Daily Reflector, July 15, 1983


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SPORTS TODAY

INSIDE TODAY

COMING SUNDAY

LEGION TOURNEY

Rocky Mount defeated Snow Hill 9-7 in the opening game of the the American Legion league championship series. (Page 13)

THE LEGISLATURE

State Senate schedules another vote today on heavily amended House legislation designed to close loopholes in North Carolinas Bingo laws. (Page 10)

-Photo/feature page on gymnast Debbie Sigler of Greenville-she is headed for the Junior Olympics.

-Free-lance writer Karen Tarlo, an R.N. at PCMH, recounts her personal experiences with parents who have lost babies to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)

-A Grifton girl receives a visit from her Dutch pen-pal.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102ND YEAR NO. 150

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 15, 1983

24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS

No Longer Required Buy City Auto Tags

By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer

Greenville residents will no longer have to purchase city tags as a result of an ordinance amendment, but a new method of collecting an annual motor vehicle license tax will still mean a $5 payment for each locally registered vehicle.

The City Council, meeting Thursday, removed the burden , of citizens having to buy tags for their vehicles and, at the same time, implemented a billing and collection method aimed at reaching all vehicle owners when they list property.

The new ordinance transfers the billing and collection of the vehicle license tax to the annual property tax notice and subjects each motor vehicle licensed by the state... which is

resident within the city ... on Jan. l of each year to the $5 assessment.

According to the ordinance, the tax will be imposed for the fiscal year beginning on July 1 following the Jan. 1 date on which the vehicle becomes resident in the city.

Since the city operates on a July 1 to June 30 fiscal year, the tax levied by the new ordinance for fiscal year 1983-84 will be $2.50 or half the annual rate to cover the six-month period from Jan. 1, 1984, to June 30, 1984, for residents who listed their vehicles in January.

Motor vehicles registered between July 1,1983, and June 30, 1984, will be subject to the total $5 tax.

City Manager Gail Meeks, who termed the new measure a

more efficient, convenient way of collecting the vehicle tax, said that tags will still be available at city hall for people who wish to display them on their vehicles.

In other business, the board continued until a later date action on a petition for satellite annexation by the owners of Colonial Mobile Home Park on N.C. 11-13 north of Greenville. Local attorney Jim Roberts represented the petitioners in the matter, which was recommended for denial by the Greenville Planning and Zoning Commission.

Bobby Roberson, the citys planning director, said the staff recommended that the development, whichcontains some 240 occupied mobile home sites, be considered in a five-year

annexation feasibility report which has been requested by the council.

The council approved three amendments to the citys Zoning Ordinance, adding shopping center to provisions of Section 32-106; changing the off-street parking requirements for hospitals and care homes, nursing homes, convalescent homes, and rest homes; and amending Section 32-80 regarding minimum lot size for conversions of existing structures.

An ordinance amending the manual of fees regarding public transportation fees and charges was adopted. The amendment calls for: the establishment of a fee for bus (Please turn to Page8)

Assembly Adjournment Now Planned Wednesday

ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - With crucial tax and hazardous waste issues still unresolved, state legislative leaders have abandoned hopes of ending this week a session already two weeks past the original adjournment date.

The Senate was expected to approve today a resolution calling for adjournment next Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. House Speaker Liston Ramsey, who as late as midweek stood by his prediction that the session would end today or Saturday, reluctantly accepted the Senate target date.

We lost a couple of days last week, but we all know about that, Ramsey told the House on Thursday, referring to the July 4 weekend. The House convened on Independence Day, but the Senate didnt return to Raleigh until the next day.

Well be here until next Wednesday, he said. We will not work Saturday and well not work Sunday.

A major stumbling block was removed Thursday as the Senate voted unanimously to concur with House amendments to the 1983-85 state budget. The vote enacted the $12.6 billion budget covering new and continuing programs. But still pending are widely differing

House-Senate versions of a half-cent sales tax increase, proposed regulatitions of hazardous waste disposal, and hundreds of special appropriations bills commonly known as pork-barrel legislation.

The Joint Appropriations Committee canceled a meeting on the pork-barrel bills Thursday and Rep. Billy Watkins, D-Granville, chairman of the House Expansion Budget Committee, said it probably wouldnt meet before Monday.

We didnt see any need to push, since the tax business is whats holding us up right now,said Watkins.

But Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston,

chairman of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee, said budget com-, mittee action would determine the adjournment date.

At this point its completely impossible to predict when we will adjourn, said Rauch. The House has said it will not appoint conferees to consider the tax package.

Ramsey has shown no disposition to accept the Senate version of the sales tax bill. In an interview this week, he said he saw little reason for a conference committee to attempt to work out the differences before the 1984 short session. However, other lawmakers said there

was a chance that behind-the-scenes negotiations would produce a compromise warranting appointment of conferees.

Senate President Pro Tern Craig Lowing, D-Mecklenburg, introduced the resolution setting the adjournment date and listing the matters that will be eligible for consideration during the 1984 short session. The resolution could be amended should the Legislature finish its business sooner.

something on record.

The idea was for the Senate to initiate the resolution, added Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green. After the House gets it they can do as they see fit.

The Senate voted 22-20 to delay a vote on the resolution until today. Sen. Julian Allsbrook, D-Halifax, asked for time to study it, saying that hasty action could cause misunderstandings.

Lawing said the primary purpose of his resolution, which set the adjournment time at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, was to get

If approved, the resolution would enable the Legislature to consider in 1984 all bills approved by one house but not acted on by the other.

Two Facing

Reprimands

By MIKE ROBINSON

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep. Gerry Studds, facing House reprimand for gay sex with a 17-year-old page, says he will stay in Congress, but Rep. Daniel B. Crane has left his plans unclear after admitting an affair with a female page.

The two congressmen on Thursday admitted ethics committee charges they had sex with teen-age pages. Formal reprimand, the mildest discipline the full House can mete out, could take only a few minutes once scheduled, since neither is contesting the action.

Of course, Studds, 46, a Massachusetts Democrat, told reporters when asked if he woidd serve out his term. He took the House floor, where he proclaimed his homosexuality and admitted a serious error in judgment in his relationship with the page 10 years ago.

Studds said, though, that

his relationship did not involve improper conduct because it was voluntary and there was no preferential treatment or harrassment.

Crane, 47, a Republican from a Bible Belt district in downstate Illinois, first sought advice from his brother. Rep Philip M. Crane, R-Ill., the 1980 GOP White House hopeful. Then he flew home to explain his affair with a 17-year-old girl page to his wife, Judy, and six children.

I know nothing - Im not talking, the conservative supporter of school prayer and strict morals said when asked about the liaison three years ago that began when the girl lost a six-pack of beer to him on a basketball bet and ended with repeated sessions in the bedroom of his Alexandria, Va., apartment.

The talk among Illinois Republicans was that Crane might resign and that, if not, (Please turn to Page 8)

Increasing Energy Costs Hike Wholesale Price

Index For A 2nd Month

SAFETY MARK Taking part in ceremonies here marking Procter & Gambles achievement of three million safe hours were (L-R) Robert Griffin, plant manager; Dr. K.D.

McMurrain, corporate medical director, and Arthur Wright, plant safety and health manager. (Reflector Staff Photo)

Local P&G Employees

REFLECTOR

Set Safety Milestone

ByROBERTBURNS AP Business Writer

The sharpest rise in energy costs in 11 months helped lift overall wholesale prices by 0.5 percent in June, the Labor Department said today.

It was the second straight gain in wholesale prices as measured by the departments Producer Price Index. But because of price declines earlier this year, prices were still down 1 percent for the first half of 1983 when calculated at an annual rate.

Meanwhile, government figures indicated today that production in factories and mines rose 1.1 percent in June, the seventh straight monthly gain as the economy pulls out of the recession.

The advance matched the overall 1.1 percent increase in May.

Gains were widespread last month among materials and products, but were especially sharp in durable consumer goods, construc

tion supplies and related material, the Federal Reserve Board report said.

Todays report from the Fed said Junes increases put second-quarter production 4 percent above that in the first three months of this

Wiiolesate Prices

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year.

It said output of durable consumer goods advanced almost 3 percent in June, reflecting a strong gain in autos and continued increases in production of goods for the home.

Autos were assembled at an annual rate of 6.8 million units compared with a rate of 6.2 million in May, the report said.

Wholesale prices rose 0.3 percent in May after falling 0.1 percent in April and 0.2 percent in March. They rose 0.2 percent in February after falling 1.1 percent in January.

In all, wholesale prices last month were 1.8 percent higher than a year ago. .Prices were up a modest 3.7 percent for all of 1982.

270

265 -

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1982        83

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Figufes)

The June increase was helped by a 3.2 percent rise in energy prices, the highest increase since July 1982. Gasoline costs jumped 5.1 percent last month, while heating oil costs rose 5.3 percent and natural gas prices gained 0.2 percent.

hOTLIK

Of Three Million Hours Tobacco Freeze Bill

752-1336

t

Ceremonies Thursday at Procter & Gamble marked the achivement of local employees having worked three million consecutive hours at the plant without experiencing a disabling injury.

Griffin and members of the plants safety committee also accepted a company safety award flag from Dr. K.D. McMurrain Jr., corporate medical director for P&G, from the Cincinnati headquarters.

Awaiting Signature

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.

The safety milestone, P&G officials said, ranks the facility as the safest among the companys 48 plants and puts GreenvUle employees in a position to challenge P&Gs safety record of 3.8 million hours in the coming year.

Griffin said the achievement of three million hours is a first for the Greenville plant, which reached the two million hours mark last May and has now operated since June 3, 1980, without a disabling injury.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Legislation freezing price supports for this years tobacco crop at last years level is awaiting President Reagans signature today following unanimous congressional approval.

MYASTHENIA GRAVIS I recently moved to Greenville and have a disease known as Myasthenia Gravis. I have questioned several people in the area, but no one seems to know anyone who has this problem. However, I spoke to a doctor in Washington who told me there are several In this area, but that he has no names. Would anyone having this disease please contact me. Carolyn Gray, 752-0919.

Plant Manager Robert Griffin told a gathering of area officials and employees th^at the facilitys incidence rate of injuries of 0.9 is the lowest among the P&G plants and compares with the statewide rate of 7.8. He said, If our rate was the same as the states we would be injuring people at almost 10 times our current rate.

The plant, which began operations in 1975, employs over 500 area citizens and produces disposal paper products.

Griffin read a letter from state Labor Commissioner John Brooks congratulating the employees for setting an example for all industry in North Carolina. Brooks sent a state award citing the plant for the new safety mark.

On hand for the ceremonies were Ed Walker, president of the Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce; David Duffus, chairman of the chambers board; Charles Gaskins, chairman of the Pitt County Board of Commissioners; County Commissioner Burney Tucker; City Manager Gail Meeks; Calvin Kurvin, staff director for Sen. John Easts Greenville office; and John Chaffee, new executive director of the Pitt County Development Commission.

The bill passed both the House and the Senate late Thursday after a disagreement was resolved over proposed changes in the burley tobacco price support program.

The freeze legislation, intended to lessen potential losses from the support program because of increased imports, will block a scheduled rise of at least 10 cents a pound in the support level for both flue-cured and burley tobacco, the two major

tobacco types grown in the United States.

Officials say that without the freeze, tobacco growers, who finance the support program with fees, would probably have to shell out $25 million in the next year to cover price support losses.

The legislation, backed by the administration, is only a stop gap measure until Congress can consider more far-reaching tobacco program changes.

In addition to the freeze, the bill awaiting Reagans signature also will allow the Agriculture Department to impose greater restrictions on burley tobacco production and expand USDAs authority to initiate action when imports affect domestic burlev sales.

WEATHER

Fair tonight with lows in 70s. Sunny and hot Saturday with highs in mid-90s.

Looking Ahead

Mostly sunny and hot Sunday, becoming partly cloudy Monday and Tuesday with chance of afternoon and evening showers or thunderstorms. Highs each day in period mostly in 90s and lows in 70s.

Inside Reading Page 6-Area items Page 9-Waste bill Page 12-Obituaries Pagen-Thechurcbes

1

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2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, July 15,1983

Program Aids New Mothers

By KATHLEEN SILVASSY

PITTSBURGH (UPI) -Monicas son seemed normal at birth but doctors watched for the Symptoms - irritability. muscle tightness, tremors, a high-pitched cry -indicating drug addict His mother had been a heroin user for five years.

Now, Monica watches her 14-month-old with motherly pride as he totters around, peeking into drawers and grabbing things off the desk.

"This baby has filled so many parts of my life - 1 dont even think about drugs anymore, she told a visitor. "Its like that part of my life is in a dark closet. I love that boy and thats all I ever wanted.

Monica was able to have a healthy delivery because of the Maternal Addiction Project at St. Francis General Hospital, a program aimed at helping pregnant addicts ensure safe births.

The project, begun in January 1982, grew out of an informal program started five years earlier by Michael Flaherty, now chief coordinator of the Addiction Treatment Center, and Iburia Scott, chief counselor.

"As far back as 1975, there was great confusion ... with regard to pregnant addicts, Flaherty said. Some doctors still believed that tlrugs did not cross over into the placenta and a fetus was not harmed.

Now we know thats not true and what the mother takes in the way of drugs goes right to the baby. Our primary goal here is healthy babies.

The program Is based on one initiated by Dr. Loretta P. Finnegan of Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. Other centers are located in New York, Detroit, Houston, San Francisco and Chicago.

Dr. Finnegan also has been visited by physicians from Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands who are interested in starting similar programs.

Treatment consists of methadone allowance coupled with once-a-week counseling sessions and periodic medical checkups.

Patients are first hospitalized for three days for conversion from hard drugs (usually heroin) to methadone, Ann Holzner, project coordinator, said.

"Methadone suppresses the withdrawal symptoms so we can concentrate on (the mothers) other needs, she said. The newborn babies are likely to go through drug withdrawal but its not as intense, since methadone is a safe drug and not as harmful as heroin.

And we make it clear: no counseling, no methadone, she said. Weve got the reputation of being a pretty strict program, but most of them who come in stick with it.

The counseling is rather painful at first, Ms. Holzner said. We take the veil away. We try to get them to look at where theyre going and what theyre doing.

One of the problems is the addiction itself, Ms. Holzner said. They usually get into it first for pleasure, then it becomes a job. Their job is to find something to steal or something to fence to get the money to support their habit.

Being on drugs takes over your life, said Monica, 23. You do whatever you have to to get them. She said she had a $30 to $500 habit, depending on how much money I could get that day. Ms. Scott said patients receive counseling an average of 18J9 months and methadone treatments an average 2/2 years.

Another woman currently

involved in the program is Diane, who is six months pregnant and single.

She said she lost a lot of friends when she joined the program since quitting drugs means cutting all ties with other users.

My days are spent here (at the drug treatment center) and at the hospital for checkups. My nights are spent at home, Diane said. "I still feel the urge now and then to use drugs, but I know theres no middle point. I have to think about my baby.

So far, Diane has stayed clean. Her main fear now is what effect her addiction already may have had on her baby, and she worries about birth defects.

So many of my friends shot dope, one friend gave birth to a severely deformed child. I would not b able to handle that guilt, she said.

At birth, newborns are checked every two hours for signs of addiction. If any are present, paregoric is administered as a detoxicant.

Post partum treatment continues for one year, said Dr. H R. Dailey, chief of obstetrics and gynecology at St. Francis.

The latest figures show weve had between a 25 and 50 percent success rate at the one-year mark, meaning mothers have remained free of hard drugs and the infant has experienced no complications.

About 94 percent of all babies go through some kind of withdrawal, and we warn the mothers about it, Ms. Holzner said. But since the program.s inception, weve had no babies bom with birth defects and the mortality rate has been zero.

About 180 mothers have been through the program since it began, Flaherty said. Individual treatment in 1981 was $2,500 per year.

Bridal Policy

A black and wliite glossy five sevi pbotograph is requested for engagement announcements. For publicatton in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on tbe preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to tbe wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding writeups wlU be printed through^ tbe first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and writenq) giving less description and after the second week, Just as an an-nouncemoit. Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Dally Reflector one week prior to tbe date of tbe wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.    ^

A temporary hair loss may be caused by a high fever, major illness or surgery, blood loss, severe emotional stress or rapid weight-loss diets restricting calories to less than 800 per day. Although the hair may seem to come out by the handful, it will regrow some months later.

The average American ate 128 pounds of sugar in 1982.

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Combine Peaches, Chicken

Teach Hubby To Belly Dancef Too

By Abigail Van Buren

> 1983 by Univarsal Press Syndicite

DEAR ABBY: Ive been married for a year to a good, loving man who treats me like a queen. He has a few faults, but nothing serious. He goes out once a week with the boys, comes home drunk and falls into bed. He has never hit me or even called me names.

I always loved to dance, and if I say so myself, I was very good. Before we were married I used to do belly-grams. When someone had a birthday. Id go out and do a belly dance. It wasnt vulgar or anything. It was all in fun. I got paid, but I really did it mostly for fun.

All of a sudden I was asked to teach a course in belly dancing at the Y. I really want to, but my husband thinks belly dancing is a hootchy-kootchy striptease dance, but its not. Its really an art.

Im 29 and my husband is 32, and we have no children yet. I really want to teach this class and have some outlet besides cooking, cleaning and doing the laundry. Do you think Im wrong?

LOVES TO DANCE

DEAR LOVES: Absolutely not! Teach your husband how to belly dance, too. If he has the stomach for it.

DEAR ABBY: Im in my early 20s, my husband is in his early 30s. My problem is our sex life. Weve been married for three years and our sex life has been pretty bad for most of it. There is no romance in our lovemaking whatsoever. It lasts maybe three minutes, then Im left frustrated.

Ive talked to my husband until Im blue in the face, but it hasnt helped. Ive been to a marriage counselor. (He wont go.) Ive even threatened to leave him. Nothing works. He says he loves me, but sex is not a very important part of marriage. I think it is.

'The rest of our marriage is pretty good, but Im falling out of love with him awfully fast. What should I do?

FRUSTRATED

DEAR FRUSTRATED: Try to persuade him in a loving, non-judgmental way to get therapy. Almost every university medical school offers sex therapy, which could be enormously helpful to your husband. If he really loves you, hell agree. If he refuses, you can either settle for a sexually frustrating but otherwise pretty good marriage, or make good your threat to leave him. Only you can make that choice.

DEAR ABBY: Im being married in an informal wedding. Its the second time around for both of us. Hes wearing a business suit and Im wearing a short, dressy dress.

All the guests are wearing informal clothes except my fiances mother, who plans to wear an expensive formal gown she bought especially for her daughters wedding, which was canceled last summer at the last minute.

She showed it to me and asked how I liked it. I told her it was beautiful, but I thought shed be more comfortable in a short dress. I explained that no other woman would be wearing a long gown, and she might feel conspicuous.

She said she had her heart set on wearing it, and if I had no objections, sh? would wear it.

Now what? I hate to let her make a fool of herself. Ive asked my fiance, and he said, Shes stubborn as a mule. Leave her alone. What should I do?

AUGUST BRIDE

DEAR BRIDE: Listen to your fiance.

DEAR ABBY: About the question of calling first or just dropping in: Nothing annoys a woman as much as having her friends drop in to find her house looking the way it usually does.

RA IN SUNCOOK, N.H.

DEAR ABBY: After 20 years of dating. Ive come to the conclusion that my mother was wrong when she said, A lady never calls a gentleman she waits for him to call her. Too many times Ive had a man ask for my phone number, and Id hang around the house afraid to go anywhere for fear Id miss his call. Then he never called.

When a woman meets a man shed like to see again, and he takes her number, why shouldnt she feel free to . take his, too, so if he doesnt call her, she can call him?

I recently met a very attractive man, and we seemed to hit it off very well together. But instead of his taking my number and saying the usual, Ill call you, he gave me his number and asked me to call him. Perfect! I had the option to either call him or not. It was all up to me* I like that. Dont get me wrong. Im not on a power trip. I still like doors opened for me, but I prefer to do the calling.

Id like to hear the opinions of men on this.

DONT CALL ME, ILL CALL YOU

DEAR DONT: So would I. Gentlemen?

Getting married? Whether you want a formal church wedding or a simple, "do-your-own-thing ceremony, get Abbys booklet. Send $1 plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to: Abbys Wedding Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

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Group Therapy-Films-Lectures-Buddy System-Your Own control book-lts Great! And you won't gain weight if you follow the 5-Day Plan. Materials Cost $15.

For information call 756-2014 or 757- 3082. It is not necessary to pre-register.

StopSmoking Week. July 18-22 7:00 p.m.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor If ypu are interested in trying an unusual combination of flavors, this recipe for Chicken with Fresh Peaches may attract you. Tbe chicken is marinated in an oriental-style sauce, then sprinkled with four different ^ices and baked. Fresh peaches and water chestnuts go into the pan shortly before the chick is ready. Rice complements the dish.

CHICKEN WITH FRESH PEACHES V4 cup soy sauce V4 cup water cup chopped (medium-fine) onion

Vk tea^ns finely chopped fresh ginger

1 large clove garlic, finely ctx^ped

3/^-pound frying chicken, cut tq)

V4 teaspoon anise seed, crushed V4 teaspoon ground allspice tea^oon ground cinnamon K(^ tea^n ground cloves

2 large fresh peaches, quartered

SHHuice can water chestnuts, drained and sliced

In a 3-quart rectangular baking dish (13'^ by 8% by R4 inches) stir together soy sauce, water, onion, ginger and garlic; add chicken in a single layer; marinate 2 or 3 hours, turning

Birth

Davis

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Davis, a daughter, Jessica Elise, on July 3, 1983, in New Hanover Memorial Hospital, Wilmington. Mrs. Davis feihe former Elise Goodman of Gileenville.

CHICKEN WITH FRESH PEACHES - An oriental marinade and an unusual combination of spices go into *^he dish.

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Lemon Custard, Coconut. Pecan, Sweet Potato, Chocolate. Apple, Peach

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several times. Turn chicken skin side up; stir togetheranise, allspice, cinnamon and cloves; crinkle over chicken. Bake in a preheated 350degree oven 50 minutes, basting several times; add peaches and water chestnuts; bake until chicken is tender and peaches are heated through - 10 minutes longer. Serve with rice. Makes 4 servings.

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Waterlilies Require Sun and Rich Soil

June is planting time for wateriilies in North Carolina. Whether you plant the hardy varieties or the tropical types, both need full sun, stUl water and rich s<m1.

Here are some other timely gardening tips from agricultural extensi(M) specialists at North Carolina \ State University:    \

If your azaleas bloomed wril this spring but now have begun to appear a little sickly, even if you have fertilized them properly, the problem may be one ol iron deficiency. You can buy small packages of iron chelate powder or small containers of liquid iron for mixing with the water. Apply this to leaves and around the plants.

Camellias, too, often are bothered by iron deficiency, so you may want to check them at the same tbne you are taking a look at t^ azaleas.

Did you ever wonder why some people, particularly professional landscapers, wrap trunks of newdy i^ted

trees? Haes why; Wrapping the trunk will retard evaporation of moisture from the bark. It protects the bark frmn the sun and will prevent sun scald.

Wrapping also prevents wood irrers from attacking the tree. Burlap is a good material to use for wrapping the trunk of a tree. Special paper is also used and generally can be obtained at nurseries and lawn-garden centers.

Your poinsettia may need some attention about now. Ymi might consider plunging or plachig the pot in a sunny spot in your flower border or nar the edge (rf tbe patk). When new growth appears, pinch back long stems to develop a low, bushy plant.

HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH

Meeting At Carolina Country Day School

SUNDAY WORSHIP MESSAGE:

Living In The Future Tense

WELCOME VISITORS Call 756-3624 For Transportation

Sunday School    10:00    AM

Worahip Service    11:00    AM

Sunday Evening    6:00    PM

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Quick Freezing Gives Tasty Product

Commercial canners are right when they brag about their products being quick frozen. Quick freezing is one of the keys to a quality product, says Dr. Nadine Tope, extension specialist-in-charge, foods and nutrition, North Carolina State University.

If you load your freezer properly, those peas, green beans or com can be frozen more quickly and the temperature kept at zero degrees or lower in the hrane freezer, says Dr. Tope.

Dont add too much unfrozen food at one time. Three pounds of food for every cubic foot of storage is about right. This means a persrai with a 12-culnc-food

Adventures A to Z can be discovered at Shqipard Memorial Library this summer. The fund includes a reading club, films, puppets, and story hours. For more information, call the Library at 7524177.

freezer can put in 36 pounds of unfrozen food every 24 hours.

For fast freezing, the new packages of food should be placed near the walls or the bottom of a chest or upright freezer. Make sure the temperature in the freezer is kept no higher than zero degrees to maintain quality.

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Clothes

Reflect

Leisure

By GAY PAULEY

UPISeiior Editor The brightening economic forecasts mean a brightening of mens wardrobes, especially in sportswear for the coming season.

One of the major results will be what one industry source called a boom, one that womens sportswear manufacturers have enjoyed for years.

Explosive is the word that best describes the menswear phenomenon, said Norman Karr, executive director of the Mens Fashion Association of America. And when you have an explosion youre bound to have a boom.

Karr said the longer hours mean men have more leisure, and a resulting increase in recreational activities. These are major factor in the changing style scene. With the improved economy men feel freer to spend again on clothes and on luxury materials.

Karr said the outdoorsy, rugged look is a big part of the new sportswear. He called it the survival look. It is worn too, he said, by men who never leave the city streets but are playing their own fashionable roles.

The Mens Fashion Association, holding its fall and winter showings recently in Philadelphia, reported these other trends:

In sportswear alone, watch for rugged-looking shirtings. When layered, they add warmth and give a man an option over a sweater.

Chip Tolbert, the associations fashion director, said men are buying the blouson jacket, a staple of womens wear. Now for men, the full bloused look includes jacket combinations of crushed leather and suede, tipped with fur collars such as beaver, and mohair sweater, an iridescent cotton shirt and pleated suede slacks.

Last year, the industry talked about the comeback of the double-breasted suit and blazer. Karr said the double-breasted look is expected to increase five-fold this season.

Its being shown in lines catering to the young-looking, lithe figure, said Karr, of a fashion known to disguise fat fronts.

For the young-looking build, watch also for the seven inch drop, a trade term for trimly tailored suits with chest measurements 7 inches larger than the waist.

A dressier sportswear brings back a collar treatment of the 1920s, the button-on instead of the attached. Karr noted many men skip the collar, so the band becomes the only thing at the neck.

The improvement in the economy brings new popularity for the luxury materials, Karr said. These include cashmere, vicuna, velvet trims, and furs such as beaver and mink. And the classic camels hair coat is back.

Outerwear continues the use of the popular down or fiber-filled, for bulk and warmth. They come in groups ranging from the short, waist-lengths to parka-hooded blousons, field jackets, military looks, ski jackets and even some models made of bullet proof fabrics.

Canvas, once a workmans or sailors fabric, shows in boldly striped blousons, with emphasis on exaggerated shoulders and minimized waists. Some of the canvas coats also are fiber-filled, some have zip-off sleeves and some close with a double-breasted panel.

Denim goes on and on, now stone-washed to look faded, also over-dyed, striped and styled into space ship or cowpoke jackets, vests and jeans.

Canvas and corduroy join denim for fall. In jeans, the dominant style remains, but there also are baggies, dropped yoke panels and inverted pleat models.

Of all the sportswear, Tolbert said the knits, especially sweaters, continue to show the most outstanding growth. There isnt a pattern, style, yam or color that hasnt been included for fall.

Joel Grey played the nightclub emcee in the Broadway stage version and the fUm of the musical Cabaret, winning both the Tony and Oscar awards for his^rtrayal.

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4-Tbe Daily Reflector, Greenrllle, N.C.-Frtday, July 15, lio

Ediforials

Good Step For Growers

The Customs Service finally has agreed to raise the import duty on so-called scrap tobacco being brought into this country. For nearly a decade, tobacco-related organizations and state officials have called for increased tariffs on the imported leaf, contending that shippers were shredding quality leaf to win the lower duty on scrap. The tobacco, once in this country, then competed at a lower price with domestic leaf.

Tragically, it took politics to get an order raising the duty. Republican Sen. Jesse Helms has confirmed that he wrote Treasury Secretary Donald T. Reagan asking for the increase, stating that it was a key to his re-election to the Senate in 1984. Helms has said he included the reference to his political future only to get their attention.

Under the ruling Monday, the shredded imported tobacco will be subject to a tax of 32 cents per pound, compared to the 16.1-cent that has been levied.

Growers generally will welcome the ruling, as did the president of North Carolinas Farm Bureau.

Its not surprising to see the executive director of the Leaf Tobacco Exporters Association, which has opposed the change, poohpooh the effects, but it is interesting to see such long-time tobacco advocates as John Cyrus of the state Department of Agriculture do an apparent about-face on the proposal. A few years ago, during the Democratic-controlled Carter administration, Cyrus was among those blaming the imported leaf for poor sales on warehouse floors. Now, with Helms credited for the change, Cyrus says it really will not have a great deal of effect.

He may be right; the change may not slow down imports, but at least it may make them more comparable to domestic tobacco of the same quality.

A Place In Trade

North Carolina business is finding 4t more difficult to stay at home.

The U.S. Department of Commerce has released a report showing that North Carolina is a leader in the Southeast in export of goods. Sharp increases have come as a result of the recessionary trends that have cut deeply into domestic markets. As expected, tobacco and textiles long the mainstay of the Tar Heel economy - are the leaders of a $4.5-billion export package, but the range of goods now going to overseas markets has expanded in recent months at a rapid pace.

In the first six months of this year, the Commerce Department said, 50 North Carolina companies already selling abroad expanded their markets while 25 new firms joined the export field.

With todays expertise in communication and travel, it is only logical that trade be conducted worldwide. North Carolina has a place in that global trade.

Paul T. O'Connor

Times Have Changed In The Counties

--Chet Currier

Post-Mortems

NEW YORK (AP) - Now that the recession is officially over, analysts are busy trying to assess its place in economic history.

Was it indeed, as it was so often described, the worst this country has seen since the Depression of the 1930s? Was anything worthwhile learned, or any indirect benefit gained, from this period of widespread economic pain?

The final answers to those questions, of course, will be subject to dispute for a long time to come. The cost to countless individuals and businesses is probably impossible to measure, and a lot of it may never be recouped.

But the post-mortems are beginning to come in. And as one analyst who has given the statistics a close examination points out, some striking things happened during the period that stretched from the summer of 1981 to the closing months of last year.

For one thing, noted Edward Gibson, director of research at the regional investment firm of First Albany Corp. inThe Daily Reflector

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Albany, N.Y., the cash and financial assets held by individuals in this country did not drop, as one might assume they would in a period of high unemployment and declining business activity.

Federal Reserve statistics, adjusted to take inflation into account, show' that individuals cash holdings rose 9.7 percent, and their net financial assets increased 8.7 percent, during the recession.

Individuals holdings of cash in currency and short-term investments, in fact, rose more than $250 billion in the 18 months from mid-1981 to the end of 1982, reaching a total of more than $2 trillion.

Thats enough money to pay off all the governments debt, and all individuals short-term borrowings as well, with several hundred billion dollars left over.

As Hugh Johnson, another First Albany analyst, pointed out, the cash buildup was motivated by more than just caution prompted by tough economic times. High interest rates and the advent of investments like money market mutual funds provided a powerful incentive for people who were able to do so to salt money away.

It now appears that this huge store of cash reserves has helped provide the fuel for economic recovery. Auto sales, retail trade and other consumer businesses are perking up strongly - providing one positive after-effect of the recession.

As Gibson acknowledges, the peak unemployment rate of 10.8 percent was by far the highest since the 30s. But he also notes that a greater percentage of the working-age population (56.4 percent) was employed than in any of the recessions of the 50s, 60s and 70s.

The evident explanation for the disparity in these two measures is that more adults - notably women - are active in the labor force now.

Furthermore, Gibson says, industrial production did not fall as much in 1981-82 (12 percent) as it did in 1973-75 (15 percent) or 1957-58 (13 percent). The inflation-adjusted gross national product, the total output of goods and services in the economy, dropped 2.2 percent in 81-82, against 4.9 percent in 73-75 and 2.7 percent in57-58.

These statistics are clearly no consolation to people who couldnt find a job or pay the rent during the long economic slump. It was a bad time, and many of the wounds are still not healed. But the data do present evidence that the postwar American economy has encountered other slumps as severe, or more so, in the oast, and come back from them.

RALEIGH - For the past two years. North Carolina county commisawiers have been extremdy reluctant to raise taxes In the wake of Propositkin 13 and the 1980 election, it was quite obvious that the populace didnt want higher taxes.

Things have changed this year. The N.C. Association of County Com-missiooers re|rts that the trend towarcfe holding the line did not continue this July. The association is estimating that the number of counties raising taxes doubled this year over last.

In July 1981, 33 counties increased taxes. In July 1982, only 19 raised taxes. In July 1983. NCACC projections show that S or 60 counties will have raised taxes. The number of counties cutting taxes, on the other hand, drooled from six two years ago to only one this year.

Ed Regan. NCACC fiscal analyst, reports that commissioners and county managers are ascribing six reasons for

the great many tax increaces The tax base has Dot been ^wing. Revenue gains from residential <md commercial eonstructioo woe offset, largely, by reductions in business inventory. Fw those counties not involved in revaluation, revenue growth may avaage only two percent. The states fiscal difficulties this year were tied to a similar lag in revenue.

Several counties lost considerable revenue because of industrial revaluation and the tax break on air pollution equipment that the legislature meant for textile companies but which went to everyone, especially the utilities.

In the p^ two years, capital needs have been largely aside because of the recession and hi^ intnest rates. These counties have now decided to undertake those capital projects. Also, some counties have decided to begin pay-as-you-go capital programs.

County reserves, called fund

balances, were depleted last year, as Regan warned, tqr commissiooefs im-willing to raise taxes. Many are now below the a^t percent reserve level wfaidi the Local Government Qxn-mis^ recmnmends fw propor cash Qow managanoit Some taxes are bang raised to restore these balances.

Losses in federal aid to educatk and a stagnatk oi ^ate aid meant that better schools would have to come at the expense of local taxpaym. Sevaral counties decided better sdaxds were worth hi^ taxes.

Coimtks got hit with federal mandates for betto* administration of social sarvice ixograms. They had to hire more peo{de.

Dpite these proWans, its still surprising that so many counties Increased taxes. If youll think back to the 1982 primaries and elections, ^11 remember the great many incumbait county commisskMiers who dklnt get

rejected. About half up fw rejection either retired (X were defeated.

Regan repwted, at that time, that many of these defeated commisnas expressed the feelii^ that high taxes had done them in. There wae also comkies, howeva-, where a cut'm services or a failure to increase school aid hurt incurnbems. Most notaMe o those cases may have been forma NCACC president J.T Knott of Wake County who lost afta standing against mae school aid and hi^ia taxes.

The 1983-84 budgets wae pik togetha by that new class of cotmty com-missioaers, the class we thou^t would be much more tigit-Bsted about tax increases. One o two things happened to them. Eitha they learned that bud^-cutting as a commisskma isnt as easy as it soifflds as a candidate. Or, they gik into office and became enamaed to spading ptfolk money just like their predecessors.

i1NEnOMOimNBNSlNIBbWll6RMOIO^

Art Buchwald

A Computer And The Spouse

The home computer business is in a lot of trouble. It would be nice to blame the Japanese for it all, but they never really got into the action.

One of the reasons the business got into difficulty is the female gender problem. Women still dont appreciate the value of a home computer and what it can do to make their lives easier.

When I set up my brand-new computer one ni^t, my wife asked why I bought it.

This is going to change our lives. We can do our taxes on it.

H R Block did them already .

Well, we can do them next year, I said. We also can compute our household expenses on this machine. Give me all our bills and Ill start programming them. You have to be kidding. It will take me three months to find all our bills. Would you take my word for it that we ^nt $10,000 more than you made in 1982?

All right. Ill put that into the computer.

What does the computer say about

that?

It says we spent $10,000 more than I made. Why dont I try balancing your checkbook? Give me all your stubs. What for?

The banks computer could have made a mistake and we can take our computer printout to the president and show it to

him.

She came back and threw her check stubs on my desk, and stomped out of my study.

Three hours later stie came back. How are you doing?

Im up to Lord and Taylors stub for March. So far e^rerything checks out. Maybe Ill make your emendar for the week. What have you got on for the next

few days?

I have a hairdressers appointment on Thursday.

Good, now Ill just feed that information into the computer, and then when you want to know what youve got on for Thursday, you just put this floppy disk into this slot, put your finger On CODE, then hit this button, and youll know you have a hairdressers appointment on Thursday. I already know it.

Okay, forget the calendar. Lets take an inventory of everything we have in the house.

At eleven oclock at night?

Why not? Once we record it on a disk, and we have a fire, well know what was lost.

Suppose the computer gets burned up in the fire?

We wont ke^ the disk in the house. Well put it in my office, and a printout in

the banks safety deposit box.

What else can your computer do?

1 can key into a bulletin board and talk to anyone in the United States who has a compatible communications terminal. You can do that by phone. You still havent told me why you bought this computer.

If you must know, I bought it for the children. Kids have to grow up these days with computer knowledge.

Ourdiildren are all grown up and they dont live here anymore.

You never know wheq theyll come back home.

The home computer is still in my study, but I dont seem to use its much as I thought I would. I made a friend in Minneapolis with it (me night, but just when we were getting to know each other, his wife made him come to bed.

(c) 1983 Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer-

Military Still Has Abusive Trainers

WASHINGTON - From across the aisle, we could see that something was troubling the young man with the Adidas running shoes and the all-American appearance.

It turned out hed lost one of his contact lenses and didnt have a spare.

But there was more. The blond-haired Amtrak passenger had just begun a 30-hour train trip to Anniston, Ala., and the Army training camp nearby. It was his first time away from home, the 20-year-old Pennsylvanian said, and he was scared. Moreover, his parents hadnt said goodbye, which only made him feel worse.

We talked for a while with the green recruit, and ne^r the end of the conversation suggested that he keep a diary of his boot camp experiences. He was enthusiastic about the idea, and he might have remained so. But a week later, we stupidly tried to call him, causing holy havoc.

Why did you tell the sergeant who you were? our would-be chronicler later demanded over the phone. He then t(dd us how his superior, upon receiving our telephone message, had thrust him against a barracks wall, vowing that the Young recruit wouldnt talk again if he associated with reporters.

As anyone (whos either been there or seen the movie An Officer and a Gentleman) knows, military training camp is supposed to be tough. But this young mans run-in with authority made us wonder whether military regulations against physical and mental abuse were as effective as they should be.

From last October through March of this year, the Army alone received more th 200 complaints about physical and verbal abuse against recruits. Locally-based inspectors general verified only half of the reports, but sources close to the Pentagon contended that official records significantly undercounted the actual number of incidents.

That often-abusive trainers still plague boot camps doesnt surprise Kathy Gilberd, director of the National Lawyers Guilds Military Task Force. With so many recruits trying to enter the

military. Gilberd said, ...many drill sergeants are succumbing to some of their old ways. Sheer volume, it seems, is overtaxing the system.

Added an aide to the House Investigations Subcommittee on Military Personnel ; Its a miracle that anyone but family (members) ever hears of these abuse charges. It takes a courageous recruit to file a complaint.

Several years ago, two deaths at Ft.' Jackson, S.C., and beatings of 20 recruits at Ft. Dix, N.J., prompt^ the Military Personnel Subcommittee to look into

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

When Cortez landed on the shores of Mexico with his army, he burned his ships behind him. God warned Lot and his wife as they fled the burning city of Sodom not to look back.

Moral advancement for all of us means putting a stop to something, closing a door, burning bridges or doing something that will make it impossible for us ever to go back to the old life. It is the old story of deciding for the sake of God and honor, or loved one. to be

through with a past which can only degrade our lives.

There are some things we can cling to continually^ but there are others with reference to which we can only close the door, wash the hands, bum the bridges or flee the city of destruction.

Jesus seldom faced temptation and fought it. For the most part, he turned his back upon it. His formula was, **Get thee behind me. Satan.

trainee abuse. The subcommittee concluded that the Army hadnt taken allegations of abuse seriously, and had s^ jected culprits to light punishments. The subcommittee suggested that the Army do more to determine each recruits capacity for stress as well as the fitness of drill instructors themselves.

Since these recommendations were issued in 1980, the Army says its strength)ed training standards, requiring, for example, all drill instructors to attend an eight-week school. Abuse is of great concern to the chain of command, said one major and former drill instructor. According to the Pentagon, the Army trains approximately 15,000 new recruits each month.

Yet only the Marines, under the initiative of retired commandant ,(and former Joint Chiefs of Staff member) Robert C. Barrow have instituted psychological screenings for drill sergeants. 1 got hell from some of my associates for pushing the reform, Barrow told us by phone from his residence in Louisiana, but it had to be done. Drill instructors ... keep long hours and woric with provocative recruits. (Instructors) have to be checked out and trained carefully.

Such tough-minded reforms might disrupt order in the other armed services, but should be welcomed. Iliev might prompt the Army to be more judicious when recruits and their parents raise questions about poor treatment. In the long run, they would help to improve the militarys image and guarantee it more willing reciuits, too.

CoDvriuht 1983 Field Enterorises. Inc.





Honduran Diplomat Points To Nicaragua's Arming

ByGEORGEGEDDA Associated Press Write WASHINGTON (AP) -Nicaragua bas almost twice as many soldiers and m<e than 60 times the number of foreign advisers as the rest of Central America combined. the Honduran government says.

Honduran Ambassador Roberto Martinez Ordonez made the chai^ Thursday at an Organization (rf American States meeting and drew a sharp rebuttal from Nicaraguan Ambassador

Edgar Parrales, who claimed the Honduran was unable to back bis allega-tions with proof.

The special meeting of the OAS permanent council, called by Honduras, was marked by charges and counter-chai^ with the two governments txriding each other re^wnsiWe for the rising tensions in the region.

The meeting underscored the d^ distrust (rf two of the principal antagonists in Central Amoicas spreading ideological warfare.

Aspirin Makes Pain Relievers

NEW YORK (AP) -Whether you call It Bufferin, Anacin, Alka-Seltzer, Dri^ or Midol, it all contains the same pain reliever -aspirin.

No clever name or high-priced ad campaign is going to make it any better at stilling your aches and pains.

The Federal Trade Commission underscored that point Wendesday by ordering two companies not to say their aspirin products were better than anyone elses, unless they could prove it.

The companies, Bristol-Myers and Sterling Drug, are unlikely to be able to do that, says Dr. Sidney Wolfe of the Public Interest Health Research Group founded by Ralph Nader. While some of their products contain other ingredients besides aspirin, the added substances are totally worthless as a pain reliever, Wolfe says.

"There are only two ingredients approved by the Food and Drug Administration as safe and effective over-the-counter pain relievers, Wolfe says. One is called a^irin and the other is acetaminophen.

Both are available in inexpensive no-frills or Storebrand varieties, at costs far lower than the name-brand products.

"Conservatively, at least $300 million or $400 million a year are being wasted by consumers because instead of buying store-brand acetaminophen or aspirin they are buying Bayer or Anacin or any of the other (brand-name) products, Wolfe says.

He adds that the consumer may well be getting unknown or unwanted ingredients in a brand-name pain killer.

Anacin, for example, contains caffeine. It was once advertised as containing the pain reliever doctors recommend most, until the FTC in 1981 ordered its maker, American Home Products, to stop saying so. The pain reliever doctors recommend most is, of course, aspirin. An Anacin tablet contains 400 milligrams of aspirin and 32 milligrams of caffeine.

Maximum strength Anacin is no different, except that it contains a little more aspirin, 300 milligrams, and the 32 milligrams of caffeine.

The 1982 edition 'of the Physicians Desk Reference, a standard guide to dru^, lists 48 products that contain aspirin. The information in the PDR, as its called, comes from the manufacturers of the products. Here are the ingre^nts in a few common brands:

Bufferin; 324 milligrams of aspirin that bas been buffered, chemically treated in a way that, its maker had claimed, makes it less likely to upset the stomach. The FTC said Wednesday there is no proof that buffering works.

Excedrin; It contains aspirin and acetaminophen, 250 milligrams of each. Wolfe says that combination doesnt- make very much sense at all.

Bayer Aspirin: 325 milligrams of aspirin.

Alka-Seltzer Effervescent Pain Reliever and Antacid: 324 milligrams of aspirin, 1,904 milligrams sodium bicarbonate and 1,000 milligrams citric acid.

Dristan Decongestant-Antihistamine-Analgesic Capsules; 325 milligrams aspirin, 12.5 milligrams phenylpropanolamine, 16.2 milligrams caffeine, 2 milligrams chloipheniramine maleate.

Midol: 454 milligrams aspirin, 32.4 milligrams caffeine, 14.9 milligrams cin-namedrine hydrochloride.

The FTCs ruling Wednesday was concerned only with the following products, all containing aspirin: Bufferin, Excedrin, Excedrin P.M., Bayer Aspirin, Bayer Childrens Aspirin, Cope, Vanquish and Midol.

Here are the ingredients in a few brands of acetaminophen;

Tylenol: 323 milligrams acetaminophen. Extrastrength Tylenol; 500 milligrams acetaminophen.

Datril; 325 milligrams acetaminophen.

Anacin-3; 500 milligrams acetaminophen, 32 milligrams caffeine.

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - The Swedish navy renewed search operations today for possible foreign submarines prowling off the coast of Sundsvall, site of an extensive sub hunt in May, following unexplained periscope sitings.

The military closed off an area around a bay at Alnon island in the inlet to Sundsvall, 252 miles north of Stockholm. Additional personnel were called in and a mine station in the area was manned and put on alert, military sources said.

The navy was tightlipped about the (^ration. We are not going to inform about our units activities in the area, Defense Staff spokesman Roger Johansson said.

About 20 witnesses, many of them military personnel, reported sighting a periscope or the backwash from a

DENYILLNESS VIENNA (AP) - The International Gay Association, incorporating homosexual organizations from more than 30 countries, on Thursday urged doctors to stop treating homosexuality as a sickness.

In his 45-minute address, Martinez issued a point-by-point analysis of what he described as Nicara^s massive military buildep since the 1979 revolution and asked, Is Nicaragua preparing to make peace or to wage war?

Replying extemporaneously throu^ a translator. Parrales sought to ca^ doubt on Martinezs claims that Nicaraguas armed forces have increased 13-fold since the leftist revolution that ousted President Anastasio Somoza.

If we have such a power

ful army of more than 100,000, bow is it we have not been able to do away with a smaU rebel army of a few thousand? Parries asked.

With delegates from the other 28 OAS nations listening intently, the two ambassadors jtraded their allegations while seated across frmn each other at the horseshoe-shaped table in the OAS main cwiference room.

Responding to Martinez claim that the Sandinistas have violated Honduran land, sea and air space almost 200 times since 1979, Parrales said Honduras has

allowed its territory to be used by counterrevolutionary Nicaraguans to launch raids against the Sandinista government.

If Honduras feels threatened it is because wben you play with fire you get burned, Parrales said, adding that the Honduran role in providing a haven for armed Nicaraguan insurgents has ^en corroborated by numerous U.S. news reports and congressional and church delegations.

He also took note of news reports that the CIA is plan

ning to support 12.000 to

15,000 anti-government rebels in Nicaragua, roughly double the figure of two months ago U.S. Ambassador J William Middendorf wound up the two-hour debate with an expression of "strong support for Martinez presentation.

He accused the Sandinistas of breaking a promise to hold elections and said the right of the Nicaraguan p^le to self-determination seems further away than ever.

El Salvadoran Ambassador Oscar Castro

Araujo joined in the attack on Nicaragua, accusing the Sandinistas of supporting leftist insurgents in El Salvador

Martinez distributed charts to the delegates indicating that. Nicaragua's armed forces total more than

130.000 compared with some

70.000 for the rest of Central America.

.Another chart depicting "foreign militaiy and other advisers in Central America showed 17.000 in Nicaragua and only 265 in all other Central .American countries combined.

In his speech. Martinez alleged that the foreign advisers in Nicaragua were sent by Cuba, the Soviet Union. East Germany. Bulgaria. North Korea. Vietnam and the Palestine Liberation Organization. In just the last month, he said. Nicaragua has received seven arms shipments from abroad.

Parrales suggested the United States supplied the data to Honduras, assertmg that the Honduran government lacks the means to acquire such information by itself.

Sweden Renews Its Alien Sub Search

periscope in the Alno sound Thursday.

In early May, the navy conducted an intensive 12-day search in the Sundsvall harbor for what they suspect were snooping Soviet midget submarines. Dozens of depth charges were dropped and mines detonated to force up any intruders, but the operation was called off May 10 without success.

Dowry Laws

NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Prime Minister Indira Gandhi says her government is toughening laws to protect Indian women, some of whom are killed by their husbands and in-laws wanting to collect a dowry.

Mrs. Gandhi, at a meeting Thursday, cited cases of Indian husbands still seeking dowries from their wives families after 10 years of marriage. Making dowry demands was outlawed in 1961, but the practice continues. Critics say the law is difficult to enforce.

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Lowery To Speak Saturday

Martin Luther King III and Dr Joseph Lower>-, natioiial president of the Southern Christian Leadership mereoce, will be the guests at a People to People Fellowship" on Saturday at 3 p.m. at Phillipi Christian Church on Farmville Boulevard

Topics of discussion include jobs, justice, peace and voter registration. The fellowship is sponsored by Phillipi Christian Church, the Pitt County Chapter of SCLC, Bennie Rountree and Wilbert Pete Little.

King is scheduled to speak about a march in Washington. DC. commemorating the 20th anniversary of his fathers "I Have Dream" speech. The Pitt County SCLC Chapter will sponsor a bus to the Washington rally in late .August.

Clogging Class To Be Offered

A beginning class m clogging will be offered by the Greenville Recreation and Parks Dqiartment. Earl White, one of the members of the original Green Grass Cloggers, will be the instructor.

The class will meet at the Jaycee Park Building. 2000 Cedar Lane. The class will meet for five consecutive Wednesdays from 7 to 8:30 p.m. beginning July 20. Registration fee is $11, with the class (^n to anyone 12 or older.

Preregistration is a must and can be made by calling 752-4137, extension 200. Class size will be limited.

Homemakers To Have Picnic

The Extension Homemakers .Association of Pitt County will have a family picnic Saturday at 4 p.m. at the Elm Street Recreation Park.

The picnic will start with group activity of songs, table games, horseshoes and other activities. The association asks each member to bring a picnic basket.

Simpson Schedules Village Meeting

The village of Simpson will hold a regular monthly meeting Monday at 8 p.m. at the Phillipi Baptist Church Education Building. The meeting is open to all Simpson residents.

Solicitation Request Approved

Police Chief Glenn Cannon has announced approval of a request by Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church to conduct a merchant solicitation July 14-24. The drive is designed to raise funds for the church.

Classs Of '43, '44 To Hold Reunion

The Classes of 1943 and 1944 of Greenville High School will hold a reunion at the Greenville Golf and Country Club Saturday at 6p.m.

The two classes have held reunions twice before, after 25 and 35 years. Reservations have been made for 138 persons to attend. These include class members, spouses and a few facultv members.-In The Area

Schools Set Informational Meeting

There will be an information meeting at the Elmhurst School Libraray Monday at 10 a.m. to discuss Greenville schools' K-3 Enrichment Magnet Program. The meeting will be open to all parents interested in the pn^ram.

Kid's Dog Show Scheduled '

The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will sptwsor its annual kids dog show Tuesday at Elm Street Park. Registratioo begins at 6:30 p.m with the show immediately following.

Children between the ages of 4 and 14 who have a d(^ at least 6 months old may enter. Ribbons will be awarded in each catego|7 and a tro^y will be given to best in show.

For more information call 752-4137, ext . 200.

Bike-A Than Raises $230

The Winterville Jaycettes recently raised $230 in a bike-a-tbon to benefit the Leukemia Society of America. Timmy Lilley received a prize for raising the most money ($67) and Matthew Geary had the ItMigest ride, 28 miles.

Investigation Continuing

Police were continuing their investigation today of a purse-snatching incident in the parking lot of Hollowells Drug Store about 2:25 p.m. Wednesday, Chief Glenn Cannon said.

Cannon said Myrtle Hill Younce of Whites Trailer Park told investigators man grabbed her pocketbook from under her arm as she stood In the parking lot, and ran away.

The purse, valued at $20, contained about $5 in cash.

Pitt Schools Air'Viewpoint'

Regaining accredition the East Carolina University School of Education will be the topic of this weeks "Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.

Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Dr. Charles Coble, acting dean of the ECU School of Education. This weeks segment is the second of a two-part series.

The show is scheduled at the following times and stations: Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sunday, 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05 p.m. WBZQ-FM.

For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.

Trio Attends NAACP Meeting

A delegation from Pitt County is attending the 74th annual convention of the NAACP being held in New Orleans this week. Those attending are D.D. Garrett, president of the Pitt County chapter of the NAACP; Willie Mae Carney of Bethel and Purvis Cohens of Greenville. The week-long convention continues through Saturday.

Gym Class For Youth Planned

A gymnastics dinic for youth will be held at Bethel Elementa^ Schod July 18-21 from 6:304 p.m. each day.

Instnictioo will be given on the balance beam, the mini-trampoijne and in the area irf floor exercises. Clinic director will be Jon Rose (rf East Carolina University.

For further infwmatk contact the Pitt County Commvmity Schools Office at 752-6106, extenskm 205.

County Board Meets Monday

The Pitt County Board of Commissioners will meet Monday

at 10 a m. at the county office building at 1717 W. Fifth St.

Included on the agenda will be the consideration of appointments to a number o boards, a discussion of office space for the Pitt-Greenville Arts Council, and a 2 p.m. workshop session to discuss: additional office space for the clerk of superior court, drainage at the county farm, plunfoing fees and the proposed Bell Arthur fire district.

Douglas Speaks To Area Council

Dr. Eugene Douglas, director of mental retardation and substance abuse services for the state Divison of Mental Health, sp<*e this week to the Eastern Reponal Council of Community Mental Health Programs. Eleven catchment areas were represMted.    '

Douglas gave a report on several issues relating to community mental health programs being debated in the current session of the General Assembly.Picketing Pauses To Accept A Check

TARRYTOWN, N Y. (AP)

John Jawor, a reactor qierator at the Indian Point, nuclear power plant, put aside his "On Strike Against Con Ed picket sign long enough to accept a $15,000 check from his employer -but it wasnt a defection from the cause.

Jawor was awarded the check by the utility for a suggestion that is saving the company hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The recent award was the maximum available under a company program that encourages employees to make suggestions to improve operations.

Jawor, who has been taking part in a strike against Consolidated Edison since June 18, got his award for sugg^ing that nitrogen be used to prevoit a vacuum from forming when water is drained from beat-exchange tubes for a servicing shutdown of a nuclear reactor electrical generator.

With no vacuum, 16 hours are saved in each shutdown. Because of the much higher cost of r^lacement power, that means saving $300,000 each time.

The average striker has lost close to $2,000 while picketing Con Edison.

MARIJUANA RAID - Robeson County officas begin i^rooting 127 marijuana plants found in woods near the home of Sgt. Ricky Stewart, who watdies from the edge of the fidd. Stewart, an Army recruiter assigned to the Lumberton area, was charged with manufachuing marijuana, fekmkHis poss^km with intat to sell and simple possesskm of marinuana. Stewart has denied any knowledge of the plants, which offices said ranged from three feet to eight feet tall. (APLaserpboto)

Testing Ability To Meet Crisis

WASHINGTON (API -The ability of the United States to reinforce NATO during a crisis wUl be tested in* August and September when 17,000 U.S. soldiers travel to Western Europe for maneuvers, the Pentagon says.

The annual field exercises have been conducted primarily in West Germany for the last 15 years. Army units taking part in the exercises include elements of

the 1st Cavalry Division, Fort Hood, Texas; 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Bliss, Texas; a Ranger battalion from Hunter Army Airfield, Ga., and 39 units from the National Guard and Reserve.

In addition, the Air Force will send 48 F-4E and F-15 fighter planes from Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, N.C., and Holloman Air Force Base, N.M.

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Nuke Plants Face Major Repair Jobs

By MAH YANCEY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Small cracks that could lead to a reactor meltdown have been found in the large cooling water pipes at 13 of the nations nuclear power plants and officials fear that more may have the same problem.

Seven of the 13 plants have been told they can resume operation after patching the hairline cracks, but government officials view that fix as only temporary and say that utilities will have to spend hundreds of millions of dollars replacing the piping as a permanent solution.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission disclosed the extent of the problem Thursday after reviewing piping inspections conducted during the past year at 18 boiling water reactors, all manufactured by General Electric.

The commission also ordered another five reactors manufactured by GE and suspected of having the same problem to shut down within the next 30 days so their large cooling pipes, ranging in diameter from 12 inches to 24 inches, can be inspected.

The shutdown was the first one the commission has ordered for inspections since 1979, when several plants were told to cl(^ to look for alleged structural problems that might affect their ability to withstand an earthquake.

Two NRC officials said Thursdays order was issued after the four companies that own the five uninspected reactors rejected suggestions during meeting Wednesday and earlier this month that they shut down voluntarily.

We just didnt think they should be down now, said Cindy Longest, a spokeswoman for Commonwealth Edison Co.. a Chicago-based utility that owns two of the affected reactors - Unit 2 at the Quad Cities plant in Cordova. 111., and Unit 3 at the Dresden plant at Morris, 111.

However, spokesmen for the three other utilities denied that officials for their companies had been requested to close the reactors voluntarily.

The other three reactors ordered to shut down were Unit 3 at the Tennessee Valley Authoritys Browns Ferry plant at Athens, Ala.; Unit 2 at Carolina Power & Light Co.s Brunswick plant at Southport, N.C., and Boston Edison Co.s Pilgrim plant at Plymouth, Mass.

Harold Denton, director of reactor regulation for the commission, said the cracks could cause the pipes of a plants primary cooling system to break, creating the potential for a core meltdown and a large release of toxic radioactive materials.

The potential for suffering a loss-of-coolant accident or major leak rests primarily with these lines, said Richard Vollmer, <lirector of the NRCs engineering division.

All of the plants have backup emergency cooling systems but, said Ed Case, the assistant director in Dentons office, "We dont like to have to test those thin^.

The closest a civilian nuclear power plant has come to a core melt was during the March 1979 accident at the Three Mile Island plant in Pennsylvania. The TMI reactor overheated and released a small amount of radioactivity but evidence later showed that the fuel in the core itself did not melt.

Denton said the severity of cracks found recently prompted him to call for the shutdown of the plants not yet inspected.

There are a fair number of cracks reported that were 50 percent through, all the way around, he said. Thats why Im fairly uncomfortable with allowing these plants that have not been inspected to continue to operate.

The industry and government had been aware of similar corrosion and cracking in smaller pipes less than 12 inches in diameter since 1975. But the problem first appeared in the larger pipes last summer at Niagra Mohawk Power Co.s Nine-Mile-Point Unit 1 reactor at Scriba,N.Y.

Niagara Mohawk opted to replace the piping, a job which cost it $65 million and required the reactor to be shut down for more than a year.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C.-Friday, July 15,1983-7

SATURDAY

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City Council...

(Continued from Pagel)

transfers at 10 cents per transfer, except for riders utilizing bus passes or ticket books; inclusion in the manual of a charge for 100-ride ticket books at a rale of $40 each, with free transfers; and a charge for regular 40-ride passes of $16, with free transfers, and elderly/handicapped 40-ride passes remaining at $8 with free transfers.

Mrs. Meeks said the Public Transportation Commission has been studying local rider fees and recommended the amendments. The new fees go into effect Oct. 1.

Council members adopted a resolution authorizing the city manager to sign contracts for the extension of sewer service outside the corporate limits. A joint policy statement on development adopted by the city and Greenville Utilities requires that requests for extension of sewer lines outside the city, or requests for service for existing out-of-city sewer lines to serve residential and commercial development, must be accompanied by a petition for voluntary annexation or a petition for annexation to be filed as soon as the property meets requirements for voluntary annexation.

The ordinance authorizes the manager to execute cov^ nants of voluntary annexation with owner-developers for the extension and provision of sewer services outside the city. Other action taken by the council included:

- Scheduling of public hearings for Au^t on a petition by Bill Clark, and others, for satellite annextion of section one of West Hills Townhomes on State Road 1204, and on a petiton by John Wellons to annex sections one, two and three of Heritage Village subdivision;

- Scheduling of a public hearing on a petition to close a portion of Taylor Street that has never been formally opened:

- Continuing until a later date action on a request by Ms. Carolyn Glass of 206 Greenfield Blvd. to prohibit thru truck traffic on a section of the boulevard;

- Approval of the sale ($30,001) of a 24,627-square-foot parcel at the intersection of Ninth and Evans streets to Hon-Ming Chan, who proposes to construct a restaurant;

- Adoption of an ordinance prohibiting contracts with city employees, stipulating that the city shall not accept a bid, nor contract with, any city employee for the performance of services, or for the purchase of apparatus, supplies, or materials;

- Adoption of a resolution approving a grant of easement to the N.C. Department of Transportation for improvements to State Road 1534 near GUCs new sewer treatment plant; and

- The reappointment of Christia Dunn and Herb Carlton to new one-year terms on the Greenville Citizens Bikeway Committee, the reappointment of Della Dayson to a second four-year term on the Pitt-Greenville Airport Authority, and the reappointment of Dr. Frank G. Fuller, Rhea Markello and Dr. William S. Bost, Jr. to their second three-year terms on the Public Transportation Commission.

Unhurt After Chutes Tangle

NOVATO, Calif. (AP) -The parachutes of two Green Berets became hopelessly tangled 1,500 feet from tt ground, but the men escaped injury and returned to the helicopter to jump again.

"They both stood up, looked at each other and were both smiling, said Phillip Gonzales, an Army medic who photographed the accident. "Whats more amazing is that they requested to go back up on the next jump in the helicopter. And they did.

The incident occurred during a practice jump (Sunday near Hamilton Field, a former Air Force base located about 25 miles north of San Francisco.

After seven others had leaped from the helicopter, the last man jumped and tried to open his parachute.

He had a little twist in his line, Gonzales said. By the time he came out of that, he was snared in the parachute of the other man.

The last jumper went through the canopy of the man immediately below him, and he tried to bounce off by spread-eagling, Gonzales said.

He continued to fall, but his tangled chute kept him attached to the other jumper. With the ground only 300 feet below^ the first jumper tried to pull his reserve chute, which also became tangled, Gonzales said.

At about 100 feet above the ground, the reserve (of the second jumper) finally did come open, he added. They landed in a field in the drop zone without a scratch.

The men, whose names were withheld, were part of the 3rd Battalion, 12th special forces group, airborne. The incident took about a minute from the time they jumped from the helicopter to their landing.

Because of their expertise, these men saved their lives, Gonzales said. I sat there on the. ground listemng to the chaplam as

Reprimands...

(Continued from Pagel)

AT THE MIKE - Actress Cathy Lee Crosby gives a bit of friendly reinforc^ent to George Burns as Burns records the title song for his bo(A, How to Live to be 100 or More, for the Con^leat label at Village Recording studios in Los Angeles.* (AP Laserphoto)

Curtain Falling On Jamboree

KANANASKIS COUNTRY, Alberta (AP) - Singing and cheering teen-agers from 102 countries gathered beneath a Canadian mountain sky and bade farewell to new friends made during the 15th World Scout Jamboree.

The ties between people here, these bonds of friendship, will stay with us, Ken Hayashida, 16, of Seal Beach, Calif., said as the nine-day campout ended Thursday night. No matter what happens in the world, we will know we had peace for two weeks here in Canada.

The 13,564 scouts, some carrying flags of their homelands, marched to the ceremonial grounds at the foot of the Canadian Rockies. And in the cold, clear night, they sat cross-legged on the ground and pledged to meet again in 1987 - at the next world jamboree near Sydney, Australia.

You now know that people all over the world reaUy are the same, with the same feelings, Lord Baden-Powell, the grandson of scoutings founder, told the campers. "The way we

speak and behave is the only difference.

The jamboree was the first to include girls as participants and had more countries represented than any otlier in the 63-year history of the event. About 3,600 attended from the United States.

Campers began packing Thursday and were leaving today and Saturday. Since July 6, this community in the wilderness had been the eighth-largest city in Alberta.

Although they traded everything from uniforms to badges, many scouts said the most rewarding part of their stay was the exchange of cultures.

The jamboree could literally change the course of the world, said Scott Higginbotham, 16, of Dallas.

One of these bop could become leader of Libya and one of our guys could become president. Then, they could walk up to each other and say: Remember the World Jamboree in83?

It could be a key to world peace, he said.

Contracts

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

day

In-

Signed contracts for the construction of a new wastewater treatment plant for Greenville were delivered to contractors at a preconstruction conference held Thursday, and site work for the plant is expected to get under way next week.

Greenville Utilities Commission Director Charles Horne said this morning that, although contracts allow two years to complete the 10.5 million gallon per plant, contractors dicated construction should be completed in IW years.

Planning for the $10.49 million project began about 10 years ago. But government red tape and changing regulations have postponed the start of construction.

Funding for the project will include more than r.8 million in grants from the Environmental Protection Agency and $1.3 million from the State.

Detailed plans for the new plant were completed in 1982, at a cost of $505,000. Horne said the bids for the project, accepted May 18, were right on target.

OPPOSE MISSILES

MILAN, Italy (AP) -Nearly 60 percent of Italians oppose the planned installation of NATO nuclear missiles in Sicily, an opinion survey rep.)rted Tuesday.

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he would have a hard time getting re-elected after barely squeaking out a third term last fall.

If Dan Crane came to me and asked me if he should resign, House GOP Leader Robert H. Michel of Illinois said in reply to a qu^ion, Well, Id like to be as much of a strength to him as possible. Id say the Good Lord sometimes moves in mysterious ways.

House Speaker Thomas P. ONeill Jr., D-Mass., said the windup of the investigation by the ethics committee, formally the Committee on , Standards of Official Conduct, yielded findmgs that were most disturbing.

The committee voted 11-1 to recommend to the full House the reprimand of the two lawmakers.

Committee special counsel Joseph A. Califano Jr. also said the panel found that James C. Howarth, majority chief page in the House doorkeepers office, engaged in a sexual rela-. tionship with a 17-year-old female in 1980 who was at the time under his direct supervision and gave her preferential treatnient. Califano said there was evidence that in 1979 and 1980 Howarth, now chief majority page in the document room, purchased cocaine in the Democratic cloakroom where lawmakers mill during House sessions.

Unlike the two lawmakers, Howarth did not waive his right to a public hearing. Califano said he urged disciplinary proceedings against Howarth.

Co-workers said Howarth was not in his office Thursday and could not say where he could be reached. He also could not be located through calls to a number of Howarths listed in area telephone directories.

The committee said Studds and the male page both confirmed the details of their relationship. It said Crane and the girl page did the same.

In his floor statement, Studds said, It is not a simple task for any of us to meet adequately the obligations of either public or private life, let akme both. But these challenges are made substantially more complex when one is, as am I, both an elected public official and gay.

The committee said Studds acknowledged in writing that he made sexual advances to two other male pages in 1973.

After Crane left Washington, his office issued a statement in which he said; Im sorry that I made a mistake.

It happened three years ago, he said. Im human and in no way,did I violate my oath of office. I only hope my wife and children will forgive me.

The committee said the girl told investigators she found Crane as an older man, very attractive. She said she went to his offce to pay off the basketball bet at 8 p.m. and that he asked her if she wanted some beer.

The girl replied that she did not like beer and the two of them then went to a suburban Virginia bar, the committee quoted her as saying. Because she was underage, though, she was not served and they went to Cranes apartment where we went to bed.

Now, an investigator asked her, were there any other occasions after that when you went out with Congressman Crane?

Went out with? No, the girl said. But the panel quoted her as saying she

went to his apartment three or four more times tor sex. She said she would meet him on the House floor to m^ke such appointments and later jmn him in his office or wait for him by his car.

The former who had a relationship with Studds was quoted by the committee as saying he was flattered and excited when the congressman asked him to dinner.

The young man said he went to Studds apartment where they sipped vodka and cranberry juice until the small hours and then had sex. He said it happened several times, and then they

went to Eun^ together in August 1973.

I have nothing negative to say about him, the committee quoted the former page as saying. In fact, I thought that he provided me with one of the more wonderful experiences of my life, if we exclude the instances of sexual experience, which I was somewhat uncomfortable with.

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House Passes New Waste Bill

By F. ALAN BOYCE

Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Predictions that adjournment migbt be delayed until Wednesday UxA some of the pressure off the state Senates consideration of one hazardous waste bill but opoMd the door to another bill passed by the House.

Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, who sponsored Uie H(h^ bill with Rep. Joe Hackney, OOrange, said it

could be the answer to disputes between the House and Senate over regulating hazardous waste landfills.

Its consistent and predictable, be said. Really, thats all indus^ wants. Mavretic said be saw no reason why the bill could not pass the Senate, adding that Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, who has fought the other bills, has no problems with this one.

The bills 96-1 passage was

New Physicians Joined Program

ECU News Bureau

Thirty-seven new physicians have joined the residency training program at the East Carolina University School of Medicine and Pitt County Memorial Hostal.

This is the first year of operation for the medical centers emergency medicine program, a new field of specialization in medicine. Four physicians are participating in that curriculum.

The majority of residents are specializing in family medicine, the medical centers oldest postgraduate program. Eleven of the 30 family medicine residents are new this year. Two dentists are partic^ating in the family medicine departments one-year dental training program.

The postgraduate program also has seven new physicians in medicine, three in obstetrics and gynecology, five in pediatrics, two in psychiatric medicine and three in surgery.

Fourteen of the residents received their medical degrees from ECU in May.

ECU and Pitt Memorial now have a total of 96 residents training in all the medical centers programs.

Residency training is a three- to five-year clinical experience that follows completion of medical school. The length of residency training depends on the specialty selected. Training in family medicine.

Honorees On Failures Day

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Lee lacocca, Betty Ford and football coach Woody Hayes are following in the footsteps of the legendary Don Quixote - theyve aU tilted at their own personal windmills and triumphed over failure.

The Chrysler Corp. chairman, the former first lady and the coach who was fired for striking a player will be among the eight recipients of the first National Failures Day Golden Helmet Awards on Aug 15.

It is intended that the strength and determination of these famous persons will inspire other Americans to strive with equal tenacity to overcome their setbacks, said Jack Gilbert of Columbus, who founded National Failures Day.

Mrs. Ford was cited for her battle over alcdiolism, lacocca was honored for helping turn around the ailing auto company and Hayes was cited for regaining respect in the sports world, Gilbert said.

Others to be honored are singer Connie Francis, who overcame the trauma of being raped; Candy Lightner, who founded Mothers Against Drunk Driving; former presidential press secretary James Brady, who was gunned down in an attack that also injured President Reagan; Harold Washington, who survived a bitter campaign to become Chicagos first black mayor; and Annie Glenn, wife of U.S. Sen. J(rfin Glenn, D-Ohio, who successfully worked to correct a stuttering problem.

The name of the awards was taken from Quixotes vision of a simple shaving bowl as a g(d(len helmet, Gilbert said.

BOATPEOPLE

TOKYO (AP)-A group of 69 Vietnamese rescued from a drifting boat by a U.S. tanker arrived Thursday in Tobata, southwestern Japan, maritime safety agency officials said.

for example, requires an additional three years of study following medical school, while surgical training takes at least five years in a general pn^am.

Residents are licensed physicians who care for their patients under the supervision of faculty physicians as well as community physicians who participate in the medical schools clinical training program.

another in a series of strong signals to the Senate that a strong hazardous waste bill is needed. Earlier on Thursday, Gov. Jim Hunt said the Senate version of a landfill bill was too weak. That criticism has been echoed by environmentalists. House members and the League of Women Voters.

<1 Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, who co-sponsored the bill with Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe, said it would encoura^ the prevention, the detoxification and the recycling of hazardous wastes.

The bill would require that only ash and residue left after treatment be buried and that other chemicals be stored above ground until they could be treated.

Meanwhile, the Senate Thursday resisted attempts to include landfill regulations in the 250-page health recodification bill and refused to consider another House landfill bill recently rewritten by a Senate Rules subcommittee.

In a morning conference committee meeting, Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, asked that the panel delete an amendment that would repeal the so-called

handcuff amendment, which prohibits North Carolina from enacting hazardous waste rules stricter than federal regulations. House conferees rejected the suggestion despite contentions by Senate Rules Chairman Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, that no further action would be taken on hazardous wastes until the health bill was resolved.

Hackney countered with an offer to amend the health bill with 11 exemptions to the handcuff clause, including the four agreed to by the Senate subcommittee. No decision was reached, and Hancock said House conferees refused to attend a scheduled 11 a.m. meeting.

Hackney said later that there were high level negotiations going on over the impasse. Meanwhile, he said his bill would leave us a bill alive and well for the short session next year if no hazardous waste legislation is enacted.

Hunts chief lobbyist, Zeb Alley, ^nt hours speaking individually with senators but said he wasnt sure when the waste bill introduced by Rep. Billy Clark, D-(Mmberland, would come to the floor or if it would be amended.

The bill originally would have prohibited some hazardous wastes from landfills while allowing others in prescribed concentrations. The bill would r^>eal the handcuff amendment, would mandate that waste be treated by any feasible method before being buried and would call for public notification of any landfill permit application.

, The Senate version would allow exemptions from federal rules in regulating landfill liners, requiring annual reports by industry and prohibiting liquid waste from burial. It would allow further regulations over wastes if there was clear and substantial evidence of a threat to human health.

Hancock said he saw no reason why the Senate could not act on the hazardous waste bill before considering the health recodification. Regardless of the order, he said he was confident both would be enacted before adjournment.

I think it would be ridiculous to end this session without passing both a public health bill and a hazardous waste bill, he said. Too many people have worked too hard on both issues to let them die.

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10-Thc Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, July 15,1963Closing Loopholes In North Carolina's Bingo Laws

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The state Senate was expected to vote again today on a heavily amended House bill designed to close loopholes in North Carolinas bingo laws.

The Senate voted 30^ Thursday to approve the bill over the objections of some who said it ^ too far and may actually prevent charities from holding bingo games.

Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, said the bUl should be approved because charities are receiving little profit from fundraising bingo games held under the existing law.

"The law is being circumvented to the extent that anything going on out there and what we wanted to go on is purely coincidental, Lawing said.

Lawing also said that because there are so many differences between House and Senate versions of the measure the final bill may be written in a joint conference committee.

Both the House and Senate bills would set up a bingo and raffle licensing agency under the state Department of Justice to license charity and tax-exempt groups to conduct bingo games and to administer rules regarding the games and

raffles.

The Senate bill, which incorporated the House version Wednesday to speed its passage, lets the group hold raffles or bingo games only on property owned by the group and using only equipment owned by the group.

The House bill would have allowed charities to rent equipment or buildings for holding the games as long as the lease was at fair market value. It also would have let two licensees jointly buy equipment if they jointly own or lease the same building for the games.

Sen. William Martin, D-Guilford, unsuccessfully tried to amend the bill to make it like the House bill. He said very few charities have the resources to buy equipment just for bingo games.

Under the latest version of the bill, it would be a misdemeanor for licensed organizations to violate the proposed law and a felony for unlicensed groups to violate the proposed law. The House bill would make operating without a license a misdemeanor.    *

The bill allows groups to pay one of their members to conduct the bingo game and requires that such members be in good standing with the group and have been members for at least one year. The House bill would have allowed groups to contract with someone to conduct the games.

Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, said he thought the Senate limit was too stringent because organizations of blind people might not have any member who could see to conduct the bingo game.

Bingo sessions would be limited to two per week not to exceed five hours each, and raffles would be limited to one per month for each group in each county, under the Senate bill.

Martin also tried without success to change that provision of the bill to let organizations share facilities and conduct more games each week.

The maximum raffle prize would be $500 or merchandise worth $20,000, raised from $2,500 by the Senate on a 36-4 vote. The House version set no limit on the value of merchandise prizes.

The Senate also voted unanimously Thursday to delete a $50 licensing fee.

In other legislative action:

Child Pom

The House Judiciary I Committee approved a bill strengthening North Carolinas child prostitution laws by making anyone who exploits children under age 16 guilty of a felony punishable by 2-5 years in prison.

The bill also would ban production, sale and delivery of obscene material involving anyone under age 16. Using children as subjects in the pictures, films and other material and having them assist in promoting the material would be

felonies. Using children to distribute obscene material would be a misdemeanor.

The bill is a combination of two Senate bills, one proposed by a legislative study committee and the other requested by Lt.Gov. Jimmy Green.

We think this adds a great deal to the ability of law enforcement officers to police Situations in which children are involved in sexual conduct, said R^. Parks Helms, D-Mecklenburg, chairman of a subcommittee that combined the bills.

Marijuana

A bill to create a separate penalty for possession of one-third of an ounce of marijuana on school grounds was approved by the House Judiciary I Committee.

Under the bill, such possession would be a general misdemeanor punishable by up to two years in prison. Currently, pos%ssion of less than an ounce of marijuana under any circumstances is punishable by a $100 fine.

Rep. James Hughes, R-Avery, said the bill was aimed at students who try to sell drugs at school, not those who bring small amounts for their own use.

Im not in favor of marijuana on school grounds, but 1 dont favor putting in the statutes bills making different punishments based on where crimes are committed, said Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange.

But supporters said the Legislature had approved other laws making certain crimes more serious when committed in certain areas.

Privacy

The House Judiciary I Committee approved a bill permitting dismissal or other disciplinary action for state employees who disclose contents of confidential information given them by legislators.

Arrest

The Senate voted 36-8 to enact a bill making it illegal to resist arrest with lethal weapons or deadly force. The bill was designed to protect law enforcement officers and was promoted by the state Department of Crime Control and Public Safety.

Every time we increase the protection of an official of our government we take away just a little bit of freedom the individual has enjoyed over the years, said Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe, speaking against the bill.

Sen. Helen Rhyne Marvin, D-Gaston, said the bill would protect citizens as well as law enforcement officers.

Bribery

The Senate voted 434) to enact a bill rewriting the laws governing legislative bribery to make it a felony to threaten a lawmakers economic livelihood to influence his vote.

Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe, said current law is ambiguous, especially concerning influences other than direct payments.

He said the bill would make it illegal for someone to threaten to remove real estate listings from an agent who was a legislator in order to influence his vote. But Swain said it would not be illegal to fire a lawyer-lawmaker if you didnt like his stand on an issue.

1 lose clients all the time that way and I dont think thats a violation of the law, Swain said.

Health Recode

House and Senate conferees considering the 250-page public health recodification agreed to compromises affecting migrant workers and local health boards.

House members objected to a provision allowing health inspections for migrant worker dwellings in which 10 or more people reside, including dependents. Rep. Bob Etheridge, D-Harnett, said he would prefer to allow 15 people not counting dependents. But Sen. Gerry Hancock, D-Durham, disagre^.

The bill was already a compromise, he said. If we take dependents out of this youre going to have 30,35,40 human beings in migrant housing.

Sen. Ollie Harris, D-Cleveland, suggested 15 people

including d^ndents. The panel agreed on 12.

The panel also agreed to adopt a House amendment adding a veterinarian, a nurse and an optometrist to local health boards and raising the number of members from nine to 11.

Auditor

State Auditor Edward Renfrow said an amendment being considered by the House in rewriting the laws governing his office would strip away the auditors independence.

I believe this issue is so important, and the consequences so disastrous, that should this objectionable amendment pass; 1 would then protest passage of the entire bill, which contains

many other important areas we have worked vigorously to enact, he said in a prepared statement.

The amendment would require the auditor to report to the Speaker of the House, the President Pro Tern of the Senate and the director of the General Assemblys Fiscal Research Division.

Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, who drafted the amendment, said Renfrow had agreed with its intent.

SERIOUS TIME - State Sen. Harold W. Hardison, D-Deep Run, fills the air with pipe smoke as he listens to debate in the Senate chamber. (APLaserphoto)

FUN TIME - State Sen. George W. Manon, Jr., D-Dobson, reacts to a joke by a fellow senator during Thursdays Senate session in Raleigh. (APLaserphoto)

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756-1145    We    accept    food    stampsLynn G. Borchert, M.D.

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College Tuition To Rise

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Students in North Carolinas community colleges and technical institutes will pay nearly a third more for tuition beginning Aug. 1, the State Board of Community Colleges decided Thursday.

Tuition for in-state students will increase from $3.25 per credit hour to $4.25, with a maximum charge of $51 per quarter. Out-of-state students will see their tuition increase from $16.50 per credit hour to $21.25, a rise of nearly 29 percent. The maximum charge per quarter for

out-of-state students will be $255.

The tuition increase is the first since 1977. The increased revenues will provide equipment money for

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The board also approved an increase in registration fees from $8 to $10 for occiq)ational and academic courses. The fees for avoca-tion^l and practical skills courses will change from $15 per course to 75 cents per membership hour.

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DOWNTOWN YARD SALE

SIDEWALK SALE BEGINS SATURDAY AT 9:00 A.M.

X. Summer Clearance on

selected items with savings up to llljlllf 50% OFF wastebaskets, candy,

nature series, hot plates, oriental bathroom sets, wicker \fans, straw brooms. Cape Craft wood items, puzzles, stationery, bumper stickers, posters, stufted animals and lots more goodies.

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)r Discontinued and overstocked items will be

discounted.

Dont miss the outstanding savings. Come W before everything is sold.

210E.FIflhStrct

H.L HODGES CO. Grccnvilk. M.C

752-4156

mlmoho cyiTLANTIC '=BEACH ^^/Jcdl J=il Iln GREENVILLE

^orth Carolina

40% 20%.,,

,.,0 m Summer Stock Men s & Women s Timberland Boots

Swimsuits Accessories

Bring A<] Ih For Additional 10 .<i

206 East Fifth Street 752-771 1

/O ul Sidewalk Sale ^fj On The Inside

Great Savings For You!

Group of $T 99 Teakwood $099

Capezio Leotards...... 1 Cheese Keeper........ j

Browsabout $090

Espadrilles........... ^ Calvin Klein Black ^ Q99

Reg *22 00 , Denim Jeans..... X ^

\/t% Many, Many 1 / i / Junior Sundresses /^ Price Savings. .Fromy3toy2o

SCOtt ... A Very Special Gi Shoppe

M DOWNTOWN W YARD SALE

Sidewalk Sale Begins Saturday At 9:00 A.M.

Specially Selected Items

Up To 50 % Off

222 East Fifth Street Phone: Downtown Greenville 757*3558

Cozarts Auto Supply Inc.

AUTOMOTIVE REPLACEMENT PARTS & ACCESSORIES

814-816 Dickinson Ave. Dial 752-3194 Greenville

Yard Sale Baco^'o^tore Bicycles ^ ^

Grab

10%oH 1 Table

Tires 4 To Sell At $20 Ea. Auto Jacks 2 Delco Batteries $10 Ea. Spray Paint $1.25 Automotive Chemicals Kool Kushions $3.95-$4.95 Antique Table Plenty of Free Parking In Rear Of Store

Great Bargains!! %# _i i

Yard Sale

To be held in our parking to the

Savings Up To 70 %

Many items one of a kind. Discontinued itemsSlightly damaged items.

Tables, lamps, mirrors, pictures, accessory items, sofas, carpet, chairs, brass beds, dinettes, living room suites, bedroom suites, din- Ad

'^r::r:::yatt Finita

til 5:30 p.m. All items cash & V * n r ...

~ 535 Dickinaon Avenue Downtown Greenville

carry. 752-51 ei

^ "85 Yeers of Continuous Service to Eeetern North Carolina

Oft jl CQacro /hop jSL

/' S18 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET

GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA 27834

U.B.E^,

, IN THE YARD

Great Savings On Discontinued

N THE STORE

ir Accounting Pads

* Drafting Supplies A'j Camera Bags-30% Off . r a i-t- Binoculars

   Frames ^ Sunglasses-30% Off

   Gym Shorts ,All Kodak Ekta Flex

   Camera Bags Materials & Supplies30% Off

   Tote Bags All Kodak Disc Cameras Grab Bag Full Of 20% Off Our Regular Price

Miscellaneous Photo '!,S dP7*I 2'i. rkjj Q nffor All Framed Posters & Prints Odds & Ends...Make Offer Shop-20% Off

Many Other Items... All Metal Frame Sections Save Up To V4 & More Ready Made Frames





12-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, July 15.1983

Stock And Market Reports

By The Associated Press

Grain: No, 2 yellow shelled corn firm at 3.17-3.51, mostly 3.34-3.49 in east and 3.25-3.60, mostly 3.54-3.60 in Piedmont: No. 1 yellow soybeans lower at 6.27-6.61, mostly 6.34-6.51 in east and 6.10-6.41 in Piedmont; wheat 3.10-3.55, mostly 3.20-3.30; oats 1.15-1.45; barley 1.85-2.15. (New crop - com 2.75-3.07; soybeans 6.16-6.46). Soybean meal f.o.b. N.C. processing plants per ton 44 percent 209.80-215.50. Prices paid as of 4 p.m. Thursday by location for corn and soybeans: Cofield 3.21, 6.51; Conway 3.30, 6.44; Creswell -, 6.27; Dunn 3.50, 6.46; Elizabeth City 3.17, 6.32; Farmville 3.46, 6.43; Fayetteville ~, 6.61; Greenville 3.34, 6.34; Kinston 3.34, 6.34; Lum-berton 3.47-3.49, 6.43; Pan-tego 3.34, 6.34; Raleigh -, 6.61; Selma 3.51, 6.51; Whiteville 3,47, 6.43; Williamston 3.34, 6.34; Wilson 3.49, 6.36; Albemarle 3.54. 6.16; Barber 3.60, 6.41; Durham 3.55; Mocksville 3.40; Monroe 3.60; Mt. Ulla -, 6.40; Roaring River 3.55; Statesville 3.25,6.10.

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents lower. Kinston 45.00, Clinton. Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill. Chadboura, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurin-burg and Benson 44.75, Wilson 45.50, Salisbury 44.50, Rowland 44.00, Spiveys Corner 43.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 34.00, Fayetteville 35.00, Whiteville 34.00, Wallace 33.00, Spiveys Corner 34.00, Rowland 34.00, Durham 34.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 49.50 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. 48 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary weighted average of 49.92 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is fully steady and

the live supply is moderate to short for a good demand. Weights light. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Friday was 1,555,000, compared to 1,757,000 last Friday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was steady with a firm undertone. Supplies adequate. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday slau^-ter was 13 cents.

NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks were broadly lower in morning trading today as the market erased its modest advance of the previous session

financial stocks paced the retreat, accompanied by computer, airline, steel and oil issues.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials surrendered its 6.51-point gain of Thursday and was off 8.32 points to 1,196.01 after two hours of trading today.

Losers ted more than 2 to 1 over gainers on the New York Stock Exchange, whose composite index was off 0.61 to 95.62.

Big Board trading volume slowed considerably, with 27.21 million shares changing hands by noon EDT compared with 41.71 million at that hour Thursday.

The financial losers included Merrill Lynch to 50'4, Paine Webber Ds to 55S and E.F. Hutton 1'4 to

International Business Machines, despite reporting a 25 percent gain in second-quarter profit, fell l-2 to 120'*2.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index fell 1.09 to 241.79.

NEW YORK I API

AMR Corp AbbtLabs Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmSland Amer TiT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind

High

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684

684

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21

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314

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25'-,

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304

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44

434

434

FRIDAY

7:30 p.m.-Red Men meet

SATURDAY

1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 8:00 p.m. Own AA discussion group at St. Paul's Episcopal Church

SHRINE NOTICE Greenville Area Shririfers of Rofelt Pasha Shrine Temple No. 175 will sponsor its annual family and nobles fish fry Saturday beginning at 1:30 p.m. in the Greenfield Terrace Recreation Park. Members will meet at the picnic area at 10 a.m.

MICROCOMPUTER TRAINING

Classes Now Forming!

AT

0

OMPUllME. INC

XW7-B South EvOM Stroot 355-6687

DeltaAirl

DogChem

duPont

Duke Pow

EastnAirL

East Kodak

EatonCp

Esmark s

Exxon

Firestone

FlaPowU

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

GtNor Nek

Greyhound

Gulf Oil

Herculeslnc

Honeywell

HosptCp s

Ing Rand

IBM

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StdOillnd StdOilOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide L'niroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox C'p

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344

194

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184

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254

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294

46-4

484

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374

1124

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55

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84

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444

324

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1134

153

454

224

304

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864

264

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284

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284

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75    75

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184    184

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314    314

434    444

524    524

514    514

444    444

534    534

714 714 304    304

474    474

254    254

384    384

294    294

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48>4    484

254    254

374    374

37    374

110    1104

534    54

544    55

1204 1204

84    84

514- 514 394    39*2

444    444

324    324

194    194

194    194

404    494

1114 1114 152    152

454    454

224    224

30    30    4

834    84

304    304-4

864    864

264    264

384    384

284    284

544    544

3(P2    304

36    36    4

584    584

344    344

274    274

584    584

354    354

274    274

AmnestyBid Explosion Rips

Is Extended ^

Pons Airport

Obituaries

544

49

284

214    214

64    64

21    214

334    334

504    504

31    31

284    284

244

25

404

264    264

254    254

134    134

154    16

394    39*4

37'-4    374

504    504

504    51

224    224

754    754

344    344

59    59

164    164

72'-.    724

654    654

134    14

244    244

344    344

40    40

414    414

484    484

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - The Constituent Assembly has extended by 30 days an amnesty offer to leftist guerrillas fighting to overthrow the U.S.-backed government.

The amnesty program was adopted May 16 and originally was to last for 60 days. It was intended to encourage the surrender of rebels who had not participated in terrorist acts, but rebel organizations issued statememts rejecting the offer.

The government hoped the amnesty would encourage guerrillas to lay down their arms and participate in elections tentatively scheduled for December.

The extension, approved Thursday, was requested by President Alvaro, who cited reports from the military that there are many rebels who are interested in acc^ ting the amnesty.

Rafael Moran Castaneda, a spokesman for the Constituent Assembly, said the extension did not include political prisoners because those still in prison are accused of very serious crimes.

The government said 540 political prisoners freed under the program and 224 insurgents surrendered during the first 60 days.

It said 38 pardoned prisoners were to leave for Australia today. Australia, Canada aixl Belgium have granted visas to 420 former political prisoners and rebels who surrendered.

PARIS (AP') - A bomb ripped through the south terminal at Oriy Airport today, killing at least three pe^le and injuring about 30, police said.

An anonymous teleplwne caller claimed responsibility for the attack in the name of the Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia - one of three Armenian nationalist groups that claimed to have assassinated a Turkish diplomat in Belgium on Thursday.

An employee at the Turkish Airiines counter said the blast occurred just in front of that station at the airport, and police speculated it might have been the work of Armenian nationalists seeking retribution for the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Armenians between 1894 and 1915.

The blast occurred, just after 2 p.m. (8 a.m. EDT) when the terminal at the airport southwest of Paris was crowded with summertime travelers.

Police said it appeared pie bomb had been placed among some baggage in the main hall of the terminal.

Airport police said the main hall was in panic with people fleeing the scene. Air^rt officials said the departure of all flights has been suspended.

A spokesman for the airport said two people died on the spot and one died

45':

364

58-

354    354

54'4    54'4

45    45'vi

Following are selected market quotations: Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power 4 Light

Collins &Aikman

Conner

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Hatteras

Hilton

JeHerson

Deere

Lowe's

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizza Inn

P4G

TRW, Inc

UnitedTel.

Dominion Resources Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

11 a.m. stock 424

59V4

21

4(P4

29

23'

424

274

344

354

154

554

35',

'    324

294 644 38

15

544

754

224

214

40

284-284

23'4-234

4-14

194-19V

Lebanese Army In Moslem Shoot-Out

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Thursday, as, computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 95. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 95 percent of your hot water needs.

CONSISTORY NOTICE Roanoke Consistory No. 248 will have an initiation from 15th to 18th degree Saturday at 7 p.m. at the Coronation Masonic Hall in Williamston. The regular meeting will begin at 8 p.m.

ELKS NOTICE Golden Rod Temple No. 368 will meet today at 7 p.m. to hold installation of officers. Alice Clifton, D.R.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)-Lebanese army tanks battled Shiite Moslem militiamen holed up in Beiruts old Jewish quarter today, and initial reports said one militiamen was killed and three soldiers and six civilians were wounded.

The street battles broke out after a government decision to evict squatters from a school. Tlie fighting flared from midmoming into the afternoon with the army shooting at militiamen firing machine guns and bazookas.

The army arrested 38 people, police said. It was the second act of defiance against the Lebanese army within 24 hours.

Druse militiamen and Lebanese troops fought in the central mountains for the first time since Lebanons 1975-76 civil war Thursday, leaving two members of the sect dead and 14 soldiers wounded.

The armys involvement in clashes with Druse and Shiite Moslem militiamen in the past two days raised questions aboet the armys ability to maintain stability, especially if the Israeli army proceeds with a partial pullout from the mountains overlooking Beirut.

Tanks and armored personnel carriers were rushed to the Wadi Abu Jamil Jewish quarter and

adjacent neighborhoods to reinforce army and police units trying to evict about 40 Shiite refugee families from the two-s^ Alliance Jewish schoiri, witnesses said.

Witness and radio stations said army tanks fired (hi buildings where Shiite militiamen were holed iqi, while other mttitiamen fired bazookas from behind street barricades and machine guns from rooftops.

City To Appeal Re-HiringOrder

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The city will appeal a ruling reinstating 56 police officers and firefigbters who were forced to retire during a cost-cutting campaign. Mayor Randy Tyree says.

liie city violated age discrimination laws when it retired the employees, U.S. District Judge Robert L. Taylor ruled Thursday. He ordered the city to give the employees back pay and benefits to last December, less any retirement benefits they received, and also struck down the city law that allows the forced retirement.

later. He said about 30 were injured, 10 of them suffering very serious burns.

The spokesman, who said he got to the scene moments after the blast, said: The injured had been put on benches and the team of medical workers are caring for them. He added that the terminal building had been closed.

Dozens of ambulances converged on the airport and two helici^ters were used to ferry the more seriously injured to local hospitals.

An employee at the Air India counter in the terminal said several dozen people were covered with blood. Inside the terminal building hundreds of rescue workers and firemen, many holding plasma bottles, helped the injured. Many victims suffered cuts and were being treated at the scene.

Randi Neumann, 22, an American from West Deal, N.J., was standing in line about 20 yards from explosion, waiting for flight back to New York.

We were standing by the charters when around 2 oclock we heard a loud noise, she said. It seemed like it could have been a firecracker. We saw the smoke immediately and we just ran out.

She said she saw peale lying around on the floor near the Turkish Airlines counter and a lot of people walking around with cuts. Another witness said he saw a suitcase explode about four or five yards from where he was standing.

The south terminal, a huge single building, houses dozens of international airlines although much international traffic has been routed to the newer Charles de Gaulle airport east of Paris.

Passengers at the Turkish Airlines counter were checking in for Turkish Airiines Plight 926, a Boeing 727 due to leave on a non-stop flight to Istanbul with 167 passengers.

An employee at the Turkish Airlines counter at Orly said by telephone that the explosion perhaps was aimed at us, but there are several other alriine offices next to us.^

In a call to the French news agency Agence France Presse, a man speaking French with a heavy accent, said only: It is an action by ASALA.

The eiqilosion came one day after a man with a pisUri shot and killed a Tiutish diplomat in Brussels. The Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia, the Justice Commandos of Armenian Genocide, and the Armenian Revolutionary Army claimed re^nsibility for shooting Dursun Aksov, 39, an attache at the Turkish Embassy in Belgium as he sat in bis car.

The City has a primary and secondaiy fire district. For more information on building regida-tions in the fire district, call 752-4137.

Andoson

Mrs. Lizzie Garris Anderson of 812 Venters St., Ayden, died Monday at her home. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 3;30 p.m. at Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church in Ayden by Elder J.L. Wilson. Burial will follow in the Ayden Cemetery.

Mrs. Anderson was bom and lived most of her life in and around Ayden and was a member of Zion Chapel Free Will Baptist Church.

She is survived by two sons, Johnny Lee and Jessie Ray (Babe) Newton, both of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Essie Vincient of Ayden and Ms. Bettie Jean Garris of the home; one brother, Christopher Garris of the home; one stepbrother, Willie Barrett of Greenville; three stepsisters, Gladys Newton, Mrs. Fannie Daniels, Ms. Ethel Barrett, all of Greenville; nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

The body will be at Norcott Memorial Chapel in Ayden

Assert AMA Is Limiting Role

WASHINGTON (API-An association representing private emergency medical centers has accused the American Medical Association of trying to restrict their businiess by imposing costly operating guidelines, in a complaint filed Wednesday with the Federal Trade Commission, the National Association of Freestanding Emergency Centers said the new guidelines adopted by the AMA amounted to restraint of trade.

Dr. Drennon D. Stringer, NAFECs president, said the guidelines would eliminate the centers ability to provide less ei^nsive care than competing bo^itals.

The guidelines would require emergency medical centers to have certain equipment and to stay opi 24 hours a day,

WUliam E. Small, an AMA spokesman, said the association would have no comment until it had studied the NAFEC complaint. In adopting the guidelines, the AMA said the rules would ensure that patients received proper care.

NOSHORE LIBERTY ATHENS, Greece (AP) -Greece is refusing to allow U.S. sailors to go ashore when Navy ships dock at its ports, according to Greek and U.S. officials.

from 6 p.m. Saturday until-carried to the church one hour before the funeral., Family visitation at the' chapel will be from 8-9 p.m. Saturday.

Hart

Mr. Henry (Buck) Hart Jr., 38, died Monday in the Vassar Brothers Hospital in Pou^eqisie, N.Y. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at Hardees Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Leroy Adams. Burial will follow in the Brown Hill Cemetery.

Mr. Hart attended C.M. Eppes Hi^ School. He was an apple picker.

He is survived by his mother, Mrs. Lessie Hart of Greenville, and three sisters, Miss Gladys Hart of Poughkeepsie, N.Y., Mrs. Jean Doe of Ayden and Miss Beatrice Hart of Bronx, N.Y.

The family will receive friends from 8-9 p.m. Saturday at Hardees Funeral Chapel and at other times will be at the home of his mother, 1016 Greene St.

Johnsh

Mrs. Annie Mae Smith Johnston, 83, died Thursday. The funeral service will be conducted at 3 p.m. Saturday in the Wilkerson Funer Chapel by the Rev. Lar^ Stevens. Burial will be in Hollywood Cemetery in Farmville.

Mrs. Johnston, a lifetime resident of Pitt County, spent her early life in the Bdl Arthur Community where she was a member of tte Christian Church. She later lived in the Winterville community and then in Greenville where she operated a store.

Surviving are two sons, the Rev. Frank Smith of Winterville and Leroy Smith of Greenville; three daughters, Ms. Ramon Mae Little of Newport News, Va., Mrs. Lillian Smith Case of Fountain and Mrs. Florence Brown of Elizabeth City; two stepsons, J.C. Johnston Jr. of Greenville and Russell Johnston; one stepdaughter, Mrs. Bruce Grice of Goldsboro; one sister, Mrs. Alice Coker of Farmville; two brothers, Albert Mozingo of Farmville and Willie Mozingo of Stantonsburg; 14 gaodcbildren; 23 greatgrandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.

The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. tonight at the funeral home and at other times will be at the home.

Complete RadlJtor Senice

Auto Specialty Co.

917W.5lhS(.

758-1131

Acknowledgement

The family of the late Heber G. Cox of Pitt County wishes to express our sincere gratitude to everyone for the kindness and sympathy shown during the illness and loss of our loved one.

The Cox FamilyCUTGRASS HRSTCLASS

You can )<eeD buying lawn mowers Or get the SNAPPER Hi-Vac A tirst-class investment Yes, investment A SNAPPER IS put together to stay together For a long and loyal time And no other mower IS engineered lil<e the SNAPPER to perform so masterfully The High Vacuum cutting feature is a SNAPPER patent Found only m our wall^ and riding mowers And delivering splendid lool<ing, evenly cut lawns every time The Hi-Vac riding mower is

ready for all seasons, with an amazing line of attachments Before you buy a mere mower, find out why the SNAPPER lawn machine is in a class by itself You II find it only at a professional SNAPPER dealer Most of all. you II find this one. shrewd investment will save you face, time and temper over the years For our money, it s the only way to roll in the green stuffDistributed in the Carolinas by Porter Brothers of Shelby

For your nearest Snapper dealer check your Yellow Pages under Lawn MowersATTENTION GREENVILLE CITIZENS!

PUBLIC NOTICE

County of Pitt City of GrMmlllo

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request tor a special use permit by Rossignol and Associates whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-42.3(h) of the City (Dode in order to construct a multi-family dwelling at a land use intensity ratio of 50 in an R-6 zoning district located on the 264 bypass N.E. directly across from the intersection of Emerson Road and 264 bypass N.E.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28,1963, In the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Bill Bowen whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-74<a) In order to have an accessory use (video games) to an automatic laundry in a floodway zoning district located at 514 E. 14th Street.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28,1963, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by George and Samual Pugh whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit, under the provisions of Section 32-32(j) of the City Code, In order to locate a mobile home in an RA-20 zoning district located on the north side of Old River Road (SR 1401) approximately 1,605 feet east of Johnson Mill Run Bridge.

The time, data, and piace of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28,1963, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

July 15,1983, July 22.1963

(

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by First Federal Savings and Loan and W.C. King whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-74(a) of the City Code in order to operate a nightclub at 509 North Greene Street in a flood-way zoning district.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Jonna Van Staagen whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-42.3(e) of the City Code in order to operate a home occupation (real estate office) at 410 Elizabeth Street. The property is zoned for R-6 usage.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July X, 1963, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.

NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE

A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Eddie M. Davis whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provlslona of Section 32-32(j) in order to locate a mobile home In an RA-20 zoning district located on the south side of Hwy. 33 approximately 750 feet east of the Intersection of Hwy. 33 and SR 1401.

The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thure-day, July 28,1963, In the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Buildino-

Lola 0. Worthington CHy Clerk





Sports XHE DAILY REFLECTORClassifiedFRIDAY AFTERNOON. JULY 15, 1983

Northgreen

Withdraws From Pact

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. Without mentioning the controversy surrounding them, officials of Northgreen Country Club quietly bowed out of their agreement with the Atlantic Coast Conference to host the leases annual golf championship.

The end came officially Thursday afternoon, when Northgreen released a statement announcing its termination. Assistant Commissioner Marvin Skeeter Francis said he was notified Wednesday afternoon that hed be receiving a letter.

They called us and told us what they were going to do and that the letter was in the mail, Francis said in a telephone interview. Its tough because those people did such a great job.

The Rocky Mount golf course became the focus of debate when it was learned that it didnt admit blacks as members but did allow the ACC to stage its championship there. Steven Rogers, who is black, wrote letters to conference officials asking that jy cease associating with the club because of its membership policies.

Rogers owns a home adjacent to the course, and from that vantage point he let his feelings be known by posting signs in his yard. One of them read rACCist.

"The conference was later the target of a national magazine editorial criticizing them for holding the tournament at Northgreen. On Tuesday, league officials met by telephone to discuss the situation, although no official action was taken.

Northgreens letter to conference officials indicated that the country club entered the deal in 1979 and was committed to hosting the mid-April tourney through 1986.

Termination of the remaining three years ... is effective with this statement and confirmation by letter to the commissioners office of the Atlantic Coast Conference, the letter said.

Not once did the letter mention the membership policy; it stated how it was happy to have been the ACCs host for the past four years.

The ownership, management, board of advisors and membership take pride in the relationship established with the Atlantic Coast Conference office and the eight member schools who participated in these annual events, the letter continued.

If the opportunity occurs, we welcome the Atlantic Coast Conference to pursue the use of our facilities for future events.

Stadler Tops Trevino

SOUTHPORT, England (AP) Craig Stadler shot a one-under-par 70 and managed to hold off Lee Trevinos challenge today early in the second round of the 112th British Open Golf Championship.

Stadler, three shots clear of the field after the first round, finished two trips over the 6,968 yard Royal Birkdale Golf Club links in 134, eight shots under par.

Trevino, who got most of his birdies before the freshening wind began to blow over the dunes and sandhills along Englands northwest coast, came in with a 5-under-par 66 and reached the halfway point of the tournament at 135, a single stroke off the early pace.

I played the first nine with no wind at all. It started to kick up on the back and was blowing pretty good when I finished, so its going to be harder to shoot a good number this afternoon, said Trevino, one of the first men off the tee.

Maybe I got a break there.*

And he took full advantage of it. He chipped in once for birdie and played the

front in 30, four under par on the course that presents an unusual par of 34-37.

Im putting as well as I have at any time in my whole life. Trevino said. "I guess thats the secret. Im driving well, hitting the wedge good and Im putting.

Over the last two or three years, thats been my problem, putting. About three weeks ago it came around again. All of a sudden Ive got great confidence in my putting. I just know Im gonna make it.

Well over half the international field of 154 still were out - or awaiting their late starting times - when Trevino and Stadler finished play.

Trevino, 43, troubled by back ailments most of last season, broke a 2-year victory drou^t last week with a triumph in the Canadian PGA.

"I said on Tuesday that somebody would play - but 1 sure didnt know it was going to be me.

I think 1 still have a major championship left in me, said Trevino, who acquired the last of his five majors in the

1974 PGA He also owns two briiish Upen crowns - the first won on this course in 1971 - and two U.S. Opens <

1 think that if I win another major, its going to have to be here, because here you have to play a bump and run. and I can do that. In the States, you have to hit the high shot over water and bunkers and things and thats harder for me to do "

Trevino birdied the second hole from 15 feet, then ran off three in a row beginning with a 35-footer on the fifth. He chipped in from about 70 feet on the sixth and scored from 25 feet on the seventh.

He made another long putt, about 40 feet, for birdie on the 10th, but missed the green and bogeyed the llth. He got it to seven under par for the tournament with a little chip to three feet for birdie-4 on the 17th.

Stadler. admittedly troubled by the wind, matched three birdies with as many bogeys over the first 16 holes, was tied for the lead at that point, and then chipped to four feet for a birdie on the 17th.

Muhammad Misses Weight; Fight Status Remains in Air

Happy Stadler

Craig Stadler celebrates after sinking a birdie putt on the 16th hole of the British Open Thursday. He finished the first round in the lead and continued to lead through the early portion of the second round. (AP Laserphoto)

WASHINGTON (AP) -Eddie Mustafa Muhammad failed to make the wei^t limit and forfeited his right to challenge champion Michael Spinks tonight for the light-heavyweight title. Promoters were still deciding whether to hold the fight as a non-title bout.

Negotiations began immediately between the two fighters. Home Box Office

Cannon Agrees To Conspiracy

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Former Heisman Trophy winner Billy Cannon pleaded guilty today in a $6 million counterfeiting scheme as part of a plea-bargain deal he struck with prosecutors.

U.S. District Judge Frank Polozola, who had refused to allow Cannon to plead guilty last Saturday when he was arrested, accepted the plea today.

Cannons hearing lasted only 11 minutes. He stood before the judge with his hands crossed in front of him and answered yes sir to all questions. He did not make any other statement and left by the back door without talking to reporters.

The guilty plea was to one charge of conspiracy and possession of counterfeit $100 bills.

Polozola gave a long statement about why he waited six days before allowing Cannon, a one-time Louisiana State University football star, to enter a plea.

The judge said he wanted to be sure Cannon knew what he was doing. Polozola emphasized Cannon will get no special favors.

The three-page plea agreement signed with Assistant U.S. Attorney Rand Miller and filed in court Thursday night specified no agreement had been reached on sentencing.

Federal officials say the counterfeiting case has so

far led them across the southeastern United States and into a number of spinoff criminal investigations, including a drug probe involving lawyers and a gold-smuggling case that already has netted one arrest in Texas.

Cannon faces only counterfeiting charges, however.

Others arrested in the case already face as many as four charges. More could be added in the formal indictments.

Cannon was freed on $100,000 recognizance bond after his arrest last weekend, when $4.5 million in bogus $100 bills was found at two Baton Rouge locations. Five others are being held on $2.5 million bond each.

One of the most popular LSU athletes ever. Cannon - now a 46-year-old dentist - tried to plead guilty at a bond hearing last Saturday, but Judge Polozola gave him nearly a week to think it over.

After winning the Heisman Trophy in 1959, Cannon played 10 years in the American Football League and, since retiring, has become a respected orthodontist with valuable real estate investments that recently have gone sour.

Prosecutors speculated it was the recent business failures that led Cannon into counterfeiting.

Hough's Knuckler Tames Yanks

By The Associated Press Charlie Houghs knuckler was knuckling ... and the New York Yankees were knuckling under.

It seems like I always have my good stuff against them, said the Texas Ranger pitcher after stopping the Yankees 11-2 with a five-hitter Thursday night.

For the Yankees, Hough rhymes with tough. It was the fifth time that the crafty right-hander had beaten them without a loss.

The next time we have to face him, Im going to tell my hitters not to show up, said Yankees Manager Billy Martin. Hes one of the two best knuckleball pitchers Ive ever seen. The other was Hoyt Wilhelm.

In other American League action, it was Boston 9, Oakland 4; Baltimore 5, California 1; Cleveland 4,

Kansas City 3 in 10 innings; Milwaukee 5, Minnesota 1; Toronto 8, Chicago 0 and Detroit 4, Seattle 2.

Hough, 8-7, struck out eight and walked three in his fifth

route-going performance this season. He retired 16 consecutive batters at one stage.

The ball was hopping all over the place, said the reliever-turned-starter.

Schlichter May Play For IFL Franchise

CLEVEUND (AP) - Art Schlichter, who was indefinitely suspended as a Baltimore Colts quarterback In the National Football League, may get a chance to play for the Ohio Bulldogs of the new International Football League at Canton, according to a published report.

The Bulldogs franchise, created two weeks ago as one of 12 charter members of the IFL, Is owned by Guy Cicchini

Sports Calendar

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

Todays Sports Baseball

State Prep Tournament at Wilmington State Babe RuUi Tournament at Bayboro

at

City League Post-season Tournament

Saturdays Sports Baseball

American Legion Playoffs State Prep Tournament Wilmington

^StMe Babe Ruth Tournament at American Ugion Playoffs

Senior Babe Ruth District Tournament at Tarboro

a

Tournament at Tarboro SoftbaU Industrial League Empire Brushes vs. East Carolina ffl Burroughs-Wellcome HI vs. Grady-White TRW vs. Coca-Cola Cox Armature vs. Union Carbine

American Legion Playoffs State Prep Tournament at Wilmington State Babe RuUi Tournament at B^boro Senior Babe Ruth District Tournament at Tarboro

of Canton.

We want Schlichter, Ed Capri, Cicchinis chief adviser, told the (Cleveland) Plain Dealer.

Schlichter was suspended May 20 by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle for gambling activities. Schlichter lost a reported $389,000 through betting on basketball and football games in 1982 and early this year.

Neither Schlichter nor Cicchini would confirm that negotiations are under way, but neither denied that contact had been established by intermediaries, the newspaper reported.

Schlichter, 23, star quarterback at Ohio State, was the No. 1 draft choice of the Baltimore Colts in 1982 and was the fourth player selected overall. Schlicter told The Plain Dealer from his home in Bloomingburg, near Columbus, that he was under strict guidelines (by the NFL) not to give any interviews. He also said, I have not talked to anybody directly connected with the Bulldogs.

When its doing that, the opposition looks awfully bad. Larry Parrish led the Rangers attack by smashing two homers that traveled a total of almost 870 feet. After singling and scoring in the second, Parrish capped a four-run third with his 14th homer of the season, a two-run blast that landed over the Texas bullpen fence in deep left field at Yankee Stadium. He singled and scored again in the eighth and followed by smacking another two-run homer int the upper deck in left field in the ninth.

A lot of the guys wanted to know if I got it all on those shots, said Parrish. I think I did.

RedSox9,As4

In Boston, Dwight Evans belted a three-run homer, Tony Armas cracked a two-run blast and Wade Boggs had a solo shot as the Red Sox routed Oakland.

Evans homer gave the Red Sox a 3-1 lead after one inning. Armas and Boggs slugged their homers in the third to help the Red Sox take a 6-2 lead at that point.

(Please turn to page 15)

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television and promoter Butch Lewis. They said they would have a further announcement about noonEDT.

Muhammad, who lost his title to Spinks two years ago, weighed in at 177>/2 at 8 a.m., 1^/2 pounds above the 175-pound weight limit. Spinks weighed 175.

Muhammad was given two hours to make the necessary weight.

Eddie made no effort to come down to 175. He went upstairs and ate, said the challengers trainer. Wall Muhammad. If he tried to come down and lose another 2>2 pounds, the fight wouldnt

go two rounds. He would have gotten killed.

The last fighter who failed to make the weight in a championship fight was flyweight champion Charachia Chionoi in October 1974. He was forced to vacate his title to the challenger, Susumu Hanagata.

The 15-round bout was to have been the first championship fight here since Joe Louis stopped Buddy Baer in 1941 and was to have been telecast live by Home Box Office. But it was not doing well at the box office.

Lewis said only 4,000 tickets, less than half the capacity of

A 16-unit apartment building in New Orleans owned by Cannon and several others was sold at sheriffs auction due to a defaulted loan. It sold for $500,000 - the minimum set by the auctioneer.

The buyer was Gulf South Bank and Trust, which holds the $I million mortgage on the property.

In related developments, a local dentist has confirmed he is negotiating to buy Cannons dental practice, and Roy Chustz of the Louisiana State Board of Dentistry said the board will wait and see what happens in Cannons case before holding a hearing. Cannon is free on $100,000 bond.

A Secret Service agent confirmed that authorities havent recovered about $1.2 million in counterfeit bills Cannon said he sold to Pensacola, Fla., oilman William Glasscock.

Glasscock is being held under $2.5 million bond. So are Tim Melancon, 41, of Thibodaux; Charles Whitfield, 44, (alias Oscar Olsen) of Ponce de Leon, Fla., and previously convicted counterfeiter John P. Stiglets of Texas and Baton Rouge.    

Cannon has been elected to the National Football Foundations Hall of Fame but foundation officials said his induction in December would depend on the pending charges.

Rocky Mount Tops Snow Hill, 9-7

SNOW HILL - A pair of doubles by Billy Godwin and six costly errors by Snow Hill gave Rocky Mount a 9-7 victory in the opening game of the American Legion League championship series Thursday.

Barry Butler recorded the win on the mound for Rocky Mount, but needed a save by Neil Avent in the ninth to close the door with the bases loaded.

The two teams will meet tonight in Rocky Mount and will be back in Snow Hill Saturday at 8 p.m.

Godwin finished the game , with three hits in five trips to the plate, with Butler, Eddie Coats and Marshall White adding two hits each.

Nat Norris, Wade Corbett and Bobby Carraway had two hits apiece for Snow Hill.

Bobby Carraway opened the game on the mound for Snow Hill but had to be relieved in the fifth when he developed a blister on his throwing hand.

Snow Hill held a 2-1 advantage going into the fifth inning, but Todd Goins walked to open the frame and Eddie Naylor followed with a grbund-rule double down the right field line. Coats drew a

walk to load the bases, and an error on a grounder by Avent allowed all three runners to score.

A grounder by Godwin was mishandled at third base allowing Avent to score, and Butler later doubled in Godwin.

Butler and Drake walked six in the ninth while Norris and Corbett each singled before Avent came on to close the door.

Rocky Mt... 100 050 201-9 11 2 SnowHU1...020 000 005-7    7 6

Butler, Drake (9), Avent (9) and White; Carraway, Murphy (5), Dixon 19) and Frederick

the 10,000-seat D.C. Armory, had been sold by Thursday.

If this goes as I suspect it may be another 42 years before they hold a championship fight here, said Lewis, who has guaranteed Spinks $1 million and Muhammad $250,000 for the bout.

Mustafa Muhammad had been having trouble all along in making the weight.

Spinks won the World Boxing Association version of the championship with a 15-round unanimous decision over Muhammad in 1981. He unified the title in March beating World Boxing Council champion Dwight Braxton in 15 rounds.

Muhammad had been looking forward to the fight

For two years he has been running from me but that all comes to end on Friday, Muhammad said before failing to make the wei^t.

Eddie tried to jab In the first seven rounds of their first fight and then ran out of gas, Muhammads trainer. Wall Muhammad, said. "He spent the day before the fight in the steam box trying to make the weight and it left him too weak to carry the fight.

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Future Looks Better For Puhl, Astros

By The .Associated Press

In 1980, Terr> Puhl aiKl the Houston Astros hit line drives, got good pitching and fine defense in winning the Nation^ League West.

Since then, the .Astros have gone astray

Lately, however, the present is looking a lot brighter for Puhl and his teammates.

On Thursday night, Joe Niekro tossed a three-hitter and Puhl doubled twice and scored a pair of runs as Houston stopped the Montreal Expos 3-0.

"Offensively and defensively, this is the best this clubs played in a couple of years, Puhl said.

' .Also, Atlanta downed Philadelphia 5-2, New York beat Cincinnati 74, Pittsburgh rallied past San Diego 8-6, Los Angeles

clubbed Chicago 84 and St. Louis overcame San F^^isco 6-5.

Houston is currently tied with San Diego for third in the NL East with a 4541 record, ^t games behind Atlanta. Still. Puhl is encouraged about the Astros.

And Bill Virdon, who managed Houston the last three years and now manages Montreal, is encouraged about Puhl, who

hit 82 with 13 home runs in 1980.

In strike-^HHtened 1961, Puhl slumped to .251 with three homers and last year he hit .2^ with ei^t home nms.

I hope hes back to his i960 form, Virdon said. He had his problems for a couple of years. A lot (tf that was our fault.

Houston went ahead in the fourth against Steve Rogers, 124, when Omar Moreno tripled and scored on Puhls bloop (kxdile. Dickie Thon then singled and Puhl scored on Phil Garners groundnut.

In the sixth, Puhl doubled, went to third on Thons infield hit and scored another Garno- grounder.

Niekro, 7-7, retired the last 14 batters for his first complete game. He struck out three and walked none as Hoiston won for the eighth time in nine ganKs. Montreal has lost 11 of 14.

Braves 5, Phillies 2

The game was tied 1-1 after dght innings, but Bob Horner and his Atlanta teammates quickly changed that.

Horner led off the top of the ninth with bis 15th homer, Chris Chambliss followed with a triple and Glenn Hubbard, Bruce Benedict and Rafad Ramirez added RBI singles as the Braves scored four times.

Philadelphia tried to battle back in the bottom of the ninth. With one out, Ivan DeJesus and Greg Gross drew walks from reliever Steve Bedrosian, 6-3. Reliever* Terry Forster allowed Ttmy Perezs RBI double before retiring Pete Rose and Gary Matthews for his ninth save.

Atlanta took a 1-0 lead on Dale Muphys Mb hcnner in the second inning.

Mets7,Reds4

Rusty Staub, New Yorks pinch hitter deluxe, came through again with a two-run homer in the sixth inning to break a 44 tie.

It was his second homer of the season, both as a pinch hitter. He was batting for winning pitcher Tmn Seaver, who halted his three-game losing streak and is now 6-9. Seaver went six innings, struck out seven and walked four. Jesse Orosco pitched the final three innings for his eighth save.

Keith Hernandez blasted a two-run homer, his seventh, to lift the Mets into the 44 tie.

New York and visiting Cincinnati combined for nine stolen bases. The Mets swiped five, including two each by Mookie Wilson and Darryl Strawberry.

Pirates 8, Padres 6

Johnny Ray, who bit a twoout, game4y1ng home run in the ninth inning of Wednesdays vktory over San Francisco, continued his heroics for Pittsburg with a twQKHit, two-run double to c<q> a four-run rally in the top of the ninth inning agaii^ San Diego.

The Pirates trailed 64, but Dale Berra singed and pinch bitter Lee Mazzilli broke an 0-f(Nr-16 slump with a single. John MontefiBCO, 8-2, gave iqi pinch hitter Mike Easlers RBI single and a sacrifice.

Gary Lucas intentionally walked Bill Madlock before Ray doubled in the

go-ahead runs.

Pinch hitto- Kurt Bevacqua bad gvi Sah Diego its lead in the seventh with a grand slam.

Cardinals 6, Giants 5

San Francisco took a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the seventh, St. Louis went ahead 3-2 in the top of the eighth and then the Giants edg^ in front 4-3 in the bottom of the inning.

But pinch hitter Floyd Rayford belted a two-run homer to cap a three-run rally in the top of the ninth that lifted the Cardinals.

The Giants tried to rally in the bottom of the ninth against reliever Bruce Sutter. Max Venable led off with a tr^le and scored on pinch hitter Tom OMalleys groundout.

San Francisco then put runners on first aiKl second with two outs, but Oiili Davis whose two-run homer put the Giants ahead in the eighth - lined out as Sutter got his lOth save.

Dodgers 8, Cubs 4

Los Angeles treated its fans to a 154iit attack, keyed by Bill Russells double and three singles and Pedro Guerreros triple and two singles.

The loss was Chicagos sixth straight.

Los Angeles erased a 2-1 Cub lead in the fifth with four runs on six hits, including five straight singes. i

Steve Sax had a run-scoring bunt single and Guerrero added an RBI single during a four-run sixth.

Alejandro Poia, 84, got the victory although he allowed 10 hits in 5 2-3 innings.

Rogers Figures Correctly For Double Eagle In British Open

Reach Out And Tag...

Chicago catcher Jody Davis makes the tag on Pedro Guerrero of the Dodgers in the third inning

in Los Angeles. Guerrero was trying to leg an inside-the-park homer. (AP Laserphoto)

SOUTHPORT, England (AP) - There was a misty haze hanging over the dunes and brush and sandhills that make up the Royal Birkdale Golf Club links on Englands northwest coast.

Bill Rogers was squinting into that blur, trying to focus on the one-iron second shot that was flying toward the green on the 526-yard, par-517th hole during the first round of the ll2th British Open Golf Championship.

It looked like it was going over the green, Rogers said Thursday.

Then pecle started falling out of the stands and I figured something had happened.

Iron 'Man' Competition Attracts Moss

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Correspmideot On (hose TV serials one sees Linda Carter vault over skyscrapers. fly through the air and swim oceans, then sneak into a telephone booth to do a quick clothes change in her crusade against evil as Wonder Woman.

Julie Moss does a similar > act in real life but not as a champion of justice. She does it for fun and as a means of competing in and promoting the newest of the worlds fitness fads - the triathlon.

She also gets on television.

Julie doesnt look much like the tall, leggy Carter in her

starTspangled uniform. She doesnt much resemble the late Babe Didrikson, called the ^atest woman athlete of all time, and certainly not the awesome, muscle-bound Press sisters, dominant Soviet track and field stars in the 1960s.

At 5 feet 5 inches in height and only 120 pounds, Julie

looks almost frail except for a sturdy pair of legs. She has a snub nose, a faceful of freckles and a shock of copper-colored curls.

She belies her 24 years. She is giggly, bubbly and iron tou^.

You dont have to be big with a lot of muscles to do what I do, says Julie, a phys ed graduate out of California Poljdechnic College in San LuisOpisbo.

The leaner the better. Id like to see the Press sisters do the triathlon.

The Ironman Triathlon is a synonym for torture - a non-stop, all-day test of speed, strength and endurance in swimming, cycling and running covering a total of 140.6 miles. The only reason the Romans failed to inflict it on the Christians is that even they couldnt stand the sustained a^ny.

The California woman, wo collapsed four times and clawed her way on hands and knees to finish second in 1982, is touring the country as spokeswoman for eliminations leading to the 1983 world championships for both men and women Oct. 22, again in Hawaii.

Using shorter tests, eight hundred will try to qualify from the Atlantic Coast area Saturday at Lake Mahopac in Putnam County, N. Y. The event is sponsored jointly by Bud Light, Mizuno and Speedo.

Its like the various marathons, said Moss. So many

people try to get in we must hold qualifying trials. We think it will be an Olympic gold medal event in 1988, certainly by 1992.

Heretofore the supreme Olympic test for athletes has been the decathlon, 10 running, jumping and throwing specialties held over two days. The 26.2-mile marathon dates back to ancient Greece. It took 100 years for the women to get it on the Olympic program.

The greatest endurance feat in Olympic history was the sweep of the 5,000 and 10,000 meters runs and the marathon achieved over a weeks period by Czechoslovakias Emil Zatopec in Helsinki in 1952.

The Ironman Triathlon makes Zatopecs accomplishment look like a three-legged race at the county picnic.

In Hawaii in 1982, Julie Moss started at 7 a.m. First, she swam miles in the Pacific Ocean. With hardly time to dry off, she changed quickly to her biking garb and pumped a bicycle over 112 miles. Then, without catching her breath, she plunged immediately into the 26.2-mile marathon.

A mile in front with 10 miles to go, Julies legs began to give out as she neared the finish - more than 11 hours after she had started the punishing grind.

They said I was wobbling like a newborn colt, she recalled. Its like getting hit by a truck or running against a wall. I didnt feel pain. I had

to keep my mind on something else. The money I had spent. What would people say if I didnt finish? Its strictly mental.

Julie fell for the fourth time just 15 yards from the finish. Kathleen McCartney shot by her to break the tape. But Kathleen was for^tten as TVs big eye zeroed in on Julie as she gutsily groped to the finish on her stomach.

McCartneys victory was overshadowed. Julie became a national heroine - featured in Time, People and Ms. magazines and sought for TV interviews.

I dont think of it in terms of pain and frustration, she said. Its a wonderful adventure, a challenge and the euphoria you experience afterward is inexplicable.

tie figured correctly.

The ball hit some 10-)5 yards short of the green, on a fairway baked hard by a record-breaking heat wave, took a bounce and then ran into the cup for an extremely rare double eagle: a score of 2 on a hole that plays to a par of 5.

It was the first in British Open competition since Johnny Miller turned the trick at Muirfield in 1972.

Thats the first one Ive ever had, the first one Ive ever seen, Rogers said of the shot that carried 228 yards.

Theres no way I can hit a oneiron 228 yards, but the ground is hard from all this heat theyve been having over here, the ball got a good run and it was a little downwind, said Rogers, who won this title, six other international events and Player of the Year honors in 1981.

I havent played very well since then, Rogers said.

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Julie Moss stretches on a traffic control box on New Yorks Park Avenue Wednesday. The California lass is touring the country as

spokeswoman for eliminations leading to the 1983 world championships for both men and women. (AP Laserphoto)

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SCOREBOARD

- udy iktueciut, ureenvuic, t naay, Juiy 15,198315

RtcSoftboll

Woma's

Players Retreat 000    300    14

GviUe Travel    510    003    x-9

Leading hitters: PMelody Ham 2-3, D Moye 2-3; G-Jemifw Counterman 2-2.

Church

202 102 0-7 Mt. Pleasant    030    400    1-8

Leading hitters: P-Doug Forrester 4-4, Donnie Hudson 2-3; MJohn Simpson 3-3, Chip Davis 2-3.

Unity    015    001    1- 8

First Pres    280    018    x-17

Leading hitters: URichard Smith 4-4, Dwayne Baker 3-4; F-Brian Hart 4-4, Marc Sasser 3-4.

C of God    303    100-7

First Pent..............003    010-4

Leading hitters: C-Danny Boyd 2-3, Ray Johnson 3-4; F-Gerald England 2-4, Larry Anderson 2-3.

Triiflty..............000    020    (3-2

Faith................001    410    x-6

Leading hitters: T-Doug Norville    2-3; F-David    Cox 2 2,

Chris McDaniel 2-3.

Eddie Vincent 3-4; S-Craig Smith 2-2, Stuart Haithcock 2 3, DarreU Harrison 2-3.

SunnysideEggs 000 291 3-15

Ormonds...........lOO    013 0-5

Leading hitters: S-Gene Rackley 3^, Vem Davwiport 2-3,

Mike Board 2-3; 0-Chip Clifton 3-3, Montgomery 18 Ricky Ratley 2-3, Leavy Brock 2-3

Harris 13, Tony Clemons 12; A Ptiiladelptiia    42    to

Charles Grice 16, Graylyn Smith 10. Montreal    42    c

Pittsburg    40    43

BJ^ Impress............23 38-81    1    5

Soul Tram...............33    42-75    WESTDIVISION

Leading scorers: B-Sirloin Atlanu    S4    34

Daniels 22, Kenno Farrow 18;        2

S-Jesse Harris 27, Haywood Houst^    4S    4i

San Francisco    42    45

Cincinnati

.512

.500

4<2

448

372

614

600

523

.523

483

432

14

8

8

114

16

TANK MCNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

Arlington............200

St. James...........002

001

012

Maranatha 000

Immanuel...........002

Leading hitters -3, William Covin Herring 3-4, Roy Brewer 2-3

0-3 X5

2-3

X5

Pair.................003 000 1-4

Calif. Concepts SOI 000 x-8

Leading hitters: P-Joe Lamm 2-3, Lloyd Johnson 2-3, Eric Sinclair

2-3, Carlton Parker 2-3; C-Ed Wells 2-3, Cloyce Wilson 2-3, Chris Parrisher 2-3, Tony Oakley 2-3.

Pair................004 062 1-13

Whittington.........003    003    5-11

Leading hitters: P--Joe Blink 3^, Jack Richardson 2-4, Carlton Parker 3-5; W-Mike Sampson 3-4, Boyd Holmes 2-3.

Industrial

Empire Brush 1.....043    400    314

Wachovia..........650    010    012

Leading hitters. E-D. Foster

3-4, A Harrison 3^; W-Mike Saleeby 3-4, John Rogers 2-4.

Firefighters........301    210    0-8

Vermont Amer.....100    801    x-10

Leading hitters: V-Haywood Latham 2-3, Ed Chance 3-3; F Bruce Mayo 3-3, Gary Coggins 3-4.

Girls

80s..............10    10 11 1243

High Five.......10    7 15 10-42

Leading    scorers;    80s-Woolard

11, Parrott    12,    Dupree 10; H

Atkinson 12.__

Boseboll Stondings

By The Amodated Pre

500 74 424 14

541 -.524    1    4

.518    2

.488    4    4

437    9

420 104 386 134

PCMH..............107

-Jeff Gould CIS................600

000

014

0- 8 x-11

2-3, William Covington 2-2; I-Mike Leading hitters. P-Bob George "            2-3,    Tom    Craft    2-3;    C-Wayne Elks

34, J Price 2-3.

First Christian.......210 410 0-8

Oakmont............401    000    4-9    Bur. Wellcome II .... (10)31 23-19

Leading hitters; F-Greg Jester ECU II..................OlO    304

34, M. Stocks 34, Eddie Bunch 34; Leading hitters. B-Lynn Cherry 0-Brian Williams 34, Mike Brown 2-3, PatCark24.

3-4.    ____

Memorial 100 380 0-12  RoC BosketfaoH_

FirstFWB..........000    200    0- 2    AdultSummer

Leading hitters: M-AUen Hair    Thriller.................24    40-64

4-4; F-Wayne Brown 3-3, Mike    Overhill Gang...........43    42-85

Tyson2-3.    Leading scorers: TCarlos

Dawson 17, Tony Dawson 16; 0 City    James Dupree 33, Paul Taylor 23.

JAs................210    213    3-12

SunnysideEggs 120 002 0- 5    Sizzlers..................26    21-47

Leading hitters; J-Randy    Alumni..................31    1849

Phillips34, Howard Vainwright 34,    Leading scorers: S-Michael

ByTiwAMociatedPm AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet

Toronto    49    34

Baltimore    47    36

Detroit    47    36

New York    44    39

Milwaukee    43    39

Boston    42    42

Geveland    36    49

WESTDIVISION Texas    46    39

Chicago    44    40

California    44    41

Kansas City    38    41

Oakland    38    49

Minnesota    37    SI

Seattle    34    34

Thuradayt Games Bostmi9,Oakland4 Baltimore 5. California 1 Cleveland 4. Kansas City 3,10 innings Texas II, New York 2 Milwaukee 5. Minnesota I Toronto 8, ClucagoO Detroit4.SeaUle2

Friday's Games Oakland (Codiroli 64), (n)

California (John 7-5) at Baltimore (Boddieker54), (n)

Kansas City (Splittorff 6-3) at Cleveland lEicbelberger 34),in)

Texas iHoneycuU ll-S) at New York (RighettilO-3),(n)

Minnesota (B Castillo 5 6) at Milwaukee (Caldwell 6-7), (n)

Toronto iStieb 11-7) at Oiicago (Dotson 8-5), (n)

Detroit (Berenguer 4-1) at Seattle (Young7-9), (n)

Saturdays Games Texas at New York Oakland at Boston Toronto at Chicago (n)

Kansas City at Cleveland. I n)

California at Baltimore. (n)

Minnesota at Milwaukee, in)

Detroit at Seattle, (n)

38    50

huaday's Games

Pittsburgh 8. San Diego6 NewYoik7.CinciooaIi4 AUanU5.Philadel|)bU2 HoiKton 3, Montreal 0 Los Angeles 8. Chicago 4 St . Louis 6. San Francisco 5 Friday's Games Montreal iGullicksaa 7 9) at AtlanU (Niekro44).(ni Cincinnati (Soto 94) at PhiladelphM (Hudson 2-2). (n)

New York (Lynch 6-3) at Houston (Knepper2-9). (n)

Pitlxirgh (Rhoden 64) at San Diego (Thurmond24) (n)

Chicago iRuthven 5-7) at Los Angeles

(HootonW), (n)

GB

590 -566    2

566    2

St. Louis (Anduiar 4-11 > at San Fran-i" '.'7 cisco iHammakerl0-4i.(ni SaturdaysGames St Louis at San Francisco Cincinnati at Philadelphia. (n)

Montreal at Atlanta. (n)

New York at Houston, (n)

Chicago at Los Angeles, (n)

Pittsburgh at San Diego, (n I

League Leoders

By The Associated Press AMERICA

St. Louis

;AN LEAGUE

BATTING (210 at baU): Carew. California. 402: Boggs. Boston. 363 Brett. Kansas (Tity. Griffey. New York. 333: Whitaker. Detroit. 325 RUNS: Upshaw. Toronto. 62. Yount. Milwaukee. 61, DEvans. Boston. 59: 54) at Boston (Hurst RHenderson, Oakland, 56: W Wilson. Kansas City. 56 RBI: Rice, Boston, 64: Cooper. Milwaukee, 61: Kittle. Oiicago, 61: Upshaw, Toronto, 55; Ward. Minnesota, 55 HITS: Boggs. Boston, 112: WhiUker, Detroit, 112: Rice, Boston. 106; Ward. Minnesota, 103, Carew, California. 102.

DOUBLES: L N Parrish, Detroit, 27; Boggs, Boston, 26; McRae, Kansas City. 26; Hrbek. Minnesota. 25, Cooper. Milwaukee. 23 TRIPLES: Herndon. Detroit, 7: GWilson, Detroit, 6: Griffin. Toronto. 6: K.Gibson. Detroit, 6. Wright, Texas. 6 HOME RUNS: Rice. Boston. 23. KitUe. Chicago, 20: Armas, Boston, 19; Cooper. Milwaukee, 17; Upshaw. Toronto. 17.

STOLEN BASES: RHenderson. Oakland, 50; J.Cruz. Chicago. 42; W Wilson. Kansas City. 40; R Uw. Chicago, 34; Sample. Texas, 28 PITCHING (8decisions): R L Jackson, Toronto, 7-1, .875, 4.20; Koosman, Chicago, 7-2, 778, 4 05; Righetti, New GB York. 10-3, 769. 3.14; Haas. Milwaukee. 512 -    6-2, 750, 3.97; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, IH.

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION W L Pet

733,3 81

STRIKEOLTS Stieb, Toronto. 113, Blyleven. Cleveland. 110; Moms. Detroit, 108. Righelti New York. 93, Sutclifie, Cleveland. 91 SAVES Quisenbeny. Kansas City, 21, Caudill, Seattle. 17; Stanley, Boston. 17; RDavis, Minnesota. 15; Lopez. Detroit, 12

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (210 at bats): Hendrick, St Louis, 347, Knight, Houston, 341; Easier. Pittsburgh. 330, Murphy, Atlanta, .325, Madlock, Pittsburgh, 31 RUNS Murphy, Atlanta. 81, Garvey. San Dieeo, 69, Evans. San Francisco, 64, Raines, Montreal, 63 Dawson, Montreal, 53; Wilson. New York. S3.

RBI: Dawson, Montreal. 68, Murphy. Atlanta, 64; Hendrick. St Louis, 60: Chambliss, Atlanta. 55; Guerrero. Los Angeles. 55,

HITS: Dawson. Montreal. 108: Oliver, Montreal, 108: Thon, Houston. 108: Hendnck. St.Louis, 103. Murphy, Atlanta. 103.

DOUBLES: Knight. Houston. 24, Oliver. Montreal, 24, Buckner. Chicago. 23: Hendnck. St Louis, 22: J Ray, Pit Isburgh, 22.

TRIPLES: Moreno. Houston. 9; Butler. Atlanta. 8; Raines. Montreal. 7; Dawson. Montreal. 6; 5 are tied with 5 HOME RUNS: Evans, San Francisco. 21; Murphy, Atlanta. 20; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 19;

Schmidt. Philadelphia. 17.

STOLEN BASES: Raines. Montreal, 37; Wilson, New York, 33; S Sax, Los Angeles. 31; LeMaster, San Francisco, 28, Moreno, Houston, 27.

PITCHING (8 decisions): Ryan, Houston. 9-1, 900, 2.09; Falcone, Atlanta, 7-1. 875,2.9Detroit, in)

^GAZerrg - FABRICATOR C Sft)RT& COUlMUfeT

Cleveland at Ch)cago, in)

,New York at Minnesota, in) Toronto at Kansas Cit Milwaukee at Texas

ity, in)

. in)

Montreal Philadelphia St Louis Chicago Piltsburgh New York

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W Lm Pet.

519

513

506

464

463

373

GB

.619

598

518

506

500

.424

Dawson. Montreal. 18;

WESTDIVISION

Atlanta    52    32

Los Angeles    49    33

San Diego    43    40

Houston    42    41

San Francisco    42    42

Cincinnati    36    49

Mondays Games Philadelphia 1. Cincinnati 7, II innings Allanta 6. Montreal 4 Los Angeles 7, St. Louis 6 San Diego 6. Chicago 5 Pittsburgh 3. San Francisco 2 Only games scheduled

Tuesday's Games Atlanta iDaylev 2-0 and Walk (H)i at Philadelphia (Gross 2-0 and Reed 4 11, 2 It ni

Cincinnati iPaslore 2-81 at New York (Swan 1-4), ini Montreal iLea 65) at Houston (Ryan 8-1), ini

Chicago I Notes 2-4) at San Diego i Show

8-5), ini

St Louis (Stuper 7-4) at Los Angeles (Welch6-8i,ini Pittsburgh iTunnell 2-3) at San Francisco i Laskey 10-7)

at San Francisco New York.

skey 10-7) in Wednesdays Games

reh at:

Cincinnati at F

Pittsburg

Daniel 'Coaxed' Into Lead

Atlanta at Philadelphia .Montreal at Houston, mi Chicago at San Diego,) n I

St Louis at Los Angeles. i n i

Leogue Leoders

By The Associated Press AtlERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING 1195 at batsr Carew, California. 404. Boggs. Boston 361 Brett. Kansas City. Griffey, New York, 333; McRae Kansas City, .323 RUNS: Yount. Milwaukee, 60; L'pshaw. Toronto, 59: DEvans. Boston, 55, WWilson, Kansas City, 55, EMurray, Baltimore, 54 RBI Rice, Boston, 61: Kittle, Chicago. 60: Cooper, Milwaukee. 57 Ward, Minnesota, s5 L N Parrish, Detroit, 54 HITS Boggs, Boston, 107, Whitaker, Detroit, 105, Rice. Boston. 101; Ward, .Minnesota, 100; Carew. California. 99 DOUBLES Boggs. Boston. 26.

L S Pamsh, Detroit, K, McRae, Kansas City, 26, Hrbek, Minnesota. 24: 5 are tied with 21

TRIPLES Herndon. Detroit, 7, GWilson, Detroit. 6, Griffin. Toronto. 6, 10 are tied with 5 HOME RUNS Rice. Boston. 23. Kittle, Chicago, 20. Armas, Boston. 18; Cooper, Milwaukee, 17; Upshaw, Toronto. 17 STOLEN BASES:    RHenderson,'

Oakland, 47, J Cruz. Chicago. 42, W Wilson, Kansas City, 39; R Law, Chicago, 33; Sample. Texas, 28 pitching 17 decisions): Koosman. Chicago, 7 1, .875. 3 95, RL.Jackson. Toronto. 61, ,857, 4 08, Kison. California, 8-2, 800, 3.28 Righetti, New York, 10-3, .769, 3.14; Haas, Milwaukee. 62, 750, 3.97.

STRIKEOUTS Stieb, Toronto, 113; Blyleven, Cleveland, 103; Moms, Detroit, 97; Righetti. New York, 93; Sutton. Milwaukee, 83 SAVES Quisenberry, Kansas City, 20;

16; 6 - " .....

Rogers Montreal. 12-3. ou, z 04 STRIKEOU'TS Carlton, Philadelphia. 141. Soto, Cincinnati. 130. McWilliams Pittsburgh, 109. Rogers, Monlreal. 89; Be renyi, Cincinnati. *8 SAVES: Bedroslan. Atlnta. 13 Reardon. Montreal, 13: Lavelle, San Francisco, 12. LeSmith, Chicago. 11; Lucas. San Diego. 9, SHowe, Los Angeles. 9

Transactions

By The AaaocUted Press BASEBALL American League

CALIFORNIA ANGM-Reactivated Geoff Zahn, pitcher Sent Curt Brown, pitcher, to Edmonton of the Pacific Coast Lea

eague

National League

CINCINNATI REDS-Fired

Dick

Wagner, president and general manag MONTREAL EXPOS-Dropped Jerry

nt and gener

EXPOS-Dr  _______

White, outfielder, from the 25-man roster Reinstated W'oodie Fryman, pitcher, from the disabled list

Stanley, Boston R Davis, Minnesota 12

audill, Seattle, 15, 14; Lopez, Detroit.

MALVERN, Pa. (AP) - Beth Daniel didnt even want to play in the $350,000 LPGA McDonalds Kids Classic.

She finally relented under the coaxing of her parents and coach, and today, at least, shes glad she listened.

Daniel, 26, started todays second round two strokes ahead in the 72-hole tournament over the 6.283-yard White Manor Country Club course.

She shot a 5-under-par 77 to lead Anne-Marie Palli of France, who carded a 3-under 69.

Another stroke back were Cathy Morse, Kathy Martin and LeAnn Cassaday. Then came Sandra Haynie, Debbie Meisterlin, Debbie Massey, and Muffin Spencer-Devlin, each at 71.

Nine players tied at even par, including defending champion JoAnne Camer, Kathy Whitworth , iXinna White, JoAnn Washam and Donna Caponi.

Kathy Sheehan, the tours leading money winner, shot a 2-over 74. The second t(^ money winner, Alice Miller, carded a 76.

Among other prominent players were Hollis Stacy at 73, Pat Bradley 74, Amy Alcott 75 and Jan Stephenson 76.

The winner will take home $52,500.

Daniel said she wanted to sit out the tournament because she was tired and lacked motivation.

I dont know what has happened, said Daniel, who led the tours money winners in 1980 and 1981.

I just dont have the same motivational level. Maybe the

Skins Report To Camp

By The Associated Press The Super Bowl champion Washington Redskins opened their training camp with eight veterans joining 51 rookies at Carlisle. Pa.

The only regulars to report Thursday were safety Greg Williams and punter Jeff Hayes. Also on hand were reserve quarterback Bob Holly, tight end Mike Williams

and linebacker Stuart Anderson, both of whom were on the disabled list for much of last years strike-shortened season.

Safety Ken Coffey, receiver

American League...

(Continued from page W

John Tudor allowed 11 hits in seven innings to improve his record to 7-5. Steve Mc-Catty, 34, gave up all three homers as Oakland lost its fifth consecutive game.

Rickey Henderson scored three of the Oakland runs.

Orioles 5, Angels 1

In Baltimore, Angel killer Scott McGregor allowed seven hits to pitch the Orioles over California. McGregor, 104, had lost two of his last three decisions to the Angels after beating them 12 consecutive times, once in playoff action. His lifetime record against California is 154.

McGregor struck out three and didnt issue a walk, allowing the Angels only run on Brian Downings sacrifice fly in the ninth.

A1 Bumbry tripled home a Baltimore run in the third inning and scored on an infield out, and Jim Dwyer walli^ a three-run homer in the eighth as the Orioles won their fifth straight game and extended Californias longest losing streak of the season to four.

Indians 4, Royals 3

In Cleveland, Alan Bannister lined his fourth home run leading off the bottom of the 10th inning to boost the Indians over Kansas City.

Bannister had a 1-1 count against Royals reliever Mike Armstrong, 4-4, when he drilled the game-winning shot just Into the left-field seats near the foul pole in Municipal Stadium.

The home run broke a tie created in the eighth by Amos Otissacrifice fly.

Rick Sutcliffe, 114, went the

Nelson Wins Putt Event

Eric Nelson shot a five-under-par 67 to win the Thursday Night Amateur Tournament at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.

Duane Grace finished second with a four-under 68, while Paul Bolen shot a 70 to finish third.

distance as Cleveland snapped a five-game losing streak. Sutcliffe surrendered nine hits, striking out a career-high 10 batters and walking two while tossing his fifth complete game.

Brewers 5, Twins 1 In Milwaukee, Don Sutton pitched a six-hitter over eight innings and Bill Schroeder belted his first major league homer, lifting the Brewers over Minnesota.

Sutton, 7-5, walked none and struck out five in winning his 265th career game, moving him into a tie with Jim Palmer and Jim McCormick for 26th place on the all-time list. Tom Tellmann pitched the ninth for the Brewers.

A1 Williams, 5-10, was the loser.

Blue Jays 8, White Sox 0 In Toronto, Luis Leal tossed a two-hitter and Buck Martinez and Ranee Mulliniks

homered, sending the Blue Jays over Chicago.

Leal, 10-6, struck out five, walked two and retired the last 18 batters he faced in pitching the first place Blue Jays to their sixth victory in seven games since the All-Star break. The loss snapped a three-game winning streak for Chicago.

The Blue Jays scored all the runs Leal needed with three in the second inning off Jerry Koosman, 7-2, two of them on Martinez home run.

Tigers 4, Mariners 2

In Seattle, Jack Morris scattered six hits in 8 2-3 innings and Lou Whitaker drove in two runs as Detroit beat Seattle.

Morris, 9-8, struck out a season-high 11 batters. He pitched shutout ball until giving up a two-run homer to Pat Putnam with one out left in the game.

Cris Crissy and running back Reggie Evans - all of whom missed the Skins National Football League championship season - also reported.

Washington signed free agents Stan Holloway, a linebacker from California, guard Norm Hopely of West Chester State and defensive tackle Bruce Radford of Grambling.

The Los Angeles Rams signed Chuck Nelson,tthe most accurate placekicker in NCAA history, to a series of one-year pacts. Nelson, a fourth-round draft pick from the University of Washington, made 81.9 percent of his field goal tries (59 of 72) and set an NCAA record by kicking 30 consecutive field goals.

The Rams also traded tackle Doug France to Houston. France had retired last summer after a series of injuries.

Miami Dolphins quarterback David Woodley withdrew from a 12-minute run after doubling over in pain from cramps in his ribs. But Woodley returned for a 1/^-hour practice.

That was the worst thing that ever happened to me, he said. I just couldnt get any air.

way to get it is shoot a couple of good rounds like today (Thursday), she said.

She has tied for second place three times this year but hasnt won since last August.

Daniel was so upset with her play that she spent last week taking lessons in Charleston, S.C., from her old friend and teaching pro, Derick Hardy.

We worked on the basics, and we determined that I would keep my thoughts simple, just work on a few things.

She birdied on four holes before the turn, sinking two 12-foot putts and two two-footers.

After taking bogeys on 13 and 15, Daniel came back to birdie the final three holes with putts of 20,10 and 8 feet.

Palli, who lost her card in 1981 because of her low earnings, posted a round that included two eagles, two birdies and three bogeys.

It was the first time I got two eagles in one round, she said.

Palli sunk an 80-foot chip on the second and rolled in a 35-foot putt at 15 for the eagles, both on par-5 holes.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING 1195 at batsr Hendrick, St Louis, 351, Knighl, Houston, 337, Easier. Pittsburgh, 333, Oliver. Montreal, .325. Murpny. Atlanta. 323 RUNS: Murphy. Atlanta. 78; Garvev, San Diego. 67: Raines. Montreal, 6j, Evans. San Francisco. 61, Dawson. Montreal, 52; Wilson. New York. 52 RBI Dawson. Montreal. 66. Murphy. Atlanta. 62: Hendrick. St.Louis. 6. Chambliss. Atlanta. 54. Guerrero. Los Angeles, 54.

ITITS Oliver, Montreal. 106; Thon. Houston, 105; Dawson. Montreal, 104, Hendrick, St.Louis. 100. Garvey, San Diego. 98; Murphy, Atlanta, 98 DOUBLES: Oliver, Montreal. 24, Buckner, Chicago. 22; Hendrick, SI.Louis, 22: Knight. Houston. 22, Cruz, Houston, 21; J 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, Atlanta,    19.    Dawson.    Monlreal.    17,

Schmidt. Philadelphia, 17 STOLEN BASES; Raines, Monlreal, 36: Wilson, New York. 31, SSax, Los Angeles, 29; LeMaster, San Francisco, 28: Moreno, Houston, V PITCHING 17 decisions I; Monlelusco, San Diego, 8 1, 889, 4.07, Ryan, Houston, 8 1. 889,    1.97;    Falcone,    Atlanta. 7 1,    875,

2 97. PPerez,    Atlanta,    162. 833.    257,

Hoolon.    Los    Angeles.    8-2. 800,    3.34,

BASKETBALL National Basketball Asaoclatloo

SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Acquired Dave Ballon, center torward, from the Washington Bullets for undisclosed future considerations

Continental Basketball Association CONTINENTAL BASKETBALL ASSO CIATION-Expelled the Reno Bighorns from the Association

FOOTBALL National Football League

BUFFALO BILLS-Released Efren Herrera, place kicker CINCIffNATl BENGALS-Signed Bert Vaughn, quarterback, and Jon Mack, linebacker ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Announced agreement on terms with Cedric Mack cornerback SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Traded Bob Rush, offensive lineman, to Kansas City m exchange for undisclosed future draft choices

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Signed Kerry Justin, cornerback

COLLEGE

CANISICS COLLKGE-.Named Brian Cavanaugh ice hockey coach UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH-Announced the resignation of Seth Greenberg, assistant basketball coach

N.C. Scoreboard

By The Associated Press Baseball Carolina League

WinslonSalem 6. Durham 2 Peninsula 16. Kinslon9

South AUantlc League G reensboro 5, G reenwood 4

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PITT-GREENE PCA & FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOQATION "Short, Intermediate 8 Long Term Agricultural Credit"

100 E. latSt. 7581512

BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E 10th St. Ext. 752-3228 Boad8 Wrecker Service"

Jartran Truck 8 Trailer Bentala

INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.

W.M. Scales, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scalea, Bep.

Clarke Stokes, Bep.

7583738

PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 752-8125

Comer of Sh 8 Greene, Greenville

HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO.

Besidentlal 8 Commerclel Building 400N. 10th St. 752-15S3

FOUNTAIN OF UFE, INC.

Jim Whittington Oakmont Profeaalonal Plaza GreenvUle, N.C. 7580000

PAIR ELECTRONICS. INC. Electrnica Suppliers 7582291107 Trade SI. QreenvIHe, N.C.

Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 752418701508 N. Greene St.

GreenvUle, N.C.

HARGEHS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charlea Ext. 7583344

DAUGHTRIDGE OIL & GAS CO.

2102 Dickinaon Ave. 7581345 Bobby Tripp 8 Employees

CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE 1405Dickinaon Ave. 752-3/78 Jerry Creech, Owner

PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO. 7582113 Greenville

EAST CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 2738E. lOlhSt. P.O. So*3785 7524323Greenville

RED! SUPPLY, INC.

Industrials Construction Supplies 1902Cheanut 7583200

HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.

"Where Shooolna la A Pleasure" no. 1 Memorial Dr. rs801i0 10.2 2812 E. 10th Ext: 757-1880 10.4 Bethel no. 5 N. Greene 7524110 no.8 Ayden no.7Tarboro

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN 101 Hooker Bd. 7583115

JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC. The Finest In Manufactured Housing'

318 W. Greenville Blvd. 7584687 Johnny L. Jeckaon 8 Employees

WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE "We put It on the plate"

900 W. GreenvUle Blvd. 7580040 2903E.IOUt St. 7582712

JIMMYS PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE All Types Minor Bepair Work Wrecker Service Comer 14th St. 8 284 ByPaaa J.F. Baker, owner 7581445

EASTERN INSULATION, INC.

Owens Coming Flboq/laaa Phone Dey or Night 752-1154

Compliments of THOMAS W. RIVERS

ESTATE REALTY CO.

1304 Otahea St. GreenvUle 752-5050

Jarvia or DotUa Milla

FAITH is your haven of refuge in a troubled world

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Come To CHURCHThe Daily ReHector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, July 15,1983-17

Area Church News

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN CHURCH The Womeot dub, 230* Greea Springi ParfcRd.

Hie Rev. Ridurd A. Miller PtaM-7SS-MS

9:30 a.m. Sun. - The Morning WorMilp Service

OUR REltfXMER LUTHERAN

1800 S. Elm R. Graham Nahouse 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Holy Commu-nn/Sunday School

ARLINGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007 W Arlington Blvd Pastor, Rev Harold Greene 9:45 a m Sun . - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 7:30 p.m. Evening Worship 7 30pm.-Brotherhood 7 :30 p.m. Wed - Worship Service 8:30p;m.-Choir

7:30 pm. Eli. - Adult Bible Study Home of Mr & Mrs. R. Gibbs

CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH

Rt. 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision Greenville, N.C Pastor: Rev. James Wright 7:30 p.m Fri - Gos)^ Chorus will meet at the home of Sis Carrie Bel Vines I0:00a.m Sun -SundaySchool II :00 a.m. - Morning Worship. Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Male Chorus 3:00 p m - Rev Greene, The Male Chorus, and the Jr. Ushers will render services at new Birth Holiness Church 7:30 p.m Mon - Home Missions will meet

7:30pm Wed -PrayerMeeting 7:30 p m Thur - Gospel Chorus will have rehearsal

ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

401 East Fourth Street The Rev Lawrence P. Houston, Jr.. Rector *

The Rev J Dana Pecheles, Asst Rector The Eighth Sunday of Pentecost 7:30 a.m. Sun. - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a. m Holy Eucharist 4:00 p.m. - Parish Picnic & Softball Game, GC Park 7 :30 p.m. - Al-anon, Friendly Hall 7:30 p.m Tue - Greenville Parent Support Group. Parish Hall 7:00a.m Wed - Holy Eucharist 10:00 a.m - Holy Eucharist and Laying-On of Hands 3:30 p.m. Holy Eucharist, Nursing Home

9:00 a m. Sat - St. Lydia's Yard Sale 8:00 p m. - AA Open Group Discussion, FrientByHall

SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH

2700 E. 4 th Street Greenville, N.C.

757-3259

Rev. Michael Clay 5:30p.m. Sat.-Vigil 8.00 a m. Sun - Liturgy 10:30a m. - Liturgy

PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE

Rev J M Bragg, Pastor 2001 W Greenville Blvd., Greenvillei N C 27834

7 30 a m Sun - Laymen's Prayer Breakfast (ThreeSteersi 10:00a.m. -SundaySchool 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship 5 30pm -ChoirPractice 6:30 p m. - Youth Service Slides from missionary Inp 7 :15 a m Mon Fri - Radio Program -"TogetherAgain " WBZQ

7 OOp m Wed - Hourof Power

8 OOp m - ChoirPractice

THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baotift)

1510 Greenville Boulevard E. T. Vinson. Senior Minister. Hal Melton, Minister with Education/Youth 9:45a m Sun - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship, Lord'sSupper Mini Church 5 30 p.m - Youth Council 6:45 p.m. Youth meet to go to Jarvis Church 7:30 p m Tue - New Bible Study Group

7 30p m Wed - Mid-Week Worship 8:00 p.m. Chancel Choir, Stewardship Committee

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Comer 14th and Elm StreeU Richard R Gammon and Gerald M. Anders, Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E. Robert Irwin, Organist 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Church School 10:30a.m.-Gallery Choir 11:00am.-Worship 11:00 a.m. - Children's Church School

7 00 pm - Summer Youth-Jarvis Methodist 9:00a m Tue. - Park-A-Tot 12:00 p.m. ^ News Deadline 7:00 a m Wed. - Men of Church 12:30 p.m. - Kate Lewis Class Lunch 2:00 p.m. - Address Angels 7:00 p.m. - Evangelism Explosion 7 OOp m. - Westminster Class Study 9:00a.m Thur. - Park-A-Tot 5:00p.m. - Bulletin Deadline 7 30 p m. - Overeaters Anomimous 10 :00 a.m. Fri. - Pandora's Box 10:00a m Sat -Pandora'sBox

HOaVWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South

Minlster-Rev. C. Wesley Jennings S.S.Supt.-Elsie Evans Music Director-Vivian Mills Urganist-Leida McGowan Youth Leaders-Debbie and Steve Asl-inger*

10:00 a.m. Sun. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Worship Service 7:00p.m Wed.-BibleStudy 8 00 p.m. - Choir Practice

MORNING GLORY APOSTOUC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH

1012 West 5th Street, Greenville, N.C. Eldress Irene G. E{^

4th Sunday until notified 7:30 pm. Tue. - Worship & Preaching 7:30 p.m Thur - Worship & Preaching

UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST

100 Crestline Blvd Minister, Rick Townsend 75^6545

10:00 a m Sun. - Sunday School II :00a.m. - Morning Worship 11:00 a m. - Jr. Church 6:00p m. - Choir Rehearsal 7 00 p m - Evening Worship

CORNERSTONE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Statonburg Road at Allen Road Reverend Arlee Griffin, Jr., Pastor 9:15 a m Sun - Church School (Kindergarton-l2th Grade)

9:30 a.m. New Members Meeting 11:00 a m. - Worship Service 6:30p.m. Thur. - Youth Prayer, Bible Study & Fellowship 7:30 p.m - Adults meet for Bible Study & Prayer

HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH lllGreenvilleBlvd.

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 RalphG. Messlck, Minister Phone 756-2275 9:45 a.m. Sun.-Coffee I0:00a.mChurch School 11:00a m.-Church at Worship 4 :30 p.m. - Beginner Choir 5:00p.m.-Junior Choir

RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

264 By-Pass West

Dr. Dan Hensley, Interim Minister 9:45 a.m. Sun. Bible School 11:00 am. - Dr Dan Hensley, Preaching 7:00 am Mon - Men's Prayer Breakfast Nursery School Monday thru Friday, 7:00a.m til6:00p.m

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SR1727(UkeGlenwoodRd.)

Mr Melvin Rawls Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Bible School Jl :00 a.m. - Worship Service 7:00 Youth Service

7:o p m. - Evir^nrWorship and

Neil D Booth. Jr . Min. oi Education Treva Fidler, Min. of Musk 9:45 a m SiBi. - Library Open 10:00 am

9 45a.m.-SundaySchool 10:45 a.m. - Library Open II :00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship, Childrens Church 6:00pm -BYF 9:15 a.m. Wed. - SUff Devotional 8:00 p.m. - Mid-Week Meditation A Fellowship Hour 8:00 p.m. Thur - Chancel Choir Rehearsal

PINEY GROVE FREE WILL BAPTIST

Hirtway 264 West, Greenville. North Carolina Bro Allan Sterbin, Pastor. 756-7430 7:00 p.m. Fri. Circle of Charity meet at Fellowship Bldg.

6:00 a.m. Sat. Youth trip to Bush Gardens 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11 00 a m- - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship 8:00 p.m.-Choir Practice 7:30pm Wed - Bible Study

BROWNS CHAPEL APOLOSTIC FAITH CHURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST

(BelvoirHwy.i

Rte 4. Greenville. North Carolina Bishop R.A. Griswould, Pastor 8:00 p.m. Thur - Bible Studies (Sister Ida Staton, Teacher)

8:00p.m Fri. - Prayer Meeting 10:30 p.m Sun - Sunday School I Deacon John Sharpe. Si^rintendant)

11:30 a.m. - Pastoral Day 8:00p.m. - Pastoral Day 8:00 p m 3rd Mon - Pastor Aid Meeting (Deacon Jesse Sheppard, Pres.)

10:00 a m 4th Sat - Youth Convention (Hertford, North Carolina)

10:00 a.m. 4th Sun. - Youth Convention I Hertford. North Carolina)

10:00 a m 5th Sun - Union (Hertford. North Carolina)

7:00 p.m. - Prison Camp Ministry (M issionary Mary Sheppard)

FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Chmer of Brinkley Road and Plaza Drive Pastor. Frank Gentry 9:45 a.m. Sun. Sunday School, Dickie Rook. Supt 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 6:00p.m.-S.S, SUffMeeting 7:00 p.m. - Prayer and Praise 7:00p.m. Mon.-AFC 7:30p.m. Tue. - Girl's Auxiliary 7:30 p.m Wed - Bible Study/Lifeliners 7:30 p m - (hildren's/Teen Choir 7:00 a.m. Thur Nursing Home Chocowinity 9:30 am Fri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ 7:00 pm. - University Nursing Home

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevard 756-3138

Dr Will R. Wallace, Minister 9:45 a m Sun . - Church School II 00 am-Worship 7:30 p.m - Long Range Planning Committee 10:00 am Tue. Newsletter Information Due in Office 7:30 pm. Wed - Chancel Choir Rehearsal

7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting A Bible Study

OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH I too Red Banks Road E Gordon Conklin, Pastor

PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610 Farmville Blvd.

Rev Randy B Royall. Pastor 1:00 p.m. Sat. - Jr. Ushers Meeting 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School. Mrs. Mary Jones, Supt 11:00 a m - Morning Worship, Rev Glenn Williams, Guest Minister 1:00 p.m. Wed Joy Hour at the Church

8:00 p m - Bible Study and Prayer Meeting

EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE

264 Bypass West at Laughinghouse Drive

Rev. S.J. WiHiams, Minister Minister of Music. . .Mike Pollard 10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School Lynwood Lawson, Supt 11 00 a.m. - Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. - Junior Worship. Judy Jennings A Debra Whaley 7:00 p.m. - Celebration of Praise 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer A Sharing 7:30 p m. - Youth Service, Gary A LaRee Maness, Youth Ministers 7:00p.m. Sat. - Intercessory Prayer

IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH 1101 S. Elm St.. Greenville. N.C High Burlington, Pastor Lynwood Walters, Minister of Education and Youth 9:30-9:45 a.m. Sun. - Library Open 9:45a.m.- Sunday School

10 45-11:00 a m - Library Open 11:00 a. m.-Morning Worship

7:00 p.m. - Greenville Youth Fellowship^, Jarvis Methodist Church "Jacob A Esau

7:30 p.m. Mon. - Mittie Smith Sunday School Class Meeting 10:00 a m Wed. - Yureka Bible Study with Doris Henderson, 1712 Rosewood Drive.

6:15 p m. - Fellowsip supper line opens

7:15pm. - Family worship. Nursery 8:00 p.m. - Church conference

SELVU CHAPEL FREE WILL ' BAPTISTCHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev. Clifton Gardner, Pastor 2:00 p.m. Sat.-Baptism 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Services (Men's Day)

4:00 p.m. - The Gospel Chorus on parade will present a Tom Thumb Wedding and play entitled "The Great White Throne "

5:00 p.m Mon. - Junior Choir Rehearsal 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Pr^er Meeting 3:00 p.m. July 24 - The Senior Choir will present 200 Women in White. Eldress Millie T. Williams, Pastor of First Timothy Church accompanied by her Choir, will be in charge of service

GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass and Emerson Road Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchison, Campus Evangelist 8:00 a.m. Sun. - "Amazing Grace TV Bible Study Channel 12 10:00 a.m. - Bible Study Classes for all ages    

11:00 a.m. Morning Worship: "In Heaven Interceding" (Heb. 7:21-28) 6:00p.m.-EveningWorship: "Sharing Aming Believers

7:00 p.m Wed. - Bible Study Classes for all ages For information or transportation, please call: 752-6367 or 756-7952

FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 2600 South Charles Street GreenvUle, North Carolina 27834 Pastor-Hairy Grubbs 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Ladles Auxiliary A Laymens League 8:15 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal

YORK MEMORIAL A.M.E. ZION CHURCH

201 Tyson St., Greenville, N.C.

The Rev Luther Brown Sr 9:30 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School

11 :00 a.m. - Worship Service

5:00 p.m. - Program by The Golden Link Club 6:30 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:30 p.m Tue. - Choir Rehearsal, Johnny Wooten Minister 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Mid Week Prayer Service

7:30 p.m. Thur. - Senior Choir Rehearsal 10:00 a m Sat - Youth training hour. Christian Education Department in charge

6:00 p.m. - (Quarterly Conference Presiding Elder W.H. Thomas of Jacksonville N.C. In charge.

COREYS CHAPEL F.W.B. CHURCH Route 1. WIntervllle J.B Taylor

7:00p.m. Fri. - Prayer Service 3:00 p.m. Sat. - Community Choir A Ushers Practice 7:30 p.m. - The Rev. Billy Anderson and the St. Paul Male Chorus will render service for the deacon board

Bizzell To Lead Services Sunday

>

The Rev. L.D. Bizzell of Wilson will render services at Burneys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 3 p.m. The congregation of St. Johns Church, Stokes, will accompany him.

Chorus To Perform Sunday ^

Selvia Free Will Baptist Church will present the Gospel Chorus on Parade Sunday at 3 p.m. The program will feature A Tom Thumb Wedding and a play, The Great White Throne.

Revival Planned Next Week

A revival will be held Monday through Friday at Tabernacle of Prayer for All People, 720 Atlantic Ave. Services will begin each night at 8 p.m. Guest speakers will be Evangelist Marvin Farmer and Eldress Barbara Barnes.

The revival is sponsored by the Voices of Tabernacle Choir and Pastor Nina E, Blount.

Quarterly Meeting Opens Tonight

Quarterly meeting services will begin Friday at 7 p.m. at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church with board meeting.

Holy communion will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The Rev. Hattie Mae Cobb will preach Sunday at 11 a.m., assisted by the senior choir and senior ushers. At 3 p.m. the Bethel Chapel congregation of Washington, N.C., will lead a service.

Church To Observe Womens Day

Womens Day will be observed Sunday at St. John Free Will Baptist Church in Farmville. Eldress Retha Dixon will be guest minister at 3 p.m. Music will be presented by Bishop Phillips Gospel Choir of St. Pauls.

Youth Day Scheduled Sunday

Youth day will be observed at St. Rest Holy Church in Winterville Sunday. The Rev. W.C. Elliott will preach Sunday morning and Shirley Ann Smith will give the welcome address. Pat Barnes will respond and Magnolia Walker will sing.

Greene To Present Trial Sermon

Tyrone Greene, a member of St. Rest Holy Church in Winterville, will present his trial sermon Sunday at 6 p.m.

' Music will be presented by the No. 2 Choir of the church.

Eldress To Conduct Service

Womens Day will be observed at English Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, Greenville Boulevard, Sunday at 11 a.m. Eldress Mary Louise Phillips of Cherry Lane FWB Church will be in charge of the service, accompanied by the Patrick Chapel senior choir and ushers from Greene County.

9:30 a.m. Sun - Sunday School 10:45a.m Deovtion 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 3:00 p.m. - Deacon Anniversary, with the Rev Nathaniel Darden and the Choir and congregation of Live Oak Church from Grifton 7:30 p m Mon - The choir and con gregation will render service at Good Hope F.W.B. Church in Winterville along with our Pastor 7:30 p m Tue. J.B Taylor Traveling Choir Meeting 7:30pm. Wed - Bible Study

HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH P 0. Box 8046, Greenville NC 27834 Meets at Carolina Country Day School David J. LeBlanc. Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 1:00 p.m. - Family Fellowship 6:00p.m. Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wed. Prayer Service 7:00p.m.ThurVisitation 9:30 a.m. Sat. - Visitation

ST. JOHN MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH

P.O Box 134, Falkland, N.C 27827 Rev. Anton T. Wesley, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship. Rev. Royal C. Wesley will preach the Morning Sermon 3 00 p m. - Rev. Maurice Laws A Mt. Shiloh M B. Church will rener the Pastor's Anniversary Service 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Prayer Meeting A Bible Study 3:00 p.m 4th Sun. - Youth Church Anniversary with Rev. James Harris A the Jr. Choir and ushers of Hayes Chapel M B. Church will render service

SYCAMORE HILL BAPTIST CHURCH 226 West Eighth Street, Greenville Rev. H.W.ftrker, Jr., Pastor 9:30 a.m. Sun. Our Sunday Church School

11:00 a.m, Our Worship Experience

7:00 p.m. Mon. Radio Production Team Meets, Church Parlor 7:00 a.m. Wed. - Sunday School Annual Outing. Kings Dominion 10:00 a.m. Thur. - Arts A CrafU Fellowship Class-Church Parlor 12:00 p.m. Sat. - Our Radio Ministery Program WBZQ

THE BIG GOSPEL TENT

Memorial Drive. Greenville (Across from Holiday Inn)

A.L. Byson, Evangelist 7:30 p m. Sun. - Evangelistic Service: "The Seven Seals of Revelation 7:30 p.m Mon. - Evangelistic Service: "A Pay in Greenville When Money wil be Thrown into the Street and not Picked Up

7:30 p.m. Tue. - Evangelistic Service: "Who is in Charge of HeU

7:30 p.m. Wed - Evangelistic Service: "The Other Side of Hell"

7:30 p.m. Thur. - Evangelistic Service: "The Greatest Question and the Greatest Answer"

7:30 p.m. Fri. - Evangelistic Service: "The Laws that were Nailed to the Cross

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 12I6MumfordRd James C. Brown, Pastor

MT. PLEASANT CHRISTIAN CHURCH Rt 6. Box 244 Greenville, NC 27834 John Simpson Minister 758-1830

10:00 a m Sun. - Bible School for all ages

11:00 a.m. Wee Worship (ages 2-4) 11:00 a.m. Junior Worship (ages

5-12)

11 00 a m . - Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Youth Meetings 7 :00 p.m. - Evening Worship 7:30p. Wed.-BibleStudy

ARTHUR CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Bell Arthur. N.C. 27828 Ben James, Minister 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Bible School (Michael MUls, Supt.)

II 00 a.m. - Morning Worship (Radio WGHB Farmville)

3:15 p.m. CYF to Nursing Home 5:00p.m. CYFMeeting 6:00pmEvening Worship 7:30 p m Mon. - CWF Meeting 7:30 p.m. Tue. Visitation 7 30 p m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p m Thur. Choir Practice 6:00 a m. Fri. - Prayer Breakfast (Tom's)

Every Member Working For a Growing Church

ST. TIMOTHYS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

107 Louis Street, Cherry Oaks The Rev John Randolph Price, Rector

8:00 a m Sun. - Holy Eucharist, Rite

I

9:30 a.m. Prelude Christian Education 10:00 a.m. - Morning Prayer A Eucharist. Rite II 4:00 p.m. - Parish Picnic A Softball Game, JC Park 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Craft Workshop, Christian Ed. Building

HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Bank Road, Greenville, N.C. Rev Don Paul Lee 9:45 a. m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00a.m. - Worship Service 6:30 p.m. - United Methodist Youth Fellowship 6:00 p: m Tue. - Troop 19 Brownies 7:30 p.m. Women's Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. Choir Practice

GREENVILLE BIBLE CHURCH Rotairy Club (Rotary and Johnston) DinoSchulmeler

10:0a.m. Sun. WorshipService and Children's Choir 6:00 p m. Family Service

Concert To Be Held Sunday

Bernice Ebron will be in concert Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at St. Marys Missionary Baptist Church, located five miles north of Greenville on N.C. 11. The No. 2 Ushers Board will sponsor the concert.

Appreciation Service Scheduled

The Gospel Chorus of Arthur Chapel will sponsor an appreciation service for Erma Jean Baker Saturday The program will begin at 8 p.m.

Joy Night Service Planned

A joy night service will be held Aug. 7 at 7:30 p.m. at St. Matthew Church in Farmville with the Rev. Willie Joyner as the featured speaker. The prorgam is sponsored by the Legionaire Ladies of the Marvin Tyson Post No. 372.

Guests To Conduct Service

The Rev. Luther Brown and the congregation of York Memorial AME Zion Methodist Church will render service at Haddocks Chapel Free Will Baptist Church Sunday. The service will start at 7 p.m.

Zion Chapel Plans Rally

Zion Chapel Free Will Baptist church will observe its second annual birthday fellowship rally Saturday. The rally will begin at 6:30 p.m.

Church To Observe Boards Anniversary

Haddocks Chapel Church will observe the anniversary of its Mothers Board Sunday at 3 p.m.

Other weekend activities include a meeting of the Willing Workers Club at the home of Mildren Golett, 1918 B Kennedy Circle, Friday at 7:30 p.m., and church school Sunday at 9:45 a.m.

Cornerstone Ceremony Scheduled

Youth day services will be held Sunday at 11 a.m. at Allen Chapel Church.

At 2 p.m., a cornerstone will be laid. The ceremony will be conducted by the Stars of the East Lodge No. 233 of Pactolus.

Pastor To Be Installed Sunday

Installation services for the Rev. Elmer Jackson will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday at Sweet Hope Free Will Baptist Church. The Rev. Charles Ray Parker and his congregation from Cherry Lane FWB Church will be in charge of the installation.

A monthly monthly board meeting will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Sweet Hope Church. The youth choir will have a rehearsal Saturday at noon. All senior ushers of the church are to meet with the pastor at 4 p.m.

Childrens day services will held Sunday at 11 a.m.

Ushers To Note Anniversary

The Rock Spring senior ushers will celebrate their anniversary Sunday at 7;30 p.m.

'The Rev. James T. Nobles of Washington, D C., will preach at Rock Spmg Aug. 20, rather than this Sunday.

Quarterly Meeting Scheduled

Quarterly meeting services will be held at Bells Chapel Holy Church, Greenville, Sunday.

At 11 a.m., morning worship will be conducted by the pastor, the Rev. Thomas D. Dixon. Evening services will begin at 3 p.m., led by the Rev, Otha Hayes and the congregation of Mount Moriah Holy Church, Farmville.

Pastors Anniversary To Be Celebrated

A celebration of the pastor's anniversary will be held at Guiding Light Temple of Faith. Farmville, Monday through Friday. The services will begin at 7:30 each night.

Monday nights service will be led by Bishop Robert Gorham of Dilday Chapel and Elder Robert PhUlips of St. James Church, Fountain, will conduct Tuesdays service. Wednesday, the service will be rendered bv Eldress Joyce Joyner of Mount ShUoh Church, Falkland, 'and Thursdays service will feature Bishop J.N. GUbert of Arthur Chapel Elder Joe Dixon of St. John Church, Farmville. will be in charge of Fridays service, and Pastor Paul Thomas of Tabernacle of Victory will officiate at Saturdays service.

Regular worship service with Eldress Bettie Rhindehart will be held Sunday at 11 a.m. At 4 p.m. Sunday. Bishop J.L. Smith and First Born Holy Church of Greenville and Grimesland will conduct the service.

Deacon Board Has Anniversary

The Deacon Board of Coreys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church will sponsor a program Saturday night featuring the Rev. Billy Anderson and the St. Paul Male Chorus from Ayden.

The Deacon Board will celebrate its anniversary Sunday at 3 p.m. The guest speaker, the Rev. Nathaniel Darden, will be accompanied by the choir and congregation of Live Oak Church. Grifton.

Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church

Mary K. McNeill,

A Stu(dent At Union Theological Seminary In Richmond. Virginia.

Will Conduct Sunday Worship Services ^

At the Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church

Through August .

The PuNic h Imnted Attend These Semces

Greenville Church Of The Nazarene

Presently Meeting In The First Federal Building, Community Room, Greenviile Bouievard.

Cliff Jones, Pastor

Sunday School .......    9:45    A.M.

Morning Worship...........................ii:00    A.M.

Sunday Evening Service.....................6:00    P.M.

355-6329 or 756-5872

Hear The Good News...Receive New Life

RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH

264 Bypass West

9:45 a.m. Bibie School.

Classes For All Ages 11:00 a.m. Dr. Dan Hensley preaching

"Ye Shall Know The Truth And The Truth Shall Set You Free

Nursery School Mon. thru Fri. 7:00 a.m. til 6:00 p.m.

THE END OF YOUR SEARCH FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH

Guest Preacher

The Rev. Royal C. Wesley of Port New, Va., will preach at St. John Missionary Baptist Church in Falkland at 11 a.m. Sunday. Wesley is the father of the Rev. Anton Wesley of St. John and will preach in recognition of his sons third anniversary with the church.

The Rev. M.L. Laws and his congregation of the Mount Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church in Winterville will render the 3 p.m. service. '

REVERSE TREND

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -After 13 years of losses, the American Lutheran Church says baptized membership last year increased by 503 to a total of 2,346,710.

RE-ELECTED

ST. LOUIS (AP) - The Rev. Ralph A. Bohlmann was overwhelmingly re-elected to a second term as president of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod at its general convention. He won 844 votes of 1,079 cast on a first ballot.

'l\'oxifiifi of ^od iliouid Li a vital paxt of one. J fif, fjoin ui tfiii ^undaij!

SUNDAY SCHOOL

WORSHIP

9 45 A M

11 (R) A M

Having problems with dogs in your neighborhood? Call Animal Control at 752-3342.

1511) Greenville Blvd SB

GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

' A boutSieii

i Rdpti(,( Ctiurc)

10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:1 vice

11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship Ser-

6:30 p.m. - Young People Service 7:00p.m. - Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS

307 Martinsborough Rd. Greenville, NC

Bishop Danny Brew 9:00-10:10 a.m. Sun. - Sacrament Meeting 10:20-ll:00a.m. Sunday School 10:20-l2:00p.m.-Primary 11:10-12:00 p.m - Relief Society, PriesUMod, Young Men A Young Women

2:00 p.m. July 16 - SUke Young Adull Activity Lake Ellsworth

HOLY TEMPLE A.F.C.O.G. Route 6, Greenville. N.C. Saintsville Elder l.J. Robinson 8:00 p.m. Fri. - Bible Studies (Missionary L. Debrew)

8:00p.m. Tue. - Midweek Service 7:30 p.m. 2nd Sun. - Worship Service 7:30 p.m. 4th Sun. - Worship Service 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School (Supt. Deacon L. Whitaker)

11:30 a.m. 1st Sun. - Missionary and Youth Day 11:30 a.m. 2nd Sun. Deacon Day (Elder Robinson Speaker)

11:30 p.m. 4th - Pastoral Day (Elder Robinson Speaker)

11:30 a.m. 5(b Stin. Union Service

Evangelistic Tabernacle

264 Bypass West

PRESENTS...

The Messengers:

Jerry and Colleen Hannah July 16th at 7:30 p.m. July 17th at 11:00 a.m.

& 7:00 p.m.

Jerry and Colleen were born in Alabama and presently live in Fayetteville, NC. Their testimony is one of healing and deliverance that glorifies Jesus Christ for HIS victories. Colleen shares how God healed a crumbling marriage, a mixed-up soul and a dying body.

God has raised up an anointed music ministry in Jerry and his testimony is presented in song as well as sharing the Word.

Pastor Sammy Williams invites you to hear these servants of God for a uniquely presented music program of Gods faithfulness to His promise and His love for each of us.

The Greenville Chapter of the Full Gospel Business Mens Fellowship is happy to invite you and your friends to hear

JERRY HANNAH

MONDAY, JULY 18,1983

RAMADA INN

264 BY-PASS 7:00 p.m.Dinner 7:30 p.m.Meeting

Jerry was born in Alabama and presently lives in Fayetteville, N C He married at a very young age, when he was 19 and his wife, Colleen. 15. During Jerry's 20 year career with the Air Force. Colleen suffered many problems. First thyroid cancer and later a birth defect was discovered in her kidneys. Her kidneys were deteriorating and unless a miracle occurred they would have been destroyed. Well, Praise God, miracles do happen.

Jeny. being blessed with a singing talent, has won many honors and participated in the Air Forces World Wide Talent Show. However, it was all for self glory. But now its different God has raised up an anointed music ministry in Jerry and his testimony is presented in song as well as sharing (Col. 3:16). The song "He Touched Me" creates a highly inspirational mood as Jerry sings and as Colleen shares in beautiful sign language. Hundreds have responded as the Holy Spirit moves to show people their lost condition and their need in these last days for a Living, Loving God. Their testimony supports the scriptural truth that God DOES confirm His word (Mark 16:20).

His testimony is one that glorifies Jesus for:

...His faithfulness in times of despair ...Victories over Satanic attacks on the family ...Confirming His word by miraculously healing Jerry's wife Come and be blessed by Jerrys testimony and talented singing.

Mens Prayer Breakfast Farmville, Every Saturday, 7:00 a.m., Bonnies Cafe, Main St.

MENS PRAYER BREAKFAST - EVERY TUESDAY AT 6:30 A.M. TOMS RESTAURANT - WEST END CIRCLE

Men, Women and Children of all ages invited. Ramada Inn Restaurant Meal $5.00 per person.





18- The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Friday. July 15,1963

A Review

Comic Cast Is Ineptly Guided

Eddie Murphy has been making a name for himself as one of the hottest young comics in .\merica. and 'Trading Places, now playing at the Plitt Theaters, offers him the opportunity to demonstrate his considerable talents. Unfortunately neither Murphy nor his co-stars Dan .\kroyd, Ralph Bellamy, Don .Ameche and Jamie Lee Curtis can save the film, which suffers from terminal under-development.

Director John Landis fails to use the potential of his cast or the basic premise of the film, a forced trading of places between a ghetto con man i Murphy i and a preppy businessman i.Akroyd). The idea is rich with potential; Mark Twain used it successfully twice, in The Prince and The Pauj^r" and Puddinhead Wilson. Landis, however, never explored the motivations of his characters or the social implications of the transformation; he is content to create slapstick out of the material of social satire.

Trading Places could have been so much better. In a conversation reminiscent of that between God and Satan in the Book of Job, the wealthy Duke brothers (Bellamy and Ameche) wonder whether environment or heredity control human nature and contrive to strip Akroyd of his job, house, friends and self-respect and elevate Murphy to the epitome of Waspishness. Bellamy believes that Akroyd will become a ghetto criminal and Murphy will succeed in business, while Ameche disagrees. On a dollar wager, they set out to destroy two lives.

Overnight Murphy acquires a Mercedes, a townhouse, a butler and a Harvard blazer while Akroyd falls through the bottom of the social safety net. For the transformation to work, we need to see each character develop the sensibility of the other. Instead, as if by magic, Murphy becomes a snob artd Akroyd a hustler. Rather than take the time to develop ironies of such a social transformation.

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Venerable Boston Pops Adapts To TV

Landis merely changed his characters costumes and accents, and we are left with little more than caricatures and stereotypes.

The movie is not a total loss. Ameche and Bellamy portray the amoral millionaires with flair, and Jamie Lee Curtis turns in a solid comic performance as a hooker with a heart of gold. Akroyds portrayal of a bum doesnt quite work, but his preppy commodity executive is a fine comic creation. Murphy is the best of a solid cast. His two characters, the street hustler and the businessman, provide nearly all the laughs in the film.

Murphy is almost worth the price of admission, but not quite.

iNot even Murphy can make Trading Places work. Even as a summer comedy, the film fails. You will be much better off reading Mark Twain and discovering how the story could have been told.

JIMHOLTE

Barely Knew Bowie's Name

NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -Pop singer David Bowie may be a household word in the rock capitals of the world, but in this coastal city the mayor barely knows the British rockers name.

Mayor Vincent Thomas announced Thursday that Bowie will perform at Scope Arena Aug. 24 and 25.

This is about the hottest act on tour these days, I understand, Thomas said at a news conference. "The city will benefit greatly from the rental and concessions.

The 60-year-old mayor admitted that he had never heard of Bowie until a few days ago and said it was probably the first time in his seven years as mayor that he has announced a rock concert.

Asked if he would attend, Thomas said, "Uh, Im on vacation out of town on Aug. 24 and 25, buUm sure that I have a younger member of my family who will probably want to be there.

Rock Star 'For' LawmanCareer

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) - "Motor City Mad Man Ted Nugent, known for his wild performing style, showed a more sedate side to a gathering of Explorer Scouts, telling them that "law enforcement - next to rock n roll - may be the best thing you can do.

The 34-year-old rock star preached against drugs and for law enforcement Wednesday night in a speech tc more than 2,200 Explorer Scouts gathered at Colorado State Universitys Moby Gym.

"I have always been intrigued by and had a respect for law enforcement, Nugent said.

ByFREDROTHENBERG APTelevisioo Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The video revolution has shaken, rattled and rolled one of the most venerable musical institutions on television - the Boston Pops

Now dont get the idea that Mick Jagger will swagger on stage and swing the baton, nor will the Pi^s shoot a sexy video for MTV. But the 14th season of Evening at Pops on public television will open Sunday night with a format that includes rehearsal sequences and photographic essays set to music.

We wanted to break the traditional concert format on TV, says William Cosel, who has been executive producer of Evening at P(^s since its incqrtion in 1970. "Instead of a straight performance show, we decided to experiment with one visual show. With most of the symphony shows drying up on TV, somebody had to be the guinea pig.

The first of six new Pops broadcasts opens with pastoral scenes of the quaint New England towns and Berkshire Mountains around Tanglewood, the orchestras summer home. The montage is set to music composed by

TV Log

For complal* TV programming information, conauit your wMkly TV SHOWTiME from Sunday's Daily Rafloctor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

FRIDAY 7:00 JokeriWild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8:00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 Falcon Crest 11:00 News9 11:30 AAovie 2:00 Nightwatch SATURDAY 8:30 Rascals 7:00 Kangaroo 8:00 Popeye 8:30 Pan.

9 00 MeattMlls

9 30 Bugs Bunny 10 00 Dukes 11:00 Bugs Bunny 12:00 Soul Train 1:00 Akatinee 4:M Sports 5:00 Golf 6 00 News 8:30 News 7:00 Solid Gold 8:00 Seven Brides 9:00 Atovie 11:00 News 11:30 Dance Fever 12:00 Special 1:00 Solid Gold

WITN-TV-Ch.7

FRIDAY 7:00 Jeffersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Roots 10:00 Eischied 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News SATURDAY 7:00 BotterWay 7 X Treehouse 8:00 Flintstones 8:30 Shirt Tales

9:00 Smurts 1:00 Putt Putt 1:30 Baseball B. 2:00 Baseball 5:00 Wrestling 8:00 News 8:30 News 7:00 K. Rider 8:00 Oitf Strokes 8:30 Silver Spoons 9:00 Quincy 10:00 Monitor 11:00 News 11:30 Night Live 1 00 Closeup 1:30 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

FRIDAY 7:00 Sanford 8i 7:30 B. Miller 8:00 Benson 8:30 At Ease 9:00 Masada 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12:30 Starsky 1:30 An Evening 2:30 Early Edition

SATURDAY 5:30 lelestory 8 :00 Great Space 8:30 Snuggles 7 :00 Cartoon Time

8:00 Superlriends 8:30 Pac Man 10:00 Scooby 11:00 AAorkA 12:00 Golf 2:00 AAatinee 4:00 Road to L A 5:00 Sports 8:30 In Search of 7:00 Wrestling 8:00 T.J. Hooker 9:30 Love Boat 10:00 ABC Closeup 11:00 Action News 11:15 ABC Weekend 11:30 Cinema 4:00 Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

FRIDAY    II

7:00 Report    II

7:30 Old House    13

8:0b Washington    12

8:30 Wall St.    1

9:00 Victoryat    2

9 :30 World War    3

10:00 Europe    4

11:00 Monty Python 4 11:30 Doctor In    5

12:00 SignOff    5

SATURDAY    

8 :00 Spokesman    ^

8:30 UnderSail    !

9:00 Business 9:30 Quilting    

10:00 Oil Painting 10:30 Paintino

00 AWokThur 30 Great Chefs 00 Bits, Bytes 30 Sport Fishing OO Soccer 00 Dr. Who 30 Adventure 00 Victory G.

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John Williams, who is in bis fourth season as Pops conductor.

Theres also a behind-the-scenes look at Williams, as harpsichord player, rehearsing Vivaldis Concerto for Four Violins and Orchestra. The program closes with the only visual segment that works well. Its a tribute to painter Norman Rockwell, whose classically American faces gain emotional zest by the lyrics of America the Dream Goes On, which also has music written by Williams.

By focusing on the abundant talents of Williams, the first pro^am becomes rhe John Williams Show. Its been four years since the death of the Pops most famous maestro, Arthur Fiedler, and this program intends to familiarize audiences with the shyer Williams.

Williams is this eras most successful movie musician. He has scored the music for Hollywoods biggest box-office hits, including Star Wars, Superman, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Jaws and E.T. - The

Extra-Terrestrial - the last of which is performed Sunday by the Pops.

That rendition points up one weakness of the broadcast, a noble effort gone awry because it turned out to be neither fish nor fowl. It wasnt a concert show, and, as a video-music broadcast, much of it was flat or cried out for more imagery.

The E.T. music conveys the spirit of fli^t, and it desperately needed some supporting footage. The same thing with The Sorcerers Apprentice and its recognizable brooms-and-water sequence from Walt Disneys Fantasia.

We ran up against ourselves because we couldnt visually treat everything, says Cosel. We created a bigger appetite than we were able to fill. Ignorance is bliss. Once we started to do things visually, we created a monster.

Cosel was interested in matching footage from Fantasia with 1110 Sorcerers Apprentice, but found it was too expensive and did not synchronize properly with the Pops version. He also put in a

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request to Stevm Spielberg for clips from E.T. but never heard from him.

We may have been too naive in thinking we could easily change formats, says Cosel.

For the rest of the season, Evening at Pops will have more conventional broadcasts - concert performances featuring the Pops lightly classical and popular music that is familiar and appealing to broad audiences shopping around during the summers network reruns. These are "the audiences that Fiedler said wouldnt be

caught dead in symphony halls. says Cosel.

Other shows, hopefully

more joyous, will feature singers Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme .

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STEWART AND EVERETTTHEATRES





Role In Dallas'Has Boosted Howard Keel's Career

By VERNON SCOTT

UPI Hollywood Repwtar

HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The name Howard Keel was not exactly on everyones lips when he was touring the country sin^g his powerful lungs out in a variety of stage musicals. But his role in Dallas has worked magic for his career.

Keel was added to the Dallas cast three years ago in the role of billionaire Clayton Farlow and his stock immediately zoomed here and abroad.

His imposing physique and rumbling basso were more than a match for Larry

Doubles In Soap Opera

NEW YORK'(UPI) -Actress Sheryl Lee Ralph might be just about everyones Dreamgirl, but between her two jobs and multiple career projects, Social life? Baby, whats that?

At 26, not even love could convince her to get married right now.

I wouldnt trade this for anything, she said while dabbing on her stage makeup in her pink-walled dressing room at Broadways Imperial theater. There is nothing Id rather do now than work.

Good thing.

Theres little time for sleep and even less for going out when youre a Broadway stage star by night and a television soap opera queen by day.

But the Dreamgirls star couldnt resist when she was offered a role on the NBC-TV daytime drama Search for Tomorrow, even though she has another six months to got in the hit musical.

Shes Deena Jones on Broadway until 11 each night and then two days a week shes up at 7 a.m. and hustling up the road to play Mac, assistant to a newspaper editor in Search.

Oh theyre very different, she said when asked if its difficult to keep her parts straight. Their clothes - Deenas all beads, glitter and feathers; Mac is padded shoulders and Harve Bernard suits.

Since shes been Deena -a character similar to Diana Ross of the Supremes - for 19 months, the lines come naturally. Mac, on the other hand, says something new every performance.

They send me the script and I have to memorize the lines in the morning, before I go on, she said of her two-week-old Mac role.

Clad in a spaghetti-strap, red cotton jersey sundress, barefooted, perfectly at ease althou^ she was going on stage in less than an hour, she laughed again about her social life.

What social life? Who has time?

Shes also planning to do a concert with Joan Rivers in the late summer or early fall in Connecticut, and she recently tried out for a part in a theatrical movie, Cotton Club.

Merrick Ready To Take Charge

NEW YORK (AP) -Broadway producer David Merrick says hes healthy enough to take care of his own money, and wants to remove a financial conservator appointed after his stroke five months ago.

State Supreme Court Justice Hilda Schwartz said Thursday she will hold a hearing on whether Merrick is sufficiently recovered to handle his own financial affairs.

Merrick, 73, and his lawyers petitioned to remove his longtime business associate, Morton Mitosky, as conservator of Merricks assets.

Merrick, who had requested Mitoskys appointment, told Mrs. Schwartz on Thursday: I feel fine.

The producers lawyers, Bella Linden and David Blasband, said Merrick no longer needs a conservator because he is recovered.

Mitosky, who also appeared in court, told the judge he had no objection to being removed as long as a hearing established that Merrick is recovered. No hearing date has been set.

Hagmans performance as J R. Ewing, the series rough-edged scoundrel.

As a result, the power of TV and the impact of Dallas has changed the big guys lifestyle in ways he couldnt anticipate.

A virtual stranger to the tube. Keel shunned singing guest spots on variety shows.

I just didnt care for variety, Keel said recently. And I couldnt ^t arrested when movie musicals faded. So I tackled straight acting and got to feeling lousy.

I sat down and had a talk with myself. I was blessed with a fine voice and enough intelligence to use it. I had some heavy responsibilities, so I had to keep working.

The solution was to hit the rOad with musicals. If youre a singer and love to sing, as I do, there is nothing more fulfilling that standing on a stage when youre in good voice and belting out songs. Its almost as good as sex. Keel starred in such touring hits as Most Happy Fella, Man of La Mancha, Camelot, South Pacific and Kismet.

Touring was more taxing and less remunerative than his salad days at MGM when the barrel-chested singer starred in such movie musicals as Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, Show Boat, Kiss Me Kate, Rose Marie and Kismet.

But more than musicals, Keel perfers the concert stage. And it was on a tour of Britain last month that he discovered the tremendous impact of Dallas.

Although hed always played to full houses. Keel did not stop traffic nor cause young women to palpitate. But thanks to Clayton Farlow, Keel couldnt walk the English streets without causing small riots.

Its amazing, he said.

grinning. I did 13 (Hie-night concerts in 15 cities. Everywhere I went pecle wanted to know about Farlow and Dallas.

I didnt expect it and Ive never seen anything like it. The last time I played London, in 1974, I filled the Palladium. The audience was warm and re^nsive but not explosive.

This year I was mobbed everywhere. I stayed in my

hotel rooms to keq> from being trampled. I went from a respected singer to a phenomenon, thanks to Dallas. \ The series is as pc^ular over there as it is in this country.

Im getting a whole new, younger crowd. Women throw roses at me on stage. Some even threw their hotel keys to me. And Im getting a lot of mail from young gals now. That never used to happen.

Its an entirely different attitude. All kinds of people think of me as Farlow and they keep asking me to flatten J R. Ive become a hero simply by being J.R.s adversary.

Most of the crowds feel they know me, as if Farlow is part of the family.

Keel has a family of his own. He and his third wife.

Judy, and their daughter live in the San Fernando Valley.

Thanks to Dallas, Keel had not played a concert in three years, much less toured in a musical.

After 35 years of touring it was time for me to sit down and get some rest, he said. And in Dallas Im enjoying straight acting for the first time.

I only work two or three

days a week and the hiatus allows me to go on tour. Im planning a European tour In countries where Dallas Is a hit.

When Im not on call, I play golf several times a week and relax at home every night after work. The rest has been good for my voice, too.

For two years I didnt sing professionally at all. But

I have been working with a great voice coach. You have to have someone else listen to your voice because you cant hear it yourself. 1 never let my vocal muscles gel out of shape.

Dallas has been wonderful for my professional and private life. .Much as I enjoy it, however, it still cant compare with the thrill of singing well.

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Croasword By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS

1 Track circuit 4 Gumshoe 7 - orange I fruit tree)

12 - carte

13 tree

14 Gamblers mecca

15 Seed

16 Those on strike

18 Presidential nickname

19 Villainous expression

20 MetaUic element

22 Before

23 Gose up

27 Oxford diet.

29 Deli item

31 Sound of danger

34 Belief

35 Truck type

37 Legal payinent

38 Golf aids

39 Self

41 Stinger

45 Rips

47 Caviar

48 After-dinner aid

52 Poem

53 Famed orphan

54 Garland

55 Damage

56 Colorful flower

57 Fast plane

58 Fool

DOWN

1 Bolivian city

2 Excuse

3 Church plate

4 Recipe units

11 Sigmoid letter 17 Maintain 21 Bottle tops 23PropeUer type

24 Supplement

25 Stout

6Speed-setter

7 Done

8 Go down

9 Longevity

10 Needlefish

Avg. solution time: 25 min.

5 Conjectured 26 Conducted

28 Flightless bird

30 Rink stuff

31 Fitting

32 Untruth

33 King topper

36 Hatchery sound

37 Impels 40 Author Sheehy

etal.

42 Scent

43 Soft drinks ^    44    Equals

45 The ones there

46 Playlet

48 Faucet

49 Singleton 50Yoko-

7-15 51 Word with Answer to yesterdays puzzle,    foil or can

Rainmaker Saint

It's St Swithin's Day. and, according to legend, if its raining today, you can look forward to another 39 days of rain. But if it's a nice day, you can expect 39 more days of fair weather. St. Swithin was a 9th Century English bishop. Before he died more than 1 KM) years ago, he asked for a humble burial in a churchyard of Winchester Cathedral. When he was canonized more than 100 years later, the Church decreed that the saint deserved a more fitting grave-site inside the cathedral. However, it seems St. Swithin did not agree with the Churchs decision. The story says that, when the time came to move the Saints grave from its original site, it began to rain. The rain continued for 40 days.

1)0 YOU KNOW-Which state in the U.S. receives the most rain annually?

THURSDAYS ANSWER-Charles Dickens wrote A Tale of Two Cities.

7        VKt'.Inc    ittsa

CRYPTOQUIP    7-15

ZCVGJVWJ XKFGXAJP SKC RCGSJ CVWAWJVCW: RKRZV FAJP?

Yesterdays Cryptoquip DARING DEMOLITION TEAMS IXiNG GET-TOGETHER IS A SMASH.

Todays Cryptoquip clue; W equals S.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution ciptier in which 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 apostro^ can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

19t3King Felur Syndicate. Inc

Transplant Bill Shakes Patient

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A heart transplant patient said the bill for his operation was enough to give me a heart attack when he and some other transplant patients went to the University of Minnesota Hospitals for their regular checkups.

The patients joked about the cost Thursday after Dr. R. Morton Bolman told them the university now requires that patients produce $100,000 in up-front money.

My bill was enough to give me a heart attack, said Ted Nowakowski. 34, an art teacher and football coach at Murray, Iowa, 60 miles southwest of Des Moines. He has insurance coverage, Mine passed $100,000 when 1 last looked, said Phil Little. 51, of Waco, Texas, who works for an insurance company.

Tom Rose. 29, a cereal chemist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Superior, Wis., said his In

surance was tine, he has new vigor and, I got an autographed picture from Ronald Reagan - its kind of nice knowing your boss is interested.

30-DAY FORECAST This is the way the nations weather will look for the next thirty days in terms of temperatures and precipitation according to the National Weather Service. (AP Lase^hotoMap)

Archie Nobles & Sons 315 Stantonsburg Road

(Across from Doctors Park)

758-4600

Steaks    Seafood

Salad Bar    Sandwiches

Daily Specials

Take-out service    Banquet    facilities

OPENSun.-Fri. 11 am-10 pmSat.-5pm-11 pm

Mixed Beverages Now Available!

Happy Hours: Mon., Wed., & Fri. 3 P.M.-7 P.M.

PEANUTS

Jjjia I i -<^0^ ti

at

Ca^ tAj o^mt

fimt ioW to Chuck. hk

Ml'practice

lAC rit}

THE f^gAL ^50] WM/

NUBBIN

BLONDIE

( WHEN I HI BED THOSE NEW

employees, I

HAD HIGH HOPES

BUT THEY DISAPPOINTED AAE

^ I NEVB? DISAPPOINTED YOU,

NO, BUT WITH YOU 1 NEVER HAD

BEETLE BAILEY

PHANTOM

FRANK & ERNEST

TOYS and GAMES

o

I POMT l<NOW IF I want a "UTTLf >OCng' HT oP WOT HOW |viany i|TTt PAr/e^T glTi





i.

FORECAST POR SATURDAY. JULY 16,1983

from the Carroll Righttr Institute

GENERAL TENDENCIES: You are anxious to get a pmon to go along with you in some project that you have but you would be wasting your time, unless you can see this individual early in the morning.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Not a good day to try to convince a partner to agree to some plan you have in mind, since he is too busy to listen to you.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Get busy at yur work and dont try to delegate it to others or there will be resentment on their part. Be more efficient.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) You have fine practical ideas that should be put in motion early in the day and then tonight you can analyze the results.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Do something thoughtful for those who dwell with you and have more harmony at home.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) A good day for self analyza-tion and fguring out better ways of operating in the future so that you can become more successful.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) A good day to study your home and make any repairs that are needed and get utilities working nicely.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A little extra touch of efficiency and art to whatever you expend your efforts can bimg you greater returns.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Good day to ferret out the truth about whatever has been confusmg to you in the past and get right answers.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Be very outgoing today since others are most receptive and you can discuss mutual undertakings with others very well.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Get into those civic taks you like and also get your shopping done early. The evening is best spent alone.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Some new project hi^ you fascinated so delve into it further and get fine results. Make new acquaintances of worth.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Your hunches are reliable during the day but tonight use only your mature judgment. Avoid conflicts with a loved one.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will get along famously with almost everyone he, or she comes in contact. Give as fine an education as possible since there is a wonderful mind here and your progeny will do very well in any technological profession.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

IT CHARLES GOBQI AND OMAR SHARIF

019S3 Tribun* Company Syndlctfa, Inc.

A REAL TWO-WAY FINESSE

Both vulnerable. North deals.

NORTH

K43 ^A

OAKQ104

Q863 WEST    EAST

4Q762    5

<7K1084    <7QJ96

0 72    0 953

AJ9    4K10742

SOUTH

AJ1098 <;?7532

0 J86

5 The bidding:

North    East    South    West

10    Pass    1        Pass

3 4    Pass    3    0    Pass

3 4    Pass    4    4    Pass

Pass    Pass

Opening lead: Four of <7.

Appearances can be deceiving. A simple holdup play lured declarer to his doom on this deal.

North conducted a classic auction. He showed a good hand with five diamonds, four clubs three spades and, therefore, a singleton heart by jump shifting and then raising his partner's suit. South had just enough for game and no ambitions beyond that.

and the defenders forced dummy to ruff a heart.

Now declarer came to hand with a club ruff, cashed the ace of trump and tried to run diamonds. But West ruffed the third diamond and the defenders collected two hearts for down one.

There was a most unusual line of play available to declarer. After he had won the first spade finesse, he should next have take the trump finesse the other way! While this play might seem crazy, it is actually a safety play. If West follows to the second spade and East wins the queen, declarer is still in charge. He can ruff the heart return in dummy, come to hand with the jack of diamonds and draw the last trump. Then he can run diamonds for his contract.

If West shows out on the second trump, declarer can rise with the king to repeat the marked finesse. Either way, he cannot be stopped from making ten tricks.

Fund To Assist Needs In Crisis

Declarer won the opening heart lead in dummy and took the spade finesse. West allowed declarer to win the trick and, impressed with his success, declarer crossed to the king of trumps to repeat the finesse. When East show ed out, declarer found he had already lost control. He tried valiantly. He gave up a club

WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan has signed into law a measure creating a $30 million revolving fund to help the Department of Health and Human Services cope with public health emergencies.

Democracy A Tension-Eoser

The money will be used to assist the Public Health Service in dealing with such unexpected emergencies as last years Tylenol tampering scare and current concerns over the deadly disease known as Acquired Immune Defense Syndrome (AIDS).

WASHINGTON (AP) -The restoration of democratic government in Chila would be the best way to ease tensions in the South American country, the State Department says.

A mass protest staged Tuesday against Chiles military dictatorship was evidence of considerable discontent with the government, dq)artment spokesman John Hughes said.

"We believe the current political tensions in Chile can best be restdved peacefully through moderation and dialogue regarding national issues, such as the transition to democracy, spokesman John Hughes said.

Rep. Henry A. Waxman, D-Calif., the bills sponsor, took the occasion of the signing to criticize the Reagan administration for not requesting money for AIDS research. The administration has tried to deal with the AIDS epidemic cheaply and routinely, Waxman said in a written statement.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Classified

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

2.90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES

Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wed nesday.. Tuesday 3 p. m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday    noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday ... .Tuesday 4p.m.

Friday Wednesday 2 p.m.

Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

Public

Notices

IN THEJ

^COURT

>IVISION

SUPERIOR CUR NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF HARLIN RICHARD

^"'^N^TTfcio^llglTORS

Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of HARLIN RICHARD PHILLIPS, late of Pitt County,

North Carolina, this is to notify all 5f

oersons having claims against the Estate of Harlln Richard Phillips to

SMUGGLING CHARGE LONDON (AP) - An Air Zimbabwe pilot and his wife are being held in police custody charged with smuggling 8.8 pounds of marijuana into Londons Gatwick Airport, a British Customs and Excise spokesman said yesterday.

Estate of Harltn Richard Phillips i present,them to the undersigned E: ecutrix, or her attorneys, on or before January 1, 1984, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.

This 11 day of July, 1983 MARGARET PHILLIPS MILLER

1406 East Wright Road Greenville, NC 27834 E xecutrix of the Estate ot Harlln Richard Phillips, Deceased Gaylord, Singleton, McNally 8, Strickland Attorneys at Law Post Office Drawer 545 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 July 15, 22, 29; August 5,1983

LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT

WANTED:    Minority    Business

jrity _______

Enterprises to bid as sub contractors on NC Dept, ot Transportation projects 8.220102 in Pitt County, NC and 8.1190101 in

JoneSOnslow counties, NC. Letting date: July 26, 1983. Contact C.F. Kienast, EEO Officer, Barrus Con

struction Company, Kinston, NC, 919/527 8021, ext. 40. An EEO/AA

employer.

July 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 1983

NO-nCI TO BIDDERS

SANITAR^S|W^^UTFALL

TO WHICHTORT DEVELOPMENT GREENVILLE UTILITIES

Sealed proposals will be received by Greenville Utilities Commission In the Greenville Utilities Commission Offices at 2:00 PM, DST on July 28, 1983 and immediately thereafter publicly opened and read, for con structiM tlw followingfaclllties: SANITARY S^^I^R A4AIN

___________ _    sealed    envelope,    ad

dressed to Greenville Utilities Commission and the outside of the envelope must be marked "Proposal for Fork Swamp Sanitary Sewer Outfall Extension," Greenville Utilities Commission. All proposals must be made on blank forms pro vided and Included in the bound document. The name, address, and license number of the Bidder shall

be plainly marked thereon. Each proposal must be

companied by cash or a certified check, drawn on a bank or trust company authorized to do business In North Carolina, payable to Greenville Utilities C^ommlsslon, in an amount at least equal to five percent (5%) of the total amount of the bid, as a guarantee that a contract will be entered Into and that a satisfactory performance bond will be executed. In lieu of cash or a certified check, the Bidder may submit a bid bond in the form prescribed in G.S. 143-129 as amended by Chapter 1104 of the Public Laws of 1951.

Contractors are notified that legislative acts relating to licensing of contractors will be observed in receiving bids and awarding contracts.

Plans and specifications are on file and may be examined at the Of flee of the Greenville Utilities C(

mission, at the office of the Engineer , at the AGC office In

In Greenville, . .. _________

Raleigh, Greensboro, and Charlotte; in the Dodge Plan Rooms, In Raleigh, Greensboro, and Charlotte. Specifications and construction drawings may be obtained upon application to the Engineer, ac companied by a plan deposit check In the amounf of 850.00.

Deizosit will be refunded In full to all bona fide bidders and others, pro vided plans and specifications are

returned In good condition within ten lys after 0|

right Is re... .    ____

or all bids, to waive informalities.

(iOl^days affer opening of bids.

rhe right Is reserved to reject any

PUBLIC NOTICES

Having quatiftod^s Executrix of the estate of Karl Pace Stocks late of

Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased

tp present them to the undersigned

Executrix on or before January 2, wlli

1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment. This 28th day of June, 1983. Christine Stocks Heath Rt.8. Box 84 Greenville. N.C. 27834 Executrix of the estate of Karl Pace Stocks, deceased.

July 1,8, 15, 22, 1983    _

Transportation seeks bids for the

disinterment and reinterment of aj^

proximately fifteen (15) graves in the Vicks Cemetery, being located one-half mile north of US 264, west of the Farmville City Limits. Sealed bids will be received at the Reloca tion office of the Department of Transportation in Greenville, North Carolina until 10:00 AM on July 22. 1983 at which time bids will be opened. No bids will be received after the hour fixed. Bids will be received in a sealed envelope marked "BIDS -GRAVEYARD'. No bids will be accepted unless made on bid forms furnished by the Area Relocation Agent.

In accordan<:e with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, minority business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color or national origin.

The Department of Transportation reserves the right to reject any or all bids. These graves are located on Project 8.1230101 in Greene County. For full particulars contact Fred Davis, Jr., N. C. Department of Transportation, P. O. Box 1587, Greenville, N. C., Telephone No. (919) 752 5124.

July 8, 15, 1983

and to award contract or contracts which, In the opinion of the Green vllle Utitltles Commission, appear to be in its best interest. The right Is reserved to hold any or all proposals for a period of forty five (45) days

from the oc lenlng thereof.    . .

mvllle utilities Commission

Greenvll____________

Mr. CharlesO'H. Horne, Jr. Rivers and Associates. Inc. Engineers Surveyors P<^ Office Box 9l9 107 East Second Street Greenville, North Carolina 27834 (919) 752 4135 July 15, 1983

021

Oldsmobile

CUTLASS SUfREME 1982. Extra .all Rex Smith Chevrolet,

clean. Ca.....

Avden. 746 3141

1982 CUTLASS SUPREME Qpve

3ray. Low mileage. $7700. call >58 6805 or 752 4297.

022

Plymouth

1974 PLYA40UTH FURY Power steering, power brakes, air. Good condition. $750:Call 758-0272

1975 PLYMOUTH FURY 318 ine, beige, 1 owner, 74,000 miles.

engine, beige, 1 Sl.oiX). 746 j326.

1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE Station Wagon. Good condition. 756 4514.

023

Pontiac

1972 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door. good condition, new tires. 756 5815. 1974 PONTIAC LEAAANS Good condition. Call 758-1383 aHer 6 p.m

1976 PONTIAC LeMans. 4 door, automatic, air, good running condi-tlon.$1050. 753 2381.

1977 FIREBIRD, automatic, power steering and brakes, tilt wheel, Craig AM/FM stereo cassette, mag wheels, needs door panel. %i600. Call 758-4349 after 6~_

024

Foreign

A GOOD BARGAIN 1975 Fiat SL128, AM-FM stereo, excellent condition. 81,000. 756-0183

AUDI 5000S 1982. Fuel injected. Like new. In perfect condition. Electric sunroof, complete stereo system. Call after6o.m. 1-975-3179

MERCEDES 240-D 1981. 4 speed, sunroof, new tires, cream. Excellent condition. 814,800. Call 756-6336 days. Ask for Lorelle. N lohts or weekends cal 1756 1549

SACRIFICE - 1973 HONDA Civic. Good condition. ri295. 756 6783.

TOYOTA COROLLA 1982. 4 door, automatic, air condition, good con dition. Call Rex Smith (Thevrolet, Avden, 746 3141

TOYOTA SERVICE, 4 cylinder r valve

King Sf^iat 820. 4 cylinder valve adjust 814. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage, 756 3796

1968 VOLKSWAGEN, 8250 or will sell for parts. Call 752-9076 or 2L6Z0

1971'TOYOTA Corolla. Good condl-

tion^i^ood gas mileage. Best offer.

758J

1971 VOLKSWAGEN Rebuilt engine and carburetor. New starter battery and tires. 752 1134

1972 MG MIDGET Good condition. Have to see to appreciate. Phone 258 7259

1972 TOYOTA CORONA. 4 door. Runs but engine needs repair. 8200. Call 752 9076or 752 7670.

1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUS Looks and drives good. Fold down bed and table Asklno Sl095. 752 1037

1 973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good. 81700. Call 758 2300 davs

1974 SAAB New engine and inter!-or. Sacrifice (or best offer. 756 4645.

1974 VOLKSWAGEN

Remanufactured engine. Excellent condition. 81500. Phone 795-3486.

1975 DATSUN B210. new paint and interior. 1976 Oatsun truck. Both In good condition. Call 753 3570

1975 MGB CONVERTIBLE Very

goodSqn(|ltlgD C4i,!l 975 2265

1975 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER, good condition. Best offer. Call anytime 746 2177

1976 MGB, dark blue. 66,000 miles, 'erdrive. Good condition. 82,600. 946 8563._

overc

CalK

002

PERSONALS

I, VANESSA D FREEMAF, vu o longer Be responslbTe for a*- detts contractad by anyone oths- than

1976 TOYOTA LIFTBACK Tires and car in good condition. Air, AM/FM c.sssefte. 82900. Call 758

1606U vs, 757 1353nights._

1976 :    ff.TA, COROLLA, 8850. Also

19,".' -    . 4'jen Rabbit, good con

j    52 5334.    _

! ,5'iMAZ> ;LC, 5 speed, AM/FM isseHe. Priced to sell. Call .56-7928

myself

t OATSUN 4 door stationwagon, radial tires, AM/FM,

SINGLES, WIDOWS, and divorcees who would like to meet other singles, widows, and divorces. All ages welcome Write to:

Singles ot North Carolina (SNC) PO Box 11077 Goldsboro, N C 27532 All replies confidential

$5;000 CASH LOANS

No credit or eniployment needed. 24 hour service. 1 702-369-9238._

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

BUY ONE DRESS at rraular price get the second one FREE) T Snooty Fox. 203 East Fifth Street.

FREE I Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers,

Downtown Evans Mall for free ^ft

to be given away weekly. purchase necessary.

010

AUTOMOTIVE

RENTAWRECK

Rent dependable used cars at low rptg^and ^ayp. 752 2277_

Oil

Autos For Sale

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings FQrg.Cal|7S?pi.14,_

013

Buicic

REGAL 1976. 2 door. Extra clean. Call Rex Smith Chevrolet, Ayden, 746 3141.___

1977 BUICK SKYHAWK Needs work. New tires. Power, air. 81600. Call home 752 1050, work 756 5994, ask for Mike Tyler

1979 BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruise, power win dows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mileage. Make offer. 756-8539._

014

Cadillac

1977 COUPE DeVille . Loaded with options^ Bronze. Very nice car.

84500. 758 4988.

1981 CADILLAC Coupe Deville.

Loaded with options. Priced to sell. Call BB&T William Handley 752

015

Chevrolet

CAMARO 1981. Fully equipped, 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.

8850 firm. Call 825 1750, 9 to 5, 825 6741 after 6.

1964 CHEVROLET BELAIR, good )tfer.

condition, 94,000 miles. Best o1 Call before 2 p.m.. 758-6674

Bids must be submitted on the

complete project. Proposals must be enclosed In a sez

1972 NOVA 307, air, AM/FM cassette, new paint and interior. Excellent condition. 81000. 758-6670 after 6 p.m. Hal Moore.

1973 CHEVROLET Caprice Classic. Good condition. 8600. Call 758 3047 agr5p w

1974 NOVA, air, power steering and brakes, AM/FM cassette. Good

condition. 81175. 756 9485 after 5.

1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC V8, automatic. Good condition. 82600. 756-8593._

016

Chrysler

1973 NEW YORKER, 8750. Call ?S4 8781._

017

Dodge

1981 DODGE OMNI Miser. 20,000 miles, owner left for overseas. 4 speed. 84.000. 752 4978._

018

Ford

1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500. 289 engine, 4 door, automatic, power iteerlng. 8650 or best offer. 757 1273

1972 MERCURY MONTEREY, runs good, must sell. 8300. Call 758 5456 anytime.

1973 FORD PINTO Runabout, air. automatic. Make offer. 756 8539.

1973 FORD WAGON Power win

dows,,steerj^^and brakes. 81500 or

best offer. 75

1975 FORD GRANADA New tires Z56 8491 ef)ers

1975 FORD GRANADA. 1 owner, excellent condition. Less than 80,000 miles. 82300. 746 2624 after 5 o.m

1976 FORD GRANADA GHIA, 62,000 miles, excellent condition. 752 4946 after 6.

1977 PINTO Loaded, low mileage. 81695. 756-0988 after 6.    ^

I THUNDERBIRD. extra clean. 11

:an746-6209aTter6p.m.

020

AAercury

1969 MERCURY COUGAR Good motor and transmlssfon. Needs

brake and front end work. 8300. Call 746 3680efter 1p.m.

021

Oldsmobile

1972 OLOSA8OBILE CUTLASS, 350 cubic inch, 4 barrell, automatic, keystone wheels, white with black too. After 7 p.m . 756 6983,_

:a*ic, air, 25,000 miles, clean. Alter 5 p.m., 752 7793.

. TOYOTA CELICA ST L .cellent condition. 85,000. 524 5975.

1981 DATSUN GX Low mileage. air, stereo. 84700.756-0447

1981 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA 5 speed, air, digital AM/FM stereo cassette. 31,000 miles. Call 758 3047 after 5 p.m

1981 VOLKSWAGEN DIESEL L S 2 door, air, AM/FM cassette. 5 speed, new tires, low mileage. Call 756 7541._

1982 AUDI 4,000 s DIESEL AM/FM cassette, sunroof, immaculate. Warranty - 7,000 miles. 756-7499

1983 TOYOTA CELICA ST, 19,000 miles, 8500 and assume payments. Call 758 7427 anytime.

029 Auto Parts t, Service

TOYOTA SERVICE and save! Bells Fork Garage. Phone 756-3796._

032 Boats For Sale

HIGHSIOE 12' aluminum boat, 12' Cox trailer, 6 horsepower Wizard motor, Minnkota 2 speed trolling motor. All for 8250. Call 749 3822

16' DIXIE BASS boat. 80 horse power Mercury motor. Call 752-7606 aiter 6

16' DIXIE BASS 35 Johnson electric start. 758 7787

17' GW BOAT 115 horsepower Evinrude motor, Cox trailer. Extras. Phone 752 4837.__

1980 23' SPORTCRAFT Fisherman series. 470 Mercrulser engine (175 horsepower), VHF radio, CB radio, depth finder, compass, cabin sleeps

f electric winch, galvanized Lon|j

trailer with buddy bearings 758 0114

034 Campers For Sale

cox POPUP CAMPER Sleeps 6. Includes sink. Ice box, electrical and water connections - also water

holding tank, new top and 2 new

elli  ...........

spare fires. 8800. 752 3812.

NEW JAYCO POPUPS Close out prices. Camotown RV's, 746 3530

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman

Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleioh. N C 834 2774.

1973 WILDERNESS 23'. Sleeps 7. Air, tent type awning. Excellent condition. Hitch and jacks included. Bargain at 83.695. Call 756 0360 after 6p.m

1977 27' ALUMLITE 5th Wheel, 87,000 1982 equipped truck, 810,000. 758 6582._

1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used tew times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self-contained. 85300 negotiable. 756 8539._

036

Cycles For Sale

/MOTORIZED ULTRALIGHT air craft. In good condition. Asking 83.000orbestOffer. 355 2970.

1980 HONDA CB750F Excellent mechanical condition. 81800. Call

1982 HONDA V-4S AAAGNA 82895. 756 4191 davs. 795 4954 after 6.

78>/i HARLEY Supergllde. 82900. Call 752 8445after 5 Eurn_

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 Cobra. Camptown RV's. Ayden, 7.46?53ft.

1967 FORD TRUCK - short bed. 6 cylinder. 76engine. 8HO0.756-9994. 968 4x4, LONG BODY, 3 speed.

8)t72S.4m

1971 CHEVY 350 Cubic Inch. New paint. Excellent condition. 81900 firm. 756 4329._ _

1973 CHEVY Cheyenne V 8, automatic, power brakes and steering, till wheel, AM/FM 8 track, needs work. 8800. Call 758-4349 after 6

1975 FORD PICKUP with locking tool box. 6 cylinder, standard transmission. Body excellent con dition, original paint. 81750. 756-7271The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-rnday, July 15,1983-21

046

PETS

AKC REGISTERED male German Shepherd puppy. 6 weeks old. Call

8fterT>M*^

AKC REGISTERED red female miniature Dachshund, 10 months old. Good with children. 8100. 758-

ML

FOR SALE: Special AKC Cocker Spaniels, Basset Hounds and Miniature Schnauzers; 8100. Also Pomeranians for sale. Call Bvll9tk'tK8nna!a.iHL3.68i

FOR SALE: AKC Shepherd pup-

gies. 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 for good home. 1 black female; 1 white male. Friendly and oood health. 752-4357. SCHAUZER-YORKIE 3</} months Old. 8150. call 752 7194

SHELTIE (MINIATURE COLLIE). 6 month old female. Champion breeding. 1 522 2178._

051

Help Wanted

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Due to increased sales, we are in need of a salesperson. Experience helpful but not necessary. Must be responsible and have the willingness to work hard and earn top commissions. Excellent benetits. working conditions and bonus plan. See Brian Pecheles in person only 9 a.m. 12 noon, Monday Friday. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen

BODY SHOP MANAGER needed. Excellent salary and benefits. Apply to Herbert Powell. Hastings Fgrg, 758 Q114.

BOOKKEEPER

Local, multi divisional organization seeks an aggressive, job conscious assistant to fhe controller. Position requires bookkeeping experience dealing with several companies, some of which are multi divisional. Formal accounting training/experience a strong plus. Position involves numerous jobs from accounts payable clerk to computer data entry operator. Experience with IBM 34 a plus. Salary and benefits negotiable, based on exoe rience. Send resume with refer enees to CONTROLLER, PO Box 9069.GreenY!He..9jC27??5

BOREDI BROKEI BLUE I Sellitoys, gifts until December. Fun job, party plan, free $300 kit. No collecting, no delivery. 756 4553, 756 6610.753 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 Tgr.rg.ll.at 823.1.611

CARPENTERS Framing experience required. Contact Miller & Davis Associates. 400 North Greene 5trggt bgtvyggn9ang5

CASHIER

Convenience store. Good at mosphere. Ste<

Apply at Dodge:

Memorial Drive.

iteady employment. Store, 3209 South

CASHIER WANTED High school education. Must be a good speller

and good with figures, l^ply In person at Great Southern Finance, U5 South Lee Street, Ayden

CHAUFFER WANTED Must be at least 18 years of age. Must be free to travel with elderly gentleman. All expenses paid. Write Chautfer, PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC 27834.

CONTINUING EDIJCATION

Specialist, Division of Community Ffealth Service, School of Public Health:    Position    specializes    in

planning, organizing, implement

Ing, and evaluating continuing edu-

iti                   

cation and technical assistance programs sponsored by the School of Public Health, giving particular

emphasis to programs for Public Health Nurses In the state. Involves

extensive work with public health agencies. School faculty, and Division staff to assess health-related training needs and plan, develop, and present programs to meet fhese needs. Minimum quail ficatlons: Bachelor of Science In Nursing and Master's degree in health, education, or related tield; three years of experience in conducting training needs assessments

and designing, teaching, and evaluating continuing education

programs for public health or related organizafion. Starting salary about 820,(XX) depending on training and experience. Send resume by July 25, 1983 to Richard M House, Acting Director, Division of Community Health Service, School ot Public Health 201H, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, or call 919 966 2248. Equal Opportunity .mplgiLg.C

DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED

Cll 752-5126

Do You Have A Desire To Win?

OUR Training can prgpare you for a WINNING MANAG^ENT posi tion In your locality within 6

months.

You can expect to earn 810,000 to 818,000 while training.

Guaranteed minimum 81200 month Income to start.

Two weeks training In school, expenses paid.

Training In the field selling and servicing established accounts.

051

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED PAINTERS

istim.

FAST GROWING FINANCIAL Corporation needs person qualified

in accounting and bookkeeping tperience desired Good grade; and clerical aptitude a necessity

 resume to Coastal Leasing

orporation. Box 647, Greenville.

Send

Corpi

FLORAL DESIGNER Experience necessary. Send resume to Design er. PO Box 1967. Greenville, NC

FOOD SALES Food broker has

retail sales opening in Greenville, NC area for a self starter. Company

salary, bonus, benefit package, and company car. Some overnight trav el. Send resume to PO Box 17126, Raleioh. NC 27607._

GRADY WHITE BOATS is now

accepting applications for future consideration in production work. Experience with using hand pow ered tools necessary. Apply Tues day, Wednesday, and Thursday 8 30 to 11:30._

IF YOU CAN sell but feel uneasy about your tuture growth within your present employment, here's the start of a new career. Starting now, right now, you can turn your present selling skills into a stable, well paying lifetime career as top earning display sales professional at Taylor Publications. Call 919-633-5106 for interview. 208 Pollack Street, New Bern, N C_

INSTRUCTOR, Electrical Installa tion and Maintenance. Candidate must have a minimum of a Voca tional Diploma. Primary responsi bility will be to provide a training program in the basic knowledge, lundamentals and practices in volved in the electrical trades. In addition, the instructor will be required to recruit, advise, and assist in the placement of students. Five years practical work experi ence preferred. Industrial and Electronic experience preferred. Position available September 1st. Applications accepted Ihru August 3 to Employment Security Com mission, Williamston. NC 27892. Martin Community College an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer._

ZALES JEWELERS is looking for a person to train in store manage ment and jewelry sales. Experience Is not required if you have the enthusiasm and are willing to learn Excellent company benefits. So if you are looking for a career and not |ust a job. apply in person to Zales Jewelers. Carolina East Mai I.

MAINTENANCE PERSON needed Must be knowledgeable in all areas of general maintenance including

plumbing, heating, and air condi tjoning. Reply to Maintenance

Person, P Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.

MANAGER

For convenience store and gas combination. 820,(X)0 with com

mission.Apply at Dodges Store. 3209 South Memorial Drive.

MANAGER WANTED tor

automotive parts in business Must have knowledge in parts and busi ness, and be able to deal with the public. 752 6124

NEED GOOD BASE and lead guitar player with playing experience to lOln Gospel group. Just starting, so there will be no pay. Prefer serious musicians only. If interested, call 758 2798 from 9 to 5 or 758 6007 trom 5 to 10.__

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 to5_______

PART TIME experienced kennel

hjelp. Apply between 4 and 5 at

's Grooming World, 758-6333 PARTS COUNTER PERSON Ford parts experience necessary Excellent advancement opportunity to parts manager position for the right person. Call 756 4272

PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5 yearsexperience 756 7961

RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION Supervisor. Experienced required. Send past experience summary. Salary plus fringe benefits plus bonus available. Mail to P O Box 859. Greenville. N C 27834

RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District

Hospital needs you.' Contact Barbara McDonald.

Nursing, 943 2111.

Director of

SALESPERSON NEEDED Auto sales experience preferred Excellent company benetits. Call 756 4267_

SECRETARY - For small chain of

treschools. Apply in person at 313 ast 10th Street. No phone calls eisgsg.

SECRETARY Challenging position in sales department. Must be accu rate with figures. Prefer 3 to 5

years office experience, typing 60        join------

words per minute. By appointment only. Call 752-2111, extension 251 between 9a.m. and 4p.m

SEEGARS FENCE COMPANY Workers needed. 758 5937._

SERVICE WRITER needed. Expe rience preferred. Ability to com municafe with public a must. Call 756 4272.

SHEET ROCK hangers and finish ers. Call 756 0053    _

TEACHER FOR Christian School.

ACE curriculum. Apply to Teacher, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

THE PIECE GOODS SHOP has an opening for a mature sales person

in Greenville. Applicants must be K r

available to worli morning and/or evening hours. No experience nec essary, on the job training tor the

Must be 21 or over, goal-oriented, ambitious, sportsminded, bondable

Benefits offered include Major Med ding Pn

ical and outstanding Profit Sharing Plan.

For the fight person, this will be a life time career opportunity with an international group of companies.

Call for an appointment;

757-0686 10:30AM to6:00P AA

Equal Opportunity Emplover M/F

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales representative. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambitious and show progress for age. Business or sales background

helpful. In requesting personal in ' tase submit resume

terview please

stating personal history, education and business experience. Write PO Box 406, Greenville. NC 27835

EXPEREINCEO 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 course for certification in H I E F S S If interested call 946-

9570. ask for Mr. Schuck.

EXPERIENCED TV TECHNICIAN

to work with established firm. Excellent opportunity, good benetits. Please call 756 3240 tor Interview._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

mature person who knows seyyin^

Liberal benefits Including paid hoi days, paid vacation, and employee discount. Apply in person at The Piece Goods Shop, Greenville Square Shopping Center. Monday, July 18.11 a.m. to4 p.m

THE TRAINING NEVER STOPS

Consider an exciting career in Real Estate. We offer the training and

help you need to be successtui Residential and Investment

Training Classes To Begin Soon. Join our new company at our ne office,

105 W. Greenville Blvd. Call Rod TugwelI 756-6810

CENTURY 21

TIPTON .ASSOCIATES

TRUCK DRIVER TRAINING 820,000-830,01)0 YEAR

Multi-Million dollar trucking com pany with beautiful late model tractors needs drivers to run with new drivers hired out ot training program. Many other driving jobs av^lable.

Interstate Personnel Services, Inc. 919-475-2119

VENDING MACHINE Repairman for Lenoir and Pitt Counties. Must have experience. Good benefits with

growing company. Kinston 527-1200, Greenville 35 6361.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1981 Ford Fairmont

4 door. Light blue, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, radio. Like new.

122.17

Per Month

Basad on salat price of $4350.00, *750 down (cash or trade), amount financed $3600.00. 36 monthly paymantt, 13.5% Annual Percentage Rata, total ol payments $4390.12. Dots not include N.C. Sales Tax.

1979 JEEP CJ-7. 42,000 miles. Call 7S6S4a

1901 BLUE TOYOTA longbed pIckuD. 85.000. 752 0779

1902 EXP FORD for sale or will trade tor late model Pickup truck. 757 0451, ask for Mr. Carrawav.

1902 TOYOTA Long bed Diesel with extras. Call 524-5614.

1903 SILVERADO short bed.

Loaded. (Tall 752 9420.

040

Child Care

BABYSITTING Mature lady wishes to babysit. Anytime, even weekends. Relerences. Call 752

3iL_

MOTHER WANTS to keep 2

children full time In my home. Near IpdvotrlalppLk. 752 ??96.

WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home, Mondays through Fridays. 756 1057_

YOUNG MOTHER would Ilka to keep infant In her home. Nursery to first grade experience. 752 3766.

ASTING

Amcrka't I Used Cji Company Tenth Slieel & 264 By Pass

FORD

S

758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

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

1

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licensed and fully insured Trim ming. cutting and removal Free estimates J P Stancil. 752 6331.

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building Call James Harrington after 6 pm 752 7765

CARPET SPECIAL

2 rooms and hall Home Care Cleaners

$39 95 756 5453

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprises. 756 9123 day. 756 1007 night._

EXPERIENCED BCX3KKEEPER

will do bookkeeping in my home all types from business to personal Call 758 8277 after 6

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques Call for free estimate. Days 756 9123, Night 756 1007._

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices All size yards Call 752 5583 GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways Call 752 7341

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver All work guaranteed Call 757 3353 after 4 p.m , weekends anytime_

LONG BROTHERS ROOFING and

Contracting Company All types of roofing, repair jobs, and new con struction. Free estimates No job too big or too small. 355 6924_

MICROCOMPUTER REPAIR

Fast, reasonable service on various makes Call COMPUTIME, 355 6687___

PRIVATE DUTY ATTENDANT

wants nursing work 756 6862

QUALITY PAINTING, Interior and exterior Carpentry and outter re pair 524 4822after 6p.m

SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, counter tops Jack Baker Floor Service. 756 2868 anytime, if no answer call back

WILL THOROUGHLY CLEAN your house Lots ot experience. Reason able rates Call 757 3620_

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

ANNOUNCING NORTH CAROLINA'S FINEST The RALEIGH ANTIQUE EX

TRAVAGANZA Show and Sale July p.m.. Jujy f?. Noon^ p.m., Civic

15, 10 a.m. 9 p.m , July 16, 10 a m

Center. Over 150 quality dealers

displaying ANTIQUES AND OLD COLLECrriBLES ONLY! $2.50

admission $2.00 with this ad. DEALERS AND COLLECTORS

DON'T MISS IT! 919 924 8337,

919 924 4359, 919 924 8956_

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood for sale. J P Stancil, 752 6331

065 Farm Equipment

IRRIGATION Complete EZ rain system. Like new. Good price. Call 919 795 4241.

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR,

317 John Deere with 48 " mower deck new motor. Call 756-6100

TOBACCO CURING SUPPLIES

Taylgr twin scale hygrometers

$29'95. PVC hygrometers $13.49. door gasket material $31.95

Barn

per 100' We carry parts to repair hygrometers, plus barn racks and repair parts for racks (Powell & Dixie). Agri Supply. Greenville, NC 752 3999.

066 FURNITURE

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $29 26 on

a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables Furniture World, 757 0451

BASSETT SOLID WOOD table and 6 Chairs, china hutch and base

Take over payments on only $67.37 per months 757 0451. Furniture

World, 2808 E 10th St.

BEDROOM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest. Take over payments on only $26,33 per month. 757 0451. Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St.

BEIGE COUCH and chair. Good condition $150 752 6669

CALL US AND SEE why people are coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings. Call 823 3834, 9 30 to 5:30 or by ap poinfmenf._

COLOR TV

Want one? Check out ColorTyme, check out Tele Rent, check out Curtis Mathes, and then check out Furniture World. We rent to own for less money than any store in Greenville. 757 0451. Remember that Furniture King will not be undersold. He don't olav._

COUCH with matching chair. Lazy Boy recliner. All for $300 Call 758 6775.

FURNITURE! FURNITURE!

THE FURNITURE KING has it all! For the lowest prices on bedroom, dining room and living room furniture, pick up the phone and call 757 0451 We finance in our store Remember the 'Furniture King' will'inot be undersold at Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St.

Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

JARMAN

AUTO SALES

1982 Oatsun B-Z10, 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 Oatsun, 2 door, automatic transmission. $4450

1981 Toyota Corolla Liftback,

2 door, automatic, air condition. $5650

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix, 2

doqr hardtop. $6650

1980 Chevrolet Caprice Classic, 4 door. $5650

1979 Oatsun B-210, 2 door. 4 speed. $3350

1979 Mallbu Station Wagon.

air, automatic. $3650.

1978 Oodge 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 Oatsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed $1950

1976 Plymouth Valiant. 4 door, automatic, air. $1750

1967 Chevrolet automatic. $850

Pickup,

12 Months, 12,000 Milas Wsrrsnty Avsllsbis

FhnndnQ Aniabli wmi AppfOMd CraSH

Hwy 43 North 7S2-S237 Business

Grant Jarman.......756-9542

Edgar Denton.......756-2921

Donald Garris.......758-0929





O

FURNITURE

GUN CABINET - holds guns, uark wood with glass door. Large com fortable couch and end table. Good

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 04il_

RECLINERS We have 50 to choose from Barcalounger and Catnapper. We finance in our store. Phone

75 7 0451 or visit the 'Furniture King' at Furniture World. 2808 E lOth St

RENT TO OWN Si* piece solid wood living room suite, sofa, chair, rocker and 3 tables. Only S29.26 per month at Furniture World. 2808 E lOth St. Phone 757 0451._

RENT TO OWN Three piece living room suite, sofa, chair, loveseaf $26.33 per month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St. or phone 757 0451._

06/ Garage-Yard Sale

ATTENTION!

Bring your unwanted items for quick sale. Let me do the selling tor you at the Red Oak Show A Sell. It's a fun place to shop and browse. Treasures, bargains and antiques throughout the many rooms. No place like It anywhere. Come on out, everyone is welcomed.- Located on Farmville Highway. 264 West, 756 1156. Open Monday, ~

067 Garage-Yard Sale

GARAGE SALE, Saturday. 8 a.m. until. 507 West Railroad Street, Bethel, NC_

tuesda'

_ jy,

Sunday 1-6. Closed Thursdays

Wednesday. Friday

lay, Tuesday, Sunday, 11-6,-

BLOCK BUSTERI Chest of draw ers, curtains, antiques, clothes, tools, bookcase, bedspreads, toys, and more. Saturday, July 16 at 8 a.m. No Friday calls or sales. Hilltop Road. Hardee Acres off 33 East .Greenville.

TRADITIONAL GREEN SOFA, low

back. Good condition. $125. Call 752 7798 after 6 and weekends.

WHITE SEARS WASHER and

Whirlpool dryer. Good condition, $150 tor pair. Light walunt couch and two matching chairs, wood frame, leatherette cushions green and brown. Fair condition. $75 a set. Chrome dinette table. Good condition. $50. Light walnut coffee table. New. $45 746 6901.______ _____

3 PIECE LIVING ROOM or den furniture. Coffee fable, two end tables, and lamp. Excellent cortdi-tion Call 758 30U after 6._

4 FRENCH PROVENTIAL chairs. $75 each. 1 Contemporary couch. $200. I Contemporary desk with typewriter table, $100. 756-5346.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

BUY ONE TOP at regulaj-get the_ second, one. PR Sn

>no9*y

____________

Fox. 203 East Fifth Street

CLUB PINES - Garage Sale Baby items, clothes for nr>en, children, and women. Games and other household items. 102 Club Pines Road. 7 to 10 30

COZART'S AUTO SUPPLY INC , 814 Dickinson Avenue, yard sale, Saturday. July 16 at rear entrance. Plenty of tree parking in rear of store 9 to 1._

GARAGE SALE Saturday. 8 11 a.m. Lawn mower, vacuum cleaner, 19" color TV works good! Odds and ends too. 3007 South Elm Street    _

GIANT FLEA

Drive Inn. Satut available!

A8ARKET Tice aturday. 6 a.m. Spaces

INDOOR/OUTDOOR yard sale everyday at Old Fairground, Monday-Friday from 9 to 6, Saturday, 7 until._____

MOVING

Chestnut

tTdfflajns,

in backyard. 1309 Street. 9 to 1. Lots of

MOVING YARD SALE Tools, furniture, clothes, toys, etc. 8 to 4. Saturday, July 16. Take right at 1st Wintervllle Exit on Route31 South. Then go 1 mile. Phone 756-6887.

ODDS AND ENDS SALE July 16. Woman's Club Building, 3603

8 12 Gre

reen Spring (Park) Road.

SATURDAY, JULY 16. 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Rain date July 25. Women, children and baby clothes. New Ceramic and other interesting items

067 Garage-Yard Sale

YARD SALE, back lot on 103 Street. Saturday, 8 until.

Trade

074

Miscellaneous

YARD SALE, Saturday, 9 til Pineview Trailer Park, Lot 4, turn In front of Clift's Seafood.

YARD SALE Corner of Sth and Ash Street. 9 until. Odds and ends

YARD SALE, Saturday, 803 East Sth Street, 8-10. Curtains, rods, old

2 FAMILY YARD SALE Take Old 11 out of Wintervllle. 1st Crossroads turn rioht. 4th house on left

FAMILY yard sale, July 16. Boat over, TV antenna, crafts, baked

3

cover

goods and lots of other goodies. 7:30 until 1. 2619 Sunset Avenue

072

Livestock

THE EVENT .

Huge community

IS HEREI Yard

What?

Sale

Broadcast live by John Moore of WROR 94. When? Saturday. July

16. 9 a.m. Where? Kwik Stop Stantonsburg Road. 3 miles Wl the hospital. Don't miss this one!

On est of

WINTERVILLE JAYCEES yard sale. Saturday, July 16. 8 a.m. until. State Road T709    2    miles    east    of

Wintervllle. tion._

Haunted House loca

YARD SALE 1303 W Ragsdale Road. Guitar, bowling ball, housewares. Everything must go. Saturday 8 a.m. til

GIGANTIC BACKYARD SALE

Seven families. Everything mus go! Make us an otter. 108 Farmhouse Place. Saturday, July 16 7:30    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CENTIPEDE SOD

Will Deliver

752-4994

TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY

For Conscientious Sales People to Market New Electronic Product that is a Must for our Increasing Senior Citizen Population.

Full or part time - Earnings Unlimited

For A personal Interview send resume or write to.

Sales Person P.O. Box 1967 Greenville. N. C. 27835 or Call 919-946-8571 EOE

SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Oldsmobile Firenza

4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.

1982 Lincoln Continental

Loaded with digital dash. One owner, 26,000 miles. Metallic 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 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 DeViile

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 roof, 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 interior.

1983 Olds Cutlass Calais

Loaded. Light gray fern, bucket seats.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

YARDSALE

Saturday, July 16th 9:00AM -1:00PM

H.L HODGES CO.

210 E 5th Street

Sale Items Will Be Found On Our

Sidewalk AND In Our Store.

Inventories will be reduced to prepare tor new tall merchandise.

Discontinued and overstocked items will be discounted.

Don't miss the outstanding savings.

Come Early Before Everything Is

Sold. Thanks For Suooortlno Usf

YARD SALE Saturday, 8 until 2.

All types Of including

1301 Ragsdale Road household items, furniture 758 2933

YARD SALE Saturday. July 16. 2710 Shawnee Place. 8 until dark. Clothing, furniture, appliances, and more._

YARD SALE, 1706 East 4fh, Satur day. July 16. 8 12. Children's clothes, odds and ends.

YARD SALE, Saturday, 3005 Briarcllft Drive. Lake Ellsworth

a.m. un

yer

ifiL

HORSEBACK RIDING

yt^blg^ 752 ?237,

PINTO PONY STALLION oentle. Must sell. 756 7209.

Very

073    Fruits and Vegetables

BLUEBERRIfS FOR SALE 45 a

pound, pick your own. Humbles Cage Farm, 2 miles west of Ayden on Highway 102 to County Road

CORN, WHITE, Silver Queen. 90c a dozen. B & B You Pick. Hassell.

FOR SALE: Silver Queen Corn C^H 756 1403 or 756 2483.

PEACHESII Excellent tor frMzing 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. Monday through Saturday, 235 4664

PEACHES ARE RIPE Call 752 26^

SENICA CHIEF and Silver Queen corn. $1 per dozen ears. We pick. 756 7209._

SILVER QUEEN SWEET CORN

Call 7$6-773 or 753-3505._

074

Miscellaneous

AIR CONDITIONER, 18.000 BTU, GE.$200. Call 756 6957.

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air

conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for uick sale. Call B J Mills, authorized Appliance Service, 746 2446 at Black Jack.

BEDDIN6&WATERBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up to Vj and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress & Waterbed Outlet (Next to PiH Plaza). 355-2626

FOR SALE: Couch and nnatchir chair. G

756 8448.

GOOD

Maytag

tee.$lf

USED WASHERS: GE

Kenmore. 30 day guaran Call 756 2479

HAND GUN tor sale. 38 Smith & Wesson, model 10 with 4" bull barrel. $250. Call 756 2816after6

HOTPOINT portable dishwasher with cutting board. Used very little $200. 355 24T9_

ICEMAKERS Barkers Refrigera rial Drive. 756 6417

Sale 40% off atlon, 2227 AAemo

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson

METAL DESK, 60 X 36. 6 drawers, good condition. $85.00. Call 758 3239

AAOVINGI Electric typewriter for sale. $175. Call 756 8799

MOVING Side-by-side frost free refrigerator and deep freeze combination, only 2 years old. sold for new $1350, like new, only $350. 19" RCA portable color tv, with simu lated woodgrain design, automatic color and Tint control, has sharp picture, only $165. 25" color console TV in beautiful Early American style cabinet and much more, only $185. 756 0492

MUST SELL Chest freezer, cubic feet. Best offer. 758-0931.

NCR 2140 CASH REGISTER Good condition with register tape. $250. 756 8388._*

CLEARANCE^ SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

LD HOMEMADE QUILTS ollection of 15. Must sell! All tor $600. 756 5356 after 6

REFRIGERATOR

dorm/apartment size. 4.5 cubic foot. Excellent conditon. $80. 758-2054._

REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER,

Philco, double doors, avocado, $250. 746 6790

REFRIGERATOR AND gas t

for sale. Call 752 7095 anvtTme.

SEWING MACHINE

condition. $65. 758 0771.

Excellent

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._

SHARP SF501

serviced. A-1 coni________

756 6101, ask for Joe Smith

copier. Just been Kidition. $800. Call

BLUE AND GREEN commercial carpet, 12x15 with rubber backing. 752J49

YARD SALE Save 50% on all merchandise outside our store this Saturday from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Includes stuffed animals, kites, stationary, puzzles, brooms, fans, oriental, etc. Book Barn-Downtown

YARD SALE - Save 50% and more on all merchandise outside our store this Saturday from 9 a.m. to I p.m. Includes camera bags, teaching aids, paints, tote bags, gym snorts, miscellaneous photo supplies, drafting supplies, tex t o o k s JT r t 8 Camera7UBE Downtown

BOSTICH AUTOMATIC NAIL guns Includes I'/j horscmwer porTable air compressor. 75 air hose, air regulators. 1 framing nailer (12D-I6u)2nd- I Sheathing nailer (6D-10O). Owner used to build own hgmg. tvpp ?S4 7?73.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919-763-9734._

YARD SALE Miscellaneous items Saturday. 8 a.m. to 12. B17 Highland Trailer Park._

YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 a until. Electrical appliances, stereo. tv. 617 Church Street. Wintervllle

YARD SALE Saturday. Best In Ayden. 710 Soulevard Street

YARD SALE, Saturday. July 16, until. Children's clothes, curtains, sheets, child's bicycle seat, bike parts and miscellaneous. 104 Park Drive

YARD SALE in front of T^pe Music Company. Saturday 8 until

YARD SALE, Saturday, 9 to 1, No sales before 9. 1002 Lynn Loop. Wintervllle. Children and adult clothing,-

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C.L Lupton. Co.

r.j (.Ilf.

BUY ONE BATHING SUIT at rMular price get the second one FREE! The Snooty Fox, 203 East Fifth Street.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, tor small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.

CENTRAL ELECTRIC HEAT furnace with AC colls. In variable speed belt massager. 758 0698 after

6^_

CLEARANCE SALE on Sony Tele visions. Savings up to 25% Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

COMPLETE bedroom, I. dinette furniture, 19" Zt TV. $600. 752 9244 after 4 o i

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

STEREOCITY

Now open featuring Marantz-Sansui-Sharp-and other brands. We otter quality components and match systems at dis count prices. We finance in our store. Call Mike Edmundson. Sales Manager at Stereo City, 757-0451, located 2808 East lOth Street.

A Division of Furniture World

USED COPY MACHINES IBM II,

25 copies per minute. Best otter! 756 6167 or >58 7808 after 6._

USED FILING CABINET, legal size, used overhead projector; bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk, secretarial chair. Call 758 3761 niohts or 757 1191 days._

WATER BED, 0 - bookcase with mirror, 6 drawers, semi waveless. Sacrifice. 756 4645.

WATERBED BEDROOM suit. Re trigerator. Couch and chair. Call days 753-2631, extension 216, 524 4677 after 6______

074

Miscellaneous

WOOD FURNACE, $1S0. 100' of fence tor dog pen with post. $50. Chainsaw, $liJo. 2 Kerosene heaters. 752 6359

23,000 BTU Approximately 6 years old. Sears Coldspot. Works good, S30P. 75j MOOdays.

25" RCA COLOR console TV Good condition. $150. 756-7325.

3 EXTRA

_....... HEAVY    storm doors.

easonable! Call 752 2691_

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping for bargains in the Classified Ads.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

ALL NEW QAKWOOOS reduced for

July "Red Tag" sale. Prices on all new Oak wood homes at our sales in Greenville and Wilson n slashed. Call or stop by ireenvilte 756 5434, Wilson

centers have been

todav! Greenville

zyijgw

A40VING, MUST SELL immediate ly. 1973 Peachtree 12 x 65. 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, all appliances. washer/dryer, new carpet, drapes. Set up in park off loth Strget. Call 7?2 *1136

MUST SELLI 1974 12x50 Newport by Connor. 2 big bedrooms, kitchen, living room, stove and refrigerator, couch and chair, 2 beds. For more information, call 758-2790. Can be seen at Lot 13, Quail Hollow Trailer Park._

NO MONEY DOWN

July Special Only

SINGLE WIDE....$8,495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995

(Loaded)

Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry- No In-laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRAOEWINO FAMILY HOUSING

705 West Greenville Boulevard

075 AAobile Homes For Sale

109 Houses For Sale

19S4 REDMAN doublewide. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan. fireplace, garden tub, storm windows, masonite and shingle roof with 5 year warranty..S25,W5. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes, 756-9841.

AYDEN Perfect tor the family that prefers a small town. Large c^nar lot. Brick ranch featuring 3 large bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, large den and kitchan, garage, sa!^ W G Blount a Associates, 756 3000 --

24X53 USED doublwide. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756-9S41.

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home In the country 3 bedrooms, 2 balhfc formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Locafad ^ over 1 acre (also available tor purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank Jjnanc-ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 4 Southerland, 756 3500; nights 756-5716.

3 BEDROOM AAOBILE HOME for

sale. Price negotiable. 752 9978.

4 AAOBILE HOMES tor sale by owner. Excellent condition for personal homes or investment use. 2 and 3 bedrooms, currently rented. Will sell seperatly or fogether. 756 0173

BELVEDERE Three bedr^s and two baths, beautifully land scaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Several gu8l*ty features. $60's. Call 756 3837 after 5 D.m,. except weekends.

076 Mobile Home Insurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754,

BETHEL 3 bedrooms, iVj baths. Farmers Home Loan assumption. S^^ht Realty 756 3220. nights

WURLITZER ORGAN 2 keyboard, automatic rhythm, bench. Like new, $550. 758-8m.

BRAND NEW HOME In Camelot Subdivision with light crwm siding and soft blue trim. Well plannied living area includes 3 bedrooms. l>/2 baths, kitchen, separate dining rnnm. ructom built c^binetS. OrMT

077 Musical Instruments

Splnet-Console Plano Bargain Wanted: Responsible party tb take over low monthly payments on spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager: PO Box 914, Newell. NC 28126.    _

room. cuium uviii

room with fireplace. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs. $59,400. The Evans Company, 752-2814. Winnie Evans, 752 424 or Faye Bowen. 756-5258.

MOVING MUST SELL

piano. $50 or best

IlZL___

:LL Old upright otter. Call 758-

OLD UPRIGHT PIANO Needs a

little work. $300 or best offer 752 4769 after 7, ask for Jay

UPRIGHT PIANO, reconditioned and retlnished. Call 756 0728

USED PIANOS AND ORGANS

Yamahas, Wurlitzers, etc. The Music Shop, Greenville Square Shopping Center, 756 0007

NO MONEY DOWN VA100%

New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $245 per month. Also FHA and conventional financing availablel.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard

_756j!19L

FAMILY HOUSING

lop in and see why we are the istest growing Mol dealer In North Carolina

dealer In N

1. Quality I

2. Best Prii

nobile Home

, Homes   rices

3. Super Service

4. Easiest & Best Financing In Town 'CMventlonal, VA, FHA)

TR^^witfDl IaMILY HOUSING 70S West Greenville Blvd. _756-4M3_

RANELL DOUBLEWIOE. air, woodstove, dishwasher. Immacu-late Call Tommy 756 7815, 758 8733.

12X60, 1 bath, 2 bedrooms, full carpeted, unfurnished, $4500 6790^_

USED PIANOS buy and sale. Piano 4 Oroan Distributors. 355-6002

WURLITZER ELECTRONIC Piano with Leslie 60 amplifier. $1,000. Call 752 8020.    _

INSTRUCTION

MICROCOMPUTER TRAINING

tor home, business, children and ^ucational applications. Only at COMPUTIME Cf ".......

Call 355 6687.

082    LOST AND FOUND

LOST-CHOCOLATE MALE lab puppy, II weeks, in vicinity of Pineridge subdivision, Stantonsburg Road. Call 752 7597 and leave messaoe

GIVE US A call soon. We'd like to help you place a classified ad in this newspaper today. Call 752-6166.

093

OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758 0702

BRING YOUR HAMMER Country special on a large lot. 3 grooms, open front porch, several types of liiriancing available. $28,900. Call Steyg g vgn$ A$>pciatgs, ?55 27jL.

BY OWNER 6 room house and lot. 2 miles from Wellcome Middle School. Less than $20,000.752-6267.

BY OWNEI Crestline

IN Club Pines. SW )lvd. 2 story brick Williamsburg, 2400 square feet, 3-4 bedrooms, 2vj baths. Great room with fireplace, large spacious kitchen. Double carport with storage. Fence. All electric. Assumable 9Vj% VA loan. Reduced to $99,500. Open House every Saturday and Sunday, i to 5, or call 754 8953 for ajgofntmgiL-

BEAUTIFUL SETTING 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood stove, screened porch and carport. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2121 or 758 0180.

BY OWNER ll'/29i> assumable loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den, gas heat, central air, fenced backyard. 107 Azalea Drive. 756 8281._

BY OWNER Lovely rustic Con temporary on wooded lot near hospital. 2,000 square feet heated, 1100 square foot garage, 3 bedrooms. Priced to sell! 752-6724 or 753 3327

BY OWNER New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R H McLawhorn, 2750 or 975 2688    _

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. /S seat restaurant. 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 758 5156 atterl._

WEIGHT LIFTING OUTFIT

Exercise bench and weights. Price $75. 756 8862

CROCK POT Stereo cabinet. Call 756 8089

WHITE WEDDING GOWN, veil and crinoline, size 9/10, excellent condition $75. Cvill 752 1231.

DIAMOND SOLITARE, Call 355 2334.

DOILIES KNITTED by

only $4. 606 McKinIr Greenville. Phone 758 6

WOULD Lit fc to buy used window and centra, air conditioners that

iir. 746 2446._

SAW, Craftsman, with $250    36    "    Gibson

e. $35 Tabletop stove 'ie, $20 Call 6 to 10

DRY PHOTO COPIER JM 76. $75 or best otter. 756 0661

1 -avy duty walker floor : JW Call 752-4745.

14 WIDES tor as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841

197) CHAMPION - 2 bedrooms Beautiful condition. Low down payment. Payment under $125. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville.

1974 VIRGINIAN -    12x65

bedrooms, 2 baths, total electric Low down payment payment under $145 <!^all 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass Greenville

COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11 er month. Furniture World. 757

. 45 V.

FOR SALE A complete set o r-Pltatzoraphdinnerware. 758 293J FOR SALE: Sharp SF 811 copier    _.

with stand. 24 c(x>ies per minute ,    . ZENITH Chromocplor II solid

Handles SVjxIl, T/jxU and Iixi7 I state color tv, similated wood gram -    cabinet, like new, $165. 25" Quasar

color console TV, good condition. $185    18,0(X) BTU am conditioner,

good condition, $150. Maple bookcase bed, $30 Electric tan, tlO, 746 6929._

Kl1, 8'/}Xl

paper sizes. Royal SE 5010 electric tyMwriter, correcting capabilities. Will sell separately or package deal. Call 7W 1067 days, 792 6962 nights.

FOR SALE: Retrigerator/treezer, 13 cubic toot capacity. 752-5767.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

PRIME COMMERCIAL LOT

ZONED: Highway Commercial

LOCATION: Corner Of Red Banks Road And Evans

Street (Beside Fosdicks)

SIZE: 1.171 Acres. Frontage 170

SUGGESTED USAGE: Veterinary Clinic - Auto Repair -Auto Wash - Bank Savings & Loan - Pet Shop -Restaurant - Dry Cleaning & Laundry - Food Store -Printing Establishment - Office Facility - Many Others!!

Call 758-1131 Or 756-1463 - H.L. Austin

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, bath, unique kithcen/dining area central air plus extras. 355 2441

1978 TITAN 12x56 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. $7500. Phone 756 5101 from 9 to

1978 12X60 CONNOR, 2 bedrooms Must sell by August 1. Will sacrifice down payment. Assume payment of $151 per month. Call 752

1979 14x60, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments of $155. Call Lawrence at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841

1981 12x60 CONNOR - Furnished. $800 down and take up payments of $194.79. 756 4629

1982 AMERICAN home 24 x 60, bedrooms, great room, 2 baths. Must be moved. Call 752 S3iQ

)982 TAYLOR 14 x 70. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. $2800 equity and assume payments of $180.946 0248.

1983 SANTA FE Front kitchen, bedrooms, total electric, vaulted ceiling with paddle fan. Low down payment payment under $150 per month. Call 756 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North AAennorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Mr. Business Man HAVE APPLE COMPTER

In my home that will help your business.

_    746-6774

AT HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

We Are Overstocked With The New 1983V2 Nissan Trucks

4 X 4s, Deluxe, MPGs, Standards A Variety Of Colors And Over 25 To Choose From

Up To $1500.00 Discounts And An Unbelievable 6.8% Financing Rate Available On All Units

Hurry, While The Selection Is Good!

HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

FURNITURE STORE tor sale In the Roanoke Rapids area. 10,000 square toot store. Fully stocked. Excellent buslrvess. Selling due to owners health. Will sacrifice. Send response to Cynthia Fowler, General Delivery, Roanoke Rapids, NC L7B70:.

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001. nights 753 4015

TO BUY OR SELL a business

Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE'S, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752 3575.

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman.

North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience worf ' -on chimneys and fireplaces. day or night, 753-3503, Farmville

TOPSOIL AND SAND for sale. Septic tank installed. Rogers Construction Company, *46-4780, Ayden, NC

102 Commercial Property

BY OWNER 2 story frame house. University area. 2 apartments - $500 a month rent. For more details -758-0416 between 6 and 10 p.m.

BY OWNER: EDWARDS ACRES 3

bedroom home featuring greatroom, kitchen with dining area. V/i baths, utility room, patio, garage. Located on wooded lot. Good loan assumption. $54,500. Call 758 7901 after 6 p.m. No realtors.

COAAMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month lease required. Call Clbrk-Branch, Realtors, 756 6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147._ __

104 Condominiums For Sale

LEXINGTON SQUARE,

bedrooms. I year old FHA assumable loan. Phone 756 7935.

109

Houses For Sale

ATTENTION INVESTER or home buyer. Corner lot. General Electric electric heat pump, fireplace, wood deck, single car garage, 3 bedroom, 2 full oaths, within a private niehoobhrood. All tor only lS3,900. Ask tor our special interest rate on this one. Call Steve Evans & Associates. 355 2727

AYDEN

TWO BEDROOMS, living room, bath, den with fireplace, kitchen, utility room, central air/heat Beautiful location. $38.(XX).

GET AAORE DETAILS on this ideal home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, living room, dining room, large kitchen, utility room, 2 car garage, on large wooded lot. $72,540.

Ayden Loan & Insurance Co 746-3761    746-6474

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-6666

NEW WILLIAMSBURG under construction: with over 1600 square feet of charm. Home features a great room with fireplace, formal dining room, and kitchen with nook. There's 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, and lots of storage, not to mention extras like a greenhouse window and large deck. Buy now and choose your colors. $69,900. #579.

OWNER SAYS SELL Don't miss your chance on this beautiful home In Cherry Oaks. Located only a stones throw from pool and tennis courts with Vj acre corner lot. It's iust waiting tor you and your family to move in and make it home. $85,900. #360.

OON't MISS YOUR CHANCE to see

this home In Lynndale with 4 bedrooms, a playroom, formal areas, den with fireplace, and a wet bar. Formal and casual entertain Ing are easily achieved in this prestigious home. $130-1- #341.

WINTERVILLE Looking tor the perfect home? This could be it, arxf If has been reduced. Three bedrooms, great room with fireplace. Even has a space tor that garden, on three acres of land. Call foday to see this. $58,500. #503.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED. 3

bedrooms, 2 baths, home, family room, dining room, fireplace. Approximately 1 acre lot. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756-2121 or

758 0180.

COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East. 1740 square feet living area, plus 440 garage, double lot. Too many extras to list!! $74.500. Bill Williams Real Estate. 752 2615.

BY OWNER Remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Elementary and parks. Fireplace, large kitchen, den and dining room, privacy fenced back yard with pool and deck. $59,999.99. 758 1355 before 7:30 am after 9:15 pm anytime Sunday._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR

SCREENS&DOORS

C l,, l.iiptori Co.

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-41)12

TWO NEW HOMES under con struction in Orchard Hill Sub division. Just being started, you may still pick out colors, etc. tor these floor plans which feature walk around fireplace, dining area, great room, nice kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Seller pays all discount points and closing costs on FHA-VA financing plans. Prices start at $54,900. Call tor more information.

THE PRICE HAS BEEN greatly reduced on this great buy at 1103 Courtland Road in Orchard Hill Subdivision. A real bonus Is the extra large lot (most of which is fenced inj, lots of room tor pets or a garden. Good floor plan with living room with fireplace, kitchen eating area opening onto a deck, three bedrooms, two full baths. Garage. Possible VA loan assumption with

NEW LISTING near the University, schools, churches and college all nearby this one owner home at 802 Forest Hills Circle. Many features such as a separate den or study with fireplace, large foyer and formal living room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Nice hardwood floors throughout. Located on a wooded corner lot. Nearly 2000 square feet of heated area priced at $72,000.

IN A CLASS BY ITSELF I This custom built home has lots of extra's worth paying extra tor. Like a kitchen skylight, wood stove Insert, celling fan, extra large deck and many other features. Great room with fireplace, dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, large heated utility room. $63,500.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1982 Ford Escort GL Wagon

Automatic tran.smission, power steering and brakes, air condition, AM-FM stereo. Ford Motor Company Executive Car.

PRICED TO SELL!

Aincrice's

Used Car Company

Tenth Street 4 264 By-Pass

758-0114

Greenville N c 278.34

TOOL AND CUTTER GRINDER

x^rlanced Tool and Cutter Grinder with ridTnT/iS I    *Prt*nce    in    the    following    areas:

SriH?    tinilB    and    reamers    step

Wl !iiul?ed.***    We    but

Please send resume to:

Human Relations Department

TRW, INC.

Greenville, N.C. 27834

Or Can 919-758-7411 Or make application through the Employment Security Com-misaion, 3103 Bismarck St., Greenville, N. C. 27834.

An Equal Opportunity Emipioyer M/F    '

P.O. Box 8088





109

Houses For Sale

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY

ISi-iM

PRACTICALLY NEWI Only a year old with energy savings heat pump, formal areas plus den, located in a great neighborhood tor walking, riding bikes, swimming or playing tennis. Call for showing. S74,w7 #423.

COUNTRY COMFORTS abound in this offering just minutes from town in a quiet subdivision. It's nestled on a corner lot and features a sunny eat in kitchen with a bay window, formal areas, cozy den and a spacious walk-in pantry. Owner says sell, so help us out today. It's offered in the foO's, so call right now. 1541.    *

REDUCED: Owners say Sell! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 1 bath home in Colonial Heights reduced to SSLSOO. Great VA ir/2% assumption! Total payments only $422 a month. Better hurry. #518.

PRESTIGIOUS GRAYLEIGH! And reduced to $109,900. This 2400 square foot, 4 bedroom has formal areas for enfertaining, and a spacious kitchen for that special lady in your life. Double garage and Savannah style porches. This one is for thedlscrlmlnatino buyer! #530

109 Houses For Sale

AAORE FOR YOUR MONEY 4 grooms, 2 baths, game room, fireplace and carport. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 754 2121 or 758 0180

MOVING TO WASHINGTON? Then you must see this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, ranch style home tor sale by owner. Great room, laundry room, heat pump, on '/z acre lot. Extra nice at $44,W, 2 adjoining lots for $3500. 944-5240 for apoointment._

NC HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY

10.15^

FIXED RATE

Available This Weekend Only! Call For Details

CLARK-BRANCHz

REALTORS

756-336

On Call: Teresa HewIM 754 1188

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

BROOK VALLEY Located at 218 Churchill Drive on the 17th Fairway. Over 3400 square feet of heated area alone. In addition there is a basement area downstairs for hobby or rec room. Floor plan offers formal living and dining rooms, large kitchen with big eating area, family room with fireplace, four bedrooms, three full baths, double garage. Other extra's too numerous to mention. $175,000.

VISIT COLONIAL Williamsburg. Right here in Greenville sits this lovely two story modeled after a Williamsburg home. Located at 105 Windemere Court on a lovely wooded lot this home offers over 2500 square feet of heated area plus a big double garage. Large foyer, formal living ano dining rooms, family room with fireplace, nice kitchen with eating area, four bedrooms, 2Vz baths, large deck. $114,000.

GREAT LOCATION for the sum mer! Everything is convenient to this great location at 1113 Hillside Drive in the Elmhurst area. Located on private street this home features tour bedrooms, living dining area, large kitchen and eating area, play or rec room. I'/i baths, covered patio. Great location. Owner ready to deal. A lot of house for $59,900.

NEW LISTING Great buy in popu lar Westhave il Subdivision. Im maculate ranch at 111 Baywood

Lane features foyer, living room, famih

..... ^_____ spacious    1

with eating area, three bedrooms.

formal dining room, family room wjth fireplace, spacious kitchen

two full baths, deck, outside workshop or storage area. Nice yard. PtTced to sell af$79.900

BRAND NEW AND READY for you. Located at 1003 Cortland Road In convenient Orchard HIM Sub division. Spacious plan features large living room, kitchen-dining area with custom cabinets, three bedrooms, two full baths, carport and storage area, deck, unique oil or wood fired central heating system. Lovely interior. $54,500

D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY

752-4012

8REAT BUY IN COLLEGE Court reat location and an immaculate home at 102 Graham St. In great area. Plan features foyer, formal living and dining room, kitchen with eatin area, cozy family room with fireplace, three spacious bedrooms, two full baths. Lovely yard. $49,500.

BIG PRICE REDUCTION in Col onial Heights. Owner must move immediately. Was priced at $37,500, reduced $3000 to $34.500. Good starter home features living room with fireplace, dining room, three bedrooms, one full bath, enclosed

NEW BRICK HOME in Cherry Oaks subdivision. Features iarge master bedrooms with adioining dressing area. Nice size great room with fireplace, foyer and separate dining room, all accented with crown molding and chair rail. Energy efficient. Low $70's. The Evans Company, 752-2814. Winnie Evans, 752 4224 or Faye Bowen, 754 5258._

NEW HOMES-SSSzOOO

Recently Completed

3 Bedrooms, V/j Baths $1350 Down $435 Per Month Total

Call

East Carolina Builders 752-7194

NEW LISTING Shaded lot, 3 bedroom, I'/i bath brick ranch. Large family room, also features approximately 400 square feet detached garage and workshop, excellent location. Call now to see this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500; nights 754 5714._

NEW LISTING $48,900. Spacious 3 bedroom, iVz bath home, formal

living and dining room. Convenient ation. Call June Wyrick, A Southerland. 754 3500;

Aldridge nights 754 5714.

NEW LISTING University area. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room, dining room, kitchen. Assumable loan. Sales price, $41,000. Call Aldridge 8. Southerland, 754 3500. or Sue Dunn, 355 2588._

NO CITY TAXES 3 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, screened

fiatio. Possible FHA loan assump-ion CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 754 2121 or 758 0180

OAKDALE 120 Holiday Court. Brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, ivj baths, living room, kitchen with dining area, den. Located on targe corner lot. $37,500. W G Blount A Associates. 754 3000._

PRICE REDUCTION + Location + Owner may do some financing makes this lovely three bedroom home with formal areas, family room, two-car garage, corner wooded lot, adjacent to Lynndale, a good buy. Price was $79,500 - owner wants an offer! Call now, let's make a deal. Estate Realty Company. 752 5058. Jarvis or Dorlis Mills, 752 3447, Billy Wilson, 758 4474

REDUCED BY OWNER - Hardee

Acres. 3 bedrooms, I'/i baths, den with fireplace. French doors leading to wood deck, dishwasher, garbage disposal, stove - newly painted outside. 14 x 24 workshop. Possible 9Vz% loan assumption.

752 5250.

for $34,500. Make us

oarage for work area, deck. Hard to find anything an offer!

IMAAACULATE HOME IN HORSE SHOE Acres. Great floor plan in popular Horseshoe Acres convenient to the hospital and med school. Plan features great room with fireplace and dining area, lovely kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths, tremendous lot with lots of room for garden, etc. Possible Federal Land Bank assumption. Priced at $42,000.

ENTERTAINING WILL be fun in

this 2 bedroom, 2 bath, contem-3 porary with loft and wet bar. Deck, ^ oarage and more! CENTURY 21 B Fqe6S8 AggntY, 754 2121 Qr_758.018p.

ESTATE REALTY CO.

752-5058

LOVELY THREE BEDROOM home in immaculate condition in well-established neighborhood; formal living/dining, fireplace with gas logs, family room, fully carpeted, two baths. Tastefully decorated with new paint and wallpaper.

NEW LISTING Charming three bedroom home in excellent condition situated on large corner lot. Call for complete details on this lovely home for only $49,900.

COUNTRY LIVING CAN be yours in this three bedroom home only 13 miles west. You also get a swim ming pool, detached garage, and spacious lot. Take a look and see what$47,500 will buy.

FHA ASSUMPTION Lake Glenwood, Bryant Circle. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick home, with fireplace, .9 acre lot. $49.000. Call Ethg Rwlty, 524 4148 or 524 5042

FIRST HOME BUYER Possible funds for your new home and interesf rate as low as 10.15% Also we have other special creative programs for all home buyers. For more details, call Steve Evans & Associates, 355 2727

. . SALE BY OWNER 1108 E 14th St., 2100 sq.ft., 3 to 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal areas. 234' street frontage. Large rolling grounds with many trees. Central heat and air. 8% assumable loan plus equity. $415PITI $79,900. Phone 758 4988.

FOR SALE BY OWNER Two bedroom townhouse on wooded lot. Cedar siding with deck. Owner transferred. $45,000. Call days 752 4889. nights 758 9089

FOR SALE BY OWNER A com fortable 1500 square foot house at 508 East I2fh Street, adjacent to

university. Has central alr/heat and a nice fireplace. House is carpeted throughout. Has 2 tile baths and 2 patios plus additional storage wace. Ideal for students or family, ^iced well under $50,000 with txcellent financing availabie. Can

seen during most daylight hours f simply ringing door bell. This 'ter expires Monday. July 25

UORSESHOE ACRES 3 bedroom maturing great room with fireplace and built in book shelves, 2 large %le baths, dining room, kitchen, . Located on 3/4 acre lot. W G Blount A Associates.

MOUSE FOR SALE by owner 3 bedrooms. Located on Mumford Road, beside VFW 2 large lots. Call ZfLMl

LOVELY HSTORIC HOME 4 bbdrooms, 3 baths. Spacious mod-rn kitchen. Screened porch. Ap-eraisal priced with owner financing fe qualified buyer. $5^000. Scotland Neck. Les Riley Real Estate. _

, CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RIVERHILLS Lovely 3 bedroom, 2<'2 bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kifcnen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat pump. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Sutherland, 74 3500, nights

ROBERSONVILLE Handsome two story meticulously maintained 3 bedroom, 2 bath home (1920), hot

house and 2 outbuildings, each with Vj bath. Large, back fenced corner lot. $49.500. Les Riley Real Estate,

SCOTLAND NECK Luxurious new designer home on 5 A Library, upstairs sitting room, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. Owner financing to qualified buyer. $110,000. Les Riley Real Estate, I 798 7441.

WONDERFUL OLD (1840) Victorian on 3 A beautifully landscaped. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Owner transferred. $4^000. Scotland Neck. Les Rllev Real Estate. 1 798 7441

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplzKe. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 "years old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 758 0144 or 752 7443

2 BRICK HOUSES for sale In Winterville. One 4 bedroom. One 3 bedroom. Both I'/i baths. $40's. Phonp 754 1297 pr 754 4^54,_

111 Investment Property

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 foot right of way. $24.500 firm. Call 754 4754 aHer 4 p.m._

115

Lots For Sale

'ft ACRE Located approximately 3 miles from Greenville off New Bern Hlohwav. $4.500. 758-7709.

BEAUTIFUL 3.2 acre wooded homesite, 8 miles East of

GreenvillQ. 114,500. Cfll!.752 1.g?S-_

CHERRY OAKS Heavily wooded. 154 foot road frontage. Gloria Street. $14,900. Call Tommmy, 754 7815. 758 8733.

LYNNDALE LOT 1 of the last. Call 355??20.

NOW THAT YOU ARE READY TO BUILD

Take A Look At Windemere

Private seHIng Beautiful Trees Community Water Restricted subdivision Winterville School District 3 miles from Pitt Plaza Extra large lot

RC WATERS CONSTRUaWN CO

_mm._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Each Saturday During July We Will Be Closed.

Open: Mon.-Fri., 8-6 Expert Shoe Repair"

RIGEANS SHOE SHOP

113 W. 4th St. Downtown Greenville

AUCTION

RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT

of

Hubs 4 Way Restaurant" Saturday, July 16,1983 - 9:00 A.M. Location: Hwy 92, 4 miles south Belhaven, N.C. at Sidney Crossroads

Mr. and Mrs. Hub Orlffen are tired. They are going to retire after many years of service. Entire stock and equipment will be sold.

Sale Conducted by

115

Lots For Sale

EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL

lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount A Associatas. 754 3000.

ONE ACRE LOT between Ayden and Gritton on State Road 1110. Call 72m

RESIDENTIAL, COAAMERCIAL, and country lots. Call CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 7S4-212I or 758-0180.

THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x ISO corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter.

gutt_ .

prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 744 2144 for full details.___

THREE WOODED LOTS on paved road. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 754 2121 or 758-0180

'/i TO 5 ACRES, Highway 244 South, Ayden Griffon area and Highway South. Call 754 2482 or 7S7 0fr7.

1 LARGE LOT (VS acre) at entrance In Cherry Oaks. $12,500. 355 2419 or 752 4187

4 ACRES just off Bethel Highway. $12,000. Speight Realty 7 3m niohts 758-774f_

117 Resort Property For Sale

IMMACULATE TWO BEDROOM

trailer and lot at Portside only 30 minutes away. Like-new condition, completely furnished, covered deck, storage building .- ready to move in - only $28,000. Estate Realty Company. 752-5058; nights 758 4474 or 752-3447

PAMLICO BEACH 2 nice wooded lots - each with 100 feet frontage on water. Build on one and sell the other. Reduced to sell at $18.000 each or $30,000 for both. Sally Robinson, 944 4711; Woodstock Re-altv, 943 3352

PAMLICO BEACH waterfront. 5 bedrooms, 3'/j baths. Great view,

flood neighbors, well-kept property or immediate occupancy. Call today! $80,000. Les Riley Real Estate, 798 7441.

PAMLICO RIVER near Burbage Crossroads - 3 bedroom, 2 bath mobile home with screen room. Lot bulkhead with pier. Reduced to sell. Sally Robinson. 944-4711, Woodstock Realty. 943 3352

PUNGO SHORES 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 story cottage with wrap

around screen porch. River access.

_ _ -ge lot in nice development. $45.000 bally Robinson, 9M47I1;

Woodstock Realty. 943-3352.

WINTRIZED HUNTING and fish ing lodge on 4.4 acres eastern Canada. 2700 square foot electricity, well, septic, modern kitchen. 300' frontage beautiful Miramichi Bay. $38,00(r Les Riley Real Estate,

2 BEDROOM COTTAGE at Pamlico Beach. ISO'pier, boat lift. Cozv. quiet place. Cair355 2455.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 75f44l3between8and5._

NEED STORAGE? We have am

to I

jOtL..    _____

day Friday? 5. Cali:

size to meet your storage need, a^ Arlington Self Storai ~

ige. Open 754 99S.

Mon-

WAREHOUSE AND office space for lease. 20,000 square feet available. Will subdivlde:>54 5097or 754-9315.

121 Apartments For Rent

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-free refrigerators.

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.

Contact JT or Tommy Williams 754 7815_

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one. two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appliances. central heat and air condl tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCY 1 bedroom, maid service. $70 week. Call 754 5555, Heritage Inn Motel

EFFICIENCY APARTMENTS

All utilities Cable TV 30 day leases Furnished

With or without maid service Weekly or monthly rates Starting $250 month and up

750-5555

The Heritage Inn_

121 Apartments For Rent

A 2 BEDROOM, I'/b bath duplex, kitchen with dining area, zmli-ances, hookups, convenient location. $285. 7^7714 after 4 p.m. or weekerwts._

AVAILABLE LATE JULY New 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. Range, refrigerator, diihwashar, and hookups. $310. Couples preferred. Lease and deposit. No pets. 754-4744.

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with l'/3 baths. Also l bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, trae cable TV, washer-dryer hook-ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, duo hgy jqqnd PDOL.7S?1557

DUPLEX APARTMENTS In Shenandoah area at Shiloh Drive and Alice Drive available August 1. $345 per month. Call Mrs. Curtis 527-4442 or 523 1078.

GRIFTON AREA New centrally heated and air conditioned; 1, 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. 12 miles from Kinston, 17 miles from Greenville. Handicapped units available. Rent starts at $190. Adjusted leases available for students. Office hours 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday through Saturday. Oftlce524 4239, hornea? 4821._

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located Iust oft 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LARGE 4 BEDROOM aMi-tment. 2 full baths, fireplace, IIDOA Myrtle Avenue, $340 per month. Lease and deposit required. No pets. Call 35-2544 or 714 0489._

LOOK BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

at our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Owen Norveil at 758-4050 or 754 1498. Wil Reid at 758-4050 ok 754 0444 or Jane Warren at 758 4050 or 758 7029.

AAOORE& SAUTE R 110 South Evans 758-6050

LOVE TREES?

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), dishwasher, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9 5 Saturday    )    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 2 bedrooms, 1'/j baths. No pets. 752-3)52 or 752-4715. ask (or John or Brvant

NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms, ) mile from hospital-med school. Really nice. $300. Deposit. lease. 825 493)

NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex apartment. 2 bedrooms, )'/i

Fhs, fully canzeted, and appli inces included. Quiet neighborhood near hospital. 757 3998or 795 4323.

NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG AAANOR BRANDNEWLUXURY APARTMENTS

Features

2 large bedrooms

1 '/j baths

Thermopane windows

E -300 Energy efficient

Heat Pumps

Spacious floor plan

Beautiful individual Williamsburg

interior

Patios with privacy fence

Washer/dryer hookups

Kitchen appliances

Custom buiit cabinets

CALL 756-7647

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS 6, AWNINGS

C.L. l.upton. Co.

GRAHT

iiie uiiuy aeuecmr, ureenvuie, w.c.-i noay, July 15,190-S

121 Apartments For Rent

FOR RENT, furnished apartment, for men or girl students, $80 month each. Also a room for girl student. 758 2201

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart-ments. carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 7te-4849

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart-ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish, washer, refrigerator, range, disposal includiecr We also have Cable TV Very convenient to PIM Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. $215 a month. Z5S22

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 754 7815

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances. $210. Call 758

ONE BEDROOM. 10th Street, $140 per month. Call Ervin Gray, 524-4148 or 524-5042

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO,

7Si:mL.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

75

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer hook-ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm A Willow

752-4225

TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets. Call !n$yran<;qa.RMlTy,752 2754

Smith

TWOBEDRCX)M APARTMENTS

Near ECU Most utilities included. $275 up. Available immediately. 756-V49! y 754-7^ VVtQrg9p.m.

TWO BEDROOM duplex with fireplace, washer/dryer hookups, refrigerator, dishwasher, stove. Available immediately. $285. 754 7433,

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy. they turn to the Classified Ads. Place your Ad today for quick results.

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, I'/a bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.

9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

PUT EX I KA LASH in your pocket today. Sell your "don't needs with an inexpensive Classified Md.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LOT FOR SALE

CHERRY

OAKS

GLORIA STREET

Heavily Wooded

*14,900

756-7815    758-6733

1982 FORD ESCORT

4 door sedan. Blue, 4 speed overdrive transmission, radio, air condition. Nice car.

M13.73

Per Month

Baaed on tales price of SSOOO.OO, *800 down (cash or trade), amount flnattced $4200.00. 13.5% Annual Parcentaga Rate, 48 monthly paymanta. Total of paymants $5450.04.

^    H

AiMrirsc el    H H

ASTING

Amcfkas I Used Cai Company TanhSifeei4 264By Pass

FORD

S

758-0114 Greenville N C 27834

BUICK-MAZDA, IHC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.

Great Buys On Young Used Cars

LUXURY & FULL SIZED 1983 Buick Electra Limited Coupe, black.demo. Real Sharp!

1983 Buick Electra Limited Demo, loaded. Big Savings!

1981 Fleetwood Brougham DElegance Black, wire wheels, loaded, immaculate automobile in every way.

1979 Buick Electra Limited -4 door, beige, local car, loaded!

1979 Buick LeSabre 4 door, 26,0(X) miles, local car. Like new!

1979 Caprice Classic, - 4 door green, local car. Very nice!

INTERMEDIATES

1983 Buick Regal - 4 door, less than 2,000 miles. Nearly New car!

(2) 1983 Buick Regals 2 door. Low, low miles, power windows, stereo, tiltwheel. One white, one blue.

1982 Buick Regal - 2 door. \White on white. Low miles, nice car!

1982 Pontiac Bonneville -4 door, low miles, wire wheel covers, pretty car.

1982 Buick Regal 4 door, power windows, tilt wheel, nice.

1981 Skylark 4 door, beige, cruise, stereo, power doors and locks.

GAS SAVERS

1982 Mazda GLC -12,000 miles. Like new!

1981 Mazda GIC -2 door, silver, air. Nice one!

1981 Mazda 626 Luxury 2 door, blue,loaded with options!

1979 Mazda 626 - 4 door, automatic, air, stereo. Local carl

1979 Dodge Challenger - Alloy wheels, air, many options!

1980 Citation - 4 door, automatic, air. Clean car.

1979 Century VI7agon - Solid car, light blue, local wagon.

TRUCKS & RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

(2) New 1983 Chevrolet Custom Vans. These are one of a kind conversions and are priced to go!

1980 Ford Custom Van - 26,(XX) miles. New conversion.

1982 El Camino - 22,000 miles. Very clean!

1978 Dodge Custom Van 39,000 miles, new radials, nice van!

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-1877

121 Apartments For Rent

I AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available imnnedtately. 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM apartment. Heat artd hgt water furnished. 201 Ngrth Wogdlawn. $215. 758 0435 or 754 0545

1 BEDRCXMA, central air and heat, beside pool, on ECU bus lines. $205. Available August 1. 752 4551 after 5

2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen applianes furnished, totally electric, $325 month. Call 754 7447.

2 BEDROOM townhouse. carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances, washer/dryer hookup, $295. 108 Cedar Court. 758 3311

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air. carpeted. appliarKes. $275 a month. Brvton Hlfis. 758 3311

2 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-posit. $240. 734 1888 9 to 5 weekdays.

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only $3 40 per square foot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348

FOR RENT Prime retail space.

Arlington Boulevard. 4500 square feet M.25 per SI -    -

square foot. Call

FOR RENT- 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowlnity. Call Donnie Smith at 944 5887__

127 Houses For Rent

CENTRALLY LOCATED 3

bedroom, 7 bath brick home. Great room with fireplace, heat pump. $415 a month. Lease and deposit. 754 2753._

HOUSE FOR RENT in Ayden 3 bedrooms, living room, bath, kitch en, 2 porches. Call 744-3474._

HOUSES AND apartments in Greenville. Call 744 3284or 524 3180

NEW ECONOMICAL AND SPACIOUS home. 2 bedrooms, liv ing room, dining room, kitchen, bath, much storage. Acre lot. 754-4445_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

No Credit Check

127

Houses For Rent

I 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 cond

tioner, garage, nice neighborhood. Families only. Lease and deposit. $295. 754 1888 to 5 weekdays.

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up. No pets, no children 758 0745 or 754 9491

138

Rooms For Rent

SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges. Across from ECU $25 per week includes all. 752 7278._

142 Roommate Wanted

FEAAALE roommate to share trailer. $200 month, utilities included. 757 1377 after 5

FEAAALE ROOMMATE needed Non smoker to share 2 bedroom

apartment. Prefer 1st or 2nd year nursing student at PCC or ECU Call 753 4389 anytime

! BEDROOM Mobile Home for rent. :all 754 4487_

2 BEDROOMS, 1 bath Mint condi tion $175 758 7741 after 5 p.m 2 BEDROOM trailer. 1' i baths, air. Ngpgts 754:^._

135 Office Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN Just oft mall Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse. Call 754 0041 or 754 3444

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial. 404 Arlington Boulevard. 754 8111._

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 754 7815. 2500 SQUARE FQOT building for rent. 327 Arlington Boulevard. Available Septernber 1. Call Van Fleming. III. days 754 2000. nights 754 4091_

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty ot park-ino Call 758 2300 days _

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceanfront. families only. 756 4207or 724 3849

EMERALD ISLE beach house. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, central air. Weeks of August 21 and August 28. $300 per week 919 223 4772

HOUSES FOR RENT on Pamlico River at Bay view. NC Weekly rates 919 923 2W1_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AAALE. young professional wanted to share house in Lake Ellsworth. 754 5820.

AAATURE FEAAALE non smoking roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house $70 a month plus ' z utilities 757 l175aHer5.

NEW DUPLEX townhouse, 2 bedroom. 1 mile from hospital-med school. Female roommate desired $150 Laura. 919 772 5398 aHer 7

RESPONSIBLE roommate wanted to share house in country $55 per month plus utilities. 752 2W4 nights. days 1 944 4852. ask (or Andy.

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE

wanted, country living. Lots ot room 10 minutes from Greenville. $100 plus halt 754 0344 or 744 4048.

2 RCXTAAAAATES NEEDED to share

3 bedroom apartment. $125 a month per person. Wilson Acres. Call Amy at4ri

144

Wanted To Buy

WISH TO BUY good used carpet Call 752 2994after 8p.m_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6221

The

Real

Corner y

1980 FORD FIESTA

3 door hatchback. Tan. 4 speed transmission. One local owner.

^99.85

Per Month

Based on sales price ot $3200.00, 'TOO down (cash or Irsde), amount financed $2500.00. 30 monthly payments. 14.5% Annual Percentage Rate. Total of payments $2995.50.    i

AmerxdS I Used Car Company

Tenth Street 4 264 By Pass

H

ASTING

FORD

s

758-0114

Greenville U C 27834

HERE IT IS FOLKS!

A 1767 square foot home on 13/^ acres for only 669,900. Federal Land Bank financing is a possibility. Give us a call.

ALDRIDGE & SOUTHERLAND

756-3500 Dick Evans, REALTOR 758-1119

FOR SALE BY OWNER SPACIOUS HOME BETHEL

Two story, gix>d condition, landscaped yard, 4 bedrooms, study, den, formal dining and living rooms. fVi baths. Corner lot, large storage house. $49,900.

Telephone 825-1905

9 to 5 PM only

OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY

On Call This Weekend Evelyn Darden BROKER During NON-Office Hours Please Call

[\    4    ,    758-9878

DUFFUS REALTY, INC.

756-5395    ^

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 1.4th 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

t





24-The Daily Reikctor, GrwnviUe. N C -Friday. July 1&.HO

Hart's Anti-MX Campaign Is

Sure Loser, Says Sen. Tower

CAR OVERTURNS ... One of three persons (seated) injured in a traffic accident on Reade Circle receives first-aid from a Greenville Fire-Rescue member Thursday afternoon on ReadeCircle. They were hurt when a car driven by Shelton Eugene Sutton of Fort Bragg struck a utility pole. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

Five Injured In Seven Mishaps

Five people were reported injured and an estimated S19.570 damage caused in a series^of seven traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Thursday.

Officers said heaviest damage resulted when a car driven by Shelton Eugene Sutton of FortBragg collided with I utiliy pole about 4:04 p.m. on Reade Circle. 84 feet east of the Cotanche Street intersection

Police, who said Sutton and two passengers in his car were injured, estimated damage at $6,000 to the car and $500 to the pole. Sutton was charged with driving under the influence and careless and reckless driving.

David Wayne Leggett of Shady Knoll Trailer Park was reported injured when the car he was driving collided with a utility pole on Fifth Street. 600 feet east of the Elizabeth Street intersection about 1.05 a.m., according to investigators.

Leggett was char^ with driving under the influence by officers who estimated damage from the collision at $5,000 to the car and $300 to the pole.

Cars driven bv Pamela

Denise Odom of 205B S. Elm St. and Susan .Ayer Jarrell of 604B Berdant St. collided about 4:40 p.m. at the intersection of Fifth and Elm streets, causing an estimated $500 damage to Ithe Odom car and $2,000 damage to the Jarrell vehicle.

Police arrested Tony Earl Jennette of Wilson Acres apartments early today on charges of hit-and-run driving in connection with a 1:05 a.m. collision Thursday on Fourth Street, 40 feet east of the Jarvis Street intersection.

Police said a car ovsned by-William Joseph Warrington of 1502 Ragsdale Road, and driven by Jeanette, collided with a parked car owned by James Edwin Smith of 701 E. Fourth St.. causing $700 damage to the Warrington car and $1,000 damage to the Smith vehicle.

The Warrington vehicle was found parked at Wilson Acres about 30 minutes after the collision.

Gregory Charles Wilson of 903 E. 14th St. was charged with failing to stop for a red light following investigation of a 6 p.m. collision at the intersection of 14th and Chestnut streets.

liivestigators said the

Wilson car collided with a car driven by Jena Ja Kim of 302 Scottish Court, resulting in an estimated $1,000 damage to the Wilson car and $^ damage to the Kim vehicle.

Kim was reported injured in the collision.

Police said a driverless truck, owned by Eastern Carolina Coca Cola Bottling Co. of Kinston, parked in the parking lot of Carolina Truck Co. at 1900 Dickinson Ave., where it was being worked on, rolled from the lot and struck three vehicles about 4:20 p.m.

Police said the driverless truck first collided with a car driven by Dean Alan Payne of 102D Eastbrook Apartments, which was traveling along Dickinson Avenue at the Higgs Street intersection.

The truck then crossed Dickinson Avenue and struck two cars parked in the Ormond Wholesale Co. parking lot.

Damage to the Coca Cola truck was placed at $200, while damage to the Payne vehicle was estimated at $420. Damage to one of the parked cars, owned by Asaad Mohammah Said of Aurora, was set at $300, while damage to the other car, owned

Life As it's Lived

Wishing Doesn't Always

Bring Real Santa Claus

By GAIL MICHAELS Its the middle of July. The air is thick with humidity. The weeds that make up our lawn are knee-high and brown. The ants and I are battling for kitchen counterspace. The candles in the living room have faded under the persistant glare of the afternoon sun from Colonial blue to parchment. Mold is growing in Phillip's jogging shoes. And Zachary is on the lookout for Santa Caus.

Increase Offer

To First Colony

North State Savings & Loan of Greenville Thursday increased its offer for the purchase of outstanding shares of First Colony Savings & Loan stock to $16.50 a share, and two hours later, First Financial Savings & Loan of Kinston upped its offer for First Colonv shares to $17

First Financial, in an unfriendly attempt to take over Southern Pines-based First Colony, offered shareholders $13 per share in late June.

However, First Colony officials urged shareholders to reject the First Financial offer and invited North State to tender a proposal.

North State, in turn, offered $15 per share for the First Colony shares July i, and First Financial increased its offer to $15 on Julv5.

A source close to North State management said this morning that officials were meeting today to consider increasing the $16.50 offer made Thursday,

He has determined that Christmas is right around the comer because weve already been to the beach. And as far as hes concerned, our failure to plan another trip to the sandy shore this year means that summer is over.

But its still hot, I keep telling him.

I can feel it getting cold. Believe me, Zachary, summer will be here for a longtime.

Then we can go to the beach again.

"I would like to go back, too, but its too far away. Then 1 want Santa Claus to come.

1 have tried to explain that mere wishing doesnt always produce positive results. If it did, Phillips and his lawnmower would have more than a passing acquaintance and the army ants in my kitchen would have enlisted in El Salvador by now.

But Zachary has about as much use for reason as he has for spinach. If we lived in Rome, he would undoubtly be earmarked for a career in Italian politics. As it is, he pinpointed last Wednesday as the day Santa Claus would arrive, and nothing I could say would sway him For his naptime stories that day, he asked for two versions of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. He sang "Jingle Bells all day. He pointed out the window and said, "See that white cloud out there. Theres probably snow in that cloud

"There is not snow in that cloud, I said. Its hot enough outside to grill steaks on the driveway.

Will Santa Claus eat supper with us?

ive told you, Santa isnt coming today.

Hes coming tonight, I

better wait by the front door so that I can let him in.

Hes not coming tonight either!

But I want him to. But hell probably come in a car because he cant turn on the air conditioning in his sleigh.

Why dont we think about something else? 1 begged. "I know. Why dont we watch Sesame Street?

1 think Ill wait until Santa gets here because he might want to watch it, too. In desperation 1 suggested that we take a walk. I would have been more comfortable In a sauna, but Zachary hardly noticed the heat. He was too busy speculating about what Santa might bring him.

I think I would like a green car.

"Fine, I puffed. In December.

Can we go now and buy a Christmas tree?

Please,, Zachary, cant you understand? We cant buy a Christmas tree in the summer.

But I want one.

No one sells them now. We have to wait for winter. He pondered this for a while. What color do you think Santas car is? he finally asked.

Exasperated, I banished him to the upstairs when we got home. He sat on the tq> step, his chin in his hands, until the lock on the back door clicked.

Its him! he squealed. Hes here!

Phillip walked through the door Zachary stared at him in disbelief before bursting into tears.

Phillip rushed to him. Whats the matter?

I wanted Santa Claus, Zachary sobbed. And youre only you.

by Julie Ann Morgan of 105 Pinelog Lane, was set at $150.

A car driven by Grace Stokes Warren of Hi^and Mobile Home Park and a truck operated by John Harvey Lilly of Vanceboro, collided about 11;09 a.m. at the intersection of Red Banks Road and Cbaries Street, causing $400 damage to the Warren car and $600 damage to the Lilly vehicle.

By DON WATERS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Sea. Gary Hart and bis aoti-MX coalitk would only be postponing the inevitable defeat of their attempt to scrap the nuclear msile with lengthy floor debate, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services (Committee says.

Hart DA^., while not ruling out chances of a victory, says be intends to p>ro-ceed with his full airing primarily because if we allow this missile to be built we have mie a fearful, deadly decisioa.

Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, the cmnmittee chairman, tdd r^rters Thursday that "weve had a great deal of debate on the MX pre-vkxsly and that be saw no need for another talkathon.

He also noted that Hart, a candidate for the Democratic presidential nominatiOQ, had missed all of the panels drafting sesrions on the $200 billion defense authorizatk bill that contains $4.7 billion in MX money.

Tower characterized Harts tactics as an exercise in futility because I think we can defeat any debilitating amendments to the MX.

Hart and about a dozen colleagues began their formal assault on the MX Thursday, the same day Majority Leader Howard Baker, R-Tenn., once had hoped to wrap up work on the entire bill.

Baker extended the Senates work week throi^ Saturday and saved notice be might employ pariiamoi-taiy tadics to shut df a filibuster. Bid Hart said it could go Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday oi next week.

In his opoiing statement. Hart hit on hs central theme that President Reagans decision to place the 10-warhead missiles in silos tlMught to be vulnerable to Soviet attack heightened chances of a nuclear war, either by desi^ or mistake.

It meets all the specifications and designs of a first-strike weapon, he said. It invites a pre-emptive Soviet attack in a time of extreme crisis.

And, alluding to Reagans nickname of Peacdieeper for the missile, he added, it is a we^Mo that will not keep the peace, regardless of its name.

The president and the Penta^ say the seaborne and airborne legs of the nattons strategic triad reduce this vulnerability and that the MX must be b^t and deployed to ensure the Soviet Union eventually agrees to negotiate seriously to reduce its own land-based nuclear missile force.

In conjunction with Harts statement. Sen. Cart Levin, D-Mich., offered an amendment that would restore $2.7 billioo worth of ships, planes, anununition and other non-nuclear items the Armed Services Committee had cut. He suggested

that this additkm could be offset by slashing the MX.

But the Senate responded by voting, 60-34, to table, or kill, the amendment.

Shutly before the Soate quit work in late evening, Daniel P. Moynihan, D-N.Y., proposed a measure banning use of money in the bUl to deploy the MX, which the Air Force plans to place in operatk in late 1986. Furtho- debate was planned today.

While the MX emerged as the prime issue in consideration of the fiscal 1984 defense bill, the Senate also disposed of several controversial matters Thursday.

By 91-5, it voted to establish a new Pentagon office to oversee operational testing of new weapons. Spimsors said that under the current, decentralized system, too many of the weapon are being produced and given to troops before serious performance problems have been solved.

SenatiMTS rejected. 71-23, an attempt to rqieal a new law that denies federal grants and loans to coU^ students who failed to register for the military draft. A legal challenge to the law is pending in the Supreme Ckwrt.

'The Senate also voted 56A1 to uphold an admlnistratkm plan to build B-IB bombers on an expedited schedule under terms that permit multi-year rather than annual contracts. It also had rejected an attempt Wed

nesday to scrap the program entirely.

While wwk on nearly all the major non-MX amendments was completed Thursday, a rescrfutkw by. Sods. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., and Mark HatTieid, R-Ore., seeking a mutual and verifiable U.S.-Soviet freexe on nuclear weapons remained.

Komedy and Hatfield were said to have filed the measure to force hearings ( their resdution by the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, which has kept it bottled up for several months.'Dealt Blows'

ROME (AP) - Out^Mng Premier Afflintore Fanfai claims toTorism in Italy has beoi siqipressed, but warns the coui^ duuld be on guard against foreign subversion and espkmage.

In a report Thursday on the secret sovkcs activities, the head of the caretaker government said Italy had beanne a prefooitial ground for foreip subversive groups. He said the heavy influx of foreigners into Italy was an element oi high risk and called finr stiffer controls in the immigratioo polilcy.

The report said crackdowns again^ riband left-wing terrorists have dealt "lethal blows to the armed groups.

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Title
Daily Reflector, July 15, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30512
Date
July 15, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
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NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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