Daily Reflector, July 19, 1983


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INSIDE TODAY

INSIDE TODAYSPORTS TODAYTHE LEGISLATURE

House hazardous waste-related amendment given new look by the Senate after nearly a week of stalemate in Senate subcommittee. (Page 15)N.C. BUDGET

North Carolina Assembly today considers a package of special projects worth more than $6.7 million, which includes workers compensation change. (Page 8)

OLD TIMERS

Brooks Robinson and Al Kaline hit homers, but their American League lost to the National 5-3 in the second Cracker Jack Old Timers Classic. (Page 13)THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 153

GREENVILLE. N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

TUESDAYAFTERNOON.JULY19.1983

20 PAGES TODAY ^PRICE 25 CENTS

'Challenge' Programs For City Students Described

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writor Four projected programs, all designed to outline various aspects of plans to

challenge our most capable students, were presented in detail to members of the Greenville Board of Education at the boards informa

tion meeting Monday ni^t.

The four programs presented were:

Honors Program - The concept of this program is

to provide a more rigorous and challenging academic program for students in grades 9-12 leading to an opportunity for students to

Piff Commissioners OK $300,000 Land Purchase

By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

The Pitt County Board of Ckimmissioners Monday afternoon formally approved the purchase of a half-block in downtown GreenvUle for $300,000.

The property, owned by attorney Frank Wooten, includes more than 23,000 square feet bordered on the west by Greene Street and on the north and south by Sectmd and Third streets, a half-block west of the present Pitt County Courthouse.

The property will be used to expand court related-facilities as the need arises. The county has for some time been renting a portion of the property for $200 a month to provide parking facilities for jurors.

Funds to purchase the parcel were included in the 1983-1984 budget a^ted by the board last month.

Commissioners Monday also gave tentative approval to the establishment of a minimum plumbing inspection fee of $5. At present, there is a $2.50 charge, made for each plumbing fixture inspected, but no minimum fee. The minimum fee would cover plumbing inspections where no fixtures are involved, such as when bouses are moved and reconnected, or when repairs are made but no fixtures are installed.

The board took no action on a request by the GreoivUle Jaycees to name the hospital-mental health center complex for former East Cardina University Chancellor Leo Jenkins.

Joel Johnson, coKdiairman of the project for the Jaycees, told commissioners that 8,760 signatures have been recorded

on petitions to name the complex for Jenkins, who was a leader in the establishment of the medical school.

In other action, the board reappointed Gaudie McLawhom and Paul Braxton to the Winterville Board of Adjustments; accepted the resignation of Rebecca Davenport from the Sheppard Memorial Library Board of Trustees and the Pitt Council on the Status of Woman, and named Catherine Creech to replace her on the library board; and appointed Frank Groom and Hank Milsap to the Region Q Private Industry Council.

In an afternoon workshop session, commissioners met with representatives of the Pitt County Bar Association and Gerk of Superior Court Sandra Gaskins to discuss the possibility of moving the tax collectors office and the tax supervisors office from the court bouse to the county office building. The move would provide more space for the court clerks offices at the court house.

The board also discussed with Frank Porterfield of Weyeitaeuser Co. and Albert Coffee of the Soil Conservation Service a propel drainage project at the county home farm on SR1725 near Bells Fork.

Poterfield agreed to make detailed surveys of alternate ditching to @ve commissioners more information on which to base a decision.

The board also set July 26 as a tentative date to meet with rqiresentatives of the Bell Arthur Fire Department to discuss the departments request for the establishment of a tax district to support fire department operations.

NASA Is Optimistic A Space Station Will Receive Approval

By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Aerospace Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - NASA is optimistic it will gain President Reagans approval for its long-sought goal of a permanent manned ^ace station and will ask for $200 million in fiscal 1985 to start the project rolling, the agencys top official reports.

If the United States does not take this step, we will lose our pre-eminence in space, James M. Beg^, administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, told a Space Station Symposium on Monday. He said there have been encouraging signs from the White House and he expects a go-ahead within six to 12 months.

'Die symposium is being attended by several hundred industry, government, foreign and military planners who are

RKFLtCTOH J

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.

MEDIC ALERT ADDRESS?

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You may obtain membership in Medic Alert and obtain the bracelet or necklace appropriate for indicating your condition by writing Medic Alert, P.O. Box 1009, Dept. B, Tdrlock, CA 95381. Your medical information will be kept on file in the foundations office and will be available 24 hours a day for anyone who calls the phone number listed on the jewelry.

providing NASA with final ideas before the agencys fiscal 1985 budget is submitted in September.

Beggs said if the $200 million is approved, it would be used primarily for space station concepts and desi^. He said money for hardware would be requested starting in fiscal 1986. The agency estimates a price tag of $6 billion to $8 billion to have a permanent station with four to six people on board in orbit by 1991. The facility would grow with the later addition of modules and p^le.

The NASA Chief said industry response has been encouraging as companies begin to realize the potential value of processing new dru^ and materials in the weightless vacuum of space. Foreign interest also has been high, he said, but military and scientific backing has not been as strong.

Richard D. DeLauer, undersecretary of defense for research and engineering, told the symposium the Defense Department has not identified a military space station mission that would substitute for roles now played by unmanned satellites and at the same time justify the cost. But that doesnt mean we wont come up with something; weve got a lot of mission studies under way, he said.

Thomas M. Donahue, chairman of the* space science board of the National Academy of Sciences, expressed concern that the hi^ cost of a space station might drain funds from space science projects, just as the space shuttle did in its early development.

Under those circumstances, he said, we dont need a space station. But we can benefit from it. One benefit, he explained, would he the servicing and repairing of unmanned scientific satellites by station astronauts.

The space shuttle is moving ahead well, and while it is truly impressive, it allows only a short time in ^ace, Beggs stated. The space station is the next logical step for long-durationwork.

graduate as honor graduates.

In presenting the program outline, Rebecca Oats, director of secondary instruction, said requirements, standards, and performance indicators must be developed for each honors course and for courses that are to be classified as honors.

The honors program should be designed ... to stimulate individual initiative and creativity as opposed to every student doing the same thing. Planning stages to develop such a program will be taken in four steps - to select an Honors Steering Committee composed of administrators, teachers, students, parents and other interested community people; establish school level committees in each discipline area; establish a school-level steering committee; and discuss revisions with principals.

Magnet schools - Ann Harrison, director of pupil personnel, assisted by others in the school administration, reported on the current status of the magnet program. Designed as an enrichment program for elementary level students, it will be established during the coming school year as a pilot program at two schools -Sadie Saulter and Third Street schools. The program will be set up in three levels of activity with Level I designed to enhance awareness and stimulate interest. This level of activity will be centered in the classroom.

Level II activities are those geared to develop cognitive skills and will take place in a special enrichment center. Children permitted access to this program will be those who are capable of completing regular classroom work and still have time to be part of the program. Selection of students for Level II will be coordinated between the classroom teacher and the enrichment teacher.

Activities at the Level III stage will allow individuals or small groups to pursue a special interest subject in greater d^th than possible at the other levels. This is seen as as a step which will involve outside assistance by mentors and adult guides to help a child in research and investigation of a subject.

Several public meetings have been held recently to explain the magnep pro^am to interested parents. Mrs. Harrison noted that to date 26 families have signed for their children to take part in the program with more expected before the deadline two weeks away.

Gifted students - The third program was a comprehensive preliminary report of 25 pages entitled Developing a Comprehensive Program for Gifted Students at the Sec-(PleasetumtoPagelO)

Beating The Heat?

MAYBE SO? ... Three-year-old Christopher Hammond seems just a bit skeptical that being buried in wet sand by his father Ken is a good way to escqie the full effect of the current heat wave. The Hammonds, from Salem, Va.. were visitors last Saturday at

Hammocks Beach State Park near Swansboro. After being encased up to his chin, Christopher wasted no time in breaking out to join other youngsters nearby who were diggbg boles down to the water level. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)

Identify Ayden Woman Found In Car In Neuse

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

The body of a woman discovered Saturday In a station wagon submerged in the Neuse River near Fort Barnwell in Craven County has been positively identified as that of Pearlie Mae Edwards, 56, of Ayden, who

MRS. PEARLIE MAE EDWARDS

was reported as a missing person in January.

Lt. Mike Warren of the Craven County Sheriff Department on Monday afternoon said an autopsy, made in Chapel Hill, identified Mrs. Edwards through dental records and other means. The cause of death has not yet been established.

(Graven County officials have called off the search at the river site to locate the body of Charlie Frank Edwards, Mrs. Edwards husband, who was reported missing at the same time. According to Warren, the investigation is now being center^ on efforts to seek Edwards in order to question him about his wifes death.

Greenville Police Chief Glenn Cannon said that Mrs. Edwards daughter, Doris Jean Oryema of Albemarle Avenue in Greenville, made a missing person report on Mrs. Edwards on Jan. 18. The report stated Mrs. Edwards was last seen on

Jan. 12 at the Albemarle address. She had been living temporarily with her dau^-ter following a separation from her husband a week and a half previous, Mrs. Oryema said.

Mrs. Oryema this morning told The Daily Reflector that her mother went outside the house on the evening of Jan. 12 to talk to her husband. She has not been seen since. Mrs. Edwards was, at the time of her disappearance, an employee of the Eastern Carolina Family Practice Center, where she had worked for several years.

Kissinger Choice Inspires Controversy

WASHINGTON (AP) -The appointment of Henry A. Kissinger to a key Central American affairs post is winning praise from the congressional leadership but old rivals from the left and right say the move is a serious mistake.

Controversy over the Kissinger comeback began to swirl within hours after his appointment Monday by President Reagan as head of a bipartisan commission on

Central America.

Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said he will call the former secretary of state as a witness to find out what if anything he knows about Central America.

There may be someone in this broad land who is lower on my list of choices than Mr. Kissinger but I cant think of him, said Helms, R-N.C., the conservative chairman of the Western Hemisphere subcommittee of

the Senate Foreign Relations Commitfee.

I hope it is only a trial balloon, and as far as I am concerned, I would like to see it shot down, said Rep. Clarence Long, D-Md., a liberal whose House Appropriations suhcommittee must approve funds for the administrations Central America policy.

Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes, taking note of the criticism of

Kissinger, today said that certainly the president understands people have strong opinions about the secretary of state.

Speakes said Kissinger was known for his expertise and knowledge of foreign afairs and everyone accepts him as a leader in the field, with as much expertise as anybody.

Earlier, Senate Majority Leader Howard 11. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., said, "Few public

servants enjoy such a distinguished background, and few carry with them such international acclaim and trust as Kissinger. Support for Kissinger also was expressed by House Majority leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, and Sens. John Stennis, D-Miss., and Charles McC. Mathias, R-Md.

The mandate of the commission is to,undertake a study of the Central Ameri-'' can situation.

WEATHER

Farti) clud) lmghi, chance of acatiered evening bhowers. lov^ in 70s Partly tioudy Wednesda'. high in 90s

Looking Ahead

Partly cloudy each day Thursday through Sat nr day witti widely .scatlcre<j afternoon and evening showers. Highs in 90s during period and lows in 70s.

Inside Reoding

Page 5 - UFO tales^

Page 9 - MX debate Page 10 Obituaries Page 14'- Area items





2-The Diily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Tuesday, Jufy 1, 1913

Ice Cream Month HonorsBirths

Dessert Thats All American

By DICK WEST

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Old saying: Everything I like is either illegal, immoral or fattening.

Although most ice cream comes under the heading of the third taboo in the above lament (in some varieties, butterfat content is as hi^ as 20 percwit), the confection appears to have escaped the more rigorous prohibitions of the dieterscode.

To date, no light ice cream has caught on with calorie-conscious consumers in the pattern of light beer and certain other products associated with waistline bulge.

Apparently, it takes more than the specter of excess poundage to discourage ice cream eating.

If statistics compiled by the International Association of Ice Cream Manufacturers mean anything, the stuff is consumed by 98.3 percoit of the peale in this country.

"What a pity this isnt a sin, the French novelist Stendahl is said to have remarked upon first tasting icecream.

That attitude may in part account for the fact that U.S. residents last year downed

4.1 billion pounds, which figures out to 93 scoops for every man, woman and child in the country.

This, thoi, was the situation facing the industry as it designated July as National Ice Cream Month:

On one hand, overwhelming positive consumer attitudes that have put ice cream on a plateau with baseball, apple pie and motherhood as enduring American virtues;

On the other hand, a guilt feeling of the type that caused one magazine writer to used the word confessions in the title of an article on ice cream con-sumptioo.

Whatever the national frame of mind, there is little doubt the United States is in the grips of what has been called an ice cream re

naissance.

This year has seen a 5 percent production ^increase over a comparable period in 1982.

The publication Progressive Grocer Is icam and ice milk products as No. 1 in the frozen food department, and 33rd among the 200 best-selling supermarket items, edible or not.

Nevertheless, the industry obviously feds that some coi^uners arent doing their part.

There is a major merchandising-marketing opportunity for ice cream, says the manufacturers association, explaining that increased sales is a matto* (rf creating top of mind consumer awareness.

One of the first steps in that direction involved pre-suading Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., and Rep. Thomas Foley, D-Wash., to sponsor a poll to deteiinine the ice cream preferences of members of Congress.

In the survey, naore than 40 flavors were identifed as favorites, with chocolate, vanilla and butter pan heading the list.

The choices were announced at what was billed as an old-fashioned ice

cream

ty on Capitol Hill. That function was the official beginning of the July Ice Cream for America observance.

Not a bad beginning for a dessert whose origins are lost in the mists of antiquity.

Although people have been enjoying frozai treats since

Designer Draws Bead On Exclusive, Costly F ashions

ByGAY PAULEY UPI Senior Editor NEW YORK (UPI) -Some shoppers would gulp at paying $2,000 f(M- a sweater!

Fabrice, a fashion designer from Haiti, finds many customers willing to pay that and more for his unique beaded costumes.

He calls his clothes good investment.

Without pause, Fabrice quotes $2,700 wholesale for a gunmetal gray costume consisting of tailored cashmere trousers, casual, street-length coat and a long-sleeved cashmere sweats, different only because it is entirely hand^beaded in a beehive motif.

Double that $2,700 wholesale to figure the cost to the customer. Double is the usual retail markup.

This is being picked up by all my rich clients, said Fabrice, who comes from a prominent Port-au-Prince family.

Fabrice in August will celebrate his seventh year as head of his own evening wear firm. Hand beading is his trademark. The beading, sometimes an elaborate, free-form pattern, all is done in his homeland. Currently his favorite fabric for ornamentation is cashmere, itself one of the most expensive materials around.

The beaded cashmere is the focal point of his fall and winter custom collection of about 25 basic designs. But he also works with georgette, charmeuse, pearls and fine cottons.

Some of the beads he calls caviar because they are shaped like roe, but at his prices could be named for the luxury product itself.

The woman who wears my clothes is buying something luxurious, different and timeless, said Fabrice .They are an investment and she cannot lose because they dont go out of style. Ten years from now she can reach into the closet, pull out a Fabrice, and it will still look sensational.

Women are getting what I consider works of art.

The dresses, short or full-length, are cut on the simplest of lines. They include tank tops, unbelted sheaths, full-length sweater

dresses and an occasional tiered but not non-beaded skirt.

For fall the designer leans heavily to black and gray combinations, silvery beading, plus cream tones where he uses the matching ornamental pearls. Fabrice makes three collections a year: fall-winter, holiday, spring-summer.

Store buyers come to shows, usually with particular customers in mind. The roster of stores garnered during seven years now includes Saks Fifth Avenue, I. Magnin, Neiman-Marcus, Bloom-ingdales, Bergdorf-Goodman, Martha and some of the shops along Beverly Hills Rodeo Drive.

Customers also come directly to his combination workrooms-showrooms-apartment home on New Yorks lower Fifth Avenue. Many of them are people of show business, and he counted Suzanne Somers, Morgan Fairchild, Mary Tyler Moore, Cheryl Tiegs and Dionne Warwick among them.

Fabrice said many of his customers are jet-setters, wives of rich executives who wnat to show off their husbands affluence, and the upwardly mobile young women who may buy only one Fabrice a year.

" Fabrice, 31, comes to his designer role from a family backgrounded in the fashion arts, writing and diplomacy. The family name is Simon although he uses only Fabrice.

His mother and aunt in the 1940s and 50s ran a couture dress salon in Haiti but his mother closed shop after his aunt died and all three children came to the United States to seek further education and careers.

A sister, Brigitte, is his production manager and a brother, Andre, is a designer of fabrics for menswear.

Fabrice studied textile design at the Fashion Indsitute of Technology, in New York,

learned the ins and outs of the garment business in five years wiith Seventh Avenue manufacturers, started doing hand-painted fabrics which he sold to speciality shops, and gradually built the business he now owns. He said he had no other backers.

Eight people work in his sample room in New York where everything is cut and, shipped flat to Haiti, beaded or otherwise ornamented, and returned to New York for assembly.

Fabrice said he has 20 headers in Haiti ami the number is growing as la^ as he can make return trips to train them.

I can sell everything I can produce, he said.

He does some invdividual requests and is at work currently on gowns for the wedding p^y for the model. Kim Alexis. The total will include Miss Alexis gown, gowns for the five bridesmaids, two flower girls, and mother of the bride.

I dont want the ratrace of wholesale collections on Seventh Avenue, he said. Its not for me. Im just not bufiness-oriented.

Engagements

Announced

Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Clemons of Greenville announce the engagement of their daughter, Pamela Louise, to Billy Gene Savage, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Savage of Greenville. The wedchngwill take place Aug. 6.

Mr. and Mrs. Wliam H. Wilson of Winterville announce the engagement of their daughter, Terrie Ljiin, to John Leonard Williams, son of Mrs. Carolyn House'of Dunn ^ J(^ Williams of Godwin. The wedding is planned for Aug. 6.

the time of Alexander the Great, trade sources could point to no magic moment when ice cream was discovered. TbKe was no inventor with a band-cranked freezer shouting Eureka, or anything like that.

Edwards Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lee Edwards, Hookerton. a daughter. Tori Lee, on July 12, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Ice cream just sort of evolved. But it has been documented that some flavor was served in America as early as 1700.

AlsS.cumented in the maiden appearances of various accessories. The 91e, was first made and sold at the St. Louis Worlds Fair in 1904.

Rouse

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Elmer Rouse Jr., 1405 Holbert St, a son, Daniel Ray, on July 12,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Davenpmt

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Harrell Davenport, Mannings Trailer Part, a daughter, Jessica Lynn, on July 12, 1963, in Pitt County Memorial H(^ital.

Congressional tastes to the contrary, the latest trend in the business seems to be in the field of designer ice cream.

McDonald Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Timothy John McDcmald, Route 8, GreenviUe, a son, Daniel Keegan, on July 13, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

AU kinds of new and non-traditional flavms have been developed in the past decade. .Am<mg the novelties are kiwi, dUl pickle, jaliq)eno and African violet ice cream.

One modem concoction is called Meatballs and Spaghetti Ice Cream, although that is something of a misnomer, the name having more to do with appearance than ingredients.

Even some of the lawgv-ers broke with tradition. Besides the big three, flavors catching the fancy of senators and r^resentatives included Oreo Cookies, White House (Tierry and Southern Pecan Pie.

Morris

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Raines Morris, RobersonvUIe, a s<m, John MarshaU, on July 1^ 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Staton

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Larry James Staton, 398 Elizabeth St., a daughter, Adrea Latasba, on July 13, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

As for ^pings, such as employed in the creation of sundaes, the only apparent boundary is imagination.

Byrs

Bom td Mr. and Mrs. William Bostic Byers Jr., 213-A S. Eastern St., a daughter, LUlian Jean, on July 13, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital.

Suffice to say that one of the co-^nsors of Celebrate with Ice Cream month is a company best known for its jams and jellies.

ShAes

Boro to Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Delano Stokes, Route 3, Greenville, a dau^ter, Helen Ruth, on July 14,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Bridal Policy

Tbe Daily Reflector wiU now pubUsh engagemrat and wedding photographs of a bridal colqile pictured together, m* of the bride picbired individuaUy.

A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagemoit announcements. Far publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. En^gement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.

Wedding write-ups wiU be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and writenip giving less descrq)tion and after the second week, just as an announcement.

Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one wedr prmr to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food EdhtN* SNACK FARE Grilled Sandwiches Beverage GRILLED SANDWICHES Usually well liked. l-3rd cup creamy peanut butter

1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish

2 tablespoons mayonnaise 4 strips bacon, cri^ly

cooked and crumbled 4 slices bread

In a small bowl, with a ^)oon mix together well the peanut butter, relish, mayonnaise and bacon; spread over one side of each bread slice, taking care to cover edges. Place on foil and broil briefly. Cut each slice into 2 triangles. Serve at once. Makes 2 to 4 servings.

WOTM Have Program

The Greenvillee Greenville Chapter of the Women of the Moose Lodge No. 1308 held its college of regents ch^ter night Thursday ni^t. Ada Jones presided as guest senior regent and Mary Knapp attended as college of regents chairman.

Installed in the office of treasurer was Edowise Johnson. Dorothy Fleming and Eva Spain were appointed officers.

Chapter development committee chairman installed were Gertrude Littleton, Susan Van Der andRowannMcLamb.

Vickie Wells was em c i as a new member.

A social hour followed and was sponsored by the College of Regents.

Fashion, Function And Fun For Fall

BEILL-RINGERS Back to school with all the right answers in shadow-stripe black/white cotton denim suspender miniskirt, left: adjustable button suspenders make the fit made-to-order; top it with a Gibson Girl ruffled shirt of polyester and cotton. Little girls

paint the fall fashion scene in corduroy jumper with pleated front and rocking-horse embroidery, right; interlock turtleneck top with coordinating rocking-horse print completes the picture. (All from Tulip Tops.)At Wits End

By Enna Bonibeck

It was your usual elevator crowd of women descending from a luncheon-style show on the mezzanine to the main floor.

They all faced the front of the elevator, their stomachs tucked in, their eyes glued on the lighted numbers. Out of the silence a voice said, Ive heard it from too many people for it to bs a rumor, Margaret. Ironing boards are definitely coming back.

Seconds later, the doors opened automatically, but no one moved to get off. We all just stood there numbed by what we had just beard.

Mayva was the fir^ one to lau^. She said it was a sti^id prank and someone was just trying to get attention. If it is untrue, its the most vicious rumor to be circulated since the one a few years ago that long tel^hone calls caused cellulite.

The very mention of the words ironing board brou^t back all kinds of memories. The early mornings when the kids would chop by at the utility room just before they cau^t their bus for school and Id iron anything that showed from under a sweater. (The short kids had to be lifted to the board and held steady.)

The stack of unironed clothes in a basket that grew every week and was such fun to rummage through at Halloween.

The time one of my children was visiting and got burnt on an iron. He had never seen one hot before.

And who could forget the night when their grandmother babysat with them and laid ironed pajamas out on their beds and they were afraid and refused to touch them?

Then one day 1 bought a dress made out of nylon that was drip dry. It was hot in the summer and cold in the winter, but it was a major drudge breakthrough. It got me out of the utility room and led me giddily into the 20th century. I never ironed again.

When I told my dau^ter that I had heard ironing

boards were making a comeback because of the new per-mawrinkled linens, satins and silks, she was unmoved. Whats an ironing board? she asked.

You remember, I used to iron when you were a child. I remember. Didnt you bum my leg once whUe you were pressing my skirt? Thats it. Its about waist-high and has a hot surface on top and you kids used to pile your coats and books on it.

I thought that was a stove.

Ive always gotten the two mixed up ... but if either comes back Im in trouble.

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With Offices At No. 6 Medical Pavilion Greenville. NC 27834

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Couple Speaks Vows In New York Saturday

RENSSELAERVILLE, N.Y. - Hie Presbyterian Cburcb here was the scene of the Saturday afternoon wedding cerenuny of Susan Blair Haseley and Stuart Meatb Miller, both of Clinton, N.Y. The two oclock wedding was performed by the Rev. David Jenkins of the Episcopal Church here.

Parents of the couple are Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Haseley of Grifton, N.C. and Mr. and Mrs. James F. Miller of WUmoot. N.H. and Coroapolis, Pa.

The bride was given in marriage by her father. For the double ring ceremony, she wore a gown of white summer satin and reembroidered alencon lace and pearls on the bodice, V-neck front and back, dropped V-waistline, full skirt with chapel train. The gown had a row of satin buttons on the back bodice and the elbow-length puff sleeves featured alencon lace appliques and pearls. Ruffles trimmed the shoulders. She carried a white colonial bouquet accented with dusty pink roses and periwinkles. She wore a fingertip veil with a wreath of satin rosebuds and babys breath tied with ribbon streamers.

Lynne M. Haseley, twin sister of the bride of New Bern, N.C., was honor attendant and bridesmaids included Karen G. Haseley, sister of the bride of Grifton, N.C., Kim Johnson of Pawleys Island, S.C., Anne Lee of Lorain, Ohio, Kathleen Mayer of Greenville, S.C. and Catherine Croy of Liber-tyyille, 111., niece of the bridegroom, was junior bridesmaid.

James D. Miller of Pittsburgh, Pa., brother of the bridegroom, was best man and ushers included Robert E. Miller of Beals, Me., brother of the bridegroom, Allan Niles Haseley of Grifton and Chapel Hill, N.C., brother of the bride, William R. Beam of Greensburg, Pa. and James L. Shafer of Etters, Pa.

Lola Belle Gilmour,

Cat-aunt of the bride of

ala, Fla., was organist and Phyllis Gilmour of West Chester, Pa. was vocalist. Directing the ceremony was Kim Smith of Winterville.

Linda Pearson of Pawleys Island, S.C. presided at the register and coordinator was John R. Long Jr., uncle of the bride of ^nsselaerville, N.Y.

The honor attendant was dressed in a floor length skirt of periwinkle blue shimmer satin, gathered at the waist with triple rows of pleats around the bottom. She wore a short sleeved white bodice with a front scoop and V-back neckline. A cummerbund tied with a full bow in back with long sashes was fashioned from crepe de chine in stripes of dusty rose,

MRS. STUART MEATH MILLER

pearl gray, white and periwinkle blue. She carried a colonial bouquet of periwinkle, dusty rose and white. Each of the attendants was dressed identically.

A reception was held at Conkling Hall. The buffet table centerpiece was of dusty rose, white and periwinkle blue flowers. Individual table were decorated with matching bud vases. Whipper-Snappers Band provide music for dancing.

The co(q)le will live in Qinton, N.Y. after a wedding trip to Bermuda.

The bride is a kindergarten teacher at Deerfield Elementary School in Utica, N.Y. She graduatred from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and of Ayden-Grifton High School. She is taking graduate courses toward a masters in reading from State University of New York at Utica. The bridegroom is a product metallurgist with Special Metals Corp. He is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pa., and of Moon Area Senior Hi^ School. He is studying for a M.S. A. from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Griffis ABC campus.

A rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom Friday at the Weathervane at the Institute of Man and Science in Re-nsseiaerville, N.Y. A picnic supper honored the couple Thursday and was given by the parents of the bride for out-of-town guests.

Former Red Cross Head Leaves City

Mrs. Walter F. Tayor, a resident of Greenville since 1938, is leaving here today to make her new home in Mesa, Ariz.

A native of White Oak, Mrs. Taylor served as executive secretary of the Pitt County Red Cross for 28 years. She retired in 1970. She received several commendations and awards for her outstanding service to the community.

She will be living with her daughter, Rosalie Bruington, and three grandchildren in Phoenix. She will also be visiting another dau^ter, Jayne Holt, in Maryland.

After August, her mailing address will be Patterson Terrace Apartments, 1825 W. Emelita Ave., Mesa, Arix. 85202.

Births

Hansley Born to Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Colidge Hansley, 1600 Myrtle Ave., a daughter, Crystal Joy, on July 14,1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Williams Bom to Mr. and Mrs. James Alton Williams, Hamilton, a daughter, Articia Renee, on July 14, 1983, in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Rountree Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Artis Rountree, Grifton, a daughter, Erika Jade, on July 14,1983, In Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

The DUy Reflector, GreeovtUe, N.C.-Tuetday, July U, USS-3

Florence Nightingale, the founder of modem nursing, was bom in 1820 in Florence, Italy.

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Objectivity Is Ultimate Goal Of Food Tasters

Eager To Be Husband, But Not Father

By Abigail Van Buren

1W3 b UnnMfWl PrMt Syndie

DEAR ABBY: I am a 49-year-old man, divorced for 10 years. I raised four children my youngest is finally out of the neat

I am in love with a young lawyer who is divorced from her lawyer husband and has custody of their only child a 7-year-old boy. If it werent for the boy, I would marry her in a minute, but I dont want to raise another child! I have told her that

She says she will send the boy to summer camp, to his fathers, to her mothers for weekends and holidays, then to boarding school so I wouldnt have to raise him, but I think the hoy deserves better than to be sent away, pushed around and boarded out

This woman and I are perfect for each other in every way, so why is it so difficult for me to move into her lovely home, let her send the boy away, and live happily ever after?

HAVING DOUBTS

DEAR HAVING: Because having been a conacien-tiona father, your conscience wont permit you to allow this woman to abandon her responsibilities aa a mother in order to have you.

DEAR ABBY: I am writing in reply to Wet Nightie, the woman whose husband "gets upset, drinks too much and wets the bed.

Im another man who had the same problem, but after I got help I found out the problem was not my plumbing, but my drinking.

I thought that I could not be an alcoholic because I was not old enough and not on skid row. I was 27 and a successful attorney with a large firm. I also thought I didnt have a drinking problem because I never drank before 5 p.m., although at night Id drink until I passed out

In my case, not only was my drinking making me a bed wetter, it was hurting my marriage in ways I wasnt even aware of.

A fiiend got me to go to Alcoholics Anonymous. Ive been sober for a year, and its been the best year of my Ufe. Incidentally, when I stopped drinking, the bed-wetting stopped immediately. Wet Nightie should introduce her husband to AA.

DRY IN LA.

DEAR DRY: I received a flood of letters (no pun intended) from former bed wetters saying, As soon as I dried up, so did my bed. Lets hear it for A.A. Iti the greatest!

DEAR ABBY; I was fortunate to have had my hearing for 53 years, but I now have a profound hearing loss and am enlisting your aid to gain for us deaf persons more hours of captioned TV programs.

ABC is the only network of the big three to provide consistent captioning, and I am grateful for those programs that are now available. But the choices are pathetically Umited and only a few hours a week of captioned programs are available to us.

We deaf persona are as hungpr for knowledge, diversion and entertainment as the hearing public. If you print my letter, it might help.

PUNTA GORDA, FLA., READER

DEAR READER: One letter (yours or mine) wont help, but the squeaky wheel gets the grease, so If organized groups of the deaf and hearing-impaired were to launch an organized, vigorous letter-writing campaign, you might get some action.

NBC and CBS, can you hear me?

DEAR ABBY: The letter about cousins first, second, third, etc. reminded me of a cartoon I saw years ago.

It pictured a woman showing her family album to a friend. She was saying, Thats Rodneys first cousin twice removed. Rodney threw him out of the house twice.

TEMPLE DUNN, ARUNGTON. VA.

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

RALEIGH, N.C. (LTD -Some days the menu may be pound cake, on others it may be rancid fish, but members of North Carolina State Universitys sensory profile panel are expected to approach both with equal aplomb.

We dont think of food in subjective terms, said panel leader Dolores Moncol of Gamer. We dont form a preference;

And panel members dont exactly eat the foods set before them by faculty members of the universitys food sciences department. Instead, they sniff, chew, taste, and then, often as not, politely spit the food out and move on to the next sample.

If its something thats really good, we might swallow, especially if its about the middle of the morning when we are ^tting a little hungry anyways, Mrs. Moncol said.

But as a rule, the panel is not supposed to enjoy the food they sample, instead acting as impartial surveyors of taste, texture or aromatic pn^rtles researchers are interested in measuring.

Sometimes that Involves tasting foods most people would find somewhat repugnant. The rancid fish, for example, was part of an experiment to measure the longevity of frozen fish.

Mrs. Moncol, a 13-year veteran of food evaluation, said unless samples are in truly bad condition, she and most 'Other experienced panel members just dont think about it and dont swallow.

I have know one panelist to gag once, and even thou^ the things are not harmful, panelists, especially if they are inexperienced, tend to bi a little hesistant to put some things in their mouths, she said.

Gastronomical fortitude is only one skill panelists must develop before taking part in evaluations. During a six month apprenticeship, panel-ists learn to place characteristics of a certain food sample - its sweetness, sourness, stickyness, chewiness and so on - on a 14-point scale, something food scientist Dr. Donald Hamann says not all people cando.

Hamann said candidates for the panel are tested before they enter the training period to make certain they have adequate awareness of their senses.

We run them through some tests to see if they are able to sense the attributes we are interested in, Hamann said. Some people just do not have the ability to sense certain things.

One lack that automatically disqualifies potential panelists Is that of

natural teeth.

They just need to have normal senses, we dont need anyone with extreme abilities, Mrs. Moncol said. But they cannot have false teeth.

She said false teeth interfere with a persons ability to sense textural qualities like crispness and ct^ive-ness, important in testing the snap of Hamanns restructured fish products or the crackle of vegetable chips other researchers have worked on.

Another factor important for panelists is personality. Mrs. Moncol said the panel reaches its final evaluations of a foods characteristics in group consensus after sampling. She said people who mi^t allow a tendency toward arguing to warp their judgments are weeded out in the selection process.

They cannot be too domineering, she said.

Objectivity is the ultimate goal of the food panel, providing researchers with unbiased data (HI how different

products crunch, taste or smell.

The group pursues its unbiased evaluations with a careful routine, each member chewing in the same way and for the same am(Mint of time.

In the course of evaluation, panelists dont just take a bite or two a then pass jud^ent. If the panel is testing crispness in pickles. Dr. Hamann said, they tart a session by calibrating themselves - trying one limp variety of pickle and one that is very crisp.

We practice with foods, Mrs. Moncol said. We have to become very familiar with the product.

The amount of sampling required for one series of tests leads to a very (Please turn to Page 5)

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Editorials

Vineyard Struggle

There is no Napa Valley in North Carolina. There might have been at one time, but we su^)ect the various entanglements of taxation, price supports, environmentalism, pesticides and herbicides, costs of mechanization, marketing problems, and you-name-it, would make re-entry into the grape-growing industry a leming prqx>sition.

It came close to being different.

Time was, almost every farm in eastern North Carolina had its own grape vines. They were a spare time undertaking that was mostly for family consumption. Descendants of those long-ago vines are scattered hither and yon; an isolated arbor is still to be found in farmyards and where farmyards used to be.

A decade or so ago there were a few serious efforts to raise grapes to augment farm income. Muscadines, which made up most of the states crop, found a market in an occasional winery. But we read grape cultivation has since plummeted from a high of 2,494 acres in 1976 to 1,706 in 81 (latest figures available). The number of growers also has fallen by almost half.

Prices for the crq;) just arent good enough to support it.

Early settlers were aware of the favorable soil and weather conditions in Carolina for grapes. 'They raised some, but they did not have a tradition of grape cultivation nor the taste for wine that other families brought from the Old Country, to other parts of the New World.

Todays few commercial growers in North Carolina are trying to stay in business, but its been a losing fight.

We wish them well.

Paul r. OConnor

Safety Pays

Area industries have long been known for maintaining good plant safety records.

Procter & Gamble last week honored its employees for having for the best safety record among the corporations 48 plants. The local facility now is closing in on the P&G safety record of 3.8 million work hours. It has an incidence rate of injuries of 0.9 compared with the sate rate of 7.8.

Plant safety reduces personal suffering, inconvenience and loss of time from work and other activities. It pays in every way.

Procter & Gamble employees and administrators have every ri^t to be proud of their safety record. We have no doubt the tradition of safety will be continued.

Special Place For Hazardous Wastes

RALEIGH - If you store dynamite on your property and it blows i|>, tbus breaking all your oei^ibM^s windows, youre liable fw the damage. You cant go into court and plead that the dynamite was properly sted, that you werent ne^igent, that you coul(tot fm^ that lightning would hit the storage shed. With a substance as dangerous as dynamite, youre hdd strictly liable by the states courts.

S(Mne people in the Legislature think we should treat hazardois wastes the same way we treat dynamite. They say these wastes, by their very nature, are so dangerous that they warrant a special place in state law. If someone is harmed by hazardous wastes, they shouldnt have to prove that the handler of those wastes was negligent, only that they were harmed by the wastes.

The bill, sponsored by Rq>. William Qark, IK)umberland, is due to be considered in the June 1984 session. It is

a watered-dofwn v^ of a IhU first proposed by the Governors Waste Management Board and amoided to allay smne (tf the concons of mdustry.

We need th^ bill because of the Bock Wards of the wmld, says Bill Holman, lobbyBt fr the N.C. Conservaion (}oimdl. Hes retoring to the man convicted in the PCB dumping cise. Theres nong in the wortd that gets the attention of handl^ of hazardous w^tes like civil liability.

Holman and the bills ^xmsmrs think that by making it harder fw a waste g^raUx (Mr transp<Mrter to defend himsdf in court, theyll force those people to be much more re^xmsible about handling the garbage.

As the law currently stands, a pone who claims to have been harmed by hazardous wastes must first nnve that the wastes were ne^igitly bandied and thai prove that they were harmed by those wastes. Also, a produco' of these

wastes is off the book as soon as be bands than ova* to a tranqxMrter. Under the proposal, the producer would be re-spoosftle for any harm the wastes cause up untfl the time they are ddivered to a Ikeneed waste disposal or storage cm-pany.

- TUs bill tdls the hazardous wastes producers that you just cant go out there and And the cheapest tranqxRta* on the market and expect to be relieved liability if something happens, Gark said after the bill gained apimval from the House Judiciary I Committee.

It also tells the producer that while theyre in contrtri of the substances, toeyd bettor be putting a great deal (rf thought into their safe maintenance. For exanqrie, if someone wandered onto the propoty of the company even if tbqr were trespassing - and burned themselves on some chemical^ the (XHnpany would be ltole. Were telling these people youve got to do everything

you can to protect peo(^ from getting hurt.

For 20 years after the person came in contact with those hazardous wastes, hed be able to go iiRo court and benefit from this principle of strict liability. If his case wasnt toou^ until after 20 years, hed be undo* the usual tort provisions of law.

This bill is a ccnnpromise and if it is fimdly passed next year, the conservation council wont be totally satisfied, Holman says. First, it deals only with hazardous wastes. It does not apply to toe same chmicals before they bec(Mne waste products. Second, it is very (Uflictiit to prove that a hazardous waste you came into contact with IS years ago is, in fact, toe source of your cancer or other ailment.

Still, toe sponsors hope that if the bill evo- becomes law, itll prtxnpt the more re^xmble handling of these wastes and diminate situatkms like the PCB dump-

James Kilpatrick

\

WASHINGTON - Sometime next week, if Congress obeys its own instructions, we will get an idea of what Congress proposes to do about toe prospective federal deficits of 1984-86. Setting aside the avoidance of nuclear war, which is the issue that transcends all other issues, no problem in our national life is now more important than getting these deficits under control.

So long as our government is compelled to borrow in the appalling area of $200 billion a year, private industry must be pushed to the outer edges of the market for capital. Because capital spending in the private sector has been depre^ during the recession, the effects of this economic law have not been fully visible. Now the recession wanes; economicPrivate Sector Holds Key To Deficits

recovery clearly is on the way. But if interest rates begin to climb again, the whole hopeful process could be stymied.

In the budget resolution approved last month. House and Soiate conferees agreed on these estimates for fiscal 84; outlays, $858.9 billion; receipts, $679.6 billion; deficit, $179.3 billion. Almost overlooked in our concentration on 1984 were the revised figures for the current fiscal year that ends in Sq)tember. These revisions boost current spending from $770 billion to $813 billion; they reduce estimated revenues from $666 billion to $604 billion, and they thus Increase the prospective deficit for this year - are you ready? - from $104 billion to nearly $209 billion.

The figures are unimaginable. They

have become unimaginable for a good reason; Like all projections of income and outgo, they are based upon imaginings. With the best intentions in the world, the people who put our budgets together are engaged in a gigantic game of blindmans buff. They are feeling in the dark ((h- indices they cannot grasp.

A fascinating study of these uncertainties just a[^)eared from the Cato Institute in a paper by Randolph H. Boehm. Budget forecasts, as we all know, depend upon guesses at such components as unemployment, inflation, the gross national product and rates of interest. From these we derive estimates of income and outgo, and from these we compute prospective deficits.

Boehm does not say so in so many

words, but his study makes it evident that these indices are made of moonbeams. Over a 12-year period from 1971 through 1^, projections of the deficit were so wildly off target that the figures, if they were not taken so seriously, would be ludicrous. Such projections, says Boehm, are chronically unreliable.

Nevertheless, these are the only figures we have, and they are like the wind; We do not see the wind, but we see the effects of the wind; and the effects of the estimated deficits already are seen in a restless market. In some believable fashion, these estimates must be brought down.

I have said it a hundred times before and will say it a hundred times again; Deficits can be' reduced only by cutting

outgo, or by raising revenue, or by a c(xn-bination of both. Major congressional committees are to rqmrt on July 22 on their proposals in these directions. Their instructions are to cut spouliog by $12.3 billion over the next three years, and to increase revenues by $73 billion.

Can it be done? Yes. WUl it be done? Probably not. Thus far the 98th Congress has demonstrated not the slightest inclination to cut spending. Last months budget r^lution saw increases, not decreases, in virtually every area but defense. The Senate refused to agree to any cap on the July 1 reduction in income taxes - and this was a sound decision. A tax increase at this particular moment could precipitate the very disaster everyone wants to avoid.

But the American people have to face fiscal realities. Barring some miraculous, booming recovery, in which unemployment plummets und revenues from existing sources go rocketing upward, we will have to have significant tax increases within the next two years. Our elected representatives, on the record of toe past 18 months, simply will not cut ^>ending sufficiently to do the job. Indeed, they seem determined to embark upon new entitlement programs that would make bad matters worse in the cmning years.

I am not hollering crisis! I am wary of the word. But I ask forgiveness if I follow the repetitive example of that Roman statesman for whom the Cato Institute was named; The deficits must comedown.

Che# Currier

NEW YORK (AP) - In a fierce financial battle since last winter, banks and savings institutions have been able to Inflict some heavy, and probably permanent, damage on their dread competitor, money-market mutual funds.

But if toe money funds are down, they are certainly not out. And as toe fight continues, neither combatant appears likely to surroxler any time soon.

Those are the principal (XMKlusions that emerge from a study by Chase

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Money Market Funds Aren't Gone

Econometrics, a leading forecasting firm, of the impact of money market dep<fiit accounts since their introduction last December.

MMDAs, as they are called in the business, were authorized by legislation passed last year to give traditional financial institutions a new competitive weapon against the upstart money funds (MMMFs). They are accounts paying money market interest rates set by the individual institutions thati^er them.

In dbeir first half year of existence, they attracted more than $350 billion in deposits. Over the same period, money funds, which have been on the scene for about a decade, saw their assets fall from $232 biUion to about $165 billion.

As Chase Econometrics Bernard M. Markstein III pointed out, growth from zero to $200 bUlion - a task that took the money funds 10 years to accomplish -

came for the MMDAs in just six weeks.

Thou^ they are rivals for the savers dollar, Markstein said, the success of the money funds actually helped pave the way for the dramatic debut of toe MMDAs.

At its introduction the MMMF was seen as a new and untried instrumoit, he noted. Its growth was slow as investors took a wait-and-see attitude. Only when interest rates surged in 1978 did the MMMF start to grow significantly.

The MMDA has-benefited from this history. The public views the MMDA and the MMMF as very similar instruments. As a result, very little learning about the MMDA was retired. Where it took years for the public to become familiar with the MB4F, it took only a few months for them to comprehend the MMDA.

Similar as they may be, there are notable differences between the two types of accounts. As banks are always ready to point out, MMDAs are covered by federal deposit insurance, while money funds, however safe and stable, are not.

The absolute differeiK;e in risk between the two is probably very small, said Markstein, but small investors tend to be very risk averse.

At the outset, MMDAs offered promotional Interest rates that were well above prevailing yields on money funds. By now, however, the gap has all but disappeared. At last word, the average rate on MMDAs, as reported by the Bank Rate Monitor, was 8.4 percent; the average nxmey fund, according to Donohues Mcmey Fund Report, stood at 8.24 percent.

Money funds, meanwhile, have an edge

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

or two of their own. Die minimum requirement for (^tening an MMDA is $2,500, and the yield (m the account drops to the passbook savings rate any time toe balance falls below that. The typical money fund has an opening ante of only $1,000, and no penalty is required if the balance goes lower.

Broker-qxnisored money funds, in addition, seem to have retained their appeal as a convenient parking place for money that active investors move in and out of bonds or stocks.

In the week ended last Wednesday, assets of money funds actually rose $252 million - marking the first time that has happied this year.

Assuming toat the rules of the game remain as they are now, Markstein concluded, money funds arott likely ever to regain the preeminence they enjoyed before the advent of toe MMDA.

Baker Will Play Campaign Role

WASHINGTON - The Carter briefing book controversy did not disrupt a secret Reagan re-election campaign planning session recently that included White House chief of staff James A. Baker III, a principal target of FBI inquiry in the alleged political espionage case.

The campaign strategy meeting, which was conducted over lunch at the White House, indicated that the present controversy had not yet altered plans for Baker to play a major role in the campaign. Tentative arrangements called for Baker to ^y in the VRte House as the channel between President Reagan and his campaign organization, functioning as chief strategist.

However, the widening controversy over the 1980 Reagan campaigns use of

Presidit Jimmy Carters private briefing material has clouded Bakers 1984 role. He was in char^ of Reagans debate preparations against Carter and has admitted receiving the Carter briefing material.

Apart from his conservative enemies who have seized on the briefing book affair as a means of forcing out Baker, his role in the 1984 campaign has become a point of dilute within the Reagan political structure. I think its a mistake to have Jim sit in on these meeUngs, at least until the (FBI) investigation is finished, said one fdlow Reagan adviser previously on close terms with Baker. But most Reagan political operatives disagree, contending that no evidence so far in the Carter briefing case disqualifies

Baker from a campaiffD itrie.

In addition to Baker, campaign planners attending Wednesdays White House lunch included Sen. Paul Laxalt, general chairman of the Republican Party, who will be in nominal charge of the re-election campaign; Frank Fahrenkopf,

ward Rollins, who will ^ve his present post as White House ptditical aide to assume operating coittnd of the rejection campaign.

The luncheon meeting was one of several unannounced Reagan campaign planning sessions held in Washington this week, providing more signs that point to tjie presidents forthcoming decision to

seek a second term.

Laxalt, Fahrenkopf and Rollins met Wednesday morning in the senaUx-s Capitol Hill office with another key 1984 performer - former secretary of transportation Drew Lewis. Lewis now heads the New York-based Warner-Amex Corp. but is expected to be back here by mi(i-1984 to replace Rcrilins as the campaigns operating chief. Lewis was not invited to the Wednesday lunch.

In addition, longtime Reagan political adviser Stuart Spencer was in town from California Tuesday to confer about 1984

cipals. Spencer is to be a key adviser m the reHilection effort, probably traveling with the president on the campaign plane. Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

Elisha DouglassStrength For Today

One of the things most remembered about the teachings of the great philosopher Immanuel Kant is his contention that we should always act in such a way that we would be willing to have our acts made universal.

No one, of course, knows enough to put such a principle perectly and infallibly into (^ration. As fallible beings, we can only carry out Kants dictum in a partial and awkward fashion. But certainly it is a good principle to follow. At least we can ask ourselves whether the general direction of our lives appears to be benefitting mank-ingorharmingit.

Perhaps you will say that your life has no relevance to world affairs. But this is not true.

The humblest housewife, tt most unskilled laborer, the people whose lot is waiting on others - all these have a destiny registered in heaven, observed and held precious by God, in-dispensible to the fulfilling of the worlds life.





Had A UFO Experience? She'll Listen

By CYNTHIA BENJAMIN Associated Press Writer DAVENPORT, Iowa (AP) - If your love life falls apart, theres Dear Abby. If you drink too much, you can

go to Alo^lics Anonymous. But if you see strange, winking lights floating over your house or furry green men sitting under your apple tree, where do you turn?

Wounded During Camp Exercise

JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Two Camp Lejeune Marines were wounded by a blast of live machine gun fire Saturday, according to a Marine Corps spokesman.

Lance (^1. William C. Ohschafsakie and Lance Cpl. Velibor Zoric apparently were wounded during a squad leader blank fire training exercise at about 10; 30 a.m. at Camp Lejuene.

NONAME-CHANGE TOKYO (AP) - Japan will no longer require its naturalized citizens to adopt Japan^ names, the Asahi Sbimbun newspaper said Sunday.

Ohschafsakie, 26, from Enfield, Conn., was rushed to Portsmouth Naval Hospital in Va. with wounds in the shoulder and chest area. He was listed in stable condition.

Zoric, a 19-year-old Milwaukee native, was wounded in the left leg and was in stable condition at the Naval Hospital at Camp Le-juene.

The weapon was identified by the Marine Corp as an M-60 machine gun which fires 7.62 millimeter rounds. Spokesman did not know why live ammunition was used in a blank firing exercise, and said the incident is under military investigation.

Barbara Schutte, 31, hopes youll turn to her groiq), Abintra Inc., where youll find someone to talk to who doesnt believe youve seen too many science fiction movies.

Seeii^ a UFO can be v^ traumatic - its something you dont know and dont understand, she said in a recent interview. "If people realized how many others saw UFOs, then they wouldnt feel so singled out. Thats why were here - to show people theyre not going nuts, theyre not insane.

The name Abintra is derived from the Latin for from within, referring to the gi^s aim of providing a friendly, trusting atmosphere in which people can make their UFO revelations.

Me. Schutte, vdw formed the support and research group earlier this year, claims she has seen an unidentified flying object.

Ms. Schutte, who is a nurse, said she was at a farm in southeastern Iowa on

March 22,1978, when she saw three huge red globes hovering just above some power lines.

About every 30 seconds, they faded in and out in a random li^t pattern. When the lights went out you could just make out the outline of a little square. Then they began to move off very slowly, she said.

Ms. Schutte said she called the local flight service to see if any special aircraft was being used to survey recent local flooding.

The man at the flight service said no. He said, I suspect what you saw was three geese with red lights strapped on their backs, aiKl hung up. That really insulted me, she said.

Ms. Schutte said several other people apparently saw the same UFO, but when she tried to talk to them about It, they refused.

They didnt want anyone to know they had seen UFOs because people would think they were nuts. Its not the type of thing you want to

mention because the wife thinks youre nuts, and the neighbors chuckle, or they thiidc youre drinking, Ms. Schutte said.

When confronted with the sugestin that UFOs do not exist, Ms. Schutte countered with statistics of reported sightings.

And while she was never able to discover what she saw, her persistence eventually led her to become an investigator for the Center For UFO Studies, a research group in Evanston, 111.

As an investigator, Ms. Schutte said the biggest problem she encountered was peoples unwillingness to talk for fear they would be branded lunatics.

Today, she said, people who have a UFO experience can call Abintra and talk about their sighting either with her or her colleape, Robert Cweirtniak, a clinical psychologist.

We get as much information as we can about what was seen and the person who reported it. Then we check

star charts, military bases, airports, flight services, the weather service we try to explain it every way we can, she said. "But if youve checked out everything and come up with nothing, then y^ou have to leave it unidentified.

Dr. J. Allen Hynek, professor emeritus of astronomy at Northwestern University and director of the Center for UFO Studies, said about 1 out of every 100 people has had a UFO experience.

He said 10 to 15 percent of the reported sightings turn out to be the Goodyear Blimp or the planet Venus or so forth but a good portion of the others are unexplained.

GUARD DEFECTED HANNOVER, West Germany (AP) - An East German border guard dodged explosive charges in the ground and clambered over a barbed wire fence into West Germany, authorities report.

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuealay, July 19,19S3-5Tasters    ^

*    have a nice, polite way to

(Continued from Page 3)    spit it out.

practical problem indigestion.

In the case of pickles you are going to regret eating too many, she said.

And in tasting experiments, both Hamann and Mrs. Moncol agreed bombarding panelists with too many samples in too short a period of time leaves itastebuds jaded.

We call it getting wip^ out, Mrs. Moncol said.

After so many your ability is not so keen.

But on the whole, Mrs.

Moncol said she and her colleagues enjoy the part time work they get as panelists.

And Mrs. Moncol said although objectivity is expected of panelists, they cant help but look forward to experiments that include favorite foods - the survey of commercial pound cake, for example That enjoyment may be a contributing factor in countering another hazard of food testing.

Most of us have a weight problem, she said. We try

Fast Recovery

SAAS FEE, Switzerland (AP) - A 13-year-old Belgian boy was in excellent condition Monday after a fall into an icy alpine crevasse where his body temperature dit^^ to a normally fatal level.

The youth had wanctered over the Fee Racier in a T-shirt aiKl shorts last Thursday. He fell into a narrow crevasse 55 feet deep and was stuck there for five hours until rescue workers retrieved him.

He was rushed, unconscious, to a ho^ital in Bern; and after 40 hours in an intensive care unit be regained consciousness and recovered with amazing swiftness.

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6-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, July 19,19C

TAKE YOUR PLACES - Photograpber    2Stli annual conventionof the Little People of

Leonard Lang gives directKns to some of the    America, Inc. is being held in Boston this

more than 300 "httle people who posed for a    week. (AP Laseijdioto)

group photo Monday afternoon m Boston. The

Political Amnesty Said Not For All In Poland

By THOMAS W.NETTER Associated Press Writer

WARSAW, Poland (AP) - The Communist Party daily Trybuna Ludu reminded Poles today that some political prisoners may not be freed by an expected amnesty when the government lifts martial law.

The article appeared shortly after a senior Parliament official said the authorities might delay ending martial law because they fear pro-Solidarity demonstrations during the outlawed unions third anniversary next month.

We have to make clear that amnesty bills are not abstract acts of mercy in politics and social life, Trybuna Ludu said. If the bills were to contribute to the return of anarchy and threats of civil war, they would speak against themselves.

About 450 people still are held for martial-law violations. The government has said previously that about 40 of them will not be freed when the military crackdown ends.

Among those not likely to be released are five members of the dissident group Committee for Social Self-Defense, and four members of the outlawed anti-communist Confederation of an Independent Poland.

There are individuals who do not want to understand,...who are ready to destroy the calm which has been built with such difficulty, the paper said.

Late Monday a senior Parliamenta^ official, who declined to be identified, said the prospect of pro-Solidarity outbreaks in August had made some government leaders hesitant to rescind the 19-month-oId state of emergency.

They are afraid of everything, the official said. A large number of politicians is expecting the lifting of martial law soon, but we are not sure of that.-

The official reported the possible delay after the state-run news agency PAP said military leaders had agreed formally to end the state of emergency.

It was not clear if their decision meant martial law would end on Friday as widely anticipated because the day is Polands national holiday.

The 21-member Military Council for National Salvation, headed by premier and Communist Party chief Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, set no date or conditions for ending martial law. PAP only said the appropriate decisions were taken.

Januelski decreed martial law on Dec. 13, 1981, ending 16 months of strikes and political defiance by Solidarity, the first union free of government control in the Soviet bloc. The union, formed during Gdansk shipyard strikes in August 1980, was outlawed last October.

The Communist-controlled Parliament convenes Wednesday, and had been expected to endorse an end to martial law. But lawmakers have been busy drafting changes in Polands criminal and penal code to replace martial-law edicts once military rule ends.

Dissidents say the changes will have the same effect as martial law by crushing dissent from students and intellectuals, banning unauthorized union activity and punishing those who challenge the Communist Partys mon(^ly empower.

Solidarity leader Lech Walesa said Sunday that the changes are just something I cannot accq>t. ...I looked at the proposals of the govemm^it and the new laws and I just hope they will be rejected. I would prefer martial law to that.

Walesa received a tumultuous welcome by 5,000 workers when he returned to his Gdansk shipyard Monday after taking an unauthorized two-week vacation.

He said officials had approved his time off and authorized him to take two more weeks of vacation, despite an eariier threat to fire him for a breach of workers rules. Walesa claimed he was entitled to the time.

Walesa said he plans to leave Gdansk for the additional two weeks off, and has hinted he is using his vacation time to plan new political strategies. He has refused to rule out new strikes and protests.

Last year, workers marking Solidaritys second anniversary clashed with police in several cities. Four people died in Lubin and Wroclaw.

'Sinister Garden' Has Crop Of Toxic Plants

ByLAURINDAKEYS

Associated Press Writer

SAN DIEGO (AP) - When Dr. Dale Collins treats a young patient for poison oak inflammation, part of the cure is a prescription to go outside the clinic doors and take a look at the sinister garden.

There, Kaiser Permanente Hospital volunteers are nurturing poison oak and 20 other toxic plants.

Many of the plants are commonly found in backyards, and the garden was established at the hospital last month as a community education project, especially to alert people to plants that are dangerous to young children.

A large number of poisonings come from seeds and pods, says Collins, the hospitals chief of pediatrics who also holds a doctorate in organic chemistry.

Some kids go over and munch on leaves and stuff; they just put something into their mouths and chew. But the most interesting things to kids are seeds, for some reason, he said.

Collins said he isnt advocating that people rip plants out of their gardens, but that they know what the dangers are. Anyone who has toddlers would be crazy

to ^ow caster bean plants in their yard and leave the beans on the pods, he said.

There are about 4,500 poisonings per year in San Diego County, judging by calls to hospitals and poison control centers, said Collins. Most poisoned children turn out to have ingested part of a toxic plant.

Still deaths are few - one or two nationally, he said, thanks partly to a drug called Ofipwac, which induces vomiting.

This ^ves them a start. By the time they get to the emergency room, theyve usually vomited the poison out, he said.

Collins hopes that parents will take a look at the garden and take notice of potentially dangerous plants that may be growing at home, includ-ing poinsettias, philodendrons, hydrangeas, oleanders, agaves, elephant ears, privets, holly, wisteria, iris and azaleas.

Collins said that adults get poisoned by plants because of mistaken notions about folk medicines and traditional food.

An entire family came into the ho^ital three years ago, suffering from irregular heart rhythms and severe stomach pains. They told the doctors they had eaten

pokeweed.

It turned out to be tree tobacco, a South American plant, said Collins. Appar-ently the familys grandmother was visiting from Mississippi. She thought this stuff was pokeweed, stewed it up and nearly finished them all off.

You better dam well know what youre eating unless youre a real live botanist who knows something, said Collins.

VEPCO Strains To Fill Demand

RICHMOND (AP), -Virginia Electric & Power Co. says it pressed all its available power units into service and bought electricity from Appalachian Power Co. to meet record demands brought on by this weeks hot weather.

Vepco customers clicked on air conditioners in Mondays 90-degree heat to set a power demand that peaked just shy of 8.95 million kilowatts about 5:30 p.m., Vepco spokesman Jim Buck said. He said that compared with the 8.88 million kilowatts measuredJan.il, 1982.DAYWednesday 12 a.m. to 9:30 p.m

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Tuesday, July 1, 1983-7

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LIPPIZANER FARM REOPENED - Four stud farm was closed to the public following a Lippizaner horses as they draw a killer herpes virus infection that killed eight four-wheel open carriage during a ceremony brood mares and 31 foals of the nearly held in Piber, Austria for the first visitors to 400-year-old institution. (APLaserphoto) the Lippizaner stud farm in five months. The

Two Top Reagan Aides Deny Getting Material

WASHINGTON (AP) - Two top aides to President Reagan have told a congressional subcommittee they never received any documents from Jimmy Carters administration during the 1980 campaign.

In separate letters to the House Civil Service and Post Office subcommittee, Michael K. Deaver and Edwin Meese III said Monday they had no recollection of receiving any Carter documents nor were they aware of any effort within the Reagan campai^ to obtain such material.

I have no knowledge of, and had no participation in, any transactions involving material produced for President Carter or any mechanisms for obtaining such material, said, Meese, a long-time Reagan aide who is now presidential counselor..

Likewise, I have no personal knowledge of the use of any such material by anyone involved in the campaign, Meese said in a letter to Rep. Donald Albosta, D-Mich., chairman of the panel that is investigating alleged political espionage during the 1980 campaign.

In his two-paragraph reply, Deaver, deputy White House chief of staff, said that at no time during the period involved did I have any direct or indirect knowledge of, or any participation whatever in, any transactions involving material prepared for President Carter.

Joe Grimes, a subcommittee spokesman, said the panel did not have a comment on the replies.

Deaver and Meese sent copies of their letters to the Justice Department, which also is conducting its own investigation of the allegations. The White House released copies of both letters.

In letters sent to Albostas subcommittee several weeks ago. White House Chief of Staff

James A. Baker III, Communications Director David Gergen, Budget Director David Stockman and Frank Hodsoll, chairman of the National Endowment acknowledged they had received or seen Carter briefing materials.

So far, no one has said how the Reagan campaign obtained such material.

Former Reagan campai^ volunteer Wayne Valis, meanwhile, met with House subcommittee investigators for the second time since the panel began its probe.

Valis, who declined to give a detailed comment about the meeting, had earlier identified two men he said were sources of Carter campaign strategy information that Valis sent to Gergen and Baker.

Valis said the two men were Robert D. Leahy, a lobbyist-public relations man, and John Lenczowski, who now works for the National Security Council, according to a subcommittee spokesman who provided the names on the condition he not be identified.

In another development, former Reagan campaign aide and one-time CIA official Max Hugel denied he was involved in any questionable campai^ practices.

A report by Time magazine said William J. Casey, who was Reagans campaign manager and is now CIA director, recruited former CIA and FBI agents to gather political intelligence during the 1980 campaign.

The magazine said Casey had one trusted aide who other campaign workers susp^t had a role in the intelligence network. He is Max Hugel.

But Hugel said, I categorically deny the allegations contained in the Time story. Hugel, who resigned as a deputy CIA director early in the Reagan administration, said he neither participated in such a scheme nor had he ever heard of one.

A CIA spokesman said Casey also denied the allegations.

Study Says American Pupils 'Shortchanged'

7S6-1190Pitt Plaza

NEW YORK (AP) - A new study says American schools are in trouble and finds that many students leave school ill-prepared for jobs and effective citizenship.

A Study of Schooling, a comprehensive study that took more than eight years and included about 27,000 interviews, found the problems of the American educational system to be deeply entrenched and virtually chronic. Also, the study said, the schools should undergo far-reaching restructuring.

The study characterized the system as one of talky teachers addressing uninterested students who face unclear goals and study in an environment of serious social and educational inequities.

John I. Goodlad, former dean of the Graduate School of Education at the University of California at Los Angeles, and the director of the study, said, American schools are in trouble. Large numbers of students are leaving school ill-prepared for jobs and effective citizenship, and even

many of those who appear to be making it are shortchanged, he said.

The study was sponsored by an independent research organization, the Institute for the Development of Educational Activities, and consisted of questionnaires, interviews and classroom observation by 43 researchers in 13 communities.

Among the changes suggested by Goodlad include;

-Accelerating schooling 'by two years, with children starting formal education the month after they reach the age of 4 and graduating high school at age 16.

-Having high school currculums that require a core of general education courses for all students, including those in vocational programs.

-Naming head teachers who would have Ph.D.s and would receive higher salaries. This would serve as an incentive for capable teachers, he said.

Goodlad said a typical day of instruction in a junior or senior high school included 150 minutes of talking, of which only seven minutes is

initiated by students.

As they progress from grade to grade students become less and less involved in their school work, the researchers found.

According to Goodlad, the atmosphere of most classrooms in the study was emotionally flat.

Rarely did we observe laughter, anger or any overt displays of feelings, he said.

The study was also critical of the practice of tracking, that is, putting students into fast and slow moving sections in core subjects to allow students to move at their own pace. The researchers found the practice altered both the rate of learning and the content of instruction, as well as teacher attitude and classroom atmosphere.

TRAINING DEATHS

T HARDE, Netherlands (AP) - Six soldiers were killed and 10 wounded by an explosion Monday during a training session Monday at a Dutch military base, the Defense Ministry reports.





Package Of Special N. C. Projeds Nears Approval

By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The General Assembly today considered a package of special projects worth more than $6.7 million including a controversial bill expanding the kind of injuries covered by workers compensation.

However, a proposal to raise the legal drinking age for beer and wine to 21 faUid to win approval of the House-Senate Appropriations Committee by a 43-31 vote during deliberations Monday.

the workers compensation bill, introduced by Rep. William Clark, D-Cumberland, would allow workers who injure their backs during the normal performance of their job to be compensated.

Courts have Interpreted existing law to require that workers should be com

pensated only for injuries from an unusual accident such as a slip, trip, of fall. The bills supporters say careful workers injured during the routine performance of their job cannot recover for their injuries.

Supporters of the bill, a compromise reached after years of debate between industry and labor, say it will cover most of the injuries omitted from the existing law.

Most of the bills approved Monday are lawmakers pet projects although many would affect citizens statewide. A smaller package of bills dealing with lawmakers pork-barrel projects was expected to be considered later today.

Several of the bills were approved Monday night during separate House and Senate action, but none was enacted by both houses.

Sen. Bob Warrens attempts to raise the drinking age began when the Johnston County Democrat offered an amendment to Gov. Jim Hunts anti-drunken driving bill. He introduced a separate . bill after legislative leaders said the amendment could jeopardize passage of the Safe Roads Act.

His bill would have raised the drinking age to 20 on July 1,198^ and to age 21 on July 1, 1986. Under Gov. Jim Hunts anti-drunken driving bill approved earlier this year, the legal drinking age will rise from 18 to 19 on Oct. 1.

Legislative analysts said Warrens proposal would cost the state $1.2 million in lost beer and wine taxes in

1985-86 and $2.5 million in

1986-87.

Going to 21 on beer and wine ri^t now would be a disaster, said Sen. Ben Tison, D-Mecklenburg, asking the committee to give the new law time to work. We

ma

But Warren said recent polls indicate widespread public support for raising the drinking age to 21.

Twenty North Carolinians a year would be alive if we raise the drinking age to 21, he said.

Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, said the drunken driving law was designed to get beer out of the hands of high school students. The Legislature would have to raise the drinking age to 24 or 25 to get beer away from college students, he said.

Meanwhile, the committee

rejected efforts to kill a bill creating a child abuse council and Childrens Trust Fund with money from a $5 increase in the fee for marriage licenses.

The bill, introduced by Sen. Marshall Rauch, D-Gaston, would set up an Advisory Council on Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect. The council would use money from tte trust fund to start educational and service programs to prevent child abuse and neglect.

Other bills in the package would;

- Decriminalize minor traffic offenses to allow the courts to concentrate on more serious crimes, particularly drunken driving.

- Use money from an increase in the fee for obtaining copies of drivers

records to generate money for 65 additional drivers license examiners. The extra examiners would cut down on waiting time, keep satellite offices open longer and take voter registration applications.

- Give Warren County $100,000 in 1984-85 to compensate for its ec(HX)mic de-vel(^ment problems resulting from placement of a PCB landfill there.

They have suffered differently from every other county in the state, said Rep. William Watkins, D-Granville, Expansion Budget Committee chairman. I see no reason they shouldnt profit differently from every other county.

- Implement an outpatient involuntary commitment program in which pecle who

may become dangerous to themselves and others are committed to a doctors care rather than a mental institution.

- Establish an income tax refund checkoff with mcmey to gc toward management of nongame and endangered species.    ,

- Spend $600,000 more for perinatal programs. >

- Continue to provide incentive pay for state employees for helping an agency or office to economize or be more efficient.

- Ask the Secretary of Correction to notify interested parties when a prisoner is being transferred.

^ Call for a study of awarding fiiU retirement allowances to teachers, stale employees and law en^

forcement officers after 28 years of service.

- Buy court equipment, hire additkmal court support personnel, increase jurors pay from $8 a day to $12 and hire three more magistrates.

- Spend $100,000 for screening for fetal neural tube defects.

- EstaUish a fund for compensating crime victims.

- Publish summaries of proposed constitutional amendments to help voters understand them.

- Create a 47-member Education Policy Council to study the fiscal and operational duties of the Department of Public Education.

- Require that any unspent money from the 1983414 fiscal year be used to help satisfy school and water and sewer needs in 1984-85.

1

Assail Tobacco

Play^urCaidsB&^Aiid

Price Supports Sts^AhcadOf TheGattie.

CHICAGO (AP) - Public policy which    W "

CHICAGO (AP) -Cigarette smoking is a mass tragedy say health officials and critics who are calling for the elimination of the federal governments tobacco price support programs.

The opinions were aired at a hearing here Monday presided over by U.S. Rep. Charles Rose, D-N.C., chairman of the House Agriculture subcommittee on tobacco and peanuts.

Rose, however, defended tobacco farmers from his district as about a dozen witnesses testified against the federal policy. The chairmans state is one of tte biggest beneficiaries of the price support programs.

The subcommittee currently is considering legislation to deregulate the program and eliminate its $15.9 million annual cost, about eight times as much as the government spends on educating the public on the risks of smoking.

Elizabeth Fayad, associate director of the Coalition on Smoking or Health, said the federal government allocated just $1.9 million annually to the Department of Health and Human Services in 1981 and 1982 for its campaign against smoking.

Public policy which permits the expenditure of over fives times as much money to promote the growth of tobacco than it does to educate the public about the risks of smoking cannot be justified, she said.

Chicago Alderman Martin Oberman, another witness, criticized what he called the basic schizophrenia of the price-support program.

Dr. Quentin Young, former director of medicine at Cook County Hospital here, labeled smoking a mass tragedy and faulted any federal program encouraging tobacco growth.

The support program limits tobacco production to farmers who have received allotments, or government permission, to grow the crop.

The allotment system started in 1938 to help small farmers hurt by the Great Depression, but Young charged that it has evolved into a feudal system that allows a privile^ few to command high prices by renting allotments held by certain families for years.

The hearing was sponsored by the Illinois Interagency Council on Smoking and Disease, a coalition of health and community organizations.

Claim A Potential

In Laser Weapons

WASHINGTON (AP) -Industry studies showing laser weapons could knock out enemy ballistic missiles have prompted a Penta^n proposal for an orbital de-. monstration by 1987, according to an aviation industry publication.

Aviation Week & Space Technology reported in its Monday issue that studies by Lockheed and TRW show that chemical-powered lasers could destroy Soviet ballistic missiles three times more rugged than existing models.

Research studies by the two firms indicated the technology is available to vproduce an orbiting stations that could detect missiles after they were launched and track them until the rockets could be destroyed with laser beams.

According to the magazine, known for its sources of information in the Pentagon, these industry analyses prompted a Defense Department proposal to advance by several years tests to demonstrate the fea-sibility of laser space weapons.

Aviation Week said the weapon would be tested against a liquid-fueled intercontinental ballistic missile, a solid-fueled submarine launched ballistic missile, a high-altitude bomber aircraft and an orbiting spacecraft.

Defense Department spokesmen could not be reached to comment on the report.

beams of high-energy particles to knock out enemy warheads before they reach American soil.

Fear Martin May Step Down

President Reagan proposed last March developing a high-technology defense svstem against nuclear weapons, including the possibility of using lasers and

WASHINGTON (AP) -Some colleagues of U.S. Rep. Jim Martin, R-N.C., fear the frustration of being a member of the minority party in the Democrat-controlled House may lead Martin to quit and run for governor.

But Republicans are urging the six-term veteran, to seriously consider the importance of his new House GOP leadership role before deciding, the Charlotte Observer said in a report from Washington.

Martin, 47, who [presents North Carolinas 9th Congressional District, is 36th in seniority among the 167 Republican House members.

He is a veteran member of the Ways and Means Committee and this year became head of the House Republican Research Committee, elected by his GOP colleagues.

Minority Leader Robert Michel of Illinois, the top House Rq)ublican, said he thought Martins election to the research committee post had settled Martins future for the next few years. So he was shocked when Martin said he was thinking of running for governor.

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The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, July 19,1983-9

MX Foes Grumbling Arguments Not Being Heard

By DON WATERS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -Liberal senators fighting to kill the MX missile are grumbling that advocates of the nuclear weapon are not listening to their arguments or challenging them.

As a result, the big floor debate they had planned on the nuclear weapon has turned into a week-long, sporadic series of unanswered speeches on the alleged dangers of placing the missiles in underground silos vulnerable to Soviet attack.

Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan.

Remains On Probation

BRYSON CITY, N.C. (AP) - The chairman of the Jackson County Democratic Party remained on probation Monday after he paid back taxes, fines and court costs stemming from federal tax--evasion charges.

U.S. District Judge Woodrow Jones decided not to revoke Paul E. Cowan Jr.s probation during a hearing Monday, despite testimony that Cowan had not complied with the terms of his probation.

Jones found Cowan guilty July 28, 1981, on four counts of falling to include gross income from real estate sales on his income tax returns. Cowan had pleaded no contest. He was given a suspended prison term, put on probation for five years and ordered to pay back taxes plus a $10,000 fine.

During Monday^s hearing. Western District probation officer Wayne Carson said Cowan had paid off his debts to the government too slowly.

Cowan was given a suspended prison sentence and placed on probation for five years.

Jones told Cowan Monday that he had reviewed the case file and found Cowan had not complied with the terms of the courts order. Jones said he could revoke Cowans probation and send him to prison.

You have showed total disregard to the court, and if you had been unable to pay you should have come back to the court," Jones told Cowan. Jones then said that Cowan could remain on probation.

Running For Labor Post

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Don Wiseman, former administrator of the N.C. Department of Labors OSHA division, says he will run for state Labor Commissioner in 1984.

Wiseman said in a news conference Monday he had been encouraged to seek the office by industry and government observers he met while in charge of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration program.

Wiseman, a Democrat, said he would propose a six-point plan to help the states workers and businesses.

The plan includes reducing unemployment, developing better apprenticeship programs, improving existing safety pro^'ams, encouraging college students to enter the safety profession, making labor advisory boards genuine and meaningful, and emphasizing employment of the handicapped.

North Carolina needs a commissioner who is genuinely concerned for our working population, said Wiseman.

Incumbent commissioner John Brooks has not announced formally his 1984 intentions. But labor department spokesman Ginny Lawler said he told employees last week he planned to seek re-election.

BAR CYCLISTS NEW DELHI, India (AP) - The Punjab state government has banned motorcycle riding in an effort to curb escplating violence by extremist Siks, who have used motorcycles to make getaways following attacks.

D-N.Y., one of about 15 senators in an anti-MX coalition headed by Sen. Ga^ Hart, D-Colo., complained to a nearly deserted chamber Monday that little attention has been paid to our discussion, even though members of the group consider the MX the most fateful decision they have faced in public life.

The reason may be that there has been no response by the other side, Moynihan said, referring to the advocates at another point as the silent majority.

A Republican aide pointed to remarks by Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and others that the basing question had been fully aired before the Senate voted, 59-39, in May to release funds for flight-testing the missile and thus further lengthy exchanges were not needed.

Advocates have stressed that the 10-warhead missile is needed both to modernize the land-based leg of the U.S. strategic arsenal and as a bargaining point for arms-

reduction talks with the Soviets.

Rejecting those arguments Monday, Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield of Oregon, the only Republican in Harts group, referred to the MX as a monument to madness in a strongly worded speech that marked his debate debut.

... It is nothing less than insane to deploy a weapon which is useless unless we desire the capability for a first strike or intend to adopt a hair-trigger launch on warning policy, he

asserted.

Although they have taken the floor to speak against the MX, members of the Hart group have yet to call up any of the 10 amendments they have prepared for the $200 billion defense authorization bill that has provided the vehicle for the one-sided debate.

While Republican leaders expect the MX to survive in the Senate, the situation was consider to be extremely close in the House. That chamber is tentatively scheduled on Wednesday to

take up a measure that would strip $2.4 billion in MX production money from its own version of the defense bill.

Adding to the uncertainty was a statement by House Majority Leader Jim Wright, D-Texas, that he has not yet decided whether to shift a previous pro-MX vote cast when the House cleared the test-flight funds, 245-176.

But sources said privately that Wright almost certainly will vote against the MX.

While the MX has been the dominant subject of the

Senates defense bill, the chamber has dealt with four dozen amendments on other matters in seven days.

In a 91-0 vote Monday, senators accepted a measure by Sen. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass., to bar the testing of explosive or inert antisatellite weapons in space unless the president certifies that he is trying to negotiate a ban on such technology with the Soviet Union.

They also refused to kill, 50-42, an amendment by Sen. Robert Stafford, R-Vt., that would have the schools run

for U.S. military dependents in 20 foreign countries switched from control by the Defense Department to the Education Department in May 1986 - two years later than now planned.

The A*rmed Services Committee had included in the bill a permanent ban on the change in control, and chairman Tower sought unsuccessfully to have Staffords measure tabled, or killed.

Final resolution of the matter was postponed until today.

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Ifr-Tbe I^y Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.-Tuesday, July 19,1913

Stock And Market Reports

/

Service Of Private And Public Figures Honored

Obituary Column

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market turned hig^r today, interrupting a slide, with broad gains among chemical, financial and technology issues.

Eight stocks rose in price for every five that fell in the midday tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, down 2.41 points Monday and off 58.40 points since peaking June 16, was up 7.02 points at 1,196.92 at noon.

Stock prices have been falling amid concern that a Federal Reserve Board shift to a more restrictive monetary policy would propel interest rates even higher, slowing the economic recovery. Short-and longterm interest rates already have climbed more than a percentage point since early May.

But today, Treasury Secretary Donald Regan told the Joint Economic Committee of Congress that he expected the Feds policy to lead to lower interest rates and sustained, non-inflationary economic growth.

The NYSEs composite index rose .46 to 95.42. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 1.40 at 240.52.

Big Board volume reached 32.67 million shares a third of the way through the session compared with 29.74 million in the same period Monday.

McDermott International topped the active list on the NYSE, down /a at 22% in trading that included a block of 509,600 shares changing hands at 22V4 a share.

Among technology issues, Data General rose 2% to 63%, International Business Machines gained 1 to 120% and Digital Equipment was up 1% at 114%. Sperry, which reported higher earnings, gained 1% to 40%.

NEW YORK

(API -Midday stocks:

Low

Last

AMR Corp

32*

33

AbbtUbs

474

474

Allis Chaim

16

144

144

Alcoa

374

37

37

Am Baker

164

164

164

AmBraixls

51

504

504

Amer Can

404

404

404

Am Cyan

484

484

484

AmFamil^

21

21

21

Am Motors

94

84

9

AmStand

324

324

324

Amer TAT

624

63

62

Beat Food

274

364

X4

Beth Steel

214

114

114

Boeing

444

434

434

Boise Cased

40

40

40

Borden

584

584

584

Burlngt Ind

CSXCoij)

CaroPwLt

374

374

374

69

214

684

314

684

214

Celanese

654

654

654

Cent Sop Champ int Chrysler

15

144

144

234

314

334

304

234

304

CocaCola

484

48

484

Colg Palm

224

214

214

Comw Edis

254

254

254

ConAgra

294

29

294

Conti Group

44

434

434

DeltaAirl

384

37

374

DowChem

334

324

334

duPont

474

464

47

Duke Pow

234

234

234

EastnAirL

94

9

94

East Kodak

704

694

70

Eatoni^

424

424

424

Esmark s

754

754

754

Exxon

344

344

344

Firestone

184

174

ITi*

FlaPowU

364

364

384

FlaProgress

184

184

184

FordMot

574

57

574

For McKess

484

484

484

Fuqua s GTE Corp

324

434

32

434

32

434

GnDynam GenlElect s

514

514

514

504

514

504

Gen Food

454

454

454

Gen MUls

524

524

524

Gen Motors

734

724

73

Gen Tire

31

304

31

GenuParts

464

464

464

GaPacif

> 264

254

264

Goodrich

364

364

364

Goodyear

294

294

294

Grace Co

444

444

444

GtNor Nek

474

474

474

Greyhound Gulf Oil

254

25

254

384

384

384

Herculeslnc

364

364

364

Honeywell HospfCp s

1154

544

114

534

1154

54

Ing Rand IBM

544

544

544

1204

1204

1204

Intl Harv

84

84

84

Int Paper

514

514

514

Int Rectif

414

404

41

Int TAT

444

444

444

K mart

324

314

324

KaisrAlum

18,

184

164

Kane Mill

154

154

154

KanebSvc

194

194

194

KrogerCo

404

404

404

TUESDAY

7:00    p.m.    -    Family    Support

Group at Family Practice Center 7:00    p.m.    -    Post No. 39 o

American Legion meets at Post Home

7:30 p.m. - Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:30    p.m.        Vernon    Howard

Success Without Stress study group at 1 ION. Warren St 7:30 p.m. - Toughlove parents support group    at St.    Pauls

Episcopal Church 7:30 p.m. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a.m. - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 1:30 p.m. - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m. - REAL Crisis Intervention meets 6:30 p.m. - KiwanisClub meets 7:30 p.m. - Wintervill Jaycees meetat JayceeHut 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville hwy.

8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville hwy.

Lockoeea

Loews Corp

Masonite n

McDrmlnt n

Mead Corp

MinnMM

MobU

Monsanto

NCNBCi

NabiscoBrd

Nat DistUI

NorflkSou

OlinCp

Owensill

Pennev JC

PepsiCo

Phelps Dod

PhUipMorr

PhUlpsPet

Poiaroid

ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

RCA

RaistnPur RepubAir Republic SU Revlon Reynldind Rockwl s StRegisCp Scott Paper SeaidPwr s SearsRoeb Sbaklee s Skyiine Cp Sony Corp Southern Co

isa'

StdOUlnd StdOUOb Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s WestPtPep Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Xerox Cp

145'.4

44    Vi

22 V4

83<i

8SV4

27

SVi,

tV;

55-\

Vi

36 5*'i 34 V,

a'%

3SV),

274

52,

45 28V4 2IV1.

6

21Vt.

34

51

30V,

294

24

25 404 294, 25\ 14 16

40V,

38V4

sov,

514

22V,

754

35Vi.

59V,

164

714

sn,

134

244

344

404

434

484

454

364

574

354

464

Following are selected 11 market quoUtions Ashland

Carolina Power A Ught

Collins A Aikman

Conner

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Halteras

HUton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowes

McDonalds

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizzainn

PAG

TRW, Inc

United Tel.

Dominion Resources Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER Aviatk

Branch UtUeMint Planters Bank

112 112-^ 1454 1454 444 444 224    224

304    30,

834 834 30V,    30,

864 864 264    26,

384    384

284    284

554    554

30V,    304

36    36

584    584

344    344

27,    284

584    584

354    354

274 274 524    524

444    444

284    284

214    214

54    54

214    214

334    34

504    504

304    304

294 294 234    24

25    25

404    404

294    294

254 254 134    134

154    154

304    404

38    38    4

SO 50 514 514 224 224 754 754 354    354

59    594

16 16 714    714

664 674 134    134

24    24    4

34    34    4

404 404 424 434 484    484

454 454 36    36

574 574 354 354 454    46

a m stock

414

504

214

404

274

234

424

28

344

344

154

54

354

324

274

644

37

384

154

524

744

224

214

404

28-284

23-234

4-14

194-20

WASHINGTON (AP) -The founder of Mothers Against Drunk Drivers (MADD) and a man who was instrumental in building the Washington memorial to Vietnam veterans are among nine people being honored today for their service to the countiy and to their communities.

The men and women are recipients of the llth annual Jefferson Awards, given by the American Institute for Public Service, which was founded in 1973 to honor achievements in the field of public service.

This years winners, being honored at a ceremony scheduled for at the Supreme Court, include people who have worked with youngsters, with the elderly and with the poor.

The recipients are;

-Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker, cited for service by an elected or appointed official.

for his "courage and ... leadership in guiding the countrys mone^ policy in difficult economic times.

-Actor Kirk Douglas, honored for the greatest public service performed by a private citizen, for his continuing efforts to share the meaning of American freedom with other nations and his concern for refugees.

-Actress Helen Hayes, cited for service benefiting the disadvantage^, for her "countless activities as a humanitarian and as an advocate for senior citizens.

-Jan C. Scruggs, honored in the category of the greatest public service performed by an individual 35 or under, for his individual leadership and integral role in the building of the Vietnam veterans memorial.

-Dean Cri^ of Asheville, N.C.; Darlene Handley of Chicago, Dr. Robert Kustra of Franklin, Wis.; Candy

Permit Ordered For Book Store

Nab Cocaine At Airport

MEXICO CITY (AP) -Police at Mexico Citys international airport arrested a French citizen whose two suitcases hid false bottoms packed with nearly nine kilograms of cocaine, the attorney generals office says.

The statemrat said police at the airport Monday afternoon became ^icious of the Frenchman, identified as Elie Louis Bihm, 53, when they noticed him acting nervously while passing throu^ the luggage claim area.

"On inspecting his luggage, it was found that hte two suitcases had a double bottom hiding 40 compact polyethylene packages with the drug, the statement said.

It said the cocaine was uncut and wei^ied 8.7 kilograms, the largest quantity of cocaine found on a drug trafficker in Mexico this year.

Training Camps

BANGKOK, TbaUand (AP) -About 20 canq have been set up in nei^ boring Laos to train Thai insunents bekmging to a pro-Soviet movement, Thai military officers said today.

Of&xrs of the Internal Securitv Operations Command, Ihiiilands top anti-OKnmunist unit, said there have been persistent reports recently of Thai pfttnmunlidg sl^blg into Laos from nortbeastem ' Thailand for training.

Thailands communist insurgents have suffered losses in recent years through mass defections and battlefidd defeats.

MASONIC NOTICE There will be a regular stated communication at WUliam Pitt Lodge No. 734 Wednesayat7;30p.m.

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) - A federal judge has ruled that the city of Paterson cannot deny a certificate f occupancy to an adult book shop, saying there is a con-tradition between a public that permits movies about murders but protests depictions of sex.

"If a merchant announced his intention to (^n a store dedicated to murder mysteries, no matter how violent or bloody, nary a picket or protester would appear, U.S. District Judge H. Lee Sarokin wrote in the opinion Monday.

"But should one announce that sex is to be the main theme, thoi organized opposition is inevitable.

The city had sought to deny the store a certificate of occupancy on Uie grounds

School Bd.

(Continued from Pagel) ondary Level. The preliminary plan outlines a number of actions needed to be accomplished - such as defining what courses now offered are appropriate for gifted students; what opportunities are available in the community for students to take advanced courses, receive advanced credit, and explore new interests; and determining what help is available to students in making eariy career choices.

Four curriculum committees have been established to look into these po^ibilities. The four are: English, social studies, science and math. Counseling will also play an important role in the development of this program.

Grouping - Aycock Junior Hi^ Principad Kay Whitehurt submitted a report on the grouping policy at that school for the coming school , year, particulary at the ei^th^ade.

Mrs. Whitehurst said aU students are ranked for English, history and science, higb to low, according to their CAT total reading scores. As part of the placement level of a student within the two standard deviations eateries, percentile ratings, high to low, have been established as one of the several guideline factors to be considered. The percentile factor as related to the level placement are\ Level 1, between the 84th and 99th percentile; Level 2, between the 50th and 83rd percentile; Level 3, between the 16th and 49th percentile, and Level 4, between the 1st and 15th percentile.

Mrs. Whitehurst said consideration has also been

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that It lacked off-street parking.

Restrictive zoning ordinances cannot be used to bar a store that has not been determined to be illegal, Sarokin said. He noted that of the 22 businesses on Main Street that received occupancy permits, only five had some off-street parking.

Dhe citys actions, he said, were "clearly a prior restraint of free speech, no matter how it may be disguised.

Its a clear First Amendment victory, said Kenneth H. Ginsberg, the attorney for E-Bru Inc., which rented the storefront in January.

Ginsberg, who said Donald Behler, the stores owner, would open shop within two weeks, claimed the city used subterfuge..

given to the grades (A,B,C, etc.) achieved by each student during the 1982-83 sdiool year; and that teachers fec-ommendation had been part of the grouping evaluation process.

In action items on the agenda, school board members approved June 13,1984, as an additional employment day in order to round mt the days required for an exact 10-month employment calendar; and approved a change in the annual holiday schedule of 12-month employees to make April 24 a holiday in lieu of Memorial Day.

Also approved was a first reading of the personnel pcri-icy for the school system; the resignation of one teacher, the election of several teachers and a request for a student transfer.

Agenda items to be considered for the July 25 meeting of the board will include a pit^wsal to make the 85 instructional fee a{^licable to the K-6 grade levels, with the $7.50 fee applicable to grades 7-12. Previously, the division line has been K-7 and 8-12.

Lightner of Fair Oaks, Calif.; and Tony Messineo of St. Louis, Mo., cited for )ublic service benefiting ocal communities.

The winners in the first four categories receive gold and silver medallions and $5,000 each; those honored for service to local communities will receive medallions and $1,000 each.

Criq?, a five-year veteran of the Asheville Police Department, was honored for the volunteer work he has done with young people, including his efforts to develop a summer camp program that invidves 500 disadvantaged youngsters. He also works to teach children from kindergarten to high school about the dangers of drug abuse.

Ms. Handley is the founder of Anchor No. 1, a community center in an area that was known for its crime and lack of programs to help the needy. She and 30 volunteers, many of \^m are handi-C2q>ped, (^rate the coiter which began as a result of Ms. Handleys desire to help her brother, a paraplegic. The center has organized a tutorial program and softball team in the neighborhood and provides visits and other services to hospital patients and shut-ins.

Kustra was honored for providing dental services to the disadvantaged in Milwaukee through the Guadalupe Medical-Dental Clinic for Children. He established the clinic as a one-man (^ration in 1965 and has expanded it to include 18 dentists who see 200 patients a month - most of whom do not qualify for medical assistance programs.

Ms. Lightner was cited for her campai^ to toughen drunken driving laws - a campaign that began after the death of her daughter in 1980. She founded MADD, an organization of victims and concerned citizens, and lobbied for stronger laws and tougher penalties. According to the American Institute for Public Service, drunken driving laws in 26 states have been tightened as a result of MADDsefforts.

Messineo, the kitchen and dietary manager of St. Johns Mercy Medical Onter in St. Louis, was txmored for his volunteer work with the homeless on St. Louis Skid Row. Messineo and his friends provide clothes and food and Messineo time with the people alo^ the riverfront, talking with them and listening to their problems.

The winners of the awards were chosen by the 81-member Board of Selectors of the institute from nominees sent in from across the coun^. The nominations in the first four categories came from the general

iiublic; the people honored or service to local communities were honored by newspapers and television stations who participate in the institutes awar^ program.

Edwards

Mrs. Peariie Mae Wilson Edwards, 56, of Greenville died in January. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 5 p.m. at St. Matthews Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. Jasper Tyson. Burial will fdlow in Brown Hill Conetwy.

Ms. Edwards was born and reared in Martin County, but had resided in Pitt Ckiunty for the past 20 years, where she was an employee at Pitt County Memorial Hospital for nine years. She was a

BLIND TRUST -Central Intelligence Agency Director William J. Casey agreed Monday night to put his extensive stock p(Mtf(dio into a Mind trust. Casey has been criticized for trading millions of dollars in stock while seeing the governments most secret economic data. (AP Laserpboto)

Hydroelectric Power Studied

BOONE, N.C. (AP) -Researchers say small hydroelectric generaUfig turbines placed along North Carolinas streams and rivers ciHild provide iq) to 3 percent of the states energy needs.

The state already has nearly 250 small dams (m its rivers, but less than 20 percent are producing power, said Harvard Ayers, a hydroelectric expert at ^ palachian State University.

River power attracted textile manufacturers around the turn of the coitury, but most mill dams were closed at mid-century as other abundant cheap energy sources were found.

But the rising cost of fossil fuels and a federal energy policy aiding developers of renewable ener^ resources has made the mills practical again today, Ayers said.

He said 1,600 mountain stream sites could generate power with comparatively cheap, almost no-dam technology.

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Surviving are three daughters, Doris J. Oryema of the home, Marilyn L. Bullock of the home and Gloria J. Cox of Wintervflle; four scms, James E. Phillips of Greenville, Michael T. Moore of Greenville, Cleveland L. Bullock of Madrid, Spain, and Hairy E. Bullock of Washington, D.C.; her father, Elijah Wilson of Robersonville; three brothers, William J. Wilson of Rocky Mount, Garland Wilson of Robersonville and Pete Wilson Jr. of New Yoit; three sisters, Carrie L. Cox of Winterville, Fannie Wilson of Greenville and Connie Wilson of New York; a stqibrother, Dorsey Wilson of Greenville, and 14 graii-children.

The family will receive friends tonight at the home, 622 Albemarle Ave., Apt. B, Greenville. Funeral ar-rangemetns are being made by Hardees Funeral Home of Greenville.

EUeoberg

BURLINGTON - Mrs. Lois Whitley EUenberg, 72, of 2705 Catherine Drive, Burlington, died Monday in Alamance County Hospital. The funeral service wUl be conducted at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the First Pentecostal Holiness Church by Dr. James A. Gardner and Dr. Kenneth Benson officiating. Burial will be in Pine Hill Cemetery in Burlington.

A retired teacher, Mrs. EUenberg was a native of Pitt County and was a graduate in elementary education at East Candina University. She taught in the Burlington, Durham and Mecklenberg county schools before retiring in 1977.

She was a member of the First Pentecostal Holiness (Uiurch and the Ladies Auxiliary.

She is survived by three sons, D. Vinson EUeberg of Burlinghm, WUliam R. (Bob) EUoiberg of Sarasota, Fla., and John D. EUenberg of GreenvUle, S.C.; a dau^ter, Mrs. Jean Bynum of High Point; two sisters, Mrs. Elise Nicholson of Bethel and Mrs. Dorothy English of Ashtabala, Ohio; four brothers, Z.E. WhiUey of Greensboro, Alton S. WhiUey of Vanceboro, Alva L. WhiUey of Bethel and Robert B. WhiUey of Belhaven, and twograndchUdren.

The famUy wUl receive friends at Lowe Funeral Home, 2000 S. Church St., Burlington, from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight. The body wiU be taken to the church one hour prior to the funeral service.

Memorials may be made to the CoUege of the Bible, GreenvUle, S.C.

Flonlng

Mrs. Mary Fleming died Monday evening at Uie home of her dau^ter, Ms. CynUiia Fleming, in Denver, Colo. She was the wife of Christopher Fleming of the home in GreenvUle. Funeral

arrangements wUl be m-nounced later by PhiUips Brothers Mortuary.

Hardy

GRtfTON - Mr. Theodore Roosevelt Hardy of Route 3, Grifton, died this morning in Lenoir Memorial Hospital. He was Uie husband of Mrs. Maggie Hardy. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Flanagan Funeral Home.

McLawhorn

WINTERVILLE - Mr. Sam W. McLawhorn, 58, died Monday at his home, 426 Church St. His' funeral service wUl be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Home Cliapel by Uie Rev. Willis WUson. Burial wUl be in the WintervUle Cemetery.

Mr. McLawhorn was a native and life-long resident of WintervUle who had been associated, untU his retirement in 1982, wiUi Uie E.I. Du Pont Co. of Kinston for 30 years. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and was a member of Reedy Branch Free WUl Baptist Church.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Maggie B. McLawhorn; two daughters, Mrs. Trudy Hodges and Mrs. Pam Brock, both of WintervUle; his mother, Mrs. Lillie McLawhorn of WintervUle; a brother, Reid McLawhorn of WrightsvUle Beach; two sisters, Mrs. Helen Lawrence of WintervUle and Mrs. Ruby Wingate of Ayden, and Uiree grandchUdren.

The famUy wUl receive friends at Uie funeral home tonight from 7 to9 p.m.

Mooring

WILLIAMSTON - Mr. Clarence Mooring died Tuesday in Albemarle VUla Nursing Home. He was the brother of Mrs. Maletha Moore of Baltimore. Funeral arrangements wUI be announced by PhUlps BroUiers Mortuary in GreenvUle.

Suggs

The memorial service for Mr. Roland Suggs wUl be held Wednesday at 7;30 p.m. at Shady Grove Free WUl Baptist Church near Snow HUl, instead of Thursday morning as was previously announced by Flanagan Funeral Home, GreenvUle. Burial wUl be held 'Thursday at 11 a.m. in the St. James MeUiodist Church Cemetery in Snow HUl.

Whitfield

SNOW HILL - Mr. Michael Whitfield of Snow HUl died Tuesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. He was Uie son of Mrs. Jessie Whitfield.

Funeral arrangements wUl be announced by Flanagan Funeral Home.

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 19,1983Astros Rip Carlton, Ruin Owens' Debut

By Tbe Associated Press

The Houston Astros apparently forgot that theyre supposed to swoon when Steve Carlton pitches.

Carlton owned a 31-11 lifetime record against the Astros before they jumped on him Monday ni^t.

Houston bashed Carlton, 9-11, for nine solid hits in three 2-3 innings, and went on to collect 17 hits in an 8-2 triumph over Philadelphia, dampening Paul Owens return as the Phillies manager.

In the only other National League game, Atlanta topped New York 7-4.

I cant remember getting nine hits off CariUm, said the Astros Ray Kni^t, \1m) went 3-for-5 to tie George Hendrick of the St. Louis Cardinals for the National League batting lead with a.342 average.

Carlton did strike out five to go four ahead of Houstons Nolan Ryan in their continuing battle for the major league all-time strikedut lead. Cariton now has 3,587 career strikeouts.

But the Astros were as hot as Philadelphias 90-degree-plus weather.

Weve been getting the hits when they count, said Manager Bob Lillis. Everybody is just working a lot harder, plus everything is jelling for us.

Things arent so jelled in Philadelphia, where Owens replaced Pat Corrales, who was fired earlier in the day.

n 1972, Owens took over the Phillies on an interim basis when he replaced Frank Lucchesi, guiding them to a 33-47 season.

Four Astros drove in two runs each Knight, Jose Cruz, Bill Doran and Terry Puhl. Joe Niekro, 38, pitched a seven-hitter for his ei^ith victory against seven losses, and his fifth complete game. It also was Niekros fifth straight victory.

"Joes been pitching great for us, said Lillis. His record is no indication of how hes pitched.

Owens remark that Carlton hung a few pitches was one of the understatements of the night. The Astros treated the four-time Cy Young Award winner like a batting-practice pitcher.

They took a 1-0 lead in the second on consecutive singles by Phil Gamer, Cruz and Knight.

Houston made it 80 in the third after Thon singled with two outs. Gamer doubled and Cruz singled across two runs.

The Astros boosted their lead to 80 in the fourth. Doran walked, George Bjorkman doubled and both scored on Puhls two-out sin^e.

The Phillies managed a run off Niekro in the fourth as Mike Schmidt walked, V<m Hayes beat out an infield single, both runners advanced on a wild pitch and Schmidt scored on an infield out.

The Astros got three more runs in the eighth. Tony Scott singled and Puhl sacrificed him to second. Thon was intentionally walked and a wild pitch advanced the runners to second and third.

Cruz then was intentionally walked, loading the bases. Knight beat out an infield single to knock in one run, and Doran singled across the other two.

The Phillies picked up a run in the ninth on a single by Bo

Diaz, Joe Lefebvres double and an infield out.

Braves7, Mets4

Atlanta overcame an early 4-0 deficit to defeat visiting New York.

Jerry Roysters two-run triple keyed a four-run fifth inning that gave the Braves a 6-4 lead, and Royster later doubled in an eighth-inning run.

Rick Camp, 7-7, took over for starter Craig McMurtry in the second inning and got the victory with three 1-3 innings of relief.

The Mets took the lead as George Foster singled home a run in the first inning. Then, after a 52-minute rain delay. New York added three more runs in the second on Mookie Wilsons two-run single and another RBI single by Foster.

Tom Gorman, 0-3, took the loss.

Snow Hill Captures Area I Eastern Title

SNOW HILL - Snow HiU erupted with a 14-hit attack to defeat Rocky Mount 11-6 in the rubber game of the Area I Eastern Finals of the American Legion state baseball tournament.

Snow Hill now advances to meet Gamer in a five-game series beginning Friday. Games played Friday and Saturday will be in Gamer, followed by a Sunday game in Snow Hill. If necessary, Monday and Tuesday games will be played in Snow Hill.

Winning pitcher Richie Chase, 8-0, went six innings before needing relief by Bobby Carraway. Mike Sullivan came on in the eighth to complete the game.

Anthony Russo and Tommy Goff each had three hits in five trips to the plate for Snow Hill, while Mike Sullivan went 2-5.

Neil Avent Billy Godwin, Marshall White and Eddie Naylor divided the eight Rocky Mount hits evenly.

Rocky Mount took a 1-0 lead into the fifth inning, but Snow Hill plated four runs in the bottom half of the frame to take command of the game. After one out, Tommy Goff and Wade Corbett singled and

Nat Norris drew a walk to load the bases.

Steve Sides lofted a sacrifice fly which was dropped in ri^t field allowing Goff and Corbett to score. Russo doubled in Norris and Jeff Ginn singled to drive in Sides.

Rocky Mount managed a run in the top of the sixth to trim the margin to 4-2, but Snow Hill again put four runs on the board in the bottom half of the inning.

Mike Sullivan singled and Bobby Carraway followed with a base on balls. Goff singled to plate Sullivan, and Corbett reached first on a fielders choice. Norris walked and scored behind Corbett on a triple by Sides.

When Rocky Mount attempted an appeal at second on Norris, Sides raced home for an 8-2 Snow Hill advantage.

Both teams put three runs on the board in the seventh, but Eddie Naylor rippl a leadoff homer in the ei^th to put the game further out of reach.

Rocky ML.000 101 1-6 8 3 Snow Hill . 000 OM 32x-ll 14 4 BuUer, Avent (7), Ckidwin (8) and White; Chase, Carraway (7), Sullivan (8) and Frederick.

Kaline, Robinson Power AL In Old Timers Classic

WASHINGTON (AP) - A1 Kaline and Brooks Robinson were home run hitters for one more evening and Johnny Sain nailed down one more victory, but the crowd wanted one more look at Willie Mays.

As the National League batted in the fifth and final inning Monday night, the crowd began a rtiythmic chant of We want Willie, pleading for a look at the Hall of Famer. #

But Mays, who received the largest ovation in the pre-game introductions, apparently left the ball park early in the game when he learned he would not start.

Tal Smith, chairman of the event, said he told Mays he would be the first substitution but that when the time came for the first changes the former New York and San Francisco centerfielder had left.

The National League won 5-3, but the outcome hardly mattered to 31,160 fans who came to see baseball history come alive in the second annual Cracker Jack Old Timers Baseball Classic.

Bob Feller, who led the majors in walks four times between 1938 and 1946, got wild once again. He issued four free passes in the first two innings, including one to Ron Santo with the bases loaded.

Kaline, who hit 399 home runs in 21 seasons for the Detroit Tigers, took Warren Spahn deep to left-center for an unofficial No.400 in the first inning.

It was a fastball inside. I hit it pretty good, Kaline said.

Spahn, who gave up a round-tripper to

75-year-old Luke Applmg last year here, was philosophical about Kalines blast. One homer a year seems to be my standard, said the games all-time winning lefthander with 363 victories.

Robinsons homer, a fly ball down the left field line, tied the game at 2-2 in the top of the fourth.

It would have been a home run in Baltimore, said the former Oriole third baseman who is being inducted into the Hall of Fame next month.

I knew it would be gone if it stayed fair, he said.

Carl Erskine, who toiled for the old Brooklyn Dodgers, was the victim of Robinsons home run. It was my best gravity drop. I was just trying to throw him a strike. It would have been a dull game without me.

Former Washington Senator first baseman Mickey Vernon, a two-time American League batting champion, booted a Dee Fondy grounder in the bottom fourth allowing two runs to score and giving the National League its winning margin.

Last year. Mays was ordered to sever his ties with Major League Baseball by commissioner Bowie Kuhn because of his involvement in an Atlantic City casino.

At games end, the players filed off the field to one last standing ovation.

Ill come back here as long as I can, said Hank Aaron, the games all-time home run champion. How many times do you get into the same room with so many Hall of Famers.

Coaches Want Tougher Academic Standards

Division Lead Not

t

Enouah For Phillies

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Nobody could blame Pat Corrales for shaking his head in disbelief.

Corrales was fired as manager of the Philadelphia Phillies Monday even thou^ the team was in first place in the National League East.

He discovered that being first wasnt enough.

His bosses decided he wasnt far enough ahead, and claimed he lacked the ability to communicate with his players or motivate them to greater heights.

Bill Giles, the teams president, insists declining attendance had nothing to do with the decision. But the inference is plain.

If the Phillies, with one of the highest payrolls in the leame, were well ahead in the division, fan interest probably would be higher.

Press box veterans said they couldnt recall a manager being given the gate in mid-season with his team in first place.

Yogi Berra was dismissed after leading the New York Yankees to an American Leac

World Series.

Billy Martin lost his job at

Minnesota following an AL Division title. He lost in the playoffs.

And Johnny Keane quit as skipper of the St. Louis Cardinals and took the Yankees job after guiding the Cards to an NL pennant.

But Corrales iqipears to be a first - canned in July because his team wasnt far enough ahead.

old Timers Classic

Former Atlanta Braves outfielder Hank Aaron (above) shows he still has the form which carried him to the top of the all-time home run list, while Cy Young Award winner Early Wynn gets a kiss and hug from an attractive fan Monday in the Second-Annual Cracker Jack Old Timers Baseball Game in Washington, D.C. (AP Laserphotos)

ByThe Associated Press Some North Carolina education officials, who say the current prep rules are too weak, are calling for more stringent academic requirements for high school athletes.

We would be very much in favor of tightening up the academic programs, said Gene Hooks, Wake Forests athletic director. Based on some of the athletes we see, 1 think youd be doing a whole lot of them a service to make them as academically responsible as they can be. Athletes can fail as many as half their classes under current academic standards set by the State Board of Education with the concurrence of the N.C. High School Athletics Association.

The current rule, in effect since 1953, requires athletes to

Justice White Satisfies NCAA

pass each term three or more courses - with one English, mathematics, social studies, natural sciences or a foreign language.

In that case, a student could take six courses, pass only half and participate in sports. A passing grade in the academic course and Ds in all others would fulfill the requirement.

Clarence Bighouse Gaines, mens basketball coach and athletic director at Winston-Salem State University, prefers a C-average requirement that his athletes must maintain in at least three courses.

I think the C average statewide would be sound, Gaines said. And I think they should demand that they take certain academic subjects. I think a kid only does what he has to do. If you tighten them up, theyll get Cs.

The Durham School Board adopted regulations three

weeks ago which di^ualify athletes from sports if they fail more than one course. The rule was adopted partly in response to the new National Collegiate Athletic Association rules adopted in January, according to a spokesman for the Durham schools.

Under the NCAA rules, athletes must keep a C average in a mandatory core curriculum of basic courses like English, math and science. Prospective collegiate athletes also must score a combined 700 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test or a 15 on the American College Testing entrance exam.

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Todays Spots Baseball State Prep Tournament at Wilmington sute Babe Ruth Tournament at Bayboro

SoftbaU City League Post-season Tournament Wednesdays SporU Softball City League Post-season Tournament Industrial League Post-season Tournament

By'ie Associated Press

The NCAA scored a temporary victory in the Supreme Court in its battle to retain the rights for televising college football. But that triumph could be short-lived.

Justice Byron R. White, a one-time All-American running back at Colorado, issued a temporary order made public Monday that keqis in place the NCAAs $281-mUUon contract with ABC, CBS and the Turner Broadcasting System. The NCAA is seeking a permanent stay of lower court rulings throwing out those contracts and allowing individual schools to negotiate with television outlets on their own.

The universities of Georgia and Oklahoma challenged the NCAAs hold on those ri^its. The schools have won several lower court decisions.

Last years ruling by U.S. District Court Judge Juan C. Burciaga threw out the NCAAs television plan as a violation of ttie Sherman Antitrust Act. The ruling held that colleges and universities should be free to make their own television deals, as Georgia and Oklahoma

claimed.

That ruling was upheld last month by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, putting in jeopardy the three networks college football schedules for this fall, which were drawn up under the contract with the NCAA.

White, when he issued the order Saturay, gave the universities until this evening to respond to his decision, indicating a further decision will come sometime after that. He also asked the federal ^v-emment for its opinion.

If White finally agrees with that position and makes Mondays order permanent, this years schedules would remain intact. But if he declines to issue a stay of the lower court order, it would leave several possiblities, none of them very different from the current NCAA contract. They would include:

A contingency plan put forth by the College Football Association, a consortium of 60 major football powers that includes both Georgia and Oklahoma. Schools in the Big 10 and Pac-10, however, are not members of the CFA. It is similar to the NCAA plan, but

allows more exposures and allows individual teams to make their own deals to show games after 7 p.m. on Satur-

A coalition between the Pac-10 and Big 10 and individual CFA members. There have been discussions between those conferences and a number of CFA schools, including Notre Dame, which is a premier television attraction.

A situation similar to the one for college basketball, under which schools or conferences can negotiate separately with networks or individual stations, or with cable networks such as ESPN or USA. 'The Atlantic Coast Conference, for example, has already drawn up a contingency plan with Raycom-Jefferson, which syndicates ACC basketball games. It would be used in conjunction with thq CFA plan, and package games for sales to ACC-area stations for showing after 7 p.m.

What it (Whites action) does is put us on hold again, said Mike Treps, Oklahomas sports information director. We cannot go out now and look for bids or take bids on

television. And it puts all the other schools in the same situation. Were on hold just like we were before.

Well have to wait and see how temporary this order is, whether it will carry over into the season or whether it will be dissolved before the season begins.

There was no immediate comment at Georgia.

The 10-member NCAA television committee, which is meeting in Gleneden Beach, Ore., expects to here presentations from CBS, NBC and TBS this week.

The vast majority of opinion in Division 1-A has b^n to try to hold things the way there are for at least a year,

said Wiles Hallock, a member of the committee. Very few schools - you can count them on one hand - arent sorry this whole lawsuit took place. Everyone realizes it would be difficult to generate the revenue that was in the NCAA package if everyone goes his own way.

The television networks had no comment pending further developments.

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Toronto Keeps Rolling With 8-2 Win

By The Associated Press Its high time in Toronto.

A team that hasnt had much success since coming into the major leagues in 1977, the Blue Jays are putting everything together this season in what has been cheerfully termed Bobby Ball in deference to Mana^r Bobby Cox.

I dont really like it when people call it Bobby Ball because Im not the one playing, said Cox, whose club improved

its record to 52-fi with an 8-2 vicU^ Monday ni^t over the Kansas City Royals.

Its their brand of baseball, Im not really doing anything, he added. MThen you play that good, theres really not much a manager has to do.

The elements that have carried Toronto to the top of the American League East and held it there - solid pitching, clutch hitting, power hitting and

outstanding defense - were all in evidence against the Royals. Righthander Jim Qancy, making his 19th start of the season, scattered five hits while striking out two and walking as many to improve his record to 9^.

In other AL action, Milwaukee beat Texas twice, 4-3 and M, New York trimmed Minnesota 4-2, Chicago turned back Cleveland 5-3, BosUm wbij^ California 7-2, Detroit stopped Seattle 4-2

and Baltimore bombed Seattle 94.

The Blue Jays put the ganM out of reach with a five-run fourth inning keyed by Buck Martinezs a two-run txxner and Giff Johnsons two-run doidile o! Larry Gura, 8-11.

Weve been laying good ball since before the All-Star break, said Clancy of Torontos 9-2 record since the midsummer classk. Weve got Baltimore two games bdiind us and we know weve got to go out there and win every game we can.

Brewers 4-5, Rangers 34 In Milwaukee, Ted Simmons sin^ home the jabead run in a two-run seventh inning, triggering the Brewers over Texas in the first game of their doubleheadm*.

Cecil Coopor hit a sacrifice fly to spark a four-run eighth inning as the Brewers charg^ back to defeat the Rangers in the nightcap. The sweep extaided the Brewers winning streak to eight games and gave them an 18-4 record since they slipp^ to last place in the AL East June 24.

Yaiees4,Twins2

In New York, Ron Guidry won fw the first time m almost a nKmth with an ei^t-hitter and Graig Nettles slammed a two-run triple as the Yankees beat Minnesota.

Guidry, 11-5, making his second ^art after missing three weeks due to back spasms, struck out four and walked two to post bis first victory since June 22. Nettles triple off A1 Williams, 5-11, gave the Yankees a 2-0 lead in the first inning. After the Twins came back with a run in

the fifth on Riety Kuntzs RBI sin^e, the Yankees put the game away on Dave Winfields RBI triple in the seventh and Don Mattin^ys run-scoring sin^ in the eighth.

White Sox 5, Indians 3

In Clevdand, Carlton Fisk bomered and singled twice to drive in four runs and LaMarr Hoyt and three relievers combined on a six-hitter as Chicago downed Cleveland.

Hoyt, 11-9, pitched the first sevoi inning. The White Sox used relievers Dick Tidrow, Juan Agosto and Salome Barojas in the eighth, when the Indians scored on Mike Hargroves sacrifice fly. Barojas finished ^ for bis ninth save.

After Fisks single set the stage for Gr^ Luzinskis RBI single in the first inning, Fisk made it 34) with a two-run homer, his 15th of the season, in the third. The White Sox chased Clevdand starter Juan Eicbelber^r, 3-10, in the fourth on Fisks two-run single.

Hoyt held the Indians to two singes until the fifth inning, when Broderick Perkins singled and R(i Hassey hit his third homer this year.

Red Sox 7, Angels 2

Gary AUoison paced a 16-hit attack with four bits and three RBIs and victory-starved Dennis Eckersley won for the first time in nearly a month as BosUm beat California.

Allensons two-run homer in the second Inning followed Dave Stapletons RBI sin^e off Bruce Kison, 84, and gave the Red Sox a 34) lead to start Eckersley, 6-7, toward his first win since June 20.

Eckersley, 6-7, dq)arted when a single

by Bobby Grich imd a pair of walks loaded the bases with none out in the seventh. A run scored on Rod Carews grounder before Bob Stanley retired the side.

Tigefs4,As2 Chet Lemon slugged a homer and hot-handed relievw Doug Bair pitched out out of a bases-loaded jam in the ninth inning to pace Detroit over Oakland.

Lemons one^Hit homer, his 12th, keyed a two-run second inning for the Tigers off Oaklands Tim Conroy, 2-3. Alan Trammell followed Lemons shot with a walk, stole second and scored on a two-out single by Lou Whitaker to make it 2-0.

Dan Petry, H, gave up five bits in seven innings before being relieved by Aurelio Lopez. Lopez then needed relief help himself in the ninth after giving up Davey Ix^ pinch-hit RBI single and then loa(U^ the bases. Bair posted his fourth save, continuing a streak in which he has allowed no runs in nine AL app^ances since coming over from St. Louis.

OrkdesO, Marinm^4 In Seattle, Ken Singleton stroked four hits and Jim Dwyer added three to lead Baltimore past the Mariners.

Dwyer tripled, doubled and singled in his first three at-bats while Singleton contributed two doubles and two singles. Before Dwyer struck out in the sixth, he bad rapped six doubles, a triple and a home run and drivra in 10 runs in his previous 12 at-bats. Dwyer and Singleton each drove in two runs.

Storm Davis, 8-4, struck out nine while scattering six hits as the Orioles made it eight out of nine.

Diving Assist

New Vork third baseman Graig Nettles makes a diving attempt at a ball hit by Gary Gaetti of the Minnesota Twins in the fifth inning Monday night

Dogfight In America's Cup

at Yankee Stadium. Nettles knocked the ball down and shortstop Andre Robertson made the throw to first base for the out. (AP Laseiphoto)

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - A three-way dogfight has develen among the boats vying for the ri^t to def^ the

Americas Cup, and ski{^r Tom Blackaller says the battle should improve the United States chances of retaining

Mancini To Defend Title Against 'Mystery Man'

NEW YORK (AP) - Lightweight Orlando Romero, a mystery man from Peru, has burst upon the bigtime boxing scene to fight for the World Boxing Association title.

Though ranked as the WBAs No. 1 contender, Romero is virtually unknown in the United States. His 31 fights all have taken place in either his country or the Dominican Republic against opponents most of whom were as little-known as he.

I know enou^, said Ray Boom Boom Mancini, who will make a mandatory defense 'Of his WBA crown against Romero ^t. 15 at Madison Square Garden.

I know he is unbeaten, so he must be pretty good. I know hes a good-looking fighter from the films Ive seen.

Mancini also knew the 23-year-old South American was a left-hander.

That should be no problem, Mancini said Monday at a news conference at which promoter Bob Arum announced the fi^it. The only time left-handers are a problem is if they move around the ring a lot. Then, theyre hard to pin down. But hes going to be coming at me. He wants to take my title.

Romero, who speaks no English, smiled when an interpreter explained what Mancini had said.

The fight, to be televised on closed circuit and cable outlets, will be Mancinis first since Feb. 6, when he won a 10-round decision over George Feeney in Italy, and his first title

defense since Nov. 13, when he knocked out Duk Koo Kim in the 14th round in Las Vegas, Nev. The South Korean challenger died of brain Injuries.

Mancini acknowledged he was not as sharp as he would like because of the inactivity. But he said be was in good physical shape except for the after-effects of a viral infection earlier this month.

The infection knocked me out, said Mancini, who described the illness as worse than a bad cold. My white blood cell count was low and they wanted me to rest.

Now Im underweight. he complained. Mancini said he weighed only one or two pounds over the 135-pound li^tweight limit. At this stage, I should be 141 or 142, but Ill be all right when I get to training camp.

The Youngstown, Ohio, boxer said, I always stay in condition. Even when I had my broken collarbone, I ran.

The injury to. Mancinis right collarbone canceled his May 27 title fight with Ken Bogner in Bophuthatswana.

Mancini, 22, has a record of 26-1, his only loss a knockout at the hands of Alexis Arguello in a World Boxing Council lightwei^t title fight on Oct. 3, 1981. He has scored 20 knockouts.

The only blemish on Romeros record was a draw with Miguel Macias in his fifth professional fight on July 21, 1979. He has 12 knockouts.

Cheering Chomps

The 1983-A cheerleaders from E.B. Aycock Junior High School took first place in the district finals at a camp conducted by the Universal Cheerleaders As^iation at Tyler Dorm on the East Carolina Universi

ty campus. Pictured (L-R) Allison White, Kimberly Davis, captain Kim Mallard (below), Felicia Tumage (above), Sharon Howard, Sonya Ruffin (with trophy). (Reflector photo)

the sailing worlds top prize.

I think its really good for all of us, Blackaller said Monday after guiding Defender to two victories in three races against Courageous to narrow the results in the early Cup trials.

Liberty skipper Dennis Conner has been at this full-time for five years and it wouldnt be suprising if be ran away with it in June, Blackaller said. But he didnt, and now its a question of adjusting to the winds and the other variables for the rest of the races throu^ August.

Only two victories s^arated Ck)urageous, Liberty and Defender in the first round of 17 races that began June 18. In the second round, which started Saturday, Liberty has defeated Defender, Courageous knocked off Liberty and then Freedom took two of three from Courageous.

Liberty and Defender were scheduled to race again today on Rhode Island Sound.

Don McGlohon INSURANCE

Hires Agency, Inc.

758-1177

Blackaller said the New York Yacht club, which will pick one of the 12-meter boats in September to defend the Cup, is aware of the even ability of the yachts and will stop a race once one contender gets clearly ahead.

The boats are so close that even a short lead can prove decisive at this point, he said. There will be very few races any more where someone can make up a five boat-length swing.

In Mondays first race, Defender took a 29-second lead after the first mark and never looked back.

NFL Trio Find Different Exits

The Biggest Name in Little Computers

By The Associated Press

The National Football League careers of Russell Davis, Mike Butler and Bob Chandler may be over - for entirely different reasons.

Davis, a reserve running back, is suffering from a rare blood disorder and was placed on the physically unable to perform list by the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday. Butler, a defensive end with the Packers, fled Green Bay for the Tampa Bay Bandits of the United States Football League. Chandler, 34, announced his retirement from the Los Angeles Raiders.

In a trade Monday, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers sent veteran tackle Charley Hannah to the Raiders for defensive end Dave Browning and a fourth-round pick in next years draft.

All-Pro comerback Everson Walls has told the Dallas Cowboys he will not report to training camp or accept the Cowboys latest contract offer. The Cowboys also cut 15 rookie free agents.

Davis rushed for 72 yards in 24,carries as a reserve last year. He checked into a lKpi-tal for tests in March and the blood disorder - similar,to that suffered by former Steelers defensive back J.T. Thomas in 1978 - was discovered. Thomas sat out the 78 season before returning to the Steelers.

It was not known how long Davis recuperation would take. He is undergoing steroid treatments.

Butler reportedly was offered more than $1.2 million for four years by the Packers, but only a $100,000 signing bonus was guaranteed. So Butler headed for the new league.

Mike had to make a business decision, said James Lofton, Green Bays All-Pro receiver. And I think he made the right decision. From everything Ive learned about it, he got a much better deal with a lot more security. Chandler has been plagued by injuries recently. In 1980, he had his spleen removed and last year he appeared in only two games because of a knee injury, failing to catch a pass.

Chandler was a seventh-round pick in the 1971 draft by Buffalo and he was with the Bills until being dealt to the Raiders in 1980.

Even though Bob was with us a short time he contributed tremendously to our brand of football, said Raiders Coach Tom Flores. He helped us win a Super Bowl (1981) and was one of our leaders.

The Bucs couldnt sign Hannah, a free ant who was a third-round pick in 1977. He agreed to terms with the Raiders before the trade was announced.

"It was something we had to

do and we did it, said Bucs Coach John McKay. We got a player whos played extremely well on defense and gave iQ) a player who has played well on offense.

Hannah played defensive end his first two NFL seasons, but shifted to right tackle four years ago and had played there ever since. The Bucs are expected to move Sean Farrell, the clubs No. 1 draft choice in 1982, from guard to

tackle to replace Hannah.

It (trade) came as quite a bit of a surprise to me, said Browning, who is entering his fifth NFL season.

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KOREBOARD

R Boskttboll

Adult Sasmcr

RunniRReMs..........30 31-51

FraiKise...............44 35-70

Leading scorers; R-Shelton WUmo 14, WUlie Bridges 13; F Albert Brown 20, Lorenzo Owens 18.

New yon4, Minneoouz Bootoa7,CaltforeiI Detroit 4, OakUndl Boltimorel. SeoUlet

Komos (SmbIkIi mi at Torooto (UallMi.lal Cbicaeo (Kooooiaa 7-1) at CleveUiid (S*itcUrteU-4),<n)

MiHwaoU (B. CaiUUo S-71 at New York (Rawley 0-71,(01 Texas (Honqrcutt 114) at Milwaukee (Siktoo7-5).(n)

Boston (Tudor 7-SI at California (Fortdil4), (0)

Detroit (Morris M) at Oakland (CodiroliS4).in)

Baltimore (McGregor IIN) at Seattle (Abbott 3-ll.(n)

wadMad(wsGaMa MimiesoUatNewTork TexasatMUwaukee Detroit at Oakland Baltlinore at Seattle Kansas CityatToromo, (o)

Chica at Cleveland, (o)

Boston at California, (n)

natkmli^ue

BASTMVrnW

W L Pet GB St Louis    45    44    .S    -

Phlladelpllia    41    43    SCO    ly

Pittsburgh    43    43    .500    >4

Montretf    43    44    .404    l

41    40    454    4(4

33    57    .367    11(4

WESTIHVISION

57    36    .630    -

51    16    .501    1

46    41    .533    6

45    44    .506    10(4

44    46    .460    11

40    51    .440    16(4

sGanMO hial

Onl y games scheduled

TuaadkysGuMs

San Francisco (M Davis 0-3) at Chica (Rainey 0-6). (nl LosAiigelcs ifteuss 6-7 and Zachry 1-0) at Pittwurgh (Candelaria 6-6 and

Oro^.... Soul Train.

20    24-44

38    37-73

Leading    scorers: 0-Mack

Walston 12, Jeff Hop^ 12; S--Timothy Harris 22, Danny Nelson 10.

Lakers..................21    10-40

OverhillGang...........48    41-89

l.eadinfl acoren; L-Darryl Allen 10; D-James Dupree 22, Paul Taylor 20.

Bostboll Stondingi

Toronto Baltimore Detroit New York Milwaukee

Cleveland

a 35 SO 37

45 36

46 31 46 36 44    44

 37    51

WBSTNVISION Chica    46    41

Texas    46    44

CaUfornia    45    44

Kansas City    41    43

Oakland    40    51

MlnnesoU    37    55

Seattle    36    56

MoadariGainti MilwaukeeT5Tl%(as3-4 Toronto 6, Kansas Cttyl Chica 5. Cleveland 3

DIVISION W L PcL GB SW -.575    1

.563    3

551 4 551 4 .500    6(4

416 16

.513 -.511    1

.506    1(4

.416 3 .440 7(4 .401 11 .311 11

McWdiiamsaS). 1.(01 Houston (Koem SO) at PhUadel|ihia (Bystrom 3-41.(01 (^hKlnoaU (Price l-S) at Montreal (Rogers 11-41. (n)

New York (Seaver M) at AtlanU (P. Perex 10-1). (n)

San Die (Loilar 44) at St. Louis (Allen SoTini

WodHMtarsGai

lodsco at Chica

San Francisco at (

New York at AtlanU Cincinnati at Montreal. (n) Houston at Phlladetahla, (n) Los Angeles at raSurgh. (n) San Die at SL Louis, (n)

UogyLfodtrt

PITCHING (6 decisionsi-Falcone, AUant^l-l. .MS, IM; PPcra, AtUnU. 10-2, .613. 1.51; Ryan, HouHon, 1-1, 111. 1J4; MontefUM. Su Die, 0-1 .600.    1,114,^.136.

PhUadeip McWUli)

114, Hammaker, San Francisco. 13, Rogers. Montreal, 92.

SAVliS-Bedroslao, Atlanta, I5; Reardon. Montreal, 14; Lavelle. San Francisco. 12: LeSmith, Chica, 12; 4 are tied with 10.

TANK SFNANARA

'ftXICALA'ft.UMR' y

i uc uaiiy Reflector, Ureenville. N .c.Tuesday, July 19,1983-13

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

1

lejRiMin Montreal. 114, l50.2.M SfRIKE^OUTSGaritoo. PhUadeiphia. 13. Soto, CtocinnaU. 136; McWUlbms.

AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (210 at batsi-Carew, California. .397; Bog Booton. .375; Brett, Kansas Ctty, In. GrUtey, New

Chica

NewYork

AUanU Los Angeles

Houston San Die

San Francisco Cincinnati

.)ATiONALLEAGU_ BATTING (210 at baUI-HewMck, StLouls, .343; Knit, Hotuton, .342; Easier, Pittsburgh, 317; Madlocfc, Pit-tsburg^ .313: Oliver, Montreal, .310.

RUNS-Mi^y, AtUnU. 65; Garvey. San Die 70; Evans, San Francisco, 61; Ralnea, MontKol, 65; Dawson, Montreal, 54Homer. Atlanta, 54.

RBl-Dawsoo, Montreal, 70; Murphy. AUanta, 95; Guerrero, Loo Angeiet. 60; Hendrick, StLouls, M; Chambliss, AtUnU, 57.

HITS-Thoa, Houston. 115; Dawson, Montrenl, 112; Oilver, Montreal, ill; Murphy, Atlanta, 195; Garvey. San

Ybrt^ W; AikenXaiaas RUNS-YoumjiUlwaukee. A; Upabaw, Toronto, 65; DEvanc, Boatonjll okland, TiTen

derson, Baltimore, M

RHen-

urray.

RBl-Coqper. MUwaukee, 71; Rice, Booton, 66; Kittle, Chica, 61; Brett. Kansas City, 56; EMurrayyiialtimore. 56

HITS^] Detroit, 1

Boston, 121; Whitaker,

Houston I, Phil. AUanU7,NewY

^^BLES-Buckner, Chicago, 25; Knit, Howt S, Oliver, Montreal, iTHendrickTStLouis, 22; JRay, Plt-tsbui,21.

TRIPLE^Moiem, Houatoo, 11: Butlo', AtlanU. 6; Raines, Mootieal, 7; Dawson, Montreal, 6; 7 are tied with 5.

HOME RUNS-Evaol, S Franctaco,

21; Murphy Montreal, II;

, AUanU. 16; Dawn, Guerrero, Loo Angelct, 19; ad^hU, II.

:n BASES-Ralnes, Montreal, M; WUaon, NewYork,33;SSax.LoaAngelea, 31; LeMaster, San FranclMo, 30; Moreno, Hmaton, II.

Rice. Booton, ill; Ward, MlnneaoU. IM; Carew, CallfomU, 104; Cooper, Mllwiukee, 104; Yount, MUwauker 104.

DOUBLS-Bog Booton, M; LNPar-riah, Detroit, M^Rae, Kansas City, 27; Hrbok, MlnneioU, 25; Brett, Kansas Ctty, M; Cooper. MUwaukeeJ4.

TRlPLES^erndon, Detroit, 7; GWUmo, Detralt, I; Griffin, Tofooto, 6; KGiboon, Detroil. 6; Moiltor, MUwaukee, 6; Winfield. New York, 6; Whgbt. Texas,

HOME RUNS-Rice, BoMon, 23; Cooper. MUwaukee. 10; Kittle, Chka^; Armas, Booton, 19; 4 are tied wltbll.

STOLEN BASES-RHenderson, Oakland. 54; JCnu, Chicago, 43; WWIIaon, Kansu City. 41; RUw, Chliea.M; Sai^, Tnat, 39.

PITCHING (T dedaioatl-RUacluoa, Toronto, 7-1, .975, 4.35. Rlghettl, New York, 11-3, .m, 3.27; Huii^Uwaukee. 7-2. .771, 3.15; KoomnanTChica. 7-2, 4.05; Tellmann, Milwaukee. R, .750,

3.04.

STRlKEOUTS-SUeb, Toronto. 120; Blyleven, Cleveland, 110; Monis, Detroit, 108; Ri^U, New York. 97; GDavis, Baltlmore,93 SAVES^iaenberrv Kansu City, 21; Stanley, Boston. 11; CaudUl, Seattle, 17; RDavis, MinnesoU, 15; Lopez. Detroit.

Tronsoctiom

BylheAaaocUledPnu BASEBALL Amerlcu League

OAKLAND ATHLETlS^laced Mike Davis, outfielder, on the I54ay diubled list.

Nathmal League

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Fired Pat CorraUs, manar Named Paul Owena,neral manager, u manar.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Placed Steve NIcosU, catcher, on the I54ay diubled list.

ST LOUIS CARDINALS-Placed Dane

infielder-outflelder. on the I54ay led list Purchued BUI Lyou. ui-flelder. from LouisvUle of the American Associatioo.

BASKETBALL Nattonal BaifcetbaU Asaodatton

SAN DIEGO CUPPERS-Named Don Chaney and Don Ca^ assistant coaches FOOTfiAU Nattonal Football League

BUFFALO BlLLS-CuPoeWayne Chivers, tight end. Marlon Body, defensive bacK, Zack Grate, linebacker, Amero Ware, fullback, Paul Watson, place-kicker and Mark Ehde, offensive tackle. Placed Rex Robinson, kicker, and Julius Dawktois, wide receiver, on the physically unable-to^erform list.

DENVER BRONCDS^-Cut Mark Richt, quarterback, Pete Caruio, tlt end. Mike Hembrou^, Scott Pettis, and Terry Morehead, running backs, Tony Dalton. Scott Homan, aiM David Joeckel, offensive linemen, and Bob Lashley and Tyrone Smith, ufettes.

HOUSTON OILERS-Cut Joel Baxter.

kicker, Darren Blair, comerback, Donald Cook, Matthew McKnight, Andrew Molls, and Gr WUiiams. ufeties, Joe Kader, limAacker, Osby Mitchell, tackle, Darnell Toy. ninning back, and Rob WInshlp. defensive ena

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Simed Derrick Taylor, comerback and Mike Elarms, wide receiver.

NEW YORK JETS-Signed Russ Carpentlerl. kicker Waived James Mat

thews, running back, Julius Wallace,

:  UcUe, Gary I

and Dan McShane. taclOe.

defensive

Gary BIrkbolz, center

LOS ANGELES RAIDERS-Announced retirement of Bob (handler, wide receiver Acquired Charley Hannah, offensive tackle, from the Tampa Bay

Buccaneers in exchange for Dave Browning, defensive end, and an un-discloseafuture draft choice PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Placed Russell Davis, runnliw back, on the

physically unable to perform list.

LOUIS CARDINALS-Traded Mike Dawson, defensive tackle, to the Detroit

Lions for a future draft choice SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Cut Darrell Dickey and Joe Dufek quarterbacks; Steve Lively and John Staik, guards. Jeff KloecU, tackle, Troy Morris, center, Steve Michalewicz. defensive end and Dwight Robertson, running back Derrick McCondichie, guard, left camp WASHINGTON <tROSKlNS-Signed Alvin Garrett, wide receiver HOCKEY

DETRor^o'^G'ffuned BUI Dincen head coach of Adirondack of the American Hockev Leamie

N.C. Scoroboord

By The Auodated Prau CaroUuLum Peninsula 6. Winston-Salem I Kinston 5, Durham 1

Southern League Nashville 12, Chariotie'Selig Remains Quiet About New Commissioner

By JOHN NELSON API^^ Writer Bud Selig, tbe Milwaukee car dealer who owns baseballs American Lea champion Brewers, is resisting a mis powerful urge these days.

Hes such a caiKlid fellow, hed really like to talk about baseballs next com

missioner. But hes also chairman of the committee charged with finding the man.

Im dealing with other peimles lives here, he says. The easiest thing for me to do would be to say to bell with it, Im going to do what I want to do. But I just cant do that.

Theres too many peale whose con

fidences I have, too many people who have tven me their confidence that I would be violative of if I said anything. The search for a new commissioner was launched last December at baseballs Winter Meetings, where Seligs committee was formed. Last November, baseball owners voted not to

Falcons' Rookie Tries To Forget Last Effort With Red And Black

SUWANEE, Ga. (AP) -Red and black combine for some bitter memories in the brain of Atlanta Falcons rookie linebacker Rich Dixon.

And now that hes wearing the Falcons red and black hes trying to forget his last trip to Georgia, when he faced the Bulldogs red and black.

I thou^t about it the first day I got here, Dixon said. Two years ago, I was near here, and my knee was blown out. Now, Im back here trying again.

Back thi, in 1981, Dixon was a 6-foot-2, 225-pound senior linebacker for the Uni

versity of California who had made the AU-PAC 10 team as a junior.

The Georgia game was to open a senior year of showing his stuff to the pro scouts.

At the time, Dixon said, he had a feeling like I didnt want to be out there.

It was an omen.

A block by Georgias Lindsay Scott bent Nixons knee the wrong way and be collapsed.

I thought I would be fine and would be able to play the next week, Dixon said Monday at the Falcons early camp for rookies and free agents.

Then they told me 1 had to have surgery.

The Golden Bears quickly got him a year off because of the injury, but when he returned in 1982 a new coach, Joe Kapp, was in charge and Dixon was caught in a youth movement. He spent his senior year as a reserve.

But the Falcons new coaches remembered Dixon as a junior.

His name had been brought to our attention, said head Coach Dan Henning.

Different things can happen in college. A linebacker who might not fit into one system could be more natural in our scheme.

Where he fits, Henning thinks, is at outside linebacker, a spot made for Dixons sj^ and jumping abUity.

Baltimore, Dallas, Denver, Kansas City and the Oakland Invaders also remembered Dixon, but he decided to try to find a silver lining in red and black by siraing a free agent contract with Atlanta.

renew the contract of the present commissioner, Bowie Kuhn, whose tenure expires Aug. 13.

Since December, some names have surfaced. The name of William Simon, former Treasury Secretary and now head of the U.S. Olympic Committee, seems to top the list, but he, like several others, has said he doesnt really want the job. Others who have declined include Tal Smith, former Houston Astros executive now in private business, and Montreal Expos President John McHale.

Others are too ludicrous to mention.

The really odd thing about this search has been that, while the committee continues to hold meetings, very little has leaked from Selig or its seven members - Bob Lurie of San Francisco, Dan Galbreath of Pittsburg, Charles Bronfman of Montreal, N.E. Hardy of Toronto, Edward Bennett Williams of Baltimore, George Argyros of Seattle and John McMullen of Houston.

There havent been too many rumors going about, really, Selig says. In fact, its been incredible. On balance, with the committee being seven or eight months old - and what with the general state of baseball - its difficult to keep secrets. But its been remarkably good.

Some word could come from Seligs committee next month when owners hold their annual summer meeting Aug. 3-4 in Boston. The timing would seem right, but

even that could be premature. Kuhn wasnt named until the day his predecessor, Gen. William Eckert, left the job. Likewise for Eckert when he replaced Ford Frick.

Its not even out of the realm of possibility that Kuhn could be picked to succeed himself. Many baseball executives, including San Diegos Ballard Smith, have remained staunchly in support of Kuhn, who will have served two seven-year terms when his contract expires. When the commissioner helped negotiate a huge television contract that will gross baseball more than fl billion total from NBC and ABC over the next six years, some figured he could slip back in.

Bowies support is the same as it was then (in November when he failed to gain re-election with two-thirds of the owners backing him), Smith says, but so is his opposition. He did an outstanding job on the TV contract. And its odd. One of the main complaints about the man was that he was not a businessman, and he got more money for baseball than anyone ever expected.

Oakland As President Roy Eisenhardt, whose plan for restructuring baseballs heirarchy remains hostage to Kuhns fate, says there have been extensive private conversations among owners outside the search committee, some of which have been aimed at keeping Kuhn in office.

Bowie has not been unelected, or diselected, or whatever the term is, Eisenhardt says. Theres no procedure in baseball for voting him out. Theres only a procedure for electing and reelecting. Theres no rule saying that a commissioner, having failed in re-election in that one meeting we had, is no longer eligible to be re-elected.

Eisenhardt says he believes the search committees progress has been substantive and that several names - none of which has been made privy to him - will be ushered into nomination in Boston next month. If a commissioner cannot be named before Kuhns contract expires, "there is a procedure for the Executive Council to take over the operation of major league baseball without a commissioner, Eisenhardt adds.

But, until the shoe is ready to drop, Selig says he cant even set the tone for his committees progress.

Whatever I do, I get into an area that I cant talk about, Selig says. 1 hate to be this way, and generally I enjoy talking about what Im doing, but in this case, its impossible. It would lead to something 1 dont want it to lead to.

And its really eating him up, the kind of guy he is. Thats not to mention, of course, what it must be doing to Commissioner Kuhn and his family, the men who work for Kuhn, and all those aspiring commissioners out there, just waiting for word on their futures.

Allison Remains On Top Of Winston Cup Point Standings

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Bobby Allison remains well aU^ the NASCAR Winston Cup Grand National point standmgs, with a 202-point advantage over Darrell Waltrip after 17 races in the 30-event NASCAR season.

Allison, following the Busch Nashville 420 at Nashville, Tenn., International Raceway over the weekend, has 2,629 points.

Waltrip has 2,427 points.

Bill Elliott is third in the standings with 2,380 points, followed by Harry Gant, 2,363; Richard Petty, 2,300; Neil Bonnett, 2,260; Terry Labonte, 2,089; Joe Ruttman, 2,070; Dale Earnhardt, 2,051, and

A's Execute Triple Ploy

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -The Oakland As executed a triple play in the third inning of Monday nights game with the Detroit Tigers.

Lance Parrish was on second and Glenn Wilson was on first and both were running when Detroit designated hitter John Wockenfuss lined a ball to right fielder Rick Peters.

The runners were easily put out as Peters relayed the ball to second baseman Tony Phillips, who threw to first lead in money-winnings with    baseman    Wayne    Gross    to

$341,480 whUe Allison fell to    complete the triple play,

second with $338,500.    The Chicago Cubs pulled off

Petty is third with $236,825, the only other triple play this followed by Gant, $230,750;    season.

Earnhardt, $222,681; Bonnett,

$208,255, Liiioii, $189,425,    gouthpaw,    is a son    of former

Detroit Tiger righthander

Ricky Rudd, 2,042.

Earnhardt became the ninth different winner of the 1983 season when be captured the Nashville 420 victory. That tied a modern-day NASCAR record for different winners in a single season, set in 1979 and duplicated in 1980 and 1981.

Waltrip, who finished second at Nashville, regained the

StockUp

RrLess.

Dave Marcis, $161,635, Buddy Baker, $154,885.

and

Dizzy Trout.

Bambino Champs

The Chlcod Hornets won the South Pitt Bambino League, baseball tournament recently. Members of the team are: (Kneeling, from left) Eric Swinson, Jerry McGowan, BUI Brown, Daniel Beachum, Nikki Adams and Stephen Andrews;

(standing) Ronnie Foster (head coach), Derek Ennis, Casey Pittman, John Green, Dale Sutton, Ernest Harrington, Gray MUls, Wilbur Beachup (assistant coach). Abent when the picture was taken were Eric Bradley, Troy Hardee and Mark Nicholson.

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In The Area

Br^ak-ln Reported At Restaurant

A break-in at a local restaurant is under investigation by Greenville police who discovered the incident at 3:38 a.m. today, accor^ to Chief Glenn Cannon.

Cannon said intruders apparently pried opoi the front of a cigarette machine at Ernies Famous Subs & Pizza at 911 Memorial Drive and officers today were trying to determine if money or cigarettes were taken.

He sakl offico^ found a door broken out on the southwest comer of the facility.

Fellowship Day Scheduled

A Randolph Harris Memorial Fun and Fellowship Day wUl be held at the Wintmville Ballpark behind A.G. Cox SdxNri Saturday beginning at 2 p.m. Events include ladys and mens softball games, vc^ybaiu, a dunking machine and games to children.

Barbeque chicken plates will be served from 4-6 p.m. All proceeds will go to a memorial fund to purdiase an organ to the new WintovlUe Free Will Ba^ Church.

The event is ^xmsored by the Chrisitian Fellowship Gass in memory of its founder and teach^, the late Randolph Harris.

WO W To Have Supper Meeting

Woodmen of the World Insurance Society LodgeX^ will have its covered-disb supper meeting Thursd^ at7 p.m. The

meeting will be at the home of Mrs. H.B.

La Leche Names Delegate

Judy Beckert of Greenville will be a delegate to La Leche Leagues ninth international cmiference in Kansas City, Mo.

The threeKlay session will feature actress Mariette Hartley, educator Dr. Burton White and p^atric allergist Dr. William CnxA. All i;riuises of parmiting will be discussed in more ian 100 sessions.

Mrs. Beckert has held several positions with the Pitt County ch^r of the La Leche League since its organization in 1975.

Stokes Registration Under Way

Parents of students who have recently moved into the Stokes school district should go to the school to register for the 1983-84 school year, according to Principal Selma Cherry.

Parents of kinderg^^ children should have their childs birth certificate and immunization record, Ms. Cherry said. For further information call the school at 752-6907.

Park Schedules Program

An interpretive program on mushrooms, insects, wildflowers and lichen will be held Saturday from 9 a.m.-noon at Goose Creek State Park, located between Washington and Bath off U.S. 264. Anyone interested in the program should meet at the park office.

A horseshoe tournament will start at 10 a.m. Anyone interested in entering should call the park office to regiker. Other programs, including singing and games for children and adults, will begin at 1 p.m. at the swimming area.

For more information, call the park office at 923-2191.

Helms Dinner Planned In Kinston

A dinner in honor of Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., will be held in Kinston beginning at 7:30 p.m. Friday, to be held at Kings Restaurant.

Tickets for the event may be obtained by contacting George I. Ford at 522-3082 or the Helms For Senate office at 876-8522. Tickets are priced at 35 for adults and $3 for students and children.

Schedule Hearings On Planning-Zoning

Four rezoning requests are among the agenda items scheduled for consideration by the Greenville Planning and Zoning Commission at Umigbts 7:30 meeting at city hall.

Hie requests were submitted by; Harvey D. Bradshaw to rezone 9.748 acres, located within the Fairlane Farms subdivision, from R-15 to R-6 and R-9, and from R-6 to R-15, all residential zones; M.E. Porter to rezone 6.6 acres, located within fhe Whichport Development prt^y adjacent to Landmark Drive, from highway commercial to R-6;

Dalton Worthington and others to rezone 12 acres, located about 800 feet east of

Suspects Arson In House Fire

Greenville Police Chief Jennis Allen said today that he suspects arson in a vacant fraternity bouse fire that occurred Sunday evening.

Lambda Phi Alpha Fraternity House, located on the comer of Elizabeth and Ward streets, sustained minor damages even though several diffwent fires were blazing throughut the house.

We suspect arsmi because there was fire in three places in the building, not all in one place. Thats the best reason anyMy can have to suspecting arson. Fire just doesnt jump all over a building, Allen said.

Allen said the fire department received the call at 7:35 p.m. Sunday. He added that minor damage resulted because we caught it in time.

The Greenville Police Department is continuii^ investigation of the case.

Tobacco Road and fronting on U.S. 264 Bypass, from RA-20 to R-6; and by J.T. Manning Jr. and bis wife, Roia, to rezone 3.16 acres, located adjacmit to Alice Drive and Shenandoah subdivision, from RA-20 to R-9.

Other items include; five requests for zoning amendments; preliminary plats of Heritage Apartments, located at the eastern end of White Hollow Road in Heritage Village subdivision, Kingston Place, located on the west side bf Greenville Boulevard across from Eastwood subdivision, and of a proposed street dedication on the west side of Memorial Drive adjacent to Clark Equipment Co.;

A request by Bill Clark to annex 3.16 acres within Quail Ridge subdivision off 14th Street; a request to close a portion of Tammi Trail; a request to change the names of 12 streets in Bedford subdivision; and other miscellaneous items.

Compressed Air Cor Is Reality

TAYLORSVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A vision came to Gerald Warren one night showing him bow to modify a conventional car to run on compressed air.

From there on, it was powers beyond my control, he said.

Now Warren is trying to prove his air-powered car isnt a lot of hot air.

Warrens Air Car has been costly. Hes quit his job as a body mechanic, lost his wife, and sold his two conventionally powered cars. Now he has a 1974 Volkswagen Dasher with 120,000 mUesto which he paid 3250.

Student Mokes Honors List

Amy Christine Lawler of Greenville has been named to the honors li^ at Mary Baldwin College for the spring semester. Honors list studrats must make a grade point average of 2.75 on a scale of 3.0.

Ayden Leads Fire Calls

The rural fire departments of Pitt County answered 71 alarms during June.    

Sixty-nine of these were fires - 10 were houses, four were mobile honms; one was a building, five in motor v^cl^ 15 were pass or woods fires; 34 were others and two mutual aids, lliere were no false alarms.

There was 3374,500 involved in fires; 31,784,999 exposed; 320,720 lost and ^138,779 saved by the rural fire daart-ments. The Ayden Fire Department had the most fires, 10, according to a report from the office of Fire Marshal Bobby Joyner.

Two Men Found In Market

Greenville police responding to a burglar alarm at a local supermarket arrested two men early today after they were -^cau^inside the business, Chief Glenn Cannon reported. CanniKsmd officers charged Robert Douglas Perkins, 40, of 515 W. 14Ui St. and James Howard Johnson, 31, of 508 Battle St. with /breaking, entering and larceny at Harris Sipermarito on Memorial Drive.

The clue^said the stores burglar alarm went off at 4:12 a.m. Officers^toyid a front pass section broken out. After hearing noises insto, officers searched the building and found Perkins and Johnson hiding on of a rear storage area,besaid. \

Cannon said 94 cartons of cigarettes, valued at 3614, had been boxed up and moved to another area of the store. He added that a false ceiling in the facility was damaged when one of the men ai^arently fell through into the meat nHing department.

College Delegates Meet At PCC

Sixty participants rqiresenting 10 community coU^ and universities in eastern North Carolina attended the District U North Carolina Community CoUege Learning Resources AssociaUon meeting held at Pitt Community College recently.

Dr. Nolan Tomboulian of Carteret Technical College demonstrated the uses of the small computer in learning resource centers. Janet Gaino of Diversified Media presented a demonstration of computer paphics.

Teacher Presented Award

Deborah Andrews Higbsmith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S.T. Andrews of Stokes, was recoitly awarded the Teachers, Administrators, Paroits and Staff award by the New Haven, Conn., public school system in ceremonies bdd at Wooley Hall on the campus of Yale University.

The award is presmited annually to individuals who have significantly contributed to the quality of education in the city of New Haven.

Mrs. Hipismitfa, a language pathologist, received her bachelors degreee in speech pathology from East Canlioa University and was a Daily Reflector Scholarship recipient. She received a masters degree in speech pathology from Southern Connecticut State University. ^ holds the certificate of clinical competence in speech pathology from the American Speech and Hearing Associatk. She currently serves as president of the Connecticut affiliate of the Natiooal Black Association of Speech, Language and Hearing and is a member of the Continuing Education (tonmittee of the ConnecUcut Speech and Hearing Association.

WAVE DAMAGE - Houses in the fishing village of Orani, outside Manila, are fan frmn their foundatkns by a series ( huge waves caused by the strong winds 01 tropolcal typ^n Vera vdiidi hit the Philippines Luzon island. Eariy official

rq^ Moitoy said 85 deaths had been counted, mimy woe    of    peoiile    rcndend booeten. (AP

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House Expected To Yield On Hazardous Waste Bill

By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) House conferees on a bill to rewrite state health laws were expected to yield today on a hazardous-waste related amendment after the Senate thawed out a House-passed waste landfl bUl on Monday. '

The two adminstration-backed bills have been stalled since the House tried to use the health bill as leverage to quicken Senate action on a bUl introduced by Rep. Billy Oark, p-Cumberland. The House amended the health bill allowing hazardous waste laws more strict than federal standards -repealing a handcuffing provision introduced in 1981 by Sen. Harold Hardison. D-Lenoir.

However, the version of Clarks bUl that emerged from a ^te Rules subcommittee was cricized by environmentalist and Gov. Jim Hunt last week as too weak to protect the public. Since then, lobbyists for the governor have swarmed

over the Soiate to generate support to amend Garks bill when it reached the floor.

After nearly a week. Rules Committee Chairman Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, reieased the bill Monday night. He denied that he had been holding it to gain political leverage, but said he had done his duty in getting the bill to the Senate floor.

If he (the governor) can change it now. Ive done all 1 can do, he said. I reported it out favorably from my committee.

I havent any thoughts about fighting them (amendments), he added. But he might have a problem amending it.

Zeb Alley, chief legislative liaison for Hunt, refused to divulge his strategy.

One House member, who asked not to be identified, said the Senate had kept its end of a deal to free the health bill.

Now we just have to see if they (Hunts lobbyists) have the

vote, the lawmaker said.

As it stands, the bill allow exemptions to federal rules for landfill liners, requiring annual reports by industry and prohibiting liquid waste from being buried. It also would allow other chemicals to be prohibited if there was clear and substantial evidence of a threat to human health.

Meanwhile, the Senate Special Ways & Means Committee MStponed action on a bill that would require hazardous waste andfilis to be built in conjunction with treatment piants while outlawing burial of anyUiing but ash and residue. The panel also delayed considering bills to let the state charge industries for cieaning up waste dumps they abandon and to allow strict liability for waste generators and transporters.

In other legislative action:

Testimony Scheduled To Begin In Trial Of State Sen. Soles Today

By BILLY PRITCHARD

Associated Press Writer

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) A federal jury was expwted to begin hearing testimony today in the trial of state Sen. R.C. Soles Jr., charged with extortion, vote-buying, perjury and conspiracy.

The 10 women, two men and two alternates selected on the opening day of the trial Monday in U.S. District Court, may be in for a long trial.

Judge James C. Fox, who questioned prospective jurors, said more than 80 witnesses will be called by the prosecution tind defense. The defense alone listed 67 potential witnesses it might call, including 12 state legislators.

Sbles, a 48-year-old Tabor City attorney and a 14-year veteran state lawmaker, appeared relaxed and confident Monday, conferring with his three attorneys and talking casually with reporters covering the trial.

Ill just be glad when its all over with, Soles said upon entering the courthouse in this port city.

After the jury was selected Monday afternoon. Fox told jurors to return to the courtroom at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Soles, who has pleaded innocent to the charges and is free under a $20,000 unsecured bond, faces up to 50 years in prison and $40,000 in fines if convicted of all charges.

Soles is charged with helping former Columbus County Commissioner Edward Walton Williamson take a bribe in December 1981 in connection with the FBIs undercover probe of corruption in southeastern North Carolina, dubbed Colcor for Columbus County corruption.

Prosecutors said they will show undercover video tapes during the trial. The government also has listed sev-erai undercover FBI agents involved in the Colcor investigation as witnesses for the prosecution, including Robert J. Drdak and Bradley D. Hoferkamp.

Also listed as coconspirators with Soles, along with Williamson, are Herbert Riggins and J.C. Hines, both of Bolton. All

Vote-Buying Is Near-Tradition

HAYESVILLE, N.C. (AP) - In Clay County, where unemployment ranks the third hipest among North Carolina counties, vote-. buying is a tradition because people depend on government j(s provided by patronage, residents say.

There are certain people who evidently, their votes are available. If their vote isnt bought, the way the story goes, theyre not going to vote, said land surveyor George McGraw. Whoever gets there firstest with the mostest is the one that comes out winning.

Earlier this month, eight people, including the sheriff and former sheriff, were indicted on charges of buying votes in the 1982 general election, when the Democrats swept into office for the first time in 16 years.

Unlike the other seven defendants who pleaded innocent, gas station operator Edgar Jones pleaded guilty last month to 20 of 32 charges against him. Jbnes faces five ' years in prison and a $10,000 fine for each charge.

I guess they think I squeal^ on them, Jones said of the Democrats. I never squealed on them -till they put me in front of the grand jiuy. They aint gonna get me on no perjury.

Jones said he agreed to no plea bargain but pleaded guilty only to those charges he was involved in.

He admitted paying voters to vote a straight Democratic ticket. But in 1978, Republicans were the subject of the last scandal. The state Board of Elections ordered a new lection that year, charging vote-buying, voting by minors and felons and misuse of absentee ballots. R^ublicans swept both the contested and the new elections.

Jones said Democrats promised him a job, either with tlte sheriffs office or the Department of Transportation. And he said they promised to bring county business to his gas pumps.

But after the election, be said, he was offered only a $90-a-week job at a Gay County recreation area, f

which he turned down.

Absentee ballots have been used fraudulently in most all the electipns I can remember - by both sides, said Republican Haig Davenport, 64. Since registration is so near even, it seems to be the party that gets the most absentee ballots is usually the party that wins the election.

McGraw said that since Clay County is split nearly even with Republicans and Democrats, by controlling 200, 300, 400 votes, you control the outcome.

At stake are about 220 patronage jobs in a county with 19.3 percent unemployment in May, the third-highest rate among the states 100 counties.

Politics controls the bulk of jobs in the county, McGraw said. Those on the losing side will get nothing for four years, the jobs that will come open.

Jones is accused of conspiring with six others to get Democrat Howard Barnard elected sheriff.

Barnard, who beat incumbent Hartsell Moore by fewer than 150 votes, is also a defendant in the alleged conspiracy, along with Magistrate Gene Harvey Auberry; Board of Elections employee Frankie Campbell; Jack Parker, director of the state Department of Transportations Clay County office; Glenn Martin, shoe store (^rator, and James Red Cherry, gas station operator.

The indictment issued July 7 lists 31 votes allegedly bought in that scheme.

Moore, the only Republican charged, is accused in a separate indictment of buying three votes.

THEIR DECISION NEW DELHI, India (AP) - The people of Tibet, not Chinese officials, will determine when the Dalai Lama should return from self-exile in India, a spokesman for the relif^ous leader said Monday.

three co-conspirators are expected to testify for the prosecution. Williamson and Riggins already have pleaded guilty to charges stemming from Colcor.

Williamson is serving a 10-year prison sentence, while Riggins is awaiting sentencing.

Soles is charged with conspiring with Riggins, Hines and Williamson to block legislation that would have restricted precious metal dealers. Undercover FBI agents, meanwhile, had set up a silver and gold trading business in Whiteville.

The indictment against Soles alleges he promised to

block the bills before the General Assembly in return for a gold bracelet.

Soles also allegedly agreed to support efforts to help pass a liquor-by-the-drink referendum in Bolton if Williamson and Riggins were taken care of by the undercover agents. Hines owned a bar in Bolton.

Soles also is accused of lying to a federal grand jury in May 1982 when he denied paying money to anyone to influence their votes. The indictment charges that Soles knew illegal payments were being made to voters during elections in April and June 1982.

The state Senate approved a bill to keep professional operators out of bingo and sent it to the House for concurrence after adopting amendments to help reduce the chance of a conference committee.

All the professional promoters out there are paying more jackpots than my little (Veterans of Foreign Wars) post can afford, said Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, who introduced the Senate version of the bill. He said since laws were passed in 1979 to allow charities to sponsor bingo, unscrupulous professionals have skimmed off most of the profits.

In Cumberland County, there was $2.54 million taken in and only 2 percent went to charities, he said.

Last week the Senate Finance Committee substituted Lawings version for a similar House bill introduced by Rep. Bruce Ethridge, D-Onslow. That action was expected to speed passage because it eliminates the Houses option to send the bill to a committee. But the bill became bogged down when lawmakers said it was so strict it would keep many legitimate charities from holding bingo games.

Sen. Bill Martin, D-Guilford, agreed with House members in objecting to a provision prohibiting charities from leasing facilities or equipment to run the games. Even after the Senate agreed to exempt raffles from the provision, Martin was unappeased.

The reins are still on the vast majority (of charities), he said, arguing that the definition of a charitable organization should prevent abuse.

Anybody can get exempt status in a weeks time, retorted Lawing, but he grudgingly supported an amendment offered by Sen. Dennis Winner, D-Buncombe, to allow bingo games in facilities leased by charitable organizations for five years and used for purposes other than bingo six months before the game.

Martin asked that the time limits be removed, but Lawing said some restrictions were needed to put the five or six

bingo moguls in the state out of business.

Like its House counterpart, the Senate bill would outlaw back-to-back games now used by professionals to circumvent laws against charities holding more than two games a week at one place. Licensing fees would increase from $25 to $50 per game and violations would increase from misdemeanors to felonies. The merchandise prize limit would be $2,500, compared with the current ceiling of $500 that applies to cash alone.

Ethridge said last week that he liked the Senates stricter version, but added that many House members would object to the lease prohibition. He said Monday he wasnt sure if the House would concur in the bill or opt for a conference committee.

Hit and Run

The House voted 105-1 to approve and send to the Senate a bill making it a misdemeanor for drivers irAlved in an accident that results in injury or death not to stop, give their name and help persons in the other car.

If the driver is involved in an accident that results in property damage, he must stop and give information to the passenger or leave the information in a note.

Room Tax

A bill allowing Forsyth County to levy a 2 percent motel room tax was tentatively approved by the House, 75-17.

The money from the additional tax would be used to attract tourists and conventions.

The bill to increase the sales tax, now before a House-Senate conference committee, also would allow the county to levy a tax. Supporters said they wanted to be sure to get a room tax so they were pursuing both bills.

Marijuana

A bill that would make it a misdemeanor punishable by up to two years in prison and a fine to possess less than one ounce of marijuana on school grounds was sidetracked in the House Appropriations Committee.

Rep. Jim Hughes, R-Avery, said the maximum punishment for the crime now is a $100 fine - a small license fee to sell marijuana to school kids.

But Rep. A1 Adams, D-Wake, said the problem is a matter of enforcement, not the law. He said he was afraid the bill would send niany students to prison and asked the fiscal effect of the bill be considered in Appropriations Committee.

Pornography

The House tentatively approved a bill tightening the penalties for sexual crimes involving minors.

The bill would prohibit a person from employing a child under the age of 16 to engage in sexual performance, to consent to a childs performance of sex acts, to promote children in sexual performances.

Violations of the proposed law would be felonies.

BanUine

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Wachovia BankLine is a way to inaease your personal financial resources by $2,500 to $25,000, without making a special trip to the bank when you neec money. You just write a BankLine check. And the interest you pay is tiec to the Wachovia prime rate!

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Right now BankLine is just about the least expensive loan source you ::ind. Your interest rate is determiner Dy the size of your credit line, so you pay the same low rate no matter how much you borrow.

Since its all prearranged, you have absolute discretion and control over when and how you use the money. And there are no special fees, so it costs you nothing unless you use it.

A Personal Banker can help you decide whether BankLine is right for you. Its a better way to borrow money.

WBchovia

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I nder present North Carolina law, L.PP'5i is the maximum that can be charged tor loans (it this type. It the law should be changed, the 17.Pt''' annual percentage rate ceiling ot BankLine loans would be subject to change. There is a minimum annual percentoge rate of S '- .





16-The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Tuesday, July 19,1983

7

7:

t ^

Real-Life Athletes Not Part Of The Plans For 'Bay City Blues'

ANTIQUE OPERA HOUSE - A chamber music ensemble rehearses prior to a concert at Pipers Opoa House in Virginia City, Nevada. The theater, built in 1885, has played host to the

likes of Edwin Booth, Enrico Caruso and Jolson, but now is the home of an annual July chamber music festival. (AP Laserp^)

'War Games' Game Planned For Everyone

LOS ANGELES (AP) -The movie studio that brought you WarGames says consumers across the United States soon may be able to play Global Thermonuclear War, althou^ it might not be just like in the movie.

MGM-UA officials have sold the Coleco company rights to produce a home video game and a film-related line of software products based on the movie. But Bill Dennis, studio vice

'Brainstorm' Date Eyed

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The movie Brainstorm, filmed largely in North Carolina, may premier in Raleigh just ahead of the national openings Oct. 7, says an official of the studio that produced the picture.

A1 Newman, vice president of publicity for MGM-UA Entertainment Co., said a decision probably would be made by the middle of next week.

"There is still some talk of something happening in Raleigh in conjunction with the (national) opening of the picture, said Newman.

Gov. Jim Hunt plans to meet Monday in Los Angeles with Freddie Fields, president of MGM Pictures. Hunt has several meetings that day with producers interested in North Carolina locations.

Brainstorm filming began about two years ago in Research Triangle Park with additional sequences produced in Southern Pines and Nags Head. Production was suspended in November 1981 when Natalie Wood, star of the science-fiction drama, drowned off the California coast.

Solar Fraction

The solar fraction for this area Monday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 96. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 96 percent of your hot water needs.

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president for merchandising and licensing, said MGM-UA hasnt decided yet just how similar those products wilt be to the film.

In WarGames, a teenager played by Matthew Broderick accidentally engages a U.S. Defense Department computer in a game of global thermonuclear war that takes the world to the brink of destruction.

Dennis said in a recent interview that when Colecos

TVA Will Help Create A Flood

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - After 50 years of trying to stop floods, the Tennessee Valley Authority is going Hollywood to help create one for a movie starring Sissy Spacek and Mel Gibson.

The agency will lend its expertise this fall when Universal Studios floods some east Tennessee bottomland for the film, The Rivers, spokesman Don Bagwell said Monday.

The TVA will release water through Fort Patrick Henry Dam on the Holston River, which will then be diverted onto land owned by an unidentified farmer, whom Universal is paying, Bagwell said.

It will be a very controlled situation, Bagwell said reassuringly.

Ms. Spacek and Gibson portray parents fighting natural disasters and big business to keep their farm, according to studio press releases.

Shrimp Harvest Remains Poor

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolinas shrimp harvest will be poorer than normal this year because heavy spring rains and cool weather killed many young shrimp, state officials say.

Overall we expect a less-than-average year, said Edward G. McCoy of the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries in Morehead City.

McCoy said heavy rains and cool water were present

proposed product is complete, MGM-UA will decide whether its suitable for distribution. MGM-UA didnt specifically demand a benign approach, Dennis said.

Whatever they suggest, we must approve it, he said. We gave them some ideas and were looking to them to come up with the right approach.

Obviously it was a major commitment for us - much bigger than any other game or any of our other properties.

Coleco also has licenses to produce video games based on the MGM-UA films Rocky 111 and The Wizard of Oz, Dennis said.

The WarGames video game will not be out until late September, three months after the films release, Dennis said.

Paul And Art In Concert Tonight

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Its the sounds of silence no longer for Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel, who kick off their first U.S. concert tour in 13 years toni^t at the University of Akrons Rubber Bowl.

A$ a news conference Monday, the pair said their reunion was sparked by their 1981 free show at New Yorks Central Park, vriien half a million fans showed up to hear them sing 1960s hits like Bridge Over Troubled Water, Mrs. Robinson and Homeward Bound.

The reaction was tremendous, said Simon, the songwriter of the two. Were sort of back by popular demand.

The duo, now both 41, were among the most popular singing groups in America when they split in 1970 to pursue solo careers, and their 19-city tour is designed to rekindle that old feeling.

I feel that weve played a surprisingly deep part m peoples memory life, some of them, and were going to now touch that again, said Garfunkel.

this spring in areas where brown shrimp grow.

Sunday Buffet ^ 12 Noon til 3 p.m. ^

^ Wed.&Fri. % ^ Night Buffets /t 5 p.m. til 10 p.m. Jjy

(Friday night buffet will be mostly seafood)

Speciab on Tuesdays and Thursdays

JEAN-YUNGCHINA H RESTAURANT    {

Chocowinity, N.C.    ^

Phone 946-5607 Corner Hwys. 17 & 33 J

Our hope is that WarGames will be in the theaters throughout the summer, so it wont seem too late, he said.

TV Log

For comploto TV progranuning information, conaull your wookly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday'a DaHy Rafloctor.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

TUESDAY    12

7:00 Jokers Wild

7 30 Tic Tac Dough ; 8:00 OntheRoad    *

8 30 Our Times    ^ 9:00 Movie 11 00 Nevrs9 11 30 Late Movie 2:00 Nightwatch

WEDNESDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 JImBakker &:00 Carolina 8:00 AAorning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Child's Play 11:00 Price Is

00 Nev>rs9 30 Young and 30 As The World 30 Capitol 00 Guiding Light 00 Waltons 00 Hillbillies X AndyGrltflth 00 News9 X News 00 Joker's Wild 30 Tic Tac Dough 00 Archie 30 Gloria 00 AAovie 00 News9 X AAovie 00 Nightwatch

WITN-TV-Ch.7

TUESDAY    11:00 Wheel of

7:Sb Jefferson    11:30 Dream House

7:X Family Feud 12:00 News 8:00 A Team I2:X Search For 9 :00 R. Steele    1. 00 Days Of Our

10:00 St. Elsewhere 2:00 Another WId. 11:00 News    3:00    Fantasy

11 :X Tonight Show 4:00 Whitney the 12:X Letterman 4:X LIttleHousa I :X Overnight S.X Dark Shadows 2:X News    8:00    News

WEDNESDAY    4.X NBC News

5: Lie Detector 7:00 Jefferson 6:00 Almanac j; x Family Feud 7:00 Today 8:00 Real People 7:25 News    9:00    Factsot Life

7:X Today    9:X Buffalo Bill

8:25 News    10:00 News Is News

t.X Today    i0:x Taxi

9:00 R. Simmons 11:00 News 9:MAIIinthe    11: Tonight Show

10:00 DIM. Strokes i2: Letterman 10: Sale of the    liXOvarnlght

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

TUESDAY    10

7:00 Santordki 10 7: B. Miller 11 8:00 Comedy Hour II 8: JoanieLoves 12 9:00 3'sCompany 12 9: NinetoFlve 1 10:00 Hart to Hart 2 11:00 Action News 3 11: Nightline * 12: Starskyk 1 Mission

2: Early Edition WEDNESDAY

5:00 Bewitched

5 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day

6 News

7 :00 Good AAorning 10 6:13 Action News ii 6:55 Action News II 7:25 Action News 12

8 25 Action News 1

9 :00 Phil Donahue 2

00 Happening SantardB 00 TooClose Loving 00 Family Faud Ryan's Hope 00 My Children 00 One Life 00 Gan. Hospital 00 Cartoons 30 W . Woman Peopla't 00 Action News ABC News 00 Sanford &

B. Millar 00 Fall Guy 00 GoldMonkty 00 Dynasty 00 Action News ABC News Starsky B Mission Early Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

TUESDAY 7:00 Report

7 Old House

8 :00 Nova 9:00 Lifeline 10:00 Saudi Arabia 11:00 Monty Python 11 Doctor in 12:00 SignOtt WEDNESDAY

3:00 Teaching 3 Reading R

ByFREDROTHENBERG APTdevisioo Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The players who w<Mit be in tbe linei^ for NBCs new dramatic baseball series, Bay City Blues, are athletes wbo cant act, and actors who cant throw.

Were not requiring a professional level of skill, says Steven Bocbco, tbe shows executive producer. But they have to be good athletes and have rudimentary skill.

Auditions are scheduled as double-headers. First they act, tben we take them out to tbe parking lot, says Bocbco. We wont take anybody whos not co(Hrdinated enough to be credible as a baseball player.

In casting pitcher Frencfay Knuckles, a New York actor was was flown to Hollywood. But then we found out be threw like a girl, says Thad Mumford, creative consultant and writer on the slmw.

Greg Hoblit, co-executive producer, worked out in New Yorks Coitral Park with actob Jeff McCracken, whos been cast as first baseman Vic Kres^. McCracken had a rou^ introduction to the big leagues. Accustomed to playing softball in the Broadway Show League, one of Hoblits hardball tosses mugged him. The shiner added to the reality of his screen test.

Weve gotten calls from anybody whos ever touched a baseball, says Mumford. The problem is that most of them are too old. This is about a Double A team in the minors. The level is really young. Theres a harshness about the camera that makes you old or older.

The difficulty in casting has forced the producers to postpone by one week the filming, which will now start July 27. NBCs Tuesday night series, which will chronicle the life and dreams of the minor-league club in a blueK)ollar town, debuts Oct. 25.

Weather, Too, Was Uncommon

HANALEI,Hawaii (AP)-Uncommon weather did quite a number on the first

4:00 SPMirwSt. 5:00 Mr Rogw-s

5 Reading R. 6:N Dr. Who

6 Wildlite

7 00 Report

7 Old House

8 00 Creatures 9:00 Country C. 10:15 Soundstage 11:15 Monty Python 11:45 SlgnOff

days of filming Uncommon Valor, the tentative title of actor Gene Hackmans new $16 million Vietnam War movie.

First, rain draicbed the set near Hanalei, on the island of Kauai, forcii^ actors staging a trek throu^ Vietnamese jungle to slog through ankle^leepmud.

More problems arose when the cast and crew journeyed to the base of Waialeale Mountain, one of the rainiest ^ts on Earth, to film a continuation of the trek.

Midway through filming, the skies turned clear for about the second time this year, said Eric Myers, a spokesman for tbe film. We had to wait several hours to proceet'

The    is    scheduled

to reiHc r in Hawaii until mid-Aug s then travel to Bangkok for location shots.

SHraMPferfection

Wed&Fri. ^

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All The Fried, Broiled Or Boiled Shrimp \txj Can Eat, Salad Bar, Stuffed Or Baked Potato. PLUS All. The Chablis Mxj Can Drii JUST $8.95

Real-life athletes havent been seriously considered, although there was talk of casting former Pittsburgh Pirates star Willie Stargell as a player-coach. Trick casting doesnt work in an ensemble cast, says Bocbco, wbo also is executive producer of Hill Street Blues.

In a 1^ cast, a conscious effort is ma<te to avoid well-known stars whose egos and demands might cause problems. A real athlete on a show about baseball might also make waves.

Ed Marinaro, former National Football League running back, and Michael Warren, former UCLA basketball star, are regulars on HUl Street, but, when they were cast, they were unsung actors on that cop show.

Stars also cost more money, and Bay City Blues is already high-priced. Whats really expensive is doing baseball action, says Bochco. The cost of the extras is very expensive. Plans call for more than 400 extras for the baseball s^uences.

Bochco is also building his own stadium - on the grounds of the Dept, of Water and Power in Pacoima, Calif. We tried desperately to find a regular stadium, but theyre booked, he says. If this show doesnt make it, well be this years Supertrain.

Besides youth and a ^ arm, it helps to have trained in Hill Street Blues, which has become a farm team of sorts. As of last weekend, eight characters of the 15 weekly regulars had been cast - and four of the actors had played memorable roles on HUl Street.

- Dennis F/anz played the slimy, sadistic undercover c^, Sal Benedetto, who shot himself when his superiors found he was on the take. Franz played the same kind of despicable villain in Psycho II. In Bay City Blues, hes the pitching coach.

- Pat Corley played the gravelly-voiced coroner, Wally Nyerdorf, who cremated the wrong stiff and sweated buUets about it. Hes the cash-poor owner of the Bluebirds and a local used-car dealership.

- Peter Jurasik was the greasy cocaine dealer, Sid, who enjoyed print shirts, J.D. LaRues drug jokes and Neal Washingtons cool. HeU be the teams play-by-play

announcer.

- Marco Rodriguez was Rico, the rehabUitated dope addict who feU off the wagon

in last seasons final epbode. -HeU play the lecherous team mascot, tbe Bluebird of Happiness.

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1:10-3:10-5:10-7:10-9:10 qA ^HI^I^AD of lAUQHS!

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Family Restaurants

Luncheon Specials Monday thru Friday

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Banquet Facilities Available

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REYNOLDS    I    TWILIGHT ZONE

STROKER ACE (PG)

SHOWS 3:00-7:10-9:00 I SHOWS 3:00-7:104:05

RETURN OF THE JEDI

SHOWS MON.-FRI. iPG 3:00-7:00-9:30

SUMMER KID SHOWS-PLAZA 3 TUE., WED., THUR., 10:00 A.M. TREASURE ISLAND ALL SEATS $1.50

OUTLET

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Shirtinater Blouses Slripet 8 Solids.......

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Knit Tops By Russ..........13    si

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Skirts By Russ Ll &up

besses..........19

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GOOD SELECTION OF LADIES

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SIzos to 40

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Croammford By Evgene Sbefftr

ACROSS IFannunit 5 Swiss river SAmNKUi sodaUst 12 David, dim

r4Mjit>lynr^

U It might bewtite

14 Seed coat

15 Native country

17 Brood of

U Force IS Avoided aUow 21 Ghastly pale 24Paitofn.b. 25 Ponce de-21 Short-billed bird as French artist

31 Vdcanoon Martinique

32 Runner '' Sebastian

33 Commuter route

35 Denvers elevation 31 Dobbins portion

37 Fishermans 53 Singer

li-Yutang

boot

Abbe

28 Wavy: Her.

38 Canal

DOWN

21 Winglike

courfry

IQgar

22 Antitoxins

UBuddhist

residue

23 Pueblo

sect

2Billand-

dweller

42 Arthurian

(talk fondly) 24 Rubysixnel

lady

3Produrt

28 Exercise

43 Drivers

of Cuba

outfits

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27 Citric or

48 Fairy tale

team

amino

opoio'

5 Exclamation 28 (Captive of

49 BiUical tribe 1 Frendi river

Ifereules

58 Case for

7 Blushed

29 Gaze askance

gmall

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31 Infants con

articles

companion

veyance

51 Require

9Estrada

34 Ready

52 Jets

14 Wait

to shock

bailiwici 11 Toboggan Av%. sointion time: 24 minutes.

35 Fireplace ledge

37 Married

38 Mexican latxM^

3S English queen

40 French resort

41 Crazy

44 Mighty tree

45 Gredc letter 40 Energy

source 7-19 47 Even the Answer to yesterdays puzzle, scwe

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CRYPTOQUIP    7-19

BIPZ GJBFU GSFU LCBD BXIUJL AB

QJZ QB DUANP QCUSJ XNJUL.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip - DENTIST IS ENLISTING AS A DRILL SERGEANT.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: B equals 0.

Itie Cryptoquip is a sim|de substitution dpber in which each letter loed stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will etpial 0 throu^XMit the puzzle. Si^e letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

Q im King Features Syndicate. Inc

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY. JULY 20.196S

GENERAL TENDENCIES: You have aU kinds of good ideas for expressing yourself and putting in motion the plan of life that is important to you but dont be surprised if you have some delays.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Make plans to expand where your interests are conconed, even thouj^ you may find that a partner objects.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Go ahead with thoM plans of a business nature that are constructive and gain fine benefits. Be clever in presenting them.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A partner may want some agreement revised and this would be good for both of you, so go ahead with it.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Do not procrastinate so much at your work and be more precise and direct fw better results.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Get that plan wwking that can bring in fine benefits, even though it may take a little longer before it is completed.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept 22) Get busy early with those ideas you have for im{nvving home conditions. Some money problems may crop up.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Some puzzling matter can be best understood by the questions which others ask, but it may take a little time to settle.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Financial affairs should be first on the agenda today. Later some quick action saves a defeating situation.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You have fine ideas and can state them clearly to others, but dont expect much support for them.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Sit down in the quiet of your study and analyze your position in life and what you want to do in the fiiture.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You can see only a few of your friends now because of lack of time, so talk over mutual aims with them.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Contact bigwigs and gain their backing for whatever your interests happen to be, and gain more progress.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will to varying philosophies of life different to the one in which bom. Early teach to study each one thoroughly before accepting any of them.Teach early the importance of working with the hands.

'"nw Stars impel, they do not compel." What you make of your life is largely up to you!

Littering With Grass-Clippings

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - A Greensboro dentist was given a suspended jail term after a judge convicted him of littering by dumping grass clippings behind his house.

Dr. James Lemmons 30-day sentence was suspended Monday for five years on the

F

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C

u

s

El Liberador

This weelt, the nations of Latin America celebrate the 2(X)th birthday of Simon Bolivar, their most revered political hero. Born to a wealthy family in Caracas, Venezuela, Bolivar shunned the aristocratic life and led the struggle for independence from Spain. He joined a band of patriots in 1810, and for the next 14 years he led rebel bands against the Spanish forces. In 1819, he became the first President of the Republic of Colombia, a vast territory that included modern Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama. He added Peru to the new Colombian empire in 1823, and upper Peru was named Bolivia in his honor. Bolivars dream of a union of South American nations failed. But he is still remembered as El Liberador.

DO YOU KNOWWhich South American nation was not settled by Spain?

MONDAYS ANSWERJeanette Rankin was the first female member of Congress.

"IHMM    VKC.Inc.    19M

GOREN BRIDGE

lY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

01983 Tribunt Company Syndlctte. Inc;

THE POWER OF SUGGESTION

Both vulnerable. North deals.

NORTH

105 9J10

0 AKJ73

AKQ6 WEST    EAST

AKJ83    4762

<79    <7A873

0 942    OQ106

J1095    4842

SOUTH 4Q94 ^KQ6542 085 473 The bidding: ,

North    East    South    West

1 0    Pass    1 <7    14

2 4    Pass    2 <7    Pass

3 <7    Pass    4 <7    Pass

Pass    Pass

Opening lead: King of 4.

You dont have to have the right hand to beat a contract. Sometimes, making declarer think you have the right hand is as good. Your senior scribe held the East hand many years ago in a European tournament.

North-South reached the reasonable contract of four hearts. Note Norths raise on a doubleton-South almost surely held six hearts for his auction, so the jack-ten represented excellent support.

West led the king of spades, and from Easts vantage point the prospects looked bleak. He could see that

his side was going to take two spade tricks and the trump ace, but where was the setting trick going to come from? South surely held six hearts to the king-queen, so it looked as if declarer was going to prevail.

East realized that his one hope was that his partner held the nine of hearts. So at trick one he started an echo with the seven of spades. West dutifully continued with the ace of spades, and East completed the false pic ture of his hand by following with the two. Now West led a third spade.

East had convinced declarer that he had started with only two spades. So declarer opted to ruff the third spade on the table, instead of letting it ride round to his queen. Easts coup had succeeded. He now had two sure trump tricks when his partner turned up with the nine, and a seemingly unbeatable contract had bitten the dust.

HACKED TO DEATH

NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Angry villagers hacked to death six men who robbed passengers of about $5,000 at a bus stop near Monghyr in Birhar state, United News of India says.

Speaking of Your Health...

later LColaM>.M.Di

Collagen Can Erase

Scars, Wrinkles

condition that he not dump more clippings. Lemmons filed notice of appeal.

Lemmons next-door nei^bors, attorney Joseph Elrod III and bis wife, Linda, swore out a warrant against Lemmons and his wife, Mary.

I have some scars on my face that were left over from a trad case of chicken pox when I was a child. I have been told that these can be fixed with injections of collagen. Are there any other ways of doing this? Are there any dangers to using c(dlagen. Exactly what is it? Mrs. R.S.E., Texas.

Dear Mrs. E.:

Collagen has come into discussion because of its potential possibilities for repair of scars and obliteration of some types of wrinkles of the skin. Many dermatologists and plastic surgeons have been evaluating collagen and learning to avoid allergic reactions. The Food and Drug Administration has approved the use of collagen after studying its safety.

Collagen comes from the connective tissues in the body. This tissue is the supporting architecture in various organs of the body. The collagen that is being used is taken from the skin of cattle. Tiny quantities are injected into a wrinkle or a scar in cases that are well-chosen by discriminating doctors.

Since it is known that collagen can cause severe allergic reactions, all people

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who are contemplating using it are tested by their doctors long before it is used. A tiny amount is injected into the skin and that area is kept under observation for four to six weeks just to be sure that no delayed sensitivity is present.

Not all people and not all cases are candidates for its use. Some types of arthritis will make the use of collagen impossible. Severe allergic and gamma globulin deficiencies will mitigate against its use.

All patients who undertake the program of collagen injections should be certain to know all the advantages and disadvantages long before they enter such a program. Only in this way can one avoid disappointment.

There is another technique which has been used with considerable success. That is dermabrasion. By this method a fine wire brush sandpapers an area of scarring. When the area heals, the surface loses its indentations and when the crust disappears, a new flat surface may result.

Perhaps you should give this some consideration too before you contemplate the collagen approach.

FRANK t ERNEST

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18-The Day Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, July 19,1983

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Advertising

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line par day 7 Or More Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

2.90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Uneage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday.. Tuesday 3 p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday..........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday    noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday ... . Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

TOPPED OFF - Workmen finish pouring the last of the concrete on the top of the first reactor at the SeahroiA (N.H.) nuclear plant.

I*ublic Service CiHnpany of New Hampshire said the building was completed six weeks ahead of schedule. (AP Laserphoto)

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

Seeking To Formulate An Ethic On Land-Use

By The Associated Press Religious leaders seeidng to establish a land-use ethic in .North Carolina have found that transferring their enthusiasm for land stewardship to the congregations isnt easy.

'Ninety-nine people out of 100 will agree there should be some regulation so North Carolina doesnt end up like Newark, said the Rev. S. Lex Mathews, director of Christian social ministeries of the Episcqial Diocese of North Carolina. But ask them if theyre willing to be controlled and theyll say Heck, no!

The Land Stewardship Council of North Carolina believes land and development should be tempered with concerns for environment and people. But the council hasnt always found a welcome reception to its suggestions.

Created in 1980, the council includes leadership by Baptists, Catholics, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Moravians and Jews.

Council officials say development plans should be judged by both ethical and economic standards and that part of the money to fund the project should come from congregations, which are already bogjged down with other projects. But this years budget of $42,000 has been met in part by two foundation grants.

James R. Hinkley, who took the job of Council executive director to integrate his expertise in state planning with his religious convictions, discovered his fundraising skills had to be sharpened. The fund-raising effort has forced him to take time away from education and advocacy work.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR resrves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

PUBLIC NOTICES

WHEREAS, the City Council has received a petition that a portion Taylor Street be closed; and VVHEREAS, the City Council

in

tends to close the aforesaid portion of Tf    ---------------

- . aylor Street in accordance with the provisions of G.S. IMA'299;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE RESOLVED BY THE CITY

CIL that It Is the intent of the . , Council to close the followini

coy the Cl

Ity

described portion of Taylor Stree; located in the West Meadowbrook

Project Area 81 ON 37 0057 beginn .......... of    Moore

the

the

ing with the right-of-way _ _______

Street a distance of 240 plus or minus feet, said portion being nrMire par ticularly described as follows: Beginning at a point at southeastern intersection of right-of-ways of Taylor Streef and Moore Sfreet; thence with the pre sent rljBht-of way of Taylor Street S30 33*^4' W a distance of 244.92 feet to a point; thence N69* 26' 36" W i distance of 40.00 feet to a point thence N20 33' 24"E a distance o 236.13 feet to a point located at the southwestern int^sectlon of the right of-ways of Taylor Street a Moore Street; thence with

the

southern right-of-way of Moore Sfreet S81> SO' )4"E a distance

40.95 feet to the point of beginning.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED thaf a public hMring will be held in the Council ChamW, Municipal luilding, Greenville, North Jarolina, on August 11,i 1903 at 7: P.M., to consider the advisability

closir>g the aforesaid portion . Taylor Street. At such public hear

Ing', all objections and suggestions Will be duly considered

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this resolution published once a week for four (41 successive weeks in The Daily Reflector; that a copy of this resolu tion be sent by certified mail to the

owners of property adjoining the aforesaid portion of Taylor Street as shown on the County tax records;

ounty

and that copy of this resolution >rominently posted In at least two 2) places along the aforesaid por

ion of Taylor Street Di 1983

 aylo _______

Duly ai^ted this 14th day of July,

PERCYR COX,MAYOR LOISD WORTHINGTON, CITY CLERK

July 1?, 26; Augusf2, 9, 1983

The undersigned, having qualified j Executrix of the Estate of B. rank Jackson, deceased, late of

Pitt County, this is to notify all per sons having claims against said

state to present them to the under

Rev. Robert Estill, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina and the councils vice chairman. Its frustrating, but churches are more interested in putting in parking lots than getting involved in land stewardship.

The council priority is to develop a land-use ethic - a set of values to govern how land is used.

The current ethic is that land is a commodity to be bought and sold, Hickley said. The ethic we hope to devel(^ would have three elements; who makes land-use decisions, what are our attitudes toward land use and how tax policies can promote intelligent development.

When Robert L. Jones,

president of Davidson and Jones Construction Co. heard about the council, he suspected anti-development sentiment. Jones firm has been criticized by the council for building Raleighs Crabtree Valley Mall on a floodplain, a flat area prone to flooding, in 1971-72.

We care and we want to do things right, Jones said. But were also in a business and that business is building and development. I dont know what this group stands for, but it sounds like a new approach to an old war game - anti-development.

But the board of the Land Stewardship Council contends it favors development as long as it doesnt desecrate the land or cause injury to people.

signed on or before the 19th day of notice will be recovery. All persons Indebted to the said Estate

January, 1984, or this pleaded in bar of fheir

will please make immediate pay ment to the undersigned.

This the 11th day of July, 1983 LULAW JACTKSON 1509 Broad Sfreet

Greenville, NC 27834 BRC

HOWARD, BROWNING. SAMS & POOLE Attorneys at Law

Greenville, NC 27835-0859 July 19, 26, Aug. 2, 9, 1983

PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTIC

TORSAND

NORTH CA._,

PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified

P Moseley, deceased, late

of Pitt County, this is to notify all

rirsons having claims against 'said state to present them to the

Counted Fewer N.C. Bridqe Traffic Deaths n .

Posses Test

If you have 10 concerns pushing on you, somethings got to give, said the Ri^t

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Twenty-nine North Carolina cities and towns had no trfiffic fatalities in 1982, an improvement over the pre-vious year when 23 municipalities were without traffic deaths, the N.C. State Motor Club says.

Fifteen cities were on the list both years. Eight fell off the list, and there were 14 new towns, said club president John Frazier III.

Municipalities on this years list are Ahoskie, Archdale, Belmont, Boone, Brevard, Canton, Cary, Chapel Hill, Cherryville, Concord, Dallas, Edenton, Forest City, Graham, Havelock, Hendersonville, Kemersville, Kings Mountain, Lincolnton, Mint Hill, Morehead City, Mount Holly, Mount Olive, Newton, Plymouth, Reidsville, Tarboro, Thomasville and Waynesville.

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A bridge in Graham County has passed an inspection prompted by the collapse of a bridge on lnterstate-95 in Connecticut, the North Carolina Department of Transportation said Monday.

The Graham County bridge, which crosses the Little Tennessee River, is one of two similarly constructed bridges in the state. The other is on 1-40 in Winston-Salem and was undergoing tests on Monday.

The Graham bridge passed an ultrasonic test, but will be closed for one day so state bridge crews can replace a 5-inch steel pin as a precaution. The pin was found to have a slight imperfection, but there was never any danger of bridge failure, said Jimmy D. Lee, head of the states bridge maintenance section.

_ .    unckir-

signed on or before the I2th day of January, 1984, or this notice will be

January, 1984, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said Estate

will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the 8th day of July, 1983.

MAR ION H Moseley

111 Bellmont Drive Greenville, NC 27834 HOWARD, BROWNING, SAMS Si POOLE Attorneys at Law BY: Stanley M. Sams P.O. Box 895

Greenville, NC 27835-0859 July 12,19, 26, August 2, 1983

w!^^W%!noT!ty^&ss

Enterprises to bid as subcontractors on NC Dept, of Transportation projects 8.2220102 in

Pitt ?rwnfy,-^N?:''?*8.11*101 Onslow coyntJes._NC. Lettl^

ispor

date: July 26, 1983 ________

Kienast, EO Officer, Barrus strucfion Company, Kinston, nv, 919/527 8021, eL 40. An EEO/AA employer.

July 11 17. 18. 19, 20. 21. 22. 1903

acquire by lease

i*et?SetTc

____   spAce

in the Greenville NC area. Lease t*':'" 3 years. Possession Jan. 1, 1984. Cut-Off time for receiving pro-posals is 2:00 PM, AAonday, August 8' 'W3. For specifications, proposals and additional information cont.

Ted Bowen. Eastern Regional I sonnel Otflce, 404 South Andrews Street 27834, 919 756 7812.

July 18. 19, 20,21. 22, 1983

Proposals are invited for supplying LP gas for heating, cooking, and other uses at our schools. Thistild is for a period of one year. Pactolus School Is on natural gas and is ex empted from this bW. Containers (tanks, bottles, etc.) are to be fur nished and Installed by supplier at no cost, lease, or rent to the Pitt Cqyn y Board of Education.

Tai.Ks and/or containers furnish

ed by the supplier may be removed one week after the closing of school

and reinstalled one week prior to the open I ng^of school.

The Pitt County School uses approximately 40,()06 to 50.000 gallons of LP gas per year.

Please submit properly identified prop<als to Mr. Carl Heath, Maintenance Supervisor, Pitt Coun-ty Sc^' P. O. Box 432, Winterville, NC 28590 on or before July 29, 1983 Bid opening will be at 1:00 August 1,1*3. Any and aU

Bid

will be at l:dO p.m. on

August 1,1983. Any and allprqposals may ^ rejected by the Pitt County BMrd of Educafioo.

This contract may be terminated

There Oughta Be A Law

I nis contract may be terminated by the Pitt County Board of Education at any time service is un

satisfactory July 17, 19,21, 1983

(Sinai the

OT OF $TAT&, ALL TH6lie F(2|gMP$ MAC? THl$ TO SAY

(A/g finally got an

AN$W6(E PPOAA OUI^ DPAK F(Zlg)lC?$ 6ACK MON\p...

THAMK5 FOe. yoe LXM5 LBTTGfZ. MOTHIM5 (slew Ai^OJNP TO THAT'S ALL FOtZ NOW. W(2ir^ A5AN.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

utrlx /ERN( Coun

_______

 _RKION

BARNHILL, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate to pre s*nf them to the undersigned, whose mailing address Is 20s Jefferson

Drive, Greenville, North Carolina,

27834, t .....

Januar

27834, on or before the 19th day of January, 1984, or this Notice win be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All

; If-      1    inc    I_ A./

wmont/u    MOrgs    Agg    oprgw    a    7-    <?

persons indebted to said Estate will

Case make immediate payment to undersigned.

This the 14th day of July, 1983.

Mrs. Pauline L. Barnhill 2805 Jefferson Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834

AVENDISH&

Attorneys at Law Post Office Di

_..iceDrawer 15 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 July 19, 26; August 2,9, 1983

NOTICE^TP.CREDITORS

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

002

PERSONALS

018

Ford

1975 FORD GRANADA, 1 owner, excellent condition. Less than 80.000 miles. 82300. 746 2624 aHer 5 p.m

1977 PINTO _ L169?.7?6-Q9*a

.Loaded.

low mileage

021

Oldsmobiie

1976 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME Loaded. Real clean. New radlals

752-4080 or 756-8759.

023

Pontiac

1977 FIREBIRD, automatic, power steerliM a^ brakes, tilt whMi. Craig ^/FM stereo cassette, mag wheels, needs door panel. S2^ Call 758 4349 after 6

1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRO Light blue. Air. AM/FM. power steering, 4 speed, mint condition. 756-7178 ^

024

Foreign

AUDI 4.000 AM/FM cassette, sunrooi

late. Warranty 7499._

DIESEL, 1982

iunroof

Immacu 7,000 miles. 756

AUDI 5000S 1982. Fuel injected

Like new. In perfect condition Elec ' ----

electric sunroof, complete stereo system. Call after 6 p.m. 1-975-3179

DATSUN 310 GX 1980. Excellent condition. 4 speed, air, sunroof. AM-FM cassette. 54,000 miles 83900. Call 758-5097after 6 p.m.

MERCEDES 240-D 1981. 4 speed

sunroof, new tires, cr-eam. Excellent condition. 814,800. Call 756 6336 days. Ask for Lorelle Nights or weekends call 756 1549

TOYOTA SERVICE, 4 cylinder tune special 820. 4 cylinder valve adjust 814. 5 years experience Toyota East. Ben's Fork Garage. 756-3796.

VOLVO-1982 DL 2 door. 4 speed with overdrive. Air, stereo with cassette, 21,000 miles. Absolutely perfect condition. 810,100. 756-8524

1971 TOYOTA Corolla.

fion^i^jood gas mileage

758-:

Good condi . Best offer.

1971 VOLKSWAGEN Rebuilt Ine and carburetor. New starter

engine and carburetor. N battery and tires. 752-1134.

1972 MG MIDGET Good condition Have to see to appreciate. Phone

758-7259.

1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUS Looks and drives good. Fold down bed and table. Asking 81095. 752 1037.

973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good. 81700. Call 758 2300 davs

1974 SAAB New engine and Interi-or. Sacrifice for best offer. 756 4645.

74 VOLKSWAGEN Remanufactured engine. Excellent condition. 81500. Phone 795-3486.

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA 5 speed

firm

condition. 81100

044

PETS

hip dysplasia. Field trial champion blood line. 8150.746-4793 after 5.

DOBERMAN PUPPIES Red.

black and rust. /Male, 885. Females, 880. 749 4741

DOBERMAN PUPPIES 4 red,

black. 875each. 752 4609 after 6.

FREE CATS AND KITTENSI Some with li

long hair and mixed colors. 758 5013 aHer 8 p.m., anytime weekends

GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES

AKC females. 875. 752 3735.

LHASA APM, 2>^ years o registered. 830. Call 756-0010

old, AKC

RAT TERRIER puppies Will be weened July 31. 850 each. Call 746A679

SCHNAUZER-YORKE

3Vi months old female. 8100. Call 752 7194._

051

Help Wanted

ACCOUNTANT CPA or CPA candidate with i to 4

years experl

ence to fill immediate vacancy in light

tax oriented practice. No overnight travel. Salary negotiable based on experience. Reply to PO Box 989, Kinston, NC 28501

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Due to Increased sales, we are In need of a salesperson. Experience helpful but not necessary. Must be responsible and have the willing ness to work hard and earn top commissions. Excellent benefits, working conditions and bonus plan. See Brian Pecheles in person only 9 a.m. 12 noon, AAonday-Frlday. Joe Pecheles Volkswaoen

BODY SHOP MANAGER needed. Excellent salary and benefits.

Apply to Herbert Powell, Hastings Ford: 758 0114._ ^

051

Htip Wanted

NEED GOOD BASE and lei^ gulH with playing experience

starting, i seam

player with playing e> loln Gospel group. Just there will be no pay. Prefer _ musicians only. If Interested, ca 758 2798 from 9 to 5 or 758-6007 froi 5 to 10.

PARTS COUNTER PERSON For

parts experience necessary Excellent advancement^gjpt^nlf

to parts manager positk riofit person. Call 75^4272

PITT COUNTY cepting appHcati of Pupir Serv

SCHOOLS is..a<

kations for the posltio of Pupil Services Coordlnatoi Graduate degree In Counseling o

Supervisor's Certificate, 5 year experience desir^. Application

must 1^*

July.

OHici

...ke, 752-6106 or write Pitt iChools,: 1717 W** Sth

ireenvllle.NC 27834.

PLUMBER NEEDED At least years experience. 756 796L

POSITIONS AVAILABLE Grom home manager and relief personnc to work in home living situations to adults with mental retardatioii These are manager/lnstructo positions. Applicants must bo 2 years old, nigh school graduate able to qualTfy for chauffeur license and be able to suppi' referen

enees. Applications ti

personal refi -be received through August 5, 1983 Contact Group Home Coordinator

946-0151 8 to Friday. EOE

5, Monday througl

RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo Distric Hospital needs you. Contac Barbara McDonald, Director o Nvr8lfl9,94?21!l

BOREDI BROKE I BLUE I

Sell toys, glHs until Decernber. Fun

job, party plan, free S300 kit. No

collecting: 'no deiiverV. 756-4553, 756^10.753 2534.

Convenlenc

mosphere

CASHIER

store. Good

Apply at Dodges Memorial Drive.

e store. Good at-Steady employment. Store, 209 South

 __________ Your    chance    t<

oin up with Fortune 500 Company Only sharp, aggressive mechanically inclined "go-getter' need apply. Paid I year training period. Excellent benefit_package Call Jamie, Heritage wsonne Service 355-2020:

SALESPERSON NEEDED Auti sales experience preferred Excellent company benefits. Cal

DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED

:xperienced required. X-ray lerflficatlon required. 756-5911.

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY

Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales repre sentafive. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambitious and show progress for age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal In terview please submit resume

stating personal history, education and business experience. Write PO Box 406, Greenville. NC 27835.

1975 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER, good condition. Best offer. Cali

anytime 746-2177.

monda stationwagon

53.IM0 miles. 81700 negotiable. 753 4965.

1976 TOYOTA LIFTBACK Tires condition. Air AM/FM casseHeT 82900. Call 758 606 days. 757 1353 nlohts

1976 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe

Automatic. 81100. 746 3502._

1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT

Good condition. 82400. Call 746 6483

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA AM/FM 8 track, air, 72,000 miles. 83200. Call 752 6855 aHer 7 p.m

1981 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA _ speed, air, digital AM/FM stereo cassette. 31,000 miles. Call 758-3047 after 5 p.m

1981 VOLKSWAGEN DIESEL - L

2 door, air, AM/FM casseHe. s|ie^ new tires, low mileage. Call

1982 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT LS

Diesel. AM/FM, air, low mileage, like new. 758-6659

1983 TOYOTA CELICA ST, 19,000 m les, 8500 and assume payments Call 758 7427anytime.

1976 FIAT stationwagon. 1 ow Good oas mileage. 897f 753 2381

030    Bicycles For Sale

CHILDRENS BICYCLES - U

" ^y or girl with training m 20" boys. T 24" girls. 756 7*6

Jsed. A wheels.

RED

year

condition. 757-102._

032

Boats For Sale

ect^t^.1?7787

ASS 35 Johnson

_ MERRIMAC 16', TrI hull, new seats, 65 horsepower

1973 I

motor, after 5.

like new.

Evinrude 81500. 756 7364

1982

8900.

IZ*. SAND PIPER Sailboat. Call 757 6078 or 946 0288 after

034    Campers For Sale

NEW JAYCO POPUPS prices. Camptown RV's, 746 3530

Close out

TRUCK COVERS All sites, colors. Leer FibergTass and Sportsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Brlants, aleigh, N C 834 2774

Exceptional Opponunity

WILL YOU EARN

SECRETARIAL Public reiationi position. Congeniaiity and top skilh will put you in touch with Inter esting people. Salary com mensrate with abilities. Call Le Personni

355 2020, Heritage Personnel.

SECRETARY

preschools.

For small chain oi preschools. Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone callt Pl9889

RETARY RECEPTINIS7 wanted to assume responsibility and handle a variety of duties. Musi have excellent typing and ad ministratlve skills. Send resume to 'Secretary', P O Box 1967. Greenvirie. N C 27835_

SERVICE WRITER needed. Expe rience preferred. Ability to com munlcafe with public a must. Call ^9* *7?

SHEET ROCK hangers and flnlsh-ers. Call 756 0053. ^_

815,000 to 820,000 this year, more in future years.

International comi^ny in its second 50 years of grp'.rth needs fhree sales representatives In this area.

ARE YOU:

Sportsminded *21 years of age or over Aggressive Anibiflous

In good health High School grt Bondable with good references

I School graduate or better

IF YOU QUALIFY YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED;

month guaranteed f

2 weeks expense paid training Hospitalization and Profit Sharing

81200 per start

Unlimited advancement opportuni ty, no seniority. Opportunity to advance into management as rapidly as your ability warrants. Act today tor a secure tomorrow. Call ix)w for appolntmenf and personal interview.

Monday thru Friday 757-0686 10 A.M. to 6 P.M.

An Equal Opportunity Company M/F

EXPERIENCED Word Proo needed on Wang, Lanier Displaywrlter. (Lall for

polntment

rocessprs and IBAA ap

Manpower Temporary Services

118 ReaJe street 757-3300

needed 756 4254

uii or

BABYSITTERS part time. Call

EXPERIENCED HAIR STYLIST needed full or part time. Excellent working conditions and good ^neflH. Call days 355 2076; nights

FINANCIAL

ill'

1978.2.1' Wilderness. Like new. Only 8. Roof air.

ness. Lik<

used few times. Sleeps i awning, fully self-contained. negotiable. 76 8539.

P36

Cycles For Sale

^PED FOR SALE 1981 Honda.

Perfect shape; heFme.....

8230. 756 027r

ilment Included!

I, VANESSA 0 FREEMAN, wilino nger be .responsible for any debts

longer      ...    _____

contracted by anyone other than mvself. _

SINGLES, WIDOWS, and divorcees vvho would like to meet other singles, widows, and divorces. All ages welcome Write to:

Singles of North Carolina (SNC) PO Box 11077 Goldsboro, N C 27532 All replies confidential

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

^ PAY CASH

Floyd G Ri Evans Mall

for diamonds.

toblnson Jewelers,' 47 Downtown Greenville

010

AUTOAWTIVE

. ^ RENTAWRECK Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save. 752 2277_

Oil

Autos For Sale

before you sell or trade your J? M "lodel car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay too dollar

SELL YOUR Autofinders

.CAR the National ... Wayl Authorized Dealer in PIH County.

Ford. Call 758-0114.

Hastings

012

AMC

1979 AMC CONCORD DL WAGON "S- 6 spaad. Excallant condition High mileage. Must see to appreciate. 81450.75f5027.

013

BuIck

Ijn BUICK SKYHAWK Needs work New tires. Povrer, air. 81600. Call home 752 1050, work 756 5994, ask for Mike Tvler

1977 AAOTTO GUZZI Italian built touring bike. Wind lammer and mpIdM saddle bags. Only 3,300 miles. 82100. Call 827 5626 aHer 5 EJIL_

1982 HONDA V-45 MAGNA 756 4191 days, 795 4954 aHer 6.

82895.

039

Trucks For Sole

FORD COURIER, 1982, 84800. Call afterOp.m, 756 9886.

TRUCK COVERS Cobra. Camptown

746 3530.

^hawk and RV's. Ayden.

1973 CHEVY automatic,

Chevenne steering, tllP wheel, *^"am/FM 8

V 8, and

track, needs work 4349 after 6

8800. Call 758-

IgV^JEEP CJ-7. 42,000 miles. Call

1980 BLUE 4 wheel drive Toyota truck short bed, 83500 negotiable. Call after 6 p.m.. 795-4419

1981 BLUE TOYOTA

pickup. 85.000. 752 0779.

longbed

1981 DATSUN pickup, air, AM/FM with casseHe, T top. 756-8948 aHer

1982 EXP FORD for sale trade for late model ^ck.^ 757 0451, ask for Mr. Carrawav

_ or will ickup truck.

FAST GROWING

Corporation needs person quallflec In accounting and bookkeeping, rience desired. Good grades clerical aptitude a necessity. Send rMume to Coastal Leasing Corporation, Box 647, Greenville.

FLORAL DESIGNER Experience neceMry. Send resume to Oeislgn-

er. PQ Box 1967. Greenville. NC

FULL OR

-__^-R PART TIME waitress needed at Szechuan Garden.

Waltresslng experience required. No phone calls. Application forms given out 3-5 p.m

FURNITURE SALESPERSON Apply in person at Furniture World :ast 10th Srreet

STARTING A 9 lyiONTH secretarial course July 25. Greenville School of Commerce. 752 3177._

STOP!

Ask yourself I Where will I be and what will I be doing 5 years from today. If I continue what I am doing now? Outstanding management op pw-tunlty can be yours In as IIHIe as 6 to 8 months. Earnings range from

820.000-835,000. Com'ni is^on

management. 2 week training program then will field train you In new sales in servicliM with world leader of long standing disability accounts. Must be bondable, over

21. ambitious, have a good car and Previous SI

be competitive. Prevlius sales ex

Rsrience desired, but not required, ospital plan, dental plan, profit snaring, and liberal fringe benefits. Tour chance of a lifetime If you

TIME FOR A CHANGE

Here's thegjl|s^^. we offer here In

_NVILLE and the surrounding area

1 .As much as 822,000 to start

2.National concern over 70 years in business

3.Noncontrlbutory deferred

pmsatlon program 4.Extensive training program.

com-

Call LaeWoavor

1-527-4155 Kinston; N C

MUTUAL OF OMAHA People you can count on...Affiliated Companies: Unit^ of Omaha The Omaha Indemnity Company -Mutual of Omaha Fund ^nage-ment Company.

Equal Oppot^nlty Companies M/F

WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy,

they turn to the Classified Ads.

 ....

Place your Ad today results.

059

WorkWantBd

ALL TYPES TREE Licensed and fully insured

fully _______________

ming, cuHj>^ and removal. Free

estimates. JP Stancll, 752-6331.

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK nasonry and roofing. 35 ience in building. Tall after

Carpentry, mas

years exper    Harrington

James

ZSLIZ

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning aHer - hard winters use. Eliminate

creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road Enterprises. 756-9123 day, 756-1007 niont

FURNITURE srnlsh

-    -    ._ STRIPPING Paint

and varnish removed from wood ind metal. Equipment formally of

and metal. Equipment formally of D p and Strip. All Items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques.

Days 756-

Call for free estimate 9ia.Wiflht7?4i99?

MAINTENANCE PERSON needed Must be knowledgeable in all areas aintenanc

of general mainh

plumbing, heating, and' air ______

Honing. Reply to Maintenance

nee Including condr

Person, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834

MANAGER

For convenience store and gas combination. 820,000 with com-mission.Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South AAemorial Drive.

AAANAGER TRAINEE perience needed to

progressive company Rerocafe. Call Li

licate Heritage Personnel

Retail e: qualify wii Top benefits

ee 355-2020,

MANAGER WANTED for

automotive parts in business. Must have knowledge in parts and business, and be able to deal with the public. 752-6124

MECHANIC NEEDED Due to the increase in service business and a future move to the By-pass, we are in need of an experienced mechanic. Excellent oay plan and ^nefits. Apply to: Bill Brown or Pobft Starling at Brown-Wood, Inc., 1205 Dickinson Ave._

040

Child Care

WANT TO BABY sit in my home Mw^j^ through Friday. Phone

WANTE

utiaiich

: Mature lady to In our home. 758 6659

Ksep

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

1*77 BUICK SKYLARK 2 door, air. Call aHer/p.m.. 756-3191._

Want to Mil livestock? Run Classified ad fc

Call after 7p.m.. 756-3191.'

for quick responM.

i*"BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruiM. power windows. 1 oymer. Good condition. High

mileage. A6ake offer. 756 8539.

014

Cadillac

JWl CADILLAC Coupe Deville. 6S8L

I options. I William

Handley 752-

015

Chevrolat

1974 NOVA, air, power steering_and brakes, AM/FM casMtfe. Tiood

condition. 81175. 756-9485 aHer s.

Havingqualified as Administrator of the Estate of 16

-      Walter    Monroe

Glisson, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them un^rsigned Administrator within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of ttwlr recovery. All persons Indebted to Mid Estate will pleaM make Immediate payment to the undersign-

"WMni'&TR

Route 10, Box 192

"g'SisS'-*"

GrMnville, North Carolina 27834

Telephone: 758 4276

July 19, 26; August 2,9,1983

1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC V8, "s wV    condition.    82600.

1*77 CHEVETTE Good condition. Musi

4 speed. 2 door. tusTseiil 81800.

017

Dodge

Itli    Good    condition.

8*50. Call 756 7686 after 6._

018

Ford

1*70 MUSTANG.

autpmatle trasmlislon.'^ air*"con3l!

Honing, after 5 p

good condition. 756-0801

1*73 FORD GALAXY, stereo, air. 2 door, factory Installed tow package. Good transportation. 8850. Call

ZUm_

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    7b6-b221

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

GRASS CUTTING, trim arqund shde^t^^lks and driveways. Call

GRASS CUTTING at reasonat

prices. All size yards Call 752 5583

reasonable

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757-3353 after 4 p.m., weekends anytime._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LOT FOR SALE

CHERRY

OAKS

GLORIA STREET Heavily Wooded

M4,900

756-7815

758-8733

USED MOBILE HOMES

NOW ON SALE AT

AZALEA MOBILE HOMES

90 Day Warranty

FINANCING AVAILABLE LOW PAYMENTS 2MByPassWnt    7St-7l1S

CONNER HOMES

616 W. OrMfivHlB Blvd., QreBtivlllB. N. C.

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A REWARDING CAREER IN ONE OF TODAYS PASTES! GROWING BUSINESSES?

ARE YOU AGGRESSIVE ENOUGH TO MAKE THE MOST OF A CHALLENGING OPPORTUNITY?

> ARE YOU WILLING TO WORK AT LEAST 60 HOURS PER WEEK? IF YOU ARE, CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT Contact: Jim Bisesi, Manager

756-0333

9AM-6PM

It

K

Ii.3i.





059

Work Wanted

LONG BROTHERS ROOFING and Contracting Company. All types ot roofing, repair jobs, and new con struction. Free estimates. No job too big or too small. 3SS-69I4

AAAGICIAN SHOWS for adults and children. Magic, balloon animals, iUOOlind. Call 746 6146.

SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenfer jobs, counfer ti Jack Baker Floor Service, 756-: anytime, if no answer call back

WILL THOROUGHLY CLEAN your

house. Lots of '---- "

able rates. Call

house. Lots, of experience. Reason I 7Sf 3670

060

FOR SALE

063 Building Supplies

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your house cleanlnd. 752 3758.

064 Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancil, 752 A331

065 Farm Equipment

ATTENTION TOBACCO Farmers! Agri Supply carries a large line of supplies for you including; 12 volt winches for harvesters $143.9S; 110 volt hoists for bulk barns $383.95, seats for Long harvesters $12.49, racks; clips; clampbars and tines for Powell and Dixie barns. Many other parts in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville. NC 752 3999    ^

IRRIGATION Confete E2 rain 99 9?424'l    ^

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR,

317 John Deere with 48" mower deck new motor. Call 756 4100

LONG TOBACCO Harvester with a 4 cylinder diesel engine. Call 758-

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 month. 757 0451. Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St

BEDROOM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest Take over payments on oniy $26,33 per month. 757 0451. Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St.

CALL US AND SEE why _____

coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings. Call 823 3834, 9:30 to 5:30 or by ap Dolntment

074

Miscellaneous

KELVINATOR REFRIGERATOR, $85, 18,000 BTU window air condl tioner, $200, 21" lawn mower, $60. Call 752-2625

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson

MICROSCOPE AND LIGHT Bosh and Lomb, excellent condition, $400 Autoclave 777, $150.752 0973

MOVING, MUST SELL Sears

heavy duty washer, $150. Candlelight wedding gown and veil, best offer. Bedspreads, furniture, much more. 752-3>49after4:30.

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._

OFFICE FURNITURE: 7 arm chairs; 2 armless chairs; 1 bench table; 1 walnut end table; 1 Ah'' Dick copying machine and stand; 2 metal bookcases; 1 time clock; 2 bucket chairs. All good condition. Z1LOT73.___

REEL TYPE self propelled push mower. $45. Call 746-6860:_

REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER,

Philco, double doors, avocado, $250 746 6790. _

SCHWINN 5 speed bike, good condi-fion, $65. 756-3420.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

SHARP SFS01 copier. Just been serviced. A-1 condition. $800. Call 756 6101. ask for Joe Smith.

STEREOCITY

Now open featuring Marantz-Sansui-Sharp-and other brands. We offer qualify compo-and match systems at dls-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 FILING CABINET, legal size; used overhead projector; bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk, secretarial chair. Call 758-3761 nights or 757-1191 davs.

WATER BED mattress, liner, heat-er. Sacrifice. 752 5020.

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 recllner Ail for $300. Call

FOR SALE, gold queen size hide a bed sofa. $150. Loveseat size convertible foam sleeper, $50. Can be seen by appointment, 758-7888 after 1 p.m

FURNITURE! FURNITURE!

THE FURNITURE KING has it all! For the lowest prices on bedroom, dining room and living room furniture, pick up the phone and call 757 0451. We finance in our

store. Remember the 'Furniture King' will not be undersold at Furniture World, 2808 E lOthSt

MATTRESS WORLD at Furniture World. We keep a truck load all the time. We finance. For the lowest price on bedding, visit Furniture World, 2808 E Toth St or phone 757 0451.__

RECLINERS We have 50 to choose from. Barcalounger and Catna We finance in our store. P _ _ 757 0451 or visit the 'Furniture King' at Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St

RENT TO OWN Six piece solid wood living room suite, sofa, chair, rocker and 3 tables. Only $29.26 month at Furniture World,

10th St. Phone 757 0451.

RENT TO OWN Three piece living room suite, sofa, chair, loveseaf $26.33 per month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St or phone

SOFA with 2 matching chairs and coffee table Also lamps. Call 758 0124._

TRADITIONAL GREEN SOFA, low back. Good condition. $125. Call 752-7798 after 6 and weekends.

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 7j2 5237

MULE FOR SALE $300 Call 756 2736,

073 Fruits and Vegetables

BLUEBERRIES FOR SALE 45< a

nil.

pound, pick your own. Humbles Cage Farm, 2 miles west of Ayden on Highway 102 to County Road

19" COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11

Ker month. Furniture World. 757-<51.

23,000 BTU Approximately 6 years old. Sears Coldspot. Works good.

$300. 758 2300 days.

25" QUASAR AAOTOROLLA console color TV New picture tube. $200 756 9508 after 5.

25" ZENITH Chromatolor II Floor console. Perfect working condition $175. 756 5346.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

MOVING, MUST SELL immediate ly. 1973 Peachtree 12 x 65. ; bedrooms, 2 full bafhs, all appli anees, washer/dryer, new carpet, drapes. Set up in park off lOth Street. Call 752 1136.

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

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

70S West Greenville Boulevard

NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $245 per month. Also FHA and conven tional financing availablel.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

Tr'B'W

FAMILY HOUSING

Stop in- and see why we are the fastest growing Mobile Home dealer in North Carolina.

1. ^allty Homes

2. Best Prices

3. Super Service

4. Easiest 8, Best Financing In Town (Conventional. VA, FHA)

5. P^le Who Care TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

705 West Greenville Blvd.

BUTTER PEAS, $6 a bushel. Corn, 90< a dozen. B & B You Pick, Hassell 795 4646

FOR SALE; Silver Queen Corn Call756 1403or 756 2483.

PEACHES! I Excellent for frMzing

sry and Peach Orch. mjles North of Bailey, Highway 581

and canning. You pick Nursery and Peach Orchard. 3

North. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m Monday through Saturday, 235-4664.

074 Miscellaneous

AIR CONDITIONER, 18.000 BTU, GE. $200. Call 756 6957

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Why pay retail when you can save up to V} and more on bedding and waterbeds. Factory Mattress 8, Waterbed Outlet (Next to PIH Plaza), 355 2626

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and sibne. Also driveway work

CENTRAL ELECTRIC HEAT furnace with AC coils, 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

CROCK POT Stereo set with cabinet. Call 756 8089._

FOR SALE: Sharp SF 811 copier with stand. 24 copies per minute. Hbndles 8</2Xlt. 8>2x14 and 11x17 paper sizes. Royal SE 5010 electric tyMwriter, correcting capabilities. Will sell separately or package deal. Call m 1067 days: 792 6962 nights._

FULL SIZE brass bed with Sealy m|ttrw$gt,5QQ, 757 3414

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Shop. Stripping, Repairing 8, Re-finlshing. (Formerly of Eastern

Carolina Vocational Center) Located next to John Deere E^ipment Company on Pactolus Hfahway. Call 75^3509._

HOSPITAL BED for sale. Good condition. Call 756 6627 or 756 3444 after 6 p.m

HOTPOINT portable dishwasher with cutting board. Used very little. a9 3?S 24T9._

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration. 2227 AAemo-rlal^2^e^^56^6417^^

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

RANELL DOUBLEWIDE, air. woodstove, dishwasher. Immacu-late Call Tommy 756 7815, 758 8733

12X60, 1 bath, 2 bedrooms, full arpe'

6790.

carpeted, unfurnished, $4500.

14 WIDES for as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841

1969 FRONTIER Partially furnished. $3900. 752 4609 after 6. 1972, 12x52, Halteras. Fully furnished. Excellent condition. $5500. Call 752 7233.

1975 CONNER, 12x65. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, unique kithcen/dining area, central air plus extras. 355 2441.

1978 CAROLINA 14x70, 3 bedrooms. IV2 baths, partly furnished. Set up in Pinewood Mobile Park in Ayden. Price negotiable. 746-2478

1978 TITAN 12x56. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. $7500. Phone 756-5101 from 9 fo

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 TOWN AND COUNTRY, 2

bedrooms, 2 fgll baths, furnished, small equity and assume loan. Call 756 4376 or 756 1601.

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068

1984 REDMAN doublewide. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden tub, storm win dows, masonite and shingle roof wifh 5 year warranty. $25,W5. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841

24X52 USED doublwide. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at

D(

Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841 3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME for sale. Price negotiable. 752-9978.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.l. l.iipton, Co,

CENTIPEDE SOD

Will Deliver

752-4994

BROWNIE MOTOR SALES

Corner of 14th Street And Farmville Blvd. f

Brownie Tripp

Herman Hill

752-0117

1979 Chevrolet Blazer 1979 Pontiac Wagon 1981 Ford Thunderbird 1977 Mercury Comet 1975 Volk^f^ Rabbit

1977 Toyota SR-5 Pickup

1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

1980Datsun280-ZXGLP

1980 Chevrolet Citation

075 AAobi le Homes For Sale

4 MOBILE HOMES for sale by owner. Excellenf condition for

rtrsonal homes or investment use and 3 bedrooms, currently rented Will sell seperatly or fogether 756-0173_

076 AAobile Home insurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754._

077 Musical Instruments

UPRIGHT PIANO, reconditioned and reflnlshed. Call 756-0728._

USED PIANOS AND ORGANS Yamahas, Wurlifzers, etc. The Music Shop, Greenville Square ShooDlno Center, 756 0007.

USED PIANOS buy and sale. Piano 8i Organ Distributors. 355 6002

WURLITZER ELECTRONIC Piano wifh Leslie 60 amplifier. $1,000. Call

Z52joaa

WURLITZER ORGAN 2 keyboard, automatic rhythm, bench. Like

naw,s55g.7s

078

Sporting Goods

CASTER SURFBOARD 6x4", single fin wifh leash. Excellenf conblflon. $150. 756-3565

REMINGTON 30.06; Marlin 22 Lever Action; Winchester 12 gauge automatic; Mossberg 12 gauage pump; Ruger Black Hawk 44 Maonum. 752-6706.__

080

INSTRUCTION

WATER BED, Q - bookcase wifh mirror, 6 drawers, semi waveless. Sacrifice. 756-4645.

WEIGHT LIFTING OUTFIT Exercise bench and weights. Price $75. 756 8862._

10 TON heavy duty walker floor lack. $300. Call 752 4745._

19" PORTABLE COLOR TV

Excellent condition. Call 756-7066 after 5:30.

MEN AND WOMEN 117-62 TRAIN NOW FOR CIVILSERVICE EXAMS

No High School Necessary Positions Start As High As

$10.21 HOUR

POST OFFICE- CLERICAL MECHANICS INSPECTORS Keep Present Job While Preparing At Home For Government Exams

Write 81 Include Phone No. To:

National Training Service, Inc.

P 0. Box 1967 Greenville, NC 27835

082 LOST AND FOUND

LOST: female black caL some gold and white mixed. In Club Pines.

093 OPPORTUNITY

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT

for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 758 5156 after 5

GROUND FLOOR OPPORTUNI TY Dynamic fuel saving technology. Saves money and gas. Income unlimited, performance documented. Money back guarantee. Introductory meeting July 25, 7:30, Ramada Inn. Greenville, NC

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015.

109

Houses For Sale

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, 7T2750 or 975-2688.__

EASTWOOD 4 bedrooms, 2 full bafhs, wooded lot on dead end street. Den with fireplace. $57,900. Call Aldridge 6. Southerland. 756 3500._

FOR SALE BY OWNER Two

bedroom fownhouse on wooded lot. Cedar siding with deck. Owner transferred. $45,000. Call days 752 6889, nights 758 9089

FOR SALE BY OWNER A com fortable 1500 square foot house at 508 East 12th Street, adjacent to university. Has central air/heat and a nice fireplace. House is carpeted throughout. Has 2 tile baths and 2 patios plus additional storage space. Ideal for students or family. Priced well under $50,000 with excellent financing available. Can be seen during most daylight hours by simply ringing door bell. This offer expires Monday, July 25._

HARDEE ACRES Loan assump tion 10% FHA Excellent location, 3 bedrooms, lVi baths, large lot, 2 out buildings, country kitchen and den. $42,500. Call Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500._

HICKORY POINT 4 bedroom house on river front property with lots ot trees. House needs work. Great fishing, deck with new bulk head. $10K down, assume mortgage. (31) 530 6169.

HOUSE FOR SALE by owner. 3 bedrooms. Located on Mumford Road, beside VFW 2 large lots. Call 758 2681.

LOVELY HSTORIC HOME 6 bedrooms, 3 baths. Spacious mod ern kitchen. Screened porch. Ap-

firaisal priced with owner financing o qualified buyer. $55,000. Scotland Neck. Les Riley Real Estate, 1 798 7461.__

AAOViNG 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 V} acre lot. Extra nice at $44,500, 2 adjoining lots tor $3500. 946-5260 tor appointment

NEW LISTING Red Oak. A picture book and immaculate fri level on a quiet cul-de-sac. Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining room, family room, garage. Storage building $67,900. Duttus Realty, Inc. 75r5395.

NICE STARTER HOME or in

vestment potential with possible owner financing. Features 2 bedrooms. 1 full bath, living and dining rooms, eat in kitchen, fenced rear yard and some privacy fenc ing. Home has been well care for - a bargain tor $27,000. Call Jane Butts, Mavis Butts Realty 756 2851

ROBERSONVILLE Handsome two story meticulously maintained 3 bedroom, 2 bath home (1920), hot house and 2 outbuildings, each with '/2 bath. Large, back fenced corner lot. $69.500. Les Riley Real Estate, 1 798 7461.

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, 1 798 7461._

UNIVERSITY CONDO -    2

bedrooms, V/t baths, all appliances, complete carpenting, dra^s, and other custom features. Ottered below market value fo settle estate. Call 756 5058.

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE, Licensed Brokers. 401 W First Street. 752 3575._

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman North Ca........

swee

on

day

... Jarolina's original chimney lep. 25 years experience working chimneys and fireplaces. Cad ' or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

100

REAL ESTATE

TOWNHOMES tor sale Located near University on wooded lots. The units consists of 2 bedrooms. IVj baths, fireplace, and large decks. Contact Russell Fleming at days 756 3453. nights 756 8363._

102 Commercial Property

COAAMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted tor office space. 12 month lease required. Call Clark-Branch, Realtors, 756-6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147.__

104 Condominiums For Sale

LEXINGTON S(3UARE, 2 bedrooms. 1 year old. FHA 235 assumable loan. Phone 756-7935.

109 Houses For Sale

BELVEDERE Three bedrooms and two baths, beautifully landscaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Several quality features. $60's. Call 756 3837 after 5 p.m., except weekends

WONDERFUL OLD (1860)

Victorian on 3 A beautifully land scaped. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Owner transferred. $49,000. Scotland Neck. Les Riley Real Estate, 1 798 7461

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 Vears old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced In the $50's. 758 0U4 or 752 7663.

Ill I nvestment Property

NEW LISTING DUPLEX Con veniently located each side features 2 bedrooms, IVj baths, great room with dining area, kitch en has range, dishwasher and

refrigerator. Washer/dryer hook ups and heat pump. $6,000. Call Mavis Butts Realty. 578 0655.

SEVEN 1 bedroom units with fireplace near University, 3 years old and fully lea^. Call days 756 3453; nights 756 8363

TWO BEDROOM house near Uni versity. Needs minor work done. PricM mid $30's. Call days 756-3453, niohts 756 8363.

WINTERVILLE . Large house with 2 apartments and trailer on same lot. Apartments have stove and refrigerator, trailer has stove, re trigerator and some furnitshlngs. $3^900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655._ _

115 Lots For Sale

CHERRY OAKS Heavily wooded. 156 foot road frontage. Gloria Street. $14,900. Call T<

756 7815, 758 8733.

lommmy.

EVANSWOOO RESIDENTIAL

lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount & Associates. 756-3000

LYNNDALE LOT 1 ot the last. Call 355 2220._

BETHEL 3 bedrooms, iVj baths Farmers Home Loan assumption Sge^ht Realty 756 3220, nights

BY OWNER 6 room house and lot. 2 miles from Wellcome Middle School. Less than $20.000. 752 6267

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 Sun^lay

BY OWNER Country home wifh aluminum siding on acre lot. Central heat, 2 oedrooms, living room with fireplace, kitchen has eat-in and den area, 1 ceramic tile bath, large carport, other building included are: 2 story double garage (ideal tor workshop), 2 story storage building. Approximately 4 miles from Greenville on County Home Road. 756 3432

Top quality, fuel-economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

HELP WANTED

WANTED; 1 Asphalt Paver Operator, 2 Asphalt Roller Operators, 2 Asphalt Screed Operators, 2 Asphalt Rakers, 1 Asphalt Distributor Operator. Must have experience.

Apply to:

Bamis ConstnKtion Co.

Bell Fork Road Jacksonville. N. C.

An Equal Opporlunily Employsr

ONE ACRE LOT between Ayden and Griffon on State Road 1110. Call 756 2682.__

THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, orestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 746 2166 tor full details._.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

MEN & WOMEN

Learn to drive tractor-trailor

Train full or part-time

No experience necessary

Tuition assistance

DOT certification

Assistance with class A license

Career guidance

TARHEEL TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL

Burlington, NC 1-800-222-6603

TOBACCO FARMERS

PRICED TO SELL

Taylor Tobacco Equipment

2 ^Jjy^Qplf-propelled

   2    row    self-propelled

harvester

1 New 230 MF, 10 hours, $7000.00 2 row pull type harvesters

2 rowpul^^^jOivester

2 row

irvester

2 row pull typeharvesters

(6 harvesters, field ready, remaining

Bulk barns (5 Sets SOLD, 1 set remaining)

TraJOLO

Taylor high crop sprayer, regulariy $23,000. Now $15,000.

Cutter Bars (Tipn Head) $2000 per row (Many SOLD-Several Remaining)

Equipment Can Be Seen At

LUMBERTON SALES CO.

205 E. 1st St., Lumberton, N. C.

CONTACT OSBORNE TAYLOR

Dial (919) 730-2421 Day    Dial    (919)739-7357    Night

115

Lots For Sale

264 South,

'/i TO 5 ACRES, Highway Ayden-Gritton area and Highway 33 South. Call 756 2682 or 757 0277

WOODED LOT AVAILABLE in

nice subdivision dimensions are 73' front and 299' deep Call Mavis Butts Realty. 758 0655

1 LARGE LOT (W acre) at entrance in Cherry Oaks. $12,500. 355 2419 or 752 4187

2/10 MILES from city limits. Mobile home lots. $300 down - $85 per month. Only a few available. S||^ht Realty 756 3220, nights

4 ACRES just off Bethel Highway. $12,000. Speight Realty 7S6 3220, niohts 758 774*_

117 Resort Property For Sale

PAMLICO BEACH waterfront. 5 bedrooms, 3'/i baths. Great view, 9<x>d neighbors, well-kept property tor immediate occupancy. Call today! $80.000 Les Riley Real Estate. 798 7461._

WINTERIZED HUNTING and fish ing lodge on 6.6 acres eastern Canada. 2700 square toot electricity, well, septic, modern kitchen. 30b' frontage beautiful Miramichi Bay. $38,00(r Les Riley Real Estate,

2 BEDROOM COTTAGE at Pamlico Beach. 150' pier, boat lift. Cozy, Quiet place. Call 355 2455.

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 7M-44I3 between 8 and 5

NEED STORAGE? We have any

size fo meet your storage need. Ca Arlinoton Self Storage, Open day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933.

Mon-

121 Apartments For Rent

A 2 BEDROOM, IV2 bath duplex, kitchen with dining area, appliances, hookups, convenient loca tion, $285 . 756 7716 after 6 p.m. or weekends.

AVAILABLE LATE JULY New 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. Range, refrigerator, dishwasher, and hookups. $310. Couples preferred. Lease and deposit. No pets 756 4746.

AZALEA GARDENS

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 _756    7815

BRAND NEW, tastefully decorated, town houses, 2 bedrooms, 1' j baths, washer dryer hookup, heat pump, efficient. No pets. $310 per month. 752 2040, 756 r-

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with 1''3 baths. Also I bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV, .her dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club

house and PCX3L. 752 1557

DUPLEX APARTMENTS in

Shenandoah area at Shiloh Drive

and Alice Drive available August 1.

5 per 527 6442 or 523 1078.

$365 per month. Call Mrs. turtis

EASTBROCK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCIES 1 or 2 bedrooms, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates. Call 756 5555 Heritage Inn Motel._

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments. carpefed, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 76 6869

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden

,. Ca ------

rigerator, disi

ind cable TV Conveniently located

apartments. Carpefed, range. trigerator,_ dishwasher, disposal

to shopping center and Located I ust oft 10th Street

Call 752-3519

LARGE 4 BEDROOM apartment. 2 full baths, fireplace, 1310A Myrtle Avenue, $340 per month. Lease and deposit required. No pets. Call 35 2544 or7S6 0489.    _

LARGE 4 BEDRCXJM house. 500 W 4th St., recently redecorated. Ideal tor large family. Gas heat. $440 per month. Lease and deposit required. No pets. Call 756 5217or 355 2544.

L(X)K BEFORE YOU LEASE!!!

at our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Owen Norvell at 758-6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758 7029.

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

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), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 2bedrooms, I'j baths. No pets. 752 3152 or 752 6715, ask for John or Bryant

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. $215 a month. 756 3923.

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815._

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Officehours 10a.m. to5p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, cU house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office Corner E Im 8. Willow

752-4225

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

iiie i/auy netiector, ureenvme, w.u.-i uesoay. July 19,198319

121 Apartments For Rent

ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances. $210. Call 758

RENT FURNITURE; Living, din mg, bedroom complete $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862

TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets, call Smith Insurance a Realty, 752 2754.

TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS

Near ECU Most utilities included. $275 up. Available immediately.

_ 7M:0491 or 756-7809 bgtore 9 p.m.

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom. IV2 bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.

9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

2 bedroom. Wt bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 752 3311.

1 BEDROOM apartment. Heat and hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlawn $215. 758 0635 or 756 0545

2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen appllanes furnished, totally lectric, $325 month. Call 756 7647

2 BEDROOM townhouse, carpeted, central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer/dryer hookup. $M5. 108 Cedar Court, 758 3311.

2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air. canzeted. appliances. $275 a month. Brvton Hifis. 758-3311._

2 BEDROOM duplex apartment, located in Meadowbrook. $130 month. 756 1900._

2 BE0RCX3M DUPLEX, refrigera tor and stove, central heat and air. deposit and lease, no pets. 756-6834.

704 EAST Third Street, 2 bedrooms, furnished. 2 blocks from ECU Stove, refrigerator. Lease and de posit. $260. 756 18889 to 5 weekdays

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

office space. Arlington Boulevard. 3,000 square feet. Only $3.60 per e tool. For more information.

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie Smith at 946-5887

2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260._

127 Houses For Rent

CENTRALLY LOCATED 3

bedroom, 2 bath brick home. Great room with fireplace, heat pump. $415 a month. Lease and deposit. 756 2753_

FOR RENT in Ayden. Nice house and yard. Call 746 3674.

HOUSE FOR RENT in Winterville. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living room, front and back porches. $250 per month. Deposit required. 758-4128._

HOUSE IN the country. Approximately 8 miles past the hospital. References reouired. 523 3562.

1 BLOCK FROM CAMPUS and town. 505 East 4th Street. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lots of room. $400 a month plus deposit. 758 0174.

2615 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3

bedroom, central heat, air condi tioner, garage, nice neighborhood. Families only. Lease and deposit. $295 756 1888 9 to 5 weekdays._

133 AAobi le Homes For Rent

SPECIAL RATES tor students. Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up. No pets, no children. 758 0745 or 756 9491

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furniture Ratinishing and repairs. Superior caning for all type chairs, larger selection ol custom picture framing, survey alakes-any length, all types ot pallets, selected framed reproductions.

EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758-4188    8AM-4:30PM

Greenville, N.C.

SHOW ME A BARGAIN!

Yes, a true bargain with a whopping 25% discount off regular price.

NEWSINGERS

Used For Teaching Purpose Only 7 To Sell

Different Models, Prices, all with new machine warranties 1 Touchtronic Included

Hurry For Best Selection

GREENVILLE SEWING CENTER

Pitt Plaza 756-0747

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

12 X 60 TWO BEDROOM furnished , washer, dryer, air conditioning. Good location. No pets. 756-0801 after 5 pm._

2 BEDROOM Mobile Home tor rent. Call 756 4687_

2 BEDROOM trailer. I'/j baths, air. No pets. 756 6005._

3 BEDROOMS, with 2 baths, washer/dryer. Semi-private lot. Call after 5 weekdays, 756-7317.

135 Office Space For Rent

IX)WNTOWN Just off mall. Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse. Call 756-0041 or 756-3466.

FOR RENT 2500 square feet. Suitable tor office space or com mercial 604 Arlington Boulevard.

756 8111.__

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or To

ommy Williams, 756 7815. 5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty ot park ing. Call 758 2^davs._

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceanfront. families only. 756 4207 or 726 3869

FOR SALE OR RENT Resort on Neuse River Nice accommoda-tions. Call 746 3674._

138

Rooms For Rent

SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges Across from ECU $25 per week includes all. 752 7278._

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE roommate to share trail er $200 month, utilities Included. 757 1377 after 5. _

NEW DUPLEX fownhouse, 2 bedroom, 1 mile from hospltal-med school. Female roommate desired. $150 Laura, 919 772 5398 after 7.

RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE

wanted, country living. Lots of room. 10 minutes from Greenville. $100 plus half. 756-0344 or 746-6048.

RESPONSIBLE PERSON desired to share 3 bedroom house with 26 year old male Private bath, washer, dryer and more. $150 and 1/2 utilities Call Tom. 756 5820.

148

Wanted To Rent

GRADUATE STUDENT and

housetrained Siamese cat looking for 1 bedroom apartment. 752 7213.

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping tor bargains in the Classified Ads.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Safe

Model S-1 Special Price

$12250

Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 s. Evans St.

752-2175

The Real

Estate

Corner

Qi*e^

' !r-r^ ,nn

TIPTON & ASSOC.

Under construction in lovely Club Pines, 18lh Century Georgian, features 3 bedrooms, 2Vt) baths, large greatroom and over 2000 square feet. Mid {90's

Under construction in Lynndale, outstanding S bedroom, 3 full bath home featuring all formal areas and large double garage. $100s.

Duplex. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath each side. Stantonsburg Road area. Good investment property. $45.000.

Prime commercial space, over 5000 square feet, for sale or for lease in the downtown area. Building has potential for many uses. $125.000.

10 Acres of land in the Farmville area. $30,000.

756-6810

Nights, R(xiTugwell 753-4302

HERE IT IS!!

76X14ONLY *14,995 Plus Tax

25 YEARS IN THE BUSINESS

3 BEDROOMS 2 FULL BATHS

Over 20 Families In The Last 3 Months Have Taken Advantage Of This Offer. We Hope Your Family Can Also Receive One of These Homes!

INCLUDES:

Deluxe Furniture

Cathedral Ceiling

Storm Windows

Deluxe Refrigerator Total Electric

100 Mile Free Delivery

AZALEA

MOBILE HOMES OF N.C.

Greenville-756-7815 Tarboro 823-7161

Williamston-792-7533 Chocowinity 946-5639





HEALTH PLANValuable New Hospital Plan Pays Cash Benefits Up To

$

60

00

$a dayCollect up to $60.00 for every day in the hospital

a week Cash benefits paid directly to y<m

Youll receive up to $60.00 a day for any covered accident or illness beginning with the first day you go into the hospital. Youll continue to collect benefits for as long as youre hospitalizedeven for life if necessary.

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kD

\Up to $240.00 D(yuble Daily Accident BenefitsYour benefits are not taxable

Youll collect up to $240.00 a day ($120.00 per person) if both you and your insured spouse are hospitalized at the same time as the result oi any accident. Depending on the plan you select, this feature could be worth as much as $7,200.00 a month!Unlimited cash benefits$20.00 a day for Home Nursing Care

Youll receive an additional $20.00 a day each time a Registered Nurse or Licensed Practical Nurse spends an 8-hour shift in your home after you have been hospitalized for any covered accident or illness. Nursing care must be ordered by your doctor and begin within five days from the time you come home from the hospital. Home nursing benefits will be paid up to one full /car based on the number of days you spent in the hospital.

The American Citizens Health Plan will pay you as long as youre in the hospital for any covered accident or illnesseven if youre hospitalized for the rest of your life. There are no limits on how long you can collect benefits!You can never be cancelled

We can never cancel your insurance protection no matter what your age or how much you collect in benefitsas long as you pay your premiums on time. Only you can cancel.Up to $5,000.00 for loss of limb or eyesight

The American Citizens Health Plan will pay you an additional $5,000.00 in compensation for the loss of any two limbs or sight in both eyes within 90 days of an accident ($2,500.00 for the loss of a single limb or sight in one eye).Pre-existing conditions:

You wont be covered for pre-existing health problems during the first year (any new conditions will be paid for immediately).Pays in addition to any other insurance

Optional Cash Benefits

All children covered for a single monthly premium

Youll receive up to $30.00 a day for each child hospitalized forany covered accident or illness when you add Childrens Coverage to your basic plan. One premium covers all your unmarried dependent children from birth to 19 years of age.

To help pay your medical bills and everyday household expenses, youll receive a check in addition to any other insurance benefits you collect.

Your Guarantee of Satisfaction

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Maternity benefts also available

Your wife will receive up to $60.OU a day for each day shes hospitalized for pregnancy and childbirth when Childrens Coverage and Maternity P'mefits are added to your basic plan. The mother muM iie inaured for the entire pregnancy. Benefits will be paid from the first day for as long as needed. Miscarriage is also covered.

When you receive your policy in the mail, look it over carefully. Discuss it, if you wish, with a trusted advise and feel free to compare this Plan with other policies of this type. If, for any reason, you decide , th^ you no longer wish to participate in the plan,

I simply return your policy within 30 days of issue and we will promptly refund your money. In the meanwhile, you will be fully protected while you are making up your mind. >

M. A. Sloan

American Citizens Health Plan

CUT ALONG HERE AND MAIL TODAY Mall Application and $1.00 to

Plan Service CeiMcr Attn: Calvin Pmden P.O. Box 1291, Durham, N.C. 27702

1

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

APPLICATION Check Coverage Desired:

$60.00 a Day or

($1,800.00 a Month)

(PLEASE PRINT)

Mr.

Mrs.

NAME Miss

$30.00 a Day

($900.00 a Month)

First

Initial

Last

o

o>

ADDRESS

CITY

STATE

.ZIP

DATE OF BIRTH

Yr

AGE

o

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k=)

Mo Day

I want coverage for my children.

I want coverage for my children and maternity benefits.

List all family members to be insured (Do NOT include yourself.)

Male Female

NAME(S)

RELATIONSHIP (husband, wife, son, daughter)

SEX

DATE OF BIRTH Mo Day Yr

AGE

1.

2.

3.

Heres All You Do To Receive Your Policy

1

Check the box on your application for the coverage you desire (either $60.00 or $30.00).

For additional dependents: Use separate sheet of paper as needed

I understand that I will be protected as soon as my policy is issued. I also know that pre-existing conditions are not covered during the first policy year but that new conditions are covered right away.

Signature X

- Date.

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North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company

FOR OFFICE USE ONLY

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1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I.

2

3

Complete your application and cut it out along the dotted line.

Enclose just $1.00 with your application in an envelope and mail it to:

Plan Scnin Center

Attn: Calvin Pruden P.O . Box 1291, Durhmi. N.C. 27702

Only $1 protects you and your entire family for the Hrst month!

And for your convenience, you may charge your future premiums to: VISA or MasterCard

1800

00

The cash benefits you receive do NOT count as income for tax purposes. This helps to make every dollar go further as you use these benefits to meet your needs.a month

All benefit checks will be made out to you and mailed directly to your home. You can use the money to pay the hospital or your doctoror spend it any way you choose. Its entirely up to you!

Even if youre entitled to free medical care at a VA or government hospital, well still pay you full benefits.Your premiums stay the same year after year

Your premiums will NOT go up as you grow older and you cannot be singled out for a rate increase. Your premiums will only change if there is a general rate adjustment on all our policies of this type in your entire state.Guaranteed acceptance (you cant be turned down)

You and your entire family will be accepted automatically in the plan of your choiceno physical examination required.. .no health questions to answer. You cannot be turned down!Coverage reduces at age 65 Read how American Citizens Health Plan pays in addition to Medicare!

When you reach 65, the American Citizens Health Plan will pay you up to $30.00 a day (50% reduction of benefits provided those under 65) to tie in with Medicare during the first 60 days of hospitalization. Then, just about the time when Medicare benefits are reduced, we will pay you up to $60.00 a day beginning with the 61st day for as long as you are in the hospital.

Your low monthly premiums include $20.00 a day for Home Nursing Care, Double Accident Benefits, and up to $5.000.00 for loss of limb or eyesight as outlined above.

You are not covered for...

In order to keep rates down and guarantee that everyone will be accepted with no medical questions asked, there is a limit of only one policy per person.

Also, some exclusions are required losses resulting from acts of war, nervous or mental disorders, or use of narcotics, normal pregnancy, unless Maternity Benefits have been selected; and confinement in a nursing home or convalescent care facility as defined in your policy.

Economical Monthly Premiums

The chart below shows how little it costs to insure yourself and other family members. Remember , just ONE DOLLAR protects your entire family for the first 30 days from the time your policy is issued. So please ACT NQWthe sooner you apply, the sooner you are protected!

Premiums for FIRST DA Y Coverage

Adult

Age

$60.00 A Day $30.00 A Day

(Monthly Premiums ier Adult 1

Under 40

$15.00

$ 7.50

40-49

17.00

8.50

50-59

19.90

9.95

60-64

22.70

11.35

Optional Benefits

*A11 Children

10.20

5.10

Children & Maternity 15.50

7.75

NOTE: Rates do NOT increase as you grow older.

When policyholders reach age 65 or over both plans provide 50%of the and 1(S% tilireafte?    ^    hospitalization

One premium covers ah unmarried dependentchildren from birth to 19 yeys of age (regardless of number) for 50% of the Adult Daily Hospital Benefit selected.    ^

HEALTH^ PLAN

Underwritten by North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company A company you can depend onwith a Best insurance rating of A (excellent).

Founded in 1898 Over 80 years of dependable service! Licensed in North Carolina

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Act Now...

JiMM

Mail YourApplwation Today


Title
Daily Reflector, July 19, 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.) - 30516
Date
July 19, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95429
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