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INSIDE TODAY
THE LEGISLATURE
\
Reforms of N.C. bingo laws, designed to run professional operators out of the business, are enacted with acceptance of joint committees compromise. (Page 16)
INSIDE TODAY
ARCHEOLOGICAL HEAVEN'
The Kruger National Park in South Africa is yielding rich story of vanished peoples who inhabited the area for perhaps 250,000 years. (Page 20)SPORTS TODAY
CONTRACT EXTENSION
ECU head basketball Coach Charlie Harrison has been granted a contract extension after a 16-13 campaign in his first season with the Pirates. (Page 13)
ss
SBTHE DAILY REFLECTOR
102ND YEAR
NO. 155
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE. N.C. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 21, 1983
24 PAGES TODAY PRICE 25 CENTS
Economy Heating Up
As Activity Grows
SURVEYS DAMAGE - A Lebanese R^ Cross Early reports said 6 people were dead and 18 were
volunteer surveys the smoke pouring from a fire injured, an unknown number missing. (AP
started by the blast of a car bomb at the plush Laserphoto)
seaside Summerland Hotel west of Beirut.
Three Terrorists Attack
Beirut Hotel: Six Dead
ByMONAZIADE
Associated Press Writer
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Three terrorists shot their way into Beiruts most luxurious hotel and exploded a bomb-laden car, killing six people and wounding 18, in-cluding an Italian peacekeeping soldier, police said today.
They said two bodies were dug out of the rubble this morning, raising the death toll to six in Wednesdays nights attack on the Summerland hotel, packed with guests who had fled sectarian violence in the nearby mountains.
In southern Lebanon, guerrillas shelled settlements in northern Israel Wednesday for the first time in the 13-month-old war, but no injuries were reported.
Police said the hotel terrorists machine-gunned two guards to death and detonated a car packed with explosives, killing two parking lot attendants, starting a raging fire and shattering the hotels windows. The killers fled, and police said they had no clue as to their identities.
Among the 18 wounded by the blast were an Italian soldier in Beiruts multinational peacekeeping force, and an undetermined number of other people were missing.
Firefighters struggled for three hours to control the blaze, which came only hours after Druse gunners in Lebanons central mountains shelled Christian east Beirut, killing at three people including a young girl, wrecking five cars and shattering chandeliers at a Greek Orthodox church.
By early today no group had taken responsibility for bombing the hotel, where many residents of the central mountains had sought refuge from the deadly feuding between Druse and Christian militias.
They escaped the fighting only to be bombed by explosives, said a hotel employee who asked to remain anonymous. He said most of the 102 rooms at the hotel - which is owened by a wealthy Druse family -were occupied.
In Tel Aviv, the Israeli military command said two
mortar shells apparently fired by guerrillas in Lebanon exploded near the Israeli border settlements of Hanita and Adamit Wednesday, but caused no casualties.
It was the first time shells fired from Lebanon hve landed in Israel since the Israelis invaded Lebanon in June 1982 to smash Palestine
Liberation Organization guerrilla bases.
The shelling came after the Israeli Cabinet approved a partial pullback of Israeli forces from the central mountains 20 miles south to the Awali River in attempts to reduce guerrilla ambushes that have caused scores of Israeli casualties in recent months and raised opposition to the war at home.
By PAULINE JELINEK Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The nations economic recovery heated up this spring, with business activity ^pwing at a strong 8.7 percent annual rate - its fastest pace in more than two years, the government reported today.
President Reagan hailed todays report, saying, The economy is growing with more vigor than most economists predicted and this heartens us.
Vigorous growth is the surest route to more jobs, declining deficits and a future filled with opportunity for all our people, Reagan said at a hastily called news conference.
'The Commerce Department said in its first official estimate for growth in the April-June quarter that it was the best showing since a revised 9 percent growth in the first three months of 1981.
It was also more than triple the 2.6 percent growth of the first quarter this year, when business activity was just beginning to come back.
Last month, the Commerce projected second quarter growth this year at only 6.6 percent, as measured by the Gross National Product. The actual figure - 8.7 percent -was much higher.
And the pickup is even more impressive in light of new figures showing that the recession was deeper than previously thou^t.
In an accompanying report of 1980-82 revisions, Commerce said the downturn from the first quarter of 1981 through the fourth quarter of last year was a full 3 percent rather than the 2.2 percent previously reported. Those figures are not annualized.
It said the second quarter improvement reflected a substantial increase in sales and much smaller rate of inventory cutting by businesses.
It said GNP grew at an annual rate of $1.52 trillion.
Inflation, as measured by the GNP-linked, fixed-weighted price index, was 5.2 percent in the second quarter compared to 3.4 percent in the first.
Todays report on real, or inflation-adjusted, GNP covers the entire economy, attempting to measure or estimate the
nations total second quarter ouput of goods and services and comparing it to the first quarter.
Other, narrower reports also have been encouraging in recent weeks, showing improvments throughout the economy during the last month of the second quarter.
Commerce announced Wednesday that Americans personal income grew 0.5 percent in June as personal consumption spending rose 1 percent.
It said last week that industrial production in June increased 1.1 percent, its seventh straight monthly pickup.
The Federal Reserve Board said Monday that industry operated at 74.5 percent of capacity in June, the highest level since February 1982.
And the Fed said consumers took on $2.7 billion more in installment credit during June than they paid off. It was the largest amount since September 1981 and economists said the greater willingness to assume debt was a sign of consumers growing confidence in the economy.
Economists generally say growth will slow later in the year as the recovery matures. The Reagan administration is predicting real GNP growth for the year will be 5.5 percent.
State Sales
Tax Advances
MX Funding Is Retained With
Launch Ending Martial Law
Vote in House
REFLECTOR
tioTunc
WARSAW, Poland (AP) -The Council of State, acting on orders pf the nations military and Communist Party leaders, has ordered the lifting of martial law in Poland beginning Friday, President Henryk Jablonski told Parliament today.
On Wednesday Parliament, acting to insure the governments grip on the country, granted broad emergency powers to Polands Communist leaders so they can act quickly to silence any political threat once martial law ends.
Today, shortly before the announcement. Parliament approved a series of tough new regulations that further secure the governments control - in effect extending
some martial law curbs for an 18-month transition period.
In a nationally televised speech today, Jablonski said At the request of the Military Council for National Salvation, the Council of State has lifted martial law on the territory of the whole country, starting July 22. Commmunist chief Wo-jciech Jaruzelski addressed Parliament immediately after the Jablonski speech, and said "martial law was a necessity, an act of defense. The lifting thereof is a conscious choice.
The decree was imposed Dec. 13, 1981 after many months of unrest by labor reformers and followers of Solidarity.
By DON WATERS Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -The MX missile, a weapon embattled by a decade of debate over how to base it, has narrowly cleared another hurdle on its way to joining the nations strategic nuclear arsenal in 1986.
After a blitz of telephone lobbying by President Reagan, the House kept the program alive Wednesday night when it turned back, 220-207, an effort to strip from a 1984 defense authorization bill all $2.56 billion to build the first 27 of a planned 100 MX Peacekeepers. Seventy-three Democrats joined 147 Republicans to form the majority, while only 18 GOP members were allied with 189 Democrats in voting to prevent production.
Promising further comment from President Reagan
today, White House spokeswoman Sheila Dixon said the president was pleased with the vote.
The vote marked a significant narrowing of dhe 239-186 approval margin that the House had given May 24 in releasing $625 million to flight-test the 10-warhead, 192,000-pound weapon.
The slippage occurred largely among moderate Democrats, led by Majority Leader Jim Wright of Texas, who had voted with Reagan in May but voiced second thoughts about the presidents commitment to arms control and the need to restrain military spending.
Opponents will have another chance to kill production plans when the House considers an appropriation bill to provide the actual dollars for the weapon, probably in September.
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - A bill authorizing counties to raise the sales tax by one-half cent appeared to be heading toward easy enactment after winning tentative House and Senate approval Wednesday.
The bill, which also would allow five counties and three cities to levy a motel room tax, was scheduled for a final vote today in the House and Senate.
Meanwhile, the General Assembly enacted a bill Wednesday listing 47 topics that may be studied before the 1985 session under the auspices of the Legislative Research Commission.
The topics range from problems with worthless checks to the development of the biotechnology industry in North Carolina, one of Gov. Jim Hunts pet projects.
Traditionally the legislative study committees have designed bills to address needs identified during their research and those bills often set the agenda for the session.
The sales tax bill tentatively was approved by the Senate, 31-7. and the House, 79-25, with no debate.
The bill is a mixture of a House proposal to allow counties to raise the tax and spend the money as they wish and a Senate plan to automatically raise the tax statewide and divide the proceeds between schools and water and sewer projects.
Under the compromise.
county commissioners may vote to raise the tax or put the question to voters in a referendum. The higher tax would generate an additional $104.2 million this fiscal year and $135.4 million in 1984-85.
The Department of Revenue would distribute the money according to population, a change from the method now being used to distribute the 1-cent local sales tax. The state now returns the tax to the place where it was collected, a method which benefits metropolitan counties.
The bill would require that a minimum of 40 percent of the additional money to counties go for public school buildings and 40 percent of the money for cities be earmarked for water and sewer projects. Those percentages would drop to 30 percent for the following five years.
Cities with a population of more than 75,000 could spend up to 20 percent of the revenue on housing programs.
Any local government could petition the state to waive the required percentage of spending if they think their needs \ary from the formula.
The rest of the bill would let the counties of Mecklenburg, Buncombe, Haywood, New Hanover and Forsyth and the cities of Ocean Isle Beach, Topsail Beach and Surf City levy a motel room tax to generate money for attracting tourists.
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Daily R^ector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because (rf 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.
Panda Ling Ling's Baby Presumed Dead
MEAL DELIVERERS NEEDED Peter Anderson of the Farmville Senior Council says seven more hot meals may be made available to Farmville residents who are shut-ins if two volunteers to deliver the meals can be obtained. The two will work every fifth week and mileage will be paid. Allocation of the meals is through the Pitt County Council on Aging. Anyone who can help is asked to call Louise Baker, 7534411 or 753-3656; Anderson, 7534174; or Mrs. R.T. WUliams, 753-3180.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ling-Ling gave birth to a panda cub today at the National Zoo, but authorites said later that the baby had not moved for several hours and was presumed dead. It was the first panda cub bom in the United States and only the sixth bora outside China.
The giant panda gave birth to the tiny cub at 3:18 a.m. EDT. Zoo spokesman Michael Morgan said it was the size of a stick of butter.
By 9:30 a.m., however, Morgan said the oanda had not moved in hours. The panda is still with its
mother, he said, but we presume it is dead.
Dr. Devra Kleiman, head of the zoos extensive panda research, got a close look at the cub through a glass that surrounds the cage and said were no signs of
there
movement.
The panda, which crawled around the cage for about three hours after it was born, was last seen moving about 6;30a.m.
Ling-Ling was still cuddling the cub to her breast, Mobgan said. A zoo medical team would try to remove
the baby, he said, but may wait several hours to make the attempt.
Morgan said the medical team would try to distract Ling-Ling and scoop up the cub with a net or, if the mother goes into her den, lock the door to the den and take the cub.
As for the mood at the zoo, he said, Everyone is very somber.
The paternity of the baby is uncertain. The father is either Hsing-Hsing, the male panda that mated with Ling-Ling last March or Chia-Chia, whose frozen
sperm was used the same week to artificially inseminate Ling-Ling.
Morgan said the cub was born 124 days after Ling-Ling mated with Hsing-Hsing. She was also artificially inseminated during the same heat period with semen obtained from Chia-Chia.
conduct an around-the-clock watch to make sure Ling-Ling continued the excellent care she is already providing.
If there ever was a planned birth for man or mammal, this was it.
Morgan said that Ling-Ling had held the baby to her breast but it could not be determined if she were actually feeding it.
Ling-Ling is an inexperienced mother, Morgan said, adding that the zoo would
For seven years now, zookeepers have been hoping that Ling-Ling and Hsing^ Hsing would start a family. Every spring Ling-Ling, now 12, would come Into heat. But each time. Hsing-Hsing. six months younger, couldnt figure out what was expected of him.
WEATHER
Fair tonight vrith low in 70s; partly cloudy Friday (40 percent chance of thundershowers) with high in upper 90s.
inside Reading
Page 6-Stres.<?
Page 7- Area Items Page 8-TheLoyalists Page 10-Excavations Page 11-Need insects Page 12-Obituaries Page 17-Scores raised'
2-The Dkily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.Thunday, July 21,193
Desi^ Bookbinder Makes One-Of-A-Kind
PITTSBURGH (AP)-Say you nod off in the bathtub while reading your favorite novel. You wake with a start as the novel goes down for the third time. What do you do with it*?
Wrap it in plastic and put in the freezer for a month, recommends Jean Gunner, a bookbinder and conservator at Hunt Institute for Botanical Documentation at Camegie-Mellon University (CMU). The moisture will evaporate just as it does from frozen food left in the refrigerator for a long time, explains Ms. Gunner.
One of only 25 design binders in the country. Ms. Gunner is used to peculiar questions. "A nun from New York called and said they had just slaughtered a goat and wanted to know how to tan the hide so they could bind a book with it. I told her I wouldnt know what to do with it. Im not Into tanning.
Someone else brought in a World War II flyers leather jacket and wanted to know how to restore the leather label in it, she adds with a laugh.
A native of Cobham in Surrey, England, Ms. Gunner studied bookbinding as a required course at Epsom and Ewell School of Art in Surrey. She quickly decided to specialize in it.
They told me I couldnt go into bookbinding, that it wasnt for women. Its very much a mans world in England. The more they told me that, the more I wanted to do it.
The main job of Ms. Gunner, who has been at CMU for 11 years, is maintaining the bindings and book collections for the Hunt Institutes rare books, but she also teaches bookbinding to design department students and others privately. Two of her private students come in from Cleveland, two from Akron and one from West Virginia for the weekly classes.
Theres really no course in this country for bookbinders. she says. Most come from Europe.
While the binding of books started in the first century and the tooling or decorating of bindings began in the ninth century, design binding began in 1935. A design binder, according to Ms. Gunner, designs the cover to reflect the contents of the book. I read it, think about it for a long time, design it and put it together. Each design is one of a kind.
I start with a painted design. Its sort of like doing a complicated jigsaw puzzle. She cuts leather pieces in various colors to create her design. Some are inlaid in the leather cover, some are overlaid.-
But a design binder does more than make a jacket for the book. Ms. Gunner constructs the entire book -stitching pages together by hand, attaching the spine, pressing the spine to curve it.
She sands the composition boards that form the cover. "That takes two hours and I sneeze constantly, she says. I punch holes in the boards and lace them to the book.
The leather binding goes on last when everything else is completed. Im a nervous wreck when Im doing the cover, the bookbinder admits.
She recently completed a desi^ binding of the book, Tulips and Tulipomania for The Royal Library of The Hague, where she is the only American bookbinder represented. They were tickled pink with it, she reports. She is working on another
UNUSUAL PROFESSION - Jean Gunner, one of only 25 design bookbinders in the country, not only maintains rare book collections at Camegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh, but also teaches the art of bookbinding in CMU design department courses and to private students.
original design of the Tulips book for an individual.
Ms. Gunner is about five years behind in commissions. *
Design bindings cost about a minimum of $1,000, depending on the complexity of the design, she says, explaining that it takes about 100 hours to make a design binding. Some go for as much as $15,000.
What does it take to be a design binder?
You have to be crazy. You have to have patience, says Ms. Gunner. 1 have absolutely no patience with people. I have some with books. You have to like to work alone. And it takes a tremendous amount of concentration. You should have a good sense of feel for the materials you work with, a good sense of design and color.
Ms. Gunner admits that you cant really make money In bookbinding. The time needed for restoration of a book is so great that people cant afford it or arent willing to pay for it.
The oldest book she has ever worked on was a Thomas Aquinas printed in 1492.
1 had a sense of awe about it, she recalls. But I knew, too, that 1 was improving it and saving it. Not too many books of that time need work unless theyve been subject to abuse. Theyre made of quality paper.
Ms. Gunner laments the fact that many late 19th-and 20th-century books are made of materials that easily disintegrate. A sudden change in air-conditioning can be devastating to a book, she says. It can really shorten the life of books in a library.
Births
Ibele
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward Ibele, 107 Leon Drive, a son, Michael Edward, on July 15, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Ipock
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John Edward Ipock, Vanceboro, a daughter. Lorie Ann, on July 15, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Staten
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Augusta Staten, 116 Rodney Road, a daughter, Ashley Noelle, on July 15, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Edwards
Born to Mr. and Mrs.
Name Tags
Made By
Coastgl Uniform
Pitt Plaza, Greenville
Raymond Wardell Edwards. 1304 Sonata St., a daughter, Laura Suzanne, on July 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Webb
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Crockett Webb, 122 Robin Hood Road, a daughter, Henri Faye, on July 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Brown
Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wayne Brown,
Long Islands Nassau Co. Gets Vineyard
Abby Agrees With Outcast
By Abigail Van Buren
IMS by Univanal Pms SymticM*
DEAR ABBY: About three montha ago I stopped by to see my sister and she looked ill. She said she had a terrible headache. She didnt talk right, and she bumped into things when she walked. I offered to take her to a do^r or the hcwpital, but she said she didnt have the time because she had to finish her daughters prom gown.
When I got home I was still worried, so I called my sisters husband at work. He went right home and took her to the hospital and they found that she had had a stroke!
While she was in the hospital all she did was worry about Joans prom gown. I told her Id buy her one because I cant sew well enough to finish the one she had started, and it was too late to find somebody else to do it
Well, the only dress Joan liked cost $250, which I couldnt afford, so I told her I would spend $100 and no more. Well, she got mad and refused to go to the prom because she couldnt have the dress she wanted!
Now my sister isnt speaking to me. She said I should have let her finish the dress instead of interfering and calling her husband. Also, since 1 did butt in, I should have bought Joan the dress she wanted. Abby, my whole family is mad at me.
Was I wrong? What would you have done?
FAMILY OUTCAST
DEAR OUTCAST: You were not wrong, and I would have done exactly as you did.
DEAR ABBY: Thank you for publishing my letter a>n-ceming Booth Hospital for unwed mothers. Weve received some lovely donations and even some inquiries from people wanting to adopt one of our 10-year-old pregnant girls. (Booth doesnt have a license for adoptions, so we had to discourage that)
One woman who had been in Booth 54 years ago wrote: I came to your hospital in 1929, a young, unmarried girl, 8 months pregnant Everyone was wonderful to me. I had no money, but was treated the same as those who could pay something. I decided to keep my baby and Im glad I did, because two years later I fell in love with a gentleman who knew my story and said he loved me even more because I kept my baby. He married me, adopted my child and a year later we had another child.
I had always wanted to send Booth Hospital at least $100 to show my gratitude, but times were tough, we were on welfare and lucky to feed ourselves.
I am now a 71-year-old widow and can finally send you $5 a month. I hope it helps. Except for a few close family members, nobody knows I was an unwed mother, so I beg you not to use my name.
God bless you folks at the Salvation Army. May the Lord watch over, comfort and guide all of you always. Name Wiffiheld We were very much touched by this letter, and I thought you might want to share it with your readers.
AUCE GRAHAM WINTERS, BOOTH HOSPITAL, CHICAGO
DEAR ABBY: For the last year or so, when I go into a store I take a few small things and put them in my purse or pocket. I have the money and could easily pay for them, but I still do it. Some of the items I have taken I throw away because I have no use for them.
Why am I doing this? I am a respectable 42-year-old married woman. Please tell me soon, as Im very much ashamed. '
OTHERWISE HONORABLE
DEAR HONORABLE: You could be afflicted with kleptomania a compulsion to steal. If you cant bring yourself to ask your physician to recommend a therapist, consult your local mental health facility. It offers confidential counseling.
Youre never too old (or too young) to learn how to make friends and be popular. For Abbys booklet on popularity, send $1, plus a long, self-addressed, stamped (37 cents) envelope to Abby, Popularity, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
ByTOMHOGE AP Wine and Food Writer Long Islands Nassau County, long famed for its colony of manicured estates, is about to have its first professional vineyard.
A 60-room Elizabethan manor bouse, built for a British nobleman more than half a century ago, lias become headquarters for Villa Banfi, importers of Italian wine.
Now John Mariani Jr. and his brother Harry, who run the firm founded by their father, have decided to try their hand at growing wine grapes on New York State soil.
The new venture is being launched (m a modest scale. The Marianis have set aside 12 of the estates more than a hundred acres to grow grapes amid the formal gardens and sleek lawns. If the crop measures iq) to expectations, the vineyard may eventually be expanded to 75 acres and will produce a sparkling w|ne, said a spokesman for the family.
The Marianis are optimistic, since Long Islands climate , is much like that of the famed wine countri of northern France. In fact, another Long Island county, Suffolk, has been producing wine grapes for some time.
If the new winery, now classified as an experimental project, proves out, the Marianis h<q)e to produce up to 50,000 gallons of wine a year. But that is looking pretty far ahead. The fir^ modest harvest is not expected for at least another three years.
If the crop is good, the family is ex{^;ted to seek a farm winery license. But in any case, says John Mariani Jr., the mansion will serve as a showcase for the wines of Italy that fill its cellars.
We h(q>e to make it like the great wine houses in Europe, he told me.
The vineyard, located in Brookville Village, will be devoted to growing theChardonnay ^ape, which produces the white wine popular both here and abroad. Among other thin^, it is an excellent kitchen ingredient, as in this recipe for Vichyssoise.
4 cups coarsely diced raw potatoes /! cup finely ch(q>ped green onions 2 leeks, white part only,
sliced fine 2>/^ cups chicken consomme
>4 cup crumbled blue cheese I
\ JOSEPH'S I
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>/2 teaspoon celery salt 2 cups light cream 1 tablespoon sweet butter i/i cup Chardonnay Vacup minced chives
Combine potatoes, green onions, leeks and consomm in saucepan and bring to a boil. Cover and cook until potatoes are tender, about 10 to 15 minutes. Put mixture into a bleiKter, add blue cheese and blend about 30
(Please turn to page 3)
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Bethel, a daughter, Nikki Keona, on July 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Gerald Ford was the only American president who had two attempts made on his life.
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At Wits End
By Erma Bombeck
Looking back on it, my entire life changed the first holiday I was aUowed to eat at Grandmas big table.
Up until then. 1 could only speculate on what it was like to be an adult by listening from the kitchen and occasionally getting a glimpse of them as Grandmas swinging door thumped in and out.
Then one Easter, when I was 13, Grandma pointed to a vanity bench brought down from her bedroom that was sandwiched in between my mother and an uncle, and said. You can sit at the big table.
It was awful. They passed things and took a little bit of eveiything whether they liked it or not .. . just to be polite.
They never laughed with food in their mouths even when something was funny and needed laughing at. When they talked, they argued usually about thin^ they couldnt do anything about... the Germans marching into Czechoslovakia and the high cost of living.
They had a real thing about napkins and dabbed the corners of their mouths when there was nothing there. With every bite, they looked depress and kept saying, shouldnt be eating this. My weight, you know.
Everyone was always shooing the dog away from the table and saying, Go away, I just washed my hands.
Sometimes when the door swung open I could hear the rest of the kids in the kitchen laughing and screaming. I knew my cousin Billy was blacking out his front teeth with black olives and acting crazy. And my cousin Pat was scraping the grease with her spoon for hunks of chicken that stuck to the skillet. When they wanted seconds, they just brought the pots to the table and ate what was left with the big spoons still in them. Someone would belch and theyd laugh until someone choked and had to be hit on the back. Then theyd hit back and someone would start a fight with cold mashed potatoes and Grandma would say, If you kids dont settle down out there. Im going to make you all go outside.
Every Easter Sunday I think about the big table. It never changes. . . only the name of the war changes and the names of the adults. But as I hear the laughter from the children in the kitchen, 1 yearn to shed the yoke of responsibility, decorum and discipline ... and be a child once more.Doll Club To Meet
WASHINGTON, N.C. -The A-Z Doll Club of Washington will meet at noon Monday at the Rendevous Restaurant for a dutch luncheon.
The program will feature Carrie Miller of New Bern. She will speak on restoration and care of antique dolls.
Mrs. Miller will also display some dolls from her collection.
The luncheon is open to interested persons.Long Island...
(Continued from Page 2)
seconds. Add celery salt, cream, butter and wine Blend, and chill thoroughly. Serve in soup cups with sprinkling of minced chives.
(To obtain other recipes, taken mostly from Tom Hoges Gourmet Corner over the past years, send (2 for \ your copy of 101 Recipes to Gourmet Corner, AP Newsfeatures, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY 10020.)
The Real McCoys, one of the biggests hits on ABC-TV between 1957 and l%2, was originally turned down by NBC.
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4 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C -Thursday, July 21,1963EditorialsMeasured Reaction
President Reagan is backing up his concern for Central America with the dispatching of an eight-ship battle group, including the aircraft carrier Ranger to the area.
The group will be on the Pacific coast of Central America to underscore U.S. support for friendly countries in the region, the Pentagon announcement said.
The group will be off the coast for show, but it underscores the fact that the United States can blockade the area to keep Soviet bloc war supplies from reaching communist guerrillas.
The United States has long had an interest in keeping foreign influence out of the Western Hemisphere. We are dealing with a different European power bloc now but the threat to Western Hemisphere security is greater than ever.
We are facing a very dangerous situation in Central America where the communist tactics that enslaved so many European and Asian people are now being used. Communism is a threat to Central America and can be a threat to the entire hemisphere if its spread continues. Certainly a measured reaction such as sending U.S. ships to the area is proper.Henry Is Back
It seems like ages since Henry Kissinger was center-stage dealing with foreign policy. Hes back again; this time, coping with leadership of a new bipartisan commission to advise the president on Central American policy.
No question about it the news media (and possibly much of the public) missed Kissinger. He was a colorful character on the.international scene.
He won some points in his diplomatic dealings, and lost points; which is about par for the course. He was patient, he was obscure, he was many things, but never dull.
The fact that he was chosen to head this particular commissions work indicates Kissinger is still highly regarded at the White House: the Central American policy problems are matched only by the Middle East and the nuclear weapons face-off in Europe as crisis points in the diplomatic field.
Maybe experience has honed the Kissinger talents. Hell need them all, and at their finest edge.
Rowland Evans and Robert NovakMndale Slips
DETROIT - The flaw In Walter F.
Mondale's well-oiled campai^ machine revealed itself to Democratic National Committee members when they arrived last week to read a Detroit News poll showing Ronald Reagan losing Michigan badly to Sen. John Glenn while narrowly edging Mndale.
That was the first, but not the last, glitch undercutting an event Mondales handlers lonjg anticipated as the summers crowning event in confirming his solid hold on the Democratic faithful.
Long standing Mndale efforts to seat national committee members as nominating convention delegates collapsed. His black supporters on the committee dropped opposition to a presidential campaign by the Rev. Jesse Jackson certain to hurt Mndale. Committee members revealed through polls and private talk that though the former vice president still is their favorite, he is slipping.
What makes this so frustrating for Mndale is that among the candidates he is the best orator, has the best campaign organization ahd the most campaign money. Party pros gathered here last week could contrast past favors from-Mondale with the disdain of Glenn, who until 1982 seldom campaigned for other Democrats.
But Mondales reliance on party pros as his base recalls the fate of Robert A. Taft in another era and another party.
Althou^ Taft was idolized as Mr.
Republican by his partys faithful in 1952, they turned to a political stranger in Dwight D. Eisenhower because they wanted a winner. The danger that Mndale might play Taft to Glenns Eisenhower was enhanced by the poll showing him trailing Reagan in recession-ravaged Michigan, where the Democratic leadership is overwhelmingly Mondalean.
Gov James J. Blanchard, one of those Michigan-for-Mondale leaders, told us theNeed
Paul T. O'Connor
For tax Increase Comes Home
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Detroit News poll reflected Glenn support from the old Wallace vote, which has a poor turnout record. Simultaneously, Mndale underlined his credentials as a party pro himself (Im a politician and proud of it, he told the national committee). But even his fellow politicians here were casting a wayward eye toward the old astronaut who might be able to bring back George Wallaces Democrats.
CBS and ABC polls signaled some but not all of Mondales erosion in Detroit. Two national committee members from Florida nominally supporting former governor Reubin Askew had secretly promised to support Mndale following Askews inevitable collapse; now they were telling colleagues they might go for Glenn as a winner.
Mndale countered by delivering the kind of stem-winder that has become commonplace for him the past year. Disregarding outside advice to break publicly withsome liberal interest groups, Mndale instead tried to cover the full range of factions institutionalized in todays Democratic Party.
Mndale began with a press conference defense of the innocent (air) traffic controllers fired by Reagan, then played his new theme of defending an activist government. Ill do what you want me to do, he said in jest when asked what his attitude toward the national committee would be as president, but that accurately reflected his posture.
Since when is it a special interest to stand up for organized labor? asked Mndale, prompting an ovation. In calling the roll of liberal interest groups, he outdid himself on Israel, stretching both history and rehlity. He declared that Egypt had invaded Israel four times and dared anybody to name a country that has gone any further for peace than Israel.
But calling the complete roll of Democratic interest groups was not easy. Apparently satisifed he had sufficiently massaged feminists at the National Womens Political Caucus the previous weekend, Mndale neglected to single out women in his speech. Deeply offended, Bella Abzug and other feminists gruffed out of the meeting grumbling about Mndale.
Glenn did not even try to match Mondales pandering. Scorning the special-interest roll, his strategists decided to let national committee members in on what the rest of the country was hearing to cause his rise in the polls. So, after a sleep-provoking recital of his education program, he tossed out his standard campaign speech.
Glenn and Mndale differ less on the issues than in tone. No such baldly patriotic rhetoric as Glenns campai^ fare has been heard by the Democratic National Committee since Vietnam. While taking a soft line on El Salvador, he referred to Marxist communist guerrillas - exotic language for a national Democratic function.
Most exotic of all was Glenns vote in the Senate a day earlier for nerve gas, searing liberal sensibilities here. Several sharp questions about this were submitted to Glenn, but none passed through National Chairman Charles T. Manatts anticontroversy screen. Yet, we heard nobody say this disqualified Glenn for president.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
RALEIGH - When Sen. Chip Wright, R-New Hanover, announced to the Senate Finance Conunittee that he was changing his vote on the proposed half-cent sales tax increase, he was eating a double dose (rf pditical crow First, he was publicly admitting that hed been politically maneuvered into voting for a bill he found many faults with. Secondly, he was voting for a tax increase vriien he has made of^ition to tax increases the centerpiece of his short political care.
But, in abandoning his opposition to the sales tax increase, Wri^Jt was by no means alme on that committee. He was simply one of the last saiators to come to the elusion that there was no other (^tkm but to vote for a tax increase.
You dont have to remember back too many months to hear people like Sen. Handd Hardison, D-Lenkw, saying no siree bob, therell be no (general) tax increase this year. The people dont want
it. Or, Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, and Sen. Bob Jordan, D-Montgomery, and Seo. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, saying die same thing. They were all with Hardison in voting for that increase.
The reeducation of Chip Wright was affected by the inclusion in the sales tax package of a nratel tax authorization for his district. When Wright initiaUy voted against the package, Soi. Bo lliomas, D-Henderson, suggested that New Hanovs motd tax be takoi out of the package. Wright (pckly changed his vote.
For the oth smt(s, reeducation came gradually ov the six nHths of the le^ative sesskm. They came to Rjdeigh CQRvinced they wouldnt have to raise taxes but by the last week of the session, they were convinced that raising taxes was dieir only option.
You learn things tod^ that ^ didnt know six months ago, Hardison said. The things he and the other senators
learned were school buildings and sewer lines. Their teachers, in this case, were the states county commissioners and citycouncilm!.
The states schools are in a sorry state. The state Board of Education says that, at a minimum, we need $600 million for new buildings and renovations, a fact of life that sunk in with the senators after four years.
The state is out of money for new water and sewer lines. Money raised through bonds seval years ago ran out last month. The federal government is getting out of the sewer line aid business. The are communities around the state which cant add new water and sewer custonwrs and who, therefore, cant add new industry or residojces.
These are the kinds of issues that worry county commisskmers. The pressure applied to the membership by all local govemmnets, said Lt. Gov.
James Kilpatrick
Going Back In History
WASHINGTON - We are hearing fresh discussion on Capitol Hill these days of an issue that is as old as government itself. The immediate topic has to do with the legislative veto. The ancient issue has to do with the restraint of power.
The question has troubled free governments since Pericles took on the Athenian Areopagus and curbed its censorial rules. The issue was at the heart of the barons rebellion against King John that produced Magna Carta. No problem was closer to the hearts of our own Founding Fathers than the problem of restraining the constitutional powers they were delegating to a new government.
Every schoolchild presumably is familiar with at least the essential restraints devised by the framers of the Constitution. The powers delegated to the national government were intended to be limited powers. Certain powers could not be exercised at all; No bill of attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed. The House and Senate would act as checks upon each other. The president would have a power of veto, but the Congress could override. At every point in the Constitution, wherever a power is extended, a provision reaches out to snatch some power back.
The system worked well enough for 150 years, but then the operative structure of our government began to change. The old-line departments began to yield power to a host of new ind^dent regulatory agencies. The needs of society grew more complex; government assumed a greater role. Precisely in the traditional pattern.
the Congress that was delegating power sought a means to snatch it back. Thus was contrived the legislative veto.
Stripped to its essentials, in its most familiar form, the legislature veto was an admirably simple mechanism; Congress would delegate power to the Federal Trade Commission, for example, under which the FTC could issue trade rules having the force and effect of law. But, if Congress concluded that the FTC had abused its power. Congress could nullify the rule by its veto.
Over the years a number of variations developed on this theme. An estimated 200 laws were enacted that contained a legislative veto in one form or another. The power to nullify rardy was exercised, but the power was there. Now the mechanism has been scrapped. The Si^ireme Courts 6-3 decision last month in the Chadha case turned on a tricky point of constitutional law; When Congress imposes a legislative veto, is Congress improperly excluding the president from the legislative process? The court said yes; and there went the veto.
A vacuum has been created; and nature, we are instructed, abhors a vacuum. At the moment, the independent executive agencies apparently have acquired powers that are effectively unfettered. A president cannot nullify a trade rule or regulation. The Congress no longer can interpose a veto. On the surface, nothing new restraints the FTC but its own sense of self-restraint - and in times past that sense has not appeared to be exercised actively.
Both in fact and in theory, the prospect of a bureaucratic binge is more apparent than real. Congress retains the power of the purse. Basic laws creating the administrative agencies always can be amended throu^ the normal process. These avenues carry slow traffic; they offer none of the tidy efficiency of the new discarded legislative veto.
James C. Miller III, chairman of the FTC, was up (the Hill last week to talk the matter over with a House Judiciary subcommittee. It may have seemed out of character for a bureaucrat to ask that his powers in some fashion be restrained, but Miller is no ordinary bureaucrat. He urged the committee to find some way of creating a veto power that would include a president and thus avoid the proscriptions of the court. His liberal Democratic colleague, form FTC chairman Michael Pertschuk, disagreed. The legislative veto, he said, has never been a good tool for disciplining agencies.
It is a nice problem for philosophers and politicians. The heavens havent fallen since the courts opinion of June 23, and they are not likely to fall any time soon. Government goes on. But is is only a matter of time before one of the regulatory agencies takes some action that sends congr^men climbing the wall. Without resorting to the laborious process of a restrictive amendment to an appropriations bill, how could the offensive action be suspended? We will be back to the struggle that Pericles waged so many years ago.
Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
Young Need More Care
WASHINGTON - Are younger Americans crazier than their parents?
Thats probably what many observers asked last week when the federal government reported that an unexpected flood of young chronics is overtaxing the nations mental health facilities. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, approximately 1 million 18-34-year-(rids badly need treatment but cant get it.
While some folks might lay responsibility for this figure to Dr. Benjamin Spock, the Grateful Dead and other bad influences of modem America, the baby-boom generation probably has no more screws loose that its parents do. The problem is that health planners may have merely goofed in their projections.
The roots of the currait crisis can be traced to the early 1960s, when mental health experts began to favor small outpatient programs over the mass institutions. This experiment drew on a premise that, if mental health patients received treatment in humane, positive settings rather than the larger institutions theyd improve more quickly. Moreover, many policymakers believed the Americans psychiatric and psychological problems would decrease as society grew more affluent.
In retrospect, we were too idealistic, admitted Leona Bachrach, an instructor at the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center. We ... didnt expect that members of the baby boom would suffer (as many problems as older groups did). Nor did we think that they would be so difficult to treat.
Younger patients are more cir-cums|K^ vocal and questioning of their
treatment, said Ronald Manderscheid of the National Institute of Mental Health. They are more resistent to treatment and require l(ger-term care that isnt necessarily available. Drug-related problems, Mandershceid added, make this group only more resistant to therapy.
If anything, the influx taxing facilities today may have more to do with an inadequate response to a population explosion than the ravages of a sick society.
At a Washington press conference last week, television evangelist Jerry Falwell
Elisha Douglass
Strength For Today
There are three ways to go through life.
The first is to lounge through life. Some people feel that this would be utter bliss; yet, when and if they try it, they end up becoming utterly worthless to themselves and to the world.
The second way is to lunge through life. For some this means organized violence. Most of these people pay the penalty by winding up in prison. World conquerors are also in this class. So are the less notable people
everywhere who chronically lose their tempers, and often cast aside their future in a moment of passion.
The third way is to love through life. Those who follow this path are at peace with themselves and with the world because we are essentially spirits living in a world that is essentially spiritual.
The cross is the sign of Christian faith the emblem of that One who showed us how to live the life of love
responded to each question wiUi a query of his own: What, pray tell, was the reporters sexual preference? Quite remarkably, most of the reporters complied with FalwelTs request, and in a variety of ways.
Twelve years ago, Lt. William J. Galley Jr. was convicted of murdering 22 unarmed civilians in a Vietnamese village called My Lai. Though sentenced to a life of hard labor, Calley only served three years of house arrest. He now works as an assistant in a Columbus (Ga.) jewelry store owned by his father-in-law.
Jimmy Green when asked what was behind the shift in sentiment. "Ive never seen any issue lobbied more fervently than ... this. They were literally crying fw-it.
The counties got in bad shjqie ami they showed up showing us the facts in their hands, said Jordan. Redman said hed been approached by the commissioners of the four counties he represojts. All four boards, two of each party, supported the tax|pcrease.
The senators said there were two other ways to pay for the inpmvpoits. Bonds could be floated and the^lle (^d pay a lot of extra interest. Or, the problem could be dealt back to the county commissioners who would probably have to raise property taxes. "If we dont pass this, Redman said, then our property taxes are going up.
In the end, they, like Wright, didnt see any real options for themselves.
Christopher LindsayHanging
NEW YORK (AP) - One of those things that seemingly must ^ up and must come down haait done either lately
- the prime rate. *It has hung at 10.5 percent since February.
In 1980, the nations big banks changed the prime rate 36 times, with the year starting at 15.75 percent and ending at a record 21.5 percent. The prime rate changed 25 times in 1981, ranging from 20.5 percent to 15.75 percent, and 12 times last year, falling steadily from 16.5 percent to 11.5 percent.
This year there has been but one change; on Feb. 28, banks dropped the prime from 11 percent to 10.5 percent.
Here are some questions and answers on the prime rate;
Q. First, what is the prime rate?
A. It is the rate that big commercial banks use to figure the interest they charge their business customers on short-term loans.
Q. Does that mean banks make corporate loans at different rates?
A. Yes, with some borrowers getting loans below the prime rate and others paying above that level.
4 Does that happen often?
A. According to a survey conducted by the Federal Reserve Board, as of last November, the median range of commercial and industrial loans was 10.68 percent to 13.55 percent, even though the published prime rate at the time was 12 percent. The spread is called the interquartile range, representing the middle 50 percent of the interest rates on all loans at major commercial banks. Gearly the prime rate is merely a benchmark.
Q. Why not abolish it?
A. That would not be a bad idea, says Treasury Secretary Donald Regan. He says the prime is not a true indicator of real-life market rates. He says a better barometer is the negotiated rate of commercial paper - loans of excess reserves between big companies. On Monday, while the prime stood at 10.5 percent, commercial paper for 90 days was trading at around 9.5 percent.
Q. Why the difference?
A. Harold Levine, bank analyst with the E.F. Hutton investment firm, says that for awhile the prime rate was too high, with an inflation premium stemming from the markets suspicion that the Fed had not gotten as firm a grasp on inflation as it in fact had.
Q. Which way is the prime headed?
A. Like any unknown, opinions vary. Levine says, You could make a case f a higher prime. On the other hand, Barry Rogstad, chief economist of the Coopers & Lybrand accounting firm, says he sees rates staying where they are, but not coming down.
Q. What could lead to a lower prime?
A. Rogstad says a key determinant would be reduced federal deficits. When and if we are capable - and can demonstrate to the financial community
- that we can deal with the deficits in a non-inflationary manner, then there will be substantial room for interest-rate reduction.
Q. Does the prime rate affect consumer loans, such as mortgages or new car loans? ,
A. Not directly. Those tend to be long-term, fixed-rate loans and thus the borrower must pay a premium in higher interest, as financial institutions attempt to immunize themselves from high rates later on.
Q. Why has the prime been so steady after the volatility of recent years?
A. Levine says the banks left the prime alone even though other rates were changing, because they were not entirely confident that Fed monetary policies would produce the lowered inflation levels intended and market rates would head up again.
Q. Is this the longest period that the prime rate has held steady?
A. Recently, yes, but historically not by a long shot. The prime was 1.5 percent from May 1934 to June 1947, then it crept up to 1.75 percent, a level it held for p year and a half. The prime moved iq) to2 percent in January 1949 and to 2.2S percent a year later, be^nnlng a moreor-less relentless rise. It reached the peak of 21.5 percit iriHember 1980 but began to recede two weeks later, and the trend has been downward - with a few upward blipsev since.
Q. Will the prime rate terfturu to 1.5 percent?
A. Anything is possible, but it is highly unlikely in an economy so dependent on credit that there will be sufficient funds available to everyone that interest rates could get that low again.
VIRGINI
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6-The Daily Rdtector, Greenville, N.C-Tlwrsday, July 21,1983
A High Level Of Stress On Captol Hill
By JILL LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Imagine your job is on the line every two years, and its surv'ivai depends upon pleasing or at least appeasing colleagues and constituents every time the telephone rings or the mailbag arrives.
Thats the lot of 7,500 people who work for House members in an atmosphere so frenzied and consuming that counselors and therapists are marketing a profitable brand of expertise: stress management in congressional offices.
Our lifestyle is stress, says Karen Kinard, press secretary for Rep. Bob Edgar, D-Pa., whose office held an eight-hour Stress Day or Help is on the Way workshop in June.
"We drink a lot of coffee, we talk about our work after hours, we do everything we shouldnt do. And we havent stopped, Ms. Kinard said.
I havent followed through, confessed Edgars office administrator. Skip Powers, who tries to stay serene surrounded by snapshots of ocean-borne whales and a giraffe in the African bush. We learned how to deal with stress. But learning something and doing it are two different things.
Making a dent in Hill stress is hard. The 1,430-member Congressional Staff Club sponsored a stress mana^ment workshop earlier this month, and only four people showed up.
People are always saying, Id love to come to your stress management pro^am but Im too busy, said Barron Maberry, the Lutheran minister who ran the workshop.
He and Beth Kilker, who arranged the session, offered a variety of explanations for the sparse turnout: too busy, not enough publicity, hi^ price ($10 for a two-hour session), having to stay after work, vacation season, concerns about Maberrys holistic approach.
But there seems to be no question that, as one workshop participant put it, Capitol Hill is a stress factory - and getting worse.
Burned-out House staffers who used to find sanctuary in the private sector after a couple of years in the pressure-cooker now hang onto their frenetic Hill jobs because other work is scarce.
Congressional offices received 160 million pieces of mail in 1981 up from 14.6 million in 1%9, according to
THE AMISH WAY - An Amish teen-ager cultivates his familys cornfield near Ohio 314. He would not give his name but said be had been out for cmly an hour. He was observed resting the horses after each pass through the fidd. (AP Laserpboto)
Carolina East Centre Vv Phone 756-8963 J
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House postmaster Robert V. Rota. And they receive an average of 12,000 constituent requests a year, a recent survey found.
Every time the phone rings, its a new case, a new issue, a new contact with the outside world. Every phone call means somebody has to do something, said Edgar.
Theres the constant pressure of wanting your boss to be re-elected, of not wanting to let him down, said Ms. Powers. To have that coming up every two years...she sighs.
Even a simple event creates hours of work. When a minister from Edgars district recently gave the opening prayer in the House, staffers had to write the congressmans floor remarks; set up a photo session in the House Speakers office; arrange lunch for Edgar and his visitor; and advise the media about the whole thing.
Daily pressure is intensified by House schedules
which routinely list five or six things happening at the same time, which translates into pressure on aides to reschedule their members again and again as different events arise.
The results were vivid at the staff club stress session.
Jack, an attorney, said he gets extreme headaches and takes occasional tranquilizers. 1 look f(Nrward to the day when I can just chuck all this and pump gas. But it is veiy challenging work, be said.
Mary, a typist-receptionist, said she had to type speeches, testimony and press releases for her whole office - between answering phone calls. Soon she was overeating and drinking too much wine each ni^t.
Remedies for such typical stress responses are universal - and familiar. Fi^t loneliness with friends and pets. Meditate. Practice deep breathing. Give and get neck massages. Exercise. Pursue hobbies. Get away. Volun
teer. Keep caffeine' salt and sugar consumption down. Develq) a sense of humor.
Humor is the preferred way of coping with stress on Capitol Hill. But much of it is
the sick humor considered to be a symptom of ...stress.
In Edgars office, one staffer has hung a picture of a translucent, grim-looking frog staring out from a branch. TTie capti<Hi: National Stisss Poster Child 1983.
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VRCATIONS
_
Travel Express is open on ^turdays from 9:00 am until 1:00 pm. So if you need help on weekends, we work on your vacations.
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Downtown
Pitt Plaza
Both stores open at 10:00 a.m.
Shop entire store for unadvertiseid specials as well. Sorry, no phone orders, C.O.D.s or layaways. Select groups. Limited Quantities. Shop early for best selections.
JUNIORS
Entire Stock Of These Selected Catagories
Swimsuits Summer Skirts Summer Pants Summer Dresses
Summer Jumpsuits
Sundresses
Lady Thomson Pants and Skirts
Summer Jackets
Summer Blouses
DRESSES
MISSES
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Short-Sleeve Summer Blouses
Koret City Blues Summer Pants Summer T-tops
Large Size Summer Tops and Blouses
Large Size Summer Coordinates
(Rejoice-basics, navy and black-and Rejoice, creme and blue)
COSMETICS
Charles of the Ritz Cosmetics
SHOES
Entire Stock of Better Summer Shoes
Amalfi, Pappagallo, Stanley Philipson, Garolini, Deliso, Bandolino and Vaneli
Entire Stock of Summer Shoes by Red Cross Lifestride & Selby
Childrens Dress Shoes
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Entire Stock of
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by Sanibel, Surry & others.
(Sizes 6-20, S, M, L, XL.)
Great Selection
Summer Sweaters
by Daniel Caron * in summers newest colors (S, M. L)
Summer Skirts and Tops
Exclusively by Lilly Pulitzer (Downtown Only)
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by Leslie Faye, R&K, Jack Mulqueen and others. (Sizes 4-20. Also in Petites)
Entire Stock of Summer
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Entire Stock of
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by Malia, Jenny, Etc. (Sizes 4-18)
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Blouses, skirts, tops, pants and shorts (Sizes 4-14)
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Entire Stock
Mens Summer Suits
Entire Stock
Mens Summer Sportcoats
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Mens Swimwear
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Mens Summer Trousers
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Ocean Pacific Trousers
CHILDRENS
Entire Stock Summer
Healthtex
Entire Stock Summer
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Boys and Girls
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Boys and Girls
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Boys and Girls
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Cl^rk Charged With False Report
A WdsoQ area woman faces several charges stemming from aUegedly falsely reporting to Farmville police that the convenience store in which she was clerking had been robbed. An accon^ce has also been charged.
Farmville police Capt. W.G. Earbo' said Brenda Reason notified Farmville police on the morning of July 9 that the Fresh Way rtore on West Wilson Street in Farmville had been held up and robbed of $530. Conflicting portions of her story led him to question the report, Barber said.
Ms. Reason has been charged with making a false report to police, conspiracy ami larceny, con^iracy to embezzle and embeztlement. She is being held in Pitt County Jail under $10,000 bond.
Arrested with her was Alexander L. Jones. He is charged with lirceny, forgery, conspiracy to commit larceny, and con^iracy to embezzle. He is also under $10,000 bond.
Food stamj and $67 in cash have been recovered. Barber said.
Greene County Man Dies
A Greene County man died Monday from injuries he received after being struck by a car on the evening of Feb. 6 near Snow Hill. Michael Ray Whitfield, 23, died in Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital.
According to an investigation report filed at the time of the accident by Trooper F.L. Kearney, Whitfield was lying in a traveled path at the time he was struck by a car driven by John Lewis Cox, 37, of Route 3, Snow Hill.
Cox was not charged, the trooper said.
Singing Program is Scheduied
A singing program will be held at the Bethel Church of God Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The program will feature Bettie and The Sunrise Singers.
r
Marathon Raises Over $6,000
'
A softball marathon Saturday and Sunday to benefit the Easter Seal Society and its programs raised more than $6,000, the Greenville Recreation and Parks Department has announced. Twenty-eight teams from eastern North Carolina participated.
Bill Twine, planner of the event, said Wachovia of Greenville led the teams in raising money with $700. The Lenoir Memorial Hospital womens placed second with $666.
Choir To Hold Fish Fry
The C.J. Spiritual Choir of Selvia Chapel Church will ^nsor a fish fry Saturday. The sale will begin at 9 a.m. in the lot at Hardees Funeral Home, 901W. Fifth St.
Shearin Named Park Superintendent
Sidney Howard Shearin has been promoted by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation to superintendent of Petti^w State Park.
Shearin is a native of Greenville and had been a park ranger at Medoc Mountian State Park for more than five years. He is a graduate of North Carolina State University, where he double majored in natural resources management and parks administration.
Shearin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Howard Shearin of Greenville, is a graduate of J.H. Rose High School. He and his wife will live at the park, which is located in Washington and *^^1X611 counties and includes the 16,000-acre Lake Phelps.
r
Pitt Schools Air Viewpoint'
The Rural Education Institute will be the topic of this weeks Pitt County Schools Viewpoint, a radio show aired on several local stations.
Host Barry Gaskins will talk with Dr. Richard Warner, director of the Institite, about the function of REl and how it relates to the education process of eastern North Carolina.
The show is scheduled at the following times and stations; Saturday, 7:30 a.m. WITN-FM, 8:30 a.m. WGHB-AM, 8:25 a.m. WOOW-AM; Sunday, 8:30 a.m. WRQR-FM; 1:06 p.m. WNCT-AM, and Monday, 3:05 p.m. WBZQ-FM.
For further information contact Pitt County Community Schools at 752-6106, extension 249.
Ushers'Anniversary Set
The ushers of St. Monica Church in Grimesland will hold the annual ushers anniversary service Saturday at 6 p.m. at tbe church. The service is open to the public.
)
Bus Trip To New Jersey Planned
A chartered bus will leave Bell Service Station and travel to Brown Chapel Free Will Baptist Church in Newark, N.J., on SMt. 30 at 7 p.m. and will return Oct. 2.
the tr^ will be sponsored by Frist Timothy FWB Church and the deadline for purchasing tickets is Sept. 25. Interested persons should contact Eldress Millie T. Williams, 201 Stutz St., phone 758-1208. _
In The Area
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Three Injured In Two Collisions
Three persons were injured and an estimated $2,900 damage resulted from two traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Wednesday.
Officers said Sheila Dianne Smith of 1805B Kennedy Circle and two passengers in the car sh^ was driving were injured in a 6:l0 p.m. collision at the intention of Dickinson Avenue and 14th Street. %
Police, who said investigation of the mishap was continuing, said the Smith vdiicle collided with a car owned by James Lee Canfield of Camp Lejeune, which left the scene following the collision.
Damage to the Smith car was set at $2,200, and officers charged her with driving without a license.
Cars driven by Evelyn Brewer Blizzaro of 2707 Shawnee Place and William Edwin Stancil of Washington, collided about 12:30 p.m. at tbe intersection of Evans Street and Arlington Boulevard, causing $500 damage to the Blizzaro car and $200 damage to the Stancill vehicle.
Charges Placed After Car Stopped
Greenville police arrested James Lee Atkinson, 32, of 301B Dudley St. Wednesday about 6:30 p.m. on charges of larceny and unauthorized use of a vehicle.
Chief Glenn Cannon said officers stopped a car driven by Atkinson to take him into custody on the unauthorized use charge and discovered 69 cartons of cigarettes in the vehicle.
' Police said the cigarettes, valued at $405, allegedly were taken from Ormond Wholesale Co. at 1901 Dickinson Ave. about 3 p.m. Atkinson was placed under a $2,500 bond pending court action in the case.
Church Plans Sunday Services
Miracle of Faith Soul Saving Station Holiness Church, 1515 Broad St., will have church school Sunday at 11 a.m. A worship service will be held at noon.
Rental Paddle Boats Are Available
The Greenville Parks and Recreation Department, beginning Saturday, will have seven rental paddle boats on one of the ponds at River Park North available for public use.
From 1 to 6 p.m. Saturday and at the same time daily thereafter, the boats can be rented at the rate of $1 per half-hour for one person, and $1.50 per half-hour for two people. The capacity of each boat is two persons.
The park is now open seven days weekly from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fishing is $1 per day, and putting in private boats is $2 per day. Other activities available include picnicking and walking along nature trails.
Park director Howard Vainright and other staff members on duty will provide assistance and full details on regulations to anyone desiring this information.
Correction
A news story appearing in Wednesdays edition of The Daily Reflector, reporting on a series of traffic accidents in Greenville Monday and Tuesday, incorrectly reported that Ann Jones McClellan of 1209 Ragsdale Road was charged in connection with a Tuesday mishap at the intersection of Chestnut and Wilson Streets.
Ms. McLellan was not charged in connection with the wreck.
The Reflector regrets the error.
Income Grows
ROCKY MOUNT, N.cT (AP) - The Planters Corp. has reported an increase in net income of 13.5 percent to $1,244,000 for the second quarter ended June 30 from $l,0%,000inl982.
On a per share basis, that amounts to 57 cents, compared to 51 cents, a gain of 11.8 percent, said James B. Powers, Planters chairman
Superior
Court
Report
The following cases were disposed of during the July 5 term of Pitt County Superior Court.
Steven Wendell Bazemore, Win-tervUle, possession of marijuana, dismissal by prosecutor.
William Everette Fleming, 1607 S. Greene St., rape, not a true bill.
Barbara Ann Grimes, 1406 Broad St., assault wiUi a deadly weapon, 2 years jail suspended on payment of costs, restitution, attorney fees, 3 years probation.
Vicky Lane Hardy, 1711 Hopkins Drive, driving while license revoked, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine and costs, 3 years probation.
Thomas Earl Midgette Jr., Route 1, Greenville, forgery, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 5 years probation; uttering forged check (2 counts), 2 years jau suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 5 years probation; uttering forged check (3 counts), 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine, cosls, restitution, 5 years probation in each case; breaking and entering, 3 years jail, 120 days active, remainder suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 5 years probation.
Willis Moore Jr., Ayden, assault on a female (2 counts), dismissal byprosecutor.
Estella Olds, no address, welfare fraud, 3 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 5 years probation.
Thomas Lee Pippen, Route 1, Bethel, driving under the influence, not guilty.
David Earl Robbins, Route 2, Greenville, aid and abet safe movement violation, pay fine and costs.
Willie Michael Sampson, Wilson Acres, assault, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 3 years probation.
Paul Douglas Sigmon, 333 Slay Dorm, breaking, entering and larceny, 2 years jail suspended on payment of fine, costs, restitution, 5 years probation.
Kenneth Ray Streeter, no address, uttering forged prescriptions, 2 years jail; uttering forged prescriptions (2 counts), dismissal by prosecutor.
Moses LeeiWilson, Bethel, driving under the influence, 6 months jaU suspended on payment of fine, costs, ^nd 25 days in jail, 4 years probation.
EYEGLASS SALE
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20%
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with Purchase Of Prescription Lenses
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_ 73fl Grppnvillf Blvd. (Next To Pitt Plaza) _
OPEN ^
DELIVERY LAY AWAY LOW MONTHLY MON,-THURS 10-7
AVAILABLE PLAN' PAYMENTS' FRI. & SAT. 10-6
THIS WEEK AT JCPENNEY
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Orig. $150 to $170.00. Dress for success in this group of trim fit 3-piece suits. Polyester/wool for year-round wear. In solids or stripes.
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$2 down will hold your layaway for 60 days with regular payments.
Orig. S23 to $30. Cut a smart figure for town or country in this group of dress slacks. Assorted color in young mens sizes.
Now
10.99
Orig. $15. For casual wear you cant beat the wear of Plain Pocket * corduroy jeans. Blue only.
Intermediate markdowns may have been taken.
Percentage off represents savings on original prices.
CPenney
Shop 9:30-9:30 Phone 756-1190 Pitt Plaza
*1983. J C Pinney Compiny. Inc
Colonial Loyalists Mark Bicentennial
By CHARLES CAMPBELL Associated Press Writer
SAINT JOHN, New Brunswick (AP) A bicentennial celebration for the losers of the Revolutionary War is under way in Canada, honoring the the colonists who fled north to build a new country loyal to the British crown.
Scores of towns and cities in eastern Canada - the first refuge for nearly 40,000 Loyalists sometimes referred to as 18th century "boat people" - are mounting pageants, festivals and re-enactments this summer.
The hoopla spreads next year to Ontario, where the government has proclaimed 1984 the provinces bicentennial year.
An American view of the Loyalists could perhaps be summed up in George Washingtons comment: "Unhappy wretches! Deluded mortals!
But Canadians tend to see the same group as an elite, courageous band who gave up wealth and station for principle and honor, then applied themselves with industry and forditude to building a new life in the wilderness.
New York, the last British stronghold in 1783, was filled with tens of thousands of refugees and with members of locally recruited regiments - such as the Royal Fencible Americans and the Carolina Provincials - who had fought fiercely against the rebels and did not want to be left behind.
During the summer, close to 40,000 Loyalists were evacuated at government expense and given clothing and provisions for their first years in Canada. Others fled to the West Indies or returned to Britain.
"They were shipped all over the bloody place, says Eric L. Teed, secretary of the New Brunswick branch of the United Empire Loyalists Association, whose members all can prove descent from Americans who declared loyalty to King George III before 1783.
"You can get a U.E.L. after your name if you trace your ancestry back, but so what? said Teed, interviewed in his law firms offices overlooking Saint John harbor.
Sarah Frost, one of the 10,000 who became the founding settlers of Saint John, wrote in her diary the day she landed, It is, I think, the roughest land I ever saw. A fellow passenger looked out and saw only dark woods and dismal rocks.
Saint John, now an industrial city of 115,000, still looks a bit grim on a rainy afternoon, but the people have gone all out to lure tourists with a year-long schedule of Loyalist-related pageantry.
A hi^ight of Loyalist Days in July was the recreation in full dress regalia of the first landing, an event which is also commemorated each year on its anniversary. May 16.
At the landing site, a town crier in full costume is available to be photographed with visitors and a play describing the settlements early days is performed every day.
Nora Gallagher, a guide on bus tours, says she sometimes runs into Americans so assertive about their version of history that she has to soft-pedal the Canadian view of the Loyalist forefathers.
Theres some negative feeling there. Im sure, she
Hospital Seeks InfectionCause
TOWSON, Md. (AP) - St. Josephs Hospital, which has closed its labor and delivery room because of an outbreak of rare meningitis germs, has tested 400 employees without finding the source of the bacterial infection, officials say.
A ninth baby born last week at the hospital was discovered to carry the germ, but does not have the disease.
"The baby is well, it simply had the bacteria in its body, hospital spokeswoman Jane Devlin said Tuesday.
The disease, a type that has been reported only 69 times since 1971, affects only newborns and creates an inflammation in the lining of the brain and spinal cord. It can be fatal if left untreated.
said. "Some say they just dont want to hear about it. In neighboring Nova Scotia - where about 20,000 Loyalists crowded into an already settled province -the focus of attention this year is on Shelburne, which was briefly the fourth-largest city in North America, after New York, Boston and Philadelphia.
For lack of arable land the settlement foundered, and by the 1820s Shelburnes population bad dipped to about 300. The town later recovered to become a prominent site for yacht-building.
This summer, dory races, square dances and soap box derbies, among other festivities, are being staged with a Loyalist theme.
Ontarios decision to celebrate next year - even though it was not separated from the old province of Quebec until 1791 - has already sparked controversy.
Andre Cloutier, president of the Ontario French-Canadian Association, said, Its hard to ask young Franco-Ontarians to
celebrate the arrival of 6,000 Loyalists when their ancestors were here a century and a half before.
The provincial government is trying to defuse criticism by including recognition of Indians, early French settlers and later waves of immigration under the slogan, Celebrating Togher.
Back in New Brunswick, 1984 will be the bicentennial of the provinces creation -a direct result of the Loyalist influx into what bad been western Nova Scotia.
And to revive the bicentennial spirit for still another year. Saint John will celebrate the anniversary of its incorpiH^tion as a city in 1785.
Now Open
Edgecombe Furniture Outlet
Fourth & Sater Streets Pinetops. N.C.
Buy Direct From Factory And Save!
Tues-Sat . 9-5 Fn Nite Til 9 /
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Sentence Is Protested By Sister
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The sister of a woman killed last year protested to the judge Wednesday when the man who pleaded guilty to running over her with his car received a two-year sentence.
Janie Pulley was in Wake County Superior Court to witness the sentencing of Bernardo Hernandez, a migrant worker charged with .murder. He alleg^y had driven a car throu^i the parking lot of a tavern,
crushing Mrs. Pulleys sister, Brenda Perry Jones.
Mrs. Pulley watched as Hernandez pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter and Judge Donald L. Smith ^sentenced him to two years in prison.
Smith had adjourned the ^court after the sentencing, but reconvened it when Mrs. Pulley spoke up from the audience.
i sat in your courtroom last week and saw you give more time for someone char^ with forgery and uttering than the man who ran over my sister, Mrs.
; Pulley said. The only consolation in a case like this is that we have a judge that all of us will have to answer to one day.
Smith explained to Mrs. Pulley that under the Fair Sentencing Act, the maximum punishment for involuntary manslaughter is 10 .years and the presumptive, or standard, term is three years.
Under the law, a judge must impose the presumptive sentence unless he states in writing aggravating or mitigating circumstances that would cause the sentence to be raised or lowered.
Investigators have said Hernandez left the tavern parking lot in his car after a .fight, but returned and 'plowed throu^i a crowd, killing Mrs. Jones. He was allowed to plead guilty to involuntary manslaughter under a plea bargain.
Smith said he found that Hernandez had no prior criminal record and had acted under strong provocation, factors which caused him to reduce the sentence to two years.
If I had felt that this defendant ought to have 10 years - and Im not saying thats what I thou^t - with 'the aggravating and mitigating factors before me, there was no way legally to [justify 10 years.
Smith said the defendant in the forgery case last week ' had a long criminal record and that the aggravating factors outweighed the mitigating factors.
I ^think its terrible , because hes getting two years and my sister is dead, Mrs. Pulley said after court. , This just dont look like justice to me.'ENOCA Moose tRolly At Kinston|
KINSTON - Members of t Eastern North Carolinas Legion of the Moose will gather here Saturday and Sunday, with representatives from most of the Moose lodges east of Raleigh at-
* tending.
All activities will be held at the Kinston Moose Lodge.
Five members of Legion , No. 69 were elevated to the
* highest degree of the fraternity, the Pilgrims Degree of Merit, last May.
' They were Chas. Alsup of ' Fayetteville, Garland Bed-
dard of the Greenville Lodge,
: Larry L. Jones of Oak Island,
! Joe Lawrence of New Bern ; and John W. Rose, of Wilson.
* E.M. Baldree, for 18 years I the secretary-manager of the
* Greenville Moose Lodge, and
* serving as Herder for ENOCA Legion since 1954,
T was installed as a member of
* the Supreme Council of the Loyal Order of Moose.CORREaiON
In the Kmart ad pubiished in th Wad. July 27 edition of The Daily Reflector the aporta socks on sale for 75*
were incorrectly pictured as a 3 pair pack. The sports socks on sale are the 1 pair pack. We apologize for this
error.
Kmart
JULYisales darances.
Carolina east mall k^greenville
Mens Walking Shorts Up to 9 Off!o
Reg. Values to 23.00
Polyester/cotton. Solids, plaids. Sizes 30 to 40.
_
L''
I
S/%
h.%
Mens Popular Beachwear at Terrific Low Prices!
Off
y
Reg. Values to 30.00
Surfer plaids, solid surfers. All swimsuits and selected Hawaiian print shirts. Sizes 29 to 42. Save now!
79.88and28888Re{|. 84.88 and 375.00
GE 12 ' black and while TV with woodgrain cabinet. Also 17" color TV with cabinet.
40% Off) Regular Values to 140.00
Boys Blazers and suits Sizes 8 to 20, prep and boys' sizes
V3 Off I Regular Values to 25.00
Great values on boy's swimwear in solids and stripes Summer colors Sizes 8 to 20.
6>88, Regular 10.00
Rack of boys short sets in red. navy and tan sizes 4 to 7 Shorts with lank top
25% Off, Regular 6.50 to 15.00
Men's and boys Panama Jack' t shirts in light blue, yellow and
white solids S to XL.
Vt PriCG, Regular 9.88 to 49.88
All Atari' cartridges for the Atari 400/800.2600 and 5200 on sale iust for you
1.75to7.50, Regular 3.50 to 35.00
Select group of Cape Craff wood gift items including recipe
boxes and much more!
25% Off) Regular 6.00 to 49.95
Entire stock of microwave cookware including a variety of
casseroles, grills, more
25 % Off) Regular Values 27.00 to 70.00
Sperry Topsiders' clothes for men and ladies in assorted
solids and stripes
V4.0V3 Off Regular Values to 27.00
Selected group of men's dress shirts Sizes 142 to 17 S M L XL Save now!
7.88) Regular 12.00 and 13.00
Boys short sleeve dress shirts by Andhurst' in spring and summer styles Sizes 8 to 20
25% to50 % Off) Regular Values to 35.00
Haggar'. LEVI S' slacks for men for spring and summer Sizes 28 to 38 Stock up now!
10.88, Regular 15.00
Men s LEVI S' shirts with cool short sleeves Machine wash polyester/cotton. S. M. L, XL
7.88, Regular 19.88
Seven air tight containers include: 3 pc sheer canister set beverage server, bowls
9.88, Regular 19.88
18-pc glassware set comes in amber and blue glass 6 juice. 6 beverage. 6 coolers
888, Regular 14.18
Five piece Margarita set includes: 4 magarita glasses and 6' round plate Nice!
3.88) Regular 6.00
7-pc wood salad set contains 1 10" salad bowl. 4 to 6 bowls, salad fork and spoon
50* ) Regular 1.50
Pot holders in a variety of styles and designs Durable cottons Novelty prints
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Straw placemats in a variety of designs and colors such as pur pie, yellow, brown
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Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. until 9 p.m. Phone 75&B-E-L-K (756-2355)
Indian Remains Being Excavated in Bertie County
SCENES FROM THE EXCAVATION ... Shown here are three typical work phase scenes at the excavation of an Indian burial site near Lewiston-Woodville in Bertie County. At top, Billy Oliver and Delores Hall screen
soil for artifacts; in the center photograph, Dan Simpkins removes soil at the smaller of two plots; and bottom, Ellis Braswell and Jean Watson carefully remove soil from two exposed bones.
Big Month For Assigning Jobs
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP) -The Employment Security Commission set a record in June for placing nona-gricultural workers in jobs. ESC chairman Glenn Jemigan said Wednesday.
He said ESC placed 17,493 workers in the labor market that month, the largest number in a single month since 1960. More workers collecting unemployment insurance went back to work in North Carolina than any of the southeastern states, he said.
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By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
LEWISTON-WOODVILLE - In the case of the skte-tons at this site, they are near the surface in an area where disturbance has already happened, explained Billy L. Oliver. "Our primary mission in the one week we have here is to remove the bones of the four complete gravesites we have d^vered and any artifacts we find to be sent to Raleigh to be analyzed.
Oliver, a mmber of the archaedogy branch (rf the North Carolina Divison of Archives and History, is regional archaeologist for an area that covers one-half the state, all the coastal counties and half of the Piedmont counties. He is heading a seven-member team that began excavation of an Indian burial site in Bertie County on Monday morning and has only thitxigh Saturday to complete the task.
Oliver, another archaeologist, John Gauser, and five unpaid volunteers with previous experience in archaeology, are toiling diligently under a blazing sun in an open field near the Roanoke Rivo* a few miles northwest of the twin villages of Lewiston-Woodville.
The excavatkm is being carried out in two adjacoit plots, one 50 by 60 fert, the other 10 by 20 feet. Eadi plot is further divided into squares with scale drawing and photograidis made of the placement of bones before they are removed.
The presence of these skeletons was rqiorted by a member of a construction company that is now taking sand from the general area, Oliver said. He has asked to remain anonymous, and we have understandably not publicized the exact location of this dig in order not to attract spectators, primarily because of the danger that would be involved with peo
ple at the site while heavy equipment is being opo^ted and trucks are coming and going in the area.
TMs particular gravesite is where farming operations have been carried out for a long time. The field is part of an old plantation that dates back nearly 200 years, Oliver explained. This circumstance, be noted, accounts for the skeletons being near the surface.
Its also an area that has been well known to local residents fix the past 40 to SO years as a good place to find arrowheads, projectile points and pottery shards. Because of this, we are not finding neariy as much in artifacts as you would find in an undisturbed site.
Although the appxoximate age of the skeletons cannot be known until complete laboratory analysis of the remains are made, Oliver said, From the evidience at this point, and ciunpamg the evidence with past finds, it is likely that they may date back to four to five thousand years ago. From the best we can tell at this point, these remains may be of the type
that Dr. David Phrips (of East Carolina University) has termed as proto-Tuscaroran, maybe of the Cashie [rilase.
Oliver mentioned that Phelps and two ECU teams are currently digging at two Indian sites not far distant from the Bertie site, in Gates County and near Harrelsville in Hertford Ckxmty.
In addition to the human bones, evidence of former Indian occupatioo unearthed include several arrowheads and a number of small points fnmi projectives, as well as charcoal from fres, pipe fragments, some shell and pottery shards.
Sometimes there is what seems to be a good lead that later turns out to be a disappointment. This circle Ive been excavating had a stain that indicated a possible gravesite, explained Wayne Brook. But it turned out to be a false lead. The ^ain in the earth at this point could very well have been a trace left by the remains of a tree. Brook is a retired IBM physicist-oigioeer.
Other volunteers giving their time to the deadline
task under this weeks hot summer sun are Dan Simpkins, an arcbaecriogy graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill; Ellis Braswell of Roanoke Rapids; Delores Hall of the state archaeiriogy office, and Jean Watscm, a student at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem who is doing interne work this summer in archeaoiogy excavations.
With the current budgetary cutbacks in all areas, were fortunate to have viriunteers pitc^ in to help. Its essential fw projects like this, where we have lots to do in a short time. These are dedicated peale of all ages, eager to bdp and to learn more about professional excavation of site. Most (rf them not mriy fredy give their time, but provide their own expaises for travd and food.
The Bertie excavation is being carried out officially under the Archaeological Resource Protection Act. Hiis act, Oliver ex[riained.
governs what landowners are required by law to do whoever unmarked human burial and human skdetal remains are discovoed. The states chief archaecriogist, Dr. Tom Burke, has to look at a reported ate and make a decision within 24 hours on action to be taken.
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SMALL FRAGMENTS OF ARTIFACTS ... removed from screened oil include tips of projectile points, two bits of charcoal, and a tiny pottery shaid.
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Need Insects In Research Rolet
By TOM FORTNER - ECU Medkal Writer Are you bothered by wasps, yellow jackets or other stinging insects? Scientists at the East Carolina
University School of Medicine may be willing to take them off your hands - or any place else they happen to land.
As part of their studies of
allergic reactions to insect stings, ECU researchers tx^ to enlist the aid of volunteers in rounding up stinging insects for scientific use. Hie researchers need a
GREAT WHITE SHARK - A 20-foot-long great white shark estimated to weigh 5,000 XMiods nudged and chewed a charter fishing )oat M(day 30 miles east of Long Islands Montauk Point. The shark stayed around the
boat about 15 minutes, disappeared for 15 minutes and then reaiq^eared for about five minutes before swimming off. (AP Laserfdioto)
Investigte
Land-Buying
LUMBERTON, N.C. (AP) - A Housing and Urban Develqiment official said Tuesday that the FBI is investigating the Robeson County Housing Authoritys 1982 land purchase for the Raft Swamp public housing project.
Walter C. Conway, the regional inspector general for lUD in Atlanta, said HUD officials requested an FBI )robe late last year, but earned a probe already was in progress.
The Robeson County Housing Authority bought the land from Lumberton attorney I. Murchison Biggs for $135,233 in May, 1982. The 26.34 acres along N.C. 72 was purchased for $5,134 an acre. The property is appraised for tax purposes at $558 per acre, according to records on file in the Tax Supervisors Office.
The FBI has jurisdiction over HUDS investigations, and turning the matter over to them was standard procedure for that situation, Conway said.
Neither the FBI or HUD would give details about the probe.
Biggs, brother of Lumberton Mayor Furman K. Biggs, said he was not aware of the investigation.
The housing project, which is under construction, will include 110 housing units.
After the property was purchased, the housing authority spent $399,156 to fill the marshy land with top soil and clay to make it suitable for construction, according to HUD records.
Facing Big Bill On Severed Ear
RUTHERFORDTON, N.C. (AP) - Rutherford County officials are facing a medical bill of some $18,000 for the severed ear of a jail inmate.
The bills from an Asheville plastic surgeon and Memorial Mission Hospital are for Rodney Morrison, a prisoner in the county jail who had his ear bitten off in a fight with another inmate in October 1982.
County officials say the state should pick up the tab for Morrison, who has since bwn sent to Central Prison in Raleigh.
County manager Bob Irvin told commissioners that he learned of the bill from Dr. John Newkirk, the surgeon who reattached Morrisons ear in three operations.
Newkirk said that after county officials deferred payment for nine months, he wrote to Irvin, asking about his $2,475 bill. Morrisons hospital bill totaled $16,000.
Irvin said the bill had been sent to the state, but since Morrison had not been sen-, tenced at the time, although ' he had been tried and found guUty, the state regarded Morrison as a prisoner of the county.
See A Dilemma In Teacher Pay
WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Bigger paychecks for better teachers - a concept brewing around the counti7 as a way to improve public education - is not a hot idea with some North Carolina principals.
Merit pay is a good concept, but administering it could create more troubles than benefits, several school leaders meeting in Wilmington said this week.
I wouldnt mind giving good teachers more money, but I dont see how you can have an equitable way of distributing money without causing a morale problem, said Stan Sneeden, principal of Wrightsboro Elementary School in New Hanover County.
In many cases, principals would be the ones to evaluate teachers and decide which ones deserve extra money.
Sneeden said it will be difficult to distinguish be-t\feen an excellent teacher and one who is not far behind.
Merit pay has been tried before and did not work, said Wendell Owen, principal of a Greensboro elementary school.
If North Carolina tries it, he said, thre should be enough money to make it worthwhile.
Merit pay seems to be an idea whose time has come, said John Howard, principal of an elementary school in Durham.
Merit pay - which would provide more money in the form of bonuses to good teachers - does not have as much of a chance to win teacher approval as a similar concept called differential pay, he said.
With differential pay.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee said Wednesday that Agriculture S^retary John Block has approved an incentive program intended to increase the amount of flue-cured tobacco sold this season.
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., said the so-called Buyers Incentive Purchase Program, was approved last month by the flue-cured industry. Under the plan, purchasers who buy more 1983 tobacco than they bought on average for the last three years will receive a 30-cent rebate on every extra pound.
The rebates will be paid from a producer-supported fund set up last year to cover any losses resulting from operation of the government price support program for tobacco.
Even if the plan spurs purchase of the entire 1983 crop. Helms said the rebate will only use $48 million of the $^ million in the producer fund and there would be no possibility for financial losses through price support activity since no tobacco would be put under loan.
EVACUATION
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) volcanic eruption, and
More than half of the 7,000 inhabitants of Unauna island have been evacuated after a
another eruption is feared, the official Antara News Agency reports.
supply of the living creatures to study the chemical makeup of different varieties of insect venom.
If a resident knows of a wa^ or hornet nest or a yellow jacket colony that they wouldnt mind being rid of, they need only call the medical school. Scientists involved in the research will do the hard part - come out and collect the insects for use in the lab.
According to Robert Jacobson, an entomologist working in the medical schools pathology department with Dr. Donald R. Hoffman, the researchers need only three varieties of stinging insects - paper wasps, yellow jackets and a species of horrot known as the white-faced hornet. Bumble bees are also being studied by the scientists, Jacobson said, though only on a limited basis because of the difficulty in obtaining them in large numbers.
Honey bees, because they are readily available, have already been studied extensively and therefore are not needed. Also, the black-bodied dirt dauber or mud dauber is not being considered because it produces little venom and rarely stings humans.
Jacobson estimates that the researchers will need several thousand yellow jackets* and comparable numbers of wasps and hornets. He stressed that the insects have to be alive and in good condition to be useful in the study. Yellow jackets contaminated with insect spray or gasoline, for example, would not be acceptable.
teachers would receive salaries based on their performance and their duties, he said. A teaher who ^nds time after school working with school clubs, for example, would be paid for the extra effort.
Rona Leach, a principal in Robeson County, said a merit pay plan would be nice if someone could guarantee a way to fairly determine which teachers would receive the money.
I dont know whether there is any way to perfect it, she said, adding she is skeptical of the whole idea.
Were a long way off, said Gene Rivenbark, a New Hanover County elementary school principal. I can see advantages of having it, but at the present time, it would be very difficult.
Once the insects have been collected and brought to the lab, the scientists extract their sting venom in a process comparable to milking a poisonous snake. The clear liquid venom is thi analy^ to determine its chemical pn^rties and how those properties differ among, for example, several species of paper wasps.
The venom study is a continuation of Hoffmans research in the area of human hypersensitivity to insect stings. Earlier this year he collaborated in the development of a pair of laboratory tests which, for the first time, can tell pathologists whether an individual has died from a reaction to an insect sting.
Area residents who think they might be able to help the ECU researchers can best identify the desired insects by their dwellings, according to Jacobson. Pa[^r wasps live in the familiar gray-white paper nests often found under the eaves of roofs. The nests are distinguished by the numerous tiny larval chambers that make them up. Yellow jackets, on the other hand, are almost always found living in holes in the ground, as many a terrified lawn gardener has discovered.
White-faced hornets, which are black with white markings, make their nests in large gray bag-like structures often found under the eaves of buildings and suspended from trees. Made of a coarse papery material, the nests can be up to a foot in length and have a distinct entrance hole.
The peak season for all these insects is at hand, Jacobson said. Wa^s are more active in early August, while hornets peak in late August and yellow jackets around Labor Day.
Jacobson asks that residents with information about where these insects might be found please call him at the medical school at 757-2816, Greenville. He will ask each caller specific questions about the find and then act on the information accordingly.
Jacobson reminds residents that he cant promise to completely eliminate the insect problem. But in most cases the actions taken should help the situation.
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All Other Summer Clothing On Sale Too!
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Sportswear
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CHILDRENS DEPT.
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Downtown Greenville Shop Doily 10 to 5: 30
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1JThe Daily Reflector, ureenvuje, .ci nurscuj, vui> a, laoj
Stock And Market Reports
Two Drown And Native Appears Third Missing Today Show
Obituaries
Hogs
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 75 cents higher. Kinston 45.00, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill. Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 45.00, Wilson 45.75, Salisbury 45.00, Rowland unreported, Spiveys Comer unreported. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 33.00, Fayetteville
31.00, Whiteville 33.00, Wallace 31.00, Spiveys Corner unreported, Rowland unreported, Durham 34.00.
Poultry
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for next weeks trading was 50.00 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. Too few of the loads offered have been confirmed. The market is steady and the live su^ily is moderate to short with some death losses due to heat stress for a moderate to good demand. Weights light. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Thursday was
1.744.000, compared to 1,680,000 last Thursday.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market turned mixed in active trading today as some traders sold shares to cash in on Wednesdays powerful advance.
More than four stocks rose in price for every three that fell in the midday tally of New York Stock Exchange listed issues.
But the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, up 30.74 points Wednesday in its biggest gain in more than seven months, slipped 3.40 points to 1,224.46 at noon.
The NYSEs composite index feU .05 to 97.79. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 1.39 at 246.72.
Big Board volume reached 50.36 million shares a third of the way through the session, compared with 52.08 million in the same period Wednesday.
Norton Simon topped the active list on the NYSE, up IV4 at 35^4. The diversified company is the object of a $35.50-a-share takeover bid by Esmark, which rose l%t to 79. Anderson, Gayton ^4 Co., which dropped out of the bidding, gained 4 to 29.
NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks
H# Low Last 33^ J3i V,\ 49V4 49V. 49V.
15 15V, 15V.
AMRCoip AbbtLabs Allis Cbalm Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Cao Ant Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmStand Aroer TAT Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden
Ind
39V, 40
17V, 18
51. 51V, 51
42', 42
42V,
49't 50
22, 23
Celanese Cent Soya
int
Champ 1 Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra ConU Group DeltaAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot For McKess Fugua s GTE Corp GnOynam GenlElect s
9V, 9V. 9'
34V, 34V. 34V.
63 62W 62V,
27V, 27V. 27
22 21% 21
45 44V. 45
40V. 40V. 40'
61 60% 60%
40 39 39
71V, 71V. 71V,
21 21% 21V,
69% 61% 69%
15V, 15% 15V.
25% 25 25%
32 32% 32%
50 49% 49V,
22 21V. 21V,
27 26V, 26
29' 29V, 29V,
43 43V, 43V,
37V, 37% 37V.
34V, 34V, 34V.
47V. 47% 47V.
23V. 23V. 23%
9% 9%
70 43
70V
43'
35
1,
9%
70'/,
43
V. 19% 58V,
- . . 49V,
34% ;4V. 34%
47 46V. 47
54 J4V. 54
54 53% S3
r, K 19'
58
49' 41
THURSDAY
p.m. Exchange Club
- Greenville Elks
6:30 meets
7:00 p.m Lodge meets
7:30 p m. - Overeaters Anonymous meets at First Prebyterlan Church
8:00 p m. - VFW meets at Post Home
8:00 p m. - Coochee Council No 60, Degree of Pocahontas meets
FRIDAY
7:30p.m. - Red Men meet
Gen hood Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GLNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell Ho^Cp
46% 45% 46
53 S2V, S2V,
75% 74% 75
33% 33 33
47% 47%
ibIi
Rand
Inti Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc Kit^rCo Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmlnt n Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil . Monsanto NCNBCd NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorGkSou OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhillpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
RalstnPur RepubAir Republic Stl Revlon Reynldlnd Rockwl s RqyCrown StRegisCp Scott Paper SealdPwr s SearsRoeb Shaklee s Skyline Cp Sony Corp Southern Co
26%
39
38
r
36% 36%
28% 28.
26%
39%
47V 27%
36%
29%
45% 45% 45'.
49V, 49S, 49%
25 39'
m-* STi.
122% 121% 122% 54 53% 53%
56 55% S.
125% 124% 125% 9', 8% 9
54 S% SV,
45 44 44%
45% 45%
32% 32
32 V,
SNEADS FERRY, N.C. (AP) - Heavy seas smashed a fishing boat onto a sandbar Wednesday at New River Inlet, drowning two men and swe^ing a thini man out to sea.
The Coast Guard cutter Point Martin searched for the missing man through the ni^t and was to be joined this morning by a bd^ter and another Coast Guard vessel.
A fourth man, James Jones, 53, of Lumberton, was picked up by the Sneads Ferry Rescue ^ad and Coast Guard Auxiliary boats after the accident, the Coast Guard said. Jones was treated and released from Onslow Memorial Hospital in Jacksonville.
Coast Guard Chief Petty Officer W. Forry said the names of the victims and the missing man were not available. Authorities said two of the three men were from Lumberton and the 34% 34% 34% other was from New York.
The 21-foot outboard boat capsized at 11 a.m., approximately 1 mile from shore about 10 miles from Jacksonville, Forry said.
19% 19% 19%
15% 15% 15%
20% 19% 20%
41 40% 40%
121% 120% 121%
149 149 149
46% 46% 46%
21% 20V, aov,
33% 32% 33%
84% 84% 84%
31% 31% 31%
9SV, 94', 95%
26% 26 26
37 37% 37V,
29', 29 29
57V 57% 57%
29% 29% 29%
36% 36% 36%
58, 58% 58%
34% 34% 34%
29% 29'-.
60'-,
36%
27', 26% 27%
53% 53% 53%
46% 46% 46',
29', 29
22 5%
29%
22',
5%
22
59% 60',
36 36
29 22% 5% 21% 21%
25% 25
27 27
42>',
tdOil StdOUInd StdOUOh Stevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn UMC Ind Un Camp Un Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMan s Westgh El Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox C;p
50V, 50V,
32 32
24% 24% 24%
30 29V. 29V,
25 27
41 42V,
29% 29 29%
25% 25V, 25V,
14% 14% 14%
16V, 16% 16V,
43% 43% 43V,
38>, 38%
5IV. 5IV.
53V, 53%
22% 22% 22%
76', 75V, 76
36% 36 36
59>, 58% 58%
17% 17% 17%
75 75 75
67 67% 67V,
15. 14% 15%
25 24% 24
3SV. 35% 35%
40% 40% 40%
45V, 45 45
47% 46 47%
36% 36% 36V.
56 56% 56
37 37% 37%
52V, 52% 52%
47 46% 47
38%
52
54
Following are selected market quotations: Ashland prC Burroughs
Carolina Power A Light
Collins A Aikroan
Conner
Duke
Eaton
Eckerds
Exxon
Fieldcrest
Halteras
Hilton
Jefferson
Deere
Lowe's
McDonald's
McGraw
Piedmont
Pizza Inn
PAG
TRW, Inc.
United Tel.
Dominioa Resources Wachovia
OVER THE COUNTER
Aviation
Branch '
Little Mint Planters Bank
II am stock
42V.
55
21%
42%
29%
23%
43%
28%
35%
35 15V, 53%
36 33
29
66
36
42%
16%
53%
76V.
23%
21%
40%
28-28'/,
23-23%
-!%
l9%-20
Agree Comply With New Law
DOVER, Del. (AP) -News executives have indicated they will comply with a new law that requires newspapers in Delaware to publish the names of criminals released to a supervised custody program.
No one at our newspaper has expressed moral opposition to the law, said Lee Ann Walling, news editor of the Delaware State News.
Brian Donnelly, publisher of the Wilmington News-Journal newspapers, the largest in Delaware, said, If its the law, well comply with it, but we havent looked at it closely enough to know what were going to do.
The bill was signed into law Tuesday. It requres that victims of robbery and crimes against persons be notified when inmates are released to the custody program.
OFFICIALS CHARGED ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Two senior government officials have been arrested on drinking and gambling charges - activities punishable by public flogging under Pakistans strict Islamic laws.
MASONIC NOTICE Mount Calvary Lodge No., 669 AF&AM will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
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Education Is Key: Hunt
DENVER (AP) - The United States is headed for a new era of technological leadership in the world and education is the key to that leadership. North Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt told the Education Commission of the States Wednesday.
If we in America value our jobs and our technological leadership, we must understand that our educational system at all levels is the essential ingredient, said Hunt, commission chairman, during the or^-zations 17th annual meeting.
Hunt said other countries are increasingly challenging the United States economic and technological supremacy. And he said the challenge is being felt by traditional industries such as textiles, apparel, steel and automobiles, which formerly dominated world markets.
High technol^ industries also are being directly challenged. Hunt said, pointing to Japans challenge to U.S. leadership in the semiconductor era and the application of microelectronics to computers and modem electronic products.
The introduction of science and technology at the primary and secondary levels is crucial to developing the foundation necessary for maintaining excellence in higher education and thus a long-term high technology leadership position for the United States, he said.
KNIGHTED
LONDON (AP) -Falkland Islands Civil Commissioner Sir Rex Hunt, who was detained at gunpoint by Argentine troops invading the disputed British colony in April 1982, has been knighted by Queen Elizabeth II.
The seas are pretty bad down there; the boats have bad a rough time, said Todd Herman, Onslow County emergency management coordinator.
Witnesses said the boat was beaded out of the inlet into the ocean when a large wave pushed the boat out of the narrow channel and onto a sand^, causing the boat to break up before it capsized. Some of the men held onto the bow of the boat but all eventually were washed out to sea, witnesses said.
Rescuers and Coast Guard Auxiliary members said an offshore swell, caused by thunderstorms off the coast, along with high winds and a rapidly falling tide created the conditions.
One body was discovered about 1 p.m. about 100 yards into the ocean, while the second body was found about 4; 30 p.m., officials said.
Bulgarian Is Questioned
ROME (AP) - The judge investigating whether Bulgaria agents plotted to kill Pope John Paul II questioned jailed Bulgarian suspect Sergei Ivanov Antonov for six hours, but Antonovs lawyer says nothing emerged from the interrogation.
Judge Ilario Martella conducted the interrogation Wednesday at Rebbibia prison after he returned from Bulgaria where he questioned three other Bulgarians and a Turk that Italian officials say may be implicated in the plot.
Giuseppe Console, the Italian lawyer representing Antonov, said nothing new came out of the interrogation and his client again proclaimed his innocence. Con-solo was present during the questioning.
Antonov, an official of the Bulgarian state airline, has been held since November on charges of complicity in the May 13, 1981 shooting of the pontiff in St. Peters Square by Mehmet Ali Agca, a Turkish terrorist.
Agca, who first claimed he act^ alone, said earlier ttiis month that Bulgarian and Soviet agents were invdved in the assassination attempt.
Console said be expected the Italian official to decide in October whether to press the case and indict Antonov or whether to drop the charges. He speculated that in the event of an indictment the case would go to trial sometime next year.
Martella has given no details of his findings in Bulgaria. But the Bulgarian state-run news agency MTl reported today that Martella and Bulgarian authorities both expressed satisfaction with the judges inquiries. There was no elaboration.
The judge questioned Bekir Celenk, a Turk accused of offering $1.25 million to have the pope killed. Celenk is wanted in Italy and Turkey on a variety of charges.
Martella also interviewed Todor Ayvazov, former cashier at the Bulgarian Embassy in Rome, and two other Bulgarians.
Bulgaria has denied that its agents were involved in a conspiracy to kill the pope.
Greenville native Dr. Godfrey Oakley ai^ieared on the NBC To^y Show Monday and countered the cmtaition of a New York Times article that the incidence of birth defects now is twice that of 25 years a^.
Oakley is a birth defect epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Cwtrol in Atlanta, Ga.
I am absolutdy certain, he said, that a woman who conceives today does not have twice the risk of giving birth to a baby with a birth defect that her mother did 25 years ag(). It is true that many of the babies that used to die now survive, addling to the incidence, but many of them have defects that can be corrected or improved. Examples of conditions that now can often be treated surgically or otherwise are cystic fibrosis a^ ^inal bifkla. Twenty-five years ago, these children died, be said.
Premature deliveries continue to be one of the most common contributors to congenital health and development problems, be said, and our neonatal intensive care units, like the one there in Greenville, do a good job of saving many who once would have died and bringing them to normal health.
Some conditions that used to interfere with successful pregnancies have been eliminated, he said. He mentioned polio, rubella, the Rh factor. Women, he said, are now having fewer children after 35 and, therefore, the incidence of Downs syndrome came down by 25 percent between 1965 and 1975. Tliis, he added, does not mean that only women 25 n older have Downs sydrome-affected children.
My job, he said, is to propose and conduct studies that will find causes of birth defects and propose interventions. Its a dow task and the truth continues to be that usually we dont have the foggiest idea what causes a birth defect. Nevertheless we keep on trying and we have made some tremendous strides.
Oakley attended Duke University and Bowman Gray School of Medicine. He said he has never been in private practice. Ive always been a fed, he quipped.
He and his wife, the former Mai7 Ann Bryant, are both from Greenville and their parents still live here. His mother is Mrs. Carrie G. Oakley; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.H. Bryant.
Construction Activity Brisk
^though slowing slightly, construction activity in Greenville remained brisk during April as building permits valued at over $2.4 million were issued, state Labor Commissioner John Brooks has r^rted.
The commissioner said the April permit figure of $2,443,369 compared with $2,568,406 recorded for March. Greenville was one of 14 cities in the state to issue permits exceeding $2 million.
Construction activity in Greenville included $843,500 for 18 single-family units; $969,625 for 50 multifamUy units; $392,553 for 15 non-residential units and $237,691 for 54 additions and alterations. A total of 137 units were issued in Greenville during the month.
Permits totaling $2,673,326 were issued in Pitt County in April, compared with
No Flight Plan Before Crash
CLEVELAND (AP) - No flight plan was filed for a small plane that crashed at Hopkins International Air^rt, killing five people, a federal official says.
The plane, a twin-engine Aero Commander Model 685, crashed in an industrial park as it approached the airport Wednesday, said George Doughty, director of port control for the city.
Parts of the plane hit three buildings, forcing their evacuation, officials said. There were no injuries to people on the ground.
George H. Seidlein, a National 'Transportation Safety Board investigator, said no flight plan had been filed for the plane, which was registered to a Charles Wessinger of Portland, Ore.
$3,853,606 in March. Pitts figure, which reflected Greenville permit totals, included $872,875 for 19 single-family dwellings, $1,051,272 for 53 multifamUy units; $472,553 for 18 non-residential units and $276,626 for 62 additions and alterations.
The commissioner said that statewide, the 44 cities of more than 10,000 population authorized 3,626 new construction units in AprU, up 23.9 percent from 2,926 last April, but a 6.5 percent decrease from Marchs 3,877.
Estimated value of the units, at $110,958,986, rose 37.5 percent from the April 1982 total of $80,697,412 and was up 6.6 percent from $104,096,837 in March.
Brooks said construction authorized in the 44 cities during the first four months of 1983 was up 35.1 percent from the same period in 1982.
BuUding values for April in several eastern towns included: Elizabeth City, $157,200; Goldsboro, $2,328,602; Jacksonville, $2,354,396; Kinston, $145,000; New Bern, $582,700; Roanoke Rapids, $467,325; Rocky Mount, $2,118,073; Tarboro, $302,200, and Wilson, $865,284.
DeViscooti FARMVILLE - Funeral arrangements for Miss Tabitha Marie DeVisconti, 92, who died here Wednesday, wUl be conducted Friday at 11 a.m. from the Church Street Chapel of FarmvUle Funeral Home by the Rev. Jack M. Daniel. Burial wUl foUow in Forest Hill Cemetery.
Visitation wUl be at the funeral home today from 7:30 to 9 p.m. There is a request to omit flowers.
Fining Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Reeves Flming, 49, will be conducted Saturday at 2 p.m. at Selvia Chapel Church by the Rev. Qifton Gardner. Burial will follow in Cox Cemetery.
Mrs. Fleming was bom and reared in Pitt County and attended Roberson Union School in Winterville. She was an active member of Selvia Chapel Church and was employed by Brodys Department Store in Greenville.
Surviving are her husband, Christo{^ Fleming of the home; three dau^t^ Mrs. Cynthia Fleming of Denver, Colo., and Ms. Linda Bess and Ms. Natalie Fleming, both of Greenville; one brother, John Reeves of TaOedega, Ala., and two grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Friday from 7-8 p.m. at Phillips Brothers Mortuary Chapel.
Mooring Mr. Clarenece Lee Mooring, 74, died Tuesday in Albemarle Villa Nursing Home in Williamston. Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 4 p.m.
Teenagers Face $200,000 Suit
MANVILLE, N.J. (AP) -A $200,000 lawsuit filed against two teen-agers who allegedly bou^t alcohol using fake identification should stop all these kids from coming in and lying, an attorney says.
If you bang a kid for $50,000, hes going to realize youre serious, attorney Donald Chase said Wednesday.
Liquor store owner Irene Cyburt, whose business was closed five days for selling beer and brandy to two 18-year-olds, filed the suit Monday in Superior Court in Trenton.
at Saint Marys Missionary Baptist Church, Route 11, Greenville by the Rev. F.R. Pearson. Burial will follow in Mooring Cemetery in Greenville.
Mr. Mooring was a native of Pitt ^County, where he lived his entire life. He attended local schools aiKl was self-employed as owner aa operator of Moorings Cafe in Greenville. He was a member of St. Marys MB Church.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Maletba Moore and Mrs. Essie CoUins, both of Baltimore.
The family will receive friends Friday from 8:15-9:15 p.m. at Phillii^ Brothers Mortuary Cha^. At other times, the family will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Lawrence Teel, Route 11, Greoiville, on the Bethel Highway.
Whitfield
Funeral services for Michael Ray Whitfield, 23, (rf Route 3, Snow Hill, will be held Saturday at 3 p.m. at Saints Delight Baptist Church near Walstonburg. Buri^ will be in the Saints Delight Cemetery.
Mr. Whitfield died Monday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital of injuries received in a motor v^cle accident Feb. 6. A Greene County native, he spent most of his life in the Snow Hill community.
Surviving are a son, Michael Waters of Snow Hill; his' mother, Mrs. Jessie Whitfield irf the home; three brothers, Gaude Williams of Washington, D.C., Marcellus Williams of Greensboro and Jessie J. Whitfield of Snow HUl.
The family will receive friends Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. at Saints Delight Church. Funeral arrangements are by Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.
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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 21, 1983Ford Blasts Three Homers In Return
By The Associated Press The Seattle Mariners thought they could take advantage of Dan Fords inactivity for the last month. Instead, Ford did a months worth of work in one game.
Seattle starter Matt Young said he asked catcher Rick Sweet before Wednesday ni^ts game at Baltimore how they should pitch to Ford, playing his first game since June 21 because of an injured knee.
Sweet said, Lets go after him. Hes been on the disabled list. Make him hit your pitch, Young said. And he did.
Ford slammed three solo homers and added a fourth hit with a bunt as the Orioles beat Seattle 4-2 for their fourth straight victory and 10th in their last 11 games. Cal Ripken had four hits for Baltimore, including a seventh-inning RBI single that snapped a 2-2 tie.
In my first at-bat I was jittery, said Ford, put in the leadoff spot by Manager Joe Altobelli. My first day hitting leadoff I thought, What am 1 going to do leading off? I didnt know what my approach was going to be. I was just trying to hit the ball someplace hard.
In other American League games, it was New York 6, Minnesota 4 in 10 innings; Milwaukee 4, Texas 3; Oakland 9, Detroit 2; Chicago 8, Cleveland 2; Kansas City 14, Toronto 8; and Boston 6, California 4.
homer leading off the eighth inning as the Brewers won for the ninth time in 10 games and handed Texas its 12th loss in 15 outings.
Cooper, who has 13 hits in his last 21 at-bats and 17 RBI in nine games, drilled the first pitch to him by loser Mike Smithson, 6-9, into the right-center field bullpen. Cooper now leads the majors with 73 RBI.
The Rangers, held to five hits in six innings by Mike Caldwell, scored three times in the seventh to tie it 3-3 on a solo homer by George Wright and Dave Hostetlers two-run shot. But Tom Tollman, 7-2, pitched out of a jam in the eighth to gain the victory.
As9,Tigers2
At Detroit, Oakland got six runs in the seventh inning, highlighted by Bill Almons three-run homer, to beat the Tigers.
Dwayne Murphy drove in three runs with a homer and a single for the As, while Rickey Henderson stole his 55th base and also had a homer and a single to extend his hitting streak to 12 games.
Chris Codiroli, 7-6, scattered seven hits to gain the victory.
Yankees 6, Twins 4 At Yankee Stadium, New York won its sixth straight game and Minnesota lost its seventh in a row as Don Baylor smashed a two-run homer in the 10th inning.
Steve Kemp opened the 10th with a double against loser Ron Davis, 3-4, and then Baylor ripped his third hit of the game and 11th home run of the year.
Dave Engles sixth homer of the season had tied the score 4-4 in the eighth.
White Sox 8, Indians 2 At Cleveland, Tom Paciorek and Ron Kittle slugged
two-run homers in Chicagos five-run fifth inning and Harold Baines also homered to power a 14-hit attack against Cleveland.
Every Chicago starter had at least one hit. led by Paciorek and Mike Squires with three each.
Richard Dotson scattered nine hits in eight innings for his ninth victory in 15 decisions.
Royals 14, Blue Jays 8 At Toronto, Kansas City broke open a close game against Toronto with eight runs in the seventh inning, keyed by Pat Sheridans two-run single and Don Slaughts two-run double.
trailing 4-3 going into the seventh, Kansas City chased Toronto starter Dave Stieb, 11-8, and two relievers. The Royals had seven of their 19 hits and two walks in the inning.
Greg Pryor added a three-run homer and Willie Aikens a two-run shot for the Royals.
Seattle Manager Del Crandall said Ford picked a lousy day to come off the disabled list. But Baltimore is playing well. Theyre beating up on a lot of people.
Ford belted homers in his first two at-bats off Young, 8-10, and added another one in the ninth off Mike Stanton after his bunt hit set up Ripkens tie-breaking single in the seventh.
Batting leadoff, you have to be capable of doing everything, Ford said. Ive been pretty successful bunting. I like to say Im capable of doing it all.
Sammy Stewart, 3-3, held the Mariners to two hits in the middle three 2-3 innings after Seattle scored its two runs off Orioles starter Mike B^dicker.
Stewart benefited from Ripkens seventh-inning sin^e which scored Rick Dempsey. Ford had beaten out a sacrifice bunt for a single to move Dempsey into scoring position.
After Stewart walked Steve Henderson to open the ninth, Altobelli called on Tim Stoddard, who struck out the side for his third save
Red Sox 6, Angels 4 At Anaheim, Wade Boggs hit a two-run triple to snap a ninth-inning tie and give Boston its victory over California. Both teams scored three runs in the eighth inning.
The Red Sox went ahead 4-1 on Tony Armas three-run homer, his 20th of the season. Brian Downing led off the California eighth with his 10th home run. Later in the inning, Reggie Jackson doubled in a run and Tim Foli hit a game-tying single.
Brewers 4, Rangers 3
At Milwaukee, Cecil Cooper, who has gotten hits more often than making out in the last week, broke a 3-3 tie with his 21st
JOWI Regatta Set For This Weekend
The First JOWI Invitational Regatta, to be held July 22-23, will follow the tradition of North Carolina summer sailboat
racing.
The regatta, sponsored by Price Designs and hosted by the Pamlico Sailing Club, gets underway at 6 p.m. Friday at McCotters Marina near the Washington Country Club with a social, registration and the skippers meeting.
Saturday is race day with the four-leg race on the Pamlico River starting at 9 a.m. It will be to the Performance Handicap Rating Formula, with two spinnaker and one non-spinnaker classes. Silver will go to the top five boats in each class, but the sponsor has limited the regatta to 50 boats.
The main social will follow the race at Eastcoast Marine Fiberglass Repair, featuring barbecued chicken with trimmings and the awards ceremony.
Tickets for the Saturday social will be $6 for everyone beyond the five crew members per boat.
For more information contact Wiley Price at 524-5790 or Warren Moore at 975-2046.
Paying The Price
New Yorks Jerry Mumphrey slides hard into shortstop Ron Washington of the Minnesota Twins for the force out at second during the sixth inning
of the game at Yankee Stadium Wednesday. The relay to first was not in time to get Andre Robertson as the Yankees won their sixth in row, 6-4. (APLaserphoto)
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -Rod Carew, whos been batting near the .400 mark since the season began, apparently has put off retirement plans.
Ive thought about it a lot. Like (Gen. Douglas) MacArthur said, I shall return, the 37-year-old California Angels first baseman said.
During spring training, Carew, in the final year of a five-year contract, said he might retire after this season
if he couldnt come to terms with the Angels.
Then he said there was a good chance he might retire, no matter what, after this
year.
Asked recently about his plans, he said with a smile, Dont talk about retirement.
You want a scoop? Ill be back next year. If the Angels dont want me. Ill go somewhere else. Ive enjoyed it here. Theyve been good to me, I cant complain.
USFl A voids Duel
Share-Holding
Carew, currently batting .396 - the best in the majors - said he tries to dodge questions about the magic .400 mark.
I try to keep myself away from the press. In 77,1 went through it and it just destroyed me mentally.
Ive never wanted to be an individualist in this game. Ive never said I would bat .400. Its not the easiest thing to do, especially today. Its tough to hit .300.
If it happens, it happens. If it doesnt, I wont be embarrassed. It (hitting .400) doesnt have a high priority. I dont think I have anything to prove.
Not since Ted Williams did it with .406 in 1941 has a major
league player topped .400.
Carew, who has won seven American League batting championships, brought a career batting average of .331 into the 1983 season - the best among active players.
He wound up the 1977 season, the next-to-last of 12 years he played with the Minnesota Twins, hitting .388.
What makes him such a good hitter? '
The difference with me.
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PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Ted Diethrich would be required to sell his majority interest in the Chicago Blitz before he could acquire any share of the Arizona Wranglers, according to United States Football League Commissioner Chet Simmons.
As of now, however, there is
Sports Colendor
Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Church League Post-season tournament Industrial League Post-season tournament Summer Basketball League Franchise vs Soul Train Lakers vs Alumni Omega vs Sizzlers
American Legion Playoffs 16 Sr. Babe Ruth State Tourney at Elizabeth City 17-18 Sr. Babe Ruth Tourney at Kinston
no proposal before the league involving the Wran^ers and Blitz, Simmons said Wednesday in a telephone interview from his New York City office.
Diethrich is a Phoenix heart surgeon and is believed to own about 75 percent of the Blitz franchise. The Wranglers principal owner, Jim Joseph, indicated last week that he would be willing to sell part of the franchise to Diethrich, who has expressed interest.
There is no way one person can own even the smallest part of more than one team in the USFL, Simmons said. Theres a prohibitionary clause to that effect in our league constitution.
He said the league is anxious to get squared away as soon as we can.
We look at Arizona as vital to the USFL, and its obvious that Chicago has to continue to be a part of it, added Simmons.
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Harrison Given Contract Extension After Premier
East Carolina University Director of Athletics Dr. Ken Karr announced today a contract extension for head basketball coach Charlie Harrison.
Harrison joined the Pirate staff last season, finished 16-13 and recorded a fine recruiting year, including three future Pirates who will play in this weeks East-West All Star game.
We feel extremely good about the basketball program and its future with direction from Charlie Harrison, Karr said. At the time we selected Charlie, we felt he was the right man to put our program together in a very positive manner and point it in the proper direction for the future.
With his outstanding 16-13 year first year, but more so, with the many positives that surrounded-his program, we feel even stronger that Charlie is the man to lead East Carolina to its finest days of modern basketball.
For these reasons, I am pleased to announce that we are extending the original contract that Charlie signed last year, Karr said.
Length of the contract and other terms were not announced, following a standard contract release policy at ECU.
With a the vote of confidence, Harrison may now enjoy the East-West clash even more. The trio represents the most players East Carolina has had in the East-West game since the mid-1960s.
Derrick Battle (6-6 forward from Northern Nash), Jack Turnbill (6-9 forward from Wilmington New Hanover) and Roy Smith (6-7 > forward/center from Gastonia Hunter
Huss) will play in the game Tuesday night at the Greensboro Coliseum.
Harrison begins his second season on the heels of outstanding success in 1982-83. The 16-13 record was considered a miracle by most, but in recording the mark, Harrisons club had several outstanding highlights. Among those were:
Set record for defensive scoring, allowing but 63.6 points per game, breaking a 20-year-old school record.
Improved team three throw shooting by 9 percent over previous year.
Recorded most road wins wince the 1974-75 season.
Won 10 of the last 15 games, strongest finish 1974-75.
Best record in three years.
Matched most wins of any team in last nine years.
Drew the eighth largest crowd ever in Minges Coliseum.
Attendance at home games increased nearly 1,000 per game.
Had first all-conference player in five vears.
We are pleased with last year, but I feel this is really my first season. Ive had the chance to put in my system of play and recruited my class.
I look forward to 1983-84, especially knowing that I have a vote of confidence through the contract extension from the adminstration. I appreciate the extension and feel it means a great deal to our overall program, Harrison said.
KinardlosflnBig Apple
NEW YORK (AP) - Former Clemson safety Terry Kinards savvy on the football field proved to be little help in tackling the streets of the Big Apple.
The New York Giants No. 1 draft pick decided last Thursday to take his first solo trip into the Giants home city since joining the NFL team.
Kinard hopped in a car with a friend for a drive across the Hudson River from Hackensack, N.J., to Manhattan. The 12-mile trip should have taken a few minutes, but it took Kinard hours.
We got lost, Kinard told the New York
Daily News. We drove and drove. And when we got to the city, I thought Id get kiUed with all the traffic. We never even got out of the car. There was no place to park. We just drove around, then went back to Hackensack.
Asked if it might not have been a better idea to take a cab, Kinard said, I aint riding in one of those things again.
"The other time 1 went to New York I took a ride in cab, he said. The guy rode me around the block about four times. I could tell, but 1 didnt saying anything. And those things are flying when Im in no hurry.
Carew Changes On Retirement
Ive been able to adjust, work at it (hitting), he said. Im fortunate. Ive experimented.
Nevertheless, he has been frustrated by various injuries, the latest a sore right knee.
I played 12 years in Minnesota and was injured only once, he said. Ive been five years here (with the Angels) and every year, its been something.
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Broken Bat Rattles Hudson, Ends Bid
By The Associated Press
Craig Reynolds broke his bat and broke up Charlie Hudsons chance for glory.
Hudson, a 24-year-old rookie righthander for the Philadelphia Phillies breezed through the Houston lineup Wednesday ni^t and had a no-hitter after eight innings.
As he trotted to the mound with a 10-0 lead to start the ninth, the crowd of 21,052 on a steamy Philadelphia night cheered. Third baseman Mike Schmidt stood near the young hurler as he warmed up, thrust the ball into Hudsons glove and wished him good luck.
Pinch hitter Harry Spilman was the first batter, and he struck out looking at a 1-2 pitch.
That brought up Reynolds, a reserve
infielder who had entered the game in the seventh inning and had just 11 hits all
season.
Hudson threw two strikes past Reynolds, and then missed with a ball. Then Reynolds fouled off a pitch.
And then Hudson threw a pitch down and in, and Reynolds broke his bat as he looped the ball to center field, where it fell safely for a single, out of the reach of shortstop Ivan DeJesus, second baseman Kiko Garcia and center fielder Bob Dernier,
Hudson, admittedly a bit shaken, got the next out before Denny Walling cracked his first homer of the season. Dicke Thon followed with his 13th homer before Hudson made Phil Gamer his ninth strikeout victim in a three-hit, 10-3
victory.
In other National League games, San Francisco topped Chicago 4-3 in 10 innings, New York held off Atlanta 3-2, Montreal beat Cincinnati 6-4, Pittsburgh downed Los Angeles 7-3 and San Diego defeated St. Louis 5^.
It was a good pitch, Reynolds said of his sin^e. It was a cut fastball, I think. He got it in on me and I just fought it off.
It broke my bat severely. He made a good pitch, it just went against him. If I hit that pitch 10 other times, it would have been for an out.
Hudson, now 3-3 on the season, said; He hit it on the weakest part of the bat and it fell in.
Ill get it (a no-hitter) another time, he said with a sad smile.
Hudson was trying to become the first rookie to pitch a no-hitter since Steve Busby of Kansas City did it in 1973. Hudson also would have become the first pitch to throw a no-hitter in the 13-yar history of Veterans Stadium.
Joe Lefebvre paced the Phillies attack by knocking in five runs. He staked Philadelphia to a 4-0 lead in the first inning with a grand slam, his fifth home run of the season, and singled in an eighth-inning run.
Mike Scott, M, took the loss, ending his five-game winning streak.
Pirates 7, Dodgers 3
In Pittsburg, Dale Berra drove in five runs as the Pirates moved into first place in the NL East, one percentage point ahead of St. Louis.
Berra lined a two-run single and Pittsburgh took a 6-3 lead in the sixth inning with the help of Dodger second baseman Steve Sax, who committed a costly throwing error.
Berras three-run homer, his 10th, gave the Pirates a 3-0 lead in the first inning against Burt Hooton, M.
The victory was Pittsburghs ninth in 10 games and overshadowed Los Angeles Ken Landreaux, who went 5-for-5.
Rick Rhoden, 7-8, gave up 12 hits before giving way to Kent Tekulve in the ninth.
Giants 4, Cubs 3 Jack Clark belted his 15th home run of the season with two outs in the ^ of the 10th inning to beat the Cubs in Chicago.
The blast came on the first pitch by reliever Lee Smith, 3-5, who had not served up a home run pitch in 69 2-3 innings, dating back last Sept. 12.
Greg Minton, 4-6, went the final three innings to get his second victory in two days for San Francisco.
Minton had allowed a one-out home run in the ninth inning by Jody Davis, his 16th, to tie the game 3-3.
Mets3, Braves 2 Mookie Wilsons RBI single with two outs in the eighth snapped a 2-2 tie. Then the Mets held on in the bottom of the ninth in Atlanta.
Expos6, Red^4
In Montreal; the Expos continued to plague Cincinnatis Mario Soto.
A1 Oliver and Gary Carter stroked run-scoring singles and Tim Wallach added an RBI double in the fifth inning against Soto, vtlio is 10-9 this season but has a 1-7 lifetime mark against the Expos.
Charlie Lea, 7-6, took a five-hitter into the ninth, but left after Nick Esasky belted a two-run double. Esasky had earlier blasted a solo home run, his sixth.
Padres 5, Cardinals 4
Ruppert Jones slammed a three-run homer in the ninth inning to rally visiting San Diego past the Cardinals and reliever Bruce Sutter.
With St. Louis ahead 3-2, Sutter got one out before Terry Kennedy and Garry Templeton singled. Jones then unloaded his fifth home run of the season to pin the loss on Sutter, 7-6.
Luis DeLeon, 1-3, got the win and Sid Monge, San Diegos fifth pitcher, got his fifth save.
NHL Still Quiet On Proposals For St. Louis Biues Franchise
Usina His Head
la
New York Mets catcher Junior Ortiz slams into home head first as Atlanta catcher Bruce Benedict
dives in a vain effort to make the tag. The run was scored in the third inning of Wednesdays game in Atlanta. (AP Laserphoto)
CHICAGO (AP) - National Hockey League officials say a number of proposals to buy the St. Louis Blues have flowed into league offices recently, but they wont reveal the identities of those bids to save the franchise.
The various competing plans to keep the team where it started as an expansion entry in 1967 were to be considered here today at a special session of the NHLs Board of Governors.
The NHL assumed stewardship of the Blues in June after the teams former owners, Ralston Purina Co., tendered the franchise back to the league. Since then, the NHL has solicited bids from qualified buyers willing to keep the team in the city.
NHL spokeswoman Allyne
'Foolin'Around'Means Trouble
By The Associated Press Last Friday night, boxing fans who turned on Home Box Office expecting to see Michael Spinks defend his light-heavyweight title against Eddie Mustafa Muhammad instead got a movie called Foolin Around.
All of this courtesy of Muhammad, who failed to make the 175-pound weight. First, the fight was scaled down to a non-title affair, then it was canceled outright.
So HBO is out a good bit of money and was forced to take the air with a bit of egg on its face - 20 minutes of Larry Merchant, Barry Tompkins and Sugar Ray Leonard in the ring at an empty D C. Armory, explaining why there was nothing to show; a tape of the (over) weigh-in. a tape of a news conference.
Then the aforementioned movie.
All of which left HBO, which has telecast two dozen title fights in the last 2^ years, warier about its commitment to boxing.
Well have our guard up a little bit, but were not going to abandon boxing, its been
very good to us, says George Krieger, HBOs director of sports programming.
But one thing is sure -were not going be entering into any agreements that have to do with Eddie Mustafa Muhaamad.
Some estimates put HBOs loss at $200,000 in production costs and other fees - although it obviously didnt have to honor its contractual obligation for the rights to the fight.
Krieger says the $200,000 figure is high and that some of the losses may be covered by insurance. He also says the network is considering going to court over the rest.
But hes most irked at Muhammad, who weighed in early Friday morning at 177>/2, 2h pounds over the weight; was given two hours to lose the extra poundage, and promptly left to eat breakfast.
Were kind of regrouping right now and trying to decide what to do, Krueger says. Its one of those unfortunate occurrences, when everybody can point the finger at one person who doesnt have any responsibility to the promoter.
to the network, to the fans, to anybody. Were just like the fan who buys a ticket to the fight and then finds out its canceled.
And he adds;
I guess thats the problem with individual performer sports like tennis or golf or boxing. If somebody gets hurt, youre out of luck.
Its not like showing a football game. If the quarterback gets hurt, you get a new quarterback.
The powers-that-be in the United States Football League, led by Commissioner Chet Simmons, a one-time NBC mogul, are convinced that adding new teams to the league will increase the USFLs television market and thus its national ratings.
Maybe. Maybe not.
The USFLs championship on ABC Sunday night did phenomenally well in the home markets of the two teams playing in the game -pulling 61 percent of the in-use
sets in the Detroit area and 47 percent in Philadelphia.
But in New York and Chicago, both USFL cities, rating were strikingly low and in two others - Los Angeles and San Francisco -they were mediocre, indicating that the allegiances of USFL rooters dont extend beyond their teams.
That raises questions about pn^pects for next year, with six new teams, most of them in smaller markets.
By the end of this season, the USFL had convinced ABC to black out home markets, boosting attendance but cutting down ratings. Moreover, ABC has been doing only one national game per week with one secondary game.
That means if it carries New Jersey (New York), Boston, Chicago, {itichigan, Philadelphia, Washington, Los Angeles or Houston, it must black out those major markets; if it carries Oklahoma City or Jacksonville or Memphis, this years precedent indicates
that the big cities wont tune in.
One answer mi^ht be local television contracts.
But the leagues agmment with ESPN cable, which carries Monday and Saturday night games, allows local telecasts only twice a season. On Sunday, the non-network stations in major markets - as in New York - are usually committed to local baseball.
Price said in a interview Wednesday from league offices in New York that a number of proposals have been received from various sources to purchase the Blues. But she would not provide details.
Two groups already have publicly announced their intentions to buy the Blues. One is headed by Beverly Hills, Calif., investor Harry Omest and St. Louis attorney Louis Susman. The second is being represented by New York attorney James Drese.
Omest has said that his offer to the league, reportedly worth between $8 million and $13 million, depends on obtaining a lease to allow the Blues to continue playing in the Checkerdome. That property is owned by Ralston Purina, which pledged its cooperation with the franchises eventual buyer, but also said it may accept another offer for the arena.
Were still negotiating, said Omest. We havent stopped talking, but it is crucial to keeping the Blues in St. Louis.
However, any decision by the board during Thursdays session is likely to run into a host of legal roadblocks.
Ralston Purina, which contended it lost $20 million in (^rating the Blues since 1977, has filed a $60-million lawsuit
against the NHL for vetoing a sale of the team to a group from Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
The NHL responded with a $78-million countersuit, charging Ralston violated the leagues constitution by attempting to sell the team without the mandatory two-year notice.
Both suits are pending in U.S. District Court in St. Louis.
Meanwhile, Bill Hunter, who
heads the Saskatoon group, has asked the Canadian government to look into the proposed sale. The government began an investigation into the NHLs operations in late June, demanding the league produce documentation for the transfer of any franchises dating back to 1970.
The league re^nded by seeking a restraining order in the case, which also is pending.
Yarborough Pronounces Cor Fastest In 1983 Talladega 500
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) -Cale Yarborough stopped short of grabbing the checkered flag after taking a test run around the Alabama International Motor Speedway, but he quickly pronounced his car the one to beat in the Talladega 500.
a 1983 Monte Carlo to the worlds fastest track for a day of testing as they pr^are for the July 31 race.
Yarborough and his crew chief, Waddell Wilson, brought
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Gottfried Wins In Three Sets, Sounds Off On Guarantees
Kinston Swimmers Defeat Greenville
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rain washed out a portions of play at the $200,000 D.C. National Bank tennis tournament, but not before Brian Gottfried got in some licks both on and off the court.
On the court the third-seeded Gottfried disposed of Tom Cain 3-6, 6-2,6^. Off the court Gottfried took aim at those people who offer Illegal guarantees to players to appear in tournaments.
You can blame three groups, Gottfried said of the system. You blame the tournament directors, the players and the pro council for not being able to enforce the rules.
Next months issue of World Tennis magazine reports that 95 percent of the Grand Prix tournaments outside the United States are paying guarantees to top professional tennis players.
I have been offered guarantees in Grand Prix tournaments, Gottfried said without naming the specific events. I didnt take them because the rules say you cant accept them.
Thats not to say guarantees are wrong, thats a separate issue, he added.
Gottfried did admit accepting guarantees to play in exhibitions and non-Grand Prix events. Thats perfectly legal. And thats the way you captitalize on the name youve made coming up, he said.
Gottfried has made quite a name for himself in tennis circles, rising to No. 16 in the world rankings. On Wednesday, despite a lackluster performance for much of the afternoon, he proved too strong for Cain.
Two other seeded players. No. 8 Fernando Luna of Spain and Perus Pablo Arraya, the No. 9 seed, advanced to the third round with straight set victories.
Luna beat local favorite Harold Solomon 6-3,6-1 and Arraya stopped Frances Giles Moretton 6-2,64.
Rodney Hannon, seeded I4th, survived two tie-breakers to defeat BrazilsCassioMotta 2-6,7-6,7-6.
Rain washed out the evenings card including the match between top seed Jose-Luis (^erc of Argentina and Eddie Dibbs. The match, which was interrupted with Clerc leading 1 -0 in the first set, will resume at that point toniit.
The Kinston Swim Team placed first with 474 points in a tri-meet hosted by second-place Greenville. Greenville posted 245 points, while Rocky Mount came in third with 48.
of Greenville
Summary
swimmers;
Eight-and-Under Boys
Jeff Carstarphen - first 25 free 17.21. first 25 back 21.33, first 25 fly 22.55.
David Kelly - second 25 free
17.72, third 25 back 25.28, second 25 fly 23.51.
Brad Williams - fifth 25 back, fourth 25 breast 28.93.
Graham Powell - second 25 breast 27.92.
Eight-And-Under Girls
Kara Bozik - first 25 free 16.84, first 25 back 21.28, first 25 fly 20.25.
Becca Uhlman - fourth 25 free 21.23, third 25 breast 26.43, fourth 25 fly 28.49.
9-10 Boys
Troy Grizzard - fifth 50 breast
52.73, fourth 50 fly 48.44.
9-10 Girls
Sonja Downes second 50 free 34.03, first 50 back 43.81, third SO breast 47 48.
Sara irons - third 50 free 34.03, fifth 50 back 48.74, fifth 50 breast 4907
Janelle Moore - sixth 50 free 37.91, sixth 50 breast 49.71, fourth 50 fly 42.78
Stephanie Martin sixth 50 back 56.16
Margie Groome - fifth 50 fly 46.51.
11-12 Boys
Won Kim - second 100 free 1:03.29, first 100 back 1:15.25, first 100 fly 1:17.08.
Ed Clark - first 100 free 1:00.56, second 100 back 1:16.81, first 100 breast 1:16.70.
John Carstarphen fourth 100 free 1:08 27, third 100 back 1:21.85,
second 100 fly 1:24.14.
John Uhlman - fifth 100 breast 1:34.81.
11-12 Glris Ellen Bettes - fifUi 100 breast 1:34.81.
13-14 Boys
Paul Kelly - first 100 free 54.92, first 100 back 1:07.11, first 100 breast 1:09.30.
Sellers Crisp - second 100 free 55.58, second 100 back 1:08.47, first 100 fly 1:05.48.
Jim Gilliham - fourth 100 free 57.90, second 100 breast 1:14.14, second 100 fly 1:06.02.
15-18 Girts Maria Keily second 100 back 1:35.24, second 100 breast 1:34.06, second 100 fly 1:28.08.
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Cannon Misses College Hall
NEW YORK (AP) - Former teammates and members of the college football Hall of Fame were saddened by the announcement that Billy Cannon will not be inducted into the Hall because of his guilty plea in a recent counterfeiting scheme.
Cannon, 45, a two-time All-American running back from Louisiana State, was elected to the Hall last February and had been scheduled to be inducted in a ceremony here Dec. 6. But on Wednesday, Vincent Draddy, board chairman of the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame, issued a two-sentence announcement through a i^kesman here.
As a result of Dr. William Cannons recent plea of guilty to a felony chaise, he will not be inducted to the foundations Cdlege Football Hall of Fame, the statement said. It also said the 10 other coaches and players elected would be Inducted.
Cannon, the 1959 Heisman Trophy winner who became an orthodontist after 10 years in the pros, was supported by former teammates Warren Rabb and Tommy Neck.
I feel like he deserved to be in the Hall of Fame and there may have been other ways to do things, said Rabb, the quarterback on LSUs 1958 national champions. Hes paying very dearly for his mistake. What are they going to do, make him pay more?
Added Neck, a halfback for the 58 Tigers, I thou^t it was judged on credentials as a player. Maybe at a later date, theyll reconsider.
Hank Lauricella, a Louisiana state representative and one-time All-American at Tennessee, was inducted into the Hall last year. He said, Im sad to see it come about that it was taken away from him. You have to show some responsibility and progress and Billy has shown all of it. He was a perfect candidate and then this comes along.
Paul Dietzel, who coached Cannon at LSU, said, One of the great tragedies in this type of situation is the youngsters who consider athletes heroes. It knocks down that ped^tal.
Draddy, contacted in West Palm Beach, Fla., said
the vote of the foundations 18-member board was unanimous.
We never had it happen before, he said. It is the first time in our whole history that a candidate before induction turned out to be troublesome.
Draddy said it is the foundations practice to do a very good research job before anyone is voted in, and there was nothing in Cannons background to indicate a problem would arise.
Neither Cannon, who lives in Baton Rogue, La., nor his attorneys were immediately available for comment.
Cannon was arrested in Baton Rouge July 9 in connection with a $6-million counterfeiting operation. He plea-bargained with the government a week later, pleading guilty Friday to a charge of conspiracy to possess and deal in counterfeit $100 bills. In return for his testimony, he received immunity from further prosecution in the case.
The college football Hall of Fame is located in Kings Island, Ohio.Pirates Prepared For Reunion
By ALAN ROBINSON AP Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The Pittsburgh Pirates are trying to hold a Family reunion this summer.
Its been four years since the Pirates self-proclaimed We Are Fam-a-lee won the World Series with a swashbuckling, free-talking, free-swinging team that wasnt intimidated even by a 3-1 World Series deficit against the Baltimore Orioles. Willie Stargell was the Pirates patriarch and Dave Parker was the intimidating big brother, talking loudly and swinging a big stick.
The Pirates had been just another team since that colorful championship season, but of late have been going like 60 - and 71 and 79, the last three times they won the World Series.
I dont know what it is that makes this club get hot when the weather gets hot, says reliever Kent Tekulve.
Were coming together and weve got a shot, said pitcher John Candelaria.
These new-breed Pirates stumbled through the same kind of early season slump they endured in so many seasons gone by, falling so far off the pace the National League nearly had to send out a search party to find them.
But they put together a nine-game winning streak to get back into the five-team
National League East race, then returned after the All-Star break to win nine of 10 games during their most successful West Coast road trip in history.
And now they find themselves atop the division standings.
Tekulve says the Pirates are performing exactly as they did in 1976,1977,1978 and 1979, when they recovered from spring somnolences to stage stirring summer surges.
Its an attitude tj^e of thing, he said. This has always been the kind of club that didnt destroy itself by losing early in the season. People dont go around pointing fingers.
But while I can explain why we can get out of a hole every year, I sure cant explain why we get in one.
In 1978, the Pirates were once 13 games behind the division-leading Philadelphia Phillies, then won 22 of 23 home games during one incredible stretch. This years team has been as many as ll>/2 games back in a division where the top four clubs are all playing around .500 baseball.
Ive never seen anything like it, Candelaria said of the NL Easts balance.
He notes a lot of fans and writers have been comparing the 83 Pirates to the 79 Bucs, who also made a remarkable mid-season turnaround.
But he points out that many of the veteran stars of that team are gone - Stargell, Phil Gamer, Tim Foil, Ed Ott, Bert Blyleven - and have been replaced by a new breed
of Bucs like Marvell Wynne, Dale Berra, Johnny Ray and Tony Pena. Parker, statistically if not physically, is only a shadow of his former self.
But that was 79 and this is 83, Candelaria said. Its four years later and we dont have as many veterans. This is a much younger team. This is going to be a good team
Peete To Defend Title After Sitting Out Open
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - Calvin Peete, who is defending title in the $350,000 Anheuser-Busch Classic, said he made the right decision in withdrawing from last weeks British Open golf champion^ip.
It was not an easy decision, said Peete, who has never played in the British Open, one of the games Big Four events.
I really wanted to play over there, he said.
But when I was playing in Milwaukee (also as the defender, the week prior to the British Open), my back started acting up on me a little bit.
I wanted to play in the British Open, but I just couldnt see going all the way over there and not being able to perform well, if I could play at all. \
It was a tough decision, but I figured the week off would do me more good. I think I made the right choice.
Now, Im rested and eager to defend. The back is fine, and Im looking forward to playing, Peete said before teeing off in todays first round over the 6,684-yard, par 71 Kingsmill Golf Club course.
This is a good golf course for me. Its not all that long but it i^uires good placements of your shots. I feel like its the kind of course I
should play really well, Peete said.
Peete, the most successful black player in the games history, scored the sixth victory of his career earlier this season in the Atlanta Classic, was second in the Bing Crosby, has six other top-10 finishes and has clinched a position on the 1983 American Ryder Cup team.
Peete, 40, golfs most accurate player, has led the Tour for the past two seasons in greens hit in regulation and driving accuracy. And hes in position to make it three in a row..
He leads by a wide margin in driving accuracy and is pressing Johnny Miller for the lead in greens hit in regulation. Miller leads with a .723 average, while Peete is .716.
He also is challenging Ray Floyd for the lead in scoring average and the Vardon Trophy. Floyd leads with a 70.74 mark and Peete is at 70.84.
In addition to Floyd, some of Peetes chief challengers for the $63,000 first prize here are the years top two money-winners, Hal Sutton and Tom Kite, along with Bill Rogers, Bruce Lietzke, Hubert Green, Jim Colbert, host pro Curtis Strange and Morris Hatalsky, who has finished first and second in his last two starts.
Portions of the final two rounds Saturday and Sunday will be televised nationally by NBC.
SCOREBOARD
RocSahboll
Churdi
Oakmont............201 300 0-6
Immanuel...........300 000 4-7
Leading hitters: 0-Terry Rogers 3-3, Brian Williams 2-3;
1-Steve Camp 2-3, Charles Camp
2-3.
Peoples.............041 000 4-9
First Pres...........000 002 0-2
Leading hitters: P-David Harris 2-4, David Dickerson 2-4, Nat Sutton 2-4.
Industrial
TRW...............024 800 2-16
Coca-Cola..........100 601 1-9
Leading hitters: T-Edward Ross 4-5, Skip Vandervoort 5-5, Bobby Daniels 3-4; CRoy Oldham 3-3, Robbie Armistead 2-3.
Coca-Cola...........000 031 4-8
WNCT-TV...........000 000 0-0
Leading hitters; C-Linwood Everett 2-3, Chuck Jenkins 2-3, Roy Oldham 2-3, Rusty Hudgell 2 3.
Enforcers...........Oil 000 0-2
Public Works........000 080 x-8
Leading hitters: E-John Nichols
2-3; PW-Leonard Williams 2-3, J.C. Daniels 2-3.
Grady White........332 500 0-13
Enforcers..........302 100 39
Leading hitters: G-Doug Games
3-4, Tony Woodard 2-3; E-John Nichols3^,HughCredle4-4.
ECU II.............220 OU '2- 8
CarolinaLeaf......700 033 x-13
Leading hitters: E-David White 3-4; C-^arles Thornton 3-4, Mel Toler 34.
Vermont Amer 341 102 011
Wachovia..........302 000 1-6
Leading hitters; V-SUn Jirfinson 3-4, Walter Moody 3-3; W-Rox Corbin 3-4, Les Strayhom.
GUCO...............000 200 0-2
Firelighters.........000 200 1-3
Leading hitters: G-Larry Lewis 2-3.
Empire I............Oil Oil 0-4
ECU I...............003 000 0-3
Leading hitters: Em-Tommy Harris 2-2, Randy Moye 2-2, Russell, Harris 2-3; ECU-Carl Hartsfield 2-3, John Moskop 2-3, BUI Byrd 2-3, Ira Simon 2-3.
aty
Jimmys 66..........010 lOl 6-9
JAS.................302 003 0-8
Leading hitters; Ji-Kemp Bradshaw 3-3, Fred Hill 2-2; JA-Ted King 2-3, Ronald Vincent 2-3.
Jimmys66 ......... 412 031 0-11
JAS.................003 041 0-8
Leading hitters: Ji-Charles Meeks 3-4, Ted Jordan 2-3, Mike Conger 2-4; JA-Jesse Baker 3-3, BoMyGodley34.
Roc Bfltlwtboll
Adult Summer
B.T.Express............37 31-68
Sizzlers..................34 40-74
Leading scorers: B-Dennis Pitt 18, Slriom Daniels IS; STony
Clemons 18, Jasper Gaskins 13.
Thrtller.................35 25-60
Alumni..................28 4160
Leading scorers: T-Carlos
TANK 9FNAMARA
ecm a
MlP-CAI^CR It JUST F. -
FUM t(9 PAV ReHT MCAW
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Dawson 17, Larry White 13; A Byron Tyson 18, Dennis Wells 14.
Running Rebels..........17 27-44
OverhUlGang...........30 37-67
Leading scorers: R-Calvin
Whichard 15, Charles Dixon 10;
0-James Dupree 17, Paul Taylor 14.
_Bowling_
Thursday NIte Owls
W L
Alley Cats.............20 12
Teamlfl...............19 13
Sammys Coun.Cooking 17 IS
No Chance .....16 16
Cornwell Builders 14 18
Just Beat It............10 22
High game: Hope Sermons 212, Wayne Matthews 212. High series; Pat Cannon 561, Jim Duckwell 596.
Bosebflll Stondlngt
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pci GB
.Baltimore S2 37 584 -
Toronto 52 37 .584 -
Detroit 50 39 .562 2
New York 50 39 .562 2
Milwaukee 49 40 .551 3
Boston 45 45 500
Cleveland 38 53 .418 15
WEST DIVISION Chicago 47 43 .522 -
Texas 47 45 .511 1
California 46 45 505
Kansas City 43 43 500 2
Oakland 41 52 441 I'h
Minnesota 37 57 394 12
SeatUe 36 58 383 13
Tuesday's Games Kansas City 6, Toronto 2 Cleveland 5, Chicago 4 New York 4, MinnesoUO California 6, Boston I Baltimore 8, Seattle 1 Texas 3, Milwaukee I Detroit 4, Oakland 3
Wednesdays Games New York 6, Minnesota 4.10 innings Milwaukee 4, Texas 3 Oakland 9, Detroit 2 Baltimore 4, Seattle 2 Chicago 8, Cleveland 2 Kansas Cii^ 14, Toronto 8 Boston 6, California 4
Thursday's Games Minnesota (Schrom 8-41 at Cleveland (Brennan 0-01, (nl Kansas City (Perry 3111 at New York (Fontenot 2-0), (n)
Chicago (Bannister 5-9) at Milwaukee (Haas7-2),(n)
Toronto (Gotl 5-7) at Texas (Tanana J-2),(n)
Detroit (Bailey 4-2 and Rotema 64 at California (Witt 4-6and Zahn6-4), 2, (t-n) Baltimore (Mlrabella 04)1 at Oakland (HeimuellerO-ii,(n)
Boston (Ojeda 5-3) at Seattle (Moore
1-3), (n)
Friday's Gi
Minnesota at Cleveland, (n) Kansas City at New York, (n) Chicago at Milwaukee, (n) Toronto at Texas, (n)
Detroit at California, (n) Baltimore at Oakland, (nl Boston at Seattle, (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W
L
Pet.
GB
Pittsburgh
45
44
.506
St. Louis
46
45
.505
Philadelphia
Montreal
44
44
.500
/I
44
45
494
1
Chicago New York
41
51
446
5i
34
58
.370
I2><(i
WEST DIVISION
Atlanta
58
36
.617
Los Angeles
53
38
.582
3'^
Houston
49
43
.533
8
San Diego
46
45
.505
lOtt
San Francisco
46
46
.500
11
Cincinnati
41
52
441
l6>/ii
TueodaysGamM
San Francisco 4. Chicago 3,10 innings
AtlanUII,NewYork7 St. Louis 4, San Diego 0 Houston 7. Philadel^ia 3 Pittsburgh 4-2, Los Angeles 1-3, 2nd game II innings Cincinnati S. Montreal 2
WedDMdays Games San Francisco 4. Chicago 3,10 innings NewYork3,AtlanU2 Montreal 6, ClncinnaU 4 Philadelphia 10, Houston 3 Pittsburgh 7, Los Angeles 3 San Diego 5, St. Louis 4
nairsdays Games San Francisco iNammaker 10-4) at Chicago (Ruthven 6-7)
New York (Torrez 5-II) at Cincinnati (Puleo3-5), (n)
Los AnMles (Valenzuela 9-5) at Pittsburgh (Robinson 2-1) (nl Houston (Ryan 9-2) at Montreal (GullicksonMO), (n)
Philadelphia (Denny 8-5) at Atlanta (Falcone 8-1), (n)
San Diego (Thurmond 2-1) at St. Louis (Andujar4-I2), (nl
Fridays Games San Diego at Chicago New York at Cincinnati, (n)
San Francisco at Pittsburgh, in)
Houston at Montreal, in)
Philadelphia at Atlanta, (n)
Los Angeles at St. Louis, (n)
League [odtrt
By The Asaodatad Proas
American LEAGUE
BATTING (210 at batsl-Carew, California. 393, Bog, Boston, .374; Brett, Kansas City, Griffey, New York, .333; Aikens, Kansas City, .329.
RUNS-Yount, MUwaukee, 66; Upshaw, Toronto, 65, RHenderson, Oakland. 63; DEvans, Boston, 62; Ripken. Baltimore. 61.
RBI-Cooper, Milwaukee. 73. Rice, Boston, 6^ Kittle. Chicago. 63; Brett. Kansas City, 61; Ri^en, Bidtiroore, 80.
HITS Bous, B^. 125; WhlUker, Detroit, 117; Rice, Boston, 111; Ward, Minnesota, 110; Cooper, Milwaukee, 108 DOUBLES-Bomu, Boston, 29, LNPar-rlsh, Detroit, 28; McRae, Kansas City, 27; Hrbek. Minnesota. 26: Brett. Kansas
City, 24, Cooper, MUwaukee, 24.
'rRIPLES-Herndon, Detroit, 7; Winfield, New York, 7; GWUson, Detroit, 6; Griffin, Toronto, 6; KGibson, Detroit, 6; Molitor,^Milwaukee, 6; Wright. Texas. 6 HOME RUNS-Rice, Boston, 23; Co()per, MUwaukee, 21; KitUe, Chicago, 21; Armas, Boston. 20; Brett. Kansas City, 19
STOLEN BASES-RHenderson, Oakland, 55; JCruz, Chicago, 44; WWilson, Kansas City, 42, RLaw, Chicago, 38; Sample, Texas, 30.
PITHING (8 decisionsl-RUackson, Toronto. 7-1, .875, 4.35; Righetti. New York. 11-3, 786, 3 28; Haas,Mllwaukee. 7-2, 778, 3.65; Koosman, Chicago, 7-2, .778, 4.22; Tellmann, MUwaukee, 72, .778, 3.00
STRIKEOUTS-Stieb. Toronto. 121; Morris, Detroit, 114; Blyleven. Cleveland. 1)0; Righetti. New York. 104, Sutcliffe. Cleveland, 96.
SAVES4Julsenberry, Kansas City, 23; Stanley, Boston, 18; CaudUl, Seattle, 17; RDavis, Minnesota. 15; Lopez, Detroit. 12.
NATION^ LEAGUE
BATTING (210 at batsl-Knight, Houston. 339; Hendrick. SlLouis, m. Easier. Pittsburgh. .330; LoSmith, StLouis, 322; Madlock, Pittsburgh,^ .321 RUNS-Murphy, Atlanta, 87, Garvey, San Diego, 71); Evans, San Francisco. 68; Raines, Montreal. 65; Horner. Atlanta, 57,
RBI-Dawson, Montreal, 70; Murphy, Atlanta, 65; Chambliss,' Atlanta, 60, Guerrero, Los Angeles. 60; Hendrick. StLouis. 60 HITS-Thon, Houston, 117; Dawson. Montreal, 114; Oliver, Montreal. 113, Murphy, Atlanta, 106; Buckner, Chicago, 105, Guerrero, Los Angeles, 105 DOUBLES-Buckner, Chicago, 25; Knight, Houston, 25; Oliver, Montreal, 24; Mendrick. StLouis. 22; JRay, Pit tsburgh 22.
TRIPLES-Moreno. Houston. II; Butler, Atlanta, 8; Raines. Montreal, 7; Dawson, Montreal, ^ 8 are tied with 5.
HOME itUNS-Evans, San Francisco, 21; Murphy, Atlanta. 20; Dawson, Montreal, 19; Guerrero, Los Angeles. 19; Schmidt. Phiiad^la, 18.
STOLEN BASES-Raines, Montreal. 39; Wilson. New York, 33, LeMaster, San Francisco, 32; SSax, Los Angeles, 31; Moreno, Houston, 28.
PITCHING (8 decisions)-Falcone, AUanta, 8-1, .889, 2.86; PPerez, AUanU, 10-2, .833, 2.79; Ryan, Houston, 9-2, .818, 2.24; Montefuaco. San Diego, 8-2, .800, 3.99; Hammaker, San Francisco, 10-4, 714,1.90.
STRIKEOUTS-Carlton, Philadelphia. 153; Soto. Cincinnati, 145; McWUIiams, Pittsburgh, 122; Candelaria, Pittsbur^i. 95; Rogers, Montreal, 95.
SAVES-Bedroslan, Atlanta. 15. Reardon. Montreal. 14; Uvelle, San Francisco, 12; LeSmith, Chicago. 12, 5 are tied with 10.
Trontodioni
By The Aasoctalad Presa ^^BASEJ^
BALTIMORE ORIofflfi^Reactlvated
Dan Ford, outfielder. Optioned MUce Young, outfielder, to Rochester of the International League.
National League
MONTREAL EXPOS^ssigned Jerry While, outfielder, to Wichita of the American Association.
BASKETBALL National BasketbaU AssocUtlon KANSAS CITY KINGS-Signed Ed Nealy, forward, to a two-year contract, TOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS^Walved Rick Mashburn, Scott Vernoy and Greg Lowery, punters.
BUFFALO BILLS-Waived Riley Washington, cornerback.
CHICAGO BEARS-Announced that Gary Fencik, safety, Jim Covert, tackle, and Mike Richardson, cornerback, have agreed to contract terms CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed Dale Carver, linebacker.
DETROIT LIONS-Signed Dexter Bussey, running back, to a multi-year contract
HOUSTON OILERS-Waived James Davis, wide receiver KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Announced the retirement of Don Parrish, nose tackle.
NEW ENGUND PATRIOTS-Signed Clarence Weathers, wide receiver. Released Tom SkoruppaiPlacekicker NEW YORK JETC-Traded Bobby Jones, wide receiver, to the Cleveland Browns for an undisclosed draft choice. Signed Ken O'Brien, quarterback, to a series of one-year contracts.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Signed Kenny Clarke, nose tackle, and Stan Walters, offensive tackle PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Siened Gary Dunn, defensive tackle, to a Tour-year contract with an option year SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS--WaivedJeny Floyd, linebacker, Steve Harris ana Admiral Larry, defensive backs. Kevin McGill, offensive lineman, and Joe Vertucio. Greg Sykes, and Mike Barbee, defensive linemen.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS-Signed Jeff Bostic, center, to a series of three one-year contracts.
HOCKEY National Hockey Leajme
PITTSBURGH PENGUINS-Named Lou Angotti head coach
COLLEGE BOSTON UNIVERSITY-Named John Kuester head basketball coach.
HOFSTRA-Announced the resignation of Nick Gallo, wrestling coach.
IDAHO STATE-Named Dave Nielsen womens track coach. Announced the resignation of Beth Bricker, womens basketball coach.
N.C. Scoraboord
ByTheAaaociatedPna
CarolinaLeaf
Winston-Salem 5, Peninsula 2 Kinston 5, Durham!
Soutim Leifflii Nashville 4. CharlottesThe Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.Thursday, July 21,1963-is
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Reforms Of North Carolina Bingo Law Are Enacted
ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Reforms <rf North Carolina bingo laws designed to run professional t^ierators out of the business were enacted when the House id Senate accepted a joint committees compromise.
We have ti^tened up the (law)... which we think will turn the game of bingo back over to the charities as we intended, Rep Bruce Ethridge, DOnslow, told the House before it voted 91-8 to approve the revised bill Wednesday. The Senate endorsed it 40^.
Charities, civic, religious, veterans or fraternal organizations could obtain a oneyear license from the Department of Revenue to operate bingo games under the new law. The bill as originally proposed would have allowed the Department of Justice to monitor bingo operations.
Groups wishing to hold an annual or semiannual bingo game could apply for a single-occasion permit and use equipment and property donated by a licensed organization.
The new law will not affect beach bingo, games with prizes of $10 or less.
It will be a misdemeanor for one of the licensed organizations to violate provisions of the law and it will be a felony to operate a raffle or bingo game without a license or to misapply proceeds from a bingo game.
Licensed organizations must own the bingo equipment used in the games and they must own or lease for at least one year the property where the games are played. The property must be used regularly for purposes other than bingo.
The new law will limit raffles to one per month and bingo sesskms to two per week, with each not to exceed five hours. No two sessions can be held within a 48-hour period.
The maximum prize will be $500 cash or merchandise for a bingo game, with a maximum per session of $1,500 or $2,500 for th(ie who hdd only one session a week. The maximum prize for a raffle is $500 cash or $20,000 in merchandise.
In other legislative action;
Child Pmnogrtqrhy
A proposed crackdown on child pornography and other sexual exploitation of the young was sent to a conference committee when the Senate rejected House amendments.
The House didnt pay any attention to what they were doing, said Sen. Dennis Winner, D-Buncombe. "They restored provisions that will make it a crime to show such movies as Romeo and Juliet... or to promote them.
The bill would make it a felony for a parent or guardian to have sexual relations with a child under age 16 or to allow ' someone else to do so. It also would be a felony to use actual or simulated sex acts by a person under age 16 in any play, motion picture, photograph, dance or other performance.
It would be a misdemeanor to hire children under 16 to deliver obscene material or otherwise assist in making or distributing it.
In an interview, Winner said he was disturbed primarily by the bills ban on simulated sex acts by children. He said the 1960s film Romeo and Juliet included a simulated lovemaking scene between a 15-year-old and a 14-year-old, but said the movie was anything but pornographic.
We went over and over and over this is the Senate, and we
came up with a bill that gets the people you want to get but not those innocent people you dont want to get, be said. We do need to deal with child pornography reasonably, but not by victimizing innocent people.
Midwife
A bill allowing registered nurse midwives to perform home or hospital births was enacted after the Senate approved it 36-2 and the House concurred in Senate am)dments.
The bill would levy a licen^g fee of up to $100. It would require that midwives perform under a doctors supervisk, adhering to standards established by a board consisting of midwivs and physicians.
Voting against the bill were Sens. Dennis Winner, D-Buncombe, and Vernon White, D-Pitt.
There was no debate. But after the Senate vote, Winner asked for time to explain his opposition, saying he had been deluged with demands for an explanation after voting against the bill Wednesday
Winner said that when his dau^ter was bom nearly 14 years ago, there were sudden cmnplications.
If ste hadnt been in a ho^ital, she would not have been bom alive, he said. In my own conscience, 1 could not vote for anything that liberalize the current law.
Privacy
A bill subjecting legislative staff members to dismissal for revealing contents of confidential communicatkms and disussions was enacted into law 31-9 by the Senate.
There was no debate, although several senators spoke against it Tuesday when it passed its second reading 24-17.
Critics said the bill would lend an air of secrecy and oppressiveness, perhaps leading people to think that wrongdoing was being covered up. But suppMters said the bill only puts in writing what already is official policy.
Covered by the law are staff attorneys, secretaries, assistants and elected aides such as clerks.
Foreclosure
The Senate approved 42-0 a bill requiring that a notice be mailed to the property owners last known a^lress before foreclosure on the property is carried out.
Sen. Bob Swain, D-Buncombe, said the bill is in response to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling which ordered New York to amend Its law.
This will give an adequate notice to those who have an interest in the property, he said.
Sheriff Liability
The Senate af^roved 37-0 and sent to the House a bill relieving sheriffs from liability for their defMities actions if done without the sheriffs knowledge.
Hit and Run
The Senate approved 39-0 a bill rewriting the states laws on hit-and-run driving and returned it to the House for concurrence with amendments.
Under the bill, it would be a felony txrt to stop if the driver has reason to know what happened and if the acci^ involved an injury or death. It would be a misdemeanor not to stop if property damage resulted.
'The bill was amended to make clear that a driver must stop until law enforcement officers arrive.
Earthquake History Could Be 'Fatal' To Nuke Waste Sites
HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A U.S. Department of Energy spokesman said Wednesday that Hendersonville and other North Carolina cities with earthquake histories could be rejected as sites for nuclear waste depositories.
If the earthquake situation is serious enough, that would probably disqualify the area, said Philip Garon, DOE information officer in Washington.
Garon said the Energy Department has received
stiff opposition to its study that named six North Carolina sites as possible places to dispose of high-level nuclear waste.
The sites under study include the Henderson Gneiss rock formation in the Western North Carolina counties of Henderson, McDowell and Transylvania.
The study has angered officials in those counties, who say a nuclear depository would be dangerous, especially since the area is prone to earthquakes. Much
of the gneiss lies near the Brevard fault zone.
County officials are improving civil preparedness programs in case the Department of Energy ships nuclear wastes to this area.
Tom Edmundson, civil defense coordinator and director of emergency medical services in Henderson County, told county commissioners Wednesday that he needs an assistant director.
I think the general public has become much more
HIDES FROM SUN ... Four-year-old Meredith Hicks of Greenville hides from the hot sun undo- a bleacher at West Mead-owbrook Park while her mother, Kathy Hicks (front), and a friend, Beth Winstead, watch a softball game Mondav evening. (Reflector photo by Angela Llngerfdt)
aware of the possibility ... that disasters could involve us, he said. The commissioners took his request under consideration.
The Transylvania County Fire Commission will try to establish a hazardous-materials program for the county at its Aug. 9 meeting.
Garon said a fedral nuclear despository would need at least 2,000 acres of land and would need to be located away from large population centers.
You have to study how durable the rock is, whether the area has a history of earthquakes, the underfund water flow, population density and whether the site is close to major transportation routes, he said.
The Energy Department has been directed by Congress to consider the various types of rock formations as possible depositories. The department has already looked at soft rock, basalt and volcanic tuff, and now needs to study crystalline, composed mostly of granite, Garon said.
That is where North Carolina comes in, with its large deposits of crystalline rock formations.
The waste would be placed 2,000 to 4,000 feet below the ground within the rock formation.
It would be surrounded by rock, Garon said. It would not just be dumped there. The waste itself would be stored in strong, protective canisters and would be very deep below the surface of the earth in an area with a great deal of geologic stability. Garon said crystalline rock is being studied in 17 states along the Atlantic Seaboard aiKl around the Great Lakes.
niere are over 200 quite large bodies of this rock that are present in these states, he said. It covers a large body of land on the whde East Coast. We are not at all near the point of focusing on smaller land areas yet. There is no certainty that a nuclear waste depository would be built in North Carolina or in a^ of these states under consi(teration.
In about a year or lonf, we may start narrowing down in terms of which of these rock formations ... have more potential than others.
The five other sites being considered in North Carolina are Cherryville, Churchland, High Sboais, Landjjs and Mooresville-Mount Mm^.
MAKING A POINT R^. Howard B. Chapin, D-Lewiston, on the floor of the Soiate during a D-Washington, left, uses his hands to make a point recess Wednesday. (AP Laserphoto) as he talks with State Sen. J.J. Harrington,Beat The Heat HTilh Ceol Buys From Garris Evans!
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ACE
Minority Pupils' Math, Science Scores Boosted
By DOLORES BARCLAY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Math and scioice scores of minority students have lagged behind oatkmal averages, but ^ialiy designed pro-9^ms to boost those skills are now achieving results.
On the California Achievement Test, llth. graders went from graded in math to a level of 11.1 - a two-yea^ jump this year in ma4" says Moses Gark. actihjg (firector of the Math
and Science Alabama Regional Plan at Tuskegee Institute.
Fmr the first time in the Tuskegee pdblic elemaitary school, we had youngsters in the 3rd and 6th grades going to the public mathematics tournament this year, he said.
Tuskegee was one of 17 institutions to receive grants totaling $1.7 million from the Ford Foundation in 1961 to help raise the math and science skills of black, His-
Had 75 Pupils In Science Camp
ECU News Bureau Seventy-five elementary school children from 31 North Carolina counties participated in East Carolina Universitys residential summer science camp at Camp Caroline this summer.
The program, designed for children of ages 10-12, was the fifth annual program held at the Pamlico County camp, and featured a week of hi^ interest science activities d^gned to increase an awareness and knowledge of the environment.
Activities also included .fishing, swimming, sailboating, canoeing, model rocketry, a talent show and campfire gatherings. Director of the camp was Dr. Charles Coble of the ECU science education faculty. He was assisted by counselors, certified science teachers and camp staff members.
Camp Carolina is located at the convergence of the Neuse River and the Pamlico
Sound and occupies 25 acres.
Area students attending the camp included;
MARTIN COUNTY Robersonville - David Everett Ward and Ted Stokley.
Williamston - Trahey Maner and Jonathan Whitley.
PITT COUNTY
Stokes - James Trenton Bullock.
Grimesland - Chrissie Cooper.
Ayden - Jennifer Drye.
Winterville-Lisa Mayo.
Grifton - Daphne McLawhom.
Greenville - Jeremie Baugham, Chad Avery Bomstein, Angelica Brewer, Christopher Brumbaugh, Jennifer Finch, Jennifer Annette James, Mitchell Christopher McCuUen, Amy Rayle, John Rose, Haila Rusch, David Lee Tarlo, Mee Hea Tarlo, Darby Thomas, Dean Willis, Dan Wooten Jr .
Marketbasket Statistics
The ji<vtrnnutU is scheduled to release the latest Consumer Iriee Index tomorrow, and the new figures should us an idea of how the cost of living is changing. Each month, the government collects prices on a markethasket" of ;W2 separate items in Ha survey areas acro.ss the country. The items include staples like food, medicine, clothing, and other tangible goods, rent and property taxes, as well as physicians fees, auto repairs, and other services. The H.") CPI surveys are then averaged to form the national index, using UKiastheCPl for 19b7. This means that, if the ('PI is .'too, a consumer today can buy for $300 what would have cost him onlv $100 in 1967.
IK) YOU KNOWWhat Labor Department agency compiles the ('onsumer Price Index?
WEDNESDAY'S ANSWER-Yuri Gagarin was the first person to orbit the Earth.
TJIS:! VKC. Inc. 19S:t
panic and other minority students. It received $341,000.
According to a rtport this year from the National Assessment of Educational Progrese, at the age of 9, black youngsters avera^
45.2 percent or 11 points below the national average of 56.4 percent.
The report from the federally financed testing agency which surveys the educational skills of students aged 9,13 and 17, further said that black 13-year-olds averaged
46.2 percent, or 12 points below the national average; and black 17-year-olds averaged 45 or 15 points below the national average.
Tuskeegee has 109 students from rural Macon County studying 3rd and 6th ^ade math and computer science. Pre-calculus is also given for high school youngsters.
In addition to the summer session, ^ial classes are held on weekends and after school during the school year.
We want them to decide and find early careers in math and science, said Clark, an associate math professor at Tuskegw. The hope is that theyll like math and do a better job and choose math as an area.
The Mathematics and Science for Minority Students program at Phillips Academy in Andover, Mass., is designed to have minority students go into scientific fields.
Thirty 10th graders enter the intensive summer program each year and complete it after three summers. After the third session, they receive college counseling.
We have to work very hard here to get a B or a C, said Paula Saenz, 17, who goes to Science High School in Newark, N.J. In school, its easy to get an A.
Miss Saenz, who plans to major in medicine in college, is in the third year of the summer program at Phillips. The good thing about the program, she said, is that I learned a lot in terms of
school work and also about myself and other peo|rie... Eric Bibb, 15, of Louisville, Ky., started bis first year in the program this summer.
inner city schools.
Ms. Edmonds said the
i
list want to better myself. Its bard, be said. It makes you work, but you get used to it.
According to Patricia Edmonds, director of foundation and corporate support at Phillips, the 200-year-old preparatory school started the program to h^ increase the number of minorities in engineering and science and to have some impact on math and science teaching in
students in the summer program tend to have an influence on how math is tau^t once they return to their home schools. One Giicago high school, she said, had to revamp its math curriculum to acconunodate the increased math skills of returning students.
The program was started in 1977 and received a grant from Ford for $316,400. About $1 million has been raised from other foundations and coiporations, Ms. Edmonds said, including International
Business Machines Inc., The New York Times and Standard Oil Co. (Ohio).
Lincoln University, a predominantly black institution outside of Philadeli^, Pa., received $50,000 from Ford.
Essentially, were trying to encourage youngsters to take four years of college math and take advantage of the new technology thats out fiiere, said Dr. Earie Win-derman, vice president for development.
The school recently received an additional ^ant from the National Institutes of Health for $500,000 to
encourage stwlents to go into doctoral pro^ams in the bio-medical sciences.
Some probaras are designed to assist the teachers of math and science rather than directly work on stwlent skills.
If we can get teachers in a mode where they can perform at maximum proficiency, a M of these other problems will go away, said George Baker, project director of the math improvement program at Xavier University, a predominantly black Catholic institution in New Orleans.
Xavier received a grant of $29,780 to assess the teaching of mathematics in junior and senior high schools in Louisiana.
The Atlanta University Center - a consortium of six black private institutions -started its first math clinic this summer for 64 public school students in grades4-8.
In most instances, we find that the students just needed help with basic computational skills and problem solving, said Harriett J. Walton, project director for the Center for Mathematics Education.
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CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - A Charlotte woman has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the beating death of her mother and agreed to testify against her former boyfriend, who is also charged in the killing.
Sentencing has been delayed for Sheila Elizabeth Fowler, 28, of Dallas, Tex. She has agreed to testify against Herman Williams Jr., 34, who faces a first-degree murder charge.
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DINOSAUR CLAW - Rill Walker, a 55-year-old {dumber, in London Wednesday with the claw of a dinosaur dating back about 125 million years, which he found while looking t|)roilgb.a claypit ^ Smey, south of the Kftj^.cflpital. The animals skeleton was
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A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS
18-The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Thursday. July 21,1M3
Crossword By Eugene Sheffer
ACROSS
1 Beatles movie 119651 5 Food fish 8 107, Roman-style
12 Lustrous gem
13 Reverence
14 Sibilant sound
15 Lollobrigida IS Gypsy
Rose-
17 Dutch cheese
18 Pretty
20 Some eels
22 Flightless bird
23 Abrade
24 Amount owed 27 Loyal
32 Everyone
33 Beige
34 National monogram
35 Sunday sales restrictions
38 Ballpark beverage
39 Vigil
40 Draw
42 Summer day temperature
45 National song
49 Press
50 Go out
52 Prepare for takeoff
53Uir
54 Be sick
55 Range
5S Some poetry'
57 Hwy
58 Relax DOWN
1 Swine
2 Great work
3 Kents coworker
4 The Daily
5 Indian city SBein
the red
7 Judge
8 Cupid
Avg. solution time: 27 min.
ITiNBS'T|A-R| 7-21
Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
9 Famed pitcher
10 Britisher's exclamation
11 Beliefs
19 Egotists
contraction
21 Mine stuff
24 Bit of paint
25 Right angle
26 Puritan
28 Like steak tartare
29 Volatile
30 Exploit
31 Elephant--(plant)
36 Happenings
37AOW
38 Gambler
41 Door word
42 Baja boy
43 Angered
44 Word with leap or solar
46 Possess
47 Former spouses
48 Gum flavor
51 Iota
FORECAST FOR FRIDAY, JULY 22.1969
BY CHARLES G(ER AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tnbun# Comp*ny Syndicatt, Inc
North South vulnerable. East deals.
NORTH
AJ1085 ^ AQ64
0 AQ3
A
EAST
Q3 ^1093 0 J2
KQ6432
WEST
K92
Ifo9SS
J1097
SOUTH
764 ^ J752 0 K764
85 The bidding;
East South West 3 Pass 5
Pass 6 ^ Pass Pass
Opening lead: Jack of .
North 6
Pass
CRYPTOQUH 7-21
WMS FSXHSXCYS IHRYFWDJI JSHSZW ZSN IMDN NXI X CRIW.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip DID BILLY THE KID BOTHER GETTING A KINDLY SHERIFFS GOAT
Todays Cryptoquip clue: N equals W.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it wUl equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Sirgle letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
IVUKing Features Syndic1(. Inc
Taxis Get Help In Drunk Driving Law
"We do the impossible. Miracles take a bit longer!" That could well be the credo of the bridge expert, as this hand testifies.
Both East and West took advantage of the vulnerabil ity to force North to make a decision at a high level. His cue bid of six clubs was much too aggressivewe would have been content with a double of five clubs. But watch an expert technician at work at a contract which seems to have no play.
West led the top of his club sequence. Declarer perforce won in dummy, came to hand with the king of diamonds
Opposition To 'Sobriety Pills'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Motorists who were hoping sobriety pills would allow them to drink and drive face opposition from the Food and Drug Administration.
The agency, in a notice published in the Federal Register, said it regarded such products as a threat to the safety of motorists and pedestrians.
It said manufacturers of the drugs would be required to conduct clinical studies proving their products are safe and effective before any are allowed on the market.
PLAY FOR THE ONLY CHANCE
and finessed in trumps. When the king dropped under the ace, life was begin ning to look up.
A careless declarer would come to hand with the jack of trumps and take a spade finesse. But our South realized that that would lead to defeat - East would return a club after winning a spade honor, and declarer would be locked in dummy and would have to concede a spade.
Instead, declarer elected to play on the chance that East held a doubleton spade honor. He led the jack of spades from the table. East won the queen and forced dummy with a club, but declarer was in command. He accepted the ruff, came to hand with the jack of trumps, in the process drawing the last outstanding trump, and took a spade finesse. When that succeeded, the slam was home.
from th Crroll RlgMtr IfWlHutt
Kiddie Shows Not Required
WASHINGTON (AP) - A television station that does not air regularly scheduled programs for children is not providing grounds for a challenge to license renewal, an appeals court says.
The case, settled by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, involved challenges filed in 1981 by the Washington Association for Television and ChUdren, or WATCH, to the license renewal applications of Washingtons three network affiliates - ABCs WJLA-TV; NBCs WRC-TV, andCBSWDVM-TV.
The court said that though the Federal Communications Commission may not be vigorously enforcing its policies on programs for children, the FCC was not acting unreasonably by not requiring flatly that stations offer such childrens programming.
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Argumenta today could occur if you try to puah your occupational idaaa apoa otbera, whether th^ work with you or are on the outaide, but it ia a very good time for you.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Try not to be demanding at' work eithtf with undodinga co-workera and get better organized. Be aure to handle a credit affair.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Get thoee new ideaa in operation and gain the cooperation of allien by charming them. Alao make new contacta.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Your huncbee are fine in tlw morning and can be very helpful in whatever you have or want to do. Relax toni^t.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Your partnera expect you to come up with the right aohition to joint problema, ao dont diaaiqKHnt them.
LEO (Jufy 22 to Aug. 21) Co-workera ahoukl be handled in a tactful way in the morning and then when the going ie fast, there arill be no toiaeneaa.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Early aet up thoee ap-pointmenta with frienda f the amuaementa you want to delve into and later all goea smoothly.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct 22) Take care of those calls in that are important and later try to he^ family with some proUematical situation.
SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) You like to investigate and now can come up with the truth about {Huzling matters but don't act unwisely later.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Know what new interests you want to take on and later avoid some difficult situation.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Early make thoee plans 80 that you can gain whatever it is you want the moat. Apply your beat efforts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) A good day to do whatever will be of help to your frienda and show that you are devoted to them.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Full speed ahead at the work ahead of you. Later slow down and use tact with everyone. Socialize tonight.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will have much imagination and will want to work ideas down to a practical and workable level, and learn about the most accepted methods of doing thinp. Give as fine an education as you can. Religious training is a must.
rhe Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
Major Causes Of Home Fires
WASHINGTON (AP) -Heating and cooking cause more than one-third of all residential fires in the United States, a fire official has told Congress.
Donald D. Flinn, general manager of the International Association of Fire Chiefs, told a Senate committee that heating fires accounted for 23 percent of all home fires and is causing an increasing
There Oughta Be A Law
By DOROTHY CAST
Associated Press Writer
LIHLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - When the band quits playing and the bottle runs dry, more Arkansans are climbing into a taxi instead of behind the wheel of a car, to avoid getting nabbed under Arkansas new drunken driving laws, cab companies say.
On a Friday or Saturday night. Ill have five or six new customers. William Long, a nighttime driver at Checker Cab Co in Hot Springs, said recently. "They always mention the law. They say its cheaper to ride in a cab than to pay that DWl ticket or lose your license.
The new statutes, passed by the 1983 Legislature, mean a first offender could lose his license for three months and could be fined up to $1.000 and sentenced to a year in jail. The first of the statutes became effective in March, the second in April.
Cab drivers and dispatchers interviewed in Fort Smith. Fayetteville, Little Rock and Pine Bluff said theyve noticed an increase in besinecs because of the laws.
Rep. Judy Petty, R-Little
Emergency Help For Chad
WASHINGTON (AP) -The government of Chad will be getting $10 million worth of U.S. emergency supplies to support them against insurgents backed by Libya, the State Department says.
Air shipments of clothing, food, jeeps and other vehicles will reach them this week as part of a package of non-lethal military equipment.
Failure to have taken the emergency action would have involved the grave risk of allowing Libya to establish a regime favorable to Libya and to use Chad as a base for subverting neighboring states. the department said in a statement.
Rock, one of the primary sponsors of the DWl bill, said the cab companies statements proved that the new laws are effective.
"To me, thats the proof of the pudding - that every ni^t so many intoxicated drivers are not behind the wheels of their cars. she said. "Theyre getting home some other way .
She said courts throughout Arkansas were being monitored, and thou^ some judges are interpreting the law differently than it was intended, others were following it to the letter.
I have visited with a lot of youth groups and teen-agers since the law has been signed, she said. "When theyre talking very frankly about... the habits that have been changed, that makes me know that the highways are a lot safer.
^6 TMg CAf^r BOV colleot all Twe $noppiM^ GfllSTS FKO(V\ THE PA12KIMO LOT AfJC? STACK TMEnA IM FIZONT (OF THE 6iipee-(WAKKET.-
SATISFY
,^pDED
,.vThem the TO
6ET loose/
doe
CLiFroUPftgK.M.V. ______
oimi IF THE(2E'S F) rglcK/irs (A/ELL-FLACEP K(0^>
Joe Cullipher Chrysler Plymouth Dodge. Inc., 3401 S Armorial Drive, Greenville, N.C , will offer for sale af public auction on July 26, 1983, 10 a.m. the following vehicle.
1972 Oldsmobile 2 Door. Serial Number 3F87H2G123448 July 14, 21, 193
NOTICE OF SALE int to findings mj fain Specl4 "IN THE MAT
PUBLIC NOTICES
IN BOOK P 49. PAGE
in accordance with the provisions of sale upon default as contained in said Deed of Trust, the undar^i^ Trustee, at the request o4 the bo^ of the Note secured by said Deed of Trust, will offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash before the Courthouse door in Greenville. North Carolina, on July a, 19*3 at 12:30 p.m. all the foltowing lot or parcels of real estate loceled in or near the City of Greenville. Pitt County. North Caroline, and described as follows:
That certain tract or parcel of land lying and being sitaule in Gremvllle Towmship. Pitt County. North Carolina, and beirn all of Lot No. lO. tock "A", as shown on map of
PUBLIC NOTICES
proportion of fires nationwide.
Flinn, deputy chief of the Silver Spring, Md., Fire Department, said cooking accounts for 15 percent of all residential fires while incendiary and st^icious fires rank third with 12 percent and smoking fourth at 9 percent.
PISLIC
NOTICES
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Charles H, Briley, deceased, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the under signed on or before the 7th day of January, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 1st day of July. 1983 ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF CHARLESH BRILEY, DECEASED RFD2. Box 217 ROBERSONVILLE.NC 27871 July 7. 14,21. 28, 1983
please niake immediate payment. This 12th day of July, 1983.
Jean Rook King
Pursuant tb findings made and entered in that certain Special Pr
ORECLOSURE OF
Executrix P .O. Box 278 Roxboro, N.C.27S73 John W. Rook, Jr. Executor P.O. Box 97 Bethel. N.C 27812 July 14, 21, 28. August 4, 1983
BMtmoore Addition and as shown on plat prepared by Thomas W Rivers, dated May. I9S1. and recorM in Map Book 5, on PaM S9, Pitt Ca^ty Public Registry. See Book G 26. Pw 522. PTtt County Registry.
THis property will be sold subject to all prior outstanding taxes, assessments, and encumbrances if
**Yhe highest bidder will be re quired to deimit ten (10%) percent of the first une Thousand ^lars (Sl.000.00) purchase price and five percent (S%) of the excess.
This sale remains open ten (10) full days for confirmation. This the Istdayot July. 1983.
KENNETH G HITE, Trustee July 14. 21. 1983___
NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to findings made and entered in that certain Special Prg-ceedino entitled: "IN THE MATTER OT THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED
NORWCftLINXTWlTT CoOn
n the district court divi
SION
JoeCulllpher Oiryslor Pymoufh VS
James PrescoH Beury IV TO: Jamas PrescoH Buary IV Take notica that a pNaiijna ^
for towing, storM. and s^icas to a 1972 VWAHN lY}9530 by sala of said vehicia which Is rtgisfarad in your nama. This casa has baan
Courthousa. Graanvilla, N.C You are required to make defense to such pleading before such date and Mme
so. plainfif?WiiraAy at lha haaring
. plainfi forihareliaf
Plymouth
3401 S. Mamorial Orivs Graanvilla. N.C. 27834 July 14. 21, 28,1*83
NO^R^^!HSr.N
7n the district COURT DIVI SION
Joe CuMiphar Chrysler Plymoufh vs
Henry LaePIH, Jr. TO: Henry Laa PIH,.
OF TRUST EXEC____
BY ROSCOE C NORFLEET AND WIFE, JOYCE N NORFLEET, DATED JULY 17. 1978 RECORDED IN BOOK Z 46. PAGE 817. PITT COUNTY REGISTRY. BY KEN NETH G HITE, TRUSTEE" being File No. 83SP245. and further in ac cordance with the provisions of sale
_. .ienry Lea PlH, Jr.
Taka notica that a piaatfng Making relief against you has baan fM in the above enflHad action. The nature of the raHafsought is to satisfy a possessory 1^ of >4503 for towing, storaaa, and services to a 1969 Buick VIN^791I34611 by sale of said vehicia which is raoistarad in your nama. This caM has baa assigned to i Aug. 23. 1983,
CourthouM.
me. This caM has baan
19*3, i^.M?at M, Graanvilla, N.CYou
default as contained in said
of Trust, the undersigned
Trustee, at the request of the holder
faUure to So
the hearing
of the Note secured by said Deed of Trust, will offer for sale and Mil to the highest bidder tor cash before the CourthouM door in Greenville, North Carolina, on July 22.1983 at 12:15 p.m. all the following lot or parcel of real estate located in or near the City of Greenville. PIH County, North Carolina, and described as follows:
Parcel No. 1: Being_all of Lots No. 1, 2 and 24, in Block 'T", of Hiat cer tain Subdivision known as "Biltmore", according to map of same which duly appears of record in Mw Book 3, at page 285, of the Pitt County Registry, reference to which is hereby directed for more detailed and accurate description.
Parcel No. 2: At the southeast intersection of FiHh and Hudson Streets and BEGINNING at the point of intersection of the southern property line of Fifth Street with the eastern property line of Hudson Street and from said beginning point running South 84-23 East and along the southern property line of Fifth Street. 89.00 feet to a stake, thence South 13 06 West, 105.00 feet to a stake, thence North 84-23 West. 89.00 feet to an iron stake in the eastern property line of Hudson Street; thence North 13 06 East and along the eastern property line of Hudson Street, 105.00 feet to the point of BEGINNING
Parcel No. 3: On the south side of Flemina Street BEGINNING at the Julia Poindexter northeast corner nearly opposite the eastern property line of RTooMvelt Avenue at its point of intersection with the northern property line of Fleming Street and from said beginning ^nt running SouHi 7S05 East and along the southern property line of Fleming Street. 36.1 feet to the JesM Allen northwest corner; thence South 14-49 West and along the JesM Allen western line. iJv.O feet to an iron stake; thence North 75 05 West. 36.1 feet to an iron stake, another corner with Julia Poindexter; thence North 14 49 East and along the eastern line of the Julia Poindexter property. 149.0 feet to the point of BEGINN ING
This property will be sold subject to all prior outstanding taxes, assessments, and encumbrances if
*""fhe highest bidder will be required to deposit ten (10%) pwcent of the first One ThouMnd Dollars 01,000.00) purchaM pr)ce and five percent (5%) of the excess.
This sale remains open ten (10) full days for confirmation.
This the 1st day of July, 1983. KENNETHG HITE,
T rustee July 14, 21,1983
NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY
The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix under the Will of Glen-wood Jordan Waters, late of PIH County, this is to notify all persons having claims against Mid estate to preMnt them to the undersigned on or before the I4th day of January. 1984 or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will pleaM make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 11th day of July, 1983.
Jo Ann Johnsen Wales Executrix Under the Will of Glen wood Jordan Waters P O. 80x811
Greenville, North Carolina 27834 July 14. 21. 28. August 4. 1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Executrix and Executor of the estate of Addle Lloyd Rook late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix or Executor on or before Jan. 16, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate
are required to make deforiM to such pleading befort such date and tinM or you may appaw and dot>d at said haariiM. Upon your so, plaintiff wHIapplyat tor the relief soumt.
This I2fh dayof July. 1983.
Joe Cullipher Chrysler Plymoufh
3401 S. Mamorial Drive Greenville. N.C. 27834 July 14. 21. 28,1983
north
n the district court divi
Jm Cullipher Chrysler Plymouth vs.
Joseph Henry Cobb TO: Joseph iWnry Cobb Take notice that a |
ing relief against you---------
in the above entitled action. The riature of the relief sought is to satisfy a possessory llan of >395.00
sale of Mkt vehicle which is registered in your name. This com has " '
for h
PIH (______, ____________
N.C. You are required to make defenM to such pleading before such date and time or you may appear and defend at Mid haaring. Upon your failure to do so, plaintiff will appl^^at the haaring for the raliaf
***T^is 12th day of July. 1983.
Joe Cullipher Chrysler Plymouth
3401 S. Memorial Drive Greenville. N.C. 27834 .
July 14, 21, 28,1983
/n the district court division
Joe Cullipher Chrysler Plymouth
gisterea in your nama. i nis caM s been assigned to a Magistrate - hearing Aug. 23.1983. loX.M., at H County CourthouM. Graanvilla,
TO: Bobby Wiggins Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is to satisfy a possessory lien of >328.00 tor towing, storage, and tarvicas to a 1976 Motorbacwto^VIN OS8I32UC by sale of Mid vehicle which a registered in your name. This cash has bean assigned to a MalftoBto for hearing Aug. 23. 1983. at
Pitt County CourthouM, GraanvHla. N.C. You are required to make defenM to such pleading before such date and time or you may appear
apply at the haaring tor the raliaf sought.
This 12th day of July, 1983.
Joe CuMipfier Chrysler Plymouth
34dl S. Mamorial Drive Greanville. N.C. 27834 July 14, 21. 28. 1983_ i
Enterprises to bid as contractors on NC Oapt. dl Transportation projects 8.33MI02 Ift ^nty, trc a low count / 26, 198:
Kienast. EEO Officer.
Cc
Pitt County, HC and S.llfOIOr Ht Onslow counties, NC. La. .. July 26. 1983. Contact C l EEO Officer, Barrus Co
102 I lOIM ..Hl^
struction Company, Kins' 919/527-8021, ext. 40. An employer.
July IS, 17,
rrus Cod-
rE-o/S
. 18.19, 20, 21, 22, 1983
^2.''*p?<!|Sft].l^g*r5?.ad
until 2:30 p.m. in August 11. 1983, In Mr. Marvin Pike's office. Washington Daily News, Inc. 217 N. Market Street., Washington, N.C. 27889, for the construction of Int^lor Renovations - Washington Daily News, Inc. at which time and place bids will be opened and read.
Complete plans and specifications tor this project can be abtainea from the Engineer Dibble & AssociataiL P.A., Tsivi West Main Street.. Washington, N.C. 27089 or the Architect Frederick A.
. Schneider, 826 Charlottosvllto
A. Hinton Avenue,
Virginia 22901 during normal offict hours aHar July 20, IW.
Plan Deposit S50.00 (FIHy Dollars) The Ovmer reserves the unqualified right to reject any and all proposals.
Marvin Pike, General Manager
Wa^ii^on baUy News
NC 27889
July 21, 22, 1983
Washington,
a
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Music Furnished By Steve Hardy's Original Beach Party
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Friday. July 22 - 6:00 p.m.-untll Saturday, July 23-12 noon-until Sunday. July 24-1:00 p.m.-until
Novice Register by 9:00 Friday Pro - Register by 8:00 Saturday Juniors Register by 1:30 Sunday
Friday & Saturday: $4.00 Member; $5.00 Non-Member Sunday: $3.00 Member; $4.(M Non-Member
Hilltop Molors, Inc.
1309 Grocavlllc Hwy. Klmioa SZ7-7I2I
BccfBsro Hwy. 70, By-Pitt KlMtoo 512-2284
Taylor Bovnagc Co.
103 N. CaroIlM Si. Goldsboto 734-2751
MaaooitotU Music Co. 1806 W. Varaos Avt. Klatloii 527-1988
Naata laauranca Agaacy. Inc. 1000 W. Varnon Ava. Klnaton 527-5011
CoBway A Co.. Raallon laturora 707 Ptau Blvd.
S2219I1
Hardy'a Appllaaca UGrsaga 566-4487 Ktatloo 523-8477 Snow Hill 747-2638
A-1 MuHlar Caalar 2U-BGordoa St. Kintum 527-9813
Klag'a Raaisaraal, Inc.
409 E. Naw Bata Rd.
Klntloo 527-2101
waidou Balwi Suit Fam laa.
Klnaton 527-7742
Lowa'i 01 Klattoa 2200 W. Verana Ava.
Klaaloo 522-1811
A-1 Auto Sarvica 2II-B W. Gordon St.
Klnaton 527-9813
GrUtont Bc.oacua R Seafood Houaa Hwy 70. Rl. 3 LaGranga 566-9200
Tripp'a TIra Service 310 E. HlghUad Ava.
Klnaton 527-8414
StoHh't Paint Body Shop Gralngara Stolion Sn-r532 *
KkMtoa Narine Inc.
1426 Rkhlanda Rd. Klaatoo 527-5038
M ) V I
Waltert Clark PatoHaf Coolt.'
S23-S8?Ht-lltf5'^ *
Sari Tori Raataorant
488 N. Qmm Si. S2S-4S64
Holiday Imi U.S. Huto 288 70 Klnaton S27-4ISS
A Step Above N. Queen SI.
Klnaton $284487
Golden Conal Faadly Stoak Hoom 1701 W. VarwM Ava. Kloatoa $184829 NC Dr. Pappar BotUm. Im.
CAROWINDS BOUND - Tbe Uttle River Band wUl be in perftMTnance at Carowiods Park in Charlotte for two shows on Saturday. The Grst perfOTmance will be at 3 p.m., with the second at 8 pjn. Admissk to the show is 13 in addition to the
$11.95 general admissioo to the park. Tmkets are sold only at the park on the date of the concert, trn a first-come, first-served basis.
Musicians'Strike Threatening New York City's People's Opera
ByRICKHAliPSON Associated Press Writtf NEW YORK (AP) -Opera buffs are worried that a musicians strike may bring down the curtain on the citys No.2 opera company, its diva-tumed-director and what one critic calls their
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long, valiant fight to survive.
The strike that closed the New York City Opera on July 7 has gotten more publicity than the performances, admitted Martin Op-penheimer, opera vice chairman and chief labor ne^tiator. But he said neither a long strike nor cancellation of the companys summer season would kill the peoples opera.
The City Opiera has spent its 39 years in the shadow of the bigger, richer Metropolitan Opera, with which it competes for donations, performers, audiences and attention.
Last summer the 69 orchestra musicians agreed to a wage moratorium, and now make an average of almost $200 a week less than their Metropolitan counterparts.
Beverly Sills, the operas former star who became general director four years ago, hac tried to improve its prospects. But musicians feel her tactics - such as moving from spring and fall seasons to a continuous summer-fall season to reduce rehearsal time - saves money by
cutting their guaranteed work.
Strikers fear the economic gap between themselves and other musicians is widening; the company fears that higher labor costs will sink it deeper into debt.
And aficionados fear that the opera cannot survive the battle.
The libretto looks familiar and the arias have a traditional ring, but the drama being played out by the company and its musicians is a potentially fatal one, New York Times music critic Donal Henahan wrote.
Unless it ends soon, he warned, the final curtain could fall on a beleaguered troupe that has been scraping by for years.
Others note that the company loses $240,000 a week
during its season and saves money by iwt performing. But Opp^eimer says that without performances the donations which supplement box office revenues will dry up.
Despite another fruitless negotiating session on Wednesday, Oppenheimer said questions about the survival of the operas season, much less the company itself, were premature.
If youve got a cold, you dont woiry about dying of pneumonia, he said. We can survive even the cancellation of the season.
Opera officials say that although it may always be the citys other opera company, the Citys prospects have been improving.
Attendance increased 15 percent last year, to 85 percent of capacity.
CBS News Trims Ranks Of Staffers
Starts Tomorrow
1 PLin
1 1:35-3:30-5:25
1 iutoimiwiwi*
1 7M 1449
J 7:20-9:15
NEW YORK (AP) -"Nightwatch, CBS News overnight broadcast, will feel the brunt of the ax when CBS lays off 14 staffers next week.
The Associated Press learned Wednesday that CBS News make the staff cuts as part of the CBS Broadcast Groups overall cost-trimming measures. Most of the lost jobs will come out of Nightwatch, which debuted last fall and averages less than a million viewers a night.
A CBS source, who asked not to be identified, said the news positions range from senior staff members to secretaries. In addition, there will be about 35 layoffs in CBS owned-and-operated stations next week, the source said.
The parent CBS Broadcast Groups goal is to drop nearly 300 jobs by Dec. 31.
The Broadcast Group, with 8,500 staffers, is made up of the news division, entertainment, sports, radio and the five TV stations.
In a move the source said was not related to the dismissals, anchor Mary Jo West has decided to retubn to Phoenix, Ariz., where she will work for the ABC affiliate.
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AN ORION PICTURES RELEASE
CTARTQ The gocxi news is Jonathan's having his first affair. ^ The bad news is she's his roommate^ mother.
TOMORROW!
JACQUELINE BISSET
A COMEDY IN A CLASS ALL BY ITSELF!
1:10,3:10. 5:10, 7:10,9:10
B
AN ORION PICTURES RELEASE
Except for the departure of Ms West, even avid Nightwatch viewers wont be aware of the missing behind-the-scenes personnel. However, those who watch more than two hours of.the broadcast will see the program soon repeating the features and interviews from the first two hours in the second two hours. Only the newscasts at each half hour will be new in the later half.
In another economy move, "Nightwatch and the CBS Morning News will share the same set beginning Aug. 29, the source said. The CBS Morning News, which has been using the set of Sports Saturday and Sports Sunday, will move into the Nightwatch set when that show signs off at 6 a.m., Eastern time, each weekday morning.
Real Cops Find Reality In Hill Street Blues; Raises Mirror
ByFREDROTHENBERG APTetevisiofl Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Whether theyre on the beat, under cover or pushing paper, every Thursday night, ciys across America happily bring their work home with them - they watch Hill Street Blues.
In interviews with several men and women in blue, the consensus was that NBCs award-winning police serial is so realistic its like raising a mirror to their owns jobs, experiences and feelings.
That contrasts with what Officer Ed Hagerty calls the superman shows, such as Star^ & Hutch. If guys ever busted into apartments and did things like they did, theyd be in trouble with Internal Affairs.
I think Hill Street is entirely authentic, even the internal-affairs investigations, comiption and brutal cops, said Bill Genet, a New York City policeman for 12 years and now financial secretary of the Patrolmens Benevolent Association.
You mean Sal Benedetto, the sadistic detective whose slimy hands were caught in the till, exists outside Hollywood? Oh, yes. Oh, yes, said Genet.
Hagerty, a veteran New York City cop and now the PBAs recording secretary, said he knows everybody on HUl Street.
TV Log
For complote TV programming information, conaull your weakly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Daily Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
THURSDAY
7:00 JokersWild , ^ .
7 30 Tic Tac Dough 1 *
8 :00 AAagnumP.I. ? ??
12:00 News 12:30 Young and
9:00 Simon A 10:00 Knots L 11:00 News 11:30 Late Movie 2:00 Nightwatch
FRIDAY
2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10 :M Childs Play 11:00 Price Is
3:00 GuildingL. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:M A Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Joker's Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough 8 :00 Dukes 9:00 Dallas 10:00 Falcon Crest 11:00 News9 11:M Movie 2:00 Nightwatch
WITN-TV-Ch.7
THURSDAY 10:00 Oitf. Strokes
7 :00 Jelfersons 10 :30 Sale of the
7:30 Family Feud " OO Wheelof
8:00 Fame 11:30 Dream House
9:00 GimmeA News
9:30 Cheers 12 30 Search For
10:00 Hill Street 1 00 Daysof Our
11:00 News 2:00 Another Wor.
11:30 Tonight Show 3:00 Fantasy
12:30 Letterman * < Whilnty the
1 :M Overnight * 30 LittleHouse
2: News 5:30 Dark Shadows
PQirsAv 6.00 News
FRIDAY 4-30
5:00 Jimmy S. 6:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7 :30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the
7:00 Jelfersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Roots 10:00 Eischied 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman l:X Overnight 2:30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
10:30 Sanford 11:00 TooClose 11:30 Loving 12:00 Family F, 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 All My 2:00 One Life 3:00 G. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 W. Women 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Sanford A 7:30 B. Miller 8:00 Benson
THURSDAY
7:00 Sanford A 7:30 B. Miller 8:00 AAovie 10:00 20/20 11:00 Actions News 11:30 Nightline 12:30 Starsky 1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Edition FRIDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6*30 N6WS
7:00 GoodAtorning 8:30 Speci'ai 6:13 Action News 9:00 AAovie 6:55 Action News 11: oo Action News 7:25 Action News 11:30 Nightline 8:25 Action News 12:30 Starsky 9:00 Phil Donahue 1 30 An Evening 10:00 Happening 2:30 Early Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
THURSDAY" 7:00 Report 7:30 Old House 8:00 Previews 8:30 W. America 9:00 Diamonds
5:00 Mr. Rogers 5:30 Reading R. 6:00 Or. Who 6:30 Wildlife 7:00 Report
10:00 Monty Python i oRi
10:30 Two lionnles < Washington 11:00 Monty Python * 30 Wall St.
11:30 Doctor In Victory at 12:00 SIgnOft
FRIDAY O* Europe
3:OOOverEa$y 11:00 AAonfyPython
3:MReadingR. !1
4:00 SesameSf. ^ignOff
It shows things basically as they are - the human side, the humor, the banter about sex and sports, be said. Doesnt everybody talk about sex and ^rts? Chris Sweeney, a policewoman in Madison, Wis., and now the d^art-ments media liaison, sees herself in Lucy Bates (Betty Thomas), the no-nonsense street cop. Shes the real thing, Ms. Sweeney said. Angie Dickinson (who starred in Police Woman) was so off base. '
Ms. Sweeney likes the way Lucy is human and, almost, one of the boys. Shes not a pin-up Miss America. She wears the same uniform as the men and even wears her equipment correctly.
I also like the way she deals with her alleged ineffectiveness. She takes that and gives it right back. She can take a joke, but didnt like it when they presented her with a belly-dancer on her birthday.
Ms. Sweeney knows from the inside the part about women, by sexual definition, being incapable of handling a so-called mans job. When she was hired in 1975, she was one of four women officers.
I once went to a domestic dispute, Ms. Sweeney said, and the wife answered the door by saying: Yes dear, but I asked for an officer. Ive also been identified as a meter maid and a crossing monitor. Can you imagine, a crossing monitor who carries a gun?
Lucy doesnt do too much rough-and-tumble stuff, leaving that for her male colleagues. That also rings true.
What she lacks in physical size, she makes up in negotiating skill, Ms. Sweeney said. You learn to be a very good talker. She represents that fairly.
Ms. Sweeneys favorite character is the
grungy-but-cuddly Mick Belker (Bruce Weitz), who is known for his flying tackles and colorful language. "He behaves like a lot of us wish we could on the street, she said. We wish we could say dirtbag and dogbreath, but we have to say maam andsir.
Ms. Sweeney also remembers the emotion of Belker celebrating Christmas alone with his TV set.
They see people as humans, who have families, divorces and drinking problems, she said, comparing Hill Street with fantasy police shows such as CHiPs, where the Greek gods are swinging singles who go out and play, without a care in the world, after duty hours.
Hagertys favorites are Andy Renko (Charles Haid) and Detective Henry Goldblume (Joe Spano). Genet appreciates the accurate depiction of Capt. Frank Furillo (Daniel Travanfi), who understands the problems of his people and
doesnt play politics with the higher-ups. Because he doesnt play that game, he's stayed where he is, and hasnt moved up. Hes a real pro.
Being Furillo has its benefits - his wife, Joyce Davenport (Veronica Hamel). But I like the sergeants girlfriend (played by Barbara Babcock) better, Genet said.
COUPONCOUPONCOUPON
14 $2.00offrg.pr(cANY GIANT PIZZA U $1.00Dffreg.pric.ANY LARGE PIZZA
I. ^
(N4 vM Hh Bny othr
COUPON EXPIRES SEPTEMBER 30,1983
Billy Dee Has Official Help
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -When actor Billy Dee Williams got a sore throat while shooting the CBS-TV miniseries Chiefs, he discovered getting a doctor to make a set call was kind of like finding a friendly undertaker.
Bud Ferillo, deputy to state Lt. Gov. Mike Daniel, said when he got a telephone request Wednesday to find a doctor for the 46-year-old Williams, he did his best to oblige.
Finding an available doctor is kind of like finding a friendly undertaker, said Ferillo. Not many doctors make house calls, much less trailer calls, on a movie set.
He made a couple of unsuccessful phone calls before finding Dr. Walt Roberts of Columbia.
COMING SOON!
THE 6REEN LEAF
Restaurant & Entertainment Center Opening Wed., July 27!
Featuring
Chubby Checker
In Person
Featuring The Finest Dining & Entertainment In Eastern North Carolina Memorial Privo Prooavillo
Watch For It!
Having problems with dogs in your neighborhood? Call Animal Control atJ52-3342.
d jSb oCEEMlLLf
.6 ,0 f
^
AVA%[OFAMEAL '
105 Airport Road Greenville. N.C.
Family Restaurants LUNCH SPECIALS (Mon. thru Friday)
Shrimp Salad.......... $2.99
Shrimp (Fried) ................$2.99
Flounder (Fried or Broiled) .........S299
Trout (Fried or Broiled)......... $2.99
Clam Strips..........................$2 99
Whole Baby Flounder..................$2.99
Open Daily Sunday thru Thursday 11 A.M to 9 P.M.
Friday and Saturday 11 A M. to lOP.M
758-0327
Banquet Facilities Available
OUTLET
Sale-Up to 40% Off
Name Brand -i r\ c n
Knit Shirts .... Sold Up To 528 Now I
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Sundresses Reg. 19.99 Now! 3
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9:30 Til 5:00
Iili
Story Of Vanished Peoples In South African Park
By JAMES F. SMITH Associated Press Write' MALALANE, South Africa (AP) - The rock caves and crannies that shelter game poachers in Kruger National Park are yielding a rich story of vanished peoples who lived on the same sites as long as 250,000 years ago.
Ran^r Mike English was searching for poachers six years ago when he came across a rock painting of graceful, red, animal and
human figures painted long ago by Bushmen. This Stone Age people survives in dwindling numbers only in the Kalahari Desert, 1,000 miles to the northwest.
As English made his discoveries, archaeologists from the University of Pretoria were deep into a separate project, the first comprehensive survey of early human life in the 250-mile-long park on South Africas eastern border - known
worldwide for its animals, rather than its human histo-
ry-
The game rangerc versed in bush life, and the scientists grounded in theory, have joined in a fruitful partnership.
Teaming up with English and other rangers, the scientists have found artifacts showing a continuous ^ula-tion of the region first by an early Stone Age people, then by the Bushmen, and
then by an Iron Age pecle beginning about A.D. 300. Forefathers of the regions present Bantu-speaking tribes used the sites in recent centuries.
English figured that poachers would hide in caves and rock overhangs on the granite hills that sprout from the busbveld plains, overlooking the paths of zebra, giraffe, and white rhino.
He found his first Bushman
Seven People Share One Room In America's Poorest City, El Paso
By RANDALL HACKLE Y Associated Press Writ EL PASO, Texas (AP) -Henry Richardson, his wife and their five children share one bed in a 12-by-12-foot room with peeling blue paint and a plastic figurine of Jesus Christ nailed to the wall.
The room has two chairs, two wire-mesh windows -one fitted with a $15 fan -and dozens of cockroaches. Toilets and a washroom shared by other residents are down the hall.
For this "home in a second-floor tenement above El Rpido Cafe, the Richardsons pay $85 a month. They are poor in El Paso, the nations most impoverished large city.
"We live in subhuman conditions. Im not proud of it. We used to have a lot of mice. too. but we finally got
rid of them, said Richardson, 43, an unemployed hospital orderly.
The Richardsons are suffering like many others in El Paso, a city of 480,000 that has the lowest per capita income - $7,360 - of any metropolidan area, according to statistics compiled in 1981 by the U.S. Commerce Department.
The Richardsons earnings are far below the national average income of $10,495, or about $202 per week.
Richardsons only income comes from selling candy on the streets on days when he doesnt baby-sit his children, aged 3 to 9. He makes about $20 a week, which just pays the rent. His 42-year-old Mexican wife, Maria Guadalupe, works as a maid for $10 to $15 a day.
He has refused welfare. Vowing to set a good exam-
Speaking of Your Health...
Lester LCQlcau,N.Di
Aspirin: A Wonder Drug,
But Not for Everyone
Aspirin is d^erous for the heart! Aspirin can cause stomach upsets! Aspirin is bad for people who have ulcers! Aspirin can cause allergies! Aspirin can be good or bad for the heart!
These and other statements make all of us reel like punch-drunk boxers as we are bombarded by confusing information in the press, on the radio, and on TV.
Now we are deluged with more information about long-acting aspirin, pure a^irin, coated aspirin, candy^orm aspirin and good-tasting aspirin. And it all adds to more confusion.
Aspirin, or acetylsalicylic acid, is truly an excellent dnig which can be used effectively and inexpensively for a variety (rf complaints. This fine drug, however, cannot be used with safety by persons who have certain medical conditions. It is for these specific conditions that non-aspirin medications have been developed.
It is a well-established fact that aspirin in any form or amount should not be taken for an extended period of time by anyone who has or has had a peptic ulcer of the stomach or the small intestine (duodenum). Even those with a history (rf a cwnpletely healed ulcer should not invite unnecessary problems by using aspirin.
The reason is that this drug can be irritating to the dehcate lining of the stomach and the entire intestinal tract.
Persons who have inflammation (rf the esophagus, a hiatus hernia, gastritis or some form of colitis should avoid aspirin. Even when aspirin is taken with buffering antacids it may cause trouble in susceptible people.
People who are known to have some types of bleeding tendency must avoid aspirin. It is known that ^irin increases the "bleeding time and therefore is not routinely used following tonsillectomy or most other types of surgery.
Since aspirin can cause a moderate amount of blood thinning, a small dose is SMnetimes recommended by cardiologists (heart specialists) in some cases to prevent clo^g of the coronary arteries to the heart. This is done only with definite permission of the doctor who keeps the patient under constant observation.
It is true that we are being bombarded by advertising copy that is overenthusiasc about a particular brand of aspirin. All aspirin made by reliable companies is "good aspirin. To waste any money on buying that special brand of aspirin which is more expensive is totally unnecessary.
Aspirin is truly a remarkable drug when used judiciously and with discrimination. Aspirin does not get to be any more remaricable when it costs five times more that it should.
pie for his children, he has turned down food stamps and other benefits.
I could get about $75 a month (in welfare), but its a job I want. 1 dont want handouts, he said.
Naturalization papers that would allow Mrs. Richardson to live and work legally in the United States are pending. She is among the estimated 3 million to 5 million undocumented aliens who live illegally in this country. She bypasses the law by working for cash. Two to four times a week, she travels by bus to cleaning jobs arranged by other Mexicans who work in El Paso. Hispanics make up 62 percent of El Pasos population.
The Richardsons used to live in Juarez, a city of almost I million people across the shallow Rio Grande, but moved to El Paso so Maria wouldnt have to swim the river every day she worked, her husband said. He is bilingual; she speaks only Spanish.
The family lives in Room 17 in the building about three blocks from the international bridge. Richardson usually sleeps on the floor so his children can sleep with their mother.
Richardson said he had no intention of expanding his young family. Im real careful now. I dont want any more children - the last one was an accident, he said
DemoCaucusTo Travel Country
WASHINGTON (AP) - A group of nationally prominent Democrats representing the new National House Democratic Caucus will be traveling the country soon holding forums designed to unify the party, spread its message and ultimately get more Democrats elected to Congress.
The panel, which will begin touring in October, will help to coordinate 1984 House Democratic campaigns with national party efforts. Rep. Gillis Long, D-La., co-chairman of the new group, said.
Meanwhile, a group of moderate Republicans, in what they said was an effort to broaden their partys base in Congress, announced the creation of a fund-raising political action committee to help elect middle-of-the road Republicans to (Congress.
Rep. Bill Green, R-N.Y., the leader of the group, said the new committee, named MODRN, an acronym for Moderate Republican, would try to counter efforts made by ultraconservative fundraising groups on behalf of right wing Republicans.
tl'i.f;
softly, pointing to his 3-year-old daughter playing on the wooden floor with a small plastic spaceman.
Out of work since December, Richardson is among the 12.2 percoit of the El Paso labor force that is jobless. He admitted he had a drinkiog problem that cost me my job, but Ive been diy seven months. Still, no one wants to hire someone who used to have a drinking problem.
Richardson is also nearing the end of a five-year probation for smuggling ^iens. Richardson was arrested with four Mexicans he was being paid $600 to drive to Morton, near Lubbock, Texas. The aliens were bound for Chicago.
"Even if you get good money some get $450 to $500 per person to take (aliens) by van to Denver -being arrested is nm worth it, Richardson said, wringing calloused hands that have worked on migrant farms from Texas to California.
Being poor in El Paso has affected his self-esteem. I want to provide for my family, but Im not doing a good job of it, he said, waving his hand toward the stove, where a pot gf beans are simmering.
Mexican beans - our staple these days, he said. Above him, a single wire is drawn across the tiny room. Laundry, he muttered, as if embarrassed.
His wife, wearing a simple blouse, was more (^itimistlc about their plight. Maybe tomorrow I can get more work, she said. Theres always tomorrow.
Brian Speaks, They All Sleep
PENDLETTON, Ore. (AP) - When Brian Little talks, everybody stops listening -usually because theyve gone to sleep.
Its not that Little is a boring guy, but as Umatilla Countys zoning administrator, he rea& staff reports, correspondence and other documents into the record at public hearings.
At one recent hearing. Commissioner Bob Draper dropped off to sleep during a 55-minute reading.
\nother commissioner. Bill Hansell, said be feared a newspaj^r reporter might take a picture of his snoozing colleague, but when he looked over the reporter wasasleq), too.
Little, tongue in cheek, said he is considering adding some racy material to spice up the reports.
HUNT HAZARDOUS WASTE Enviroomental Protectfan 1981. Tlie fayhnifians are working at nigh*' bfciiiHff the
Agency oHici^ work during the night checking the site of an protective clothing they wear makes it impossible to work in
abandoned Atlanta chemical company where they suspect beheatotheday.(APLaserphoto)
hundreds of drums of hazardous wastes were illegally buried in
painting in a remote southwestern corner (rf Kruger. Eight such sites 7>ad be discovered previously in the park.
English was cjyitivated, and began a thorou^ search on foot - an effort that was rewarded by discovery of more than 100 Bushman art sites.
Hie cave art is mysterious and enchanting. English has identified 17 species of animals deleted in the red tones of the wall paintings. Graceful running figures are common.
The paintings have not yet been dated accurately. The artifacts are still being tested, and could be between a few hundred and more than 1,500 years old.
At some settlement sites among the 300 discovered during the 10-year park survey ending this year.
archaedo^ Andre Meyer and his field workers have found Eariy Stone Age cutting hxris dating back 250,000 years. Archaeological test excavations near the rock art sites have uncovered Middle Stone-Age implements dated between 40,000 and 100,000 years ago.
Bushman artifacts are mixed in, including crescent-shaped crystals that a{q)artly were mounted on sticks for cutting meat.
Meyer said the next phase of research - excavation of about a dozen sites should test bis theory that the Iron Age people came froin Kenya and Malawi in eastern Africa about A.D. 200-300, and pudied the Bushmen to the west, where their paintings are more comm and thought to be more recent.
Meyer said the team wants to determine who lived in the
region over the centuries, and to reconstruct their society.
The excavatkms could take another couple of decades, he said.
Many of the sites have been located by rangers. Road workers, encourag^ to be aware of si^ of the past, have found artifacts that led to excavation projects.
Much additional research focuses on animal bones at the sites. English said that will help the parks board to understand the flora and fauna of the past, to learn what has changed and to plan conservation.
Its ail absolutely incomparable research area, said Professor HannesEloff, head of the archaeok^ team. Kruger was established in 1898 on South Africas border with Mozambique, and before then was sparsely
populated. " ,
The park, about the size (rf Massachusetts, has about 500,000 visitors year. Bui tourists are not allowed wit of their cars, except at a few lodges. The rock art and settlement sites are often deep in the bush, far from public roads and undisturbed.
English has been in-' strumental in a project to allow the public to see the rock art as well as to epjpy a closer look, at the bu^veld. In August, the Busman Camp ^ns in the center of a region containing about 50 rock art sites.
It is the fourth wilderness hiking camp created in the park since 1978. The other three are booked a year ahead, a mark of a ^wing public desire to live in, rather than just drive through, the African bush.
IRON-AGE SETTLEMENT Archeologists history of continuous human settlement in the excavate pottery shards and other artifacts from park, better known for its wildlife, for as long as an Iron-age settlement in South Africas Kruger 250,000 years. (APLaserphoto)
National Park. A 10-year survey has revealed a
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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
752-6166 752-3952 (after Sp.m.^
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PUBLIC NOTICES
REQUEST FCW PROPOSALS State of North Carolina wishes to acquire by lease approximately 17.250 net square feet of office space in the Greenville NC area. Lease term 3 years. Possession Jan. 1. 1984. Cut off time for receivino proposals is 2:00 PM, Monday. August B, 1983. For specifications, proposals and additional information contact: Ted Bowen, Eastern Regional Personnel Office, 404 South Andrews Street 27834, 919-756 7812.
July 18, 19,20,21.22. 1983_The Daily Reflector, Greenvilk, N.C.-Thunday, July 0,1963-21
Proposals are invited for i
Vent
rqposals are invited for supply-Irtg LP gas tor heating, cooking, and other uses at our schools. This Did is for a period of one year. Pactolus School is on natural gas and is exempted from this bid. Containers
(tanks, bottles, etc.) are to be fur nished and installed by supplier ai no cost, lease, or rent to the Pitt
slier at
County Board of Education.
Tanks 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 ing^of school.
The Pitt County School uses approximately 40,000 to 50.000 gallons of LP gas per year.
Please submit properly identified proposals to Mr. Carl Heath, Maintenance Supervisor. Pitt County School, P. O. Box 432, Winterviile, NC 28590 on or before July 29, 1983. Bid opening will be at 1:()0 p.m. on August 1,1983. Any and all proposals may be rejected by the Pitt County Board of Education.
This contract may be terminated by the Pitt County Board of Education at any time service is unsatisfactory.
July 17, 19,21,1983
WANT
ADS
7526166
002
PERSONALS
SINGLES, WIDOWS, and divorcees who would like to meet other singles, widows, and divorces. All ages welcome Write to:
Singles of North Carolina (SNC)
P O Box 11077 Goldsboro, N C 27532 Alt replies confidential_
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, 407 Evans Mail, Downtown Greenville.
010 AUTOMOTIVE
RENT A WRECK
Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save. 752 2277 _
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick.Wewlllpav too dollar
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758 0114.__
012
AMC
1979 AMC CONCORD DL WAGON Power steering, 4 speed. Excellent condition. High mileage. Must see to appreciate. 51450. 752 5027._
013
Buick
1969 BUICK LeSABRE Power steering and brakes, air, radial tires, 350 with 4 BBL engine. S1S00 or best otter. 752 6185
1977 BUICK SKYLARK 2 door, air Call after 7 p m., 756 3191
1979 BUICK REGAL Silver AM/FM stereo, cruise, power windows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mileage. Makeotter. 756 8539.
014
Cadillac
1981 CADILLAC Coupe Devllle. Loaded with options. Priced to sell. Call BB&T William Handley 752
015
Chevrolet
CASH FOR your car. Barwick Auto Sales' 756 7745
1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC V8, automatic. Good condition. 52600. 7568593._
1977 MONTE CARLO, Power steering & brakes, AM FM, air condition, radials. Like new. Extra clean. Tilt wheel, bench seat. $69.000 miles. Call 752 4561._
1978 CHEVETTE 1
Automatic, AM/FM, 61,00
owner.
____________ - ,000 actual
mites, new tires. Excellent condi-tlon. $1900. 756 3974.__
1978 NOVA, 4 door, automatic, power steering, air condition, 6 cylinder, price negotiable. Call 752 3925 or after 6, 752 6910._
016
Chrysler
1973 NEW YORKER, $750 756 8781._
Call
018
Ford
1970 MUSTANG, power steering, automatic transmission, air condt tioning. good condition. 756 0801 after 5 om.___
1973 LTD. 2 door sedan Needs minor body work. Asking $750. 757 3635. _
1975 FORD GRANADA, 1 owner, air, excellent condition. 746-2624 after5o.m
1978 THUNOERBIRD, extra clean. Call 746 6209.
1983 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757 0451. ask tor Mr. Carrawav.
020
AAercury
1975 MERCURY MONARCH. 4 door. 6 cylinder, 3 speed, AM/FM, good condition. $8()0. 756 9034.
021
Oldsmoblle
1976 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME Loaded. Real clean. New radials. 752 4080 or 756 8759.
1982 CUTLASS BROUGHAM, loaded. 18,000 miles. Like new and priced to move. Call 752 4561._
022
Plymouth
1975 PLYMOUTH FURY 318 engine, beige, 1 owner. 74,000 miles. $900. 746 2326._________
19M PLYA^UTH VOLARE. 25,000 miles. AM-FM, air, power steering and brakes, cruise control, ist
owner, excellent family car. $4,350 756 4262after 5om.
023
Pontiac
1977 FIREBIRD, automatic, power steering and brakes, tilt wheel. Craig AM/FM stereo cassette, mz wheels, needs door panel.
Call 758 4349 after 6.
1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRD Light blue. Air, AM/FM, power steering, 4 soeed. mint condition. 756 7178.
1983 PONTIAC WAGON, $8,000 Call aHerp.m., 756 9886._
024
Foreign
AUDI 4.000 S DIESEL, 1982 AM/FM cassette, sunroof. Immacu late. Warranty - 7.000 miles. 756-F499.
AUDI SOOOS 1982. Fuel injected. Like new. In perfect condition. Electric sunroof, complete stereo system. Call after 6 p.m I 975 3179.
OATSUN 310 GX 1980. Excellent condition. 4 speed, air, sunroof, AM-FM cassette. 54,000 miles. 13900. Call 758 5097 after 6 p.m
MERCEDES 340-0 1981. 4 speed, sunroof, new tires, cream. Excellent condition. $14,800 Call 756 6336 days. Ask for Lorelle Nights or weekends cal 1756 1549
TOYOTA SERVICE, 4 cylinder tune special $20. 4 cylinder valve adjust $14. 5 years experience Toyota
East Btfl's Pyk Garogo.
1971 TOYOTA Corolla Good condi gas mileage Best olfer.
1971 VOLKSWAGEN Rebuilt engine and carburetor. New starter battery and tires. 752 1134._
024
Foreign
1973 MG MIDGET Good condition Have to see to appreciate. Phone
1973 VOLKSWAGEN BUS Looks and drives good. Fold down bed and table. Asking $1095. 752 1037
1973 GREEN OATSUN Wagon, straight shift looks rough, runs good, good tires. $5(W. Call 758-0984 after 6 p.m. weekdays; anytime weekends._
1 973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good. $1700. Call 758 2300 davs.
1973 OPEL GT 28 miles per gallon. ry g<
2527, Washinoton.
Very good condition. $:
1974 FIAT 124, 4 door, 4 cylinder. 4 speed. AM/FM cassette, good con dition. ----
. $650. 756 9034
1974 AAAZDA RX3. 49,000 actual miles, air. Michelin tires, new paint job. $1200. 756 3241 _
1974 SAAB New engine and inter! or. Sacrifice tor best offer. 756 4645.
1975 OPEL Body in excellent con dition. Needs some engine repair. $200. 757 1633._
1975 TOYOTA COROLLA 5 speed. Very good condition $1100 firm 752 9076._
1975 VOLKSWAGEN DASHER, good condition. Best otter. Call anytime 746 2177
1976 OATSUN 710 stationwagon. automatic, air. $1800. Call 758 6042 after 7 p.m._
1976 FIAT slat Low
$975. 753
FIAT stationwagon. 1 owner, mjle^y. Good gas mileage.
1976 HONDA STATIONWAGON
53,000 miles. $1700 negotiable. 753 4965.
1976 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe Automatic. $1100. 746 3502_
1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
Good condition $2400 Call 746 6483
1979 TOYOTA COROLLA AM/FM 8 track, air, 72.000 miles $3200 Call 752 6855 after 7 p.m
1981 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA 5 speed, air, digital AM/FM stereo cassette. 31,000 miles. Call 758 3047 after 5 p.m._
1981 VOLKSWAGEN DIESEL L S 2 door, air, AM/FM cassette, 5 speed, new tires, low mileage. Call 756 7541.____
1982 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT LS
Diesel. AM/FM, air. low mileage. like new. 758 6659._
1983 TOYOTA CELICA ST, 19,000 miles, $500 and assume payments. Call 758 7427 anytime_
Top quality, fuel economical cars can be found at low prices in Classified.
030 Bicycles For Sale
CHILDRENS BICYCLES Used A 12" boy or girl with training wheels, 1 20" bovs. T 24" girls. 756 7936
RED RALEIGH 10 speed bike 1 year old. Rarely used. Excellent condition. 757 102._
032
Boats For Sale
ll'/i' PLYWOOD BOAT with 1 trolling motor, 48 month battery. 1 battery charger, 2 seat cushions. 2 laddles, t boat cover. All like new! 758 1316
padd Call:
1963 14' GLASSTRON Make an offer. Call 756 6068 anytime._
1978 BONITA Open V 17'. 85 Mercury. Really nice! 825-4931.
1982 13' SAND PIPER Sailboat $900 Call 757 6078 or 946 0288 after
6,_
23' O'DAY 9.9 outboard, VHF, shore power, extras. Must sell! 756 6406^^
23' SPORTCRAFT BOAT Inboard/Outboard. Loaded with extras. Galvanized trailer. Like new Call 752 7474 after 6 and weekends.
5 HORSEPOWER OUTBOARD
used only on small sailboat in fresh water. $225 756 5027 alter 6.
034 Campers For Sale
cox POPUP CAMPER Contains sink, icebox, water and electrical connections. Sleeps 6. Good tires with extra spares. Needs new canvas top. $600. 756 8492 or 752 5124._
NEW JAYCO POPUPS Close out prices. Camotown RV's. 746-3530. TAURUS 1977 24' Sleeps 8. Rear bath. Air. Awnina Excellent condi tion. $4995. 756 7587.__
_________ All sizes, colors.
Leer Fiberglass and ^rtsman tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C 834 2774
1976 FORD 22' Eldorado motor home. Call 756 5241 atter 6 o.m
1978 21' Wilderness Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self-contained. $5300 negotiable. 756-8539.
1979 NOMAD 31'. factory air. like new, on Oce Isle. Call 756 7765 days, 355 2070 nights._
ceanfront lot at Emerald
036
Cycles For Sale
1973 SUZUKI GT 550 K Very good relial^e transportation with extras. $625.^gll 355/125._^_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
036
Cycles For Sale
1974 HCJNDA 350, 4 cylinder, all extras. Excellent condition. $550 or best offer Mr Brown. 756-0982 att*r 5 30
1976 HONDA CB125. Good condition Needs work Best offer Call 756 2399 atter 4_
1977 MOTTO GUZZI Italian built touring bike Wind jammer and molded saddle bags Only 3,300 miles. $2100. Call 827 5626 after 5 o.m
1981 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 400
Custom Showroom condition Serious inquiries only. Call 758 7345 after 6 p.m._
039
Trucks For Sale
CHEVROLET EL CAMINO 1980 Loaded. Nice truck Call Leo Ven ters Motors, Ayden. 746 6171.
FORD COURIER, 1982. $4800 Call m ,756 9W
TRUCK COVERS Seahawk and Cobra. Camptown RV's Ayden. 746 3530
1973 CHEVY tneyenne automatic, power brakes and steering, tilt wheel, AM/FM 8 track, needs work $800. Call 758 4349 atter 6. _
1973 TRIAXLE CHEVY 15 yard
dump. Call 746 3296
1979 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER,
4x4, immaculate condition Call Washington, 946 4924 days; 946 7971 nights/weekends
1980 BLUE 4 wheel drive Toyota truck short bed. $3500 negotiable Call after 6 p.m., 795-4419
1981 OATSUN Dickup, air, AM/FM with cassette. T fop. 756 8948 after
040
Child Care
AFTER SCHOOL CARE for 3rd grade boy. Prefer someone caring For boy/s same age. Win dermere/CherrvOaks. 7-0322
WOULD LIKE to baby sit in my home Monday through Friday Phone 756 1057
WANTED: Mature lady to keep small Child in our home. 758 6659.
YOUNG MOTHER would like to keep infant in her home. Nursery to first grade experience 752-3766.
046
PETS
AKC BLACK LAB PUP, male Pick of litter Parents certified free of hip dysplasia. Field frial champion blood line. $150. 746 4793 after 5.
COCKER SPANIEL puppies for sale. 2 black males. 1 blonde female. Call 758 6633 atter 3 30
DOBERMAN PUPPIES Red. black and rust Male. $85. Females. $80. 749 4741
DOBERMAN PUPPIES 4 red, 2 black. $75each 752 4609after 6. FREE PUPPIES, half Lab. Call 524 5430. Griffon after 6 p.m
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES
AKC females $75. 752 3735_
LHASA APSO, 2' 2 years old. AKC registered, $50. Call 756-0010._
RAT TERRIER puppies. Will be weened July 31. $56 each. Call 746 6679
SCHNAUZER YORKE
3'2 months old female. $100. Call 752 7194
051
Help Wanted
ACCOUNTANT CPA or CPA candidate with I to 4 years experi ence to fill immediate vacancy in tax oriented practice. No overnight travel Salary negotiable based on experience. Reply to PO Box 989, Kinston, NC 28561. _
ARE YOU LOOKING for a re
warding career in- one of today's fastest growing businesses? Are you aggressive enough to make the most OT a challenging opportunity? If you are and have sales experi ence. call Conner Homes tor an appointment. 756 0333._
AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON
Due to increased sales, we are in need of a salesperson. Experience helptui 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, Monday-Friday. Joe Pecheles Volkswaoen.
AVON REPRESENTATIVES have
summer fun with the money they earn during hours they choose. Work in your own neighborhood. earn up to 50%! Call 752 7006.
BEGIN $255.80 WEEKLY National
Distributors needs person for full or part time work For application mail a self addressed stamped envelope to J F . PO Box 416. Grimesland, NC 27837
BODY SHOP MANAGER needed Excellent salary and benefits. Apply to Herbert Powell, Hastings Ford, 758 0114._
CASHIER
Convenience store. Good atmosphere. Steady employment. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 South Memorial Drive. _
DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED
_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
051
HetpWantwl
Exctpfional
Opponunity
WILL YOU EARN
$15.000 to $20.000 this year, and more in future years
International company in its second 50 years of growth needs three sales representatives In this area.
ARE YOU:
Sportsminded
21 years of age er over
Aggressive
Anibitious
In good health
High School graduate or better Bondable with good references
IFYOUQUALIFY YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED:
$1200 per month guaranteed to start
2 weeks expense paid training Hospitalization and Profit Sharing
Unlimited advancement opportuni ty. no seniority. Opportunity to advance Into management as rapid ly as your ability warrants. Act today for a secure tomorrow. Call now for appointment and personal interview
Monday thru Friday 757-0686 10A M to6P M
An Equal Opportunity Company M/F
EXPERIENCED Word Processors needed on Wang, Lanier and IBM Displaywriter Call for an ap pointment.
Manpower Temporary Services
1l8Reade Street
757 3300
EXPERI
needed. 756 4254
BABYSITTERS
-ull or part time. Call
EXPERIENCED HAIR STYLIST needed full or part time. Excellent working conditions and good benefits Call days 355-2076, nights 756 6544__
FLORAL DESIGNER Experience necessary. Send resume to Design er. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC
FULL OR PART TIME waitress needed at Szechuan Garden Waitressing experience required No phone calls Application forms given out 3-5 p.m.
LIBRARY ASSISTANTS 2 part time. 1 full time. Assist patrons at public service desk. Require some college training. Experience helpful Job descriptions available at Sheppard AAemorial Library, 530 Evans Street, Greenville. Apply in writing only. No ph0f>c calls
L(X:AL MANUFACTURER of pre cisin, molded rubber products has an immediate opening for a Qualify Control Manager. The successful candidate should possess the follow ing minimum requirements: a 4 year college degree with emphasis in math to include statistics, a minimum of 2 years Quality Control and managerial experience Resume should be forwarded to GSH Corporation. P O Box 37, Snow Hill, N C 28580 Equal Opportunity Employer
MAINTENANCE PERSON needed Must be knowledgeable in all areas of general maintenance including plumbing, heating, ar>d air condi tioning. Reply to Maintenance Person, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 _
MANAGER TRAINEE
trainee tor Butler's Shoe Store Apply in person at Pitt Plaza. Greenville. NC_
MANAGER WANTED tor
automotive parts in business. Must have knowledge in parts and bus! ness, and be able to deal with the
Bqblic..7S?lj.
MECHAN 1C AND SALESPERSON NEEDED
Due to the increase in service business and a future move to the By pass, we are in need of an experienced mechanic and an expe rienced salesperson. Excellent pay plan and be%fits. Apply to: Bob Brown or Robert Starling at Brown Wood, Inc.. 13M Dickinson
MISS LILLIE LANGLEY is looking for someone to live in with her. bul work wherever they wish. I have two rooms for someone to live in. I prefer a women or girl between 21 or 25 or an older woman. Address 2103 Pendleton Drive. Greenville.
NEED GOOD BASE and lead guitar player with playing experience to loin Gospel group. Just starting, so there will be no pay Prefer senous
musicians only 758 2798 from '
S.t.9 Ip.
pay _ _ .
If interested, call I 5 or 758 6007 from
PARTS COUNTER PERSON Ford
tarts experience necessary xcellent advancement opportunity to parts manager position for the right person Call 756 4272._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
JULY IS TRUCK MONTH AT PHELPS CHEVROLET
Over 50 Units To Choose From
Prices Start at
55995
9.9/(
00
Plus Tax
o APR FINANCING OR $300 CASH BACK On Selected Models
GREENVILLE
GM QUALITY SERVICE PARTS
GENERAL MOTORS IWRTS DIVISION
22-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, July 21.1983
051
Help Wanted
051
Help Wanted
PERSON WANTED tor general oflice work Experience required Apply in person between 8 9 only at Larmar Mechanical Contractors.
750 4624___________________
PLUMBER NEEDED At least Sj
years experience 756 7961_I
POSITIONS AVAILABLE Group home manager and relief personnel to work in home living situations for adults with mental retardation These are manager'instructor positions Applicants must be 21 years old nigh school graduate, able 10 qualify for chautfeurs license and be able to supply personal references Applications to i be received through August 5, 1983 I Contact Group Home Coordinator, I 946 0151. 8 to 5, Monday through, Friday EOE__
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SECRETARY RECEPTIONIST
wanted to assume responsibility and handle a variety of duties Must have excellent typing and ad ministrative skills Send resume to Secretary' P O Box 1967, Greenville, N C 27835_
SERVICE WRITER needed Expe rience preferred Ability to com municate with public a must. Call 756 4272 _
STARTING A 9 MONTH secretarial course July 25. Greenville School of Commerce. 752 3177._
CRAFTED SERVICES
Quality furniture Relinishing and repairs. Superior caning for all type chairs, larger selection of custom picture framing, survey stakesany length, all types of pallets, selected framed raproductlons.
EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER
Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758-4188 8AM-4:30PM
Greenville, N.C.
BILL
ASKEW
MOTORS
3010 S. Memorial Drive
756-9102
1981 Yamaha Exciter 250 3,000 miles.
1981 Ford Ranger Pickup
Blue and white 1980 Subaru Wagon 1979 Ford Pinto Wagon Bronze 1979 Olds Delta 88 Royale
2 door, blue 1979 Pontiac Grand Prix Silver and black 1979 Buick LeSabre 4 door, green 1979 Chevrolet Caprice Estate Wagon Loaded. 9 passenger.
1978 Chevrolet Camaro
White
1978 Buick Regal
Maroon, white top 1978 Chevrolet Silverado Pickup White with camper shell
1978 Ford LTD II - 2 door, brown
1978 Datsun King Cab
Pickup Green
1978 Dodge Challenger
Silver
1978 Chevrolet Chevette
4 door, silver, automatic 1978 Mercury Cougar XR-7 1978 Pontiac Trans AM
White
1978 Jeep CJ-5 1978 Ford Mustang 4
speed,peach
1978 Plymouth Volare
Wagon 6 cylinder, silver.
1978 Pontiac Sunbird
Wagon Low mileage, loaded 1978 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo 2 door, blue 1978 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo Gold
1977 Chevrolet Camaro
Turquoise
1977 Pontiac Grand Prix
Brown
1977 Chrysler Cordoba
Silver
1977 Mercury Comet 4
door, blue
1977 Ford Pinto White, blue trim, automatic, air. 1977 Ford Maverick - 4 doo^ 6 cylinder 1977 Chevrolet Nova 2 door, burgundy 1977 Plymouth Volare
Premier Wagon Maroon 1977 Chevrolet Camaro Z-28 Bronze 1977 Toyota Corona
Wagon White,
automatic
1977 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo Bronze, 46.000 miles
1976 Ford Mustang Red 1976 Buick Century 4
door, blue
1976 Ford Elite Red, white top
1976 Chevrolet Monza
Silver, wire wheels 1976 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo - White, 56,000
miles.
1976 Ford Elite-Blue 1976 Ford Courier Pickup
White
1976 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo White, white top 1975 Buick Century Luxus
White
1975AMC Pacer White 1975 Olds Cutlass
Supreme Silver, 37.000 actual miles
1975 Chevrolet Monte
Carlo Silver 1975 Ford Granada 2 door, white, blue top 1974 Pontiac Grand AM 1973 Ford Pinto Wagon
1973 Chevrolet Malibu -White
1971 Pontiac 4 door, extra clean
1971 Plymouth Baracuda
Black
1970 Ford Pickup Black 1967 MG
1967 Mercury Cougar TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS
1974 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
Plus Many Others
I
STOP!
Ask yourself 1 Where will I be and what will 1 be doing 5 years from today, if I continue what I am doing now? Outstanding management op portunity can be yours in as little as 6 to 8 months Earnings range from S20.000 $35,000. Commission in management 2 week training pro gram then will field train you in new sales in servicing with world leader of long starKling disability accounts Must be bondable, over 21, ambitious, have a good car and be competitive Previous sales ex perience desired, but not required Hospital plan, dental plan, profit sharing, and liberal trirrge benefits Your chance of a lifetime it you qualify Call for appointment, Fred West, 1800 662 8851, 9 a.m. 5 p.m . Monday Frid^ Equal Opportunity Employer M/F__
TIME FORACHANGE
Here's
and the surrounding area
1 As much as $22,000 to start
2 National concern over 70 years in business
3.Noncontributory deferred com pensation program 4 Extensive training program.
Call Lee Weaver 1-527 4155 Kinston, N C MUTUAL OF OMAHA
People you can count on Affiliated Companies United of Omaha The Omaha Indemnity Company Mutual of Omaha Fund Manage ment Company
Equal Opportunity Companies M/F
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
051
Help Wanted
RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald. Director of
Nursing, 943 2111
SALESPERSON NEEDED Auto sales experience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call 756 4267._
SECRETARY - For small chain of preschools. Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone calls
_
WANTED: Persons to install duct work. Experience preferred, but will train. Apply in person at Larmar AAechanical Construction, between 8 and 9 only
7 TO 11 AND 3 TO 11 pmitions available for LPN'sor RN's. Pt
apply at Oak Manor Nursing Home, Snow Hill. 747 2860. Competitive salary.
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE
Licensed and fully insured. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates J P Stancil, 752 6331
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and roofing^ 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm.
CARPETSPECIAL
2 rooms and hall $39.95
Home Care Claanart____7S4-S4S3
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist, Tar Road Enterprises. 756 9123 day, 756-1007 night.
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call tor tree estimate. Days 756-9123. Nioht 756 1007
GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call
752 7341._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
059
WorkWanlwl
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All sUe vardt. CoH 752 55|3. LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranfeed. Call 757 3353 attar 4 m , weekends anytime
MAGICIAN SHOWS tor adults and children. Magic, balloon animals, iuoalino. Call 746^146 after 6
SANDING and finishing floors Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service, 756-68 anytime. It no answer call back.
060
FOR SALE
063 Building Supplies
DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do vour house cleanlno. 752 3750
YOU CAN SAVE nwney by shopping for bargains in the OassifM Ads.
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA AU. TYPES of firewood for sale. J P StancIL 752-6331._
065 Farm Equipment
ATTENTION TOBACCO Farmers!
Agri Supply carries a large line of suppliesior you includiiM; 12 volt winches for harvesters $143.95; 110
volt hoists for bulk bams $383.95,
seats tor Long harvesters $12.49; racks; clips; clampbars and tines for Powell and Dixie bams. Many
ither parts in stock. Agri Supply, reenvllle.NC 752 3999
IRRIGATION Complalf EZ rain system. Like new. Good price. Call 919 795 4241
LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR, 317 John Deere with 48" mower deck new motor. Call 756-6100
ONE ROW POWELL automatic tobacco primer with both heads. Ready to go to field, 758 19A_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HASTINGS FORD MAKES 13 LUCKY DURING OUR 13TH BIRTHDAY SALE
Any New Ford Car Or Truck On Our Lot During July
NO DOWN PAYMENT NO OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENSE
Through Special Arrangements With Red Carpet Lease
We are now celebrating our 13th Anniversary. Now is the time to take advantage of this money saving opportunity. All you need is approved credit and you can drive away a new Ford with no out-of-pocket expense. Better hurry, with deals like these, our inventory wont last long!
H
ASTING
FORD
Tenth Sireei & 264 By Pass
Dealer No. S720
758-0114
S
Greenville N C 27834
WYNNE
CHEVROLET
Bethel, N.C. Hwy 64& 13 Phone 825-4321
Bethels Finest Used Cars
1982 Chevrolet Caprice Classic Diesel. Silver, sharp and clean.
1981 Pontiac Grand Prix 26,000 actual miles, tike new, white. One owner.
1980 Chevrolet Monza Blue, automatic, air condition, sharp. One owner.
1980 Buick Skylark 2 door, air condition, automatic, dark blue, one owner, like new.
1980 Ford Pinto Bluo, one owner, sharp, clean. .
1975 Olds Delta 88 Convertible
1975 Chevrolet Monza Red. Priced to go!
1970 Chevrolet Camaro Average car.
TRUCKS
1981 Chevrolet El Camino Silver, like new.
1980 Chevrolet LUV Pickup - Red, 4 speed transmission, clean.
1980 Oatsun King Cab Orange, 4 speed transmission.
1979 Chevrolet Chevette 2 door. ^
Brown, air condition, 4 speed, ^9^9 Chevrolet CK-10 - 4 X 4. Silver glgg and black. Like new, 44,000 actual
miles.
1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Blue, white vinyl top, sharp car.
1979 Buick Regal Blue, clean, sharp car.
1978 Toyota Wagon ~ Brown, 41,000 actual miles, nice and clean.
1978 Chevrolet Diesel Pickup Blue, like new.
1978 Chevrolet C-10 Diesel - Uke new, automatic, power steering.
1976 Chevrolet C-10 Pickup - Red and white.
1976 Chevrolet Vega Wagon Rod,
automatic, air condition. Priced to Choaroiof El Camino-Bluo
go!
Ramon Latham
Bonner Latham Joe Rawls J.T. Burrus Doug House
GMOUAUTY
SBMCE/MRIS
GENERAL MOTORS HRS DIVISION
066
FURNITURE
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $29 a 6 piece WeBtern living roonr Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 f FumifureWorkf. 757T1451.
26 on room suit, fables.
BASSETT SOLID WOOD taWe^and 6 chairs, china hutch and base. Take over payments on on|y $67.37 oer month. 757 0451. Furniture forld.2eoe 10th St
BEDROOM SUITE, ell wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest. Take over payments on <ly $26,33 per month. 757 0451. Furniture World. 2808 E lOthSt
CALL US.ANp SEE why p^l^re coming fo Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings. Call 823-3KI4. 9:30 to 5:30 or by ap-Bglntmgat
COLOR TV
Want one? Chock out Cc^Tyme, check out Tele-Rent, check out Curtis Mathes, and then chock out Furniture World. We rent to own for less money than any_ store In Greenville. 757 0451. Rmember that Furniture King will not be undersold. He don't pfay.
FOR SALE, gold queen size hide-a-bed sofa. $150. Loveseat s^lze convertible foam sleeper, $50. Can be seen by appointment, 758-7888 after 1 p.m
FURNITURE! FURNITURE!
THE FURNITURE KING has if all! or 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 lOfti St
MATTRESS WORLD at Furnlt^e World. We keep a truck lo^ 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 M to choose from. Barcalounger and Catnapper. We finance in our store. Phone 757 0451 or visit the 'Furniture King' at Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St
RENT TO OWN Six plKO solid wood living room suite, sofa, chair, rocker and 3 tables. On'Y month at Furniture World, 2808 E lOthSt. Phone 757 0451
RENT TO OWN Three piece living room suite, sofa, chair, loveseat. $26.33 per month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St. or phone 757-0451.
SLEEPER SOFA Good condition. $200. 758 5491
SOFA with 2 matching chairs and coffee table Also lamps. Call 758 0124
TRADITIONAL GREEN SOFA, low
back. Good condition. $125. Cali 752-7798 after 6 and weekends
COUCH FOR SALE In excellent
condition. $90. Call 758-9684.
067 Garage-Yard Sale
FRIDAY 2 UNTIL 7, and Saturday 8 until 2 Yard Mie. 102 Lakeview Drive. Lake Glenwood. For In-formatlon coll 752 2778
GIGANTIC YARD SALE, located in parking lot of Vann's Hardware, 1300 North Groono Street, Saturday. July 23, 7 a.m. until 3 p.m. Roll bar for short bed pickup, men women and children's clothes, 2 infant car seats, lots and lots of other house-hvid ItSfta
INOOOR/OUTOOOR yard sale everyday at Old Fairground, AAon da^^ Friday from 9 to 6, Saturday. 7
MOVING SALE I 9 to 2. ^turday. July 23. 1808 Forrest Hills Drive. Greenville. Garden tools, large amount of furniture, toys and games, books, records, GE refrigerator, clothes, lawn mower, many miscellaneous Items
^VING SALE I Saturday, July 23. Furniture - odds and ends. 339 Cannon Road. Ragland Acres in Wlntervtlle.e:30toY:00
SATURDAY. 8 to 1. 3 families. Furniture, curtains, clothes, and much more. 103 Vernon Street, In Brentwood
SATURDAY, July 23, 7 a.m. until. 3003 Sherwood Drive. Variety of ilsmi
YARD SALE Saturday. July 23. 9 tol.33BaywoodDrlve._
SPECIAL Executive Desks
Reg. Price S2M.OO
60 30-beautilul walnut finish Ideal lor home or otfic
Special Price
$17900
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S Evans St. 75?-2175
067 Garege-Ysrd Sale
YARD SALE, Saturday, e a.m. until. Intersection of 264 Bypass and 264 Business in the Red Oak Com
mwltv
YARD SALE. Friday and Saturday 9 to 6. ^ving to California. Washer/dryar, antique bedroom, lawn turnlture. sewing machine, weights with bench, and much miscellaneous. Vernon Avenue, Wintefvllle. off Main Street
YARD SALE, Saturday. July 23. 8 a.m., 404 East 2nd Street, 2 blocks from Ovortons at the cul-de-sac. Clothes, shoes, small household aoollances. kntck knack
YARD SALE, avarything but kitch en sink, behind Sunshma Garden Center and across from Sunnyslde Eggs. g^E^yeood Drive, Saturday,
am.
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stgp|,752 57
MULE FOR SALE $300. Call 756-2736._
073 Fruits and Vegetables
BLU
UEBERRIES FOR SALE 45< ind, pick your own. Humble
pound, pick your own. Humi Cage Farm. 2 miles west of Ay on Highway 102 to County R<
BUTTER PEAS. $6 a bushel. Corn, 90 a dozon. B & B You Pick, Hassell. 795-4646
PEACHESII Excellent for frMzing and canning. You pick! Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard. 3 miles North of Bailey. Highway 581 North. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday. 235 4664
FRESH BUTTERBEANS and corn. You pick. Butterbeans $12 a bushel,
<;grn!fl.ffOedg.|n.7^m_
074 Miscellaneous
A 2 SEATER ULTRA LIGHT ride! All day Saturday and Sunday. Cost $20 per person. For more inlorma-
or 355 2970.
Ag^^^TIONER, GE 15.000
14158.
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery en<itn3ieiHtH>n,9i7 73:9734.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013. for smaU loads of sand, fopsoll and stone. Also driveway work._
stone. Also driveway work COMPLETE DOUBLE BED. S7S. Sofa. $50. Both In good condition. Call 758 5553 Of 758 8CL _
FOR SALE: Sharp SF 811 copier with stancT 24 c>le$ par minute. Handles 8'/>x11. 7/ixliand 11x17
paper sizes. Royal SE SOlO electric f^wrlter, correcting capabilities, will sell separately or packm deal. Call 79ri047 days; 792-6W
nlahti
FOR SALE; HarvMt gold electric stove, $150. Long Boy double bed with frame, dark green rocker recllner, best offer. Call 355-6214 8ttgf}:Wp,tT1
FOR SALE: Dorm size refrigwa tor. 3 piece bedroom suite, 19"^CA remote control color TV Craig turntable, receiver, and tpaakars. Royal Aristocrat portable electric swriter, and much more. Call 1961 anytime
FULL SIZE brass bad with Sealy mattress set. $500.757 3414
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture
Shop. Stripping, Repairing 8, Re-finlshing. (Formerly of Eastern Carolina Vocational Canter)
Located next to John Deere
Equipment Conmany on Pactolus
Hlghwgy. Cell 75^359
GOOD USED AUTOMATIC washers. Guarantaod for 30 days. HPQgggh, 7gfc247y.
HOSPITAL BED for salt. Good condition. Call 756-6627 or 756-3444 atttr6p.m
HOTPOINT portable dishwasher with cutting board. Usad vary little.
_
ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 AAemo-rlal Drlve7756-gl7
LADIES FOX FUR coat, like new.
at S500. Bast offer. Call
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot citaning, backhoe also available. 7S6-474Zafter 6 p.m., Jim
MAGIC CHEF RANGE - 4 burners
with clock. 2 years old. $100. 7542586._
NOTICE-PUBLICSALE
2 DAYSONLY FRIDAY- SATURDAY July 22 and 23-9:30-5:30 -aAc'itlfc^ S^E'^Wv^y'^tt?
aim All Sclssort Sharpened...50c Pair.
?.ir,.0n?8V.."*
MILLOUTLETCLOTH
2727 East lOthSHeet. Gratnville
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
BOYD
ASSOCIATES
INCORPORATED
F.O. BOX 170. GREENVILLE. NORTH CABOUNAnM4 GENERAL CONTRACTORS 7SMtS4
RENOVATIONS
074 Miscellaneous
MICROSCOPE AND LIGHT - Bosh and Lomb, axcellont condition, $400.
Avt9ciaYrzzz.im.7a:ga
MOVING, MUST SELL Soars heavy duty washer, $150. (Candlelight wedding gown and vail, best offer. Bedspreads, furnitura, fnglL 75? 3M3 pHgr 4: 3p,_^-
w,
Dickinson Avenue
OFFICE FURNITIJRE: 7^arm chairs; 2 armless chairs; 1 beiKh table; f walnut and table; 1 AB Dick copying machine and stand; 2 metal bookcases, 1 timo clock; 2 bucket chairs. All good condition
uism
REFRIGERATED TRUCK
Ford truck. Motor no ^o^
69'
Ra
frlgeratad coolar works Wheels on and can be mo ,
Price negotielbe. Call 746 3921 alter
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI ^Rent shamDooers and vacuums at Rental TWtCofflBatlK
f6L^
SHARP SF501 copier. Jirtt twen serviced. A-1 condition. $800. Call 756 6101, ask tor Joe Smith
SINGLE MATTRESS, box spring, bed rails, clean, good shapo. $36 75f73P4attrS.-
STEREOCITY
Now open featuring Marantz-Sansui-Sharp-and other brands. Wa offor quality components and match systems at discount prices. Financing available. Call 757-0451, located 2808 East lOth
A Division of Furniture World
STEREO SYSTEM. MCS separate components. Receiver, turntable, tape deck, 2 speakers, like new.
7?T3yiI
5^?x.m"a't?ly0f?78*-'.^t
and air condition. 220 current. Price $135. New Independent WarehouM 7S6W17
USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re frigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb-ino, eta eloctrlcal Mfvlca. 75^9333.
USED FILING CABINET, legal size; used overhead pro|ector, bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk, secretarial chair. C^all 758 3761
SohH y757 iT9Tday$7
. 15' REFRIGERATOR - frost (xood condition. 756-5577 attar
8mm prolector
WASHER, 880. 2 Mated Mka, 830. 1 SMted bike, $30. Mfrlgorator, $30. 74677^4,
WASHER/DRYER combination. 8250. Call 355 2340 anytime
WATER BED, Q - bookcase with mirror, 6 drawers, semi waveless. Sacrifice. 756-4645.
WATER BED maHress, liner, heat Sacrifice. 752 5020.
rjiTOnS?iei^rc,Siit%;'
8100. 758^777aHar 2p.m. _
if you'ro not using your exorcise equipment, sell It tnis winter in these columns. Call 752-6166.
18,000 BTU air conditioner. Used 4 months. Askliio 8375.758-0682
____
19" PORTABLE COLOR TV Excellent condition. Call 756-7066
ofttr?;.
2 FISH COOKERS, assembled burners only, 825 each. 115 volt electric welding machine, $60. Cal Oft8f9.7a
Salt your used televisin the Classified wayrCall 752 6166.
25" ZENITH Chromacolor II Floor conMle. Perfect working condition. 8175. 756 5344
3 TON CENTRAL air conditioner unit. Chrysler air temparafura. ExIHtlt conOItloo C9H.744
COPPERTONE Kelvinator stove. Good condition, $100. Norga refrigerator, 17 cubic foot, never frost, 8100. Porch swing nogotia-l7lf.7S434V9>t9f4
5 HORSEPOWER rldliM ?6"(;vf,|iK9h9P.|ir M
mower,
7444969.
5,000 BTU WHIRLPOOL air con ditonar, 8100. A8ast, booms. Mil and IHIngs for Sunflsh, 875. 5 piKO
drum sat, 840. 4 horsepower garden tiller good engine, frame, drive, etc. Good for parts only, 835. Call
756 9350 after 5 p.m.
075 AAobitc Homes For Sale
ALL NEW AND just for you, 1983. 2 bedroom, plywood floors, sheetrock walls, fulW furnished and decorated, all for a low down payment and less than 8130 month. 756-9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 0YMS8. gfMflylt
ALL NEW QAKWOOOS reduced tor July "Red Tm" Mie. Prices on all new Oakwooo homes at our mIos centers In Greenville and Wilson have been slashed. Call or stop by today I Greenville 756-5434, Wilson 291 7>50._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR
SCREENS& DOORS
C 1 h iiptoii CO
or maybe youre thinking about a family car--think Plymouth Reliant.
Plymouth Reliant
9.8% APB
or
Up to $750.00 cash rebate (on selected vehicles)
NOW You CAN Afford Americas Most Beautiful Driving Machines!
Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot,
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
NOAAONEYDOWN
July Special Only SINGLE WIDE....,5 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,W5 (Loaded)
Anything of Value In Tra^ BMts. Horsai^
FINANCE AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRADEWINO FAMILY HOUSING 705 West (Sreanvlllt BouleyaoL
98W*3eWT9TT-TW Wa_W
NOAAONEYDOWN VA1M% Financing
, double wide 3 bedroom, 2 b^.
New doubi
>er month, r^iwu rrir. v
Tiim'fffS&MES
630 West Gre^le Boulevard 756-0191
houM type sidng,'shTMl# i' electric. Paymants of itM than 8245 ^r month. >IM FHA and convan
NO A80NEY DOWN Two day delivery. Homes. 7M-0333.
nvllle
FAAAILY HOUSING
Stop In and fash
why we are the
irowing Mobile
Home
756^4833
late. Call yommv 7M 7115. 758-8733.
UNIQUE OFFER moblla horn#, 12x74, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, underpinned, no lot rent, cent-iletely set up on attractive country assume
pletely set up on attn lot. Pay low equity oavmenls. Call 746-231
I3 anytime.
7S47138.
108.01
We re selling all our, usad hott^ near cost fnrough July 79 with paymants as low $108.01. Cal 6131 (collact) today tor dettiH^
12.75% FINANCING M MlacM homas. Call Connar Homat, 756-
cm.
95900. 7S9 U79.
14 WIDES for as low ai $170,par month. Call or coma by Art Dallano
HomM. 756 9841.
$15,327.00
New 70 X 14 Aquarius Home. 3 bedrooms, 1'/^ baths, fully turnishad, HUD certltl^ F^ de livery and sat up. Call TrI County Homes at 756^)ig(cotl8<t) now!-
1969 FRONTIER Partially
furnished. $3900.752-440? ifluA-
1972, 12x52, Halteras. Fully
furnished. Excellent condition. S5W Cell 752 Tffl...
1972 12 X M PARK MANOR 2 bedrooms. I full bath, living room, dining room, partially furnish^. One air window unit. Must sail I 85.300 neootlabla. 746-2784.
1975 CONNER, 12x65. 2 badrooms, 1 bath, unique kithcen/dlning
Gtntr*! air Blvt f xtnt 3,Ml
1978 CAROLINA 14x70, 3 bedrooms, lVi baths, partly turnishad. Sat up In PinawoodMobila Park in Aydan. Prlcanaootlable.746 2478.
1979 14x60. 2 badroom. 1 bath, soma equity and assume payments of SIM. Call Lawranca at Art Dallano Hoffiei. 794^41.
1981 12x60 CONNOR - Fumlshad. 8800 down and taka up paymants of 9194,7?. 744-4429,
1982 TOWN ANO COUNTRY, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, furnlslMd, small equity and assuma loan. Call 756 4376 or 7S6 1401.
1983 14' WIDE HOMES Paymants as low as 8148.91. At Grssnvilla's voluma dMiar. Thomas AAobila Horn# Salat, North AAamorial Oriva
KirffH-frggUii-Wrt. pt)9<it 792^,
1984 REDMAN doublawlda. Microwave, ste^. paddle fan, firaplaca, gardan tub, storm windows, maionltt and thlMla roof
with 5 year warranty. $25, Lawranca or Frank at Art Homas, 756 9841.
24X52 USED doublwide. Muft tee to believe. Call Lawranca or Frank at ArlT)ellep9H<WW~756:a4l,._
3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME for
Mie. Price naaotlable. 752-9978._
075 /Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance
the best coverage for lets nwn^. Smith Insurance and RMlty, 752-
mL_
077 Musical Instrumants
UPRIGHT PIANO, racondltionad and ref lnlshed'^lT756D72t.
USED PIANOS ANO OR6/UIS Yamahas, Wurlitzars, ate. Tn# Music Shop. Greanvilla Squara
UlED PIANOS buy and mIs. Piano lanPittrlWi 2-4W2
"2SL_
m
sporting Goods
CASTER SURFBOARD 6x4". Single fin with hMsh. Excellent t9f1dltl9P.9t,794}M_
062 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: female black cat, soma gold and white mixed, in (.lub Pines. 754.042.1:
LOST: 9 week old female Golden Retriever, no collar, white tip on tail, in vicinity^of Rotary Street. R8YY8rd()ftica,79t-74g,.
BEDDING 81WATERBEOS
Claaranca Sale. Save over one half. Next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2424.
091
BuslnasaSarvlcts
FREE ESTIA8ATES, roofing. sMIng and painting. Gary Jonas, Paint PrW, 758 413._
093
OPPORTUNITY
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT
tpr Mia by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30
seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, soma owner financing. Call Gary
Slnli ........
hTH??rlsTcorTnc'1?iS!tl5'i
Marketing Comultants. Serving the Southaastarn United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights
7934915,_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HELP WANTED
WANTED: 1 Asphalt Paver Operator. 2 As^t Roller Operators. 2 Asphalt Screed Operators. 2 AsphaH Rakers. 1 Asphalt Distributor Operator. Must have experience.
Apply to:
mtis CmnniN Cl.
BeNForhfioad JacksomHlie, N. C.
An Equd OpporliinHy bnploysr
Immediate Opening! FREE ROOM 8( POSSIBLE PART-TIME JOB FOR CLEANOUT, * MALE ECU STUDENT.
CaH For Mervlow AppeliHiiieiil
752-210t
Don WKkaraoa
9
093 OPPORTUNITY
OWN YOUR OWN Jean Sportsvvear, Infant Preteen. Ladies Applet, Combination, accessories or Ouality Childrens Furniture Store National brands. Jordache, Chic, Lee, Levi, Vanderbilt, Izod, Gunne Sax, Calvin Klein, Esprit, Zena. Ocean Pacitic, Brittania, Ev^Picone, Healthtex, 300 others
i.*i^i i ivvrfiv, rivoiiniex, juu pTners. S7.900 to S24.S00. inventory, airfare, training, fixtures, grand opening etc Mr Kosteckv (501) 3?7 8031.
TO BUY OR SELL a business. Breakers. 401 W First Street. 752
095 PROFESSIONAL
SHj/tfNPrjyVEEP Gid Holloman
iZ. ^ vjiu rruiiuirian.
North Carolina s original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or nlghf. 753 3503. Farmville
Want to Mil livestock? Run Classified ad for quick response
100
REAL ESTATE
TOWNHOMES for sale Located near University on wooded lots The units consists of 2 bedrooms, 1' j baths, firwlace, and large decks Contact Russell Fleming at days 756 3453. nights 750 8363
Searching tor the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day
102 Commercial Property
COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000
square feet with 5400 carpeted for ott
office space 12 month lease re quired Call Clark Branch. Real tors, 756 6336 or Ray Holloman
104 Condominiums For Sale
LEXINGTON SQUARE. 2 bedrooms. 1 year old. FHA 235
assumable loan. Phone 756 7935.
109 Houses For Sale
BELVEDERE Three bedrooms and two baths, beautifully land scaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Several quality features 60's Call 756 3837 after 5 p.m., except weekends.__
DON'T THROW IT away! Sell it for cash with a fast action Classified Ad!
BY OWNER Remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch near Eastern Ele
mentary and parks. Fireplace, large kitchen, den and dining room, privacy fenced back yard with pool and deck $59,999 99 758 1355 before
privacy fenced back yard with pool
7 30 am after 9:15 pm anytime Synd^y
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. 7Sir27S0 or 975 2688.
BY OWNER Country home with aluminum siding on acre lot. Central heat. 2 bedrooms, 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
shi
(Ideal for workshop), 2 story storage building. Approximately 4 miles from Greenville on County Home Road. 756-3432._
EASTWOOD 4 bedrooms. 2 full baths, wooded lot on dead end street. Den with fireplace $57,900. Call Aldridge & Southerland. 756 3500 _
FOR SALE BY OWNER Two
bedroom townhouM on wooded lot Cedar siding with deck. Owner
transferred. $45,000. Call days njflht$75^ 9969
FOR SALE BY OWNER A com
fortable 1500 square foot house at 506 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 wace Ideal for students or famify Priced well under $50,000 wilt
excellent financing available. Can be SMn during mosf daylighf hours
by simply ringing door bell. This offer expires Monda
ay, July 25.
HERE'S ALL YOU have to do Call fhe classified department with your ad for a still good item and you'll make some extra cash! Call 752 6166
If you're taking a last-minute sum- i.fa----
mer vacation, fake along extra cash
by Mlling some of the articles^ou
don't need. Sell them fast wit Classified ad. Call 752 6166
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
YOUR AD COULD BE
WORKING
FOR YOU IN THIS
SPACE ^-
ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED
109
Houses For Sale
HARDEE ACRES Loan assump fion 10% FHA Excellent location. :
Mini II# fO rn^ tAWMVMi iwvwiivii. w
bedrooms. I' z baths, large lot, 2 out buildings, country kitchen and den. $42.5(fo Call Aldridge &
Southerland. 756 3500.
HICKORY POINT 4 bedroom house on river front property with lots of trees. Houm needs work
Great fishing, deck with new bulk head SioTC down, assume
mortoaoe (301) 530 6169,
HOUSE FOR SALE by owner 3 bedrooms. Located on Mumford Road, beside VFW 2 large lots. Call 758 2681
LARGE 4 BEDROOM house. 500 W 4th St.. recently redecorated. Ideal for large family. Gas heat. $440 per month. Lease and deposit required. Nooets Call 756 52l7or 355 ~
LOAN ASSUMPTION If you've been looking for a 3 bedroom, 2 bath home on a wooded lot in a quiet neighborhood, this could be "ir'. If you ve been looking for a good loan assumption, this IS ' it". 8% assumable loan with a balance of
^proximafely $41,000. Lower 60's. For '
or more details, call Alita Carroll at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 8278 for more information.
LOVELY HSTORIC HOME 6
bedrooms. 3 baths Spacious modern kitchen. Screened porch. Ap iraisal priced with owner tinancii
firaisal priced with owner tinancing o qualified buyer. $55,000. Scotland Neck Les Riley Real Estate.
1 798 7461.
NEW LISTING-COUNTRY A two bedroom, two bath home in the country on SR 1755. Foyer with parquet floor, great room with fireplace, ceiling fan. central air, nice. $53,900. Duffus Realty Inc., 756 5395_
NEW LISTING FAIRLANE
Possible loan assumption. Three bedrooms, I'j baths, foyer, living room, tamily room, carport. Nicely landscaped. $52,500. Duffus Realty Inc.. 756 5395._
NEW LISTING Charming 3 bedroom home in excellent condi tion situated on large corner lot. Garage, deck, and patio. Call for complete details on this lovely home for only $49,900 Esfate Realty Company, 752 5058, nights 752 364/ or 758 44
NEW LISTING, AYDEN This older home features 3 bedrooms and 1 bath downstairs and a partially tinished upstairs with room for 2 bedrooms and 1 bath. The large yard, convenient location and 18 X 26 garage are other good features about this property. $27,500 Call Alita Carroll at Aldritte 8. Southerland, 756 3500 or 756 827b for more information.
NEW OFFERING Beautiful con temporary, offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sunken great room with fireplace, kitchen and dining room. VA loan assumption with $8998.73 down. Payments $491.75. PITI $58.000. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655.
ROBERSONVILLE Handsome two story meticulously maintained 3 bedroom, 2 bath home (1920). hot house and 2 outbuildings, each with
115
Lots For Sale
ORCHARD HILL Subdivision. Four beautiful lots for sale by owner. lOOO
so. ft. minimum building size. VA FHA approved. $10.000 fir lof . Call 75^6715 after 5.
THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10.500. Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details._
1,^ TO 5 ACRES, Highway 264 South, Aytten Griftgn area and_Hi^hway 33
South. Call 756 2682 or 757 Qj
1 LARGE LOT (</> 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^i^ht Realty 756 3220, nights
117 Resort Property For Sale
PAMLICO BEACH waterfront. 5 Gi
bedrooms, 3Vj baths. Great view.
good neighbors, well-kept property for immediate occupancy. Call to
day! $80.000. Les Riley Real Estate. 798 7461
WINTERIZED HUNTINGand fish ing lodge on 6.6 acres eastern
Canada 2700 square foot electricity.
well, septic, modern kitchen, frontage beautiful Miramichi Bay. $38.000 Les Riley Real Estate, 798 7461._
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE at
Pamlico Beach. 150' pier, boat lift. Cozy, quiet place. Call 355 2544.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 75 4413 between 8 and 5._
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Opei day Friday 9 5 Call 756 9933.
n Mon
121 Apartments For Rent
BEDROOM, IV} bath duplex, len with dining area, appli s. hookups, convenient loca
A 2 Bl
kitchen
anees, hookups, c tion. $285. 7^7716 after 6 p m. or weekends.
AVAILABLE LATE JULY New 2
.....n SI
bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. Range, refrigerator, dishwasher, and hookups. $310. Couples pre ferred. Lease and deposit. No pets. 756 4746_
AZALEA GARDENS
bath. Large, back-fenced corner Lei ^
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.
I Frost free refrigerators
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
~ li----------
baths. Owner financing to qualified buyer. $110,000. Les Riley Real Estate, I 798 7461
UNIVERSITY CONDO - 2
bedrooms, iVz baths, all appliances.
complete carpenting, drapes, and laii
other custom features. Offered below market value to settle estate. Call 756 5058
WONDERFUL OLD (1860)
Victorian on 3 A beautifully land scaped. 5 bedrooms, 3 bafhs. Owner transferred. $49,000. Scotland Neck. Les Riley Real Estate, 1 798 7461
1SOO SQUARE FEET plus large porch left ot a burned house. All
hew shingles for fop furnished. 75 524T
Easy to move. $3700.
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living
room. 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop.
able
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 0144 or
M _
111 I n vestment Propeiiy
SEVEN 1 bedroom units with
fireplace near University 3 years
old ' and fully leased. nights
756 3453,
fs 756 8363
days
TWO BEDROOM house near Uni versify. Needs minor work done. Priced mid $30's. Call days 756-3453, nights 756 8363_
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them for cash with a
Classified Ad.
115
Lots For Sale
CHERRY OAKS Heavily wooded. 156 foot road frontage Gloria Street. $14,900. Call Tommmy, 756 7815, 758 8733
EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL
lots from $9,000 $12,500 Call W G
Blount & Associates, 756 3000.
LYNNDALE LOT 1 of the last. Call 355 2220._
ONE ACRE LOT between Ayden and Griffon on State Road 1110. Call 756 2682._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
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, IVz baths, washer dryer hookup, heat
washer - dryer hookup, heat pump, efficient. No pets. $310 per month. 752 2040, 756 8^._
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IVj baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, he '
una, 1 house and POOL. 752 1557
washer dryer hook ups. laundry
room, sauna, tennis court, due
COOL
CONDOMINIUMS
with monthly payments lower than vaili
rent! Units available at Brookhill, Cannon Court, Twin Oaks, Treetops
__ _ __ iqp;
and Shenandoah. Call today tor more details. Owen Norvell at
758 6050 or 756 1498, WII Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029.
MOORE & SAUTER no South Evans 758-6050
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom larden and townhouse apartments.
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
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NEED MONEY FAST??
Call or Come by:
NATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY 300-A PLAZA DRIVE 756-8100
(ALL LOANS SUBJECT TO OUR LIBERAL CREDIT POLICY)
QUALITY PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILES
1982 Ford Escort GL Wagon
14,000 mUes. Hkaiww
*6995
1981 Buick Skylark
Skktmt matalHc, V-6, Air condltlofwd, Automatic, low mUoago.
*5995
1980 Dodge D-50 >port Truck
MOd, Rally wtiaels, condltlonod, sun , camper top and
'4695
1979 Volkswagen Bus
T pMMf^Bere, 4 apeed
AM-FM atareo, ak condh lloiMd.ararefind.
'5995
1982 Mazda RX-7
conditioning,
Black, Air AM/FM Stareo, 22,000 mUea. Mint condition
MO,495
1981 Volkswagen Diesel Truck
Sandatone metallic. 4 speed, air conditioned, 1 owner
5995
1980 Volkswagen Diesel Truck
White, 40,000 miles, air conditioned, LX model, camper top, tike new.
*4994
1979 Toyota Clica
Brown metallic, 1 owner, air conditioned.
*4795
1982 Volkswagen Rabbit Diesel
4 door. Air conditioned, leatherette Interior, AM/FM stereo, Sunroof.
5995
1981 Volkswagen Rabbit
4 door. Gas, 4 speed. Slate Gray metallic, air condi-Honed, 44,000 miles, good tiras, well maintained
*5695
1980 Volkswagen
Dasher Diesel
2 door, air conditioned, Beige with Brown lealherattte i Interior, 41,000 miles, \Excellsnt condition.
*4695
1979 Pontiac Sunbird
Air condltlonod.
automatic, 41,000 actual miloa, like new. t owner. Reduced to
3295
1981 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme
2 door, brown, loaded with options.
6995
1981
Datsun210
2 door, 4 speed, sunroof, 33,000 miles. Good transportation.
*3695
1980 Volkswagen Rabbit
2 door, air condllionad, AM radio.
*3995
Immediate delivery &en the spot financing.
Many others to choose from No reasonable offer refused
loe Pecheles Volkswagen, Inc.
Greenville Blv(j. 756-1135
Serving Greenville To The Coast For 18 YearsThe Daily ReHector, Greenville, N.C.-Thursday, July 21,1983-23
121 Apartments For Rent
DUPLEX APARTMENTS in Shenartdoah area at Shiloh Drive
and Alice Drive available August 1. $365 per month. Call Mrs. Lu 527 642 or 523 1078.__
DUPLEX APARTMENT for rent Brand new!! 101 T<*y Circle. $275
per month. Phone 522
By Cli 8T
DUPLEX FOR RENT, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 apartments available, $250 each. Located 402 Biltmore Street, 756 2488 days; 756 2088 nights.
EFFICIENCIES 1 or 2 beds, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates. Call 756 5555. Herltaoe Inn Motel
FURNISHED APARTMENT for
rent. Within walking distance of colleoe and downtown Call 756 4345.
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
IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances furnished NO children, no pets. Deposit and 'all isa 5C
lease. $210 per month. Call 756-5007.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden
apartments. Carpeted, raime, 'rigerator, dishwasher, disposal md cable TV Conveniently located
to shopping center and schools. Located |usfoff 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 352544 or7S6 048V._
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 5()% less
than comparable units), dishwash
er. washer/dryer hook-ups, cable
TV.wall-to-walf carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9-5 Saturday 1 -5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756-5067
NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 2 bedrooms. IV} bafhs. No pets. 752-3152 or 752 6715, ^ik lgr Jghnpr Bryant
NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE, 2
bedrooms, 1 mile from hospltal-med school. Really nice. $300. Deposit, lea, 825 4931
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apartments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish
washer, refrigerator, range, dis pqsal includea We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza
and University. Also some furnished apartments available
756-4151
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
GRIFTON AREA 2 and 3 bedroom
apartmOTts. Cmtral air.^ca^t and
drapes. Call 524 4239or 524 .
ONE BEDROOM apartment Near
... _
carr^us. No pets. $215 a month
ONE BEDROOM, furnished
apartments or mobfle homes for rent. Contact J T
Williams. 756 7815.
or Tommy
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, looern appliances. $210. Call 758-
3311
RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO,
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live ABLE TV
Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
zrsadayat
75-4M0
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryer
hook-ups. cable _ TV,
house, playground, Near I
ryer
club
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
TWO BEDROOM aoartments Call Smith
No pets Insurance Realty, 752-2754
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS
Near ECU Most utilities included.
$275 up. Available immediately. 756-5491 gr 7-7^ Itafyg 9g JB.
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, iVz bath townhouses. Available now. $29S/month.
9 to 5 Monday- F r iday
756*7711
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom. 1'/} 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.
2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen
applianes furnished, totally electi
electric, $325 month. Call 756-7647.
2 BEDROOM townhouse, carpeted.
central air and heat, modern appli anees, washer/dryer hookup, $z95 108 Cedar Court, 758 3311._
2 BEDROOM apartment. Central air, carpeted, appliances. $275 a month. Brvton Hills. 758 3311
704 EAST Third Street. 2 bedrogms furnished, 2 blocks from ECU
Stove, refrigerator. Lease and de posit. $260. 7S6 1888 9 to 5 weekday
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
122
Business Rentals
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or
office space. Arlington Boulevard,
3,000 square feet Only $3.60 per e foot. For more Information,
square foot. For more tnformaf call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348
VPit irf J
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 &
TCA iCAA.
Southerland Realty, 756-3500; nights Don Southerland 756 5260._
4,000 SQUARE FEET Upstairs downtown Greenville. Sth Street entrance. Call 756 5007
127 Houses For Rent
FOR RENT in Ayden. Nice house and yard. Call 746 674.____
HOUSE FOR RENT in Winferville 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living room, front and back porches. $250 per month. Deposit required. 758-4128._
HOUSE IN the country. Approxi mafely 8 miles past the hospital References required. 523 3562
2615 MEMORIAL DRIVE 3 bedroom, central heat, air condi
tioner, garage, nice neighborhood. Families only. Lease and deoosit. $295. 756 1888 4 to 5 weekdays.
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath house, large
fenced-in yard. 113 Westhaven Road, across from Carolina East
Mall. $500 month. Call days 758 6200 or nights 756-6066._
138
Rooms For Rent
ROOMS AVAILABLE In pleasant
shaded neighborhood 3' z blocks
from university 2 medium sized and 1 large enough to use as living room, bedroom, and den Limited kitchen facilities. Utilities included Share bath with 2 other women Older or graduate students pre ferred 110 South Woodlawn
Avenue. 752 0495 after 5 p.m
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE roommate to share trail er $200 month, utilities included 757 1377 after 5_
144
Wanted To Buy
WANT TO BUY TRACTORS 8N
Jubilees 601. 801. and 5.000 Ford Call 758 4669atter6p m_
SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges. Across from ECU $25 per week includesall 752 7278
SINGLE FURNISHED room in nice home near Pitt Plaza for discreet
male student or young bus! nessman. $125 per month Call
756 5667 after 5 p m
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE R(X)MMATE needed Non smoker to share 2 bedroom
apartment. Prefer 1st or 2nd year nursing student at PCC or ECU Call 753 4389 anytime
RESPONSIBLE ROOMMATE wanted, country living. Lots of room. 10 minutes from Greenville $100 Plus halt. 7M 0344 or 746 6048
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up. No pets, no children. 758 0745 or 756 9491
12 X 60 TWO BEDROOM furnished , washer, dryer, air conditioning. Good location. No pets. 756 0801 aftgr 5gm
3 BEDROOMS, with 2 baths, washer/dryer. Semijzrivate lot. Cjill^ffgrSwggktlaYs, 7^ 7317
135 Office Space For Rent
(X3WNTOWN Just off mall Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse, call 756-0041 or 756-3466.
FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or commercial. 604 Arlington Boulevard. 756 8111._
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T orXsi
fommv Williams, 756 7815.
5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Pit
ing. Call 758
lenty of park-
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.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
C.l. Liipton, Co.
CUTGRASS
nRSTOASS
You can keep buying lawn mowers Or get tiie SN.^PPER Hi-Vac' A'irst-class investment Yesmvislment A SNAPPER IS put together to slay together For a lone.
and loyal t'.ne And no other ^
mower is engineered tike the SNAPPER to perform so mas-lertully The High Vacuum cutting lecture is a SNAPPER patent Found only m our walk and riding mowers And delivering splendid lookhig evenly cut lawns every lime The Hi-Vac riding rrower is
ready for all seasons with an amazing ime of attachments Before you buy a mere mower find out why the SNAPPER lawn machine is in a class by ilsell Ycu II find it only ji a profess onal SNAPPER dealer Most ot ail you II tind this one shrewd investmei t will save you face ime and tempe over the ^eauForcjrmoney It s the only way to roll in the green stuff
CLOSEOUT
SALE
NOWIN
PROGRESS
TIRE ^ CENTERI
WEST END SHOPPING CENTER Phone 756-9371 Open Sat. Ill 5 PM
729 DICKINSON AVENUE
Phone 7S2-M17 Open Sal. til 5 PM
Budget Minded
Radial Recaps 4 tor AR78X13 Whitewall
sggoo
FR78X14 Whitewall 92 GR78X15 Whitewall 97
(Good Casing Roqulrod)
Mounting & Balancing Included
All Other Sizes On Sale, At Tremendous Savings
COUPON
RADIATOR FLUSH Includes Up To 2 Gallons Of Antifreeze Or Summer Coolant
$-1488
Expires July 30,1983
T
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
COUPON
AIR CONDITION
SERVICE
Includes Freon A Labor
*21
S8
Expires July 30,1983
WCOOD^EARi
ITIRE ^CENTERI
Open Saturdays Til 5 P.M.
West End Shopping Center Phone 756-9371 Open 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Fr. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00
729 Dickinson Avenue Phone 752-4417 Open 8:00-8:00 Mon.-Frl. Sat. 8:00 to 5:00
Msr
RCXJMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom brick house in Ayden Call Angela 757 4736 before 3 p m . 746 4456 after 3 30 p m_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WANT TO BUY ' z acre of land m a radius ol 8 miles from Greenville or Winferville area Contact Louis Pail, 756 9078_
WOULD LIKE TO BUY ping pong fable Call 756 6820
148
Wanted To Rent
RESPONSIBLE WORKING female and toilet traiized cat looking for l bedroom apartment 757 3709
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton. Co.
BROWNIE MOTOR SALES
Corner of 14th Street And Farmville Blvd.
Brownie Tripp
Herman Hill
752-0117
1979 Chevrolet Blazer 1979 Pontiac Wagon 1981 Ford Thunderbird 1977 Mercury Comet 19t5Volk^i9tuO Rabbit
1977 Toyota SR-5 Pickup
1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
1980Datsun280-ZXGLP
1980 Chevrolet Citation
NOTICE
Do You Need Small Repair Jobs Done Around The Home Or Business.
GIVE ME A CALL I DO IT ALL!
Jimmy Hughes 757-3121
POSITIONS
OPEN
Regional Acceptance Corp., an eastern North Carolina consumer and automobile finance company is opening a new branch with new facilities in Ayden, N.C.. We are In need of a branch manager, an assistant manager, and two cashiers. If interested, please write a letter of resume giving experience and salary requirements to:
Regional Acceptance Corp. 3004 S. Memorial Drive Greenville, N.C.
No Phone Calls Please
nmmuse m.
Franchise Enterprises. Inc . a major franchisee of Hardee's has several openings in the Data Processing Department. These openings are available as a result of expansion and offer significant career potential.
Programmer: Candidate should be a graduate of a technical school or college and posspss a working knowledge of RPG Actual. RPG programming experience a plus.
Programmer/Analysis: Candidate must have 2 to 4 years experience in RPG programming and systems development. Hands-on experience with payroll and accounting systems a plus. Degree not mandatory but helpful.
If you are looking for a new environment, challenging work and the opportunity to get in on the ground floor, please forward your resume, complete with salary history, to:
Director of Data Processing Franchise Enterprises, Inc.
P.O. Box 1828
Rocky Mount, North Carolina 27801
THE
REAL
ESTATE
CORNER
FOR SALE BY OWNER SPACIOUS HOME
BETHEL
Two story, good condition, landscaped yard, 4 bedrooms, study, den, formal dining and living rooms. IVz baths. Corner lot, large storage house. $49,900.
Telephone 825-1905
9 to 5 PM only
LOT FOR SALE
CHERRY
OAKS
GLORIA STREET
Heavily Wooded
*14,900
756-7815 758-8733
TIPTON & ASSOC.
Under construction in lovely Club Pines. 18lh Century Georgian, features 3 bedrooms. ZVz baths, large greatroom and over 2000 square feet. Mid$90's
Under construction in Lynndale. outstanding S bedroom, 3 lull bath home featuring all formal areas and large double garage. SIOO's.
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 lor 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
Nlgms. RodTugwell ISMSOZ
MACSWOODS RESIDENCE FOR LEASE WITH OPTION
Rthx in hoHW wHIi rustic chnnn in one of Woskington's finest ntigbborinodt. 2 or 3 bedrooms, 1 Vi boths, tpocioui kitchon ond din-in| areas, comfortable tamily area with large fireplace, sunroom, covered porch. All on o quiet wooded lot. SS5,000. 1 year loose with option available. (919) 828-3848 oveningi and weekends.
Goreville Residents Learning To Live With Guns
By TERRI COLBY
Associated Press Writer
GOREVILLE, 111 (.API -A black leather holster strapped to her side, Sandy Lively stood on the firing range. On command, she lifted a pistol, locked her arms tight in front, squinted and squeezed the trigger.
It was the first time in her 35 years that she had fired a gun. But in Goreville. a southern Illinois town too small for even one stoplight, guns are a must. ' t
Goreville is one of only eight towns in the United States with an ordinance requiring residents to own firearms, according to the Second Amendment Foundation. an anti-gun-control organization based in Bellevue. Wash As in the other towns. Gorevilles law was prompted by the nations strictest gun control law, passed almost two years ago in the Chicago suburb of Morton Grove
And. as in the other towns, the ordinance isn't scrupulously enforced. But residents say thats not the point.
The whole town of Goreville is shoging everybody else we don't want to be a Morton Grove. We want to have our guns," said Rebecca Dorsey, who helped teach Mrs. Lively and other residents how to use a gun after the ordinance was passed.
Says Mrs. Lively. In Morton Grove, they took away their rights."
The law hasnt made much difference in Goreville. a quiet town of 1,20ft where folks hunt rabbits as often as their big-city counterparts hunt parkingspaces ,\o one has been arrested for not owning a gun, said .Mayor Gary Vaughn In fact, he said, most people owned guns before the law was passed.
Theyre used to guns," said Mrs. Lively, recalling that members of her family often went hunting when she was a child.
Eight women and four men signed up for the firearms class sponsored by the village earlier this year. There wasnt much crime before the law was approved in December and hasnt been much in the seven months the ordinance has been on the books, but the proximity
of two prisons makes residents a bit uneasy. The town sits a few miles south of the maximum-security federal prison at .Marion and a few miles north of the state prison at Vienna.
When they passed the gun law (the prisoners) knew we had guns." she said. Now with the teaching, theyll know we know how to use one "
Another student, 68-year-old Ray Steams, says he's owned guns all his life but took the class as a refresher course. He approves of his towns ordinance, he says.
Because 1 think the day has come when people are going to have to be able to protect themselves. . Its got to where anymore a person isnt even safe in his own home."
But gun control opponents readily acknowledge that the ordinances are more than a response to fear.
"What they are is symbolic of the peoples dead-serious intent not to allow son|ebody to deprive them of what they see as their God-given constitutional rights." said Doug Zimmer, spokesman for the Second .Amendment Foundation The .Morton Grove ordinance bans the sale and possession of handguns, exempting only police officers and licensed antique gun collectors.
Zimmer says opposition to the .Morton Grove ordinance - in the form of mandatory gun ownership laws - is a growing national trend.
, "There are more towns getting involved all the time," he said.
Of the eight towns approving such laws, three are in Illinois - Goreville: Palmer, a central Illinois village of 200: and Pittsburg, a southern Illinois community of about 600.
The first town to pass such a law was Kennesaw, Ga., north of Atlanta. Since that ordinance was approved in March 1982, seven other towns - the three in Illinois; Hollister, Mo.. Franklin-town. Pa.; Chiloquin, Ore.; and Oak Park, Colo. - have adopted virtually identical laws, Zimmer said.
Paul Lavrakas. field director of the National Coalition to Ban Handguns, doesnt take the laws seriously. They are so broad
No Name Tags For This Summer Camp
ERIE, 111. (API - Nestled in a shady valley near this rural community is a summer camp with a twist - for one thing, the campers never have to sew name tags on their clothes.
Blue Lake Nudist Park has offered its 60 member couples the usual camp amenities for 11 years - spacious grounds, a swimming pool, volleyball and horseshoes. The only difference is, everybodys nude
At least 95 percent of the people who try it are uptight at first, said Bill, a cofounder, who during a recent interview at the camp asked that his last name not be used. They think everybody is going to be beautiful and perfect. Im fat and have scars. After 30 minutes you dont notice any more.
But going without clothes does have some disadvantages. The snack bar - the Bare Buns Bar - sells something called shoe pockets, a plastic container that can be attached to shoelaces.
Where else does a nudist
carry his keys'?" said Dick, another co-founder. And going bare isnt always practical, advocates admit.
When it gets cold out here we put clothes on, Bill said. Were nudists, but were not stupid.
Enzyme Strips Test Freshness
ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) -Enzyme strips already used in the chemical industry could give consumers an accurate reading of the freshness of perishable products, Cornell University scientists say.
The strips, which turn from green to yellow to red when temperatures get too warm for a product, are more reLiable than purchase-date tags, said Cornell graduate student Vikran Mistry, who worked with food science professor Frank Kosikowski.
Is Your Daily Reflector Delivery Okay?
We take particular pride in the efficiency of our carriers who deliver the Daily Reflector to your home.
If the doily delivery of your Daily Reflector is less than satisfactory, please tell us about it. Call our Circulation Department end we will do our best to work out the problem.
752-3952
Between 0:30 A.M. and 6:30 P.M. Weekdays and 8 'til 9 A.M. on Sundays '
they cant be enforced and dont mean anything, he said.
"They turned out to be balonev laws. Lavrakas
said in a telephone interview from Washington, its just a public relations gimmick. .. 1 always feel a sense of resentment that these are
treated with any seriousness.
Hie laws allow a number of exemptions, including one for people who oppose own
ing a gun because of moral, ethical or religious ck)ctrine or belief. And even staunch gun control foes say the laws arent inteiuted to force peo
ple to own guns.
"What they are doing is stating their position and stating it very strongly, and at the same time it makes a
point." Zimmer said. "It makes it very clear to the powers that be how the people of the area feel about gun control.
OUR
90
DAY
INTEREST
RATE
JUST LIKE PAYING CASH ... NO INTEREST OR FINANCE CHARGES ... PAY Vi ON PURCHASE ... PAY Vi 30 DAYS ...1/4 60 DAYS ...& Vi IN 90 DAYS ... PLUS SAVE 3% IN SELF DELIVERY ON PURCHASE OF $100.00 OR MORE.
iJOtlt'Ul
Our 44th Year
Fwrnitvrer Inc.
^nu6)fe(^^xlluiee
401 West 10th St.. Greenville 756-2513
SAVE *80 TO *90 ON SOLID PENNSYLVANIA CHERRY 18TH CENTURY TABLES BY NULL AND CRESENT SPECIAL PURCHASE
BUTIEBS
TEIAY
TABLE
RETAIL PRICE $280.00
SALE
PRICE
28 X 40 X17 H (Leaves Down) 20 X 32 X17 H (Leaves Up)
iCi
DROP LEAF COFFEE TABLE
$1 'TAOO
RETAIL PRICE $280.00
SALE
PRICE
lOV. X X171^ H (Leams Down) 34 V. X 49IS X17A H (Leaves Up)
*51.00 OFF LIST PRICE *90.00 TALL PEDESTAL FLOORLAMP WITH TRAY...
IN SOLID NEW ENGLAND PINE
SALE
PRICE
00
By George Bent. Decorative Shade. Pine Finish.
RETAIL PRICE $220.00. SAVE $80.00
OVAL END TABLE
SALE PRICE
22 X 27 X 23 H
COMMODE END TABLE WITH DRAWER
SALE $
PRICE
RETAIL PRICE $220.00
21/^x25M?x23H
TEA TABLE WITH TWO SLIDE OUT LEAVES
RETAIL
PRICE
$220.00
SALE
PRICE
$
21x42x17V4H
RECTANGULAR COFFEE TABLE
RETAIL PRICE $220.00
,S1/IA00
PRICE
17%x28x24/^H
30 INCH TALL J BRASS m FINISH TABLE LAMP
uuhudlli
RETAIL PRICE S5S.00
SALE
PRICE
$0750
RKTAIl PRICK 590.00
YOUR CHOICE 6 WAY OR DOWN BRIDGE FLOOR LAMPS
.SAIL PRICE
Pleated Shade. Antique Brass Finish. Three-Way Switch. Limited Quantities.
FAMOUS SERTAPEDIC BEDDING ON SALE
l^
s.
Regular*
On Sale
Twin
199^0
99Z
Full
249Z
124^
Queen
6irj
309L
King
799i^
399^^
*Nationallv Advertised Suggested Retail Price