulent marriages and attempts to take up the identities of dead applicants are also common, he said.
One ruse involves a Filipino who marries an American woman, secures an easy
immi^ant visa, moves to America, divorces and then immediately petitions for his Filipino wife and six children.
But most applicants are legitimate.
Filipina Estrada, 33, was named for her county but now she wants to leave it.
I want to live in America because there will be more opportunities, she said as she awaited visas for herself
and two children. Her husband has lived in California since 1978. She waited five years for her name to come up.
M(^ Filipino immigrants seek a better life. Many live fairiy well here but think they will live better in the United States.
Even during the eight years of martial law under President Ferdinand E. Marcos, only a handful of the
most prominent emigrants could be considered political refugees.
Marcos government has spent millions of dollars cultivating the st^port of American Filipinos. A planeload of the nations top movie and television personalities was sent last month to perform in major U.S. cities and to urge Fil^i-nos to come home and see Marcos accomplishments.
Hundreds return each day under a program that gives tax amnesty and other privileges.
TTie government officially encourages the departure of both skilled and unskilled workers, primarily because of the foreip exchange they send back. Filipinos are taxed on income wherever they go, and contract workers -500,000 in the Middle East -must remit up to 70 percent of their income home.
Some companies suffer from the exodus. Manilas notoriously poor tel^hone' service is sometimes blamed on the emigration of competent linesmen.
MacAninch, pointing to a man in a neatly pressed Philippine shirt. But he acknowledged there is no way to tell bow many Filipinos get through with fake travel documents never submitted to the embassy.
264 PLAYHOUSE
INDOOR THEATRE
ENDS TONIGHT
A small crowd still mills about the U.S. Embassys new visa gate. Most wait for relatives or friends.
Some wait to prey on the rejects.
Ill lay odds hes from the competition, said
..yiSA APPLICANTS - Fflipina Estrada, 33, for pppo^. It was signe^ sho^ oN Jher passport at the U.S. Embassy in LJd'by Manila as She wss With other applicants for visas
to the United States. She later was given an immigrant visa. (APLaserphoto)
756^848 Showtime 6:00 P.M. DooraOpnS:4S P.M.
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WINNIPEG," Manitoba (AP) - Delegates at an 'international cwiference on smoking are being urged to lobby for hi^ier tobacco taxes and a ban on cigarette advertising as part of a campaign to create a smoking-free world by the year 2000.
Without active political involvement, we iall not realize our goal, Dr. Kjell Bjartveit of Norway said Tuesday at the fifth World Conference on Smoking and Health. About 900 delegates from 80 countries are attending the week-long gathering, which ends Friday.
Bjartveit said tou^ legislation is the only way to eliminate smoking.He cited the Norwegian Tobacco Act, which went into effect in 1975 and bans ail cigarette advertising.
Bjartveit said consumption of cigarettes has declined since Norway adopted the law and there has been a corresponding decrease in the incidence of lung cancer.Norways law was passed with little opposition, he said, and a survey showed 78 percent of Norwegians favored it.
Canadian Health Minister Monique Begin told the conference she is seeking a 30 percent increase in the federal tax on cigarettes,
Delegates also were told how anti-smoking forces have conducted civil disobedience campaigns and publicity stunts to get their point across.
Some members of an Australian group called
Billboard Utilizing Graf-fitists Against Unhealthy Promotions have been jailed for defacing cigarette adver
tisements.
They have stimulated public debate which has forced tobacco advertisers
into an uiq)recedented defensive position, said Dr. Arthur Chesterfield-Evans, who presented a paper on the group. Embarrassed governments have made legislative changes and a total ban on cigarette advertising is generally accepted as inevitable within the next few years.
Other countries, including Britain, have found that tobacco companies have devised ways of getting around legislation.
Dr. David Simpson, a member of a British antismoking group, said that despite a 1965 ban on cigarette advertising on British television, tobacco firms get a lot of exposure through sponsorship of televised ^rts events and their accompanying logos and billboards.
There is also a problem with enforcement, according to Simpson, who said minors in Britain are prohibited from purchasing tobacco products but only about a dozen cases have come before the courts in the past year.
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. FISH FLY CLEANUP-Vem Jansen uses a snow shovel to > clewoff the top of a Dubuque (Iowa) phone booth ftrilowing an influx of fish flies. The pesky inclHong bugs leave titer Mississippi river homes each nii^t and are attracted by li^it where they die by morning. The flies often pile up two or three feet deep around light sources. (APLaser^ioto)
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^Log Aronson Opines Blackbeard A Con Man
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WASHINGTON (AP) -Actress Butterfly McQueen, who played the slave Prissy in the movie Gone With the Wind, has won $60,000 from her lawsuit charging harassment by two bus terminal security guards in 1979.
A Superior Court jury made the award Tuesday in favor of the 72-year-old actress, who contended she was wrongly accused of being a vagrant and a pickpocket by bus terminal guards during an April 1979 incident.
The suit said the guards did not have probable cause to suspect that the New York actress had committed a crime.
The lawsuit was originally filed against Greyhound Bus Lines, Inc., and International Security Corp. of Virginia. But Judge Joseph M. Hannon dismissed the complaint against Greyhound.
Ms. McQueen, who played Scarlett OHaras slave girl in the epic movie, told jurors that the guards pushed her to the ground. One of the guards testified that Ms. McQueen had fallen.
By GEORGE A. THREEWITTS ECU News Bureau
BATH - Blackbeard the pirate, often thou^t of as one of historys most ruthless and cruel cutthroats, had a flair for dramatics and probably other redeeming qualities as well, says playwright Stuart Aronson.
I honestly believe that Edward Teach -Blackbeard - was a con man, says Aronson, author and director of the Bath-based summer outdoor drama Blackbeard; Knight of the Black Flag.
He was a good performer, a consmate actor who created the image of Blackbeard, Aronson contends.
In the play, Aronsons characterization of Blackbeard as being both a rogue and a gentleman has been a point of controversy
during its seven years of performances in this historic old colonial town - North Carolinas oldest.
Teach, an Englishman whose real name may have been Thatch or Thach, had a hideaway home in Bath during his days of buccaneering in the early 1700s and may have buried his gold there. In any case, Aronson, an East Carolina University professor, says Teach planned to retire there.
Legend has romanticized much of the Blackbeard history including the bloody end of his career aiKi life. Accounts say he was cut down in hand-to-hand combat by Lt. Robert Maynard, commander of a force sent out by. the governor of Virginia to capture the pirate.
History records that Blackbeard was killed in shipboard battle Nov. 22, 1718. Legends portray him as a ferocious pirate who would
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - NCNB Corp. Tuesday reported consolidated net income of $22.118 million for the second quarter of 1983, up 29.4 percent from the $17,099 million reported in the second quarter of 1982.
Thomas I Storrs, chairman of the board, said this was the equivalent of 90 cents a share, up 25 percent from the 72 cents per share earned in the previous second quarter.
HOME AGAIN Actor Anthony Quinn smiles after unveiling his bronze sculpture Statu^que at the dedication of the Anthmy Quinn Library in East Los Angeles. Quinn, who is also a painter and a sculptor, donated the sculpture to the library liich is located b the neighborhood Quinn lived in as a boy. (AP Laserpboto)
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frighten his victims by appearing with lifted candles in his thick, braided beard.
Aronson.said his research leaves little doubt in my mind that Blackbeard had some gentlemanly attributes. For one thing he was educated and could read and write. At the time only 1 percent of the peculation was literate.
Ive seen remnants of his logs and he wrote quite
Globe Project
LONDON (AP) - Three prominent Americans played key roles in dedication ceremonies for the site of a reconstruction of the 16th century Globe Theater and a new coiter for the study of William Shakespeares worics.
Pbilantropist Armand Hammer, fUm director Sam Wanamaker and actor Douglas Fairbanks Jr. were on hand Tuesday as trumpets blew a fanfare and balloons rose overtiead. Fairbanks unveiled a plaque announcing that construction of the International Shakespeare Globe Center will begin in 1984.
The $28.3 million project, to be funded by donations, is expected to be completed by 1989, according to Wanamaker, founder and executive chairman of the centers corporation.
beautifully, Aronson said.
In addition to having homes here and on Ocracoke, Teach was acc^ted in many of the finest colonial homes of the Carolinas and had dealings with the royal governor, Charles Eden. In the war (Queen Annes War) which ended in 1713, Teach was an English privateer and apparently continued the plundering of ships in the West Indies and along the Atlantic coast several years after hostilities ceased. During this period, he named his ship the Queen Annes Revenge, and had the vessel caulked and repaired at Teachs Hole at Ocracoke.
I believe he tried to be a good neighbor and I dont think he himself presented any problem, Aronson says of Teach during the time in spent in Bath and at Ocracoke. At the time there were many other pirates coming into Bath who were causing trouble.
There is no proof that Blackbeard himself did that. 1 think he really wanted to retire, Aronson says.
Aronson said his research also shows that Blackbeard actively traded with the Quaker colonly in Pennsylvania.
My feeling is that if he had no redeeming qualities whatsoever, I just dont believe the Quakers would have traded with Blackbeard the pirate.
Teach had to be ruthless at
times to keep the respect of his crew, Aronson concedes. But he also believes that to a large extent. Teach deliberately created the image of Blackbeard and relied on that fierce image to enhance his pirating (or privateeringj exploits.
. A lot of people dont
realize that many' times Blackbeard would come upon a ship and the pecle would surrender without even a fight because of his name and reputation, Aronson said.
He may have been a gentleman gone bad, but be was a good actor.
J.B.s Island Seafood
Open Mon.-Sat. Lunch 11;30-2;00 Dinner 5:3010:00
Wednesdav-Shrimp Night
Steamed . RP /
Shrimp ............ Oj]
Doz.
Fried, Broiled or Steamed
Shrimp Platters.......... /Vd
Special Special!!
Boiled or Pan Fried Shrimp. *7.95 Snapper...............^ 6.50
V Wednesday Night
Mens Happy Hour 9:00-11:00
*1.00 Specials
Located In Rivergate Shopping Center E. 10th St. Greenville 752-1275
DWTIML
PRIME UML
SPORTS TIME
MOVIE TIME
July 16-52
TVGUDE
VBK
All those channels. All those shows. All those choices.To help you watch the best thats
YOU
QIQQI^besU^Gbide.
On sale now.
28-The Day Reflector. Greenville, N C.-Wednesday, July IS, I9t3
Croasword By Eugene Sbeffer
FORECAST FOR THURSDAY. JULY 14.1963
PEANUTS
ACROSS 1 Chinese tea 4 The-Worm 8 Sagacious
12 Leave to Heaven
13 Cowboy gear
14 Astringent
15 Anger
Surpasses
18 Seashore
20 Small child
21 Greenland Eskimos
24 Actor OToole
28 Leaving port, as a ship
32 Back of the neck
33 Grape
34 Ermine
36 Education org.
37 Spanish painter
39 Seriously offended
41 Alleviates
43 Abound
44 0nassis
46 Hindu
guitar
50 Non-members 3 Scope 22 Car 55 Swiss canton 4 Caves 23 Pigs nose Silndian 5-Gehrig 25Sharptaste
57 Singer Adams I Choose 29 Fencing
58 Cameroon 7Maeor sword
neighbor: Adam 27 Peruse
abbr. 8 Prison 28Riverin
59 Some are custodian England
slaves 9 River in 29 Layer of
SOCrieshard Asia theiris
61 Pie-mode 10 Eat dinner USaors DOWN 11 German spa 31 Sweet fruit
ISartoriaUy 17 Spigot 35Locksofhair smart 19Br^r
2 Popular or sister,
sandwich for short
(%V)U4., eSi^.
MARCIE, YOU can't TELL CMUCK TMATlMElL GET TME BI6 HEAD'
canitellVnc.that's^
38 Badgers 40 Pierres friend
Average solution time: 24 min.
iSG!a|^|[!l|^|Qg
i!)SQi[S] agMi mm !3m QQaiQands msi [leaoi mm giQisu iBacgj
fatal date
47 Sandwich fUler
48 Seed coat Capital (rf Latvia
50 Wood sorrel
51 Ode on a Grecian
52 Vietnam festival
53 Tokyo, once
7-13
Answer to yesterdays puzzle. 54 Umbrella support
CRYPTOQUIP 7-13
WTKVM SHHNWKTT JHKJL HV PKJKNUHV
GPUMGVNTF LKM K SUGTM MKF.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip ILL QUIT, QUOTED A QUAINT OLD QUEEN.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: M equals D.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in whidi each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Although you will have the good will and helpful ideas of a man of infhimce who will be understanding of the precision that you require in your work, there will be outside delays.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You can rely on a family tie to help you improve some situation, but don't expect help immediately. Entertain at home.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You want to have a good time with a chaming person but cannot really afford it. so forget it for the time being.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Look to an expert for financial advice and forget that individual who has disappointed you. Exercise tact.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Know what it is you want from a good friend and don't let a family tie interfere. Be understanding of loved one.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Get busy at affairs that are disturbing and clear them up and avoid arguments with others, eince everyone is irritable today.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Nothing seems to be going as smoothly as you would like but can do nothing about it as yet. A good friend is helpful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) An outside partner does not agree with a plan you have made, so don't pursue the matter until next week.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Getting too involved in trying to gain information you want can prevent you from receiving benefits, if you permit.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Not a good day for involving friends in your scheme of things since they are altogether too busy. Get to work.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) An influential person is too busy now to pay attention to a plan you want to present to him, or her. Wait for a better time.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You get many fine new ideas but they would interrupt your work schedule, so lay them aside temporarily.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) If you schedule your time wisely, you can handle that responsibility and also have the pleasure you desire.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wUl ' be very capable and can accomplish a great deal in the business world once the habit of patience has been acquired since the nature is a most dynamic one. One who can easily get along well with associates.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel.' What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
Activists See Credibility Gap
m I THINK ABOUT HIM EVERY OTHER RAY?
still
TOO
OFTEN'
^ hCn cUr*tt yru ^">1^
rrknmenon / KAO m!i (sesr
ii.u'i'wxY'T&Asayia
tmrfnm Mc
NUBBIN
WASHINGTON (AP) - A group of religious activists say there is a growing credibility crisis between American churches and the Reagan actaninistration over U.S. policy in Central America.
Church people are starting to choose between what the U.S. government is telling them about Latin America and what their people are seeing with their own eyes, religious activist Joseph Moran said.
There is an increasing credibility crisis between the churches and the U.S. government, said Moran, who recently toured Central America with a group of 152 religious activists.
The Rev. William Sloane Coffin, senior minister at New York Citys Riverside Church, said the group would lobby Congress to stop covert U.S. support for anti-government rebels fighting Nicaraguas leftist government.
YOUR AD COULD BE
WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS
SPACE 1
ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED
Public
Notices
PUBLIC NOTICES
NOTICE
NORTHCAROLINA PITTCC-------
COUNTY
TKe undersianed. having qualified : Will of
as Execufrix under fhe ..... -
Richard W. Briley, deceased, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims againsf said esfafe to present them to the under
signed on or before the 29th day of January. 1984 or fhis nofice will be pleaded in bar of fheir recovery. All
persons indebfed to said estate will
please make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the day of June. 1983. Peggy M. Briley
E xecutrix under the Will of Richard W. Briley. Deceased
Kichard w. Briiey. Oe 118 King George Road Greenville, Norfh Carolina 27834 June 29; July 6, 13, 20. 1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Ad minisfrafrix of. fhe estafe of Edgar
Daniels late of Pitt County. North olina ing c
said deceased to present them to the
-------- infy,
Carolina, this is to notify all persons claims against the estate of
undersigned Administratrix on or before December 29, 1983 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar
lep
of their recovery. All persons in lea!
debted to said estate please make immediate payment.
This 27th day of June, 1983.
Mary Lee Daniels P.O. Box 726 Winferville. N.C 28590 Administratrix of fhe estate of
Edgar Daniels, deceased, e, July 6, 13. 20. 1983
June
SALE 085lLATERAL
Pursuant to and by virtue of the power of sale contained in Security Agreements executed by WILLIAM E PETERSON and SUSAN T PETERSON, Debtors, on the 5fh day of October. 1979. Default having
been made in payment of fhe obliga' fion secured by fhe above- referenc
ed Security Agreements fhe undersigned Secured Party will sell at Public Auction for cash at the PITT COUNTY COURTHOUSE DOOR, GREENVILLE, NORTH, 27834 on the 18th day of July, 1983, at twelve o'clock noon, or as soon thereafter as possible in case of multiple sales scheduled at fhe same time, the
following described property (as Agreements)
describM in Security 1975 BAYWOOD 24 X 24 MOBILE HOME, Serial Numbers: BNS1014DX and BNS1014DU Col lateral will be sold subject to taxes.
IN THE GEN
SP71
ALCOURT
SUPERIOR OURT DIVISION 3RTH CAROLINA
NORT
PITTCOUNTY ESTHER HENDERSON, Petitioner
vs.
RICHARDA J McKlNNEY, Respondent
NOTICE OF SALE OF lEALPROPERTY
Under and by virtue of an amend
tie Si - -
ed order of the Superior Court of Pitt County, dated April 22, 1983, and entered in the above action, the undersigned Commissioners on the
22nd day of July. 1983, at 12:00 Nc - -
o clock Noon at the Courthouse Door In Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, will otter for safe to the highest bidder tor cash all that certain tract and parcel of land lying and Ming in Greenville Township. Pitt County, North (Carolina, and
ly _____ ____
more particularly described as follows
All of that certain lot or parcel of land known as and designated as Lot 16, Glenwood Subdivision as shown and delineated on that certain map prepared by Rivers & Associates. Inc. and being recorded in Map Book 16, Page 58. Fntt County Registry.
A oash deposit of ten percent (10%Hvill be required of the highest biddenat said sale.
This the 17th day of June, 1983. Martin.
JohnM ......
Co Commissioner Jeffrey L. Miller,
Co Commissioner June 22, 29, July 6, 13, 1983
IN THENERAL_COURT UST
OISTRlr'OURT^DI NORTH CAROLINA
RT DIVISION
PITTCOUNTY RESA RENAY VINES JOHNSON, Plaintiff,
WAYNE EDWIN JOHNSON Defendant.
NPTLCE^OF SE.RVICE OF
PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: Wayne Edwin Johnson, the above named defendant:
Take notice that a pleading seek
ing relief against you'has been filed in the above entitled action. The
nature of the relief being sought is as follows: action tor a final and ab
solute divorce based on one year's continous separation.
You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than August 8, 1983 and upon your failure to do so the party seeking service against you will apply to fhe Court
This, the 20th day of June, 1983. ,HORNE,DUFFUS
DIXON,,
8. DOu BY:
Phillip R. Dixon
Attorneys tor Plaintiff I Building
NCNB Building P.O. Drawer 1785 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Ttephone: (919 ) 758 6200 Jung29. July 6, 13. 1983
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
Having qualified as Admnistratrix CTA of the Estate of GEORGE
WILSON, late of Pitt County. North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authoizes all persons having claims agahist said estate to present them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is 1703 Lincoln Drive, Greenville, North Carolina, 27834, on
or before the 23rd day of December, 1983. or this Notice will be pleaded in
bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will p' make , immediate payment fc
undersigned.
Jne 23rd day of June, 1983.
lease
the
ThisJ RieW.Crandol 17^ Lincoln Drive Granville, N.C. 27834 Michael A. Colombo JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH 8. BLOUfiT Attorneys at Law Post Office Drawer 15 Greenville, North Carolina 27835 0015
June 29, July 6, 13,20, 1983
FILE
FILM
IN THE GENERAL COURT -JUSTICE
SUP
3URT DIVISION
_______THE CLERK
NORTH CAROLINA PITTCOUNTY
IN RE: THE ADOPTION OF WAN DA GAIL STALLS, FORMERLY WANDA GAIL RAOffORD TO: Carl Christian Davis (address
unknown). Father of Wanda Gail Radford, Born on or about
September 26, 1976, in Martin Coun
special
proceeding. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows
1. The adoption of said minor child, Wanda Gail Stalls, formerly Wanda Gail Radford.
2. For an order to be entered
allowing the adoption proceeding to proceed -
, without your consent, pursuant to North Carolina General Statutes48 6(a)(1).
3. That it be adjudged that you abandon '
have willfully
. , oandoned your minor child. Wanda Gail Stalls,
formerly Wanda Gail Radford, as the same is defined in North Carolina General Statutes 48-2.
You are required to make defense to such pleading within forty days after June 29,1983, exclusive of such dateL said date bing the date of first publication of this notice, and upon your, failure to do so the party seek ir .....
The property is located at Lot B C Highland Ti ville. North Carolina.
railer Park, Green-:, i-wi III %.aiolina.
ECU CREDIT UNION BY:
WILLIAM H DURHAM T reasurer/Manaj
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
FREEI Stop in and register at
. - - ----
Floyd G Robinson Jewelers,
Downtown Evans AAall for free ^tt
to be given away weekly purchase necessary.
010
AUTOAAOTIVE
RENTAWRECK
Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save. 752 2277_
Oil
Autos For Sal
SELL YOUR CAR the National
Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings
Ford. Call 758^)114.
012
AMC
1979 AMC CONCORD DL Wagon. 4
spe^. high highway^milM^,'
condition. Best otter. 752 i
013
Buick
REGAL 1976. 2 door. Extra clean Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141
1977 BUICK SKYHAWK Needs work. New tires. Power, air. $1600. Call home 752 1050. work 756 5994, ask for Mike Tyler
1979 BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruise, power windows. 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-
015
Chevrolet
CAA8ARO 1981. Fully equipped, ' - Smith
good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Avden. 746-3141
CHEVROLET VEGA, 1975, sta tionwagon. Runs good. Clean. Good tires. Air and radio. 65,000 miles
$850 firm Call 825 1750, 9 to 5, 825 674latter6.
T reasurer/Manaoer JAMESM ROBERTS Attorney
Suite 201, Minges Building Post Office Drawer 1883 Greenville, North Carolina 27835 1883
Telephone: (919 ) 758 9947 July 6, )1 1983
ATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
STATL _ ..
PITTCOUNTY CLARAJ WEATHERS VS
JAMES LINTON WEATHERS, SR TO: JAMES LINTON WEATHERS, SR
Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of fhe relief being sought is as follows: Absolute divorce on the grounds of one years separation and a change of name
You are required to make defense
idii
V'
the party seeking service against
tq such pleading not later August 23,
1983, and upon your failure to do so
you wilt ^9 ^he court tor the
relief sougr This the 13th day of July. 1983 Thomas B. Brandon, III Attorney for the Plaintiff P O Box 1608 Robersonville, N C. 27871 July 13. 20, 27, August 3,1983
PUBLIC NOTICE The Greenville Planning and Zon ing Commission has scheduled a public hearing on July 19, 1983 at 7:30p.m. in the Council Chambers of City Hall to consider a change in street names in Bedford Subdivi
sion Theproposed changes are Existing Name
Proposed Name
lOnetor
Duncan Street Kineton Lane
Garrison Street Bayley Lane
McFarland Road Leicester Road
Bremerton Drive Caversham Road
Bristol Court Brutton Lane
Braswell Street Bristol Drive
Winstead Road Wyneston Road
Shelton Drive Daventry Drive
Oakley Street Abbotts Lane
Daughtry Road Coventry Road
Perryton Road Wallingford Road
Fulton Road Charlton Place
During this public hearing objec >ns or suggestions will be ouly considered and the public is invited to
attend. The request to change the street names and associated maps
are on tile in the Planning Office located on the third floor of the Com
munity BulSlng at the corner of Fourth and Gt
and Greene Streets, and are available for inspection during normal working hours Monday through Frida
P^^ANNINGOFFICE GREENVILLE,NC July 13. 18, 1983
Jf
MALIBU, 1972, 2 door. 307 V 8. automatic, excellent mechanical condition. $800 355 2579
1964 CHEVROLET BELAIR, good otter.
condition. 94.000 miles. Best oti Call before 2 p.m., 758-6674.
1971 CHEVROLET stationwagon. Fair condition. Make otter. 756-8427.
1972 NOVA 307, air, AM/FM cassette, new paint and interior. Excellent condition. $1000. 758-6670 after 6 p.m. Hal Moore
1976 AAONTE CARLO, silver and maroon, air, stereo. Firestone 721 radials. 63.000 miles. $2200. 756 3709.
Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns of today's paper.
016
Chrysler
1973 NEW YORKER, $750. Call 756 8781.__
017
Dodge
024
Foreign
TOYOTA COROLLA 1982. 4 door, automatic, air condition, good condition. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet. Avden. 746-3141
TOYOTA CRESSIDA 1983. Silver/blue metallic. Full power. 6,000 miles. Priced to sell. 747 8493
Of-?j*.32?8.
1968 VOLKSWAGEN. $250 or will sell for parts. Call 752 9076 or
752 7670.
1969 PORSCHE 911 COUPE
condition. $7500. Call 355-6881 p.m., Greenvllte
119122I46. White, 64.000 miles, good 8lol0
1971 TOYOTA Corolla. Good condi tiw^i^^ gas mileage. Best otter.
1971 VOLKSWAGEN Rebuilt engine and carburetor. New starter battery and tires. 752 1134.
1972 TOYOTA CORONA. 4 door Runs but engine needs repair. $200. Call 752 9076or 752 7670. _
1 973 MG New brakes.
transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs
good. $1700. Call 758 2300davs.
19 74 VOLKSWAGEN Remanufactured engine. Excellent condition. $1500. Phone 795 3486
1975 OATSUN B210, new paint and interior 1976 Oatsun truck. Both in good condition. Call 753 3570_
1975 TOYOTA Corolla, 5 speed, very 52?076.
good condition. $1200 75
1976 MGB, dark blue, 66,000 miles^ overdrive. Good condition. $2,600.
Call 946 8563.
1976 TOYOTA LIFTBACK Tires
and car in good condition. Air, AM/FM cassette. $2900. Call 758
1606 days, 757 1353 niohts.
1977 OATSUN B210. Needs some work, but still runs. Has 141.000 miles. $1000. 758 7964
1978 MAZDA GLC, 5 speed. AM/FM cassette, air. Priced to sell. Call 756 7928.
I91W UAibUN 4 door stationwagon, brown, radial tires. AM/FM, automatic, air, 25.000 miles, clean. $3850. After 5 p.m.. 752 7793.
1980 HONDA ACCORD, 2 door/hatch, AM/FM cassette, air, crui se control. 746 2640 after 5:30. 1980 TOYOTA CELICA ST
Excellent condition. $5,000. 524 5975.
029. Auto Parts & Service
TOYOTA SERVICE and save! Bells Fork Garaoe. Phone 756 3796_
032
Boats For Sale
FOR FISHING or skiing. 1973 16-Cruiser Chrysler. 105 Horsepower outboard, 1974 Cox tilt trailer. 756 6989 after 6 p.m
039
Trucks For Sale
1979 JEEP CJ-7. 42.000 miles. Call 756-5472.
1981 BLUE TOYOTA longbed pickup $5,000. 752 0779.
1983 SILVERADO short bed Loaded. Call 752^420_
040
Child Care
BABYSITTING Mature lady
wishes to babysit. Anytime, even wMkends. Reterences. Call 752
MOTHER WANTS to keep 2 children full time in my home. Near industrial park. 752 329.
RESPONSIBLE PERSON to keep 2
children in my home, Monday through Friday 8:30 to 5:30.
Tran^rtation ' required. 756 7761 5:30
after!
WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home, Mondays through Fridays 756 1057 __
046
PETS
AKC GREAT DANE puppies 2 females, 11 weeks old. Most sell
Price negotiable. 756 6197.
AKC REGISTERED male German Shepherd_^p^gy. 6 weeks old. Call
after 4, 752 ;
AKC registered Doberman puppies. Born May 21. Black/rust male, red male, red female. Dew claws removed, tails cut. wormed. Males $100. Females$75. 823 4415.
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-
Eies, 6 weeks old. colors black, lack and tan. Call 752 3735 or
758 4669.
FREE CATS AND KITTENSI Some with long hair and mixed colors. 758 5013 after 8 p.m., anytime weekends.
FREE PUPPIES tor good home. I black female; 1 white male. Friendly and good health. 752 4357.
SCHAUZER YORKIE 3Vj months old. $150. call 752 7194
050
EMPLOYMENT
051
Help Wanted
PHANTOM 14' sailboat with Cox trailer. Many extras. $1250 or best otter Days, 752 0400, nights, 752
16' DIXIE BASS 35 Johnson electric start. 758 7787
16' RUNABOUT 35 horsepower Johnson motor and trailer. $995. Call 752 9707 after 6
17' BARBOUR BOAT, 135 horse power Mercury, trim tilt, tilt trail er $900 or best otter. 758 2128.
17 GW BOAT 115 horsepower Evinrude motor, Cox trailer. Extras. Phone 752 4837.
1981 DODGE OMNI Miser, 20,000 miles, owner left for overseas. 4 soeed $4,000. 752 4978._
018
Ford
1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500. 289 engine, 4 door, automatic, power steering. $650 or best otter. 757 1273
1972 MERCURY MONTEREY, runs good, must sell. $300. Call 758-5456 anytime
1973 FORD PINTO Runabout, air, automatic. Make otter. 756-8539.
1975 FORD GRANADA New tires. 756 8491 after 5.__
1977 PINTO Loaded, low mileage. $1695. 756 0988 after 6.__
020
AAercury
1969 MERCURY COUGAR Good motor and transmission. Needs brake and front end work. $300. Call 746 3680 after 1 p.m._
021
Otdsmobile
CUTLASS SUPREME 1982. Extra clean. Call Rex Smith Ch
Avden. 746 3141.
Chevrolet,
1982 CUTLASS SUPREME - Dove
Gray. Low mileage. $7700. Call 6805 or 752 4297.
758
022
Plymouth
1974 PLYMOUTH FURY Powe Goo
steering, power brakes, air condition. $750. Call 758 0272
1975 PLYMOUTH FURY 318 engine, beige, 1 owner, 74,000 miles. $1.000. 746 2326._
1978 HORIZON Air, automatic, AM/FM Excellent condition. Call 753 2245after 6 p.m._
023
Pontiac
002
PERSONALS
$5,000 CASH LOANS
No credit or employment needed. 24 hour service. I 702 69 9238._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ing ^vice against you will apply to the.Covrt tor the relief sought.
You are further notified that a
hearing on this matter will be held sTi
on the Tsth day of August, 1983, at 10 a.m. or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard in the office of the Cterk of the Superior Court of Pitt County.
Thif the 23rd day of June, 1983. (ERETT&CHE
EATHAM
8ler B Warren
rneys lor Petitioner
_. Box 609
thel. North Carolina 27812 jlephone: 919/825 5691 June; July 6, 13. 20,1983
B-301
COURT
. DIVISION ^ THE CLERK NORTfiAfttlNA PITTCOUNTY
IN R ESTATE OF EMMA GILDA POLAR 0, Deceased. Late of the
County ot Pitt'
^OTir
AMI
ThounSTrsl^rt^.'h'avWquallfied s Eaacutrlx of the Estate ot Emma
as Executrix of the Estate pi Emma Glld^olard. this is to notify all per
rms (having claims against said state to present them to the under
signed on or before t^ fji
December, 1983, or this Notice will
pleaded In bar of their recovery. Ml persons indebted to the said Estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned.
This 24th day of June, 1983. Theresa G. Lawler
^ecutrix for the Estate ot Emma Gllda Polard
109 Cheshire Drive Greenville, NC 27834 JuneaO; July 6, 13.20,1983
1972 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door, good condition, new tires. 756 5815. 1976 PNTIAC LeMans. 4 door.
automatic, air.^^i^ running condi-
tion. $1050. 753 :
024
Foreign
A GOOD BARGAIN 1975 Fiat SL12B. AM FM stereo, excellent condition. $1,000. 756 0183
NEW.1983 Toyota Clica GTS All
electric equipment, great gas mile-Showroom condition. Best ot-
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
24' CR.UISE BOAT with cutty cabin and head. Boat has never been used or registered. Has top, side, and aft curtains. Outboard motor not included. $4295. Galvanized certified tandem trailer available with boat. $800. Call 946 8941. _
034 Campers For Sale
cox POPUP CAMPER Sleeps 6 ecfr
Includes sink. Ice box, el^rical and water connections also water holding tank, new top and 2 new spare fires. $800. 752 3812
NEW JAYCO POPUPS Close out prices. Camptown RV's, 746 3530.
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Soortsman tops. 250 units in stock, O'Briants, Raleigh. N C 834 2774.
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 tew times. Sleeps 8. Root air, awning, fully self contained $5300 negotiable. 756 8539._
036
Cycles For Sale
MOTORIZED ULTRALIGHT air
craft. In good condition. Asking $3.000 or best otter. 355 2970.
1980 HONDA CB7S0F Excellent ^chanical condition. $1800. Call
1980 YAAAAHA 650 MAXIM Good condition. Must sell. $1500 or best otter. Call after 4 p.m. at 267 2571,
I; Inzua GT550L, 12,000 miles. 1972 Ford E300 Van. Call 756-0991.
1982 HONDA V-45 MAGNA $2895. 756 4191 davs, 795 4954 after 6.
78'/2 HARLEY Superglide. $2900. Call 752-8445 after 5p.m._
039
Trucks For Sale
REFRIGERATED MILK TRUCK Wheels on it are moveable, but motor IS not good. Refrigeration works good. Price negotiable. 746 3921 after 6.
TRUCK COVERS Seahawk and Camptown RV's. Ayden,
746- 530.
0DY, 3 speed.
Call 795-4889.
1971 CHEVY 350 Cubic inch. New paint. Excellent condition. $1900 firm. 756 4329.
1975 DODGE KARA VAN $1795. Can be seen at Lazy Acres Nursery or call 758 5757 after 6_[
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
BODY SHOP AAANAGER needed Excellent salary and benefits. Apply to Herbert Powell. Hastings Ford. 758 0114.
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
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them tor cash with a
Classified Ad.
BORED!BROKE! BLUE!
Sell toys, gifts until December. Fun job, party plan, tree $300 kit. No
collecting', no delivery. 756 4553, 0, 753 2534
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.
CAPABLE PERSON to sell new home improvement product. En
joyable work with good income potential, either full time or part lime. Just the thing tor semi-retTred
person. For additional information, co.itact Harold Creech & Associates, 752-4348.
CARPENTERS Framing experi ence required. Contact Miller & Davis Associates. 400 North Greene Street - between 9 and 5._
CASHIER
Convenience store Good at mosphere. Steady employment
mosphere. Steady employment Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 Sooth Memorial Drive.
CHAUFFER WANTED Must be at least 18 years of age Must be free
f ag
to travel with elderly gentleman All expenses paid. Write Chauffer PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
COMBINATION clerk/warehouse erson needed. 40 hour work week
perso ..,..........
Send replies to Clerk/Warehouse, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834
DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED
Cjll 752-5126
Do You Have A Desire To Win?
OUR Training can pr^are you tor WINNING MANAG^ENT
tion in your locality within 6 months.
You can expect to earn $10,000 to IwhTiet
$18,000 while training.
Guaranteed minimum $1200 month Income to start.
Two weeks training In school, expenses paid.
Tralnl
serv
nq in the field selling and 'icing established accounts.
Must be 21 or over, goal oriented, ambitious, sportsminded. bondable. Benefits ottered include Major Med ical and outstanding Profit Sharing
For the right person, this will be a life-time career opportunity with an international group of companies.
Call tor an appointment:
758-3962 10:30AM to6:00PM
Equal Opportunity Employer M/F EXPEREINCED DIET technician/nutritionist needed 25/30 hours a week in a 180 bed skilled nursing home. Requires AAS in food and nutrition or have com
pleted/enrolled in A D A approved tion in
course tor certifica........
H I E F S S It interested call 946 9570, ask tor Mr. Schuck.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AT HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
We Are Overstocked With The New 198Sy2 Nissan Trucks
4X4s, 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!
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd. 756-3115ftie UaiJy henector. Greenvuie. N.C.-Wednesday, July 13.1983-29
051
Help Wanted
EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN to work with established firm
Excellent opportunity, good benefits. Please call 756 3240 for
EXPERIENCED PAINTERS
756 9570
EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES apply Wednesday and Thursday, between 2 and 3 p.m No phone calls Angelo's Restaurant. 2826 South Memorial Drive. Greenville.
051
Help Wanted
051
Help Wanted
LIGHT DELIVERY Must have own vehicle Call Tuesday 2 to 5 Wednesday 9 to 5, 757 O04l
MAINTENANCE PERSON needed Must be knowledgeable in all areas of general maintenance including
! RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION
'Supervisor Experienced required I Send past experience summary
Salary plus fringe benefits plus bonus available Mail to P O Box
plumbing, heating, arid air condi Tioning Reply to Maintenance Person, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834
1859. Greenville N C 27834
IRN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District Hospital needs you Contact ' Barbara McDonald Director ot i Nursing 943 2111
FLORAL DESIGNER Experience necessary Send resume to Design er. PO Box 1967. Greenville. NC
AAANAGER
FOOD SALES Food broker has retail sales opening in Greenville, NC area tor a self starter. Company salary, bonus, benefit package, and vernight
For convenience store and gas combination J20.000 with com mission Apply at Dodges Store 3209 South Memorial Drive
ROUTE DELIVERY POSITION available at local food dislribu jforship Applicant must have
'chauffers license and driving expe : rience Also applicant must be 21 I years ol age or older It interested ,call 1800 682 1107. ask for Mike i Sears
company car. Some overnight trav el. Send resume to PO Box 17126, Raleigh. NC 27607
FULL TIME TELEPHONE col lector needed. Apply in person between 3 and 5 on Thursday or Friday. Southern Credit Adjusters. 308 Evans Mall
GRADY WHITE BOATS is now
accepting applications tor future consideration in production work Experience with using hand pow ered tools necessary. Apply Tues day. Wednesday, and Thursday 8 30 to11:30
IF YOU CAN sell but feel uneasy about your future growth within your present employment, here's me start ot a new career Starting
now. right now. you can turn your present selling skills into a stable, well paying lilefime career as fop
earning displ^ sales professional at Taylor Publications Call 919 633 5106 for interview. 208 Pollack Street, New Bern, N C
JALES JEWELERS is looking for a person to train in store manage menf and jewelry sales. Experience is not required it you have the enthusiasm and are willing to learn Excellent company benefits. So it you are looking tor a career and not iust a job, apply in person to Zales Jewelers, Carolina East Mall.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NEEDED A part time auditor Experience necessary Apply front desk at the Ramada Inn
NEW BUSINESS in Greenville area Small electric motor repair and sales Full time Respond to PO Box 355, Atlantic Beach. NC 28512 or call 726 2244. 10 to 5_
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE
OVERSEAS, Cruise Jobs $20,000 $60,000/year, possible Call
805 687 6000 Ext J 8752
Due to inpease m business Caro lina Model Homes is looking tor 2 self motivated sales people needing to make money Good commission,
PART TIME eperienced kennel
.for appointmeni between 9 and II A Mand3t06P M at 758 3171
help Apply between 4 and 5 at Helen's Grooming World, 758 6333
PARTS COUNTER PERSON Ford
parts experience necessary Excellent advancement opportunity
iSALESPERSON NEEDED Auto sales experience preferred Excellent company benefits Call I 756 4267
to parts manager position for the right person. Call 756 4272
PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5 years experience 756 7961__
SERVICE WRITER needed Expe rience preferred Ability to com municate with public a must Call
TEACHER FOR Christian School
ACE curriculum Apply to Teacher, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834
THE AEROBIC WORKSHOP is now accepting applications for in structors. No experience necessary We will train Apply Monday thru Friday, 1:(X) to 2 30 at 417 Evans Street Mall, downtown Greenville, 7571608
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SECRETARY - For small chain ot
freschools Apply in person at 313 ast lOth Street No phone calls please _
SECRETARY Challenging position sales department Must be accu
rate with figures Prefer 3 to 5 years office experience, typing 60 words per minute By appointment only Call 752 2111, extension 251 between 9am and 4pm _
VENDING MACHINE Repairman for Lenoir and Pitt Counties Must have experience Good benefits with growing company Kinston 527 1200, Greenville 355 6361
Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
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 sterTO with tape.
1981 Honda Accord
Medium green with velour interior. Power steering, 5 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, digital clock
1980 Chevrolet Chevette
2 door. While, 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 Volkswagen Rabbit
Diesel, Air condition, good mileage, very inexpensive
1980 Pontiac Sunbird
Tan with tan interior, fully equipped with only 28.000 miles.
1980 Honda Accord LX
Bronze with velour interior. Automatic, al; condition, stereo with cassette, digital clock, hatch release. Local one owner car.
1980 Jeep CJ-5
Renegade. Blue. Just like brand new.
1980 Honda Civic
Medium blue with blue interior, / 5 speed, air condition, AM-FM radio, 44,000 miles.
1979 AMC Jeep CJ-5
Renegade. Low mileage. nice'Jeep
1979, Honda Accord
Beige, Womatic transmission, air condition.
1979 Toyota Corolla
SR-5 Hatchback. Green, excellent condition, 5 speed transmission.
1979 Dodge D-lOO Pickup
6 cylinder, straight drive, excellent condition. 28.000 miles, wine.
Bob Barbour
1979 MGB Convertible
Like new. 47,800 miles, green with black convertible top. AM-FM stereo.
1979 Pontiax Lemans Wagon
Automatic tran,smlssion. air condition
1978 Mercury Bobcat
Red with black interior. Inexpensive to own
1977 Olds 98
4 door Blue with blue vinyl roof, full power
1977 BMW 320i
2 door, red. AM-FM stereo, air condition
1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Gray. Real nice car.
(Located At Volvo Store!
1983 Renault Alliance
1000 miles Get a brand new one it 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
1981 AMC Jeep CJ-7
Renegade. Hardtop, one owner. In excellent shape
1980 Buick Century Limited
Loaded with options. 32.000 miles.
1980 Ford Thunderbird
Sun roo!, digital dash, power windows, power door locks, tilt wheel, cruise control.
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.
1978 Ford Pinto '
2 door Automatic transmission, air condition
1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Silver, Runs great, like new
1976 Ford Thunderbird
Power windows, power seats, air condition.
1975 Mercedes 230
One owner, air condition, stereo radio, clean car.
3Q21HS
BobBarbour
V(HX'0 \\K'Jc'op Rcnaiill
3,300 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500
117 W, Tenth St Greenville 758-7200
30-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Wednesday, July IJ, im
051
Help Wanted
THE TRAINING NEVER STOPS
0S9
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE
Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming. cutting and removal. Free estimates J P Staocil. 752^1
Consider an excitina career in Real Estate We otter the training and help you need to be successful Residential and Investment
Ta Rfiln !^nnn
Jotn
esidentiai ana invesrmei Training Classes To Begin Soon
in our new company at our new
*105 W Greenville Blvd.
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR \IVORtt Carpentry, masonry and roofing^ 35 years experience in building. Tail James Harrington after I pm.
752 7765_
3RICK AND BLOCK WORK
epairs or additions. 11
experience. Call ns^t p.m
Call Rod Tugwell 756-6810
CENTURY21
TIPTON & ASSOCIATES
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORTING
MIL'TARV GOODS
Over lOOC Di**e'ent items
ARMY-NAVY STORE
15C1 S Evans
CHIiMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after
a hard winters use. Eliminate
creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar
Road En
terprises. 756 9123 day. 756 1007
mgl
EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER will do bookkeeping in my home all types from business to personal. Call 758 0277 after 6._
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal Equipment formally of
Dip ard Strip. All items returned
,jf|. - ~ ^
within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call tor free estimate. Days 756-9123. Nioht 756 1007
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices All size yards Call 752 5583. GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WASHINGTON MOTOR CO.,
INC.
6B.7TBB
1983 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED 2 door, Wack, black landau vinyl top.
1982 FORD ESCORT GL-4 door, red.
1982 CHEVROLET CAVALIER - 4 door, wagon. Charcoal gray.
1982 DATSUN SENTRA 4 door, silver.
1982 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC WAGON
4 door, white
1982 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS - 2 door, white
1982 MERCURY COUGAR GL WAGON - 4 door, beige.
1982 PONTIAC J-2000- 4 door, wagon, medium blue. 1982 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA LS 4 door Blue 1982 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME BROUGHAM
2 door, sandstone, beige padded landau vinyl roof.
1981 MERCEDES 380 SL ROADSTER CONVERTIBLE - Blue
1981 PONTIAC GRAND LEMANS SAFARI WAGON - 4 door. Beige with woodgrain.
1981 PONTIAC GRAND LEMANS SAFARI WAGON - 4 door. Beige with woodgrain.
1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 4 door, yellow.
1981 OLDS 98 REGENCY 4 door, beige, beige vinyl roof.
1981 CHEVROLET CORVETTE 2 door, dark blue, T-top
1981 BUICK SKYLARK 4 door, dark blue.
1981 OLDS CUTLASS LS-4 door, white, red vinyl roof.
1981 OLDS 98 REGENCY - 4 door, navy, navy vinyl roof.
1981 OLDS TORONADO BROUGHAM 2 door, silver, gray padded landau vinyl roof.
1980 FORD MUSTANG 2 door. Red.
1980 OLDS DELTA ROYALE BROUGHAM - 4
door, white.
1980 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE - 4 door, gray
1980 LINCOLN TOWN CAR - 4 door, fawn, fawn
vinylroof.
1979 MERCURY COUGAR XR-7 2 door, white, white padded landau vinyl roof.
1979 OLDS CUTUSS WAGON - 4 door, beige 1978 MERCURY MARQUIS - 4 door, cream, cream vinyl roof. <
1978 PONTIAC SUNBIRD - 2door, white.
1978 CHEVROLET CAPRICE ESTATE WAGON Beige with woodgrain.
1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE 4 door, dark blue, dark blue vinyl roof.
1977 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO LANDAU -
2 door, black landau vinyl roof.
1977 FORD GRANADA 4 door, red.
1976 FORD GRANADA 2 door. Dark brown, tan vinyl roof.
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE ROAD RUNNER - 2
door, blue.
1975 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 door, silver, red landau vinyl roof.
1974 AMC MATADOR 2 door, maroon.
1973 CHEVROLET VEGA 2 door, yellow $300.
TRUCKS
1983 FORD RANGER XL Medium blue and white two tone.
1980 TOYOTA PICKUP Medium blue. Long body.
1979 FORD F-150 RANGER - Long wheel base, walnut and gold.
1978 CHEVROLET SCOTTSDALE Yellow and white,
1974 FORD COURIER Medium blue with camper
shell.
1973 FORD F-100 CUSTOM - Red. 1963 FORD F-100 Green. $500.
4 WHEEL DRIVE TRUCKS
1983 AMC JEEP CJ-7 RENEGADE - Copper, nutmeg hardtop.
1981 AMC JEEP CJ-7 RENEGADE - Beige,
nutmeg hardtop.
1981 CHEVROLET BLAZER CHEYENNE -4X4.
Black.
1980 CHEVROLET SILVERADO - Short wheel base, 4x4, black.
1980 GMC JIMMY HIGH SIERRA - 4X4, medium green and white two-tone.
1980 AMC JEEP CJ-5 RENEGADE -Red with gold stripes. Nutmeg soft top.
1980 TOYOTA SR-5 4X4 SPORT TRUCK -
Medium blue with stripes.
1979 FORD F-100 RANGER XLT -Lariat 4x4. Dark blue and silver two tone.
1979 FORD F-150 RANGER 4x4. Long wheel base, copper and beige.
1979 AMC JEEP CJ-7 4X4, white with blue stripes, white hardtop. Renegade.
1979 AMC JEEP CJ-7 Renegade. White with blue stripes, blue soft top.
1979 AMC JEEP CJ-7 Renegade. Gray.
1979 TOYOTA PICKUP -4X4, Black
1979 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT II - 4 x 4. dark
green.
1978 CHEVROLET BLAZER - Cheyenne. 4 X 4, white.
1975 PLYMOUTH TRAILDUSTER -4X4, green and white.
1965 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT - 4x4, blue.
KCiiS
Member FDIC,
059
WorkWarrted
Bob, 756 a
A PARTY? Hire 6 iyo _ eat for kkts parties. Call
LAVYNMOWER REPAIRS \Me will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m.. weekends anytime
LONG BROTHERS ROOFING and Contracting Company. All typas of
roofing, repair jobs, and new construction. Free estimates. No job
too bio or too small. 35$AW4.
MICROCOMPUTER REPAIR
Fast, reasonable service on varioxis makes CallCOMPUTIME, 355^
6687
NEW CONSTRUCTION Addttions
and remodeling repairs. Services guaranteed. 37 years experiance. Rorwst and dependable Work by
the hours or contract. State license 5807 94A9730 6 lo 12 p.m.. Wilbur Tetterton
PAINTING interiar and extarior Free estimates, work guaranteed References 12 years experienca 756 6873 after 6 p.m
PLUMBING SpecialixiM and re^ modeling of baths. StaN Licensa 7037 Call 752 1920 or 74A2657.
PRIVATE DUTY ATTENDANT wants nursing work. 756-6862
QUALITY PAINTING. Interior and
exterior. Carpentry aiid gutter re-
pair. 524-4822after 6p.m.
and finishing floprs
mall^vpenjw jote county_tog^
Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 anytime, it no answer call back
SHE^T ROCKJiangers and finish
ers. Call 756 0053.
WILL THOROUGHLY CLEAN your
ho^ Lots ot exjEwrience. Raason^ ' 7sf3620
able rates. Call i
060
FOR SALE
061
Antiques
TRUE ANTIQUE PINE bureau.
S22S. 5th chair of matching 4 sold from Show N Sell. >25. Blue salt
laze pitcher and bowl. >70: Call
glaze pi 756 5955.
064 Fuel, Wood. CoBi
AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale.J P StanciL 752-6331._
065 Farm Equipment
FOR RENT Two 10.000 bushel grain bins. iSc per bushel. Located approximately 4 miles west of W^terville. Call 756-5097 or 756-?215
TOBACCO CURING SUPPLIES Taylor twin scale hygrometers
>29.95. PVC hygrometers >13.49 gasket materia
Barn door gasket material >31.95 100'. We carry parts to repair
per 100'. We carry parts to repair hygrometers, plus barn racks and repair parts for racks (Powell & Dixie) Agri Supply. Greenville. NC 752 3999._
WANTED TO BUY Peanut hay rack. Good condition. Call after 8 p.m.. 752 3792.__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
066
FURNITURE
ASSUME PAYMENTS of >29 16 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sota, chair, rocker, and 3 tabies. Furniture Worm 7S7A651
BASSETT SOCIO WOOD tabla and 6 chairv cMna hutch and base. Take over payments on only >67.37 per month. 757-0451. Furniture World. 2W8E lOlhSt
BEDROOM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirrar, haadhoard. chest. Take over naymewts on only >16.33 per rnonm^. 757-8451. Furniture W^td.2108E lOlhSt
SinS^ng Wadis'
complete home furnishings. Call 813-Sm. 9:30 to 5:30 or by ap^
COLOR TV
Want one? Check out CotarTymo, check out Tele-Ront. chock out Curtis Malhes. and than check out
Furniture Worid. Wo ront to own for less money than any store in Groonvillo. 757-8451. Remember that Furniture King will not be undersotd. He don't riav
COUCH with matching chair. Lazy Boy reclinar. All tor >300. Cafl 7588775._
FURNITURE! FURNITURE!
THE FURNITURE KING has it all! For the lowest prices on bedroom, dining room and living room fumihire. pick up the phone and call 757-0451. We finance in our store. Remember the 'Furniture King' will not be undersold at
FurnltureWorW.2B08E 10th St._
FURNITURE SALE: Dinettes,
sofa, chairs and coftae tables. AAar Js 8 Westbrook, Monday Friday 12 to 6._
GUN CABINET - holds 6 guns. Dark wood with glass door. Larga com fortable couch and end table! Good condltton. Call 758-3016 after 6.
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 757-0651
RECLINERS We have 50 to choose from. Barcakmnger and Catnapper. We finance in our store. Phone 7578451 or visit the 'Furniture King' at Furniture World. 2808 E lOthSt
RENT TO OWN Six piece solid
wood living room suite, sofa, chair, rocker and 3
tablas. Only >29.16 per
month at Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St. Phona 7578651
RENT TO OWN Three piece living room suite, sofa, chair, lovesaaf
>16.33 par month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World. 2800 E 10th St. or phone 7578451
SOFA, LOVESEAT and chair.
burgundy with floral print. 2Vi ire old. >450. Coffee Ubfo. >25.
^^eo system, Sansui receiver. Sony speakers, and BSR turntable, %300. Call 758-5016 Monday after
4 30Q "i
WHITE SEARS WASHER and
Whirlpool dryer. Good condition.
>150 far I ' ' ------
and two _ ^ . .
frame, leatherette cushions - green
pair.' Light walunt couch two matching
chairs, wood
_ brown. Fair condition. >75 a set rome dinette table. Good condi tion, >50. Light walnut coftae table New. >45. 764^
and I Chro
3 PIECE BEDROOM suit >300. Z56jl62L
3-PIECE LIVING ROOM or den furniture. Coffee table, two end tables, and lamp. Exceilant condi-
4 FRENCH PROVENTIAL chairs, >75 aach. 1 Contemporary couch, >200. 1 Contamporary desk with typewrner table. >100- ^56 5346._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SHOP THE BEST
SHOP HOLT
QUALITY USED CARS
1983 Oidsmobile Firenza
4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.
1982 Lincoln Continental
Loaded with digital dash. One owner, 26,000 miles. Metallic green, dark green leather interior.
1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup
Beige, with beige vinyl interior, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 11,000 actual miles.
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon
Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo.
1981 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 4X4 Truck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Plymouth TC-3
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.
1981 Mercury Marquis
4 door, tan and brown, beige
beige cloth interior, loaded, 22,000 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, 40,000 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 DeVille
4 door. Silver with burgundy vinyl roof, burgundy interior. Loaded, 54,000 miles.
1977 Mercury Marquis Brougham
4 door, light blue with 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 root, automatic, air, AM-FM stereo.
DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 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 OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
067
Garage-Yard Sale
INDOOR/OUTDOOR yrd sal* veryday at Otd Fairoround, Aton day^^Friday from f to 6, Saturday. 7
YARD SALE 1203 W Ragsdale Road. Guitar, bowling ball, housewares. Everything must go. Saturdav 8 a.m. til noon
YARDSALE
Saturday, July 16th -1:00PM
9:00AM
H.L HODGESCO.
210 E 5th street
Sale Items Will Be Found On Our Sidewalk AND In Our Store.
Inventories will be reduced to prepare tor new fall mcrchan dise.
Discontinued and overstocked items will be discounted.
Don't miss the outstanding savings.
Come Early Before Everythirw Is Soid. Thanks For Suooortinq Usf
YARD SALE Saturday. 8 until 2.
All ty^ of household items, including
1301 Ragsdale Road.
furniture. 758 2T33.
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Sfftblss^
L
073 Fruits and Vegetables
CORN, dozen. B A 795^4646
, Silver Queen. 90< a You Pick. Hassell.
PEACHES!! Excellent for freezing and canning. You pick! Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard. 3 miles North Of Bailey. Highway 581
North. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. AAonday through Saturday, 235 4664.
SILVER QUEEN CORN-Little's Nursery. Call 756 3616 or 756d862.
SILVER QUEEN SWEETCORN
qpll 756:7783 or 70:3505
PUT EXTRA CASH in your pocket today. Sell your "^:t needs with an inexpensive Classified Ad.
074
Misceilaneous
AIR CONDITIONER I5.5(XI BTU Excellent condition. Call 752 1983 altera._
AIR CONDITIONER FOR SALE 5.000 BTU Coldspot. 3 speed. 8
setting thermostat control, runs and
cools 'real good. Reduced to >145. Call 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and 6
p.m.
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 Blackjack
BEDDING &WATERBEDS
Why pay retail when you can save up to Vi and jnore on bedding and
waterbeds. Factory AAattress A Waterbed Outlet (Next to Pitt
Plaza). 355 2626.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery
and installation. 919 763 9734.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013. for small loads of sand, topsoll and stone. Also driveway work
CENTRAL ELECTRIC HEAT furnace with AC coils, in variable
spe^ belt ma,ssager. 758 0698 after
6^_
CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele
visions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End
Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.
CRAFTSMAN LAWN TRACTOR, 10 horsepower, electric start, 36" cut. head lights. >700 negotiable. Whirlpool washer, autumn ^old.
Very good condition. >150. 746-:
CRIB AND MATTRESS tor sale. Standard size crib and mattress tor sale; both for only >75. Call 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m
DOILIES KNITTED by hand, and only >4. 606 McKinley Avenue. Greenville. Phone 758-64C
DRY PHOTO COPIER 76. >75 or best otter. 756-0
3M, Model 0661.
FOR SALE A complete set ot blue Plfatzoraoh dinnerware. 758 2933
FOR SALE: Sharp SF 811 copier with stand. 24 copies per minute. Handles 8'/ixil, r/ixu and 11x17
sizes. Royal SE 5010 electric
iyS^riter, correcting capabilities Will sell smrately or package deal. Call 792 1067 days, 792 6962 nights
FOR SALE: '/z interest in an experimental aromatic biplane. >2.000 or best otter. 355 2970._
FOR SALE: Retrigerator/freezer, Ic foot -------
13 cubic foot capacity . 752 5767 FROSTLESS REFRIGERATOR tor sale 17 cubic foot Sears Coldspot with automatic Ice maker and adjustable shelves; 11.10 cubic'toot refrigerator and 5.17 cubic foot freezer (holds up to 181 pounds of frozen food); shaded coppertone. (64'/i"x32"x26") looks and runs very good; reduced >400 from new rice; to >295 Call 752-4348 between a.m. and6
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
S-1 SENTRY SAFE
119
uiiiuu'iirFicEwnini;
ton*tgAOrw<<A
074
MiscdlBneous
GE HEAVY ^tTTY washer/dryer,
jQi
GOOD USED WASHERS; GE, Akaytag. Kenmore 30 day guarantee. tmCaHTSfcMT?,_
GREENVILLE CITY directory tor sale. One copy available; reduced to half price; Call 752-4348 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.__
HAND GUN for sale. 38 Smith & Wesson, model 10 with 4" bull barrel. >250. Call 756 2816atter 6.
HEATHKIT HB9 computer, >800. Call355 25a. 8a.m. 5p.m.
HUNDREDS OF USED kitchen cabinets, doors, windows, ranges, bathroom fixtures, furniture.
shelving, display counters, floor tile, tots more. F A J Salvage. 2717 West Vernon Avenue. Kinston.
ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off.
Barkers Refrigerattan. 2a7 AAcmo-
1^17._
rial Drive. 7564
LARGE LOAOS ot sand and top
soil, tot cleaning, backhoe also ~' 4742 attar 6 p.m.. Jim
available. 756-Hudson
LAWNMOWER tor sale. >50. Call 758 3431 after 6.
MOVING Side-by side frost free
refrigerator and deep freeze com jtion, only 2 years old. soid for new >1350, Mke new. only >350. 19"
binaf
RCA portable color tv, with simu
lated woodgrain design, automatic color and fir' ------- " "
Tint control, has sharp
picture, only >165. 25" color console tv in style I
>185. 756 0492
beautiful Early American :h
Style cabinet and much more, only
MOVINGI 25" 5 horsepower Mur
ray riding lawn mower. Less than 2 years old. >485. A Smith Corona
cartridge electric typewriter, elite; Call-----
>175. Call 756 8799.
MUST SELL Chest freezer, 23 cubic feet Best otter 758^31
CLEARANCE . SALE _on
AAovers. (Soodyear Tire ________
West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.
OLD HOME-MADE QUILTS Collection of 15. Must sell! All for
>600. 756 5356 atter 6.
REFRIGERATOR
dorm/apartment size. 4.5 cubic foot. Excellent condlton. >80. 758-2054._
REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER. Philco, double doors, avocado, >250. 746A790._^_
_______________ ID gas
tor sale. Call 752-7095 anytime RIDING LAWN MOWER Needs
some work. >200. Bicycle, >40. Room air conditioner. >50. Chair, >40. Fan. >10. Call 756 4976.
SHAMPOO YOUR RUG! Rent shampooers and vacuums at Renta! Too! Company.
SHOWCASE 60" long, 39" high. 9 drawers in back, oak wood. Sold for
>400. asking >250. 752 4017.
SIDE BY SIDE refrigerator with ice maker. Couch and chair. Call 756 3755 anytime.
SINGER SEWING MACHINE, 1981, Model 5107. 7 built in stitches, built in button holer. Like new - in excellent condition. >115. 756 7729.
SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quali ty printer. 5 months old. Used 1 month. In mint condition. >550. 752 3980from9a.m. to5:30p.m.
STEREOCITY
Now open featuring Marantz-Sansui-Sharp-and other brands. We otter quality compo
nents and match systems at . _ count prices. We finance in our store. Call Mike Edmundson, Sales
AAanager at Stereo City, 757-0451, located 2808 r ..... "
_________ East lOth Street.
A Division ot Furniture World.
TOUCH AND SEW Singer
machine with wood cabinet accessories. Excellent condition >250. 756 3W7 anytime
TWO 10x15 MUD TIRES Like new, >100. Call 752 9707 after 6.
USED COPY MACHINES IBM II, 25 copies per minute. Best offer!
copies per ______
756 6167 or 758 7808 atter 6.
USED DESKS FOR SALE Priced from >75 to >150. Call 752-4348 between 9 a.m. and6p.
USED FILING CABINET, legal size; used overhead proector; bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk.
secretarial chair. Call 758-3761 nights or 757 119 Vdavs.
WEIGHT LIFTING OUTFIT Exercise bench and weights. Price >75. 756 8862.
WHITE WEDDING GOWN, veil and crinoline, size 9/10, excellent condition. >75. Call 752 1231
WISH
Call 7!
TO BUY
'all 752 2994 atteryp*m
used carpet.
075 AAobiie Homes For Sale
MOVING, MUST SELL immediate^ ty. 1973 Peachtree 12 x 65. 2 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, all appli;
anees. wa*her/dryer. new carpet, drapes. Set up In park oft iM Street. Call 7^136_
NO MONEY DOWN
July Special Only
SINGLE WIDE. ..$8,495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995
(Loaded)
Anything of Value In Trade Boats. Horses. AAonkeys ' r^No In-laws
PUuisAVAILABLE
FINANCE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRAOEWIND FAMILY HOUSINC 705 West Greenville Boulevard
NOAAONEYDOWN VA100% Financing
New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath.
house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than >245
per month. Also FHA and conven tional financing: availablel.
onal financingavaiiabiei. _
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Graanvllle Boulavard
JSAOrn.
FAMILY HOUSING
stop in and sae why we are tha fastest growing Mobile Home dealer in North Carolina.
1. Quality
2. Best Prkas
3. Super Service
4. Easiest a Best Financing In Town (Conventional. VA. FHA)
^RAS&Wfl?DSw HOUSING 70S Wast Graanvllle Blvd. 7SA4833
RANELL DOUBLEWIOE. air. woodstove. dishwasher. Immacu-late. Call Tommy 756 7815. 758-8733
12X60. 1 bath. 2 bedrooms, full C4u^ted, unfurnished, >4500
12X60 HOME Good condition. Un room, set up on
derpinned, utility i lot. Small equity payments with a{ Call 758A021
and take up
credif
approved
14 WIOES for as tow as >170 per month. Call or
or come by Art Oellano Homes. 756-9841
1971 CHAMPION - 2 bedrooms.
Beautiful condition. Low down payment. Payment under >125. Call 756^^9874. Country Squire Mobile
Homes. 264 Bypass. Greenville.
1973 HOLIDAY 2 full baths. >5.000. 825 1468.
1973 12x65 2 bedroom, 2 full baths, eye-level oven, fully carpeted, furnished. Equity >2.d00 and take over payments >134 month imatelv 2Vz years owed
1974 VIRGINIAN - )2x65. 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, total electric. Low down payment - payment under >145. Call 756-9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville
197S CHAMPION 12x60. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, under pinned, air condition-
_ pi _
ing. Set up In Branches Trailer Park. 756 452or 758 7392
1975 CHAMPION Front kitchen, 2 bedrooms. 12x60. Excellent condi
tion. New plush carpet. Low down payment - payment under >170. Call 756-9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264 Bypass. Greenville
1975 CONNER, 12x65, 2 bedrooms. 1
bath, unique kithcen/dining area. central air plus extras. 355-2^1
1978 TITAN 12x56. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. >7500. Phone 756-5101 from 9 to
y_
1978 12X60 CONNOR, 2 bedrooms. Must sell, will sacrifice down payment. Assume payntent of >151 per month. Call 752-
1979 14x60, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments of >155. Call Lawrence af Art Oellano Homes. 756 9841._
1981 12x60 CONNOR - Furnished. >800 down and take up payments of >194.79. 756 4629.
1963 SANTA FE Front kitchen. 2 bedrooms, total electric, vaulted ceiling with paddle fan. Low down
payment - payment under >150 per month. Call 756-9874. Country
WOOD FURNACE, >150. 100' of fence for dog pen with post, >50. Chainsaw, >ldO. 2 Kerosene heaters. 752-6359._
WOULD LIKE to buy used window and central air conditioners that need repair. 746-2446.
10 TON heavy duty jack. >300. Call 752 4/45
walker floor
19" COLOR TV Rent to own. >23 11 month. Furniture World. 757-
23,000 BTU Approximately 6 years old. Sears Coldspot. Works good, >300. 758 2300 days.
3 EXTRA HEAVY storm doors. Reasonable!Call752 2691.
4' STAINLESS STEEL hood system, >500. Star hot dog steamer. >150. Electric deep fat fryer, >100.
5 HORSEPOWER TILLER with extra attachments, push plow.
extra attachments, oush plow, portable dishwasher. 25" black and white tv, garden planter with extra plates. 524^4913.
S HORSEPOWER riding lawn mower. New battery. In fafr shape.
>150. 752 6495.
Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypau, Greenville
1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as >148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales. North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068
1984 REOMAN doublewide. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden tub, storm win
dows. masonite and shitMle root with 5 year warranty. >25,WS. Call
Lawrence or Frank at Art Oellano Homes. 756 9841
24X52 USED doublwide. Must sae to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756-9841
4 MOBILE HOMES for sale by owner. Excellent condition tor
personal homes or investment use. 2 and 3 bedrooms, currently rented.
y renteo.
Will sell seperatly or fogether. 756 0173 _
076 AAobiie Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance
the best coverage tor less money.
- _
Smith Insurance and Realty. 2754
5 HORSEPOWER riding lawn mower. Good condition. Reel type sett propelled mower. 746-6860._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WURLITZER ORGAN 2 keyboard, automatic rt^tom. bench. Like
new, >550. 758-(
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
wmnmwLT!
SHOP THE REST....BUY THE BEST'
1982 Pontiac Trans-Am
m
Sparkling red metallic with velour trim. Tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, power door locks. AM-FM stereo cassette. 10,000 miles, local trade, like new.
1982 Pontiac Grand Prix
Slate gray with blue cloth interior, blue padded landau top. Extras include tilt wheel, air condition, stereo radio, 80-40 split seat, wire wheel covers, 24,000 miles.
1980 Ford Thunderbird
Burgundy with matching vinyl trim. Extras include air condition, AM-FM stereo tape, cruise control. Local trade.
speed
1982 Chevrolet Citation
4 door, silver metallic with burgundy vinyl trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, radio, cruise, clean car.
1980 Mazda RX-7
Silver metallic with burgundy trim, 5 transmission, air condition, stereo, local trade
1980 Qlds Delta Royale
Dark burgundy metallic with burgundy vinyl top and trim. Extras Include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, 10-40 split seats, air, wire wheels.
)n
1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wac
Light jade with cloth trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, 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 stereo, wire wheel covers, 33,000 miles.
1979 Pontiac Catalina
4 door, white with blue vinyl top and blue vinyl interior. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. Dniy 27,000 miles. Nice car, local trade.
1979 Buick Skylark
Light green with tan vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio. 50,000 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 Datsun 280-ZX
2 plus 2. Bronze meUlllc with tan leather trim. Power steering, power windows, cruise, control, automatic, AM-FM cassette, 38,000 miles, sharp car.
1981 Dodge Arles K Wagon
4 door, tan with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, stereo radio, 23,000 miles.
1979 Pontiac Bonneville
4 door. Dark blue metallic with blue vinyl top and blue velour trim. Options Include tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM cassette, air condition, rally wheels, 57,000 miles, local trade.
1978 Cadillac Sedan De Ville
Dark green metallic with leather trim. Equipped with most 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.
1981 Cadillac Sedan DeVille
Slate gray with padded vinyl roof and gray trim, fully equipped, 30,000 miles.
Before You Trade Your Used Car See Us WE BUY GOOD CLEAN LATE MODEL USED CARS Or We Will Sell It For You
1976 MG Midget
Burgundy metallic with a new black convertible top and black vinyl trim, 4 speed transmission, 32,000 miles, local car.
1976 Pontiac Grand Prix
White with burgundy vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, 61,000 miles, local trade
1973 Pontiac Grand Prix
Black with black vinyl top and white interior. Options include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo with tape. 77,000 miles, local trade.
Dickinson Ave.
Brown-Wood, Inc.
752-7111
f
PONTIAC
077 Muskai InsTnimants
BLACK FENDER .Strat^astar electric goif extertonAs.
FOR SALE
Write CredH Manager PO Bex 814. Newell, NC 28126.-
OLD UPRIGHT PIANO Need* a little work. >300 or best oftor 752 4769 after 7. ask tor Jair
UPRIGHT PI
and retinished
I ANO.
., recondittoned 7564)728.
YAMAHA PIANOS and dtscwt prices makes Piano A Ow D^ tributore a great place to *ip! 329 Arlington Boulevard. _
on INSTRUCTION
MICRO-COMPUTER TR^ItW for hom. buslnMS. and
1355-6687.
062 LOST AND FOUND
LOST in area of Winter ville. Ladies glass blue frames, tinted. Reward offered Call 756 02)7._
093 OPPORTUNITY
FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE
business for sele. Complete farm supply Established.. 21 yevs.
Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 7St 0702.
FOUR SEASONS RES-JAURANT
to? sale tw owner. Downtovm Greenville 75 seat restaurant,
v^revTiviiiv. /j
seat cocktail lounge, fully equippjto, large screen TV, all ABC permits.
Ifiil UW WO* I
some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 7M 5156 afterS
FURNITURE STORE tor sale m the Roanoke Rapids area. 10,000 square toot store. Fully stocked. Excellent business. Selling due to owners health. Will sacrifice. Send response to Cynthia Fowler, Geti^ al Delivery. Roanoke Rapids, T4C
2ZIZL.
LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris A Co., Inc. Financial A AAarketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-000). nights 753 4015.____
TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals. Financiim. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE, Liceni^
Brokers. 401 W First Street. 752
3575.__
095 PROFESSIONAL
CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chlnmey sweep. 25 years expenence working on cnimneys and fireplaces. Can
day y n"ghr753 3503. Firmville.
104 Condominiums For Sate
LEXINGTON SQUARE. 2 bedrooms. 1 year old. FHA -235 assumable loan. Phone 756 7935.
109
Houses For Sate
ATTRACTIVE brick veneer ranch. Carport. Almost 1300 square feet. Newly decorated, paint, wallpaper.
new vinyl, almost new carport over " " 1 bedrooms, 2
hardwood floor. 3 large I
full baths, kitchen with all ^g|i
anees, refrigerator, stove. washer and garbage disposal to remain, kitchen bar plus good size breakfast room and utility, fenced
MMtec^yard. Trees, trees, trees.
II Davis Realty, 752 3000,
756-2904.75AI997.
AYDEN Perfect fer the family that prefers a small fawn. Larga corner lot. Brick ranch featuring 3 Igrge bedrooms. 2 baths, formal arMs, large den and kitchen, garpge. >69!%0. W G Blounf A Associates.
TStjm.
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 flnanc ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge A Southerland. 754-iSOO; night* 754
5716.
BEAUTIFUL WILLIAMSBURG
masonite siding home with
window, carport. Almost 1600 square feet. WInterville School dis trict. 2 heating systems (^y
pump) electric baseboard attic fan. 3 large bedrooms, 2 full baths, cozy den with fireplace, formal araas (living room and dining room), kitchen with-all extras plus handy utility. Good neighborhood. Owner must sell, no reasonable otter refused. Assume FHA loan plus equity. Payment >420.41 PITI (Ejlty less than >20,000.) Won't lastlongl Call Davis Realty. 752 3000.756 29d4. 756-1997.
BELVEDERE and two baths, beautiful
Three
scaped home on
bedrooms Ifully land Crtstnne
Boulevard. Several quality features. >60's. Call 756-3837 attar 5
p.m , except weekends.
BY OWNER 6 room house and lot 2 miles from Wellcome Middle School. Less than >20.000. 752 6267.
BY OWNER l1>/>% asaumable loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den, gas haat, central air, fenced backyard. 107 Azalea Drive.
BY OWNER; EDWARDS ACRES 3 bedroom home featuring greatroom, kitchen with dining area, 1'/i baths, utility room, patio.
area, Vfi baths, utility room, patio, garage. Located on wooded lot Good loan assumption. >54,500. Call
758 7901 atter p.m. No realtors
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-6666
BELVEDERE - one of Greenville's best areas. This 3 bedroom heme has all your family will need. Formal living room and a den with a fireplace, kitchen with a breakfast nook, and a double garage. Priced at only >59,900, It Is a must sae. 513.
REOUCEOIII This 3 bedroom brick ranch with formal areas, den with woodstove. and enclosed
Krage, has a wooded lot and Is autifully landscape. Chain link fonco, and a dotachod workshop or
garage. Owners most anxious to toll, so take a look and moko an otter today. >63,900. 576.
OWNER SAYS SELLI Don't miu
^r ^^MKOjon thl> booutlful homo
ry Oaks. Located only o stones throw from pool end tennis courts with /> acre corner lot. It's lust wotting for you end your family o move In. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, dan, gorago, and o nice dock. Reduced to >85.900. and worth the price. 360.
fia> 4 bedrooms, and the potontial of
being a showplaca. If you are the
noyf ......
handyman typo bo sure to taka a look at this homo llstod ot just >27.000. 577.
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-6666
IDEAL STARTER or Invostmont home I Snug 3 bedroom bungalow with LOW VA assumable loan. It's neat as a pin intido and outside It o pretty wooded lot and fenced In backyard with dotachad garage and workshop. Priced at just msoo. 454.
CLUB PINES This elegant homo 2 baths
offers 3 bedrooms with 2 baths, don, office or study, living room with (irqplaco, beautiful mantel .and bultt ins. main bath Is I3x)l with dressing area, 31x7 potto with azaleas and trees surrounded by a
toncod yard and a winding w'alk through the trees. >85,500. 524.
ONE OF A KINDI This now listing lust abounds In quality throughouf Boautiful Capo Cod features largo
family room with antique brick tlroplaco, formal areas, 3/i tile baths. Intercom, central vac, boautiful kitchen, ond an expanda bio walk-in attic. Loan Is assumable too. >79,500. 563.
ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIESI Here's your chance to own that 4 bedroom homo you've always wanted for under >50,000. This brick ranch otters you very roomy kitch
en, I'/i baths, ^os carport. Largo corner lot. located only a tow blocks from schools. And best of all, priced at >43,900. This won't lost long, so
corner lot.
call today tor your private showing.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
TSTBuslnessBaT' HAVE APPLE COMPUTER
In my honw that wM help your bualnosa.
WANT A LARGE HOME of 2400 I
square foot at a low price? This older homo con bo your pride and joy with a little time and work. It fa -
T109 Houses For SaJe
COUNTRY HOME needs love and tender care, about I miles from Greenville. One story farm houM wifh vinyl siding. Central heat, den
with fireplace. Could have wrap around iMrch S3S.000. Call Davto Raaitv. ^ 3000.7sa W04.7it m?
Ill
Investment Property
DUPLEX REDUCED Assume
9^% to oualified buyer. Rented (t^h sidet0). PositiiTcash flow
J bedrooms. 1 bath, kitchen, utility, family room, haf pump Good investmenf Sat.OOO. Davis Realty. 7S2 3000. 7Sa ?W4. 756 1997._'
I
XCLUSIVE AGENCY Walking isface of univsersity. 3 bedrooms.
large family room with fireplace, central heat and air. deck, patio.
doublegarage, attice converter large room. Needs decorafing. S43.S00. Call Davis Realfy7 (
! converted into ecorating. Only
Realty, Grier
Rental. 3000,7St ?9<m, ;sa 1997
FHA ASSUMPTION Glenwood. Bryant Circle.
Lake
_ --------- _. ,____ ... cle. 3
bedroom, 2 bath brick home, with fireplace. .9 acre lot $49,000 Call Echo Realty. $24 41 8 or 524 5042
FOR SALE BY OWNER 1106 E 14th St., 2100 sq.ft, 3 to 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, formal areas. 234' street
frontage. Large rolling grounds ' trai
with many trees. Central heat and air. 1% assumable loan plus equity 641SPITI $79,900. Phone 7SS 4p-
HORSESHOE ACRES 3 bedroom featuring great room with fireplace And built In book shelves. 2 large file baths, dining room, kitchen, garage Located on 3/4 acre lot f44,000. W G Blount & Associates. ^ 3000
WUSE FOR SALE by owner 3
t^rooms Road.
. beside ZMM61
Located on Mum lord VFW 2 large lots. Call
WUSE FOR SALE by owner In Farmville with wooded lot FMHA
assumable loan for qualified buyer. 753 5445 after a
Look Whafs Home!
New house ur>der construction in beautiful Baytree. Country charm with city convenieiKe in this comfortable, affordable house with a touch of luxury.
CALL 758-6410
Diversified Financial Services,lnc. or your REALTOR
AAOOULAR HOME on brick foun dation. Over 1400 squre feet. Spacious kitchen, has attractive kitchen island and breakfast area. 3
large bedrooms, 2 large baths, good size den. All applafnces remain
$43,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 754 2904. 756 1997
MOVING TO WASHINGTON? Then . you must see this 3 bedroom. 2 bath, ranch style home lor sale by owner. Great room, laundry room, heat pump, on '/j acre lot. Extra nice at S44.5W, 2 adjoining lots for $3500.
NEW CEDAR SIDING E 300 home
with country porch. Well planned living area. Convenient to shopping enter and medical center. Will pay
up to 4 points plus closing costs. Low $50 s. The Evans Company, 4224 or
752 2814. Winnie Evans. 752 Fave Bowen, 754 5258
NEWHOMES-$38rOOO
Recently Completed
3 Bedrooms, IV2 Baths $1350 Down $435 Per Month Total
Call
East Carolina Builders 752-7194
NEW LISTING Shaded lot. 3 bedroom, 1'/j bath brick ranch.
Large family room, also features approximately 400 square feet de
tached garage and workshop, excellent jocafion. Call now to see
this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridg A Southerland. 754 3500,
754 5714.
mgr
NEW LISTING $48.900 Spacious 3 bedroom, 1</3 bath home, formal livlrtg and dining room. Convenient location. Call June Wyrick.
Aldridge & Southerland. 754 3500; nights 754 5714
NEW LISTING University area 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining room, kitchen. Assumable loan. Sales price, $41,000. Call Aldridge & Southerland. 754-3500, or Sue Dunn. 355 2568
NEW LISTING Take advantage of this brick veneer home in one of Greenvilles most attractive rteighborhoods. 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 ^orating. Want last long. $59.900. ^11 OavTs Realty. 752 3000. 754
NEW LISTING Doll house almost new. Brick veneer ranch in country Tastefully decorated in earth tones. 3 bedrooms, I'/z baths, outside storage. Assume FMHA 1OV.1 loan, plus equity. $41,500. Call Oavis Realty. 752 3000,
. 754 2904. 754 1997
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 tor gardening. Only {34,500. Call Davfs Realty, 752 3000. 754 2904. 754 1997._
NO MORE RENT $1200 or less will get you settled In about 7 or 8 weeks In this small, starter home located on a large lot. 2 bedrooms, den.
iiy $2
Oavis Realty, 752 3000. 754 2904, 754 1997._
OAKDALE 120 Holiday Court Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms. IV: baths, living room, kitchen with
dining area. den. Located on large corner lot. $37,500. W G Blount &
Associates, 754 3000.
OAKDALE - 3 bedroom home on a
large coriter lot,
room, kitchen, den. $37,500. Call .. G Blount & Associates at 754 3Q00 Evenings, 754 3880
OAKHURST A split level home on
a choice high lot. three bedrooms, llvl ace
Possible loan assumption Duffus Realty Inc., 75^5395
2'/j baths, living room, family room with firepiace, dining area, carport. Possibie loan assumption $46.500.
PRICE REDUCTION + Location + Owner may do some financing makes this ioveiy three bedroom home with tormai areas, famiiy
room, two-car garage, corner ent to lyn good buy. Price was $79,500 - owner
ynndale, a
wooded lot, adjacent good buy. Price was wants an otter! Call now, let's make
a deal. Estate Realty Company, Dorlis Mills,
752 5058, Jarvis or 752 3447, Blllv Wilson, 758 4474.
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 the bay window in kitchen and beautiful great room with fireplace and woodstove. Price reduced to $48,500. Call Davis Realty. 752 3000. 754 2904, 754 19?L_
REDUCED BY OWNER Hardee Acres. 3 bedrooms, 1Vi baths, den with fireplace, French doors lead Ing to wood deck, dishwasher, garbage dls^sal, stove newly painted outside. 16 x 24 workshop. Possible 9'/i% loan assumption. 752 5250._
REDUCED TO $19.000 3 bedroom mobile home with appliances on approximately 1.2 acre lot in city. Presently able to place more trail ers on lot. (can pot 3 more trailers If hooked on to city water and er, cost approximately $1400)
Investment. Want last long.
I, 754
:all Davis Realty. 752 3000. 2904. 754 1997
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 49,900. Call Davis Realty,
Only 4!
754-2904. 754 1997.
RIVERHILLS Lovely 3 bedroom, 2Vi bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat
Sump. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge Southerland, 754-3500; nights
7Sif7\6. -
SITUATED ON A WELL, land scaped, wooded corner lot. 3
bedrooms, lVi baths, large kitchen, family room with fireplace, heat
purhp! huge attic, (could be con verted In (age ottlce or etc.), patio.
gargage wired for 220. NMds some love and
luve and lender care. $44,5oib. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 754 2904, 754 1997
SITUATED ON a beautiful wooded lot In the country In a beautiful .neighborhood . Almost like new one
tiKTiuiiiAn inww . '"I
.atory home with 1500 souare feet home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large
inwith Tlrwlace anddlning area, p. CJnly $45,900. Call Davis
heal pump. Only *4S00. Calf Dav Realfv, 7H 30(K). 754 2904. 754 1997.
WINTERVILLE SCHOOL district No city taxes. Beautitu
neighborhood. Brick venwr home with 1375 squre feet 3 bedrooms.
WITH IJ/J
I'/a baths, central heat and air.
woodstove. Beautiful
$54,900. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000,
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living - room, 3 or 4 bedrooms,, worktop, large great room with 8 pool table
' pool-----
'ed with ,-ar$ old
Lucaioa J MX... ..w... Greenville. ^nSTln the $SO's, 758 0144 or
mim.
wge great room with 8 pyl * andrfireplace. Newly carpeted
flshwashtr, cable iV, 7 years ocatad 3 miles from Greens r.....
South of Greenville. Serious In-oulrers. Call 524 4782 after 5 p.m.-
. YOU CAN SAV E tmny by jibopplng for barpalns In the Classified Ads. ^
For The Best In
DUPLEXES
Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders 752-7194
113 Land For Sale
15 ACRES of woods land with
standing timber. 4 miles South of Greenville, in the Winterville school
district. With a 40 toot right of way $24,500 firm. Call 754 4754 aHer 4
57 ACRES located near Ayden on Highway 102 East. Young Pine timber. Location map available. Priced at $450 per acre. Call W G Blount a. Associates. 754 3000. Evenings call Bob Barker, 1-975 3179_
115 Lots For Sale
'/I ACRE Located approximately 3 miles from Greenville off New Bern Highway. $4.500 758 7709.
CHERRY OAKS Heavily wooded. 154 foot road frontage. Gloria Street. $14,900. Call Tommmy, 754 7815. 758 8733
EVANSWOOD RESIt
lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount 8. Associates, 754 3000.
HANRAHAN MEADOWS - located on State Road 1110 between Ayden and Griffon. '7 acre lots, cleared, $500 down, balance of $3500 financed at 12% APR with monthly pay ments of $92.17 a month. Call 752 7333 or 754 2682. Restricted to permanent single-family dwellings.
LOT FOR SALE, 95x144. Isleview pth Cr
Beach. South Creek near Aurora with or without 1979 mobile home, 2 bedrooms. 2 bathrooms, air: Excellent condition. Nice fruite trees. Septic tzmk. well, low taxes. Access fo the water. For more ntormation call 1-322 5419
Lowest Single Family Lot Prices In Greenville!
If you are looking for affordable, wooded lots within the city limits, you must see BAYTREE Prices
you
start as low as $11,000
758-6410
NEW LISTING Approximately ^ acre cleared lot. About 5 miles from Greenville. $4,500 firm. Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 754 2904. 754 1997
NOW THAT YOU ARE READY TO BUILD
Take A Look At Wlndemere
Private setting Beautiful Tree* Community Water Restricted subdivision Winterville School District 3 miles from Pitt Plaza Extra large lot
R C WATERSCONSTRUaiON CO _754-5805
ONE ACRE LOT between Ayden and Griflon on State Road 1110. Call 754 2482
THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter.
Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at ...... full" - '
744 2144 tor full details
'/b TO 5 ACRES, Highway 264 South. Ayden-Grifton area and Highway 33 South. Call 754 2482or 752 02>7.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securi'
bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 756 4413 between 8 and 5
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage. Open dav Friday? 5 Call 754 9953.
Arlington
Mon
WAREHOUSE AND office space for
lease. 20,(XX) square feet available. Will subdivide. 754 5097or 754 9315.
121 Apartments For Rent
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom arden and townhouse apartments.
garden and townnouse apartmenis featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-tree refrigerators.
Located In Azalea Gardens near C<
Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. Nopets.
Contact JT or Tommy Williams _754 7815
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1982 Datsun B-210, 4 door, air condition, 5 speed. $5450 1982 Chevrolet Chevette, 4
door, automatic, air condition. $5650
1982 Pontiac J-2000, 2 door liftback. $6350
1982 Buick Regal, 2 door hardtop. $8350
1981 Datsun, 2 door, automatic transmission. $4450
1981 Toyota Corolla Liftback,
2 door, automatic, air condition. $5650
1981 Pontiac Grand Prix, 2 door hardtop. $6650
1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic, 4 door. $5650
1979 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed. $3350
1979 Mallbu Station Wagon,
air, automatic. $3850.
1978 Dodge Pickup, short bed, 6 cylinder, 3 speed. $3350
1978 Fiat 128,2 door. $1750
1978 Ford Courier Pickup, 4 speed. $2150
1977 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2
door hardtop, loaded. $3650
1977 Oldsmobile Omega,
broughan,2door. $3150.
1976 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed. $1950
1976 Plymouth Valiant, 4 door, automatic, air. $1750
1967 Chevrolet Pickup,
automatic. $850
ItMonllw, 12,000 MHee WanrantyAvaHabla Fkw*| Afiltels WWi Asstewd Cts Hwy 43 North 702-8237 Buslnesa
Grant Jarman.......796-1542
Edgar Denton.......756-2921
Donald Garra.......758-0929The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C.-Wednesday, July 13,1963-31
121 Apartments For Rent
AVAILABLE LATE JULY N*w 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. Range, refrigerafor. dishwasher, and hookups $310. Couples pre^ ferred. Lease and deposit. No pets. 7544744._
Cherry Court
Spacious 3 bedroom
with I'/i baths. Also I bedroom
apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV. wasner-dryer hook-ups. laundry
dryer hook-ups. laundry room, sauna, tennis court, duo house and POOL. 752 1557
121 Apartmenfs For Rent
NEAR HOSPITAL 3 new duplexes available immediately. 3 bedrooms. 1</i baths. No pets. 753-3152 or 753-4715. ask tor John or Brvant
NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex apartment. 3 bedrooms, iw baths, fully caieted, and appli anees included. (Sutef neighborhood near hospital 757 3W8 prT95 4333.
ONE BEOROQM apartment. Near
cai ------ -
754
cam^s. No pefs. $315 a month.
EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid Cz
service. $70 week. Call 754 5555, Herifaoe Inn AAofel
EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS
All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished
With or without maid service
Weekly or monthly rates
Starting $250 monfh and uo
756-5555 The Heritage Inn
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. carpeted, dishwasher. cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 754A849
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden
apartments. Carpeted, rande, frigerator. dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located
to shopping center and schools. Located lusfott lOth Street.
Call 752-3519
LARGE 2 BEDROOM duplex Good location. 705 and 707 Hooker Road. Stove, refrigerator, central heat
and air, washer/dryer hook ups. carpeted. Lease and deposit. No pets. $375. 355 2544 or 754-0489.__
LARGE 4 BEDROOM apartment, 2 full baths, fireplace, .IjIOA Myrtle
Avenue, $340 per month. Lease and
deposit required. No pets. Call 35f44or7i4
4 0489.
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!
at our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome
with payments l<^er than mqn^^
rent. Call Owen Norvell at 758 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
LOVETREES?
Experience the unique In apartment living with nature outside your door
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall-to-wali carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1-5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart-- 5ish-
ments. 1212 Redbanks Road.
washer, refrigerator, range, disposal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza
and University. Also some furnished apartments available
756-4151
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
C.L. Lupton, Co.
752-6116
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or nwtHle homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 754 7815
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances. $310. Cali 758-3311.__
ONE BEDROOM, 10th Street. $140 per month. Call Ervin Gray. 524 4148 y 4 5042
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. (Jption to buy. U REN CO,
754 3842.
RIDGE PLACE DUPLEX 2
bedrooms, 1/i baths, kitchen appli $275 a
anees, washer/dryer hook up. month. 355 2040.
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live ABLE TV
Office hours 10 a.m. to5p.(r AAonday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
75-I
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, cli house, playground. Near ECU
lub
Our Reputation Says It All A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pefs. Call Smith Insurance <1 Realty. 752 2754_
TWO BEDROOM townhouse, Exc......
energy efficient. Excellent location! $310 per month. 757 0001, 753 4015.
TWOBEDRCX)M
APARTMENTS
Near ECU AAost utilities included $275 up. Available immediately. 758-0491 or 754-lW before 9 b.i
TWO 3 BEDROOM duplexes near ECU One with new furnace, fence for pets. Available August 1. $270. One, all new, heat pump, washer/dryer hook up, dishwasher
No pets. Available August 15. $330 754 5344.
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, I'/j bath townhouses. Available now. $295/monfh
/month.
9 to 5 Monday Friday
756-7711
3 BEDROOM duplex apartment, located In Meadowbrook. $130 month. 754 1900.
704 EAST Third Street. 2 bedrooms, furnished. 2 blocks from ECU
Stove, refrigerator. Lease and de-
54------ -
posit $240 754 1888 9 to 5 weekdays.
Help fight Inflation by buying selling through the Classified Call 752 4144
and
ads.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartmenfs For Rent
I AND 3 BEDROOM apartmants.
Tg33lL_
Available immediatelv 1 BEDROOM apartmant. Haat and hot water fumishad. 201 North Woodlawn. $215. 758-0435 or 754 0545
3 BEDROOM apartment. Kitcben applianes furnished, totally elktric. $325 nwith. Call 754 7447
3 BEDROOM townhouse, carpeted,
......nnodern
hookup,
central air and heaL nnodern appliances. washer/dryer hookup. *395. 108 Cedar Court, 7j8 331l
2 BEDROOM aparfntent Central air, carpeted, appliances. $275 a month. Brvton HitU. 758 3311.
122
Business Rentals
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or office space. Arlington Boulevard,
133 AAobile Homes For Rent
3 BEDROOM trailer. lYi baths, air. DaitetS.754^
3 BEDROOMS - Furnished, washer.
dryer, air condition, good location.
" ' 5p.m
No pets. 754^)801 after 5 p.m
40XIX 2 bedroom, washer, air. $170
per month. $75 deposit. Available now. Call Tommy, 74 7815
8X50 remodeled, iv bedrooms, new bed, air, washer. Fenced in private lot. $100 month. 752-5471.
135 Office Space For Rent
EAST 10th STREET Private, all utilities, furnished. $75 per month. 754 7417
3.000. square feet. Only $3.60 per e foot. For more information.
square _ _ _______
call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348.
FOR RENT Prime retail space.
Arlington Boulevard. 4500 squai feet S4.25 per square toot Call
754 9315or 7^5097
FOR RENT 10,000 square loot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie Smith at 944 5887._
127 Hcxises For Rent
CENTRALLY LOCATED house off Memorial Drive, 3 bedroom. I full
bath, stove, refrigerator, carpeting and air conditioned, $315 month. 355 2154 after 5:30. _
FOR RENT Nice convenient neighborhood. Formal rooms, den. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air. raised patio. 12 month lease and deposit required. Available August
1. Families preferred. Call Realty World. ClarkBranch, Realtors,
754 4334 Or AAarie Davis 754 5402.
HOUSE FOR RENT in Ayden. 3 bedrooms, living room, bath, kltch-en. 2 porches. C^l 744-3474
HOUSES AND apartments In Greenville. Call 744 3284or 524 3110
1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS and town. 505 East 4th Street. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lots of room. $400 a month plus deposit. 758 0174.
2415 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3 bedroom, central heat, air condi tioner, garage, nice neighborhood
Families on?/.' Lease and deposit. $295. 754 1888 to 5 weekdays.
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
SPECIAL RATES for students. Furnished
urnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up. No pets, no children. 758 0745 or 754 9491.
I BEDROOM AAobile Home tor rent. all 754 4487_
2 BEDROOM, furnished, washer, air, good location. No pets, no children. Call 758 4857._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Help Wanted
Full & Part Time
Must b* iteat, hottest and (topandabio. Prsfor nondrlnkor. Apply In p*r8on. No phona
Sam & Daves Snack Bar
1200 N. Greene Street
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH NURSE
Responsible for comprehensive employee safety and health program In a large state institution for the mentally retarded. RN, N.C. license, 1 year professional nursing experience. Prefer 4 year degree, occupational health background and certification. Good Benefits. Salary $15,612-$23,556. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to:
CASWELL CENTER PERSONNEL OFFICE 2415 West Vernon Ave. Kinston, NC 28501
Equal Opportunity Employer
GREAT
UsedCarKilues!
stock No. 4199-A -4355-A -4368-A -4392-A -4427-A -4459-A -4470-A -4472-A -4508-A -4514-A -4531-A -
4535-A -
4536-A -8214-8260-8261 -8271 -8274-8276-8282-
8283-
8284-
8285-8289-8297-8308-
8315-
8316-
8318-
8319-8321 -
8322-
8323-
8324-
8325-
8326-8331 -8332-7083-7092-7114-
7125-
7126-7130-7131 -7132-
Descrlption
1970 Olds Cutlass Convertible
1978 Ford Futura
-1980 Mercury Bobcat Wagon -1980 Mercedes 300 SD -1980 Ford F-100 Pickup -1983 Toyota Ceiica -1982 Chevroiet Camaro
1978 Ford LTD
-1979 Toyota Ceiica -1980 Honda Preiude
1981 Pontiac Trans-Am
1981 Toyota Tercel
1981 Toyota Starlet -1982 Toyota Wagon -1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla -1982 Toyota Corolla -1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Pontiac Grand PrIx
1982 Chevrolet Chevette
1982 Olds Cutlass 1982 Olds Cutlass
1982 Chevrolet Monte Carlo 1982 Buick Regal
1982 Toyota Corolla
1982 Chevrolet Chevette
1982 Olds Ciera
1982 Olds Cutlass
1982 Pontiao Grand Prix
1982 Chevroiet Chevette
1982 Chevroiet Chevette
1982 Chevrolet Chevette
1982 Toyota Truck
1981 Toyota Truck
1979 Ford LTD
-1982 Cadillac De Ville
1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo -1982 Toyota Corolla SR-5
1980 Toyota Corolla
1978 Chevrolet Monza
Everything Is Priced To Sell!!
TOYOTA
EAST
109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228
FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial. 404 Arlington Boulevard. 754 8111. _
_ __S FOR LEASE Contact
JT or Tommy Williams, 754 7815. 2500 SQUARE FOQT building for
rent. 327 Arlington Boulevard Available September I. Call Van
Fleming, III, days 754-2000, nights 756 4091
5,000 SOUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. PI ing. Call 758 2300days
lenty of park
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceanfront. families only 754 4207 or 724 3849 _
LAST CHANCE tor summer 2 bedroom townhouse (Pineknoll Shores) on ocean. 2 pools. Every thing furnished, even freshly ironed she^s. Available July 17th 24th, August 14th 31st. 752 2579_
CLASSiFiED DISPLAY
Nelv200MOMUHOMU satoiu DOUMJt wIteMWtoihe
JULY 18. itea
ROWAN COUNTY FAMOROUNOt SAUSaURV. NORTH CAROUNA
Don't miM 0X1 compNM Hquid4tK>n of new md uMd mobte home* . ALL t977-1983m(xW. Al dewwd md fMdy to go AU SCU TO THf HIQHE8T BeOCR. Buy one or teverel. Save thousand* of dolon Viewing ttuea dty* pno< to lal*. Tamii cuh or guiranteed bank Niter ot credit DeeNr* mvitsd. SaN lime 10 a.m. Set. July 16 at Rowan County Fairground*. Siliabury. North Cirolin*.
Can for dataiNd brochure. 17041833-6832
Aucttan Cete*"Y NCALNo. 3082
137 Resort Property For Rent
142 Roommate Wanted
CONDO AT ATLANTIC BEACH: 3 bedroom, 3 bath, special weekday rates ot $40 per night. Oceanside, pool and Jacuzzi, tennis. Call 758 411) Bev.
RESPONSIBLE roomnvate wanted to share house in country. $55 per month plus utilities. 752-2W4 n^ts. days 1 944 4852. ask for Andv.
EMERALD ISLE beach house. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air Weeks ot August 21 and August 28. $300 oer week 919 223 4772.
1 TO 2 ROOMMATES wanted for 2 bedroom apartnrtent. Split rent and utilities Available immadiately Call 754 5352
HOUSES FOR RENT on Pamlico River at Bayview. NC Weekly rates. 919 923 2281
144 Wanted To Buy
138 Rooms For Rent
2 5 ACRES OF LAND suitable lor house and garden within 10 miles of Greenville between Highways 11 South and NC 33 East Call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348. between 9 a m and4o m
ROOMS FOR RENT Call from 9 a m. 9d m., 752 4583
SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges Across from ECU $25 oer week includes all 752 7278
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
142 Roommate Wanted
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L Luoton Co
AAALE. young professional wanted to share house in Lake Ellsworth 756 5820
NEW DUPLEX townhouse. 2 bedroom, 1 mile from hospital med school. Female roommate desired. $150. Laura, 919 772 5398 atter 7
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
752-6116
CENTIPEDE SOD
Will Deliver
752-4994
MYLES CARTRETTE
Is Pleased To Announce The Formation Of
Rt. 8, Box 228 Greenville, N.C.
752-4883
oc
UJ
Z
0
0
u
FOR SALE BY OWNER
1108 E. 14th Street
2100 square feet, 3 - 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal areas. 243 street frontage. Large rolling grounds with many trees. Central heat and air. 8% assumable loan plus equity. $415 PITI. $79,900.
758-4988
u Ul
Z
UJ
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Recently remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch less then 1/4 mile from Eastern Elementary School and recreational parks. Beautiful carpel and hardwood floor combination. Large living room, sunny kitchen with plenty of cabinets, separate dining area, cozy den with (ireplece. Laundry room with storage area. Picturesque, enclosed back yard with 6 foot naturally weathered fence to give privacy to your 18X36' inground pool. Almost a years supply of pool chemicals and seasoned wood for next winters' fires included a steal at $59,999.99!
758-1355 before 7:30 AM or after 9:30 PM Sunday Anytime
COME TO OUR OPEN HOUSE AT BAYTREE
A Home With Country Charm & City Convenience
DATE: Sunday, July 17 TIME: 2-6 P.M.
PLACE: Baytree Drive, Greenville
EASY DIRECTIONS
From 14th Street Extension, turn onto Red Banks Road. Turn left onto Baytree Drive. Follow signs to first house on left.
REFRESHMENTS SERVED FREE 20 OZ. PLASTIC PICNIC CUPS TO OPEN HOUSE GUESTS.
Dont Miss Your Chance To Tour This Comfortable, Affordable House, Sunday, July 17!
95% FINANCING AVAILABLE AT HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS
For More Information CALL 758-6410 Diversified Financial Services, Inc. Of Your REALTOR
I
1=1
iQui HOusnx, LENDER
J
S-Tbe Daily Reflector. GreenriUe. N.C-Wedoesday. July 13, IIC
summertime savings from
ODLANDYOUR FRIINDIY MIICHBORS AT FOODLAND KNOW WHAT IT IS TO FEED A FAMILY! p
FRESH PORK
NECK
BONES.....
YOU SAVE 20* LB. 1ST GRADE SLICED ^ H FRESH LOCAL YOU SAVE 29* A _ A
39*, BACON..;;;'! CORN
W M LB. YOU SAVE 20-PKG. IHW FOR
1LB.
PKG.
YOU SAVE 20* PKG.
SWIFT PREMIUM
T-BONE
STEAK
LB.
YOU SAVE SO'LB.
FRESH
GREEN
BEANS....
YOU SAVE 20* LB.
FRESH LOCAL
49
L&,
19
L&.;
YOU SAVE 10> LB.
FRESH WESTERN
CANTALOUPE
79'
YOU SAVE 20* EACH
(18sSIZE)
EACH
SWIFT PREMIUM
SIRLOIN
STEAK..
YOU SAVE 50* LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM
NEW YORK STRIP
STEAK.....
YOU SAVE 80* LB.
SWIFT PREMIUM LEAN BONELESS
49
LB.
'3
99
LB.
STEWING
BEEF YOU SAVE 20* LB. GWALTNEY
FRANKS....
69
LB.
12 OZ. PKG.
99
FOODLAND
MACARONI & CHEESE
LB.
WE HAVE AVAILABLE, ALL SIZES m
pine FORBA.B.O.Ra*
nUv a a a PIG PICKINS AT m
OSCAR MAYER COOKED ^ A 0 A
HAM
IlfUTI aaa.........
CHEFS PANTRY CHICKEN ^ H
PAniES '1 .
$|49
OSCAR MAYER MEAT OR BEEF
BOLOGNA
12 OZ. PKG.
OSCAR MAYER NACHO STYLE
CHEESE D06S ...
16 OZ. PKG.
7 1.4 0Z
BOXES
YOU SAVE 5^
89
OSCAR MAYER OUR ORIGINAL
CHEESE DOGS...
16 OZ. I PKG.
$
FOODLAND
BREAD
2$ 100
11/2 LB.^
LOAVES \
KELLOGGS
RICE
KRISPIES
YOU SAVE 34
KEEBLER DELUXE
GRAHAMS OR
FUDGE STICKS
PKG.
KEEBLER P.B.
FUDGE STICKS......... ll
KEEBLER
TOWN HOUSE
$|09
$|09
CRACKERS I*-
KEEBLER
HARVEST aac ^ WHEATS aS99
HIGH POINT COFFEE..
13 OZ. BOX
$|25
REDGLO AA Al
TOMATOES. ZJ1
YOU SAVE 10*
CRISCO REGULAR OR WITH BUTTER
$ 198
0Z. I
CAN
YOU SAVE 57'
MT. OLIVE FRESH KOSHER
YOU SAVE 40*
DILL
STRIPS.;... PALMOLIVE
LIQUID a YOU SAVE 10*
DUKES
RELISH.... S'. 89
GULF ^
CHARCOAL ^ ^ 59
LIGHTER....
32 OZ. BOTTLE
ASSORTED OR WHITE
WHITE HOUSE
WALDORF
BATHROOM TISSUE
APPLESAUCE....3
303
CANS
YOU SAVE 8'
P5S
4 ROLL
PKG.
YOU SAVE 26*
$1
COLD POWER *3
YOU SAVE 46*
PIXIE A
SHERBET ....0*15./!
FOODLAND ^
ICE MILK.....
PET RI17
PIE SHELLS... K 75*
DUNCAN HINES
CAKE MIX
19 OZ.
BOX
YOU SAVE 4*
YOU SAVE 26
69
YOU SAVE 30*
CHATHAM
DOG FOOD .
DUNCAN HINES $111
FROSTING....'s
YOU SAVE 28*
GLAD
TRASH
BAGS....
10 CT. BOX
$ |29
YOU SAVE 10*
FOODLAND CHEESE. HAMBURGER, PEPPERONI, OR SAUSAGE
PKZA ,s99
YOU SAVE 40*
DULANY YELLOW CUT m
CORN .'k99
YOU SAVE 6* '
OULANY A A M
(KOI DUIIS IS 99
95*
YOU SAVE 6* EGGO
WAFFLES.
11 OZ. BOX
SHOP EZE
EVERY DAY LOW PRICE MENNEN
WEST END SHOPPING CENTER OWNED A OPERATED BY: SHOP EZE FOOD STORES INC.
MANAGER - BURGESS STEVENS MONDA Y-SATUROAY 8 A.M. - 9 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. 6 P.M. VISIT OUR DELI FOR DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS
SPEED STICK.....
2.5 OZ.
'1
69
jn.
COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE...
70Z.
TUBE
$16
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS. WE WILL GLADLY ACCEPT USDA FOOD STAMPS A WIC VOUCHERS PRICES EFFECTIVE: GROCERY-MEAT-PROOUCE: JULY 14,15, A16,1993.
SPAINS
1414 CHARLES BLVD.
OWNED A OPERATED BY ALTON SPAIN
M0NDAY-THUR8DAYI A.M. I P.M. FRIOAY-SATURDAYI A.M. 9:30 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY
f
t:
I
H.
AMA
Am
IV
Deeds
Charies H. Baker III al TO Anna G. Graves 13.50 . K.L. Blount Jr. al TO J.R. CiffliferNS J.R. Cullifer al TO M. 0. blount& Sods Inc. 3.00 Brewer and Marshall Concrete Products & Gen Cons. Co. TO James E. Brewer al NS
J.R. Cullifer al TO F.L. BountJr.NS Liang Lii Huang al TO Alan M. Harris al 58.00 Donald R. Lennon al TO Patrick A. Bizzaro al 48.00 Jasper Warren TO Sununit Inc. of Pitt Co. 4.50 Agens H. Burroughs TO Cyrus R. Taylor alNS The Evans Co. of Grvl. Inc. TO Sammy R. Barrett al 51.00 Garris Evans Lumber Co. Inc. TO Mudhukar M. Mehta al 61.50 William H. Ipock Jr. al TO G. Wayne Hardee al 89.00 Leonard D. Lilley Jr. al TO Charles L. Messerlie al 8.50 Leonard D. Lilley Jr. al TO Kenneth Vanderburg al 7.50 R.N. Merritt TO Jesse M. Ebron7.50 Edward H. Meyer III TO James F. Chandler al 10.50 Glen Alan Mize al TO Jeremiah Wilkins 7.00 Linda McLawhom ONeal al TO Dean Alan Hewitt al 8.00
WGB Properties Inc. TO William Jeffrey Minteer al
77.00
Iona Dale White TO BUlyL. Jones al .50 William Ramsey Wright al TO Robert E. Boyer al 14.50 Harry J. Byers al TO Sherwood Assoc. 150.00 WUliamH. Clark al TO Bill Clark Const Co. Inc.NS Alfonza Jones TO Terrance R. Westbrook al 40.50 Rosina C. Lao TO Raymond E. Coxal 29.00 Rivertiills Inc. TO Stuart Hardy Const. Co. 8.00 Glendon Smith Corey al TO Charles Douglas Pridgen al NS
Terry M. Dutton al TO Gerald E. Ely al 73.00 W.A. Forbes Jr. al TO Louis Lee Roberts al 10.00 Johnie W. Gorham al TO Johnie W. Gorham al NS Greenridge Development Co. al TO Mary L. Baldwin
18.00
City of Grvl. TO Kenneth T. Perkins DDS PA 9.50 City of Grvl. TO Housing Authority of Grvl. 13.50 Jennis Perry Harper al TO Dept, of Transportation 5.00 Jesse R. Laughin^iouse al TO City of Grvl. 10.50 Kenneth A. McLawhom al TO Gaylord Builders Inc. 25.50
Melvin K. Porter al TO PaulT. Garrett al 1.00 Grace M. Sumrell al TO Benjamin C. Norris Jr. al
30.00
Bobby N. Taylor al TO Frank Nathaniel Taylor al
29.00
John H. WeUons al TO Heritage Development Co. of Grvl. Inc. 24.00 W.G.B. Properties Inc. TO Dennis M. Brinkman al 73.50 J.R. Yorke Const. Co. Inc. TO Pamela J. Prevette al
42.00
John Baldwin TO WUliam James Robinson al 13.50 Ashley Joe Garris al TO Milton L. Garris NS Leon R. Hardee al TO Leon R. Hardee Jr. NS Robert Hemby TO Leon RAymond Hardee al 3.50 Linda B. Kopping TO Scott M. Hinson al 38.50 Lucy Smith Lewis al TO Dept, of Tran^rtation 15.00 Neil Realty Co. TO Rhonda M.Cotten 56.00 WaightstUl M. Scales III al TO Clifton E. Weatherington .al 57.00
Nathan Lee Smith al TO PaulD. Majetteal 310.00 James T. Warren al TO John Arnold Streeter al 40.00 R.C. Waters Jr. al TO John D.WUkersonal4.50
Denmark Gets First Choice
ANGMAGSSALIK, Greenland (AP) - If an effort to retrive six U.S. P-38F fighter planes which crash-landed near here in 1942 is successful, the Danish memment will have the first pick of the planes, said Russdl D. Rajani, leader of the Winston Recovery Team.
Rajani notes that although Greenland was placed under U.S. protection during World War II, the worlds largest island maintained Danish sovereignty and is today an integral part of the Kingdom of Denmark.
CLASSIFIED AD will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused Items. To place your ad. phone 752^166.
WB(@) DIXIE
Now more than ever, were right for you!;
' *PfnCES GOOD THRU SAT., JULY 16TH NONE TO DEALERS *WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES COPYRIGHT 1983. WINN-DIXIE STORES. INC.
RIGNT with: PRICE BREAKER COUPONS . CUP & SAVE!
JjiJji
_ Towe'5
umrr i cusTOMenwrm -COUnON. GOOD I THRU SAT.. I
JULY 1STM.
JUMBO SUNBELT \C
TOIMELS
IWWW) nil _
50-OZ. JAR WHITE HOUSeNASc
WhiteHouse APPLE SAUCE
LIMIT 1 pen CUSTOMER WITH ^ COUPON. GOOD THRU SAT.,
59
JULY ism. I M
5-LB. BAG THRIFTY MAId"
We stock values. You stock savings.
ISoz. Btls.
COCA COLA
Ctn. Of
7-oz. Btls.
12-oz. Cans Reg. Or Light
MILLER HIGH BLACK LABEL LIFE BEER
Ctn. Of
8.% 0Z. BOX JIFFY CORN V17
MUFFIN MIX r
'Pioneers'
No Ordinary Youth Group
ByROXINNEERVASn Associated Press Writer MOSCOW (AP) - The Young Pioneers, who have given American schoolgirl Samantha Smith a rousing welcome in the Crimea, is an organization of 25 million childURf taking the first step toward Communist Party membership.
Samantha Smith, an 11-year-old from Manchester, Maine, is Visiting the Soviet Union at the in
vitation of Communist Part)
'arty
leader and President Yuri V.
Andropov, The invitation was extended in a reply to a letter she wrote expressing concern about the possibility of nuclear war.
On Saturday, the day after her arrival in the Soviet Union, she went to the Young Pioneers showcase camp on the Black Sea for a five-day
stay. The camp, Artek, was built in 1925 and has grown
^ Each ol these advertised items is req^uired to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised price m each A8P Store eicept as specifically noted in this ad
into a crawling complex of dormitories, recreation and education facilities capable of accommodating 4,500 youngsters at a time. About 27,000 visit it yearly.
The Young Pioneers was founded in May 1922, five year* irfter the Bolcheviks overthrew the Russian czar and established a Communist government under Vladimir Lenin. Lenins wife and revo-lutionary companion, Nadezhda Krupskaya, often taught at Artek.
The Young Pioneers stated aim is to bring up children in the spirit of internationalism and loyalty to their Socialist motherland, the cause of Lenin and the Comaiunist Party, according to Soviet publications.
Soviet schoolchildren and Young Pioneers are told about the Soviet boy who in 1932, told authorities that his
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, JULY 16 AT 703 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD AAPIN GREENVILLE, N.C.
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS CHABLIS VIN ROSE
Inglenook Wine ...
1.5 liter bottle
GOOD ONLY IN GREENVILLE, N.C.
349
father was aiding peasants foi
Pepsi C
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND, WE WILL DOUBLE 3 MFG.S COUPONS.
EXAMPLE: $10.00 PURCHASE = 3 COUPONS;
$20.00 PURCHASE = 6 COUPONS; $100.00 PURCHASE = 30 COUPONS; AND SO ON! ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE!
MTN. DEW
8
fleeing Stalins forced col-lectivation.
The boy, Pavlik Morozov, is said to have told a court, I accuse my father not as his son but as a Pioneer.
Mwozov, 13 at the time, is portr^ed as a martyr for the' Communist cause. He was killed by his grandfather and an older cousin, who in turn were executed.
The newspaper of the Young Communist League, or Komsommol, said last year the 50th anniversary of Morozovs death - that
GOOD ONLY IN
GREENVILLE. N.C. i
the boy was a legend who helps youngsters learn that often there are difficult (te-cisions to be made in life.
After World War II, the Young Pioneers were mobilized in the reconstruction effort, helping in such ways as collecting p^r and scrap metal.
Guided and financed by the Komsommol, the Young Pioneers is open to youngsters aged 10 to 14. Although the Young Pioneers is very much like a scouting organization, indoctrination in the socialist way of life is important. Members are taught to be patriotic, which in the Soviet Union is equivalttit to loyalty to the Communist Party.
They are taught to parade and allowed tq stand sentry at Soviet monuments.
KEEBLER
REGULAR
Ann Page Cola
Juicy Grapes
CALIFORNIA RED & THOMPSON SEEDLESS
.Os
88
Town House Crackers
FLORIDA SWEET
WASHINGTON STATE SWEET A
MINUTE MAID FRUIT PUNCH OR
Lemonade
'/gal.
ctn.
Ybllow Corn 10
LOCALLY GROWN
Slicing Cucumbers
LOCALLY GROWN TEN^
99^ Ybllow Squash 3
Mrs
only
lb.
for
only
lbs.
only
X___________
1^^ Juicy Cherries
1 Seedless Limes
CAUFORMA
loo^Red Potatoes 3
10
for
only
1
F
Because it is under the auspices of the Komsommol, the Young Pioneers is usually the first step toward full party membership. One cannot be a member of the Komsommol without the sponsorship of two current members, or of a full member of the Communist Party.
ANN PAGE
Fruit Cocktail
/
ANN PAGE
Applesauce 3
ANN PAGE YELLOW CUNG HALVES OR
Sliced Peaches 2
16 oz. cans
Salad Olives
A good Young Pioneer is likely to have little trouble joining the Komsommol and a good Komsommol likewise is usually accepted into the Soviet elite, the Communist Party.
MRS. FILBERTS
Margarine
GOLDEN ^
Rhyming Aid In Reading
QUARTERS
OXFORD, England (AP) - According to an Oxford University survey, teaching children nursery rhymes and rhyming games is important to their future reading skills.
Hi^r levels of reading require the ability to recognize a word by either its letter or by the sound it mahee, as in a nursery rhyme. A study found that recognizing words by the sound was more important in the eariy stages of a childs reading devdoinDent. ' There were 400 preschoolers in the Oxford study.
<
1 lb. pkgs.
KRAFT AMERICAN
Cheese Food Slices
PAG BRAND
Cheese Food Slices
Barbecue Sauce ir 69^
KRAFT FRENCH ITALIAN CATALINA
Salad Dressings
T. OUVE HAMBURGER ONJ. 0PS (32 oz.) KOSHER OaX SmpS (24 oz.) on
Fresh Kosher Dills i:'
Morton Dinners
CHICKEN TURKEY MEAT LOAF SALIS. STEAK
dinner
11 oz.
pkg.
12 oz. pkg.
<
Frozen Lemonade
LUOOWV PEACH tnUWBeWIV MNMIA^TRAWKimV
tS Ybgurt 2 is 79^
FAMILY PACK
lEggo Waffles
17 oz. pkg.
CRMKLE CUT FRENCH FMEO
A&P Potatoes
21b.
pkg.
P
89*
Open 24 Hours A Day Monday 7:00 A.M. to Saturday 12 Midnight Open Sunday 7:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.
i
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>
<
ANN PAGE (1-LB. PKG.)
MargarineOtrs.
#671
Between now and July 16, we will redeem national manufacturers cents-off coupons up to 50* for double tneir value. Offer good on national manufacturers cents-off coupons only. (Food retailer coupons not accept^.) Customer must purchase coupon product in specified size. Expired coupons will not be r/' customer per item. No coupons accepted for free merchandise. Offer does
not apply to A&P or other store coupons whether manufacturer Is mentioned or not! When the value of the coupon exceeds 50* or the retail of the item, this offer is limited to the retail price.
Sliced Bacon
OLE CAROLINA
12 oz.
pkg.
88
0
HEADLESS AND (5 LB. BOX 2.99)
Dressed Whiting ,b 69^
^ JOHN MORRELL
Cheese Franks 1
Sa\
Di
mgsareGre
WBLESAVm
atwithA&f
'iSCOUPOm
?/
MFC'S
COUPON
MFC "CENTS OFF"
AtPAOOED "CENTS off-
TOTAL COUPON AT ASP
COUPON A
25*
25*
50*
COUPON B
18*
18*
36*
COUPON C
50*
50*
$1.00
COUPON D
75*
25*
$1.00
Round Roast
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF
Boneless
Bottom
199
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FAMILY PACK
JOHN MORRELL
ovnia inwnnci.L.
Sliced Bacon ^ 1^
GOLDEN SMOKED
Half Boneless Ham
Hot
or
Mild
Bone
In
lb.
11b.
pkg.
lb.
JOHN MORRELL
188
Fryer Leg Qtrs.
COUNTRY TREAT WHOLE HOG
Pork Sausage
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF
Chuck Steak
Box-O-Chicken
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH
FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM COUNTRY STYLE
Pork Spare Ribs
LAND-O-FROST (ALL VARIETIES)
Chipped Chopped Meats 99^
STEAK-UM.
ASSORTEDPRINT
Northern Tissue
ASSORTED FAMILY
^?Gala Napkins
P&O BRAND
Aluminum Foil
49
4 roll pkg.
140 ct pkg.
50 ft. roll
9<F
79*
99
FOR YOUR LAUNDRY
il pkg
stown
inks
*|99
a I cMr\-um.
Sandwich Steaks?^ 2^
Round Steak
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF
Full Cut Bone In
Punch Detergent
50* OFF LABEL
Downy Softener
A&P BLUEGREEN
Dish Detergent
42 oz. box
You Pay 96 oz. Only jug
22 oz. btl.
1
3
99*
BRIGHT EYES ALL FLAVORS
Cat Food Dinners
a REGULAR BEEF, LIVER, BACON
Gravy Train Fo^Sd
WHITE
A&P Dish Detergent
22 oz. btl.
Paimoiive Goid 11 fHand Towels
BATH SOAP
Palmolive
5 oz. bars
100
TASTEMAKER
16 x26'
Baked Ham
VIRGINIA
50* OFF LABEL-PLUS 50* COUPON You Pay Onlv^^j^
Usterine Mouthwash 7r
You Pay Only
Toothpaste 99^
PUMP UNSCENTED ULTRA HOLD REGULAR
Final Net **'
15* OFF LABEL
Aqua Fresh
DECORATED BOTTLE
<
Spray
Jergens Lotion
Soz.
bU.
ISor
bU.
2*
93S
SLICED TO ORDER
Beef Bologna
YELLOW AMERICAN
Cheese Loaf
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, July 13,198335
College Grad At 16, Has Physics Job
By MICHAEL INCITTI
SunburyDaUyltem
LEWISBURG, Pa. (AP) -I Like many other students, I Willy Hall graduated from m Bucknell University this H spring, with a degree in math S and physics.
S And like a few of his peers
who were fortunate enough
to land johs, Willy started
work in June at the U.S.
Naval Research Laboratory P in Washington, D C. He is a
research assistant in physics.
Fairly ordinary stuff. Until you ask Willy his age. Hes 16.
It doesnt take a math Iprofessor to calculate that Willy began college at age 12.
Willy, or William, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hall of Coburn. Willys mathematical bent was brought to the forefront when he took the Scholastic Aptitude Test that most high school juniors and seniors take before entering college.
He scored a 600 in the math section and 510 in the verbal, out of a possible 800 in each.
Willy then took part in an accelerated math program during the summer at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. The program was designed for children younger than 12 who showed academic ability beyond their years.
The elder Hall said Willys sisters, Hinde, 15, and Sarah,
12, also are gifted. He said Sarah is enrolled in the same program this summer.
After the program ended in late summer 1979, Willy was offered a one-course math scholarship from Bucknll.
' But instead of taking just one course, he said he decided to take four, a full semester load at Bucknell.
Hall, who described himself and his wife as self-employed artists, said the university had been cooperative and accommodating. The idea to forgo high school and undertake college, though, was Willys.
School was getting a little boring and I wanted to try something new, Willy said. The opportunity was there so I took it.
He said at first his classmates would approach him after seeing him in their physics, calculus or Japanese classes. But his incongruity at 4-foot-lO, 85 pounds, proved a blessing of sorts.
People walked up and asked me what I was doing at Bucknell and through that 1 was able to meet a lot of people,Willy said.
Willy said he commuted daily from Cobum with a nei^bor who drove the 70-mile round trip. So I wasnt really involved with the social scene there that much.
He said the leap from junior high school to college brought expected social and academic adjustments. Adapting to the academics was more difficult, Willy said.
I had some adjustment problems with the new material, Willy said. The nature of the courses was a lot different than what I had in junior high. Physics especially and calculus were very new subjects to me, so understanding them at first was a little difficult.
His major subjects proved to be his toughest challenge.
He said he earned nothing lower than a B in all courses other than math and science, where a few Cs dot his record.
He said he earned a 2.8 grade point average his first semester, but by the second semester of his sophomore year he scored a 4.0.At graduation, his overall grade point average was 3.3.
Willy said he will be leaving his job at the end of summer to become a student at the Inter-University Center in Tokyo as one of 30 U.S. students selected for special studies after winning an award for fostering U.S.-Japanese relations.
He says he has no idea what his ultimate goals are, but I think when I get back from Japan Id like to go to graduate school in math or physics and get a doctorate.
9
4
6'A oz. cans
fOO
099
89*
AVAILABLE AT
7P3 GRLENVILLE
boulevard
lb.
lb.
99
299
703 Greenville Boulevard Greenville Square Shopping Center Greenville, N.C.
--4_
>
HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT MADRID, Spain (AP) -Spains unemployment rate rose in June to 16.7 percent, the highest rate among Western European nations, the labor ministry am nouhced. ,
Busy Summer In Health Field
NEW YORK (AP) -Americans visit their doctors more often during the I summer, and especially during August, than at any other time of the year, according to a study by a provider of optometric care.
Pedodontists, who specialize in childrens (te-ntal needs, see more patients ih the second half of August than at any other time, the study by Pearle Vision Centers showed.
Osteopaths patient loads peak in August, and pediatricians report their busiest periods are August and Se^ tember, plus January - the flu season. General physicians and podiatrists, too, are busiest during the summer.
Many Americans see August as a transition from summer to winter. They schedule their regular health maintenance routine at this time, when the kids are f getting ready to go back to i school.
DISCOUNT
Invoke Lows For Mobile Home Safety
By DOROTHY GAST Associated Press Writo'
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)
- Arkansas ranks first in the nation in killer tornadoes, y^ thousands of mobile homes in the state are vulnerable to destruction evoi in thunderstorms because the law doesnt require that they be strapped down or set on a foundation.
A measure ai^roved by the 1983 Legislature says new mobile homes bought from dealers must be strapped down, but the legation 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 >vhich cost about $500 for the average mobile home.
Regulations approved in 1976 by the federal Dqiartment of Housing and Urban Development have resulted in sturdier construction of mobile homes. Such construction, Kidd said, provides a great deal of wind resistance if people are willing to provide a few more dollars to anchor them.
In a tel^hone interview recently, Kidd said anchored mobile homes were as wind-proof as most frame homes in the South. About 25 percent of Arkansas manufactured homes 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. Mississippi recorded 1,130 during the period.
Arkansas was first during the period in the number of tornadoes that killed people, with 193, Lee said. Texas was second with 186.
This past year, for 1982, as I recall 25 percent of the deaths associated with tornadoes were people living in mobile homes, Lee said.
Mobile homes have a tM-dency to collapse on themselves and blow down a lot more than a frame structure.
Lee said an unanchored mobile home could blow down in winds of 45 mph. In Arkansas, said, probably 30 percent of the thunderstorms could produce winds of 50 mph. A great percentage of the thun-< derstorms have the potential to blow down mobile homes on a daily basis, he said.
He disagreed with Kidds comment that anchored manufactured homes were as wind-proof as most frame homes. A mobile home strapped down and cm a foundati(m probably would withstand winds of 70 mph, he said. In a frame bouse, 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 parks to provide storm shelters, he said.
A
SUPER MARKETS, INC.
"Where Shopping Is A Pleasure
We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities None Sold To Dealers Or Restaurants We Accept Food Stamps And WIC Vouchers IPRICCS 0060WED. THRU SAT.
I nww.1.1 uro wwi.-TMMaio _
wSSn
SOI
VASIUNi mTENSIVE CARE LOTION
$169
ItOZ. I
VISINi EYE DROPS $159
HOI. _
Eun
PEPSI FREE a DIET PEPSI FREE
2um
RYM6 CHICKEN U6 QHARnRS
LB.
FRYER CHICKEN
WINGS .49 IB GIZZARDS.49
SWIFT HOSTESS
CANNKD HAM $W87
4 LB. ir
SMITHFKLO
HOT DOGS
12 OZ.
PACKS
JAMESTOWN KOLL
SAUSAGE
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
25*OFFUBfL 49 OZ. GIANT
LB.
<189
Ve SLICED PORK LOIN
$39
LB.
HUNTS KETCHUP
GOtRK
CHARCOAL
LIOHTiR
I I M
320Z.JU6
BONEUSS
CHUCK
ROAST
CUBED
STEAK
RIB EYE
STEAKS
BONELESS
SIRLOIN TIP ROAST
SAAITHFIELD
SLICED BACON
or.
$
LB.
GENERIC
CHARCOAL
$ 1S9
10 LB.
$
LB.
SOUTHERN
BISCUIT
PUMOR SELFRBING
FLOUR
SLB.
'lauoKinisne^ KRISPIBS MeepsnKes
SOFT PLY
$
13 OZ.
ROLL
LB.
$
LB.
$
WESSON OIL
89
NIGIITETiS
$
48 OZ.
CATFOOD
AUOZ.VAIliTliS
5/* I*
HIRffOID
CORNED BEEF
DAIRY
12 OZ. PACK
SliHTfSTUGHTAUVILY
LOWFAT MILK
PARKAY
FRESH
GROUND BBIF
I^GALION
AAAROARINE
11M. Vc'l
00
3 LBS. OR MORE
LB.
COUNTIYRiSH
HOINOGiNIZEO
MILK
99*
PAIAMOmUD
APPLE JUICE....
PAMMCNOUD
ORANGE
JUICE....T'
f*-
PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW
OUlMOUaUKl
$
19
2 LITER
120Z.6PACXB0TTIIS REGULAR A LIGHT
^ > ^ I
iS
ii
}]
TAYLOR CALIFORNIA CELURS
WINES
ALL 1.5 LITER VARIETIES
}
DUNCAN MINIS
CAKE
MIXES
ALL 18 OZ. VARIETIES
vns
DOeFOOD
AU15 OZ. VARIETIES
5/*l
00
7-FARMS
POSKABIANS
4I$|00
I 303 CANS
PFEIFFER
DRESSINGS
All 16 OZ. VARIETIES
DUKES
MATIMAISI
QUART
StTJt/
MAYONMI
UPTON FAMILY SIZE
PRODUCE
THOMPSON WHITE
SEEDLESS GRAPES
URGE CRISP
unuct
39*
HEAD
HA BASS CUCUMBERS
24 a.
LIMIT 1
10
EACH
ARMOUR TREET LUNCHEON MEAT
HI DM TOWUS
INDIAN SUMMER
FROZEN FOODS
PAMOE
WHIPPED
TOPPING
00
lOZ.
i/^1
Rozm
PARADE
COUNTRY RESH
riEonTRiNe lhnnak ice
^^POTATON CONCamAn CREAM
lOOZ. 60Z.
m sM
PEACHES
$100
LBS.
FOR
WHITE
POTATOES
10 LB. BAG
$149
FRESH
VINEGAR..:
MT.oinismET
SALAD CUBES
BROCCOLI
14 a.
C
BUNCH
CARROTS
1 LB. BAG
39*
MUSHROOMS
99V.
BANANAS
V^OAL.
3
i
LBS.
FOR
00
Utah's Baby Boom Keeps On Booming
By KAREN M.MAGNUSON SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)
- In most of the U.S., the baby boom is over and schools and colleges are facing reduced enrolments.
In Utah, however, the baby boom continues unabated -the annual birth rate is double the national average
- with all the attendant problems of a growing population.
Our No. 1 source of growth is from within - the creation of babies. Lots of them, says state economist Brad T. Barber.
We are becoming a younger and younger state because of our birth rate. And our stock of potential mothers is growing lar^r over time and larger relative to the rest of the country.
The fifth fastest growing state in the nation has welcomed 140,000 newcomers in 1980, most of them new 'babies. More than 45,000 infants come into the world via Utah each year.
State officials estimate Utah will grow at an annual rate of about 2.2 percent. And the current p(^ulation of 1.6 million could reach more than 2.2 million by the turn of the century.
That spells big trouble for The Wasatch Front, a cluster of counties of which Salt Lake City is a part, nestled on the west slo^ of the Wasatch Range, where the majority of Utahns live. Every indication is that were heading back towards the boom of the 70s, said Mayor Lawrence P. Smith of Sandy, who saw the pE^ula-tion of his Salt Lake County bedroom community grow by 800 percent in the last decade.
We are looking at it with a little bit of fear, but we think we can handle it now. Before, we werent ready. You cant have the kind of growth weve had without running into problems. Farnlland along the Wasatch Front is disappearing. Schools have the largest classloads in the nation. A blanket of brown smog often hazes over the Salt Lake City skyline. The water supply is running out and sewage treatment plants are overloaded.
But Utahs birth rate, nearly twice the national average at 29 per 1,000 people, is not likely to drop soon. It is fueled by the Mormon Church, which encourages members to have as many children as God can give them.
The dominant ethic of this society is that its good and right to have children, said State Planning Coordinator Marthe Dyner. The problem is that the local culture has not decided how its going to support the population growth its creating.
The biggest casualty is education. Utah is running out of classrooms for its students and jobs for its graduates.
It has the largest classloads and one of the lowest investments per student in the nation. About 12,000 to 14,000 new students enter Utahs elementary and high schools each year. Another 4,000 try to ^ueeze into public universities and colleges.
Rich E. Kendell, associate superintendent for the State Board of Education, sakd, Its not unusual to find classes in junior high with as many as 38 kids. A teacher may see as many as 200 students a day.
Universities are so packed that thousands of students have been turned away.
But legislators are reluctant to back tax hikes to improve the school system. Some of their constituents have turned down referendums that would have helped local school budgets.
State money for education is tight. Real spending on education has steadily declined since 1979.
The appropriations per student are vei7 low. So how do we get there? We have very, very large classes and try to balance the Ijudget by sacrificing quality, said Donald B. Holbrook, chairman of the Board of Regents, which governs the states nine public colleges and universities.
Holbrook said the board is studying ways to restrict enrollment. Some schools, including the University of Utah, already have restrictions. Without them, officials said, enrollment will double by the year 2000.
Music StoFQ Owner Finally Builds Dreani Museum
ByTOMEBLEN Associated Press Writer BRISTOL, Tenn(AP)-If there were ever any doubt that Joe Morrell loves guitars, he put it to rest this spring.
Thats when the music-store owner finished bis 70-foot-long, three-story Grand Guitar, billed as the worlds only guitar-shaped music museum.
The scale model of a six-string acoustic guitar stands beside Interstate 81 in the Tennessee mountains, a stones throw from the Virginia state line.
Painted bright red and black, its hard to miss. And Morrell says thats the whtrfe idea.
Standing recently on a plank patio atop the guitars neck, Morrell. 49, looked across the highway to the Tennessee welcwne center, where a man and woman were taking pictures of each other with the Grand Guitar in the background.
You can look out every few minutes and see somebody doing that, Morrell said. Its better than any advertising we could buy.
Its easier to understand the tourists ceriosity than Morrells reasois for spending $100,000 on an admission-free museum that be doesnt expect to ever make much money.
Its just always been his dream. Morrells dau^ter.
Speaking of Your Health...
LtsttrLColaMi.N.a
Diabetes and
Drinking Don't Mix
I am a diabetic. My condition can be controlled with just diet alone. I am 47 and lve had this problem for only two years. I lve read a great deal about it and am confused by this dilemma. One doctor says I can drink and the other doctor says that I should not have any alcohol. Mr. R.U., Mich.
Dear Mr. U.:
A recent report issued by the University of Health Sciences of the Chicago Medical School devotes itself to this particular problem.
Dr. Sant P. Singh and his colleagues believe that if you are a diabetic and insist cm having martinis or other alcoholic drinks at mealtimes, you would be well advised to do your drinking a couple (rf hours before you sit down to the table.
Apparently the study, made with the Veterans Administration Research Service, has shown that alct^l decreases the amount of insulin that is released by the pancreas. Diabetics need insulin at mealtime to help them with the metabolism and the absorption of carbohydrate foods. Therefore when alcohol depresses the insulin levels of the blood, the diabetes can be aggravated.
Dr. Singh says, I dwit recommend alcohol for diabetic patients. But if they insist on drinking alcohol, they should do it three hours before they eat.
The effect of drinking alcohol with meals is particularly bad in the case of juvenile diabetes or in those diabetics who vary a great deal in their blood sugar levels.
This work is stiU in an experimental phase. Therefore it is essentl that diabetics discuss this problem with their own doctors. For there may not be universal agreement about how each particular diabetic should handle the mild intake of alcohol.
Is arteri06clat)sis the same as atherosclerosis? I am an avid reader of medical subjects but cant teO the dif-fereoce between the two of them.-Mr. D.KJL, Calif. Dear Mr. R.:
Atherosclerosis is actually a subdivision of
arteriosclerosis. Arteriosclerosis is the term applied to the many changes that affect the inner lining, the muscle wall or the outsitte of the arteries.
Atherosclero^ specifically refers to the thickening of the inner layer of the blood vessel with the formation of plaques that interfere with the Uood supidy to all the (X'gans.
SPEAKING OF YOUR HEALTH... Doctors cannot always tell the exact number of days that an illness will last. Doctors are not pn^ts.
Air-Cooling Costs Down
WASHINGTON (AP) - A heat wave during the two weeks ending July 2 put air conditioning costs above normal for the first time this year, but Americans are stUl spending less to cool their homes this summer, the government says.
The nations air conditioning bill for the two-week period was $947 million, $41 million above normal, the National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service reports. But air conditioning spending this year is still below normal, thanks to cool weather from April throu^ mid-June, the agency said.
So far this year, Americans have spent an estimated $2.2 billion on air conditioning, $509 million less than at the same time in a normal year, the information service reported.
SPREAD-EAGLED - Dr. Maijorie McMillan (left) and Dr, Margaret Petrak are shown operating on Maria, a rare golden eagle, to remove a chickra bone lodged in her stomach, at the Angel Memorial Hoq>ital in Boston. Maria . now doing well, and has been returned to her home at Panns in Lincoln, Mass. (AP Laserphoto)
Anita, said. Since I was a little gill Ive been seeing Dad make drawings for a guitar-shaped building.
Fifteen years of planning and eight months of construction went into the concrete block and plywood structure, which has a set of nylon rope string on each side. The buil(hngs only windows are in the sound holes and scattered among the frets, which are spaced to scale like those on a real guitar.
Inside the guitar are more
than 20 unusual stringed instruments. Morrell began building the rilectiM almost 20 years ago when he opened a music store in Bristol after a brief career as a professional guitarist in New York.
He has sitars from the Orient, mandolins and lutes from Europe and steel-st^ guitars from Nashville. There is a 1920s Harp^Khofd - a cross between an autoharp and a harmonica -and a double-necked instrument with both guitar
and harp strings.
Dads collection got so big be had it under beds and in closets armmd the apartment, Anita Morrefl said. It got to the point that he was either going to have to build diis buil<&ng or stop cdlecting.
In a dsplay case beside dozens of banjos and Dobros is a fiddle that a North Carolina man made from match sticks. It dont sound too good, but its pretty to look at, Morrell said.
Country-Western musi
cians have given Morrell a few costumes they wore for album-cover photographs. The cdlectkms centerpiece is a glitter-gold tuxedo from couirtry singer Faron Young. Morrell is hoping for more donations.
Although Bristol is 300 miles from Nashville, Morrell says its a l(^cal place for a country music museum.
(hK of the first nationally
distributed country music records - by the Carter family and Jimmy Rogers -was cut in Bristol in 1927, he said. And a map in the museum shows that many country musicians were bom within a 200-mile radius.
Morrell hopes a ^ shop and four arcade video games will pay most of the Grand Guitars bills. And be plans for a tiny recording studio
downstairs to bring in a little money vdiile giving local
bands a place to make demonstration tapes with
which to launch professional careers.
It may pay for itself, but it will never be a big money-maker, said Mor
rell, who owns a music shop and a music equipment distributing company. This is just my toy.
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MUSIC MUSEUM Former , profes- free museum, which holds his collection sional gui^st Joe Morrell recently of unusual stringed instruments, stands opened this guitar-shaj^ structure, beside Interstate 81 in Tennessee, near after 15 years of planning and eight the Virginia state line, months of construction. The admission-
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Palermo Prospers With Heroin Amid Mafia Wars
By JACK R. PAYTON
PALERMO, SicUy (UPI) - The Mafia bosses of Sicily took time off from their intematioiial heroin business recoitly to watch two movies about their American cousins.
The Godfather and The Godfather II ttl of a poor Sicilian who emigrates to New York, becomes a top crime boss and founds a family dynasty based cm the ruthless pursuit of power and money.
Shown back-to-back on Italian state televiskm, the movies portrayed Sicily as a rural, culturally backward island where fictional American godfather Mictu^ Corleone, sm of that poor Sicilian, takes refuge when gangland wars in New York get too bloody.
The streets of Sicilys cities were almost deserted whoi the movies were broadcast to record television audiences. Many caf(s and restaurants closed because there were no cifetomers.
one seemed to mind that the films bucolic klea of Sicily
days the streets of Palermo are lined with fancy surants, smart boutiques and high-rise bank buildings
tl^ bespeak new and enormous wealth.
Those same streets also serve as a battleground.
People are getting killed with increasing regularity as the citys Mafia clans settle old scores, eliminate rivals and tinten their hold on the worlds most lucrative criminal business - international drug trafficking.
Sure, Sicily is a lot different now than it was 30 years ago or so, at the time of The Godfather II, said Giusto Sciacchitano, one of two Palermo judges leading an\ investigation into the Mafias burgeoning drug trade. '
In those days, the Mafia was mainly in the countryside, coptroUing the agriculture business. Everybody knew everybody else and when someone got killed you knew why.
But Sicily has changed enormously since then ami the Mhfia has changed with it.
Sciacchitano, interviwed in his second floor office in Palkrmos heavily guarded Justice Palace building, e]q)lained;
First, the Mafia moved to Palermo and took over the building trades. If you wanted to build, you had to deal with them or there was no concrete, no steel or lumber.
Now everything has changed again. Now the Mafia is running the drug business, all of it.
Palermo now is the world capital of drug refining.
Marseille used to be the acknowledge capital of world drug trafficking. Opium produce in Asia and Turkey was smuggle to the French port city, refine into heroin ae then shippe to the Unite States for distribution by the American version of the Mafia, the Cosa Nostra.
The operation was known as The French Connection.
Palermo was just a smugglers transit point.
All that began to change when international police coo^ration resulte in the arrests of most of the French and Cqrkican smugglers and the closure of the Marseille refineries.
Iq 1977, Sciacchitano said, the Sicilians made their move and took over from the French. The Mafia dons and their American cousins in the Cosa Nostra then controUe the two most valuable ends of the heroin trade - refining and street sales.
The (Mafia) families now have it very much the way they like it, said Sciacchitano.
Most of the families are divided between Palermo and the United States, with each side controlling its end of the business and working very loyally with the other. They are part of the same family so everting is well organized.
The heroin goes to the United States, the money comes back here. Needless to say, the amount of money involved is enormous.
Italian investigators estimate Palermos Mafia families take in about $1.3 billion a year from heroin. About half comes from their shipments to the United States.
The Mafia launders the money through the banks and most of it ends up in the family-controlled building industry, said Sciacchitano. A^ modem multinational corporation could not be more efficient.
All that money has transformed Palermo.
New bank branches are ^ning all over the city. The Banca di Sicilia is expanding its high-rise central headquarters building. The new boutiques along the Via Ruggero Settimo shopping arcade are filled with the latest Paris and Milan fashions, Burberry coats from London, Rolex and Piaget watches from Switzerland.
The most exclusive restaurant in town, the Charleston, has a 1920s Chicago decor, international cuisine and up-Unlate New York prices. The citys Punta Raisi airport has a brand new international terminal that is doing increasing business in charter flights between Palermo and New Yofk.
Trying to keep track of all this wealth pouring into Sicily is magistrate Giovanni Falcone, who last year ordered the prosecution of 36 Mafia dons accused of running the worldwide drug business.
Five families control the heroin traffic between Sicily and the United States, said Falcone. But trying to keep iq> with the alliances between them is virtually impossible. They keep changing almost every day.
Those shifting alliances are what makes Palermos streets so dangerous. Every time a faction changes sides, pe(q)le get kUled.
Though Falcone and Sciacchitano agree that its getting hard to tell one faction from another, it is generally agreed that the younger and more ruthless gangsters are winning out over the more traditional Mafia dons.
Old guard gangsters such as Luciano Liggio and Tommaso Buscetta are are out of the picture now.
Liggio, the legendary Mafia boss of Corleone, 38 miles south of Palermo, has been in jail since 1974. Many in Sicily believe Liggio, 59, still directs underworld activities from his cell in the Fossombrone prison on the Italian mainland. But Palermo investigators are sceptical.
Buscetta, a key drug trafficker, disappeared after fleeing Sicily and turning up for a time in New York. He is now believed to be involved in cocaine smuggling between Brazil, Colombia and the United States.
Men who followed old line dons like Liggio and Buscetta are losing their battle for control of the drug business to younger, relatively unknown men who use Soviet-made Kalatchnikov submachine guns instead of the more traditional sawed-off shotgun.
In one 24-hour period in April, the new men gunned down 12 followers of the traditional clans. More than 100 gangsters have been killed in Palermo each year since the Mafia war began in earnest in 1979.
Besides modem weaponry and the latest business techniques, the new Mafia men have introduced another, even more radical innovation into the drug trade - women.
In April Palermo police identified seven Mafia women they
Mowers Should Read The Book
CHICAGO (AP) - For safetys sake when mowing lawn, play it by the
Failure to review the oper-atoifs manual for mowing equipment at the beginning of each summer can lead to trouble, says Robert Tracinski of John Deere, a maler of mowing equipment.
TV manuals directions and safety messages can
help prevent injury and, at the same time, it contains information on proper maintenance procedures and precautkms.
AH a person has to do is to forget something like clearing the lawn of hazardous debris- sticks,* wire or rocks, Tracinski says. These things can be thrown by the Uades, and they can cause injury and-ur damage the blades.
say take an active part in the drug traffic between Sicily and the United States.
The women - sisters, wives or mistresses of Mafia dons -are carrying out roles such as keying track of the money, deliveriii^ orders to drug couriers and arranging heroin shipmmite, according to the pdice.
The iessrm that women can be very useful in the business comes from the United States, said Pino Arlacchi, a University of Cosenza sociology professor who specializes in studying the Mafia.
Though Palermo judges and police work closely with the U.S. Di^ Enforcement Agency, they have little hope of succeeding against the Mafia and its new style crime.
The M^ia is a thing that is almost intej^al in our society, even in the government and the apparatus of the state, says Judge Sciacchitano. Its not like terrorism, which is trying to destroy the state. It believes in order and is infiltrating the state and make it work its way.
When the Godfather movies were shown (m television
they were perhaps most closely followed in Corleone. the home town of Luciano Liggio. The old godfathers sister, Maria Antonietta Liggio, tells visitors she was one of the few people in the town who refused to watch either movie.
"Too much violence, she said.
Giovanni Marino, a teenager who described himself as Liggios nephew, watched the movies but said they had it all wrong about Corleone and the Mafia.
People here are respectable and mind their own business, said Marino. Everybody knows theres no such thing as the Mafia.
Seedless
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4<^The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Wedneaday, July 13,193
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PEPSI COLA, PEPSI FREE
2 LITER BOTTLE
: 1983 J.C Panny Company, Inc. S4W24. Soma itami in this book ara avallabla only at largor JCPannay atorsa. Spaclals and cloia-outs aro avallablo only whila quantltlos last. Intarmodlata markdowns may hava boon takon and wo rasorvo tho right to limit quantltlos Salo pricos otfactlve thru this waek-endEVENT STARTS THURSDAY, JULY 14 and ENDS SUNDAY, JULY 17
GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA PITT PLAZA Shop 10:00am to 9:00pm Daily Store Phone 756-1190 Catalog Phone 756-2145
Advertising Supplement to THE DAILY REFLECTOR .
Save^ to H on oxford shirts and slacks for
Update on the classics. The pastel oxford shirt in easy-care poly/cotton keeps its traditional details.
For girts: Reg.
Striped oxford shirt, 7-14.....$ 9
Belted Pant, 7-14 reg.
and slim......... $15
Belted Pant, 4-6x reg.
and slim ....... $12
Belted Pant, Jr. Hi. sizes $17
Belted Skirt, 7-14...........$14
For boys:
Oxford shirt, 8-16...........$ 9
Belted Pant, 8-16...........$14
Belted Pant, 4-7............$12
Belted Pant, Prep sizes $16Save 25%lid-summer dreamers!
Beautiful nylon sleepwear, detailed to perfection, then lightly touched with lace. In delicate shades. Misses' sizes.
Reg. Salo
Long gown................. $14 9.99
Waltz-length gown .................$12 8.99
Waltz-length sleepcoat..............$16 11.99Save 25%Pretty appliqued separates.
Appliques look great on our cool summer separates. Polyester T-shirt and poly/cotton wrap skirt in fashion-bright colors with assorted applique trim. Misses sizes.
Reg. Sale
Applique top............ $13 9.75
Applique skirt................ $21 15.75
*2 to 5 off adidas^ tops and shorts for the whole team.
Reg. $12 to $15. Outfit the whole team in sport fashions by adidas Great looking tops and shorts, some with smart triple-stripe trim. And all at the same low price! Mens shorts and V-neck top in S, M, L, XL. In a choice of white with red or blue, or burgundy/silver. Misses cap sleeve shirt and pull-on shorts in S, M, L. In pretty powder blue, aqua, navy or white. For the kids, a stripe-trimmed shirt and drawstring shorts in white with contrasting trim or burgundy/silver. Youths sizes S, M, L.
VISA'
Sale
19.99
adidas'Jupiters for men and
women.
Reg. 23.99. Save $4 on adidas Jupiter shoes with nylon uppers and suede leather trim. Padded collar, rubber outsoles. Mens sizes in navyAvhite or silver/navy. Womens sizes in navy/powder blue or white/powder blue.
5.99 twin
20% to 50% off smooth percale sheets in solids, stripes and florals.
Sale
5.99
Park Place, sophisticated stripes.
Park Place, the ultimate in contemporary striped bedding. A unique combination of bold and subtle stripes printed on a soft taupe background. Easy care poly/cotton percales.
Flat and fitted sheets are the same price.
Reg.
Twin sheet............... 7.99
Full sheet................9.99
2 standard cases..........7.99
Sale
5.99
7.99
6.99
VISA'
w
Sale 3.99
Early Spring, a bedroom bouquet
Pretty pastel flowers abloom bn a white background look as fresh and crisp as springtime. Printed percales in poly/cotton for easy-care. Flat and fitted sheets are the same price.
Reg.
Twin sheet.............. 7.99
Full sheet........... , 9.99
2 standard cases......... 7,99
Queen sheet........... 15.99
2 queen cases........... 8.99
TWIN
Sale
3.99
5.99
4.99 11.99
5.99
Sale 4.79
Solid percales, in luscious colors.
Weve got a palette of color-coordinated solid percales to mix and match with printed sheets, or use alone. Poly/cotton in tones of blue, camel, green, coral and much more. Flat and fitted sheets are the same price.
Reg. Sala
Twin sheet.............. 7.99 4.79
Full sheet............... 9.99 6.99
Queen sheet.............15.99 12.79
King sheet.............. 18.99 15.19
2 standard cases......... 7,99 6.39
TWIN
SsIg 3i39twin
Natures Garden, abundant with blooms.
Your bedroom will bloom year-round with Natures Garden, our pretty poly/cotton percales. Soft pastel flowers on a white background. Flat and fitted sheets are the same price.
Twin sheet.............. 7.99 3.99
Full sheet......... 9.99 5.99
2 standard cases......... 7.99 4.99
Queen sheet ..... 15.99 11.99
2 queen cases........... 8.99 5.99
King sheet .... 18.99 13.99
Sale 3.99 to799
*1 toHoff
deluxe
bath
towels,
including
the
XPenney
towel.
Sale
4.99 B.TH
The JCPenney towel, bath-time luxury.
The JCPenney towel is the one thats showing up in so many beautiful bathrooms.
Our thick and thirsty cotton/poly towels are luxurious and soft. In 15 glorious colors. Here are just a few: vanilla, coffee, ocean blue, cinnamon. Come see them all, and save!
Bath towel Hand towel V\feishcloth .
Reg.
7.00
5.00 2.50
Sale
4.99
4.49
2.19
VISA'Sale 7.99.Dynasty, our plush all-cotton towel.
Wrap up in the comfort of 100% cotton. With soft and thirsty towels available in 11 terrific colors. Like navy, espresso, jade and lots more. Come see for yourself, and feel the luxury of pure cotton.
Reg. Sale
Bath towel.......... .....$12 7.99
Hand towel...............$ 8 5.99
Washcloth........ .......$ 3 2.29Sale 3.99.Terri Suede, soft and sheared.
Cotton/polyester towels that feel so good.
Thirsty looped side is great after bathing, soft sheared side looks terrific with your bath accessories. In coffee, cinnamon, toast, blue and 8 more luscious colors.
Reg. Sale
Bath towel ........ 5.00 3.99
Hand towel............... 3.50 2.80
Wshcloth........ 2.00 1.60Sale 6.99.Super Touch, a new way with cotton.
A newly developed idea, this thick 100% cotton towel has no twist to the yarns. That means maximum absorbency. In 10 decorator \ colors: wine, ocean blue, vanilla, and more.
Reg. Sale
Bath towel .............. 10.00 6.99
Hand towel.............. 7.00 4.99
Washcloth........ 3.50 2.99
Save ^ on this wool bbnd suit.
Orig. $160. Our tropical weight polyester and wool blend suit has real executive styling. Jacket with traditional breast and flap pockets. Belt loop slack with button back pockets. In solids, stripes and fancies. Mens sizes: Regular, Short, Long. Intermediate markdowns may have been taken.Sale 7.99
Orig. $10. Save on handsome short sleeve button down dress shirts of 65% polyester, 35% cotton. Choose from white or blue. Long sleeve, orig. $12 Sale aS9.Sale 7.99
Orig. $15. Tie the knot on your suit with the finishing touch. Classic neckties of pure silk. In a great selection of patterns, prints, and stripes. Stock up!Save 40% to 50%
on Jet PaclC I nylon luggage.
Sale 5.99 to 15.99
Durable and lightweight Jet Pack I nylon luggage is styled to go places. Nylon webbing handles and shoulder straps. Great to fold up and stash in larger bags when traveling.
Water resistant, so theyre good for camping or the beach. In royal blue/red, tan/brown and other sporty combinations. Intermediate markdowns may have been taken.
Orig. Sale
Mini barrel bag............$10 5.99
Back pack/sport tote........$15 8.99
Sport duffle...............,$18 8.99
22" carry-on..............$20 11.99
Large overnighter..........$21 11.99
Garment bag...............$28 15.99
CPenney
Look Iraide for mora CaHng Fan
52" Brass & Wood Ceiling Fan
Your choice of antique brass or bright brass finish
Quiet 3-speed energy efficient motor
Reversible oi^ation for summer and winter
Natural wood blades
8499
g Each
Save This Circular! These prices are good through July 23,1983.
Treated Fence Boards
WTop
Pressure treated to last a llfetifne
Stain, paint or let weather
7Q0-
3' Repiacement Patk) Door Screen
Tubular frame construction for durability and long life
22^
Attic Stairway
Rugged construction lor maximum load capacity
Makes attic storage possible
Extends to 8'9"
39*8
Blacktop
Coating
Low cost asphalt driveway care
Easy to apply
C99
S-Gat.
4' Wrought Iron Railing
Easy to install ornamental iron will enhance the safety, beauty and value of your home.
Hush Puppies Work Gloves
Great quality at a low pricel
Ideal for all indoor and outdoor profects-gardening, lawn work or painting.
Pair Bfuthed Pfgskln
6.79
Pressure Treated Lumber
Pressure treated to last a lifetime
Ideal for fence rails, planters and other outdoor projects.
Entry Lock
HARLOC
Replaces most existing locks
Easy to install
WIckes Low Price...
2"x4"x8'
SAVE THIS OnCUlAR- PRICES 0000 THROUOH JUlV 23H9 IIM oiN MMcMon to mtontim lh pncw in m eirculw ixtolJulif 23 1983 Ho to iptoCtoi circuniManeM Iwyond out control my man. it nKMSxry toncranoorroduoolhopncaiMtorotwldMi Poi OJiantoM.unutuaiinarlioi commons ki many commoOi-*aa may raauli HI pnoa ftictoaaona Mai torn circula) to auad In iucii caaaa. tos raaatva too nghi to raviM out pnoaa Vou nil Da noakad oi vw okanga atom ston pnoi to prooaaamg your Durchasa
WIckes Lumber... Your Best Choice!
ISOO Oommtoam BM 304 Hwy IWBy'passS 239 Ok) MayMO Rd 1310Hwy (919)793-3112 (919)279-9673 (919)633-6636 (919)739-8611 (804)793-9632 (919)923)131
MorahaadCNy
Highway 70 West (919) 726-6801
129 W Oraenville (919) 796-7144
Hwy 52 at Cashua 1333 East Main St
Fany Rd (803) 324-3140
(803)669-5101
933 Nonii Park Ava (919) 226-2401
504 E Broad Avenue (919) 899-9263
canton
701 S East Btvd (919)592-5101
Conway
1205 Laiieside Drive (803) 246-6224
900 Blossom Si (603)771-7110
7090 Howard SI (603) 583-3613
Sadabury Cayea
1618 Salisbury Blvd. Wesi 2100 Charleslon Hwy (704) 636-5843 (803) 796-9870
WHmlngloo
5415 Market St (919) 799-0986
ula manager will be nappy lo order ihis Hem lor you al the same advertised
sale price we same item is nol avadabte loi%-order. Die manager will make available to you a compilable, item ol the same value at the advertised price % Page
Wictes
Lumber
Wckes has fans to fit any budget.. .any decor!
48'* Tropical Broeze
Brom dcortttv
Wmml Wfwl OT WOOO
bMM
Nwvyduty
52" Tropical
Brotza
Dduxt
Broum dtcoraliw* Man
3<|Mtd iMtnla* nenee-liee reversing
e -epeee memw
^336" Caribbean Ceiling Fan
5 speed wall mounted control
Easy do-lt-yourself installation Ideal tor rooms up to 9*x IZ' in size
Ssrot anargr In the Mummnr and winteri
Walnut brown with anquebraaa
wWalN Wmi
-----^ 1 t
OOBO WOOO DMOM m
a walnut alalnad Wniah
Everything you need to re-do a room from top to bottom!
Ceilings ^rnstrong
* Grenoble
2*x4'Lsy-ln Pand orirxirTle
Textured surface
Washable for easy care
DoalOiiirRoom ForAa LowA$.....
34.80
29
c
Sq. Ft
Floorings (^mstrong
Vemai Vinyl
. Sall-Mlwslva back for easy
installation
Each
Styllstik Vinyl Tile
Self-adhesive back for easy installation
Paneling
Ught Oak
1/4" woodgrain reproduction on lauan plywood
Washable with soap & water
Terrace Ught Birch Frost White
Cutting
Guide
"8M*Cur
Get professionsi accuracy and preciaron cute wNh any power tool
Perfect cuti from 4 to8'6""amueltora profaeaional pansi* mg job
Works wnii any dr-cuiarsaw.reMlw.Jlo aw or sabre saw.
12
a 5/32" light woodgrain reproduction on plywood Washable with soap & water
You Sava 11W
a 1 /8 moalture and scratch resistant finish on hardboard a Resists stains 4 fading
You Save 11%!
fi88
m M 4x8'Sheet
flBxm
Terrace Walnut
a 5/32" medium dark woodgrain reproduction on plywood
WIckes Low Price
4xr Sheet
Wickes is your best choice!Doors and windows from Wickes
Insulation
Insulation
Board
1" styrene
Our most economical foam sheathing
A versatile energy
3/4" Styrofoam^_^^^ Sheathing
a High performance thermal insulation board
nw Mghar Vw ft-vaiua. tw graalar aw hwuWlng piwacaaklorR-vaiualMl
4x8'8heei
R-3.8*
nberglass Insulation
31/r R-11*
Krill Faced
a Ideal for waHs 4 floors
a Handy stapling flange
Sq. Ft
Page 2
Gypsum
4x8
Walboard
Panels
a Low-cost walls!
a Resists fire and rotting
a Limitless decorating poesibilities
a Other sizes in stock
1/2"x4'x8'
Sheet
Asbestos-Free Joint Compound
699 5 Oal Pa
8' Sheet
1(T Sheet .5.99 a12* Sheet .6.99
Patio Doors
n 6 Wood Hinged Patio Door
a Our bast sailing patio door! a Quality constructed from Ponderosa Pina and treated with wetar-repellant preaervatlva.
a Insulating glass and full waather-etrippmg
NUDOR
419^
Grids optional
6' Bronze Patio Door
a Our fhtasl alum. pBvO ooon
a Heavy-duty construction with steal rollara lor smooth operation a 5/8" insulating aafaty glass
189^
IP Screen Included ^
Entrance Doors
6 Panel
Steel
Doors
a Prehurtg in frame for easy inataliation
Inaulalad-aaves energy and provides security a Other sizes 4 styles available
WIckBS Low Price...
109
Wood
Double
jng
ind(
Window
a Colonial style 6/6
lite single glazed
Completely assembled
Western Ponderosa Pine
Each
Qlsaa Size 2/0 x 3/2
Rough Opening: 2-2 1/2"x 3-5/8;
Fiberglass
Shingles
CertairifeedH Glassguard
] Plastic Roof Cement
Patch cracks and breaks ir^ root surfaces and around flashings
20-yMT HmiM warranty-good to the year 2003
UL daas A" fire and wind ratod
Self-aaaling to form a tight, tou^h bond agairtal weather.
Fiberglaes mat resists mold & mildew and rerhicas curling and rotting.
More coating asphalt for belter durability
769
Bundle
] Fibered Roof Coating
>!edw(l(l
Stain
Paint and stains!
Latex Redwood Stain
Magicolor
This weather rosistBnt stain woni crack, peel or blister
tdaal for Intarior or exterior use
Cleans up with water
Wckes Low Price...
,4'' i'ji
NaturalWood
ProMivsllv#
Rssiali mNdew. rot and decay
ReWrds aging pro-osas of new wood
Olympic Overcoat
Tough, acrylic house paint I Goes on smooth, cleans up last
j Olympic
Weatherecroen
Preserves wood and repels water. Guards against mildew, rot and decay.
1-Qal. Pail
5-Gai. Pail... 13.99
Preserves and waterproofs a variety of roof and outside wall surfaces
1-Qal. Pail
S-GaU PaH .. .13.99
Painted Roof Gutter
a Your choice of white or brown
a Full 5" width-K" style a All accessories in stock
5' Aiuminum Step Ladder
a Full 3" side rails Steps feature slip resistant surface and double rivets
KCIiCI?
OJ88
Each
Wickes has tools for every project!
Wickes is your best choice!
steel Fiat Square
a 1 /8 graduations on lace & back
Lacquered finish
20' Powerlock Tape Rule
3/4 blade, power return.
SMS
Electric Staple Gun
Fast, easy trigger operation
Oxygen Pfopane Torch
Everytning you need to braze, cut, solder or weld. Perleci tor home, shop or kum
Save
Over 25%
MHiri-
24??
Steel Loop Hammer Holder
1^
Electrical Wire (Ul
Plastic sheathed cable lor interior use ^
14/2 W/G
3.99
6.99
11.99 19.49
128
I Eech
Keeps your hammer within easy reach
Cradle design holds, hammer snuggly
StreOvoPdOfo
Web Work Belt
The profaaaional's choice
e Cotton web belt tor heavy tool
pouches A nail bags
Save Oyer 27%
088
Escti
Nail & Tool Bag
Heavy-duty top grain leather
Professional quality
2-hammer .holders
B-pocket design
Says Oysr 20%/
10??
ilass
Box
Fiberj Electr
18-cubic inch single gang switch box with captive nails
Lightweight
28
Eech
steel Utility Box
e 4'2 116" steal handy box wHh 1/2' knockouts e Ouali^ steel .
boxes built for suength
and safety. Each
48" Cool White Fluorescent Tube
Low 40-wan lamp saves energy with high light output
991
100' Heavy Duty Extension Cord
16/3 Orange vinyl extension cord
e Haavy-duty cord lor outdoor or indoor
Electronic Light Timer
e Replaces any ordinary light witch lor programmed "on-ofT light secunty e Program up to 48 settings per 24-hrs
14??
20" Whole House Fan
di
Quiet, complete 3-speed direct-drive package Easy-to-install in ceiling Includes fan shutter, switch metal plenum.
129!
30" Whole House Fan
Direct drive A O QflS quiet IOwEk*'
30" Wkole Houw Shultar -C99
Installs flush "tWEachstorage buildings in Finish your garage vevery size and shape! a door from Wickes!
Storage Sheds
10'x9' Greenbriar
a 100% galv. steel parts and frame
Baked enamel weather resistant finish
Easy assembly; all parts pre-cut drilled and numbered. 4f\t
SAVE lU !
1695
10'x9' Stanton
a 100% galv. steel parts and frame
B. 17915
10x9'Estator
V Spacious storage with
J * built- in attic
S2399J*
Anchor KH ha OR
Protect ^ourinvastment against wind damage Ea.
r I Build it yourseH and save!
Garage Doors
Wood Garage Door
Quality wood construction includes glass
a Easy-to-install-instructions included
Many other styles andj, sizes available i a Model 18-24
119^5
Wood Garage Door
Quainy^iyood construction
169?
Wood Garage Door
Distinctive style & beauty
remier Digital arage C(oor Opener mm 159^8 Ewm
12x20'
Garage
Our most e.conomically priced yara^el
Package Includes:
a Construction Grade Studs
2x 4" Rafters
Primed Lap Siding
Rolled roofing
a 8'x 7 Garage Door a Trim and nails a Trim and nails a Optional sidings and roofing available
CNWXKMeUMM, ewLOMa coon roe MTieuif etowwKWTe
} Wickes Deluxe Garages
18x24'
1395>
24'x24'
1895
These fine garage packages contain everything you need to build a quality garage!
Package Includes:
Treated plate stock
2"x4 ' Studs
t Pre-assembled roof trusses
1/2" Plywood rool sheathing
15-Lb. roof felt paper
CHARGeIt \
Sell-sealiny (ui imy bhmgies
Garage dour w/hardware
12" Hardboard siding
Nails & caulk
Complete plans
Door and window options available on all models.
Page 3
Build A Deck From Wickes!
10'x14' Deluxe Deck Package
Featuring DECK PLANK.. .an an new product aetectad specifically for Wickes to give your deck that professionaJly finished look.
BuglOler
15-watt Uwk Rght bulb attracts flying Insedi
Lure ranga1/2 acre
Caulk or Gun
Acrylic lalax caulk
Qun provides smooth flow
Deck
Planks
awselMl 10 WIciMS own ipocMcoSoni tof unNomi. oonwowm quoMy M oppoMd to eomnwn oonotrucSon himbor and n oooli toM toot flSongl Spono 24* osntort la Mud dock (MS
KMh dried to roMi
Complete deck as iiiustrated at left.. .even the nails are included. Materials for plwiters opfional.
8'x 10' Patio Deck Package
)in9-
8'
10'
12'
14'
16'
3^
AM
BM
564
661
not inotuded
Packagt fcidudat
6-rx6'*xr Joists
a-rxe^xKr Skirt Boar
IT-rxlO* Deck Plank
aEAov-To-u8EQg2S3iD**'* vM IvDUIKWCTFaF
Concrete Mix
I,
Pre-mixed-iust add water
Wickes
Low
Price...
60-Lb. BagYour Best Choice... For Lumber!
Give Your House a New Look!
Each
rx4"x93"
Premiuin Studs
Our best quality kiln dried stud
Moats building code requirements e Precut for your convenience
Agency grade stamped
Wickes Low Price.,,
Spruce Boards
Top quality #2 boards - ideal where appearance really countsi
Compare these fine quality boards!
rxS" 35
1"x8.....468
Lin Ft 1"x4"
Grooved Hardboard
Primed hardboard siding with vertical grooves
A**-grade-backed by 25-yr warranty
Durable and weather-resistant
4x8'Sheei
Plywood Siding
5/8 T1-11 siding is agency certified to insure quality
Roughsawn plywood siding
Wickes
Low
Price...
1488
4'x8'Sheet
rnd 0/^53 Season-Supp/fos MarV , Be Limned!
Do-lt-Yoursetf With Wickes!
Special Fence Clearance!
Paiticieboard
Partideboard underlayment may be used for subflooring, shelves, bookcases & countertops
S/8''x4x8'Sheet\
Sanded Plywood
Good one side plywood with exterior glue
Agency approved to insure quality
1 /4x 4'x 8' Sheet
1/2"x4x8'......................12.88
3/4"x4'x8'................... .17.68
Treated Fence Boards
Dog*Eared
Resawn treated pine to last a lifetime
Stain, paint or let weather to an elegant silver-gray
Each 9/l6"x 6"x 6'
Stockade
PreMsembied sections for easy installation
Naturally beautiful and durable
Post Hole Digger
6"x9" heat treated steel blade 1 designed lor heavy soil I tach
Page 4
Easy Mount $QQ99
24 Attic Fan......
Whole house attic fan with 2 speeds & rubber mountings for quiet operation. Wall control & shutter extra. Ref. Price $109.99.131252
air* Whoto House ^29^
2-speed. ShVtterextrauRsf.* Price $139.99.131254
Vm
1^
Rotating Grii Box Fan
53499
3-speed fan. Grill box rotates. Ref. Price $39.99.139585
SaveHQO! ^xriattios Panel
Rag. $t1A Real wood. PiJnt, stain or leave natural. Use as room divider or accent. #10641
Save$1IL(asi*x7r Latlioe Poking DMder Screen S32J9
Regulv$e.& #10644
Lowes is your home hnprovement center wHh a wm variety of quality products at prices that wont nibi your budget
Keep Mud i
anoutof
The House
40-Piece Socket Ratchet Set
Save $1.00! 14x24 Cocoa Door Mat
$499
$299
V4 & 3/8 drive. Metric & SAE. Reference Price $7.99. #91452
Reg. ISJlLln 2 styles oval & rectangular. #16110
Louie's
onecont
Exterior Latex House Paint wo*
Reg. $1SJ9. Lowes Best! Fade resistant and non-yellowing. In stock colors. #49651-6
Wi
11-Ounce Cartridge Latex Aoylc Cat*........
Seals cracks. White. Ref. Price $1.99. #43472
^19
2Vx6*8 Screen Door
.$2U$Full 1178 thick. 4-panel unfinished door. Save $7.00! #11192
2x4x8
Economy Stud
99*
Versatile lumber for do-it-yourself protects. Ref. ftice $1.19. #07002
Clear
msmatmg
WMowiFIm
I^Sq.FL
Deflects 76% of suns heat. Works yearroundl Easy to use. #11244
-f-hrtpjrruvt
Save $50! Variable Power Microwave Whh Probe
$27999
Reg. $329JBl This model cooks by time with a 60-minute timer. And It cooks by temperature with a temp probe & settings from 80*-200* F. Variable power settings include defrost which is great for left-overs. A great buy! #51752
UpTo$750 Instant OedH!
Oioow From TWO Credtt Plana. 12*
Lowea CrodR Caid Or Our Nefw
Lew Pgymanl Cndl Plan.
Apply lodsyl You may qualify for up to $300 Instant Credit on Lowes Credit Card or up to $750 on our Low Psyment Plan wfw yw yoqr Visa Aiherican ^preas or ^terCar^Or
/^Louie's
Vbur Household word
1993 Lowes Companies, Inc.
July (076)
Special Prices In Effect Thru July 18,1983.
Store-Front Free Parking Ask About Our Installation Service Convenient Locations Check Ouf Stores Daily For Unadvertised Specials
SAVE$5M
Interior One Coat Latex Rat WalPaM
Rm. tMJlL Werrantod one coet coveraoe. 10-year durability. White and colore. iM7807-
Satin FWah INMIa Extarfoi Oaareoit
SAVESUa liMM^ Exterior SmMom
SA\fEfKU
Uwa^Baal
biMorFM
nt/t. 1(WL 8S
SAV$Uai
LoawVUtax
RMchiDack
Latex goes on easily. Ref. Price 120.95.146176
Rag. nUi. Fade
rMi^t. White & colors. #49671-3
Rag. mm Water
cleaiHip. Whites colors. #49601-6
Rag.$MmOil&
I resistant.
I colors. #49661-4
A
oom
Olympic Sou Color AcrySc Latex Stain
Gives a flexible, colorfast, beautiful finish. Fast drying, water dean up. Stock colors. Ref. Price S16.95. #46251-64
^'ardas .
' I AiAli-
nybco
SMaSmiUn-lluil
BwiMl,iyiCQloiB
Rsg.mLProlects nnm from rust. Just brush it on. #4645542
nokfurariwia High QloaeRnWi
Rag. mm Provides a mar-proof, tong-lasting surface. #46606
SaaamnMnl
m --------
m WiHn niMIMr
Fdrtough t and varnish removing I. Fast acting. #45615
Rag. mm
paint and jobs. Fast
YourChoioe
OffBmghes:
m^rorr
79L
Easy grip handles. Oufbe. Reference Price II m. #40196
AI-AipOM
S-OunmBmi
OfR^i
89^
Umforaworfc-siiop, etc. Raf. Price 11.19. #40496
QnmCelclwrFbr jLamn Boy MoNer
IZ3J..*.. #95158
11 H
36 Cut, Riding Mower
$94999
Features a Briggs & Stratton engine with 5 speeds fonarardpius reverse. Electric start with alternator. Cuttingheight memo^ with position, one pedal clutch and R^PriceH,im90. #95196
transport disc brake.
20 Cut, 4 HP Push-Mower
$22999
Manual starting, 4 HP rated engine with solid state ignition. 1-3 inch cutting height adjustment. ReforencePrice 1240.90. #95121
Cuts Grass Gown ToSbB
Electric
StringTrimmer
$Hft99
Cuts a wide 6" path. Designed for one hand operation. Ideal for trimming Hght weeds & grass. Reforence^922.90. #91W
PoMwr Bkxeir
A great labor saver. Has
a 130 mph air velocity. Ref. PriM 159.99. #91565
3Cublo-FMl Pine Bmc Mulch
Rag. mm Helps soil retain moisture. Stock up today. #92118
SWGWton OriMnfaHl Sprayer
*19*
Rag. mim Heavy solid brass nozzle adjusts from fine to coarse. #92483
WMinwi
99* *69.4^
Blades easily interchange Rag. m^ii For patching,
for various acrapingjoba. leroling. grouting, etc. '
Ref. Price m.40. #4004 Easy toWk with. #41357
OrarOancrali
HoorSeMir
V*
Rm mm Norr-yellowing, wnsr resistant Deep penetrating. #41296
10x9Anow
^eelSloiage
BuUtag
AN parts are 100% galvmiized. Double roof beams at ridge and amid weW brace provide extra atabNHy. Aaaeinbly required. Base size: 11S%x10S%x69% neference Price 1160.90. #02735
CLOSEOUT!
Were dosing out Qurenthelne of gas & twibeque grfe at 5% over store cost
Put a Httie extra flavor into your outdoor cookOUts with a gas or barbeque griii at Lowes dose-out prices!
These Timbers Are Treated To Resist Insects, Rot And Decay. Three Sizes.
7/16x12x16 Smooth Haidboard Lap Siding
1, combined with the iasting durabiiity of hardboard. Has a smooth, primed surface thats ready for painting. And the shipiap edges give you a good, tight fit. Easy to work with, too. Reference Price $6.69. #15602
3x5x8-Foot-Long Treated Landscape Timbers ............
Remodel your lawn & garden with these good-lookinj, rustic timbers at
fl<
S979
... MEach
Lowes low price. Build a planter. Border a flowerbed. Put up your own rail fence. Also In two other sizes (below). Reference Price $3.99. #04574
3x5x4 Treated Ijndscape Tfenbeis.............$1.90 Ea. Reference Price $2.49 #04576
3x2%xr Treated landscape TMbars...........$1.99 Ea. Reference Price $2.40 #04581
Used Cross-Ties Or 6x6x8 Landscape Ties For Only
5/8x4x8 Reverse Board And Batten Pine Siding............
Real pine plywood siding in a reverse board & batten pattern that creates a wood plank effect. Tough and long-lasting. And it can be painted or stained as desired. Also makes very good-looking indoor paneling. Reference Price $21.49. #12936
HI. MASONITE
Woodsman Plank Siding
Each
The Cross-Ties are roughly rx9 and are about 86 long. Bther of these ties can be used to buikJ steps, etc. Ref. Price $9.90. #04575,3
_ 4xr Regular $16.40. Remodel your homes exterior with this durable, cedar-look hardboard panel. #15614
ZVrOmbaSUng Nrib. 1-Pound Box.... 90* Ragdv$1J0 #69200
A.
Fence Panel
Add some extra privacy with our do-lt-yourself wood fencing. Pre-assembled panels. Ref. Price $29.99. #92313
B. Treated Stockade $9Q99 Fence Panel, 6x8
Its treated to resist decay and insects, and it will weather to a natural grey. Ref. Price $39.99. #92326
c. Treated Basketwefl|^.
Fence Panel, 6x8. . ____
Interwoven wood ribbons createabeautiful panel that resists decay and insects. ^M|(^|39.99. #92325
MuM-Pbpoee 2x2 Lumber
9c
IIL UraaarFbol*
Linear Foot: A one-foot rdlessofthe kness. #04505
length, regai width &thicl(
$2999
%x12x4
tmU n nmwi II
rWuCWDoafu onoMng
S^19
Good-looking,, economical shelving that s paintable. Ref. Price $1.39. #01385 1#xirxrPafllcWxMid Sh#*ig, IZA #01386
Vinap Double Lap WWe Vinyl Siding
$A69
*12
This solid vinyl, wood-look siding has a 50-year limited warranty, so you can forget about painting. Eacn piece looks, likjB two 4 planks. #17423
Shop Lowers For AK Your Oukloor Needs
All-Lb. Boxes BrMit Common Or Cement, Coated NaHs
59L
Regukr 79*. Choose from several slzes;
At one terrific, low price. 169000
%x4x8* BC ...
Sanded Pine Plywood
For use in a wide rarige'df home projects. Sanded on one side for paint, stalri. Ref. Price $20.09. #12229
V4"x4x8 Lauan PfyWobd .............. $8.49
Can be painted or stained. Ref. Price $11.99. #12201
V4x2x2
Exterior Plywood 8^79
Smooth-finished on one side for paint or stain. Ref. Price $2.49. #07701
HITS Time To Re-Roof, Loetes Has You Covered
Bk Presiiqiie II
#2
Rooling Shingles
Premium grade fitwrglass. top of the line shingles have the look of wood shakes. Limited 25 year warranty. Come in today. Ref. Price 116.90. #15055,6.7.8.0
WH Your Stonge BirikSng Weather The Next Stom?
Green, White Or Bbck Asphalt II90 Ron Roofing
rxarRoi
Heavy felt base double coated with asphalt mineral finish. Excelient for farm sheds, garages, etc. Reference Price $15.79. #10280,5.90
4-SqtiareRol #15Rooffi
IngFeH
kteai for use over roof decking. Each roll covers about 400 sq. ft. fSS Reference Price $11.90. #1(
< 1 Lb. Vi GalvanizBd
RoofNals.....
RogidarSO*.........
79
#60178
rStemmrn
OootSj^im
V Long ZVz
Ridge, Corrugated Galvanized Roofing
Each
Regukr ISA Provides a full 2 foot wide coverage after overlapping. Ughtweight yet sturdy. Easy to work with. #12473
$459
oalvanized. #12510
iLb.BoxiW $4 59 QalvanbedNals ..T1
Ragulv$1A With washer. #60195
SAVES1.S0!
1-Galon Roof Cement
SAVES1.00!
5-Galons Rbered RoofGoat|ni(|
19
Exterior
rrooor
$4999
RsgulwSniflL
Lauan door comes unfinished. thick. #10580
Regular $148. Forms a ' flexible seal around vents, chimneys, etc. #10320
... Retains flexibility after long exposure. #10324
SAyE$3.aO!
5-QaL Aluminum RObf Coating
$2999
Regular $3ZJIl Specially recommended for mobile homes. #10325
SAVE moa
YOUR CHOICE
SBronze Or While Aluminum Palio Door
99
SAVES2S
e-Ftet
Insulated
PatloDoor
*149
Ragdte$mJlL
Hasadurable akiminum frame with a security latch. #13017
SAE$30Lm
rrDoor
RagdvSmfli
9 Hte unit Prehung in its own frame. #1811,12
Our best door unit Insulated keep COM wet weather out. bidiides key lock, handle and screen. #12987,8
ENERGY SAVINGS Patio Door Stonn Door
*109
MiH finish. Keeps inclement weather on the outside. Ref. Price $149.99. #15676.7
SAVEsaja
rrStannOoor
5MVE$&aor
23W*x3r^
StamiSMh
Wealherstripped aluminum frame. WHh latch. #11131,2
rSnA
Seats out rough weather. Comes unfinished. #13132
Exterior SDoor
$1^99
RcgutwifiLaL
Lauan door comes unfinished.1% thick. #10581
SAVE
PLOa
2* Lauan
Interior
OoorUnH
*23
ReouterSZ7A
Pfe-hung in Its bWhframe. Casing extrajf81900,01
^Glno$2Je
Reference Price $3J0L #02936
Rsgtermm
IV^ttrk*. Comes unfinished. Lauan door. #10583
9Ute,rr
Door
69
Exterior door.
144 thick. Comes unfinished. #10584
M1S
3y* Hfgh Exterior ^ . Vfnyl Shuttere........ J
Ragiiiv$fiaL Made of durable wood grain vinyl. Wllfnorrot, split or warp. Available in black or white. #12852,60
SM*S7J02-Fot $Oi|99 n-FaU UNMwed Door^4
Rtguhr $31A Comes with track and hardware. Ready to paint or stain. 110535
Lowes cantos a whte sdedion of U-fokl door abes at pifees. Come see them
iK5?ir:.........
RnWw ItlfLfli Opens doors as wide as 18 ft hy7ft Ngh. WHh courtesy light. fllOOl
.^59
Rsgslv IHSfli Has a builHn reverse saf^feature. Easy-to-instail. #11002 ExksDlgariTnnMMar ftlOB .....8UI
A.8ave$4.Q0IFIu8hr LauanBi-FdldDoor ,
^7
Rag. blA WHh track and hardware. Unfinished. #10712
a. Save HQK Reptooemsnl Palto Scraen
Save today. #tB2.13000
c.Soe$3a(n9rx7QlB28d Wood Garage Door
139*
Rra>tNUL Roli-up door with track & hardware. #11030
0. Save ROOI Garage
aea- , a
uoof WMiinsrMM. 11"r*i
Bronze or white. #11009,96
A. 10* Section White
Aiuminum Gutter.....
Reg. $5A Lightweight yet durable. Gutter comes prepainted for easy do-it-yourself installation and maintenance. #11551
$499
I
Ilf Section Brown Aluminum Gutter...
Lightweight and prepainted for easy installation and maintenance. Reference Price $6.99. #11585
B.20Rol Vinyl Gutter Guard......
R8gurwb.1ii Keeps leaves artd twigs out of gutter. Cuts with scissors. #116U
c. Downspout Strainer...........
Prevents twigs,leaves and other debris from clogging downspout. Ref. Price 09*. #11614
D. Gutter
Splashdown......
Rsgukr SSJa Directs water away from the downspout for better drainage. #11629
DOOR
AddatouAol deoonribe beauty to your home wiw ioM^ omemental imniaHnti.
A22V4x22y4
Surface Mount Skylte
Ragular StoSBL Maintenance free Available thru catalog sales. #14157
B.22y4x22V4
Curb Mount Skylte
Ragutar $44A High impact strength. Available thru catalog sales. #14154
4
38*
57
SAVE$11.00!
2*x3*2Wood Insulating Window Regular $81199. Complete weather stripping assures maximum efficiency. Made of treated Ponderosa Pine to resist rot & insects. Available thru Lowes catalog sales. #17942
SAVESim Shutter Set.....
Ragulto$AL Adds warmth and richness to any room. Perfect also for cabinets, bookcases, etc. #12802
$22999
Save $45! Insulated Garden Window...
Rcgulv W*M. Brings your garden inside with a ray of sunshine. Heavy-duty hardwrb. Choose from other sizes at varying costs. #19440
4* Section Economy IrenRiBng
$4M
(adjustable. For indoor or outdoor use. Reference Price 38.99. #14215
CSedonSuprame
honRMbig
Our best 4 ft. iron railing. Primed and ready to paint. Reference Price 18.99. #14205
r2-scral
Flat Column
*11
Column is 8 high and 10 wide. Primed. Ready to paint. Reference Price 113.90. #14281
Save $2.00! 5-Galon Driveway Sealer
RsgukrlSA Renews and protects all blacktop driveways. Dries quickly. #10272
5-GalonCanof
Sealer&FMer
Ragutar IBJBi Seals and protects against weather, gasoline, oil, etc. #10271 1 Galon Of Crack Flsr Reg. 34.99. #1027312J0
Prefinished 12x48 Great Random Shakes
Re-aide your houM wNh
-aa- _ a a. ^
mo QBonciivo kxnc oi
GraelRaidomalutoe
8idhg.ViaCiiWogSetoe.
Regutor $3.191 Has a lovely rustic design embossed with graining and distress markings. 7/18 thick. Hardboard base.
Mulli-Piffpose Tool Box.......
TMs ir* melal box faalurM a Hfl-out tnqr wWi lote handte, padlock M & norust cany haniM. FtoTPrfoo S1I99.191471
oohdM aUm mSoik9UI anofmeki
A. 13 Double-Edged
Trimmer
Heavy-Duty
ToolChest
199
This trimmers double-edged blades cut in any direction. The safety switch locks on & turns off at a touch of the trigger. Ref. Price $32.99.191556
B. Gas Poivered String Trimmer
S13999
This string trimmer has a 26.2 cc, 2-cyde engine for heavy-duty trimming performance. It cuts a 17 path. Auto line advance. Ref. Price I1M.99.191572
AH steel construction. 2-part chest with removable top tool box with 3 drawers. Bottom cabinet has shelf and tool hangers. Ref. Price. $79.99.191489
Round PoM ShOMi
One of the necaasitias of oardening. WHh 4T hwKfla. Raf. Price. IB.. 199777
Stmim CMmHon
i
Hm Tafkxv^* coated Bte biadas A hardwootMwndlas. Ref. Price $10.. IM787
*19
TMs faaliNsatHx4" blada wWi wsMsd head. handla.
RBf.Prioa.$7.liB7B7
40-PtBce
TootSet..............
A necestety for the handyman, do-it-yourselfer or the professionalt This tool set Includes screwdrivers, sockets & ail toois you use most often - in a sturdy plastic carrying case. Ref. Price $24.99.191454
3-PlmVioB
WimchSet
3 sizae of vice wrenches for iMidoing nuts A bolts. Rsf. Price $16. 191461
Flat, stable A knot free, can be painted or stained. Rsf. Price $7. #122
Becky Mountain CusteHmait Lumber
1x4x4*.
....99
1x4x6*..
.....$1J9
1x4xT......
..$2.49
1x6x4*.
..$1.79
1x6x6* .
...$2.69
1x8x8*.....
.$3.40
1x8x4*.
..$2.19
1x8x6* .
...$3.29
1x8x8*......
.$4J9
1x10x4*
..$2J9
1x10x6*
...$4.49
1x10x8* ....
.$5.48
1x12x4*
..$3.99
1x12 xT
...$5.99
1x12x8* ....
.$7.49
WHiBMe
Frame adjusts to4 cutting anglas. Plate steel blade. Rd. Price $3. #99635
24-kich
Aluminum Level
S599
2 vials are accurately set In permanent slots. Great buy! Ref. Price $7.49.199674
6-Pleoe
SorawrirtverSel
89"
I tip, 3" A 6" cabinet and f1 A12 milips. Ref. Price. 191526
10* Section Cedar SfM Rrii Fence..
Handspiit rad cedar naturally resists rot and Inaecta. This fendng section indudea 2 raHs and one 5* tall line pMt tp make alOr aeclion. Ref. Price $17. I923.e 6
1x2x8* Funfng Strip
This furring strip I
ing strip lumber is suitable for
I lumber is alap great as tomato stakes, etc. Reference Price 72* . #04592
Bright Brass
Paage Latch .v....
2-plece interior latch set is Msyto attach to your bedroom, bathroom or doset door. This lateh set does not have a16cklng dviee. Its a polished brass finish goes with any decor. Ref. Price .W. #245
Brass Finish $799 BitanceLock.....#
This 2-piece exterior lock set has a key kwUng^device on the outside A a pushbutton lock on the inside. Reference Price . 85240
Save 15% On 12 Comigated Cutvert Pipe
_ Length $120. For driveway culverts, slope or surface drains, etc. Wont misalign in unstable soils. Abrasion resistant. #24109
Comigated 4
Sold Drain Pipe
Solves drainage and water handling problems. Flexible Reference Price 29* .#24112
The Energy-Savers!
A. 40-Galon BecMc Water Heater
139
Ernm-BMdtnU
Features an adjustable thermostat plus a pressure relief valve (not shown). Come in today. Reference Price $169.99. #26302
B. -Galon Gas Water Heater
$14099
i flT* * **
ImIQvB w^CiMwwC&^nO
Pressure relief valve (not shown). Mas an adjustable thermostat. Natural gas. Via cataiog sales. Ref. Price $189.99. #26314
$AVE$10!
Deluxe 22x32x7 Deep Stainless Steel Sink
Sm40%! W* CPVC 90 Degree Elbow Fitting
12*
Rea. ar . Easy to work witFi. Durable. #23755
Sae29%!Qest \^xS Fool Long rowpuiywne
rSocSon
Rre $IJS Will not rust or Hake. #22752
SMtfnu^^xs*
^ * ^ ^ ^ tlkhA
Save 28%! CPVC %x10 Foot Long Hol&CoidPipe
Xr Section
Rre. SZA Ughtweight but strong. #237M
Save $1.21! %W Hots Cold CPVC Pipe $969
> xrSactlan Rag. SlflL #23751
Save34%OnTHs
%-lnchCPVC
Couping
19*
Each
Rre- 8*. Fits securely into place. #23761
A.Save$iaOO! 20-Ciicuit, 100-Amp Panel Box
Ragiv$7iL9SL Panel box comes with a main circuit breaker and tight fitting front cover. Has a baked on enamel finish. #71^1
&Sm$ZJU14/2 Coppof Cabte
VM
Regular $8.98. For indoor use as electrical wiring. Coms with ground. #70006
c. Save 20%! Old Woilc Box & Ctamps
Regular 99* . Made of durable plastic. Easy installation for the do-it-yourselfer. #70990
Save 16%! U.L Usted Brown Or Ivory $459
Electiical Outlet I
Ran. SIJB. For indoor use. Ideal for 2 prong small appliances. #70732,42
Save 33%! U.L Usted Grounded ^
Single Pole Switch......
Reg 199. Grounded wallswitch. Comes In brown or ivory. Easy-to-install. #70730,40
$;^99
Faawl Regular $54.99. Fully soundproof bowls. Self rimming for easy installation. #26026
$4499
SAVE $10.00!
A. Single Lever
Faucet & Spray...........V
Reg. 554.99. Attractive single lever handle provides fingsdip control for precise temperature and water ficw. Chrome plated for beauty. Washerless. #24829
B. Save SiaOO! Dual SO A99
Control Faucet....................
Reguiw $49.91 Easy-to-tum, clear acrylic handles. Washerless design. Chrome plated. #24823
Save$ia00f
Lavatory
Faucet
Save $5.00!
Oak Paper
11^__
noner
Save $6.00! 30 Oak Towel Bar
Ragulw$44A
Comes with pop-up. Washerless. Chrome plated. #24933
Regulw$14Ja.
Brass on solid oak. Gives your bath a look of distinctive beauty. #25273
RagUtar$1IJ8i
Brass on solid oak. We carry other oak bath accessories. Save today! #25281
Save $7.00! Fan/Light Combination
Regular $39199. Fits a 4 inch round duct. Super quiet fan. Bulb not included. #25504
A. Save $10.00! SQQ99 Tub/Shower Set Owl
Regular $49.99. Features a non-corrosive base plate that cleans easily. Durable chrome plated beauty. Handsome design. #24854
B. Save $5.00!
Tub/Shower Set...
Regular $54.99. Its washerless design eliminates the cause of most dripping and leaking. Easy grip smoked acrylic handles. #24835
$4999
A.Sm$3aXTolet Hook-Up KH...............:
Regular $15.99. Contains all of the neccessary parts for a complete installation. Includes easy to follow instructions. #25101,2
B. Save $5.00! Vanity S4799
Up Kit...............Til
$2.98. Comes complete with all the
Hook-Up Kit...............:
np
necessary parts required for do-it-yourself
Regular $&98.
installation. With instructions. #25103
Lowes Distkidive Furniture Catalog
Sw 23%! SBrown FIwqIbss Ponol.............
Rnuhv SLflL Lightweight, translucent panel for patio cover, fencing, greenhouse and more. Sturdy corrugated design. Each panel is 20 wide. #12507
mVE22%!
4Medttenanean Stool/Chair Leg ,
169*
K Sanded hardwood, Mint or stain. Its la terrific finishing touch to ^ndmade furniture. #01642 lOfherSbesAnd
A.ys7hlck4xr Toast Brown Panel
nagiOw IML Handsome, economy-priced panel has a rich chestnut woodgrain simulated on arrticle-' board base. Blends with most decors. #13^4
B.V4 Thick 4x8*
Natural Oak Panel
Ragutar L40 Remodel with light, warm tones of natural oak, realistically simulated on particle'
board. At Lowes solid low price. f1
SAVE UP TO $3.00!
$949
RsgawtllLfli Meismifib
finish on 1/8" hardboard. Easy to maintain. #16805
$049
llagukr IMS Organize the workshop, etc. Can be painted 1 side. #15407
The beauSfui pieces below are Just a sample of the airtique reproductions m ow Oislincthre Furniture CaMog. others include a solid oak round tabla. A ia06 pia safe.A1908diysink.An 1840 kitchen table. And more. Stop by and browse through ourcaWog. Its Impressive.
SMeSlonrxrxlk
CedvClooelRmI
I wi *' is; J ' * 5. "'Hilt'
15
Ragulw81&A Made from aromatic cedar chips. Protects clothing. #00102
SMe$2jnirx24
CoffcBuletinBoanI
$449
the kitchen or childrens room. Nice price. #10046
A. V Thick Sylvan Oak Panel
Ragulv Ml Nicely simulated on durable lauan plyw^. 113918
B.V Thick
liiBil II ae^a----
wioeiiiBSs rRCKOfy
C.ya Thick Wormy Chestnut
*10^-
RagukrHIJL Rustic graining. Simulated on lauan plywood. 113907
D. Grey Or Bioiwn Pioneer Bainboaid
RagUvlllA Hickory tones are simulated on lauan plywood. #13906
I T; > & t f I
*11i*
RagukrSM Real wood planks in 21 sq. ft. bundie. #13784,5
SoMOnADMbl Faun Colorad Mouhlno
25%ss:;
Choose from comer, base, crown, casing and other moulding types. #01604-10
Includes dovetailed drawers, sHderout writing boards & more. Handsomely finished. #85624
Save $38001 Sou Oak Floral Back Desk Chair
Rsgrar H8UL Adjustable height A 8H. Hooded casters. Swivel action. Finished with finest materials. 188826
S4VE
smoBf
Golden Rattan 32x16x16 Trank
Golden Rattan 36x29x20 Trank
59*9 79*9
ReguraHM. Makei a great accent or storage piece. Has soiid brass hardware. #96192
Sara 21%! 2-T1or Slorago Rack
9929
RagMvirA For kitchen, bafiL^. VinyKcoated.. . I2x11"x4%^deep. #82102
j >1
Regular S98M Larger style trunk can be a coffee table, toy chest and more. #96190
ASaraHKnTTHkih
HatACoidRack
RsgUhrnUBi Walnut finish.
Easy toassemUe, too. #96120
B,Sw0$5LOnirUe VUnulFiniBhTdbla
$7
RsgMv sum Plant stand or accent Easy to assemble. #06122
C.SMHOLOOI IS Round (MkAooonlTafato
$1900
RrauiwiZUOl Easy to assemble. Handsome l^ht finish. #96110
aS8o|f3JBI1S\IMdo Fkwi skm
Ragukr 99J91 Wovencane seat Some assembly required. 196124
UghtKHAOplalM
36Bnwm CeftigFan With Bms Trim
$4099
sw*a%!iTxir
ewTfc
HMrfv4r .Has a washable
anibossed surface. 64 sq. ft carton. #12312
Se10%!12xir Colonial Sinvier
87
Vf SqmfM
nsptwW. Fire retardant. Seam hiding. Sold in 40 sq. foot cartons. 112320
SMe$1JQI Easy-Up TIelnstalalioniat
Rsgdv SUL For installing 20 to 25 square ft. of 12x12 ceiling tile. #10411
Choose From A Variety Off Annstrong Lay-ln Ceing Panels For Your Suspended OBng Grid Designs!
awS%L?xr tanmaiono PlHWI
28<'
iRxX
Mgriv. Has a durable, washable siffface. 64 sq. ft carton. #12325
saveKnbfrxa Glemvood PM
43
SqumFdol
Rsgular4r. Butcher block design. Sold in 64 square fool carton. #12330
Save 10%! ZxT Bravada PM
Armstrong Sotaran No-WaxRoofffng& Floor Tie Sale!
(HoM Mms Or TMs era* Aia For iHsaBaaR Qsto. AeM Slylas
StodRdUqrVM
Square Foot
nsgukr. Fire retardant acoustical design. < foot carton. #12
12x12 Real Oak Cushion Back Ties
Each Parquet floor tiles have a self-adhesive 'k" foam cushion back.
Ref. Price $3.29.100469.70,1
AOurBestirNo^WaxI SundU SQ99
Sotariwft...........:Osq.Yd
MirabondS no-wax surface keeps its shine longer. Cushioned inner layer. Reference Price $12.99. #16139,42
B.0wBesl!12xir SoMan* No-Wax
FIOOfTlO...........EMh
The MirabondS no-wax surface enhances the pattern & color. Self-adhesive back. Reference Price $1.31. #16428.32,3.4,5
irfUeVUenda raiwii uarpei
ir Wide Carefree SciAftajred Carpet
89t, 5^ sgM
WWWW ESCh fientRh-Giiarri X Anti- With rii.ohin
SquresYani
Scotch-Guard &Anti-StatTMtreated. With cushioned back. Ref.
Price $7.00. #15205,7
Square YanI
With cushioned back. Scotch-Guard & Anti-Stat treated. Ref. Price $9.99. ri5220AAM
WakwlFMsii Bentwmxt Rocker
$4499
Rrai4vlULaL Woven cane seat & back. Some assembly isrequirBd. #96102
Save SSaoO! Reid Oakltocker
Save $1.2016* Wide Green Synthetic Outdoor Turf
UnewFbol*
Regii $2.99. Stands up to weather. Ideal for outside steps, porches, etc. #15262
Save $1.00! 6Wide Cocoa Synthetic Outdoor Turf
$999
Ai Lkier
S4g>9
RM$eAWvncahe seat* back. Sturdy. Some assembly. #96104 9
*UNC<W?FOOT:
OmPooIJhi^ OTwidth
LfewerFoot*
Regutar $3.99. Resists stains and mildew. Durable. Weather resistant. #15258
Save $2.00! 12Wide Green Al-Weather Synttietic Turf
$^99
SquweYaid Regiiv $6.98. Has super-cush backing. 3 year limited fade warranty. #15283
Features 4 beautiful teakwood blades. Complements any decor. Comes with a 3-speed control. Adapts for light fixture. Reference Price $59.99. #31707
A
48 Brawn Or White Fan, Btass-Trimmed
Reversible motor circulates cool air in the summer and warm air down in winter. 4 teakwood blades. Light adaptable. 3-speed control. Ref. Price $79.99. #31711,15
Sf Antique Or
j ----
fOISIIBCI 0IB88
Fan
99
Comes with a reversible motor for year round use. Has 4 lovely teakwood blades plus a multi-speed control. Easy installation. Reference Price $109.99. #31745,7
UgMKH4dvtable
S2 Antique Biass4Blade CeOngFan
SI2999
Features 4 beautiful teakwood blades with lovely cane inserts. 3-speed control with pull-chain operation. Reversible for year round use. Reference Price $139.99. #31749
8 Antique Or Polshed Brass
UghtKit
Easy adaptation to > . most of the ceiling faiis shown above. Great value! Ref.
Price $12.99. #31802,12
3-Ught Antique Brass Ceiing Fan Light Ktt
I An ideal match for ^ most of the ceiling fans that are shown above. Reference Price $19.99. #31805
A. SAVE $20.001 24x21 Saxony VanHyCiMnet
S7499
Rio. nun SoUd oak frames, bfass finish hardware. Top and faucet extra. 120884
StmWttPo^
Durf iJMiory Fauool
$2999
Rao. SML Waaherieas.
WHh acrylic handles. 124032
SmrUSlQO! Cultured MartileVanilyTop
$5499
Rao. mat 22x25brown on tan top. 120300
B. Save $20100! 36x21 WMte&GoUManiuis Cabinet
199
Rag. L&2-door white vanity with gold-tone trim. Topa faucet extra. 120614
Saw$7Jn2-Handto Broree Lmloty Faucet
$4999
Riau Non-corrosive parts; washerless. #24931
Save $HLOQI Cultured Maffale Vanity Top
^69
Rag. Sf&ai 22* W white cultured marble top. #20277
aSave$2a00! lOW Vanity Package With Top and Faucet \
$79%
Rag. m This attractive vanity set includes the 1-door cabinet, chrome-plated faucet and 19x17" cultured marble top. #20804
SaveltOiQOi medUne cabinet
$2999
Rag.Sal23 7/8x105/16 mirrored cabinet. With Nght Bulbs extra. #23716
A.SAVE$3a00! Pedestal Lavatory
^69*
Rag. pmm. Whitlevatory' is easy to install. Faucet extra. Available by catalog sales in some stores. #20761,2
B. Deluxe White Waier-SaverTolet
Fits around most 5 tubs. Made of easy to clean molded acrylic. And it features molded shelf areas. Reference Price $79.99. #20781
5-Foot White
PVC Bath Tub..........T
This tubs high-gloss, stain resistant finish wont chip or peel. The tub is easy to install. Cleans easily. Ref. Price $80.99. #20430,1
Efficient siphon Jet action conserves water. Reference Price $00.99. #20711,2 Blue, $nJO
Crame.Qohl Extra
GoM-Tdne ~ Tub Enclosure With Minor
$13999
BrigM gold Irinvnod tub andooure. 1 dot tempored ghes dhordoorlgmi
door is raidtho
This 2-door enclosure is 56 7/16*high & fits an opening of 54 wide. Easy to install. Nylon roiiers. Ref. Price $149.99. #26814
Kinkead
Rag. $3U6 arele lamp with 2 bulbs.
12 wide &3% deep Great for laundry room, etc. #74220
$MJ6 Comes
butt). #75431 <
32-y.......$27Ji
Rag. $34JBl #75433
Under CatM 18^ Fkioregoent
6
Rm$UL Comes winuorescent iwnp. For under bookcases, desk areas, etc. #73315
Save$iOOIWalor
CelngBalhFm
Rag. OHai Quiet but powerful! 3 roiind duct. Mastic grille. #25502
__
-1. llki
SM0S2JQIWNto
ToMSaot
S399
Rag. pJML Molded plastic seat. Easy to Install with top-mount hinges. #20591
Save $8.0014 Faucet
Rag.pM Chrome finish withacrylic*handles. Non-corrosive parts. #24913
Rag.$tUil/3*
25cord. UrtjWfff tools, etc. #70370
12/2 Grounded
VR^ ' ARagulvlU8lllbl4 B.BacMcalTapa.4r ' Rsg..%x60^.
NHe-Ule
WllhBul)
99?
Rag.Ilia U.L.* ^ listed: For bktff' -or bedroom. #71356
RaeOMLUt-njIns
ohardubk&W at dawn. #74004
o
YOUR
CHOICE
SAVESlOa A. 20-Inch Boys BMXBicyde
Rm. IIUIL This bike features coaster brwes, safety reflectors. krK)bby tires red frame and fork. Plus a racing
saddie and handle grips. 199554
SAVEmoa
B. 20-Inch Girls Polo Bicycle
Rag. MM This bike features a fuiiy iugged (interiocking) frame, sporty hi-rise handiebars. and coaster brakes. Fiorai padded seat & pink finish. #99540
Either 25 Diagonal Color Console TV____
A. RCA XL KB25 Color ConMie
This Contemporary Styled console TV has a 100% solid state chassis, singleknob 18-position tuning system. Plus it features automatiocoior and contrast controls for bright color adjustment from channel to channel. Reference Price 1579.95. #54654
B.G.E 25*Color Console
This Mediterranean Styled console has an automatic color monitor system for k)cked-in. brilliant color. It also features a 100% solid state chassis, sharpness control, convenient roll-around casters and concealed secondary controls. Ref. Price 1579.95. #54531
^59*9
Rsjpiv HMLfll This washer can dean up to 18 lbs. of laundry. It has 3 automatic cycles - including pwmanwt press. Features include a bleach and softener dispenser, a self-cleaning lint filter and a self-cleaning pump. Save now! #51238
SAVE$KK Heavy Duty Dryer
219*9
Rag. SUA Family size dryer with 130 minutes of timed dry control. Removable lint filter. #51425
ISS!12*94999
ciectnc Rango......
Rsgukr fMMl This deluxe 30" range features two 8" and 8" stay-up Calrod surface units with removable trim rings. Cleanings a breeze with liftoff door. See through window door. IS2820
SAVE$40!
19*Diagonal Portable Color TV
279*9
This table-top TV features a 100% solid state chassis, automatic fine tuning, more. Ref. Price $329.95. #54479
Save$n.O!23Otagonal Remote Coiilral Color CoiMoto
589*9
Rsg.|0BU9LThismo
incTu
. This model's features include a 100% solid state chassis, convenient remote control & more. #54836
UnderpQunter
uisnwfasn6r
$28999
Baa. SBUk Almond color dishwasher has 5 cycle options. Its sound Insulated for a quiet wash. A great buyl IS1013
aroi^anii
irmBw Color TV
$21999
AlOO%aodstate chassis & more for agreMbuylRef. 1249.96. IMB12
irMgoMl
Color TV
ITDIioorai BkckiWhNo PofttfoTV
SOliDonBl
ACVDCBAW
RoftMoTV
289* *79 *89"
Features a 100% soHd state chasais 8 much more. Ref. Price $340.96. M4MS
Low power usage TV hasa100%soli3 state chassis. Ref. Price 1340.96. IMM3
Great for ballgames or picnics! Has earphone Jack. Ref. Price $100.96.1
Gtamouilop
rosiffonTisa
Countoilop
UnsarFL Rag. $191991 Plastic laminate bonded to industrial grade board. Resists stains. 129440
*Our price indudoA lnrfloretandiRfcut topASoldinwinfL UnoerFtefclliiigIh ragmfeee of width
$20.00! 10-Qrifcm Shop Vacuum
69 ;
Hag.$IM9.Heavy-duW. Vacuums wet or dry. #98002
(QalonShopA
HomoVacuum
Rag. 99U9L Vacuums wet or d^. Use for your oar, etc.
8 nose & extensions. #00890
AM/FM Clock Radki/ laiBpnoiw Mmiiiianoii
*69
Compact unit has digital dock & p ushbutton phone. Ref. Price $99.05. #65^
SoHairei.AnBiwr
OmyTotophone
^2
Beat the price of renting. Perfect for workshop. Ref. Price $16.95. #55410
Louie's
Your Household Word
^ - ^
9p80m HmSBB
tlBIM ! VtuMrlt
MYR^WSALE
Theres A Lowes Store Near You
AfBaS
MHEKWa MC - PlMM 62S4I7I 1312N.F^MMtoSt
:,c-nioMaBMt34 II Rd-tt Hurting Um URUNOION, NC - Phona 22fr334 ' aoSOnhMHopwWtm.
CMIV, NC - Plm 47-3aOO HiBrtW54 CHAKL HLL, NC - Phona 967-2291 i7K)EIFianklinSl.
DURHAM. NC - Ptwna 363-2581 3417HMiboroughRd. nrrrTEVIXE, NC - Phona 4856731 4KORaatonlRd.
QOIOSBORO, NC - Phofi* 778-4100 H. BartdayBM.
GREBISBORO, NC - Phone 292-4813 2717PwertonSt GREENSBORO (North). NC - Phona 3754810 3223 YhncayvilN Road GREENVtlE. NC - Phona 7856660 2728 South MamorialOfma MGH POBIT, NC - Phono 8656031 Proapod St. IrtMctiwige 4166 JACKSONVKXE.NC-Phona 3636266 .
aRd.atUiaunaBM lONBTON. NC - Phona 522-1611 2200 WWrnon Art.
MOUWr AHV. NC - Phona 7886021 MqrS2B)i|iMABtuamortRd.
KWH9M, NC - Phona 6332030 t407Rmct(Ri)
NORTH MLKESBORO, NC - Phona 667-1221 ChanySt >
RALBQH. NC - Phona8286291 26l2YMlNnRd. '
REDBMUE. NC - Phona 3424241 HOOWtFrtaaayDtha ROCKY MOUNT. NC - Phona 4462331 U.& Highway 301 BypaM. North SANFORD, NC - Phona 7766431 3122 & IndiMthal Oc aWMon Rd.
SMR1. NC - Phona 3726S31 101 MNghMiySl TMSHWOION, NC - Phona 9467751 1848 Carolina Am.
RLSON, NC - Phono 2376211 Hwy. 301. Sorth WBISTDN6AIEH, NC - Phone 767-4960 3740N.UbanySt (acroaa iron) lha airport)
WNSTONBALBI, NC - Phona 722-9112 llS&SlirttordRd.
ZEBULON, NC - Phona 2696466 H8)twiy97.EaN
4 Gnat Ways To Charge!
*Loims Low Paymont-Cradit Terms
Vbur credit must be
or Life & Property insurance. The monthly payment & deferred payment price include Life & Property insurance & sales tax at 4%. H sales tax ie different in your area, the monthly payment & deferred payment price will vary siighlfy. Any delivery charges are escduded.
Lowes Pricing Polcy
Many Hama in iMa MMoW earn; a rftaranca roMH prtoa. Tha rafaranca la imandad 10 prvida a 9uiealolhatangaotraMHaaBnopacaalnouraraaandirtybauaafcitlntdanMrytngmrtiutBe-hrnar^a attggwjad laMH prtoa. or oar daMrwlnaHon ol Ha M raMH prtca baaad on prtcaa at whichHorM^matcliandMalatdlaradbyprtnt^taMltat(dapartmanti>oraa.apactBllly ihoM and othar nonnaaeounl aaHora) In our aaMng aroa. WhHa ara baHava our ratoranoa
raNiaa do not appraclaMy axoaad lha highart ratall pricaa at which aalaa ara mada In our aall-
ing
SAVE$60!
A. 15.2 Cubic Fool Upright Freezer
533999
. With textured steel door & cabinet; fast-freeze shelves; BiecHhkey lock for safety. 150660
SAVE $40!
B. 8w2 Cubic Foot Chest Freezer
*259
Rs^ mm Has textured steel lid& cabinet; tamper-proof temp control & ei^-e-key lock. IS9602
C. 20 Cubic Foot Chest Freezer
Ragfevmm With textured steel door and cabinet; tamper-proof temp control; & eject-a-key lock. 150604
Lowes Low Monttily Psymonfc $17J0 Fa 36 Months
No Dotam Paymsnt*
Dofened Payment Price; mmm Annufe Perowifeea Rale: 24JB%
or aaaura you ttial our ralaranca raMH pricaa. aa daacribad abowa, rapraaant jhaprtoaa In mmryoammunky on any gNan day. Soma Hama In ihlaadirtrtlaamani ara tetad ai
. *aaMm prtcaa. lha marchandiaaNallaradal da prIcaaMapI during a apaclal tala. Tha purpoaa oTahowbig a ntfaranca raMN prica (or a regular prtca) la to aaaiat you. our cuatomor. m making a knowdatfeabla and baNar informad buying dadalon. Wa auggaat Hial you alaodo compareMua ahopping and compare our prtcaa. (Prlcaa m tWa tabloid^ t m-duda daHvary charnaa. Aak ua about daHvory ralaa.)
LMaaaaiaehaafeNeey:MwaaaHouto(anadirertiaadnam, wa'M laaua you a relnchack. (a-capl lor produca martiad "UmHad QuantMaa). Our anwHar ttoraa may not aioefc aN advarSa-ad Hama. But avary Ham ahown can ba ordarad lor you.
4,000 BTU Room Air Condtioner
$17999
115-volt portable model with an adjustable thermostat & quick-mount side panels. Excellent supplemental cooling wherever you need it.
Ref. Price 1206.96.150146
During the entire month of July, all freezer models in stock are on sale at outstanding prices. Come see this terrific line of quality freezers by Holiday. And save!
Big Savings On Some Great Brand Names
SAVE$2a Opioiwl loeltakflr
*59
SAVE $100!
17 Cubic Foot DeknB'RSfifeSialar
549999
RsgMfer mmm This no-froet has textured doors, three aiQuttable shelvea, separate meat etorage & energy saver switch. 153670
54100 BTU Room Air Condtioner
18,500 BTU Multi-Room Air Condtioner
S229 *549
This powerful portable me an adjustable mermostat I
I model has land
expanding side peneto. ll5molt Reference Price S299.06.150011
High efficiency. 230volt unit has OixwMon thermostat; 3 oooNng and fan only" speeds: much more. Reference Price 1590.95.150174
-HotfhoinA
Smo 19010.6 Cubic Fool fMrigmalor
*339
Rag. SSmm Manual defrost. Wim two adjustable shelves and single crisper. 153502
17.1 Cubic Foot Deluxe Refrigerator
iwSimJlL Oekjxe no*frost adjuatabie, split ahelvea; aee-thfough criapera; rolkiut wheels: and icemaker kHI ftj64i,7
Lowo't Lowflloirih^ Rwmmtt $26.67Fa36Maith8
NotkMmPaymaol* Balled ffegwianlhlcac mmm. , iRKOjmk
SwBiaa ConnMCIRBMBinlor
*99"
Raf.|tmmQieatforthe Adjustable thermoetat; two Ice trays. More. IS3B10 12