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SPORTS TODAY
INSIDE TODAY
COMING SUNDAYFESTIVAL IN TRIANGLE?
A Raleigh attorney is mounting an effort to have the National Sports Festival held in the Triangle area. (Page 11)THE LEGISLATURE
State employees insurance premiums will be slightly Increased as a result of measure enacted Thursday by the General Assembly. (Page 15)
-A preview of the Pitt Community College departmental exhibits that will be on display July 28-30 at Carolina East Mall. -A photo-feature of Hammocks Beach State Park in Swansboro.
-Who will be the offensive backs for the ECU Pirates in 83?THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 156
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
GREENVILLE. N.C. FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 22. 1983
20 PAGES TODAY
PRICE 25 CENTS/Aosi Counties Expected Apply Tax Law
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Local government representatives predict that county commissioners will make quick use of a law enacted Thursday by the General Assembly authorizing a one-half cent sales tax increase.
The tax could generate $104.2 million this fiscal year and $135.4 million in 1984-05 for public school buildings, water and sewer projects and other capital spending needs. The law also clears the way for a motel room tax in five counties and three cities.
County commissioners may levy the tax increase immediately or they may put the question to voters in a referendum.
Ron Aycock, executive director of the North Carolina Association of County Commissioners, said the soonest counties could implement the tax increase probably would be
Oct. 1.
He said be expects about 25 counties to levy the higher tax by then. Aycock said some of the counties that already have expressed interest in raising the tax are Forsyth, Wake, Richmond, Craven, Mitchell and Alleghany.
By the time the General Assembly gets back (for the short 1984 session) at least 50 counties may have the tax, Aycock estimated.
I cant ima^e a single board of education that doesnt go to its commissioners and seek the half penny, said Gene Causby, executive director of the N.C. ^hool Boards Association.
He predicted that commissioners may be sympathetic to the app^s because school board members are likely to be joined in their requests by industry representatives and
chambers of commerce that want money to expand water and sewer facilities.
More than 100 cities in the state have had to hold off new industry because of limited water and sewer facilities.
The bill enacted Thursday was the result of a joint conference committee. The House voted 72-18 and the Senate voted 31-8 to approve the bill.
The compromise came from a House bill to give counties authority to raise the tax and use the money without restrictions and a Senate bill to raise the tax statewide and earmark all the money for schools or water and sewer projects.
Money generated by the one-half cent tax increase will be distributed according to peculation. Money from the existing 1 cent local sales tax is returned to the place where it was collected, a method which benefits large, metropolitan areas.
Under the new law, counties must use at least 40 percent of the additional revenue for public school buildings for the first five years and cities must earmark 40 percent for water and sewer projects. Those percentages drop to 30 percent for the following five years and then they are phased out completely.
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 Local Government Commission to waive the percentages if local needs do not fit within the outlined categories.
In addition, Mecklenburg County may levy a 3 percent room tax. The counties of Buncombe, Haywood, New Hanover and Forsyth and the cities of Ocean Isle Beach, Topsail Beach and Surf City may levy room taxes of up to 2 percent.
Tax Law Pleases Gaskins
Crime-Stoppers
Charles Gaskins, chairman estimated the county would
of the Pitt County Board of receive 63.2 percent of the
Commissioners, expressed total, while the city of
pleasure today that the General Assembly has approved a half-cent sales tax increase
Greenville would get about 3.1 percent for Ayden, 1.3
25.2 percent. Some other percent for Bethel, 3.3 per-
towns shares would include: cent for Farmville, 1.3 per
cent for Grifton, .28 percent for Simpson and 1.4 percent for Winterville.
to benefit local governments.
If the people want to vote for it, that certainly would be welcome, Gaskins said. Local governments truly need some help in tax revenues other than property taxes.
Under the new law, coun
ties could impose the tax after holding a public hearing or following approval of the proposition in a referendum.
Rate Of Inflation Holds At 0.2 Percent In Jun
Part of the revenue from the half-cent increase would be earmarked for local school construction on the county level, while part of the funds received by municipalities would go for water and sewer projects.
Saying the additional revenue could be placed to very good use in the schools, Gaskins said, In my opinion, the Board of Commissioners would call for a referendum. I say that in light of the fact that, so far as possible, the board has always let folks vote on matters such as this. The last 1 percent sales tax resulted from a referendum of the people.
County Manager Reginald Gray said if all 100 counties would levy the tax, local governments in Pitt would receive between $2.02 million and $2.04 million a year from the half-cent increase.
Based on population. Gray
By The Associated Press
Consumer prices rose 0.2 percent in June, holding inflation for the first half of 1983 to an annual rate of 2.9 percent, the Labor Department said today.
Inflation was restrained by the steepest decline in food prices in seven years, a drop of 0.3 percent in June.
Continued moderation of the Consumer Price Index gave economists fresh evidence that inflation for all of this year could match or fall below the 3.9 percent rate of last year, when recession held price increases to the lowest level in a decade. For the 12 months ended in June, consumer prices rose 2.6 percent.
Meanwhile, the economy gave signs of increased vigor.
The number of Americans filing first-time claims for jobless benefits fell to a two-year low in early Jhly after the economy surged ahead at an 8.7 percent annual rate in the second quarder, the government said Thursday.
The second-quarter increase in economic activity was more than triple the 2.6 percent annual rate in the first quarter, according to the Commerce Department report on the Gross National Product, which is a measure of the nations total output of goods and services after adjustment for inflation.
The economy is growing with more vigor than most economists predicted and this heartens us, President Reagan told a news conference. Vigorous growth is the surest route to more jobs, declining deficits and a future filled with opportunity for all our people.
figures leave us a little breathless.
Martin Feldstein, chairman of the presidents Council of Economic Advisers, said the GNP report is a good sign but warned that growth probably will not continue at that rate over a long period.
A growth spurt at this pace is a welcome indication that the recovery is on track, Feldstein said in a statement. Growth at this speed is typical of this phase of the recovery ... Of course, expansion at the recent rate cannot be expected to continue for more than a few quarters.
Jerry Jasinowski, chief economist of the National Association of Manufacturers, said the stunning ...
And Paul Volcker, apparently headed for a second term as Federal Reserve Board Chairman, warned
Thursday that record hi^ federal budget deficits still pose a threat to a lasting recovery.
The recovery doesnt have enough of an effect to eliminate the budget deficit problem, certainly for fiscal year 1984, which begins Oct. 1, Volcker told the Senate Banking Committee.
Later, the committee approved Volckers reappointment as Fed chairman and sent it to the full Senate, where approval also is expected.
Some 381,000 people filed initial applications for basic, 26-week, state-paid benefits in the week ended July 9, the Labor Department said. That was down from the 392,000 of the previous week, and it was the least since the 381,100 of the last week of May 1981.
CRIME STOPPERS MONEY -Jean Harper, representing the Pit* t-Greenville Board of Realtors, presents a check for $2,500 to Greenville
Police Chief Glenn Cannon and Sgt. Doug Jackson. The money will be used to begin funding for the new Pitt County Crime Stoppers program.
BySTUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer The Pitt-Greenville Board of Realtors has contributed the first money - $2,500 - to
the new Pitt County Crime Stoppers program.
It is seed money to get us started, Sgt. Doug Jackson of the Greenville Police De
partment said today. We hope the contribution will encourage others to donate.
(Please turn to Page 10)
Treacherous Thunderstorm Rolls Over County
ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer
Vicious lightning, heavy thunder and hail rattled many Pitt County residents
out of bed in the wee hours today as a treacherous thunderstorm moved through the area, bringing just enough rain to settle the
dust.
According to Malcolm Green, superintendent of the Greenville Utilities Electrical Department, the
utility system took a beating from the lightning.
We had some really heavy lightning strikes throughout the system, he
REFLECTOR
flOTLine
752-1336
Hotline gets things done for you. Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, Hie Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.
Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used.
EUSHA DOUGLAS BOOK?
I like your Strength for Today column so much and would like to know if this man has written any books. How can I find out.
We gave you the address of the features syndicate that supplies us this column. We also suggested that you call either a public library or a book store and ask them to check by author in Books in Print. This is probably the best way to discover whether there is a book by Elisha Douglas available. If there is, you can go ahead and have a local bookstore order it for you, if you like.
APPARENT WIND DAMAGE - Bruce Johnson of Taft Office Equipment Co. on Evans Street looks over part of a plate glass window that was
apparently blown out by high wind Thursday night during a thunderstorm. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)
said, some so heavy they destroyed a number of lightning arresters.
Green said a lightning arrester at the East Carolina Univeristy Medical School was demolished by sharp lightning, taking out one of GUCs circuits for about an hour and a half.
An arrester near Wachovia Computer Center was also blown away and took out a circuit that serves Carolina East Mall for a while, he said. We also had some small circuits on the west side of town (Greenville) that were out around 30 minutes.
Another storm in the southeastern part of the county, near Clayroot, caused what Green said were the systems largest outages. We had many fuses blown by lightning there, he said.
Other than the big lightning strikes we had lots of scattered outages from wind debris and trees on lines, he said.
Green said GUCs switchboard was jammed, preventing many customers from reporting outages. We received the first call at 1:56 a.m. and finished up about 8 a.m., he said.
Strong wind, unofficially clocked at 28 mph, also caused scattered damage across the county during the storm, including destruction of a plate glass window at Taff Office Equipment Co. in
Greenville. No official estimate of damage was available from the company.
The Department of Transportation this morning was removing two large trees that were blown into the road (Please turn to Page 7)
-A
WEATHER
Partly cloudy tonighi and .saiurday, 4(i percent chance of afternoon or evening thundershowers, low III upp<?r 70s tonight, Saturday high in 90s.
Looking Ahead
Variably cloudy Sunday through Tuesday with scattered thunderstorms mainly in afternoons. Highsin low 90s durilng period with lows in the 70s.
Inside Reading
Page 6 - Area items Page 10 - Obituaries Page 20 - In service
Couples Can Profit From Marital Tips
By Abigail Van Buren
* 1983 by Uninerul Press Syndicala
DEAR ABBY: After you published 10 tips for brides on how to have a successful marriage, a man requested 10 tips on how to be a good husband, and you accommodated him.
A few years ago, I clipped the enclosed Five Tips for a Happy Marriage author unknown. I hope you think theyre worth sharing.
JUUE IN LONG BEACH
DEAR JULIE: I do. And here they are:
1. Look not for perfection in your mate. You not fnd it and its just as well. Living with a saint could be very tiresome.
2. Let your love be stronger than your hate or anger.
3. Learn the wisdom of compromise, for it is better to bend a little than to break.
4. Believe the best rather than the worst. People have a way of living up or down to your opinion of them.
5. Remember that true friendship is the basis of any lasting relationship. The person you choose to marry is deserving of the courtesies and kindnesses you bestow on your Mends.
P.S. I am almost reluctant to ask the author to come forward. Lately when I have published an unsigned piece and asked the author to come forward, an alarming number of people have claimed authorship. This is baffling and discouraging. Whatever happened to integrity?
DEAR AEBY: Its surprising how few people know that infants cry during airplane take-of's and landings because they are in severe pain due to the change in air pressure.
Adults know enough to swallow to clear the passage of the eustachian tube, but infants do not.
If mothers would encourage infants to nurse (or suck on something even a finger), it would alleviate the pain. Some flight attendants suggest this to passengers when they board with infants. I wish all would.
CONCERNED M.D.
DEAR CONCERNED: Thanks for a helpful tip.
DEAR ABBY; My sister and I want to know if our brother is James David Collins, the third." Our grandfathers name was James Edward Collins, and his grandfather was James Andrew Collins. Our father is Dennis James Collins.
Is our brother correct in thinking that he is a third? Or is our mother correct in thinking he is not? Abby, please spell out in your column when a man is a second and third. We are all in disagreement here.
PERPLEXED APLENTY
DEAR PERPLEXED: If John Charles Jones is named after his fathr, who is John Charles Jones Jr., he would be John Charles Jones III.
A child named after his cousin, uncle or grandfather would be Hhe second. Again, the identical name must be used. Your mother is correct. Your brother is not the third. Neither is he the first to be confused by this rule.
If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.
Bridal Policy
The Daily Reflector will now publish engagement and wedding photographs of a bridal couple pictured together, or of the bride pictured individually.
A black and white glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcements. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12
on on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures i..ust be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.
Wedding write-ups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.
Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.
HOUSEWARES COME BACK
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) - After a 10 percent decline in housewares sales in 1982, the industry is expected to rebound with a 6 percent gain this year.
Thomas J. Albani, general
manager of General Electric Co. Housewares Operation, says he expects his operations sales to be up 9 percent, led by coffeemakers, broilers, can openers and electric knives.
HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH
Meeting At Carolina Country Day School
You Don*t Have To Worry
(Sunday Morning Message)
WELCOME VISITORS Call 756-3624 For Transportation
Sunday School Worship Service Sunday Evening Wed. Evening
10:00 AM 11:00 AM 6:00 PM 7:30 PM
Majority Of Women And Men Approach Problems Differently
By JUDY WATSON
TROY, N.Y.(UPI)-They risk setting off yowls of opposition from adamant women libbers. Nonetheless, a group of students at the all-female Emma Willard School are taking part in a study aimed at showing that most women approach problems very differently from men.
The study, spearheaded by Harvard ychologist Carol Gilligan, further tests her theory that women tend to think and react more in terms of interpersonal relationships - weighing the effects of their actions on others - while men tend more to follow abstract rules in deciding how to act.
Trudy Hammer, associate principal at the private girls school, said results after two years indicate two-thirds of the 72 sludents taking part in the study act more often from an ethic of care than from an ethic of justice.
In her book, A Different Voice, Ms.'Gilligan notes that of the two approaches.
only the one that stresses abstract rules and values independent behavior has traditionally been accepted and rewarded.
She cites the widely accepted work of Lawrence Kohlberg, who laid out six stages of moral development. At the most mature stage, i^le are supposed to make judgments purely on the basis of rules and universal principles.
A student of Kohlbergs at Harvard, Ms. Gilligan wondered why women almost never progressed beyond stage three, where goodn^ is associated with helping and pleasing others.
Ms. Gilligan began her studies by asking a group of men and women whether abortion was wrong and why. The next stage was to study moral development in teenage ^rls.
Participants in the Emma Willard study were interviewed, asked to write stories about four pictures they were shown, and asked in questionnaires how they
Keynote For Fall
THE NEW suit is one with a multibuttoned shorter jacket and streamlined skirt in rich chianti wool gabardine. Its added softeners: white Italian cotton blouse with foulard bow and bicolored magni-argyle sweater vest. (From Giuseppe.)
Dr.Nickelsen
Entertained
Dr. Julie Nickelsen, family physician, was honored at a farewell recq)tion held recently. The reception was given by parents of many of her deliveries.
Guests included many of the babies and toddlers.
Dr. Nickelsen is a faculty attending physician at East-ern Carolina Family Practice Center and will be practicing in California this fall.
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made choices on such tidies as roommates, courses and faculty advisors.
In the interviews, students were asked to describe themselves, describe how they resolved a moral conflict they had faced, and to give their definitions of morality, responsibility and person^ conflict.
As an example of the two approaches, Ms. Hammer cit^ Samantha, a s(^>bo-more who told of trying to decide whether to violate school rules and go drinking with friends. She applied a code of ethics to resolve the conflict.
Another student told of grappling over which friend to recommend for taking over her newspaper route -the girl who was most efficient, or the one she knew would continue the personal relationships with the dderly residents on the route.
"One group feels responsible for how their activities affect other people. The second groiq) says, Tf you do what the law says and others get hurt, its too bad, Ms. Hammer said.
The two voices actually correspond more to personality types than sex, Ms. Hammer said. It is estimated two-thirds of women and one-third of men can be grouped in the caring mode. That leaves half of the population speaking in one voice and half speaking in the other.
The interviews at Emma Willard have been conducted for two years under a grant from the Geraldine Rockefeller Dodge Foundation. Ms. Gilligan and the school have applied for funds for two additional years, to be able to trace the development of one class throu^ four years of school.
Meanwhile, Ms. Gilligan is attempting to duplicate the study at nearby Deerfield Academy in Greenfield, Mass., an all-boys high school.
Ms. Hammer concedes that the Emma Willard study focuses on a privileged group of girls. However, she said other work by Ms. Gilligan at a co-educational school in Boston and with black students at a Cambridge high school has produced almost the same results.
The implications, Ms.
Hammer said, are revolutionary for schools: Are girls being penalized for approachi^ problems and new material differenUy from boys? Should schocHs be discouraging the development of compassk and care? Shouldnt both approaches be taught and rewarded in classrooms?
Currently, Independence,
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor BUFFETLUNCH Carrot-ParsnipSoup Seafood Salad & Rolls Lemon Mousse 4 Iced Coffee CARROT-PARSNIPSOUP As prepared at Neuman 4 Bogdonoffs takenxit shop in New York City.
1 pound carrots, pared 1 pound parsnips, pared h to =V4 pound onions 4 of a V4-pound stick butter (^4 cup)
6 cups clear fat-free chicken broth
1 tablespoon minced fresh ginger
4 of a bay leaf
2 cups heavy cream
Salt, pepper and nutmeg to taste
Coarsely chop carrot, parsnip and onion. In a 4-quart saucepot melt butter; add chopped vegetables; over low heat cook covered until onimi is wilted. Add broth, ginger and bay leaf; simmer, covered, for 1 hour. Puree and chill. Just before serving, stir in cream, salt, pepper and nutmeg. Makes about 2'^ quarts. If soup is thicker than you like stir in chkken broth and adjust seasoning.
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logic and reason are valued and rewarded; feelings and intuition are not - indeed, they are often corrected. Ms. Hanunersaid.
"Girls dont define independence as synonomous with maturity. Instead, they identify it with isolation and loneliness.
.David J. DcBlanc, Pastor
(Nursery Provided)
NOTICE PUBLIC SALE
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Due to heavy budget cuts that affect school purchases, llMto OowIihI IRmcM Co. has just released for sale to the public, a limited number of new If 03 Itoavy Dvty Zig Zag Special Sewing Machines that are moJo off ifl and sews on ail fabrics: Levis, canvas, upholstery, nylon, stretch^ vinyl, vm mws mi laathart These machines are mw with a 20-year warranty! Regular retail price is $399.00. NOW ONLY $100.00 Full Price! Trade-ins will also be accepted. Layaways, MasterCard, Visa, Checks or Cash accepted.
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V
Engagement Announced
SONIA CAROL COBB...is the daughter of of Mrs. Ruth Dove Cobb of Kinston, who announces her engagement to Kelvin Troy Williams, son of James Williams Jr. of Greenville. The wedding is planned for Sept. 17.
Love Blooms In Dallas Prison
ByDAVEMEISTER Reading Eagle
DALLAS, Pa. (AP) - This Is an unusual love story, unmatched by Barbara Cartland or other writers of romances,
It is a story that begins in Dallas - Pennsylvania, not Texas - at the State Correctional Institution. For the third time in six months, this prison in Luzerne County was the site of a wedding.
That fact alone is not unusual - Dallas Acting Warden Joseph M, Ryan says he sees at least one wedding at the prison every month.
But whenCarol Hoffman, 27, of Reading, married Albert G. Reppert recently, the bride was the third sister from her family to tie the knot with an inmate at Dallas.
Her sister, Betty Warman, 21, married Roy Warman, also known as Frank J. Scathorelli Jr., on Nov. 22, 1982. And Carols older sister married an inmate two weeks after Betty Warman was wed.
The three sisters, who hail from a family of 16 children, each have a husband who resides in Cell Block E.
They met their husbands during a picnic at Dallas in June 1982. They were invited to the picnic by their brother, who is serving time at Dallas for an arson conviction. He and the oldest sister asked not to be identified.
After the picnic, the women made weekly visits to the prison and the romances blossomed.
Warman, who has been sentenced for receiving stolen property, was the first to propose.
It was a real surprise, Mrs. Warman said. It really was. I asked my mom and she said, Youre 21 and old enough to make up your own mind.So I said, Yes.
Twenty-five people attended the wedding, held in the country club-like atmosphere of the visitors center at the prison. She wore a royal blue evening dress; Warman, a two-piece dark blue suit.
According to Warman, the wedding was the talk of the prison for two weeks after the ceremony.
We had 1,500 years of time sitting at our wedding, Warman grinned, referring to the sentences of convicts who attended. Some of the
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Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROHraSTONE Associated Press FoodEdttw Twenty-five years ago a recipe for Claras Sour Cream Coffee Cake appeared in Good Housekeeping Magazine Then it appeared in the 1963 edition of Good Housekeeping Cookbook, and its popularity swept the country.
Since then, many other versions of the coffee cake have been published in cookbooks, magazines and newspapers -including my own columns.
Cooks like the recipes so much they put them in their permanent repertoires.
As a result, when recently we came on a variation of the sour cream coffee cake we had never seen before - this one filled with fresh cherries - we eagerly tried it. Its rich, flavorful and moist.
But a word of warning: because most cooks dislike sifting and few American kitchens have reliable scales, our Fresh Cherry Sour Cream Coffee Cake calls for measuring the flour by sco(^ing it up with a 1 cup and a h cup measure from a fractional measuring-cup set - 2H cups in all are needed. The flour is not stirred before scooping; using a small metal spatula, it is merely leveled off in the cups. Consequently the batter :ay differ slightly each time it is made. One time it may be a little moister than another. But no matter.
Either way its always a delight.
We bake the coffee cake on the rack below center of our electric oven because that position produces a browner bottom crust than when the cake is baked in the usual middle rack position.
FRESH CHERRY SOUR CREAM COFFEE CAKE 24 cups unbleached flour I teaspoon baking powder
teaspoon baking soda Two 4-pound sticks butter (1 cup), soft or cut into
16 pats 1>4 cu| plus 2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
4 teaspoon grated lemon rind
2 large eggs
8 ounces (1 cig sour cream
I cup pitted and halved sweet red cherries
4 cup chopped (medium-fine) walnuts
4 teaspoon ground cinnamon Topping, see recipe
On wax paper or in bowl stir together flour, baking powder and soda.
In the large bowl of an electric mixer at medium speed, cream butter, 14 cups sugar, vanilla and lemon rind. Beat in eggs singly, until blended each time. Add sour cream and beat until blended. At. low speed gradually beat in flour mixture until smooth.
Stir together cherries, walnuts, 2 tableaus sugar and the cinnamon.
Turn l-3rd (14 cups, generous) of the batter into a greased and floured 9-inch tube pan. Sprinkle with 4 of cherry mixture. Repeat layers. Spread with remaining batter. Sprinkle with Topping.
Bake on the rack below center of a preheated 350<legree oven until a cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean - 60 minutes. Cool on a wire rack for 5 minutes. Loosen edges and turn out on rack; cool completely topside down to keep bottom from sticking to rack. Invert on a cake plate ai^ serve top side up.
TOPPING: Stir together 1 tablespoon sugar and 4 teaspoon ground cinnamon.
NOTE: Youll need to buy a scant 4 pound of cherries to make the amount of fruit called for inthisrecip
The DaUy Reflector, GreenvUk, N.C.-Friday, July 22,19633
FAMILY REUNION
The Williams family reunion annual picnic will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the home of the Rev. and Mrs James Harris. Special activities are being planned for family members and guests.
Engagement
Announced
Mrs. Annie R. Dudley of Greenville announces the engagement of her daughter, Lillian Ruth, to Rex Fleming, son of the late Mrs. Nettie Perkins Fleming of Greenville. The wedding is planned for Aiig. 6.
Instant coffee is percolated before being specially dried.
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Couple Has 50th Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence T. Carrow, of Route 2, Greenville, were honored at a 50th anniversary party at their home Sunday afternoon. They celebrated their anniversary July 15'.
The party was given by their chiltiren, Linda C. Evans, Hazel C. Williams and Clarence Buddy Carrow.
The refreshment table was covered with a yellow lace cloth and centered with an arrangement of summer flowers.
Petroleum is the worlds largest item of international commerce. Coffee is second.
Mrs. Carrow was dressed in a navy blue dress coti-plemented by a corsage of yellow roses and babys breath.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Archer of Norfolk, Va., Mr. and Mrs. E.L. Tuten, Mr. and Mrs. James Harlan of Henderson and Peggy Sutton of New Bern were special guests.
The couple has four grandchildren.
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FRESH SWEET CHERRIES - They are plentiful this year and taste wonderful in Sour Cream Coffee Cake.
guys are doing triple life sentences.
After the vows, the kissing, the cake and the congratulations, Mrs. Warman went back to Reading and her husband returned to Cell Block E.
Unlike some penal institutions, Pennsylvania prisons do not permit conjugal visits for married inmates, according to Ryan.
But we have the four main factors for a successful marriage: love, trust, understanding and communication, Warner said.
It (marriage) keeps an individual mellowed out. It gives a man something to constantly look forward to. Most of all, it is important to know she loves me. Shes probably the best fringe benefit ever to come out of Dallas.
Personal
Mrs. Mattie M. Tucker of Williamston is a patient in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.
Alaskans consume more ice cream per capita than any other people in the world.
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4-Tbe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Friday, July 22,19S3
EditorialsRolling Again
The state Board of Transportation has set aside $573,000 for secondar> road construction and improvements in Pitt County for the next two years. Its good news. We only wish there could be more.
Those little back roads have become even more important in the last three decades as our society has become even more mobile. No longer are they just farm-to*market roads, as once they were called. Today they are necessary throu^fares, used by rural dwellers to get to work in the city and for farmers moving equipment from one community to another.
We need the major highways, but we would be lost today if maintenance were withdrawn from the secondary road system.
Construction has been slowed in the 80s as inflation took its bite in state revenue. Now that the economy appears to be improving, we hope this 1983 appropriation will get the ball and the road graders rolling again.
Paul T. O'ConnorHouse Gains The Upper Hand
RALEIGH - At the end of every new legislative session, the House and Seiate play a little game with each other. The Senate holds onto House bills and the House holds onto Senate bills. The idea is to hdd the other guys bills until he passes yours.
Over the past several sessions, the Senate has generally won this game because, in the match-up of power between the two bouses, the Senate has been dominant. But things appear to have changed this year. Legislative obsvers generally consider that the House was either the equal, or the supoior, of the Senate in the 1983 session.
Picking the more powerful is like picking a national college football champion. Theres no precise measure -just a lot of educated opinions. But from interviews with lobbyists, legislators and a few fellow reporters, it is clear that the
House is seen to have increased its power this year - at least to the point where it is no longer the weak sisto*.
A good example of a more powerful House came when the Senate killed an administrative rules rewrite proposal of Rep. Billy Watkins, D-Granville. Watkins immediately announced to the press that he planned wholesale revenge on the Senate leaders of this move. His bill miraculously came back to life the next week in the form of a compromise.
Another example came during the tax increase conferwKe committee. The Senate was generally considered to have given up a bit ntore than the House. And insiders on the budget negotiations say, the House prevailed in appropriating the states money.
While wie senator expressed the opinion that the House was dictating to the Senate this year, most observers feel theres beoi relative parity with maybe
the House winning a few nwre battles Both pulling iq> to that point, they say, is a major gain from just a few years ago.
How did the House improve its standing? The indefinite tenure of House Speaker Liston Ramsey is the most frequently stated reason followed by the perception of a divided Senate leadership.
Ramsey is in his secwKl term as ^)eaker and he a|^)ears ready to try to keep the job forever. Hes got a pair of tough, loyal top lieutenants in Watkins and Rep. A1 Adanns, D-Wake. The trio brings unified leadership to the House for the first time in recent memory and the membership knows that to get (xi the outs with the speaker could mean a Iwig exile in political Siberia. Therefore, the House has bepome ti^t-knit in the fashion that for a long time marked the Senate.
But over in the upper chamber, there are plenty of people with other things on
their numb. Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green faces trial on criminal charges and an uphill battle to get the job be wants in the Capihrf. In an effwt to build a coalition that mi^ dect him governor, hes had to push bills that his conservative leaders might have otherwise 0Ksed. MeanwMe, his top two lieutenants -Si. Kwmeth Royall, I>Durham, and Sen. Hardd Hardis(m, D-Lenoir - have not fomned the inseparaUe pair that they were in recent sessions. Royall is backing Sen. Bob Jordan, D-Montgonjery. for lieutenant governor, a job Hardison also wants.
In the near future, its expected that the House will become ascnidant. Ramsey will be back in 19K - barring an incredible upset. But Gremi wont be lieutenant governor. If the mild-mannered Jordan wins that post - and he centainly looks like the favorite now -hell have a big job standing up to the Mountain Man speaker.Midsummer Blues
We were almost becoming acclimated to mid-Julys oppressive heatwave and drought with yellowing lawns, the crop damage, heavy demands on electricity and health risks.
The numerous pictures, local and imported by electronic wizardry, dealing with elaborate and simple tricks of keeping cool, or enjoying the summer sun, no longer moved us.
Basically, it was an ennervating period. The occupation of choice was to sit at a window and watch automobile tires melt and wheel rims sink into the asphalt.
The weather, for awhile, was a conversation piece. There had been nothing like it since the last big snowfall. Everybody had a story to tell, and all of them were recounted with incredulous reaction ... as though it had never happened before. It w'as becoming a too-familiar story and experience.
Then came Tuesday nights rain with the accompanying fragrance of a moist land and the almost forgotten pleasure of a mild (not stifling) summer night. It all brought things back into reality.
That must have been a remarkable heatwave, after all.Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
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IN1H6 rtOPi tHAT 50M6t>AV,...l6C OAlNl....Papal Tour
WASHINGTON - Pope John Paul 11 is planning a tour of Southern Africa late this year which for the first time would turn the full moral and religious power of the papacy directly against South Africas policy of apartheid - the legal separation of the white minority that rules South Africa from the black majority.
Papal advisers agree with the pope that in view of his strong, courageous criticism of the communist-military junta in Poland during his trip there last month, he could not trim his moral sails in South Africa. Yet. for all its faults. South Africa is Western-oriented and anti-communist.
The pope conceivably could avoid the problem by bypassing South Africa on his visit to adjoining countries in black Africa. But Vatican insiders are certain he would not duck out of a delicate situation, raising the likelihood of a direct, on-the-spot confrontation between a pope and South Africa's racial policies for the first time.
Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan, who often has avoided confrontation in bureaucratic in-fighting, recently stared down economic adviser Martin Feldstein and budget director David Stockman to force through an optimistic government estimate of economic growth.
Feldstein and Stockman are insisting on a relatively poor "out-year growth forecast for fiscal year 1986. Even thou^ outvoted 2-to-l in the administrations top economic council, Regan stood his ground and threatened to take the issue to President Reagan for settlement. Aware that they would not fare well in the Oval Office, Feldstein and Stockman retreated.
At stake is a nroposed fiscal 1986 tax in-
The Daily Reflector
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crease that Feldstein and Stockman, often to the annoyance of the ^te House, keep promoting. A low growth estimate means higher estimated deficits, thereby providing more arguments for tax increases.
Despite opposition from some of his state and regional operatives, Sen. John Glenn now leans toward a total boycott of all future Democratic Party straw ballots designed to show a preference for a Democratic presidential nominee.
Glenn knows he does best in the largest possible forum and worst in the smallest - including straw ballots - where liberal zealots can muster their maximum strength. Glenn came in third in the Massachusetts straw vote but finessed two others: California and Wisconsin.
Big ones coming up include New Jersey in September and Florida, Maine and Iowa in October. Glenns rationale for staying out would parallel the strong criticism of presidential straw votes by party chairman Charles Mannatt as meaningless gestures that consume time and money and create intra-party hostility-
Gov. Jay Rockefeller, who plans to run for the Senate when his term ends next year, sent an emissary to his long-time political enemy, Arch Moore, a former Republican governor of West Virginia, with this warning: If you run for governor next year, count on my total opposition, including financial support for the Democratic nominee.
But Moore, who beat Rockefeller for governor in 1972 and then lost to him in the 1980 statehouse race, sent this word back to his old opponent: I will be running for the U.S. Senate next year against you, not for governor!
That sets the stage for a third titanic struggle in the Mountain State between the the fabulously-rich New York Democrat who decided to make West Virginia his home and political base, and the plain-spoken Republican. They will be contesting for the seat that has been held by Democratic senator Jennings Randolph since 1959.
Backbiting against White House aide Faith Whittlesey by her colleagues came to a sudden stop because of a flat order delivered by senior aides James Baker and Edwin Meese.
Whittlesey is a prominent conservative Republican politician from Pennsylvania who served as President Reagans ambassador to Switzerland. But from the moment she replaced Elizabeth Dole (now secretary of tran^rtation) as Reagans assistant for liaison with the public, Whittlesey was the target of personal attacks by pragmatist White House staffers. At one point, she called communciations chief David Gergen into her office and demanded that he lay off.
Shortly thereafter. Baker and Meese brought the affair to a head at a White House staff meeting. They said thepoisonous remarks to reporters about Whittleeey not only hurt her, but also the president, and must stop.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises. Inc.
Art Buchwald
Question Of Who Is Right
This is a true story which has more significance for Americans than whether Wayne Newton or the Beach Boys slHMild have sung on the Mall on the Fourth of July
It concerns a man whom we shall call John Doe, who attended an anti-war demonstration near the Vietnam Memorial on the July 4th weekend. He came with his camera to photograph whatever was going on.
While looking around he noticed quite a few photo^aphers standing with the park police taking pictures of the people who were against war.
Suddenly he had his theme for a photographic essay. He would do a series of pictures on laws enforcement officers taking photos of people lawfully demonstrating on public land.
As Doe was shooting away, he was approached by a senior officer from the Park Police demanding to know what the blank he was doing. Doe explained that
there had bei many photo exhibits of demonstrators held in America, but very few of police officers taking pictures of them. Doe told the officer he hoped to win a prize.
The officer demanded identification from Doe, which my friend refused to produce, citing the Supreme Court case, Brown vs. Texas, that a person did not have to identify himself to the police unless the officer can articulate he has committed a crime, or that he is about to, or that public safety is endangered.
Then the officer wanted to know if Doe was a member of the KGB. John denied it, claiming to be an ordinary American citizen who like to take photographs of cops taking photographs. Later on, he thought to himself, had he admitted being member of the KGB the Park Police would have probably left him alone. It was Americans they objected to taking pictures of them.
It was more than the Park Police of
ficial could deal with. Doe was bundled into a Park Pplice car and taken off to the station, where it was hoped he would break down and tell the real reason why he was taking photos of innocent police photo^aphers taking pictures of people that didnt like war.
In true tradition. Doe was permitted to call a lawyer. He called an old friend from his ACLU days and said, Bairy, Ive got a great case. Ive been taken into custi^y for taking pictures of Park Police undercover photographers. We can make legal history.
Barry, who was at home, said hes come down, but his relatives were in town and he was looking forward to ending the Fourth with his kids and he wasnt about to spend the weekend in court with John Doe arguing the merits of Brown vs. Texas.
But Barry, if we dont fight for our rights who will?
"Lawyers who dont have their
relatives m town.
The police officer seemed to be losing his patience and said that if Doe did not identify himself he would be taken to St. Elizabeths, Washingtons mental hospital, for observation.
But, protested Doe, thats what the police do in the Soviet Union. Are you sure you people dont work for the KGB?
By this time Barry the lawyer showed up and a deal was struck. Doe would not have ro identify himself, keeping the Brown vs. Texas principle intact, but he would have to promise not to t^e any more photos of police officers taking photos.
Unfortunately, the main legal question was never resolved. Is someone crazy for taking pictures of police taking pictures of people demonstrating, or are the Paric Police crazy for thinking you shouldnt be allowed to do it? It would be nice for us camera buffs to know.
(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate
Steven Rosenfeld
NEW YORK (AP) - In the market for precious metals, notorious for its volatility, gold has been leading a sheltered life of late.
For the past five months, gold prices have drifted within a 10 percent range while silver has gyrated wildly, sometimes swinging more than 10 percent during the course of a day.
Thats a big change in performance for gold, which in the first three weeks of 1980 soared from $575 an ounce to an all-time high of $875 in trading on the New York Commodity Exchange, ^then dropped to $682 the following day.
In that chaotic period, investing in gold was risky but also could be rewarding, said Bette Raptopoulos. a senior metals analyst at Prudential-Bache Securities Inc. Currently, she said, gold has been rather stodgy in relation to other metals.
Gold thrives in troubled times.
Bullion, which pays holders no interest, is a traditional haven for funds during periods of economic and political unrest.
When gold reached its peak 3-i years ago, inflation was growing at a doubledigit pace, Soviet troops were moving into Afghanistan and Iranians were holding Americans hostage in Tehran.
But bullion tumbled as low as $298 a troy ounce in June 1982 as deepening global recessiwi reined in inflation while record-high inflation-adjusted interest rates in tbe United States and a strong dollar made interest-bearing investments more attractive.
Gold Thrives In Risky Times
As international debt problems grew, gold began a comeback, rising to $510 an ounce by the end of January. But it quickly fell 20 percent before settling in to a trading range between $400 and $450 since March. Gold was in the middle of that range this week.
Analysts attributed the winter setback for gold to a dn^ in oil prices, reducing inflationary pressures, and sales of gold by communist nations.
Its future is closely tied to inflationary
expectations.
It all depends on your outlook. If you see a return to inflation, gold is a classic hedge. But if you see no return to inflation, why buy gold - it pays no interest? said a New York commodities broker whose firm prohibits him from being quoted by name.
"The concern over inflation rising down the road eventually will fuel the markets the timing is unclear, said Ms. RaptopoulM.
Elisha Douglass
Strength For Today
Prayer is the heritage and privilege of all people. Nothing in the whole religious life is so little affected by theological differences as prayer.
Fundamentally, prayer rests upon the belief that there is a power above us all, that we are creatures of that power, that we may communicate with Him, and that He desires to have us communicate with Him.
Although prayers take on the form and colorTation of widely
\
differing theologies, nevertheless, all men begin their petitions to the Most High with the conviction that man can pray, that God wants him to pray, and that prayer makes a difference.
It is amazing how eager God is to give to his children, and how timid they are about asking for His bounty or reaching out their hands to receive it. His outgoing loves shames our fear. His continuous providence rebukes our lack of faith.
A banking crisis or other financial or political strife could also send gold rising.
David Nelson, a metals analyst at Dean Witter Reynolds Inc., said he believes gold prices will rise next year because there may be insufficient supplies to meet rising demand for the metal.
Silver, like gold, is a shelter against inflation. But it also has many industrial uses and is affected by economic activity to a far greater extent than gold.
Silver, which hit an all-time high of $52.50 an ounce in January 1980, fell to $4.84 in June 1982. Then, it nearly tripled in seven months, rising to $14.70 last February.
Since then, silver has been on a roller coaster course, dropping a third in value, rising a third and currently hovering around $12 an ounce.
Silver does much worse than gold in a recession, but much better in a recovery, said Nelson.
Because of the improving industrial outlooK, stocks of mining and metals companies also are getting a closer look.
While post-recession recoveries in non-ferrous and light metals wUl probably progress at a slow pace, recent data suggesting a better than expected economic recovery in general is obviously welcomed news which will have a positive effect on the financial perfor-, manee of the producers of these metals, according to an analysis by Vahid Fathi at Prescott. Ball & Turben Inc.
Rebate Plon For Tobacco Questioned
By The Associated Press A proposed rebate plan for flue-cured tobacco buyers could be helpful if used just once, but could become harmful to farmers if it becomes an ongoing program. a state tobacco official said Thursday.
- The rebates, which could total up to $48 million this year, were proposed by U.S. "Agriculture Secretary John R. Block. Under tlie program, buyers who purchase t more leaf this year than their average for the past three seasons would get a rebate of *30 cents per pound for the extra purchases.
The rebates would come ;;from farmers through the 'no-net-cost fees they pay to make sure taxpayers are not ;subsidizing the federal tobacco program.
K John H. Cyrus, director of ^tobacco affairs for the state Department of Agriculture, said he had reservations about the plan.
Its been claimed that the government has subsidized the tobacco farmer, but here we have a turnabout with farmers subsidizing the manufacturer, Cyrus said.
If its a one-time deal, it could certainly be in the best interests of everybody concerned, he said. But if it becomes a continuing thing, I ' could see problems down the road.
He said that some manufacturers could buy more surplus tobacco held by stabilization this year to push their purchases up to the point that would entitle them to rebates for purchases on the warehouse floor.
, That could mean simply replacing old leaf held by stabilization with this years leaf, since those buyers would need to purchase less of the 1983 crop.
Cyrus also questioned whether some buyers might decide to reduce their buying from this years crop, speculating that there would be pressure for more rebates in future years if enough tobacco when into stabilization.
The rebates are designed to reduce the high volume of leaf held by the Flue-Cured Cooperative Stabilization Corp., which acquires tobacco that does not bring l , cent above the federal price supports on the open market.
'T. Carlton Blalock, execu-. tive vice president of the ; Tobacco Growers Association of North Carolina, said the concept could benefit ' growers.
But he said it could hurt , farmers pext year if manu-] facturers buy in excess this year to get the discount, then V dont buy as much in 1984 as ' they might have.
Beethoven
Marathon
: PHILADELPHIA (AP) -In a concerted effort that will go on well past Moonlight, la cocktail pianist plans to play alj 32 Beethoven piano sonatas in what he calls a ^unique musical marathon.
Im the only person in the .world capable of doing it, 'said Gary Goldschneider, 44, who claims his concert will set a record as the longest Beethoven performance ever.
He says hell start at 10 a.m. Saturday at The Bourse, a downtown shopping mall. He expects to wind up with the last note of an encore at approximately 10 p.m.
"The reason it is being done is to present to the public the life work of the greatest Western composer," Goldschneider said.
People are really hungry for this kind of thing, but this is not somebody playing piano 82 hours in a bar. This is the highest quality of music in the West.
Hell play barefoot, wearing a white tunic and drawstring pants, to try to stay relaxed. "The fingers are not so much the problem as the back, he said. It would be impossible to play what Im doing with tension. He will take four 15-minute breaks and one of a half-hour.
And, if his marathon is a success, Goldschneider says hell take it on the road -maybe even around the world.
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C -Friday, July 22,198J-5
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In The Area
Henderson To Be Guest Of Honor
Dr. E.L. Henderson, East Carolina Universitys oldest living former faculty member, will be guest of honor Monday evening at a reception hosted by Chancellor and Mrs. John M. Howell to mark Hendersons honorary designation as professor emeritus.
Henderson, who is 98, served for many years as director of student teaching and was chairman of the department of administration and supervision in the years when ECU was primarily a teachers college. He joined the faculty of East Carolina Teachers College in 1923.
Also to be honored is Dr.
Charles R. Coble, professor of science education, who is serving as acting dean of the ECU School of Education. Coble, a friend and neighbor of Henderson, was instrumental in obtaining professor emeritus standing for him last month.
On June 23, Chancellor Howell signed papers conferring professor emeritus standing on Henderson. Howell, Coble and vice chancellor Angelo A. Volpe walked to Hendersons home near campus to present the documents in an impromtu ceremony.
Henderson and his wife, the former Sula Cook, live in Greenville.
Holly Named To Dean's List
Lee A. Holly, grandson of Mrs. Lula Beatrice Gray of Greenville, was named to the deans list for academic excellence at the University of New Haven in Connecticut. He is majoring in computer technology.
Holly, a 1970 gradeuate of J.H. Rose High School, is employed as a Data Systems manager at Southern New England Telephone Co.
Embroiders To Meet Tuesday
The North Carolina Chapter of the Embroiders Guild of America Inc. will have a stitch-in Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Pam Burkart in Bath. Old projects will be completed.
The Embroiders Guild is an organization for the advancements of all needle arts. For more information or to join call Ms. Burkart at 756-7399.
DR. E.L. HENDERSON
ECU Trustees Meet Aug. 4
New members will be sworn in and officers for 1983-84 elected when the board of trustees of East Carolina University meets Aug. 4.
New and reappointed members of the 13-member board include Riley Roberson of Washington, Sam Womom of Sanford, Louis SingleUm of Greenville, Ralph Kinsey of Charlotte, James Dixon of Greensboro and Harvey Beech of Kinston.
Various committees of the board will hold meetings prior to the full board meeting at 9:30 a.m. in Mendenhall Student Center.
CPS Program To Be Presented
The Greenville Chapter of Professional Secretaries International will meet at 6:15 p.m. Monday at Western Sizzlin Steak House on East Tenth Street.
The pro^am will be presented by Doris J. Hunt, administrative secretary to the director of the division of continuing education at East Carolina University. She will present details of the certified professional secretary program and explain the structure of the local PSI chapter.
Interested secretaries may contact Jo Gillan, presidentelect and membership chairman, at 757-2814.
Community Club To Meet
The Hillsdale Community Club will meet Saturday. The session will be held at 4 p.m. at the home of Rosa Weaver on Route 4, Greenville.
Special Meeting Set Monday
The Greenville Planning and Zoning Commission has scheduled a special call meeting for Monday at 5:30 p.m. to consider a request by Pitt County to rezone approximately .59 acres at the northwest coiror of Maxwell and May Streets from R-6 (high density residential) to downtown commercial fringe.
The meeting will be held in the third floor council chambers at City Hall.
Hemby Reunion Planned Saturday
The Hemby family reunion will be held Saturday at 1 p.m. at the home of Mary Louise Daniels, 1105 W. Sixth St. A backyard picnic will be held.
2 lnured In 4 Accidents
Two people were injured and an estimated $7,600 damage resulted from four traffic collisions investigated by Greenville police Thursday.
Heaviest damage resulted from a 5:05 p.m. collision at the intersection of Fourth and Sycamore streets.
Officers said cars driven by Regina Adaline Blackman of Route 6, Goldsboro, and Donna Elaine Montague of Raleigh, were involved in the mishap, which caused an estimated $1,500 damage to the Blackman car and $2,500 damage to the Montague vehicle.
Ms. Montague and a passenger in her car were reported injured.
Cars driven by Norma Kay Berry of Washington and Anne-Marie Elizabeth Haddock of Route 1, Winterville, collided about 10:30 p.m. at the intersection of Second and Cotanche streets, causing $1,000 damage to the Berry car and $5M damage to the Haddock car.
Officers said a truck driven by Kenneth Elmo Allen of 3309 Evans St. and a car operated by Coleman Junior Randolph of 802A Bancroft Ave. collided about 3:40 p.m. on Greene Street, 120 feet south of the Moore Street intersection.
Police, who charged Randolph with having improper breaks, estimated damage at $100 to the truck and $1,000 to theRaldolphcar.
Cars driven by Johnnie Fredrick Lofton of Kinston and Sandra Forrest Ellis of Route 2, Walstonburg, collided about 12:15 p.m. at the intersection of Memorial Drive and Stantonsburg Road, causing $600 damage to the Lofton car and $400 damage to the Ellis auto.
Auditions Set For King And I'
NEW BERN - Audition dates for the forthcoming Footlight Theater-Lollipop Playhouse production of The King and I have been announced. Auditions will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. and from 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday at Christ Episcopal Church, Middle Street, New Bern.
Call back date will be on Monday, at a time to be announced dt the Sunday auditions.
Cast members needed are three women, five men and two teen-age boys for lead roles, also 10 additional men, 15 women, 10 dancers and 15 children. For more information. call 633-3775 between 10 a. m. and noon on Saturday.
Gross National Product '
In Bilbons of Dollars Based on 19/2 Dollars (Adiusted lor mfladorr) Rewsed Figures
1530
1510
1490
1470
1450
1430
A>
II HI IV 1982
I II 83
THE GNP - The nations economic recovery heated iq> this spring, with business activity at a strong 8.7 percmt annual rate, its fastest rate of growth in more than two years, the government r^rted Tuesday. It said the GNP grew at an annual rate of Sl.52 trillion. (APLaserphoto)
Solor Fraction
Greenvilles solar fraction as calculated by the department of physics of East Carolina University was 91 Thursday, which means that a solar water heater would have provided 91 percent of your hot water needs.
TWAIN LETTER
LONDON (AP) - A Mark Twain letter of thanks for a poem, regretting he could only reply in prose, has sold for $693, auctioneers at Sothebyssay.
0PEM1E YOUII OWN UK HOME eUSHIESS!! OEUK YOON OWN OOSS!!
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Write us at:
Littleton Lincoln Logs Corp
P.O. DRAWER 5S0 LITTLETON, NORTH CAROLINA, 27850 TELEPHONE (919) 586-3127 authortzad didrlbirtor lor
SHOP-EZE
West End Shopping Center Phone 756-0960
>
Saturday Luncheon Special BBQ
^2.49
Fried Chicken Dinner
*1.99
Special Served With 2 Fresh Vegetables A Rolls.
I
AMimrANllNCOlN
/
REEDS d,aSps
Carolina East Mall, Greenville 756-6683
2.3 Ct.
Oval Cut
Diamond
Solitaire
Reg. $13,400
*7995
REEDS For Value
1.05 Ct. Round Brilliant
Diamond
Solitaire
Reg. $3995
995
REEDS For Quality
.75 Ct. Round Brilliant
Diamond
Solitaire
Reg. $5800
J3295
Nobody But Nobody Undersells Reeds
Solitaire. Reg. $2990 now M 995
Solitaire.Reg.$3200Now ^2200 1.04 ct. SQCQC
Solitaire. Reg. $6500 Now 0U9
Fine Quality Jewelry For Lower Prices Is Here For Greenville At Reeds
5 ComnNnt Wiyi To Ouy Rowl'tCliirgo, ViM, MistorCird, Amorictn Expreu, Or Inltmt FrH Layimy
f/obm/y But Nobody Undersells REED'S
Carolina East Mall, GreemWe 7504683
Other Locftioni:
ChopN Hill. Ciry, Rocky Mount, Wilton, Jickiomillt, Whitovillo, MyrtN Botch, Wilmington.
E SAVINGS NEVER STOP! N OUR GREA
Last 2 Days
*2 down will hold your layaway for 60 days with regular payments
EVERY
OWEL
Sale 4.99, Reg. $7; bath towel. The JCPenney Towel, almost a full pound of thick cotton/polyester terry. In fifteen luscious colors.
Sale 2.99, Reg. 4.99; bath towel. Luxurious all cotton terry towel edged with a double-color woven border.
Sale 3.99, Reg. $5; bath towel. Plush terry towel feels like soft suede. Cotton/ polyester with a ribbed border.
Sale 7.99, Reg $12; bath towel. All cotton Dynasty: super-rich, super-thick, super-sized. 27x50!
Sale 6.99, Reg. $10; bath towel. Super Touch. Our all cotton towel with an incredibly high loft and plush softness.
Sale $7, Reg. $10; standard. Dacron II polyester bedpillow with polyester/ cotton cover. In 15 rainbow shades.
Sale9.99, Reg. $16; standard. Bedpillow plumppd with whole waterfowl feathers. Covered in cotton ticking.
Sale $25, Reg. $45; standard. Heavenly soft waterfowl feather and down bedpillow has a beige cotton cover.
Sale 3.49, Reg. 4.99; standard. Astrofill polyester pillow with cotton cover.
Sale 9.99, Reg. $16; standard. Quallofil polyester bedpillow is the closest thing to down, at a fraction of the price. Double polyester/cotton cover.
40% off
Made-to-measure blinds, shades.
For a more individualized choice, our made-to-measure woven woods and mini-blinds are the answer. Just tell us the dimensions and well make them to fit your windows, exactly.
Percentagt off represents savings on regular prices.
Sale prices effective through Saturday, July 23rd.
EVERY
BEDSPREAD
Sale $36, Reg. $45; twin. A rainbow of color possibilities for your bedroom. Our polyester/cotton bedspread is quilted to Astrofill polyester.
Sale 19.99, Reg. $40; twin. Wildflowers in ooean blue, light wine and maize bloom on our polyester/cotton bedspread. Quilted to Astrofill polyester.
Damage Suit Is Filed In Mortin Co.
WILLIAMSTON - A lawsuit naming Martin County, the Martin County Commissioners, Hardy-Harvey Inc. of Kinston and Fred Tolson Associates of Raleigh as defendants has been filed in Martin County Siq)erior Court by attorneys for Gloria R. Spruill of Williamston.
In the suit, Mrs. Spruill contends that negligence during the construction of the new Governmental Center (a complex containing the new Martin County Courthouse and several public offices) caused extensive damage to her residence located at 101 Harrell St., about 100 feet from the site of the center.
She is asking for a trial by jury and is seeking 1100,000 in punitive damages. Should the court seek an alternative for the repair of the house, Mrs. Spruill seeks an amount in damages of not less than $78,393.85.
In addition to the county and county officials, the commercial defendants named in the case, Hardy-Harvey Inc. of Kinston and Fred Tolson Associates of Raleigh, were the general contractor and architects for the complex, respectively.
The complaint allies several negligent actions on behalf of the county and the other parties named in the suit. Among actions cited as allegedly causing damage to the Spruill home are failure to determine the effect of construction upon nearby >roperty owners; the use of arge trucks carrying material which caused settling of the land underneath the street and underneath the home; the interior damages to the home resulting from negilent actions; the accelerated flow of water into a creek adjoining the property, which caused water to pond and stand on the premises of the Spruill home resulting in shifting and moving of the soil and causing the house to lean at an an^e and sl(^ downhill, failing to stabilize the banks of the creek in violation of regulations oT the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community development.
The complaint states the actions enumerated in the suit were done in ... a willful, wanton, reckless, and negligent manner without due regard for the rights and property of others and ' (therefore) constitute negligence as that term is defined by law.
No response has been filed by the defendants.
Storm...
(Continued from Pagel)
near Ballards Crossoards, a spokeman for the department said.
The Agricultural Extension Service said it had received no calls reporting hail damage to crops in the county.
Greenville Utilities weather station recorded .33 inch of rain from the predawn storm - not enough to provide permanent relief from the drought and heat wave that has eastern North Carolina locked in its grip.
The storm brought temperatures down to the 70s early today, according to GU(^, but by noon the mercury had crept back into the 90s. The high temperature Thursday was 98 degrees Fahrenheit, according to GUC, and the low 70 degrees F. Bank thermometers downtown, however, reflected readings in excess of 100 degrees Thursday afternoon.
In addition to the storm, GUCs system took a beating from electrical demand Thursday, Green said. We peaked for the year at an all-time high of 149.1 megawatts of electricity with our load management equipment operating - nine percent above our peak m 1982, he noted.
The superintendent said GUC usually peaks around Aug. 24 because of bulk barn usage and schools opening.
SCALED FENCE
HAVERFORDWEST, Wales (AP) - Eight women peace campaigners scaled a fence and entered a U.S. Navy base at Brawdy near this west Wales town Thursday, Britains domestic news agracy reported.
JULYi
Carolina east mall k^greenvilleOne Day Only
Saturday Only
Ladies Elegant Jewelry 40% o
Regular $4 to $50
14 kt. gold and sterling silver chains. Serpentine, rope styles and more.
Belts, Cummerbunds, Sashes25% o
Reg. $13 to $26
Ann Taylor Accessories^ offers you silk, cotton and polyester sashes. Solids, stripes and madras plaids.
Picture Print Decorator Pillows
3.88
Group of assorted pillows in shell, florals, bird prints and butterflies. A beautiful selection for you to accent your homes decor.
- )Rack of Girls Sundresses
Off
Reg. $14 to $29
Yellow, white and lavender. Adjustable shoulder straps. Elastic waist. Sizes 7 to 14.
Mens Slacks and Shirts
Va ..1/3
A
Off
Shirts, Val. to $27
14.00
Values to 30.00
Mens plaid and solid dress shirts. Sizes 14V2to17.S,M,L, XL. Long or short sleeve. Haggar^ belted poplin, duck fabric slacks.
Sizes 32 to 42.
%
Reg.
$7 to 7.50...
Girls Toddler Shift Sets40%
Off
Nursery Rhyme . Pink, tan/red. Sizes 2Tto4T.
/
/
(! Mens Shirts and Swimwear
V4 J/3
\
Off
Shirts, Reg. $17 to $23 Swimsuits, Vaiues to $30
Hawaiian print shirts in summer shades. S, M, L, XL. Also, mens beachwear. Polyester/nylon, 100% nylon. Surfer plaids, solid surfers. Sizes 29 to 42.
/Mens and Boys T-Shirts by Panama JackOff
Reg. 6.50 to 15.00
Light blue, yellow and white. Long and short sleeves. 50% cotton/ 50% polyester. S, M, L, XL.
Get yours today!Mens Casual Slacks at a Savings!
25% ..50% oLadies'S-West'Shoes for Fall
Regular
M2 lo $46..........................CU /O OffGirls Preteen Izod'^ Shorts
Regular y
$15fo$17............................... /3 Off
Rack of Toddler Summer Sportswear
Regular y
4.50 fo 13.00............................ /3 Off
GirlsSwimsuits Up to $5 Off!
Regular y
12.50to$17............................. 73 Off
Infant and Toddler Summer Shorts
;r.'.................................2.78
BoysUnderwear by Andhurst" ,
Regular Q o Q
.0.00
Rack of Girls Tops and Shorts
Regular C 00
00.....................................OO
GirisCheenos Twill Shorts
Regular n qa
15.00...................................0.00Rack of Girls Shorts and Tops
VKS..........................40% o
(3 on on BoysShort Shorts!
6.88
Regular
10.00...Group of Girls Back Packs, More
Regular OHO/
$8to$12...........................CU /O OffCaress Pillows for Your Bed
Regular O C 0/
8.00to 13.00.......................Co /O Off
Mens LEVISShirts at $4 Off!S" 10.88Mens and Ladies Sporting Clothes
Regular OCO/
Values $27 to $70...................CO /O OffBoys GantBlazers and Suits
Regular Af|0/
Values to $140.....................HU /O OffBoys Short Sleeve Dress Shirts
Regular *7 QQ
12.00 4 13.00 ............................I .00Pfaltzgraff Stoneware Reduced
Regular O C 0/
2.80to 120.00 ......................Co /O Off
Park Avenue Bed Pillows Reduced;r 12.00 ,oi7.ooOld Salem Ruffled Priscillas
Regular ORO/
17.50to45.00 ......................Co /O Off
Save $10 on our Country Curtains
ir:.............. 69.88
StatePride' CollegiateTowels
Regular ORO/
1.79to3.99........................Co /O Oft
Shower Curtains Up to $12 Off!
Regular ORO/
6.00to48.00 .......................Co /O 0(1Mens Walking Shorts Up to $9 Off
Regular
Values to 23.00 ...................4U /O OHGroup of Boys' Ores., Casual Slacks
Regular 1 /
Values to 28.00........................... 73 OH
Dacron Ninon Sheers Now Reduced
Regular ORO/
10.00to24.00 ......................Co /O OH
Regal Rose Bedspread on Sale
Regular ORO/
29.00to48.00 ......................Co /O Off
18-pc.Libbey Glass Set $10 Off
Regular Q Aft
19.88...................................9.00
Atari Video Game Cartridges
Regular y
9.8810 49.88........................... / Price
Salt and Pepper Mill Sets! Save!
Regular O QQ
5.0 0..................... .00
Albaca Place Mats at 50% Off!
Regular y
1.00 to 1.50 ............................. 72 OH
Bookcases, Record Cabinets
S'" 10.00
Mattress Pads Up to (8 Savings
Regular ORO/
16.50to35.50 ......................Co /O OH
Pinafore Sheets at a Savings
Regular OR/
6.00to 19.00.......................Co /O OH
Timex Watches Up to $19 Off I
Regular OR/
19.95 to 79.95 ......................3 / OHLadies Nike Tennis Oxfords $6 Off!
Regular QQ
26.0 0................................. 1 9.00Ladies Chris Evert Tennis Shoes
Regular 4 A QQ
25.0 0................................. 1 9.00
Mens Dexter Casual Oxfords
Regular A [T 0/
$39 to $47..........................3 / Oil
Mens Casual Hush Puppies Shoes
Regular OR/
$29 to M2..........................Co / OH
Mens Jimmy Connors Tennis Shoes
Regular QA QQ
40.0 0.................................04.00
Ladies Aigner Handbags, Leather Goods
Regular OR/.
$11 to $140.........................43 / OH
Ladies Hanes Pantyhose at a SavingstT' ..............: 4.88LadlesRain Jackets at 33 Off!
Regular a QQ
10.0 0...................................D.OO
Mens Suits and Sport Coats
Regular OR/
Values to $250.....................43 / OH
Mens Signature Sportswear Sale!
25% 0
Boys Swimwear Up to $6 Off!
Regular OR^/.
Values to 25.00 ....................CO / OH
Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)
8-The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Friday, July 22,1983
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\SAILING SHIPS
AS EAQLV AS 3000 B.C,OR EVEN 9EF0BE.MEN MAO LEARNED TO NA/ISATE ON TVE NILE, AND SNIPS POR 7M6 PURPOSE V\CRE BUILT. SOME OP IME PMARAOMS MAD OCEANSONS VESSELS ALSO PORMINSTVePRSTNA/IESOPTMEIRTIMe. MANV OP TME BOATS ON IME NILE WMICH WERE USED POR PISHINS AND P0WUN6 WERE MADE BY TYINS BUNDCES OF BAPVRUS REEDS TDSETMER AND DAUBIN6IMEM WI7M PITOM...
.. .TME ISRAELITES WERE NOT A SEAFARINS PEOPLE BUT THEY CARRIED ON TRADE USIN6 TME SEAWAVS. SOLOMON CONDUCTED COMMERCIAL 0.JTERPDISeS TMROUSH MIS FLffiT OF SMIPS BUT TMESe TRANSIENT EFFORTS WERE MORE OH LESS DEPENDANT ON TME PHOENICIAN SAILORS WMO MANNED TMEM. SOME OF TMESE SEAS0IN6 VESSELS WERE PROPELLED BY SAILS ' ALONE-OTMERS BY SAILS AND OARS.
SA TMB FOR M3UR SUNDAY SCMOa SCRAPBOOK
Sponsors Of This Page, Along With Ministers of All Faiths, Urge You to Attend Your House of Worship This Week, To
Believe In God and to Trust In His Guidance For Your life.
COZARTS AUTO SUPPLY, INC 814 Dickinson Aye 752-3194 Banks Cozarti Employees
Compliments Of HEILIG MEYERS CO
518 E. Greenville Blvp 75&-4145
LESTER TURNAGE Beal Estate 8 Insurance Agency Get Mbre With Les
Corner Third S CotancheSI 752-2715
WHiniNGTON.INC. Charles St.. Greenville, N.C Bay Whittington 756-8537
Compliments of PHELPS CHEVROLET West End Cir 756-2150
WINTERVILLE INSURANCE AGENCY 756-0317
123 S. Ballroad. Winterville
JA-LYN SPORT SHOP Hv/y 33. Chicod Creek Bridge 752-2676, Grimesland James 8 Lynda Faulkner
VAN'S HARDWARE 1300N Greenest 758-2420
QUALITY TIRE SERVICE and Employees at *
N Greenest and2900E 10thSI 752-7177 757-3762
COLONEL SANDERS KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN 2905E 5th
Take out only 752-5184 600 S W Greenville Blvd Eat in or take out 756-6434
BOND-HODGES SPORTING GOODS 218 Arlington Blvd lOthSt Greenville
756-6001 752-4156
PLAZA GULF SERVICE 756-7616 701E Greenville Blvd Byder Truck Benlals 756-6045 Wrecker Service day 756-7616 nite 756-6479
AaCTION MOVING & STORAGE
1007ChesnutSI 756-7000
ANNE'S TEMPORARIES. INC 756-6610120 Beade SI Greenville
LINCOLN MERCURY-GMC 2201 Dickinson Ave. 756-4267
EARL'S CONVENIENCE MART
Boule 1 7566278
Earl Faulkner 8 Employees
ALDRIDGE AND SOUTHERLAND REALTORS 756-3500
226 Commerce St Greenville
EAST COAST COFFEE DISTRIBUTORS 758-3568 1514 N Greene St.
' A complete restaurant 8 office coffee service''
ROBERT C, DUNN CO 301 Bidgeway 758-5278
HENDRIX-BARNHILLCO. Memorial Dr 752-4122 All employees
LOVEJOY AGENCY Daybreak records 756-4774 118 Oakmont Dr
Larry Whittington
PARKERS BARBEQUE RESTAURANT
756-2388 S Memorial Dr Doug Barkers Employees
C H. EDWARDS, INC, Htvy. 11 S. 7566500
Compliments of FRED WEBB, INC.
Compliments of
PITT MOTOR PARTS. INC.
758-4171911S Washington St
TOM'S RESTAURANT
The Very Best In Home Cooking'' 756-1012 Maxwell St West End Area
GRANT BUICK, INC. 756-1877 Greenville Blvd Bill Grant 8 Employees
OVERTONS SUPERMARKETS. INC. 211 S. Jarvis 752-5025 Alt Employees
TAPSCOTT DESIGNS 222 E 5th St. 757-3558 Kale Phillips. Interior Designer Associate member ASID
Compliments of HOLLOWELLS DRUG STORE
no.l 911 Dickinson Ave.
no. 2 Memorial Dr. 8 6th St.
no. 3 Stantonsburg Bd. at Doctors Park
PIGGLY WIGGLY OF GREENVILLE 2105Dickinson Ave. 756-2444 Bicky Jackson 8 Employees
FARRIOR& SONS. INC.
General Contractors
753-2005 Hwy. 264 ByPass Farmville
LAUTARES JEWELERS 414 Evans 752-3831
INAS HOUSE OF FLOWERS N. Memorial Dr Ext. 752-5656 Management 8 Staff
PITT-GREENE PCA & FEDERAL LAND BANK ASSOCIATION ''Short, Intermediates Long Term Agricultural Credit "
100 E. 1st St 756-1512
BUCKS GULF STATION & EMPLOYEES E 10th St Ext 7526228 "BoadS Wrecker Service
Jartran Truck 8 Trailer Benlals
INTEGON LIFE INSURANCE CO.
W.M. Scales, Jr. General Agent Weighty Scales, Bep Clarke Stokes. Bep 756-3738
PUGHS TIRE & SERVICE CENTER 7526125
Corner of Sth 8 Greene. Greenville
HAHN CONSTRUCTION CO. Besidential 8 Commercial Building 400 N 10th St 752-1553
FOUNTAIN OF LIFE, INC.
Jim Whittington Oakmont Professional Plaza Greenville. N.C. 756-0000
PAIR ELECTRONICS, INC. Electronics Suppliers 756-2291107 Trade St Greenville, N.C.
Compliments of YAMAHA OF PITT COUNTY 752-08761506 N. Greene St Greenville, N.C.
HARGETTS DRUG STORE 2500 S. Charles Ext 756-3344
DAUGHTRIOGE OIL & GAS CO.
2102Dickinson Ave 756-1345 Bobby Tripp 8 Employees
CAROLINA MICROFILM SERVICE 1405 Dickinson Ave. 752-3776 Jerry Creech, Owner
PEPSI COLA BOHLING CO.
756-2113 Greenville
E^T CAROLINA INSURANCE AGENCY, INC 2739 E. 10th St P. O. Box 3785 752-4323 Greenville
REDI SUPPLY, INC.
Industrial 8 Construction Supplies 1902 Chesnut 756-3200
HARRIS SUPERMARKETS, INC.
"Where Shopping Is A Pleasure'' no.l Memorial Dr. 7566110 no. 2 2612 E 10th Ext 757-1660 no. 4 Bethel no. 5 N. Greene 752-4110 no 6 Ayden no.TTarboro
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN 101 Hooker Rd. 7566115
JOHNNYS MOBILE HOME SALES. INC. ' The Finest In Manufactured Housing''
316 W Greenville Blvd 7564687 Johnny L. Jackson 8 Employees
WESTERN SIZZLIN STEAK HOUSE "Weput il on the plate''
500 W. Greenville Blvd. 7566040 2903E. 10th St 758-2712
JIMMYS PHILLIPS 66 SERVICE All Types Minor Bepair Work Wrecker Service Corner 14th St 8 264 ByPasa J.F. Baker, owner 756-1445
EASTERN INSULATION, INC.
Owens Corning Fiberglass Phone Day or NIghi 752-1154
Compliments of THOMAS W. RIVERS
ESTATE REALTY CO.
1304 Charles St. Greenville 752-5058
Jarvis or Dorlia Mills
faith is your haven of refuge in a troubled world
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Area Church News
GLORU DEI UJTHERAN CHURCH The Womens aub. 2308 Green Sorincs ParkRd.
The Rev Richard A MUler Phone 758^
9:30 a.m. Sun. - The Morning Worship Service 7:30 p.m. - VBS SUff Meeting
OUR REDEEMER LUTHERAN 1800 S Elm R. Graham Nahouse 10:00 a m Sun - Worship with Sunday School ^
ARLINGTON STREET BAPTIST CHURCH 1007 W Arlington Blvd.
Pastor. Rev Harold Greene 9:45 a m Sun - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. - Mission Friends 7:30p.m. -EveningWorship 7:30 p.m. Mon. Nominating Committee
7:30p.m. Wed. - Worship Service 8:30p m.-Choir
CEDAR GROVE MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Rt 9 Cherry Oaks Subdivision Greenville, NC Pastor: Rev James Wright 8:00 p.m Fri. - Senior Choil Club will meet at the home of Sis Mary Faye Stocks 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11 00 a m - Morning Worship Sermon by the Pastor. Music will be rendered by the Gospel Chorus 6:00 p.m. The Gospel Chorus will be observing their anniversary 6:00p m -TheSenior Ushers will be at St. Monica M B Church in Grimesland in their anniversary 7:30 p.m. Mon. - Junior Ushers will meet
7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p m Thur. - Traveling Choir will have rehearsal 2:30 p.m. Fri. - Union Meeting will begin at Moore's Chapel M B Church in Boraerton. NC
ST. PAULS EPISCOPAL CHURCH 401 East Fourth Street The Rev Lawrence P Houston, Jr., Rector
The Rev. J. Dana Pecheles. Asst. Rector The N inth Sunday ol Pentecost ; 9:00 am Sat.-Yard Sale, Parish Hall 7:30a.m Sun.-HolyEucharist 10:00 a.m. - Morning Prayer 7:30pm. -A1 anon. Friendly Hall - 7:30 p.m Tue.-Greenville Parent Support Group. Parish Hall , 7:00a m Wed-HolyEucharist 10:00 a.m. - Holy Eucharist and .Laying-On of Hands
8:00 p.m. Sat - AA Open Group Discussion, Friendly Hall
SAINT PETERS CATHOUC CHURCH 2700 E 4th Street GreenvUle, N.C.
757-3259
Rev. Michael Clay 5:30pm Sat - Vigil 8:00a.m. Sun:-Liturgy 10:30 a.m.-Liturgy
PEOPLES BAPTIST TEMPLE
Rev. J M Bragg, Pastor 2001 W Greenville Blvd., GreenvUle. N.C.27834 7:30 a m. Sun - Laymens Prayer Breakfast (ThreeSteers)
10:00a.m.-SundaySchool 11 00 a.m. - Morning Worship 5:30p.m.-ChoirPractice 6:30p m. - Evening^Worship 8:00p.m -Teens Fireside 7:15 a.m. Mon.-Fri. - Radio Program
Together Again WBZQ 7 :00 p.m Wed - Hour of Power 8:00 p.m. - Choir Practice
THE MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH (Southern Baptlit)
1510 Greenville Boulevard E T Vinson. Senior Minister 9:45am Sun -SundaySchool 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship, Mini Church
7:00 p.m. - Jr.-Sr. High Youth meet at Immanuel 7:30 p.m. Tue. - Evening Current Mission Group wlUi Margaret Little,
1707 Englewood Dr 7:00 p m. Wed. - Ice Cream and Cake Social followed by ()uarterly Church Conference 8:00pm -ChancelChoir
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Comer 14th and Elm Streets Richard R Gammon and Gerald M. Anders. Ministers; Brett Watson, Director of Music; E Robert Irwin, Organist ,,
9:45 a m Sun. - Church School 10:30 a m. - Summer Choir 11:00 a m. - Worship ' 11:00 a m - Childrens Church
SClMMl
- 7:00 p.m. - Summer Youth-Immanuel Baptist 9:00 a.m. Mon. - Slimnastics 9:00 a m Tue. - Park A-Tot 9:00 a.m. Wed. - Slimnastics 7:00 p m. - Evangelism Explosion 7:00p.m. - Westminster Class Study 9:00a.m. Thur. - Park-A-Tot 7:30pm -OvereatersAnonymous 10:00 a.m. Fri. - Pandoras Box 10:00 a m Sat. - Pandoras Box
HOLLYWOOD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH HWY 43 South Guest Minister Rev. Stewart LaNeave SS.Supt.-Elsie Evans Music Director-Vivian Mills Organist Leida McGowan Youth Leaders-Debbie and Steve Asl-inger
10:00 a.m. Sun - Sunday School
II :00 a.m. Worship Service 8:00p.m Wed.-ChoirPractice
MORNING GLORY APOSTOUC FAITH HOLINESS CHURCH 1012 West 5th Street, Greenville, N.C. Eldress Irene G. Epps 4th Sunday until notified 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Bible School 12:00 p.m. Worship Service 7:30p.m. WorshipiPreaehing 7:30 p.m. Tue - Worship & Preaching 7:30 p.m. Thur - Worship 4 Preaching
UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF CHRIST 100 Crestline Blvd.
Minister, Rick Townsend 756^5
10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a m. - Morning Worship 11:00 a m. -Jr Church 6:00 p m. - Choir Rehearsal 7:00p.m. Evening Worship
HOOKER MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH
III GreenvilleBlvd Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Ralph G. Messick, Minister Phone 756-2275
9:45 a.m. Sun.-Coffee 10:00 a.m. - Church School 11:00 a.m. - Church at Worship 4:30p.m. BeginnerChoir 5:00 p.m.-Junior Choir
RED OAK CHRISTIAN CHURCH
264 By Pass West Dr. Dan Hensley, Interim Minister 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Dr. Dan Hensley, Preaching 7:00 am. Mon - Mens Prayer Breakfast Nursery School Monday thru Friday, 7:00a m tll6:00p m.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SRI727(LakeGlenwoodRd.)
Mr. Melvin Rawls Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Bible School 11:00 a.m. - Worship Service 5:30 p.m. Tue. - Workday on the Church
9:45 a.m. Sat. - Roanoke DUtlct Convention at Beaver Bam Church of Christ
OAKMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 1100 Red Banks Rdhd E. Gordon Conklin, Pastor Nell D. Booth, Jr., Min of Education Treva Fldler, Min. of Music 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Library Open 10:00 a.m.
9:45a.m.-SundaySchool IO:4Sa.m. - Library Open 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a m - Morning Worship. Childrens Church 6:00 p.m.-BYF 9:15 a.m. Wed. ^ Staff Devotional
8:00 p.m. - Mid-Week MeditaUon k Fellowship Hour 8:00 p m. Thur. - Chancel Choir Rehearsal
PINEY GROVE FREE WILL BAPTIST Hi^way 264 West. Greenville. North Carolina Allan Sterbin. Pastor, 756-7430 10:00a m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 7:00p.m. - Evening Worship 8:00p m. - ChoirPractice 7 30 p.m Wed -BiWe Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Visitation
BROWN'S CHAPEL APOLOSnC FAITH mURCH OF GOD AND CHRIST (BelvoirHwy )
Rte 4, Greenville, North Carolina Bishop R. A. Griswould, Pastor 8:00 p.m Thur - Bible Studies (Sister Ida SUton, Teacher)
8:00p.m Fri. - PrayerMeeting 10:00 a m 4th Sat. - Youth Convention (Hertford, North Carolina), (Elder D Wooten. President)
10:00 a m 4th Sun - Youth Convention (Hertford. North Carolina), (Elder Dennis Wooten President)
10:00 a m 5th Sun. - Unioo (Hertford, North Carolina)
7:00 p.m. Prison Camp Ministry (Missionary Mary Sheppard)
FIRST PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS Comer of Brinkley Road and Plaza Drive Pastor. Frank Gentry 9:45 a m Sun - Sunday School. Dickie Rook. Supt.
11:00 a.m. ^ Worship Service (Missionary Philip List)
6:00p.m. - Choir Practice 7:00p.m. - PrayerandPraise 7:00pm. Mon. - Mens Fellowship 7 30 p m . - Prayer Warriors 8:00p.m -BoardMeeting 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study/Lifeliners 7:30 p m. - Childrens/Teen Choir 7:00 a m Thur. - Nursing Home Chocowinlty 9 30 a m. Fri. - Sunday School Lesson WBZQ 7:00 p.m. University Nursing Home
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 520 East Greenville Boulevard
756-3138
Dr WillR.WaUace, Minister 9:45a mSun.-Church School 11 OOa.m-Worship 12:00 p.m. - After-Church Fellowship 10:00 a m. Tue. - Newsletter Information Due in Office 7:30 p m. Wed - Summer Mid-Week Fellowship 7:30 p.m. Chancel Choir Rehearsal
PHILIPPI CHURCH OF CHRIST 1610 Farmville Blvd Rev Randy B. Royall, Pastor 2:00 p.m. Sat. - Gospel Chorus Meeting and Choir Rehearsal 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School, Mrs. Mary Jones, Stmt.
11 00 a.m. - Morning Worship 1:00 p.m. Wed - Joy Hour at the Church
8:00 p.m. - Bible Study and Prayer Meeting
EVANGELISTIC TABERNACLE 264 Bypass West at Laugl^gbouse
Drive
Rev. SJ.WUlUms, Minister Minister of Music . Mike Pollard 10:00 a.m. Sun. Sunday School. Lynwood Lawson, Supt.
11 00 a.m. - Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. - Junior Worship, Judy Jennings & Debra Whaley 7:00pm - Celebration of Praise 7:30 p m. Wed - Pryer k Sharing 7:30 p.m. - Youth Service, Gary k LaRee Maness, Youth Ministers 7:00 p.m Sat. - Intercessory Prayer
IMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH
1101 S. Elm St., Greenville, N.C.
High Burlington, Pastor Lynwood Waiters, Minister of Education and Youth 9:30-9:45 a.m. Sun. - Library Open 9:45 a. m. Sunday School 10:45-11 00 a.m. - Library Open 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 7:00 p.m. Greenville Youth Fellowship, Joseph 4 His Coat
6:15 p.m. Wed. Fellowship supper line opens 7:15 p.m. - Family worship. Nursery 7:15-8:00p.m.-Library Open 8:00p.m. -Church conferciice 10:00 a.m. - Yureka Bible Stuify with Doris Henderson, 1712 Rosewood Drive
SELVU CHAPEL FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 1701 South Green Street Rev. Clifton Gardner, Pastor 9:45 a.m. Sun. - SundaySchool 11:00 a.m. Worship Services 3:00p.m - The Senior Choir will present 200 Women In White, Eldress Millie T Williams, Pastor of First Timothy Church, accompanied by her choir, will be in charge of the service 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. August 1 Trust Board Meeting
7:30 p.m. August 6 - C.G. Spiritual Choir Rebeaism 7:00 p.m. August 5 - Senior Choir Rehearsal 11:00 a.m. 4 3:00 p.m. August 21 -Church Anniversary
GREENVILLE CHURCH OF CHRIST 264 By Pass and Emerson Road Brian Whelchel, Community Evangelist Carl Etchison, Campus Evangelist 8:00 a.m. Sun. "Amazing Grace TV Bible Study Channel 12 10:00 a.m. - Bible Study Qasses for all ages
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship: "Adorn The Doctrine Deny 4 Live Titus2:9-I5 6:00 p.m. Evening Worship: "Adorn The Doctrine, Speak, Exhort, ReproveTItue 2:15 7 :00 p.m. Wed. - Bible Study Classes for all ag/K For information or transportation, please call: 752-6367 or 756-7952
FIRST FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH 2600 South Charles Street GreenvUle, North Carolina 27834 Pastor-Harry Grubbs 9:45 a m Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m Morning Worship 7:30pm Wed.-BibleStudy 8:15 p.m. - Choir Rehearsal
YORK MEMORIAL A.M.E. ZION CHURCH
201 Tyson St., GreenvUle, N.C.
The lUv. Luther Brown Sr.
9:30 a.m. Sun.-Sunday School 11 J)0 a.m. Worship Service 6:30 p.m. Evening Worship 7:30p.m. Tue.-Choir Rehearsal 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Mid Week Prayer Service
7:00 p.m. Thur - Senior Choir Rehearsal 10:00 a.m. Sat - Youth and ChUdien Training Hour, Christian Education Department in charge
THE CHURCH OF GODOF PROPHECY
l2l6MumfordRd.
James C. Brown, Pastor 10:00 a.m. Sun. - SundaySchool 11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship Service
6:30p.m. - Young People Service 7:00p.m. - Evangelistic Service 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer MeeUng
HOLY TEMPLE A.F.C.O.G.
Route 6, GreenvUle, N.C. SalntsvUle Elder l.J. Robinson 8:00 p.m. Fri. - Bible Studies (Missionary L. Debrew)
8:00p.m. Tue. - Midweek Service 7:30 p.m. 2nd Sun. - Worship Service 7:30 p.m. 4th Sun. Worship Service 10:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School (Supt. Deacon L. Whitaker)
11 30 a.m. 1st Sun. - Missionary and Youth Day 11:30 a.m. 2nd Sun. - Deacon Day (Elder Robinson Speaker)
11:30 p.m. 4th Sun. - Pastoral Day (Elder Robinson Speaker) ll:30a.m.5thSun - Union Service
ARTHUR CHRISTIAN CHURCH Belt Arthur, N.C. 23128
Homecoming Service Planned
Quarterly meeting and homecoming services will be held at St. James Free Will Baptist Church Saturday and Sunday, starting with a business meeting at 6 p.m. Saturday. Communion will be celebrated at 7:30 p.m. Saturday with Vice Bishop J.H. Vines and the congregation of Lewis Chapel FWB Church in charge.
The service Sunday at 11 a.m. will be conducted by the Rev. C.R. Parker and the choirs and congregations of Cherry Lane, Smith Chapel ami St. James churches. Dinner will be served in the fellowship hall following the service. The Rev. Blake Phillips and the congregation of Zion Hill FWB Church. Winterville, will participate in the 2:30 p.m. service.
Women's Day Service Planned
Elm Grove Free Will Baptist Church, Ayden, will observe Womens Day Sunday at 11 a.m. The program will feature 100 women in white.
The sermon will be delivered by Eldress Rumah Knox of Good Hime Church in Winterville.
Renovafed Sanctuary To Be Dedicated
The members of Bethel Baptist Church will dedicate their newly renovated sanctuary at 11 a.m. Sunday. Members and business firms who participated in the repair of the 61-year-old building will be recognized.
Joint Services Scheduled
New Deliverance Free Will Baptist Church, Ayden, presently worshipping at Grifton Chapel Free Will Baptist
Church, Grifton, will observe joint quarterly meeting services Friday through Sunday. Quarterly conference will be held Friday at 7:30 p.m.
Holy Communion will be celebrated Saturday at 7:30 p.m with Bishop Jesse WUliams of Grace Mission Holiness Church, Goldsboro. Music will be rendered by Rock Spring Choir, Greenville.
Joint Sunday school will be held Sunday at 9:30 a.m. The worship service at 11 a.m. will be conducted by Elder J.L. Warren, the chancel choir and the senior ushers. Dinner will be served at 2 p.m., and the Rev. Ed Lewis and the Savannah Church congregation will be in charge of the 3 p.m. service.
St Mathew Plans Youth Day
Youth Day services will be observed Sunday at 11 a.m. at St. Matthew Free Will Baptist Church. Elder David Dannels and the No. 2 choir and junior ushers will be in charge of the
service.
Eldress Marie Grimes will conduct a service at 7:30 p.m.
Anniversary Qbservance Set
The junior choir and junior ushers of St. John Missionary Baptist Church, Falkland, will celebrate their 24th anniversary Sunday at 4 p.m. The Rev. James Harris, pastor of St. Reddick Baptist Church, Belhaven, will deliver the anniversary sermon.
Church Board To Meet Saturday .
A board meeting will be held Saturday at 6 p.m at Burneys Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, Black Jack, for the election
I
World Council Of Churches Has Been Facing Storm Of Criticism
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) - Christians running that international visionary ship, Oikumene, moved into this western Canadian city beside the Pacific late this week, facing a storm of criticism.
They came for the sixth assembly of the World Council of Churches which opens Sunday, the first such gathering in eight years and ttie first one on the American continent in 19 years.
It comes amid sharpened attacks on the council, whose emblem is a ship with a cross as a masthead and the Greek word, oikumene, meaning the whole inhabited earth, symbolizing the journey toward Christian unity.
There is evidence that grass-roots pressure for unity is growing stronger in many parts of the world, says the Rev. Michael Kin-namon, a U.S. Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) theologian and on the councils doctrinal commission staff.
He expressed hope the assembly, besides celebrating interchurch ties already achieved, will renew the call for obedience to Christs prayer that we may all be one.
More than 4,000 people, 900 of them official delegates of 303 denominations around
Ben James, Minister 9:45 a.m. Sun. Bible School (Michael Mills. Supt.)
11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 a.m. Junior Church 5 00 p.m. - CYF Meeting 6:00p.m. Evening Worship 7:30p.m. Tue. - Visitation 7:30 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m.Thur. -ChoirPractice A Growing Church For A Coming King
HOLY TRINITY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 1400 Red Bank Road, Greenville. N .C. Rev. Don Paul Lee 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School II :00 a.m. Worship Service 6:30 p.m. - United Methodist Youth Fellowship 6:00p.m.Tue -Troop 19Brownies 7:30 p.m. - Womens Bible Study 7:30 p.m. Thur. - Choir Practice
GREENVnXE BIBLE CHURCH Rotan Club (Rotary and Johnston) DinoSchulmeier
10:00 a.m. Sun. - Worship Service and Childrens Choir 6:00 p.m. - Family Service 6:15 a.m. Mon. - Mens Breakfst 4 Bible Study (Three Steers Rest.)
5:30 p.m. Wed - Growth Group (104 Jay Circle)
7:30 p.m. Thur. - Ladies Bible Study (809 Forbes Street)
HEALING AND DELIVERANCE
Service Even Sunday at 11:00 a.m. Emanuel temple Pentecostal Holiness Church of the Lord Jesus Christ.
No. 1 Location at Hassell Cross Road Pastor Quersur Harris Special prayer for the sick
GOOD HOPE FWB CHURCH 404 N. Mill St.
WintenUle, NC 28590 Bishop W.H.MitcheU, Pastor 5:00p.m. Sat. Choir II Meeting 9:45 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School II :00 a.m. Sun. Morning Worship, W.H. Mitchell Gospel Chorus Render ini Music 7:00 p.m. Wed. - Prayer Meeting 7:30 p.m. Friday before first Sunday, (Quarterly Conference
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCH Fourth and Meade Street 11:00 a.m. Sun. - Sunday School 11:00 a.m. - Sunday Senice 7:45 p.m. Wed. - Wed. Evening Meeting
2:00 to 4:00 p.m. - Reading Room, 400 S. Meade Street
UNITARIAN-UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP Meeting and Jaycee Shelter In Elm Street Park Sidney Barnwell, President TelMhone 758^906 10:30 a.m. Sun. - Informal Building Committee has found a place 12:00 p.m. - Cover-dU) lunch
the world totaling nearly 500 million believers, are expected for the 18-day assembly, July 24 through Aug. 10.
But even before it started, criticisms rolled from the sidelines. A Switzerland-based evangelical group, Christian Solidarity International, began meeting, challenging the council to deal more strongly with religious repression.
Our persecuted brothers and sisters are excluded from this major meeting, said the Rev. Hans Stuckelberger, president of the organization, which launched a series of meeting focused on victims of religious oppression.
The group readied a petition to the assembly, demanding attention to that issue in communist and other areas.
Other anti-council demonstrations and meetings were scheduled, featuring Northern Irelands fiery preacher-politician Ian Paisley and fundamentalist Bob Jones Jr. of Bob Jones University in South Carolina, recently denied tax exemption in a U.S. Supreme Court decision because of racist policies.
The criticisms were heighted by recent magazine articles and a CBS TV show, claiming the council was pro-Marxist and funded armed black revolutionaries against minority white regimes.
Big Demand For Bishops' Letter
WASHINGTON (AP) -With a backlog of more than 35,000 advance orders, the publishing arm of the U.S. Catholic Conference has started mailing out copies of the. U.S. Catholic bishops pastoral letter on war and peace.
The cost is $1.50 each, cheaper for bulk orders. Earlier a documentary service. Origins, distributed more than 40,000 copies and more than 1 million additional copies appeared in Catholic newspapers publishing the text.
The letter condemns nuclear warfare and calls for a bilateral halt in producing nuclear weapons.
Send Thanks To Russian Church
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - The World Council of Churches has sent a telegram to the Russian Orthodox Church, expressing thanks to it for helping arrange exit visas for Pen-tecostals wanting to emigrate. Seven of them had taken refuge in the U.S. Embassy in Moscow and remained there until recently.
The council denies the charges, calling them misleading or false, saying its aid to end racism goes only for humanitarian purposes and that it explicitly rejects communism.
The assembly, the councils supreme legislative body, has met every seven or eight years since the councils founding assembly in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, in 1948,35 years ago.
The organization has more than doubled in size since then, growing from 147 mostly Western Europpean and American Protestant denominations to 303 of them in 100 countries on every continent.
They include not just most of the worlds major Protestant bodies but Eastern Orthodox, Anglican, Old Catholic, Pentecostal and indej^ndent denominations.
Third World churches, as well as Eastern Orthodoxy, both in the West and communist orbit, have become strongly represented. Roman Catholicism, while not a full member, participates influ-
AAost Reply To Abortion Survey
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Most clergy and laity of the Lutheran Church in America who responded to a survey approve abortion in so-called hard cases but not when a married couple feels it could not adequately support more children.
Findings from a wide-ranging Lutheran Listening Post survey found that most members say abortion is acceptable in case of rape or a pregnancy endangering the mothers life but not because of economic considerations.
Most also say that sexual relations outside marriage is always or almost always wrong, an exception for a majority being elderly couples who live together but whose financial situation makes marriage impractical.
The survey, involving responses from 1,761 laity and 838 clergy, found that about 90 percent think homosexuality is a departure from the natural order of Gods creation, but most agreed that sexual behavior among consenting adults is not a matter for legislation or police action.
entially in various aspects of the council.
Scores of special programs were planned to supplement the official assembly events, including a film festival, public forums, coffee houses and a liturgical art exhibit provided by the Canadian Roman Catholic bishops.
Most assembly events, including the opening worships services and an afternoon of celebrative festivities Sunday, are on the campus of the University of British Columbia.
Filched Rock Said Cursed
PHOENIX, Ariz.(AP)-A small rock pilfered from the Petrified Forest National Park turned out to be more trouble than it was worth, says a North Carolina teen-ager.
I honestly thought it wouldnt hurt to take just one tiny little rock, Angie Davis of Huntersville wrote the National Park Service, describing herself as desperate to get rid of it.
She explained that within hours after filching it on June 24 from the park east of Holbrook, she regretted her crime.
Ever since we left the Petrified Forest, our Winnebago has had four flat tires, said Angie, who had visited the park as part of a three-week tour with 29 other teen-agers.
In San Francisco, we hit a truck and busted out two windows, one just above my head.
But thats not all.
While on their tour, the group reserved one day a week for washing clothes, picking up their schedule the next day.
There was a big storm while we were at the Laundromat, she said. The power went off for a while and took us completely off schedule.
Now when anything bad happens, everyone says: Its Angies rock. I swear I think it is a curse.
She added that she would be much relieved if you will take this dam thing and throw it back in the petrified forest with the rest of those troublemakers.
P.S. We just ran out of gas.
Hear The Good News...Receive New Life
e OAK MSIIAK CHinCII
264 Bypass West 9:45 a.m. Bible School. Come Grow With Us.
11:00 a.m. Dr. Dan Hensley preaching
When A Man Gets A Good Look At Jesus Christ Hell Never Be The Same Again
Nursery School Mon. thru Fri. 7:00 a.m. til 6:00 p.m.
THE END OF YOUR SEARCH FOR A FRIENDLY CHURCH
of new church leaders.
Mens day services will be observed Sunday at ll a.m. At 3 p.m., a building fund service will be conducted by the Rev. Steven Jones and the congregation of Mount Zion Church.
Eldress To Speak Sunday
Eldress Phyllis Watts will speak at Rock Spring Free Will Baptist Church Sunday at 7:30 pm. The program is ^nsored by the No. 2 choir.
Quarterly Meeting Scheduled
Waterside Church will hold quarterly meeting services this weekend.
Board meeting will be held tonight at 7:30 p.m. Communion services will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. by the Rev. Theodore Underhill and the Arthur Chapel choir and ushers. Worship Sunday at 11 a.m. wUl be led by Bishop W.L. Phillips. Dinner will be served at 2 p.m.
At 3 p.m. Sunday Elder Robert Phillips and the Crisp Chapel choir and ushers will be in charge.
Haddock Chapel Plans Services
Church school will be held Sunday at 9:45 a.m. at Haddock Chapel Church. The 11 a.m. worship service will be conducted by the Rev. Billy Anderson and the young adult choir.
Joy Night Service Planned
A special joy night service will be held at New Hope House of Prayer Holiness Church, 403 Brown St., Saturday at 8 p.m. The speaker will be Missionary Wanda Warren of Snow HUl.
Oak Grove Plans Service
A service wl be held at Oak Grove Free WUl Baptist Church Sunday at 3 p.m. The service will be conducted by Bishop Matthew Best and the senior choir and ushers.
Bishop To Lead Service
Bishop Matthew Best wUl conduct a service at St. Mark Free WUl Baptist Church Sunday at 11 a.m. He will be accompanied by the No. 2 choir and the ushers of Best Chapel.
Anniversary Celebration Slated
Ushers of St. Monica Church will hold the annual anniversai7 celebration service Sunday at 6 p.m. The church is located in Grimesland.
Concert Set At Holly Hill
Roy and the Sunset Spirituals will be in concert at the Holly HUl Free WUl Baptist Church Saturday at 7:30 p.m. The concert wUl be sponsored by the Holly Hill No. 2 Choir.
Hines To Lead Service Sunday
The Rev. Walter Hines will lead services at St. John Baptist Church Sunday at 7:30 p.m. He will be accompanied by the St. John Choir.
Quarterly Meeting To Be Observed
Quarterly services, including communion at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, wUl be held this weend at Holy Mission Holy Church:
On Sunday at 11 a.m.. Pastor Shirley Atkinson and the senoir choir and ushers will be in charge. Dinner wUl be served at 2 p.m. and at 3 p.m. the Rev. Adolph Holmes and the congregation of Burning Bush Holy Church of Vanceboro wUl be in charge.
Concert Scheduled At Sycamore
The Senior Ushers of Sycamore Baptist Church will present a concert Sunday. The program will begin at 1:30 p.m. at the church.
Musical Program To Be Held Sunday
A musical program, climaxing a baby contest, wUl be held Sunday at Mount Calvary Free WUl Baptist Church. The program wUl start at 3 p.m.
Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church
Mary K. McNeill,
A Student At Union Theological Seminary In Richmond, Virginia.
Will Conduct Sunday Worship Services
At The Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church
Through August
The Puhlic Is Invited To Attend These Services
Greenville Church ^ Of The Nazarene
Presently Meeting In The First Federal Building, Community Room, Greenville Boulevard.
Cliff Jones, Pastor
Sunday School .........................9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship...........................11:00 A.M.
Sunday Evening Service.....................6:00 P.M.
355-6329 or 756-5872
of (flod ifioufd Ij a oital fiait of oni j [ifi.. join ui tfiis ^undaLj!
E T Vdison, Min)slt
9L
SUNDAYSCHOI WORSHIP
y 45 A M 11 (IDA M
We have openings in our 2. ,'V and 4 year old nursery school program Call Marcia
C^/ltnOXLCiL Pleasants, 752-65.1 iBajitiii Ck lX^cl 1510Greenville Blvd S E GREENVILLE'S FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
"A Soulhern Haplisl Cliurcli'
10-The Daily Reflector. GreeimUe, N.C.-Friday, July tt, UO
Stock And Market Reports
Hogs
RALEIGH. N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 75 cents higher. Kinston 45.75. Clinton. Elizabethtown. Fayetteville. Dunn. Pink Hili. Chadboum, Ayden. Pine Level. Laurinburg and Benson 45.75. Wilson 46.50. Salisbury 46.00. Rowland
45.00. Spiveys Comer 44.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 33.00. Fayetteville
31.00. Whiteville 33.00. Wallace 31.00, Spiveys Corner 31.00. Rowland 31.00, 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 24 to 3 pound birds. 47 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a preliminary weighted average of 49.65 cents f o b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate to short with increased deaths due to the hi^i temperatures. Moderate demand. Weights light. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in Nobth Carolina Friday was
1.653.000. compared to 1,555,000 last Friday.
Hens
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was firm. Supplies not as available due to ie effects of high temperatures on egg production. Demand moderate. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday slaughter was 15 cents.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market turned mixed today as the trading pace slowed on Wall Street.
Seven stocks fell in price for every six that rose in the midday tally on the New York Stock Exchange.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which rose 1.51 points Thursday and rolled up a 39.47-point gain over the previous three sessions, nud^ up another .20 point to 1,229.57 at noon.
Big Board volume dropped to 31.75 million shares a third of the way throu^ the session from 50.36 mUlion in the same period Thursday.
Warner Communications topped the active list on the NYSE, down 1% at 21^.
The NYSEs composite index fell .21 to 97.58. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up .25 at 246.89.
NEW YORK (AP) -Midday stocks
.AMR Corp AbbtLabs Allis Qialm Alcoa .AmBrands Amer Can Atn Cyan AmFamily .Am Motors .AmStand Amer T4T Beat Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Bu'rlngt Ind CSX Con) CaroPwU Celanese Cent Soya Champ Int Chrssfer CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis CoaAgra Conti Group DowChem duPont Duke Po EastnAirL East Kodak / EatonCp Exxon Firestone FlaPowLl FlaProgress FordMot For McKess Fuqua s GTE Corp GnDynam GenlElect s Gen Food Gen MUIs Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacif Goodrich Goodyear 28u'..
Grace Co GtNor Nek Grevhound Gulf Oil Herculeslnc Honeywell Hosp{(^ s Ing Rand IBM
Intl Harv Int Paper Int Rectif Int T4T K mart KaisrAlum Kane Mill KanebSvc KroeerCo Lockheed Loews Corp .Masonite n .McDrmlnt n .Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto NCNB CD NabiscoBrd Nat Distill NorflkSou * OlinCp Owenslll Penney JC PepsiCo Phelps Dod PhilipMorr PhUlpsPet Polaroid ProctGamb s Quaker Oat RCA
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FRIDAY
7;30p.m. - Red Men meet
SATURDAY
1:30 p.m. Duplicate bridge game at Planters Bank 8:00 p m. AA open discussion group at St. Paul's Episcopal Church
Following are selected market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs
Carolina Power k Light
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Crime-Stopper...
(Coi^iiHJed from Page 1)
and the donatioos are tax-deductable. he emphasized.
Jackson said the Crime Stoppers program is an effort involving all law enforcement agencies in Pitt County, by providing a mechanism for citizen involvement without interference in police operations.
Directed by a 15-member board made up of civilians from all areas of the county. Crime Stoppers will have a private telephone line which can be used by residents of the area to furnish police agencies with information about crimes that have been committed.
Jackson said the callers giving information will not be identified. He added that rewards of up to 51,000 will be paid to persons giving information, even If no arrests are made in a case.
The amount of rewards paid by Crime Stoppers, Jackson explained, will be determined by a committee after weighing the value of the information given.
Jackson, who said the Pit-t-Greenville Chamber of Commerce has assisted in getting the program establish, said all rewards paid by Crime Stoppers will be from funds donated by individuals and businesses. No municipal or county money will be used.
Among other North Carolina cities having Crime Stoppers programs are Winston-Salem, Greensboro-Guilford County, Statesville and Goldsboro.
Since 1981, the program in Winston-Salem has helped solve 287 crimes and resulted in $48,828 in stolen property and narcotics being recovered.
The program in Statesville has resulted in 51 cases being solved and the recovery of more than $20,000 worth of stolen property and narcotics.
Jackson said Crime Stoppers helped solve a murder in Gold^ro last week within 12 hours after the crime was committed.
Since 1981, the Greensboro program has led to the arrest of 229 individuals and the recovery of $126,597 worth of stolen property. More than $277,000 worth of narcotics have been recovered. .
ACCIDENT TOLL ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Police say 36 people were killed when a bus skidded off a road and crashed into a ravine, 100 miles northwest of Islamabad.
Obituary Column
Dawsoo
Funeral services for Mrs. Ernestine Nicbds Dawson will be held at 1;30 p.m. Sunday at Mount Calvary Free Will Baptist Church. Burial will be in the Brown Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Dawson was a longtime worker at Cone Memorial Hospital in Greensboro and was married to Frank Dawson. She was a member of the Church of Christ in Greensboro and a former member of the Knights of Pythias and the Star of the East No. 10.
She is survived by a daughter, Evelyn Dawson Purvis of Greensboro; four sisters, Florence Nichols, Mary Wilson, Amandy Tyson and Doris Mooring, all of Baltimore; four brothers, Willie Nichols of Greenville, Clarence Nichols and Clifton Nichols, both of Baltimore, and Elmer Nichols of Fairmont, and six grandchildren.
Family visitation will be Saturday from 8-9 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Oiapel.
Will Perform Ritual Dances
KENANSVILLE - The Ihoka Dancers of the Boy Scouts of America, the Order of the Arrow, will perform the ritual dances of the Sioux Nation at the William R. Kenan Memorial Amphitheater in Kenansville at 7:45 p.m. Saturday prior to the 8:15 p.m. reglar performance of Tte Liberty Cart outdoor drama.
In conjunction with this event, all Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Brownies and Explorer troop members in uniform will be admitted to both the dance and the drama for $1.
Dances to be performed by the Ihoka Dancers include the Flag Dance, War Dance, Eagle Dance and the famous Hop Dance. They will be accompanied by authentic Sioux music and chants.
BORDER TREATY BANGKOK, Thaand (AP) - Vietnam reported today it has signed a border treaty with Cambodia, defining their common frontier and establishing rules for cross-border movement between the two communist countries.
BIG CHARLIES VEGETABLE FARM
Pick You Own Butter Beans
ft Crowder Peas..........................
25* Lb.
Pick Your Own Okra......................
50* Lb.
Pick Your Own BeU Peppers..............
10* Pod
Picking Time 7 A.M. - 6 P.M.
We Also Have Collards, Watenneloiu, ft Cantaloupes
1 mile hom Red Oak Church Ooeti 9 to 6 On The Allen Road
756*1145 We accept food stamps
ATTENTION GREENVILLE CITIZENS!
PUBLIC NOTICE
County of Pitt City of GrMnvillo
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Ad-lustments upon a request for a special use permit by Rossignol and Associates whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-42.3(h) of the City Code in order to construct a multi-family dwelling at a land use intensity ratio of 50 in an R-6 zoning district located on the 264 bypass N.E. directly across from the intersection of Emerson Road and 264 bypass N.E.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will t>e 7:30 PM. Thursday, July 28,1983. in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF i ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Bill Bowen whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32 74(a) in order to have an accessory use (video games) to an automatic laundry in a floodway zoning district located at 514 E. 14th Street
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday. July 28.1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Ad-lustments upon a request tor a special use permit by George and Samual Pugh whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit, under the provisions of Section 32-320) of the City Code, in order to locate a mobile home in an RA-20 zoning district located on the north side of Old River Road (SR 1401) approximately 1,605 feet east of Johnson Mill Run Bridge
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday. July 28,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.
July 15,1983, July 22,1983
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request tor a special use permit by First Federal Savings and Loan and W.C. King whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32 74(a) of the City Code in order to operate a nightclub at 509 North Greene Street in a floodway zoning district.
The time. date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28.1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Jonna Van Staagen whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-42.3(e) of the City Code in order to operate a home occupation (real estate office) at 410 Elizabeth Street. The property is zoned for R-6 usage.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28,1983. in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.
NOTICE OF HEARING BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS OF THE CITY OF GREENVILLE
A public hearing will be conducted by the Greenville Board of Adjustments upon a request for a special use permit by Eddie M. Davis whereby the petitioner desires to obtain a special use permit under the provisions of Section 32-32) in order to locate a mobile home in an RA-20 zoning district located on the south side of Hwy. 33 approximately 750 feet east of the intersection of Hwy. 33 and SR 1401.
The time, date, and place of the public hearing will be 7:30 PM, Thursday, July 28,1983, in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.
Lolt 0. Worthinglon CHyClwk
Grimes
WINTERVILLE - Mr. William Owi Grimes of 608 Hillcrest Ave. died at his home this morning. He was the husband ci Mrs. Mandie Brown Grimes of the home. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Mitchells Funeral Home, Winterville.
Hardee
ROBERSONVILLE -Vernon Lee Hardee, 61, a tobacconist with Red Front Warehouse in Robersonville, died Thursday afternoon. Fueneral services will be held Saturday at 2 p.m. in Biggs Funeral Chapd by the Rev. James 0. Hagwood. Burial will be in Martin Memorial Gardens.
Mr. Hantee was a member of the Robersonville First Baptist Church. He was the owner of the Family Favor-ites restaurants in Robersonville and Williamston and had been associated with the tobacco industry for the past 40 years. He was a member of the Stonewall Masonic Lodge No.2%andwasaShriner.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Bernice Ward Hardee; three sons, Gerald Hardee of Robersonville, and Mickey Hardee and Dennis Hardee, both of the home; two sisters, Mrs. Ethel Edwards of WiUiamston and Mrs. Hallie Crandell of Robersonville, and two brothers, Alton Hardee of Richmond, Va., and Wilbur Hardee of Greenville.
Family visitation will be tonight from 7-9 p.m. at Biggs Funeral Home.
Hardy
Funeral services for Theodore Roosevelt Hardy Sr., 70, of Route 3, Grifton, will be conducted Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at Grifton Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by Elder J.L. Wilson. Burial will be in the Live Oak Cemetery.
Mr. Hardy was a native of Pitt County and made his home in the Grifton community for 37 years. He was a security guard for Cox Trailers and was a member of Grifton Chapel FWB Church.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Maggie C. Hardy of the home; two daughters, Mrs. Ava Mae Hardy of the home
and Mrs. Leora H. Davis (rf Grifton; three sons, Theodiffe Roosevelt Hardy Jr. of the hwne, Lawrence Earl Hardy of Grifton and Eugene Hardy of Detroit; four sisters, Blrs. Thelma Pierce, Mrs. Ruby Williams and Mrs. SaUy Cannon, all (rf Grifton, and Mrs. Emma Kornegay of Chester, Pa.; one brother, James Ha^ of Grifton; 28 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren.
The family will receive friends Saturday from 7-9 p.m. at Flanagan Funeral Chapel in Grifton.
Hqpkits
Funeral services for Mr. Ed Hopkins, 61, will be conducted Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at Arthur Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, Bell Arthur, by Bishop J.N. Gilbert. Burial will ft^ow in Bakers Cemetery.
Mr. Hopkins was born in Wilson (k)unty and reared in Pitt County. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army and worked for Roger Baker in BeU Arthur.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Pauline Hopkins of the home; three daujgbters, Mrs Doris Mae Taylor of Winterville, Lois Jean Hopkins of Renston and Mrs. Mattie Gee of Wilmington, Del.; five sons, Johnny Ray Ht^ikins, Lpnnie Earl Ht^ikins and William Earl Hc^kins, all of the home, Eddie Hopkins Jr. of Greenville, and Lawroice William Hopkins of New Haven, Conn.; three brothers, Jasper Hqikins of Hampton, Va., Willie Gray Hopkins of Trenton, N.J., and Fred Hopkins of Greenville, and 16 grandchildren.
The family wiU receive friends Saturday from 8-9 p.m. at Phillip Brothers Mortuary Chapel.
Lofquist
Mrs. Kathryn Warthen Lofquist, 84, of 1616 E. Wri^t Road died today in Pitt Memorial Hospital. Funeral arrangemoits will
Tune-Ups - tSrai*? JOPs General Repans
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be announced by the Wilkerson Fuooal Home.
Starait
WASHINGTON, D.C. -Mr. Martin Van Buren Stewart Jr., 40, <rf 37 U St., S.E.. died Tuesday at his home. Funeral services will be conducted at noon Saturday at Tried Stone Church of ChrisL4l79thSt.,S.E.
Mr. Stewart was a native of Ayden, N.C., but lived the past 20 years in the WashingUm area. He attended South Ayda Scboiri and was a member of Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church in Ayden.
Surviving are his parents, Martin Van Buren and Evelyn Stewart of the bmne; four Asters, Ms. Chariotte Nadine Stewart of the home, Ms. Brenda Stewart of Suitland, Md., Ms. Evelyn Stewart of Greensboro, N.C., and Mrs. Patricia Harrington of Washing; four brothers, Lyddl Stewart and Curtis Ray Stewart, both of the home, and the Rev. Henry A. Stewart and Myron Stewart, both of Washington, and his maternal graodmi^Jier, Mrs. Francis CoxofAydoi.
The family will receive friends Friday from 6-9 p.m. at Vann Williams Funeral Home, 4808 Georgia Ave., N.W. Messages of sympathy may be smt to the funeral home or to the home.
vnidman OXFORD - Mr. Charles Franklin Wildman Sr. died at his home on Gilliam Street Thursday. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at Oxford Presbyterian Church. Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery.
Mr, Wildman taught in the public schools in Pitt County from 1923 until 1941, including Bell Arthur, Bethel, Falkland and Bdvoir. He then taught in Oxfwd and Stovall from 1941-59 and in the U.S. Army Dependents Schools in West Germany from 1959-70.
Surviving are his wife, Dsa Wildman of the home; two
daughters. Miss Betty WUdiian (rf Alexandria, Va., and Mrs. Katharine Smith of Myrtle Beach, S.C.; two sons, Charles F. Wildman Jr. of Greensboro and Stewart M. Wildman of Raleigh; one stepson, Tilman Zorn of Philadelphia; two brothers. Chaplain Albert Wildman of Atlanta and Raymond J. Wildman of Greensboro; two sisters, Blrs. Carl Johnson of Cedar Credi and Mrs. Cari Whiteside of Decatur, Ga.; four grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
The famy wiU receive friends toni^t from 7-9 p.m. at Gentry-NeweO & Vaughan Funeral Home in Oxford. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorial contributions be made to the Gifts and Beipiests Fund of the Oxford Presbyterian Church.
WflCT
CHOCOWINITY - Mr. John Wayne Wiley, 36, died Wednesday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. at Farmer Funeral Home in Aydei. Burial will follow in the Grifton Conetery.
Mr. Wiley was a retired employee of the city of Washington.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Nellie C. Wey of Chocowinity; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alton Wiley of Grifton; one brother, Wesley WUey of Grifton, and one sister, Blrs. Linda Williams of Grifton.
Family visitation will be tonight from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.
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The Change Has Come
OPENING WED., JULY 27!
THE GREEN LEAF
Restaurant & Entertainment Center
1104 N. Memorial Dr., U.S. 13 (Across From Airport, Greenville, N.C.)
PHONE 757-3107
TM Dl?DCl
^ IN PERSON Wed., July 27,1983
Doors Open 6:00 p.m. Band Starts 8:00 p.m.
$8.00 in Advance; $10.00 at the Door->-lnclude8 hors d oeuvres
Chubby Checker exploded into popular music 22 years ago with The Twist, a shot heard around the world. His new album, Th Change Has Coma, expresses the energy he has been showing on the road over the years. Chubbys influence has been so significant that Dick Clark even called him one of the three major influences in the music industry over the last 25 years ajong with Elvis Presley and The Beatles.
Added Attraction:
The Dynamic Upsetters
'Y For Your Dancing Pleasure
On Wednesday, July 27
Advance Tlckata Available At
Qreenville Record Bar (PKt Plaza A Carolina Eaal Mall)
Apple Recorda (Downtown Qreonvllla)
Qreonloal Roalaurant (1104 N. Momorial Driva Nightty til 9 P.M.)
*Open House Ticket Party*
Saturday, July 23, 5 P.M. til 9 P.M.
See Our Center, Relax, Get Your Tickets, Enjoy Yourself.
Sports nrfE DA TTY REFLECTOR Classified
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 22, 1983White Blocks Court Ruling On NCAA
By Tbe Associated Press
Universities who tioped to negotiate lucrative television packages for tbeir football teams have had their plans squelched by a U.S. Supreme Court justice who once was an All-American halfback.
Justice Byron R. Whizzer White, a star at Colorado in the 1930s, ordered Thursday that control of college football television must be restored to the NCAA. Whites order postponed tbe effect o a federal appeals court ruling that tbe NCAA violated antitrust laws when it negotiated contracts with ABC, CBS and the Turner Broadcasting System.
Were absolutely delisted, said NCAA President John Toner.
The C(^ege Football Association, a group of tbe top collegiate powerhouses, had hoped to put toother its own television package. Individual schools also wanted to make deals with national networks.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association has ^1 million worth of contracts with the networks over four years, but lower courts had held that schools must be free to cash in on their own.
The universities of Oklahoma and Georgia bad led the fight for schools to independently control their telecast rights. Thursdays decision, said OUahoma attorney Andy Coats, will cost the two schools millions of dollars.
Oklahoma and Georgia are guaranteed only one football appearance each in the NCAA package this fall.
Whites stay will remain in effect at least until the full Supreme Court can consider the case. October would be the earliest time that would happen.
In the meantime, coUe^ football will continue on television in 1983 as in the past and we hope it will be both exciting and successful, CFA executive director Chuck Neinas said. Eventually, we trust the final Supreme Court decision will enable a more innovative approach to college football television in 1984.
The stay worts to the benefit of virtually all the football-playing mem
bers of the NCAA who clearly want the continuation of national controls, said Toner, who also is athletic director at the University of Connecticut.
But some of the large football schools might argue with that assessment.
Our reaction is one of disappointment, said Mike Treps, sports information director for Oklahoma. We had hoped to free-martet our product. Our hands are tied until the courts reach a final decision.
Marvin Francis, assistant com-missitmer of the Atlantic Coast Conference, said if the ruling had not been in favor of the NCAA, the ACC would have proceeded with its plan to regionally
televise games in North Carolina, similar to the way ACC basketball is haned.
But Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Ten Conference, saw Whites ruling differently.
The total interests of college football and all but a few selfish institutions are best served by Justice Whites decision, which hopefully will permit the orderly presentation of college football on television this season, he said.
Many reacted not to the merits of the case, but expressed relief that a mad scramble for individual television contracts was averted.
The networks were predictably pleased.
"Were looking forward to the season now that the uncertainties have been resolved, said Jay Rosenstein of CBS.
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last month that the NCAA had violated the Sherman Act, an antitrust law. by controlling the televising of college football.
The appeals court upheld a similar ruling by a federal trial judge in Oklahoma City in a lawsuit filed against the NCAA by the University of Okl^ma and the University of Georgia Athletic Association.
The contracts are worth some $74 million for the 1983 season alone.Bosox Sneak Out Of Kingdom With lOth-lnning Rally, 14-13
Collision Course
Daryl Sconiers of the California Angels collides with Detroit catcher John Wockenfuss in an attempt to dislodge the ball from his mitt in the
fourth inning of the second game of a doubleheader at Anaheim Stadium Thursday. Wockenfuss held on to the ball for the out, but the Angels won 5-1. (AP Laserphoto)
By The Associated Press
The Seattle Mariners couldnt find much to smile about after what Boston did to them - but at least the Red Sox left the Kingdome intact.
The Red Sox were in the process of squandering a nine-run lead Thursday night when John Henry Johnson came out of the bullpen to preserve - for the time being, at least -Bostons lead.
He let the lead get away from him in the bottom of the ninth. But when left fielder Steve Henderson misplayed Tony Armas lOth-inning liner and Marty Barrett scored from second on the play, the Red Sox had a 14-13 victory and Johnson had a victory instead of a save.
They had the momentum going, said Johnson. If we hadnt won this one, I think wed have tom up the clubhouse.
It was a terrible ballgame, said Boston Manager Ralph Houk. Just one of those things. We couldnt get them out. It was a terribly pitched ballgame. Thats what it was until I brou^t John Johnson in. What can you say? It was unbelievable.
Elsewhere in the American League, it was Texas 3, Toronto 2; Milwaukee 7, Chicago 6; Oakland 9, Baltimore 7, and, in a twi-night doubleheader, Detroit 5, California 1 in the first game and California 3, Detroit 2 in the second game. Minnesota at Cleveland and Kansas City at New York were rained out.
The Mariners, en route to their fifth consecutive loss, trailed 13-4 after innings. But they scored three runs in the sixth and five in the seventh, then tied it in the ninth when Rick Sweet walked and came around on singles by Damingo Ramos and Tony Bemazard.
But in the 10th, Barrett singled and took second on a grounder. Then Armas ripped a liner to left-center field. Henderson chased it down, but the ball popped loose. Henderson was slapped with an error and Barrett scored the go-ahead run.
Dave Stapleton hit a three-run homer in Bostons seven-run sixth inning and Armas hit a two-run homer in the first
inning. For the Mariners, Richie Zisk had a two-run homer in the first inning and a solo shot in the sixth and rookie Jamie Nelson of the Mariners, in his second-big-league at-bat, hit a two-run homer.
Rangers 3, Blue Jays 2
Frank Tanana went the distance for the first time since 1982 - but all he really cared about was that the Rangers won. The win is the big thing. he said after pitching a five-hitter against the visiting Blue Jays. The complete game is icing on the cake, Tanana said.
Lafiy Parrish went 4-for-4 and drove in Texas tie-breaking run with his third single as Toronto absorbed its third loss in a row.
Brewers 7, White Sox 6
The Brewers countered Chicagos three-run eighth inning with one of their own to drop the White Sox into a virtual first-place tie with Texas in the West.
Paul Molitors tie-breaking double capped Milwaukees comeback after the Brewers had tied it 6-6 on singles by Ted Simmons, Ben Oglivie, and Rick Manning, a sacrifice and a wild pitch by Juan Agosto. Pete Ladd got the victory despite giving up Chicagos eighth-inning runs.
As 9, Orioles 7
Oaklands Ricky Peters drove in three runs, including the game-winner with a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the eighth inning, as the As beat Baltimore and left the Orioles tied with Toronto atop the East.
Rickey Henderson tripled before Peters lofted his decisive fly ball - and Davey Lopes added insurance with his 13th home run of the year. Eddie Murray hit his 18th homer for the Orioles while Dwayne Murphy and Jeff Burroughs homered for the As.
Tigers 5-2, Angels 1-3
Reggie Jackson doubled and scored a run in the second inning, then singled home the decisive run in the fifth as the Angels earned a split with the visiting Tigers.
Alan Trammels two-run homer was the big hit for the Tigers in the opener.
Raleigh AftorneyMountsEffortTo Hurlbut Challenging Field After Festival In Triangle
Five-Month 'Unemployment'
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Laura Hurlbut, who hasnt earned a dime in tournament piay for neariy five months, finds herself challenging for the lead heading into the second round of the $200,000 Ladies Professional Golf Association Mayflower Classic.
Hurlbut, who has missed the cut ei^t times and been disqualified once since February, opened the tournament Thursday with a 4-under par 68 at the Country Ciub of Indianapoiis.
The 24-year-old, who has less than $10,000 since joining the tour two years ago, finished the opening round one stroke off the pace set by Jo Ann Washam and Lauren Howe.
Ive been very discouraged at times, said Hurlbut, buried in the No. 135 spot on the current money list with only $1,608 to show for 14 tournaments this year.
A reaily nice sponsor, my father, has ailowed her to
Sports Colendor
Editor's Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays &wrts Friday's orts BasdMUl American Legion Playoffs 16 Sr. Babe RuUi State Tourney at Elizabeth City 17-18 Sr. Babe Ruth Tourney at Kinston
' r'l!
American Legion Playoffs 16 Sr. Babe Ruth State Tourney at Elizabeth City 17-18 Sr. Babe Ruth State Tourney at Kinston
Sundays Sports BaadlMll American Legion Playoffs 16 Sr. Babe Ruth State Tourney at Elizabeth City 17-18 Sr. Babe Ruth State Tourney at Kinston
keep playing, explained Huribut, who also credited a lot of good friends encouraging me for her willingness to battle the high scores which have plagued her on the tour.
Hurlbut, a Los Angeles resident who played on Tulsa Universitys 1980 national championship team, just missed sharing the first-day lead when she bogeyed her last hole by two-putting from 20 feet.
Hurlbut had identical 34s on both nines to equal her career low for the second time this year. Four of her six birdies came on par 3 holes after iron shots, including one that was recorded on a 35-foot shot.
I was hitting irons very, very well, Hurlbut said, crediting a recent talk with pro J.D. McSwain of Los Angeles with heiping her turn her game around.
I went home about three weeks ago, she said. He (McSwain) looked at me. I really worked hard that week. It was two years since I had any work with a pro and I think he really helped.
The turnaround couldnt be any more timely, since Hurlbut needs to earn $7,000 this year to remain on the tour.
I cant worry about it, she said about the possibiiity of losing her tour card. If its meant to be that I lose it, then Ill lose it.
After the best start of her career, Hurlbut says her big challenge in the second rmind will be to stay aggressive. I might start getting a little tenative.
Hurlbut shot her 68 while playing in the afternoon, wdien the temperature reached 97 and a swirling wind created additional problems for the
golfers.
Howe, Washam and Vicki Tabor, who also (^ned with a 68, were a little more fortunate. They started in the morning before the temperature ciimbed into the 90s, and ali three had most of their birdies early.
Howe, back on the tour after a three-year absence that
followed a lack of success when she qualified at the age of 18 in 1978, began by playing the back nine.
The first time I had a (LPGA) card, I was probably too young and I was playing hurt, Howe said. Possibly the best thing that happned to me was that I hurt my wrist. I had a chance to grow up.
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. - Convinced that the area wilt support it, a Raleigh attorney is mounting a major effort to bring the National Sports Festival to North Carolinas Research Triangle area in either 1986 or 1987.
Hill Carrow, 28 and a native of Kinston, is not the first person whos tried to bring world-ciass track and field into the Triangle area, but hes seen the festival in operation and he feels
Name Scam Continues
NATCHITOCHES, La. (AP) - Police promised to put a name on the accused con man who first claimed to be basketball immortal Bill Russell and who then said he was former pro football tight end Marv Fleming.
Its looking more and more like this guy is just one of the biggest frauds Ive ever seen, CpI. Russell Roge, a police spokesman, said Thursday.
Roge said FBI fingerprint experts had determined the man was neither Russell nor Fleming. He said the identity would be disclosed later today.
Fleming, at his home in the Los Angeles area, said he and his attorney A1 Ross had helped police establish the mans true identity.
The guy has been doing this since 74. the former Miami Dolphins and Green Bay Packers player said. Hes been living as a parasite off Marv Fleming since 74.
If this is the same guy, then he did this to me once before. He once conned a minister in Oakland out of $10,000 and I was getting bills addressed to Marv Fleming. That was back in 1972 when I was still playing and the NFL
and my attorney took care of the matter.
Fleming, who is now pursuing an acting career, said the National Football League security office had looked into the matter previously.
Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill can produce a first-rate operation.
Previous festival sites have included Syracuse, Indianapolis and Colorado Springs.
The thought gradually formulated that the festival could very well be done in this area, Carrow said. It turns out that somebody long before us had the idea.
Athletic directors at Duke, North Carolina and North Carolina State once thought about bringing the Pan American Games into the region. That idea never caught fire. Later, Duke track coach A1 Buehler and North Carolina Central coach Dr. Leroy Walker tried to bring Olympic trials to the area without success.
If history is not on Carrows side, he feels the area and its facilities are.
I think the fact that within a relatively close proximity, there are a number of very
good athletic facilities, especially considering the construction program at the University of North Carolina, and one that will start shortly at North Carolinas swell as some expansion at Duke, he said.
Dukes Wallace Wade Stadium has hosted world track and field competition, while UNC is constructing its new basketball arena which will include an Olympic swimming pool. N.C. State and the city of Raleigh could provide more indoor facilities.
Another factor is that the Olympic committee would like to retain the aspect of, amateurism in the sport, Carrow added. We look good from that point of view. The fact that were very amateur-
sports oriented looks good.
Whether Carrows dream becomes a reality depends on a visit this weekend from Sheila Walker, associate director of opjerations for the U.S. Olympic Committee. Shes a scout for the committee, looking at sites and making recommendations to the panel for future consideration.
Friday ni^t, she will make a presentation to the North Carolina Festival Committee and its guests. No decision is expected before the fall.
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Walks Cost Torrez, New York 6-1 Loss
By Tbe Associated Press On a night when Mike Torrez couldnt find the plate, the Ne\t York Mets' pitcher was appropriately hurt by a player named Walker.
' Ive been through a few of tb<e games in (Gass) A ball, said Cincinnatis rookie catcher Dann Bilardello after Torrez walked 10 batters in 31-3 innings Thursday night in the Reds 6-1 victory over the Mets. Thats the most Ive seen here (in the major leagues). Usually pitchers here are pretty consistent.
Torrezs total broke a single-game club record established by Nolan Ryan and Harry Parker, both of whom once walked nine batters in a game. Two of Torrezs walks, coiqiled with a double by Cesar Cedeno, loaded the bases for Duane Walker in the third inning, and the Cincinnati outfielder slugged a two-run double to key a three-run rally that sewed up the game for the Reds.
it looked like those walks were not going to hurt him, Bilardello said He was pitching out of the jams. But if you
keep walking that number (rf people, eventually somebody is ^ing to hurt you.
Elsewhere in the National Lea^, it was Pittsburgh 5, Los Angeles 4; Chicago 3, San Francisco 2; Montreal 9, Houston 4; PhiladdphialO, Atlanta 6 and San Di^4, St. Louis2.
Torrez, 5-12, and Cincinnati starter Charlie Puek), 4-5, a former Met, combined for 15 walks in the first four innings. There were 19 walks in the game, seven shy of the National League record f(M- nine innings.
Puek) scattered four hits and six walks over 6 1-3 im^. Ben Hayes, the third Cincinnati pitcher, came on in tbe eighth to pick iq) bis fourth save.
He struggled from pitch one, said Mets Manager Frank Howard. It was a rough night for him. But Michael is tbe type of guy who has to punish his arm. The more be throws, the better command of his stuff he has.
PiratesS, Dodgm4 In Pittsburgh, Jim Morrisrm hit a two-run, twcHXit single in the ninth inning as the surging Pirates rallied to defeat Los
Angeles and win their 11th game m the last 12.
Lee Mazzilli reached on an mw by shortstop Bill Russell to open the ioning, but Steve Howe, 3-5, got Lee Lacy to pop out and struck onA pincb-faitter Gene Tenace. Bill Madlock then singled and Howe walked Jason Thompson on a 3-2 pitch before Morrison lined his sin^ his third hit of tbe game.
Kent Tekulve, tbe fourth Pirate pitcher, worked 1 2-3 innings for his fifth victory in seven decisiois.
I wanted a fastball down the middle and tbe Lord delivered one, Morrison said of bis winning hit off Howe.
Cubs 3, Giants 2
In Chicago, Tom Va^zer and Jody Davis hit home rmis and Dick Rutbven and Lee Smith OHnbined on a five-faitto', leading tbe Cubs ova- San Francisco.
Ruthven, 7-7, tired in tbe 93Hie$ree beat and gave way in tbe eighth to Smith, who notdied his 13th save.Atlee Hammaker, 19-5, was tbe loser, although be gave up only five hits.
I gue^ their book on me is to pitdi me high fastballs, said Davis. Thats what he gave me at Candlestick Park last week and today in my first time at bat. 1 was looking for it on the first pitch.
Expos 9, Astros 4
In Montreal, A1 Olivers two-run ^^e ignited a six-run fifth and Bill Gullkkson scattered seva hits to lead tbe Expos over Houston. Montreal trailed 4-1 befce sending 10 men up against Ndan Ryan, 9-3, in the fifth, scoring all six runs after two were out.
Olivers single with tbe bases loaded cut Hours lead to 4-3. Gary Carter tied tbe ganm with an RBI double and Warren Cromartie drove in tbe tie-breaking run with a single. When tbe ball got past left fielder Jose Cruz for an error.
Carter also scored to make It 6-4.
Another run scored when third baseman Phil Gaoer made an error on Tim Wallachs bounca and two more scored on Andre Dawsons single.
Ryan struck out two batters in five innings, raising his career total to 3,585, two fewer than tbe all-time leader Steve Cariton.
Phillies 10, Braves 6
In Atlanta, Bobby Dernier had five singles and drove in three runs and Pete Rose knocked in three runs with t^ singes as Philadelphia unleashed an l8-hit attack to beat the Braves.
Mike Schmidt put tbe Phillies ahead to stay at 4-3 in the fifth when he hit his 19th homer off Rick Camp, 7-8. Roses three sin^ lifted his career total to 3,953 hits.
John Denny, 9-5, continued his mastery of the Braves, lifting his lifetime record against Atlanta to' 7-0. Denny yielded 10 hits, walked three and struck out four before being relieved with two out in the sixth. Willie Heman^ and A1 Holland finished up for the Phillies.
Padres 4, Cardinals 2
In St. Louis, Terry Kennedy drove in three runs and rookie Mark Thurmond and Luis DeLeon combined on a four-hitter to lead the Padres over the Cardinals.
San Diego grabbed a 1-0 lead in the first on Kennedys sacrifice fly off Joaquin Andujar, 4-13. After the Cardinals tied it in the fourth, Kennedy made it 3-1 in the fifth with a two-run double to provide the Cardinals with their actual winning runs.
Im not hitting too many home runs, but as long as I keqi getting RBIs,! dont care how they come, said Kennedy, a former Cardinal.
Mustafa Seeks Pardon
Run Down
St. Louis Cardinals Tommy Herr attempts to avoid the tag of San Diego shortstop Garry Templeton during the fourth inning of the
Thursday night game at Busch Stadium. Herr was caught between first and second on a grounder hit to Juan Bonilla at second base. Herr was out, as was batter David Green. (AP Laserphoto)
NEW YORK (AP) - Eddie Mustafa Muhammad, the light heavyweight contender, wants to be pardoned for actions last Friday night and is taking his case to boxings governing bodies.
With susposion a likely penalty for being overweight for his shot at Michael Spinks crown last week in Washington, D.C., the 31-year-(4d Muhammad said be would be visiting Mexico and Puerto Rico to talk with World Boxing (^oimcil and World Boxing Associatkm officials.
He reiterated at a news conference Thursday that be believed tbe official weigh-in scale was tampered with and that be actually weighed tbe division limit of 175 poumls - not the 177^ which tbe scale showed.
Altbou^ the scale was approved as accurate by government in^iectors, Muhammad was so adamant in believing that be was right that be refused to shed the extra poundage when given an extra two hours to make the limit.
Whats ri^it is right, he said. I made tbe wei^t.
He said that be had weighed 175 pounds on his botd scale on tbe day before the fight and then wait to check out on the official scale. But he said he saw the scale was off - and it was calibrated and everything.
A commissioner, a deputy commissioner, was with me and these were his words, Yes, somebody has been tampering with the scale.
He said be didnt know the deputy commissioners name.
Muhammad also said be brought two 2S-pouiKi weights from the gym and put them on tbe scale. Weighed together, they were 53% pounds, he said.
Bert Randolph Sugar, publisher of Ring magazine, said he bou^t two aoiwund four sacks. When each was placed on the official scale. Sugar said each weighed 39V4 pounds.
Muhammad, the former Eddie Gregory of New York, earlier read from a prepared statement, apologizing to the sports and boxing world at large for the cancelation of the title bout. He also apologized to Home Box Office, the cable television outfit which reportedly lost $200,000 because of the cancelation.
He said he was hopeful of a landing a title shot against Spinks, but Michael Spinks did not want to fight me. Holding two fingers about a half-inch apart, Muhammad added, He has a heart that big.
After Muhammad failed to make the weight, it was announced that the fight would go on as a 10-round non-title bout with the fighters getting half their original purses. For the title bout, Spinks, who is undefeated, was to get $1 million and Muhammad $200,000.
But Spinks later backed out of the non-title bout.
ACC Delays Television Plan After White's Ruling
By The Associated Press
The Atlantic Coast Conference has postponed Its plans to regionally televise conference games following a decision by Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White restoring control of college football television to the NCAA,
Ken Haines, vice president of network operations for Raycom, said the Charlotte-based company negotiated a contingency agreement with the ACC in May to telecast live ACC football games, pending the outcome of the court decision.
It means that our contingency with the ACC has now been put on the back burner pending any further devel
opment in the case, said Haines. I think were disappointed. We will not have the opportunity to provide regional live football to college fans in the ACC area."
Raycom-Jefferson is entering the second year of its three-year contract with the ACC for live basketball television rights.
He said Raycom received much interest from clients and stations to the concept of regional live ACC football.
Well just have to see what we can get from the networks for the TV games this year, said Marvin Skeeter Francis, assistant commissioner of the ACC. Theres certainly nothing we can do otherwise ... We do
know with our plan we would have had an ACC game every W60k
The College Football Association also canceled plans to develop its own TV-game package.
In the meantime, collie football will continue on tele vision in 1983 as in tbe past and we hope it will be both exciting and successful, said CFA executive director Chuck Neinas.
Eventually, we trust tbe final Siqireme Court decision will enable a more innovative approach to college football television in 1984.
White set aside until at least October tbe federal appeals court ruling that the NCAA violated federal antitrust law
in negotiating contracts with ABC, CBS and the Turner Broadcasting System. His order returns control of the telecasts to the NCAA until the full court can consider tbe formal NCAA appeal.
Justice Whites order is similar to the initial reaction of the lOth Circuit Court of Appeals (which refused last week to stay the order voiding the NCAAs network television contracts), Neinas said.
After further study, we believe the Supreme Court will ^hold the ruling of tbe circuit and district courts, he said.
Neinas canceled a CFA meeting of Uq) college football powers scheduled for Aug. 2 in Atlanta, which was called
following tbe NCAAs setback in the appellate court and was to discuss a television plan for tbe coming season.
Whites order made that a moot question. It also produced mixed reaction from the parties involved.
Were absolutely delighted, said John Toner, athletic director at tbe University of Connecticut and president of the NCAA. The stay works to tbe boiefit of virtually all the football-playing members of the NCAA who clearly want the continuation of national controls.
That was not tbe viewpoint at the University of Oklahoma, which, with the University of Georida, had led
Canada I Moving On Leaders
tbe fight for schools to independently control football telecast ri^ts.
We are disappointed, said Andy Coats, mayor of Oklahoma City and attorney for the university. Its clear to us that its an antitrust violation.
Coats said the impact would be immediate.
This means the 1983 season will surely be under the control of the NCAA extract. There will be very limited appearances this year. Tbe two schools will lose millions ofdoUars.
Oklahoma and Georgia are guaranteed only one footbaU aiqpearance each in tbe NCAA package this fall.
Coats said he wasnt at all sure that tbe Supreme Court would agree to bear the case in the faU, but that if it does, he expects it would rule
against the NCAA. The odds are 60-40 that theyll accept the case, he said.
I dont know that it has much of an ultimate effect. But the 1983 season is gone.
Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Ten Conference, saw Whites ruling differently.
The total interests of college football and all but a few selfish institutions are best served by Justice Whites decision, which h^fully will permit the orderly presentation of cdlege football on television this season, he said.
The networks were predictably pleased.
This lifts the uncertainty in the marketplace, which will allow us now to proceed with our plans for 1983, said Donn Bernstein of ABC. Tnats a very significant factor from our point of view.
Were looking forward to the season now that tbe uncertainties have been resolved, said Jay Rosenstein of CBS.
TBS will show 19 games, mostly on Saturday nights, some on Thursday ni^ts.
We are proceeding with plans for our games, said Mike Oglesby.
The first American president to throw out the ceremonial first ball at the start of a major league season was William Howard Taft in 1910.
Brushcutters
Available At
Memorial Or. 752-4122
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Vaulting into second place among the foreign boats vying to challenge for the Americas Cup, Canada 1 is starting to show the potential for making a Cinderella story come true.
If we could get fast enough and smart enou^ to beat Australia II, we might stand a chance of winning the Americas Cup, Canadian skipper Terry McLaughlin said Thursday after gaining his sixth win in seven races by outsailing Advance of Australia and France 3.
"Its nice, moving from fifth to second among the seven foreign challengers in a
single day, but it doesnt really mean much at this point. Everything is very premature, said McLaughlin, the only foreign skipper to chalk up two victories on the day.
Continuing to dominate the foreign trials, Australia II beat Britains Victory 83 to hold first place with 7.88 points.
Canada Is victories earned it second with 5.72. Chaiienge 12 of, Australia dropped to third with 5.6, Victory 83 of Britain held fourth with 5.44, Azzurra of Italy fifth with 5.2, France 3 sixth with 1.12 and Advance was last with 0.8.
Meanwhile, Defender took two races in fresh breezes from stablemate Courageous in trials to select the American boat which will defend the 132-year-old trophy that has become the top prize in yachting.
Not satisfied yet with his boats performance. Defender skipper Tom Blackaller, who faces 1980 Americas Cup winner Dennis Conner and Liberty today, said more major modifications are in store before the start of August trials to make Defender faster in heavy air.
Defender won by 28 seconds in the first race. In the second
race. Defender was trailing by 12 seconds after two legs when Courageous bowman Robbie Young fell overboard, forcing his boat to turn back and pick him up. Defender won by one minute. 12 seconds.
In the July trials. Defender leads with a 6-2 record, Liberty is 5-3 and Courageous 2-8. The New York Yacht Gub will chose one of the boats to represent it in the best-of-seven series starting Sept. 13 against the top foreign boat.
Canada Is margin over Advance was a whopping 4:03. In its other race, Canada 1 was leading France 3 by
nearly a minute on the third leg when the French boat snapped a forestay and had to dropout.
Australia II took a bye after beating Victory83.
In other races in the challenger series, Giallenge 12 lost to Azzurra, iHit rebounded to defeat Advance.
Azzurra, sailed by Cino Ricci, scored a 36-second victory over Challenge 12 in the first race, but the Australians filed a protest over on the first tacking leg. Azzurra lost to Victory 83 in the afternoon race.
Area Youth Baseball
, Bombino All Stors
Winterville 23
Martin County 4
Bronswell Patrick cracked a three-run homer and drove in three more runs with a triple to lead the Winterville All Stars to a 23-4 trouncing of Martin County in the Bambino Little League District 5 Tournament.
Patrick finished the game with four hits, while Clifton Bryant, Jim Faulkner and Mark Smith each had three.
Winterville took the lead with a run in the second, but Martin County plated four in the top of the third to take control. Winterville answered with a run in the bottom half of the inning and went out
front to stay with four inthe fourth.
Robbie Nichols walked, William Crandell reached first on an error and Joe Deloach singled to load the bases before Patricks triple.
Patricks homer highlighted a 17-run fifth inning eruption by Winterviile to put the game out of reach.
Wintervilie wiil face Nashville Saturday at 6 p.m. in the second round of the double elimination event.
Southarn Pitt 20
Tarboro...........2
WINTERVILLE - Johnny Sherrod and Eugene Lee each rapped two-run homers to lead the Southern Pitt All Stars to a 20-2 victory over Tarboro in the District 5 Bambino League
Tournament Thursday.
Winning pitcher Gene Stan-cill threw a two-hitter and struck out 11 batters for Southern Pitt.
Sherrod ended the game with four hits, including a a pair of doubies. Lee and Gray Mills had three hits, while Alonza Wallace had two for Southern Pitt.Beacham Wins
Lee Beacham won the Thursday Night Amateur tournament at Putt-Putt Golf and Games with a four-under 68.
Leslie Williams finished second with a one-uncter 71.Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?
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SCOREBOARD
Wheat Junior Tennis
GreenvUle/Wheat First Secnities Junior Open Tennis Champion^ip completed its first dav ot action Thursday at Rivo- BinA Tennis Center. Action will continue FrMay and Saturday.
Round
Joey Pippin (Wendell) d. Mike Bryant (Greenville); Ray Gold (Kinston) d. Mark Gunter (Fu-quay-Varina), forfeit
Bm 16 Singles Fvst Round Doug Cron (Gastonia) d. Chris Pulliam (Knightdale); Clay Jackson (Greenville) d. William Wagner (Knightdale); Gene Lilly (New Bern) d. Demus Jordan (Beaufort); Dee Warner (Goldsboro) d. Dave Rose (Washington); Cron d. Steve Kelly (Jacksonville); Rick Rogers (Kinston) d. Tonly Alston (Wendell); Kevin Draughton (Chapel Hill) d. MickGavigan (Greenville); Bowman Lewis (Washington) d. David McDonnell (Greenville), Craig Stone (Raleigh) d. Bill Hall (Greenville)
Boys 14 Singles First Round Sonny Shields (New Bern) d. Kevin Fisher (Greenville); Ralph Harper (Greenville) d. Ricky LeBlanc (Beaufort); Charles Yowell (Durham) d. Carney Taylor (Washington); Eric Whatley (New Bern) d. Greg Van Scoy (Greenville): Jack Moore (Durham) d. Brian Hartley (Kinston); Murray D'Angelo (Chapel Hill) d. Brian Wille (Greenville)
Boys 14 Singles Second Round Earl Hines (Greenville) d. John Kang (Wilson), forfeit; Stephen Gilley (Rocky Mount) d. Joe Fulghum (Greenville); Shields d. Chris Moore (Kinston); Harper d. Yowell; Whatley d. Moore; DAngelo d. David Hutson (Durham); Drew Grice d. Charles Herring (Kinston); David Lee (Greenville) d. Bat Barber (Durham), forfeit
Bm 12 Singles First Round Heath Nisbet (Greenville) d. David Eckberg (New Bern); Neal Creech (Greeenville) d. Andy Eatman (Greensboro); Kurt Leiberman (Greenville) d. John Uhlman (Greenville); Alban Barras (Kinston) d. Brian Udford (Greenville); Chris Phillips (Raeford) d. Mark Brewington (Greenville); Derrick Hines (Greenville) d. Robert Geiger (Kinston)
Girls 18 Singles First Round
Susan Maxwell (Moyock) d. Mary Kathryn Clark (Greenville) Girls 16 Singes First Round Laura Ross (Concord) d. Kathi Messer (FarmvUle); Cathy Woods (Wilson) d. Julie Talton (Goldsboro); Marcie Geiger (Wilson) d. Alicia Speight (Greenville), forfeit; Hamilton d. Louise Folger (Greenville); Powell d, Kara Deyton (Greenville); Cindy Dawson (Kinston) d. Anne-Lynne Davis (Greenville); Suzanne Stott (Wilson) d. Ann Sabiston (Kinston); Missy Fulmer (Washington) d. Emily Houser (Goldsboro)
Girls 14 Singles First Round Rush Sabiston (Kinston) d. Kara Worthington (Goldsboro); Wandria Hines (Greenville) d. Courtney Barrier; Kim Jemigan (New Bern) d. Susan Sayetta (Greenville); Susan Taylor (Greenville) d. Robin Powell (Kinston): Millie Maxwell (Goldsboro) d. Gina Parrott (Greenville) ; Jill Rogers (Tarboro) d. Kathy Park (Greenville)
Rec Softball_
Church Tournament
Peoples............200 210 1-6
Church Of God 401 410 x-10
Leading hitters: C-David Ross 2-2, Ray Jemigan 3-4; P-David Dickerson 3-4, Nat Sutton 2-3.
Faith.................201 000 4-7
Grace .........000 000 1-1
Leading hitters: F-Lenn Jackson 2-2; G-Keith Jones 2-3.
Church Of God 000 200 3-5
Grace...............000 010 01
Leading hitters: C-Danny Boyd 2-3.
Memorial . 000 030 000 000-3 Immanuel.. .000 111 000 001-4 Leading hitters: M-Wade Cox 3-5, Bruce Gark 2-4; I-Charies Camp 4-5, Tom Durham 3-5, Burney Carraway 3-6.
Blackjack. ........120 012 1-7
Jarvis...............000 010 01
Leading hitters; B-J.T. Mills 3-3, Dixon Page 2-3, Curt Spencer
2-3.
Jarvis...............104 000 0-5
Immanuel...........000 404 x-^8
Leading hitters; J-Sam Johnson
3-4, Bill Kuykendall 2-2, Mitchdl Jones 2-2; ITom Durham 2-3, Mike Herring 2-3, Jimmy Grimsley 2-3, Steve Camp 2-3, Ken Haigler
2-3.
Industrial Toumamoit
ECU I..............264 004 0-16
Coca-Cola..........115 004 0-11
Leading hitters: E-lra Simon
4-4, Ernie Loftin 35, John Moskop 35; C-Dan Gay 34, Roy Oldham
3-3, Robbie Armistead 2-3, Bob
Wooten 2-4.
Wachovia..........300 002 1-6
Carolina Leaf 004 104 x-10
Leading hitters; W-Roy Corben 2-3, Mike Saleeby 2-3; C-Jim Ward
4-4, Jimmy Bond 2-4.
Union Carbide defeated Cox Armature by forfeit.
Union Carbide.......105 003 0-9
Grady White.........200 003 0-5
Leading hitters: U-Steve Coleman 2-3, Ken Gattis 2-4; G Petteway 2-3.
Empire Brush II... 324 000 0-9
PCMH..............501 126 x-15
Leading hitters: E-Milton Jarman 33; PTom Daly 4-4, Tom Craft 3-4.
PCMH...............014 010 1-7
GUCO...............020 000 x-2
Leading hitters: P-Richard Sutton 33, Jon Bentz 2-3; GJoel Jones 2-3, Wayne Bryant 2-3.
Winterville Rec Softball
Transporer Room................13
Roberson Jewelers..............10
Leading hitters: T-Kathy Frazier 3; RDonna Beachum 2.
Uniworth........................8
Dixon Builders...................5
Leading hitters: U-Irish Barnhill 3; DLisa Mills 2.
Ayden Bombers.................26
Conger Plumbing.................2
Leading hitters: A-Delisa Black 3, Evelyn Artis 3.
Rec Baiketball
Adult Summer League
Franchise...............35 33-68
Soul Train...............24 54-78
Leading scorers: F-Lorenzo Owens 23, Albert Brown 18; S Timothy Harris 22, Danny Nelson 13.
Lakers..................31 33-64
Alumni..................37 26-63
Leading scorers: LCharles Harris 21, Darryl Allen 12; A Dennis Wells 20, Charles Grice 16.
Omega..................38 30-68
Sizzlers..................36 38-74
Leading scorers: 0-Jeff Hopkins 19, Tony Daniels 13; S-Donald Rouse 20, Tony Clemons 13.
WEST DIVISION AUanU St 37 .(11 -
Los Angeles S3 38 S7( 3>>t
Houston 49 44 S27 t
San Diego 47 45 Sll 9H
SanFranclsco 46 47 .495 11
CiACimuU 42 S2 .447 154
TiHinday's Games Chicago 3, San Francisco 2 CincinnaUS, New York 1 PittsburA5,Los MoatreaI9,
PhUadelphialt,AUaiiU6 San Diego 4, St. Louis 2
miay*t Games San Diego (Whitson 2-S) at Chicago (Jenkins 34)
New York (Terreil 2-4) at Cincinnati (Pastore4-l),(n)
San Francisco (Breining 6-7) at Pittsburgh (Ttmneil 4-3), (n)
Houston (Niekro 6-7) at Montreal (Bargarl-0), (n)
PhDadelphia (Gross M) at AUanU (McMurtryl-S),ln)
Los Angeles (Welch 7-9) at St. Louis 7).(n)
Saturdays Games San Francisco at Pittsburgh San Diego at Chicago New York at Cincinnati, (n)
Houston at Montreal, (n I Philadelphia at AUanU, (n)
Los Angeles at St. Louis, (n)
Sundays Games San Francisco at Pittsburgh. 2 Houston at Montreal Philadelphia at Atlanta New Yore at Cincinnati Los Angeles at St . Louis San Diego at Chicago
AMERICALEAGUE
Ki)NS-Hi San Raines,
57
NS-Hurphy, AUanta. T; Guvey, Diego, 71; Evans, San Francisco, 68; les, Montreal. (6; Homer, AUanU,
RBI-Dawson, Montreal, 72: Murphy, AtlanU, 65; Chambliss. AtlanU, 62; Guerrero, Los An^es, 60; Hendrick, StLouis,60.
HITS-Thon, Houston, lit; Dawson, Montreal, lit; Oliver, Montreal, 114; Buckner, Chicago. 106; Garvey, San Diego, 106; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 106; Murphy, AtlanU. 106.
DuBLES-Buckner, Chicago. 25; Knight, Houston, 25; Oliver. Montreal. 24; Cruz, Houston, 22; Hendrick, StLouis, 22, JRay, Pittsburgh, 22.
tRlPL^Moreno, Houston. II, Butler, AUanU, t; Raines, Montreal, 7; Dawson, Montreal. 6; 8 are tied with 5.
HOME RUNS-Evans, San Francisco, 21; Murphy, Atlanta, 20; Dawson, Montreal J9; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 19; Schmidt, Philad^ia, 19.
STOLEN BASES^Raines, Montreal, 39; Wilson. New York, 34; LeMaster, San Francisco, 32; SSax, Los Angeles. 31; Moreno, Houston, 28.
PITCHING (9 decisions)-Falcone. AUanU, 8-1, 889, 3 06; PPerez, AUanU. 10-2, 833, 2.79; Montelusco, San Di^. 8-2, .800, 3.99; Ryan, Houston, 9-3, .750, 2.49; Rogers, Montreal, 12-5, .706,3.00.
^RH^OUTS-Carlton, Philadelphia. 153; Soto. Cincinnati, 145; McWilliams, Pittsburgh. 122; Hammaker, San Francisco. 99; Candelaria, Pittsburgh, 95,
TANK FNAMARA
gotta
^KJCWOJlTeiGUEZ.
The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, July 22,1983-13
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
EASTDnOSION
W
L
Pet.
GB
Baltimore
52
38
.578
_
Toronto
52
38
.578
_
New York
SO
39
.562
14
Detroit
51
40
.560
14
Milwaukee
SO
40
.556
2
Boston
46
45
.505
64
Cleveland
38
S3
418
144
WESTDWISION
Chicago
47
44
.516
Texas
48
45
.516
California
47
46
SOS
1
Kansas City
43
43
.500
14
Oakland
42
52
447
64
Minnesota
37
57
.394
114
Seattle
36
59
.379
13
Rogers, Montreal, 95; Valenzuela, Los Angele^ 95.
SAVES-Bedrosian, Atlanta, 15; Reardon, Montreal, 14; LeSmith, Chicago, 13; Lavelle, San Francisco, 12; 5 are tied wiUi 10.
Golf Scores_
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - First-round scores Thursday In the $350,000 Anheuser-Busch Classic on the &746-yard, par 36-35-71 Klngsmill GoU Club course (a-denotes amateur):
0GSHP6GiTM MPIA5> EXA666J2ATH0G l4lG StUMP
Bowling
Tuesday Summerettes
Narrow Misses................69
Thoipe Music..................664
Overtons Market 42...........66
Well Take It...................61
Daily Reflector................61
Overtons Market #1...........55
Peppis Pizza..................54
The Knots.....................47
Southern Delights..............42
Hang Ten......................40
Askew Motors.................25
High game: Elaine Cobb 215; high series: Sandy Hardison 570.
Boseboll Sfondinqt
Pittsburgh Philadelphia Montreal St. Louis Chicago New York
ByThe AsaocUted Presa NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION W L
46 44
45 44
45 45
46 46
42 SI 34 59
Thursday's Games
MinnesoU at Cleveland, ppd., rain Kansas City at New York, ppd., rain Texas 3, Toronto 2 Milwaukee 7, Chicago 6 Oakland 9, Baltimore 7 Boston 14. SeatUe 13.10 innings Detroit 5-2, California 1-3 Fridays Games Kansas City (Perry 3-11 and Blue 0-5) at New York (Fontenot 2-0 and Keough
3-5),2,(t-n)
MinnesoU (Williams 5-11) at Qeveland
(Sorensen 4-8), (n)
Chicago (Bannister 5-9) at Milwaukee (Porter2-4), (n)
Toronto (Alexander 0-3) at Texas (Hough 8-8), (n)
DeUoit (Wilcox 7-8) at California (B McLaughlin 1-2), (n)
Baltimore (Ramirez 3^) at Oakland .(Langford 0-4), (n)
Bo^n (Brown 5-5) at SeatUe (Clark
4-2), (n)
Saturdays Games
Baltimore at Oakland.
MinnesoU at Cleveland, (n)
Kansas City at New York, (n)
Chicago at Milwaukee. (n)
Toronto at Texas, (n)
Detroit at California, (n)
Boston at SeatUe, (n)
Sundays Games Kansas City at New York, 2 MinnesoU at Qeveland, 2 Chicago at Milwaukee Detroit at California Baltimore at Oakland Boston at SeatUe Toronto at Texas, (n)
League leoders
By The Associated Press AMERICALEAGUE
BATTING (235 at batsl-Carew, California. .381, Boge, Boston. .372; Brett, Kansas City, 163; Griffey, New York. .333, McRae. Kansas City. 319; Whitaker. Detroit, 319.
RUNS-Yount. Milwaukee. 67; RHen-derson, Oakland, 65; Upshaw. Toronto, 65; DEvans. Boston, 63: EMurray, Baltimore, 61; Ripken, Baltimore. 61 RBl-Cooper, Milwaukee, 73. Rice. Boston. 6^ KitUe, Chicago, 63; Brett. Kansas City, 61; Armas, Boston, 60; Ripken, Baltimore, 60.
HITS-Boggs, Boston. 126; WhiUker, Detroit, 118; Rice. Boston. Ill; Ward, Minnesota, 110; Yount. Milwaukee, 109.
DOUBLES-Boges, Boston. 29; LNPar-rish, Detroit, 29; McRae, Kansas City, 27; Hrbek, MinnesoU. 26; Yodnt, MUwaukee, 25.
TRIPLES-Hemdon, Detroit, 7; Winfield, New York. 7; GWilson, Detroit, 6; Griffin, Toronto, 6; KGibson, Detroit, 6; Molitor. MUwaukee. 6; Wright. Texas, 6.
HOME RUNS-Rice, Boston. 23; Armas. Boston. 21; Cooper, Milwaukee, 21; Klt-. Ue, Chicago, 21; Brett, Kansas City, 19.
STOLEN BASES-RHendferson, Oakland, 55; JCruz, Chicago, 45; WWilson, Kansas City. 42; RUw, Chicago, 40; Sample, Texas, 30.
PUSHING (9 ^isionsl-Rlghetti, New York. 11-3, .786, 3.28; Haas. MUwaukee. 7-2, .778, 3.74; Koosman. Chicam, 7-2, .778, 4.22; Tellmann, MUwaukee, f-2, .778, 3.00, Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 12-4, .750,3.82 STRIKEOUTS-Stieb, Toronto, 121; Morris, Detroit, 114; Blyleven, Cleveland, 110; Righetti, New York. 104; Sutcliffe. Cleveland. 96 SAVES-Quisenberry,, Kansas City, 23; SUnley, Boston. 19; (JaudUl, Seattle. 17; RDavis, MinnesoU, 15; Lopez, Detroit, 13.
NATIONALLJEAGUE
BATTING (235 at batsl-Knight, Houston, .340; Hendrick, StLouis, .%1; 500 I Madlock, Pittsburgh. .322; LoSmith,
.452 5Vi StLouis, .321; Dawson, Montreal, .318; 366 13/s Oliver, Montreal, 318
Scott Simp Terry I Calvm Peete Tom Weiskopf Sammy Rachels Chip Beck EdDou^rty Bill Sander Tim Norris Hal Sutton Pat McGowan Lon Nielsen Thomas Gray Gary McCord Peter Oosterhuis Ray Floyd Bruce Lietzke PhU Hancock Barry Jaeckel Leonard Thompson Morris HaUlsky Larry Rinker Hubert Green Bob Eastwood Andy North Marx OMeara David Ogrin Ivan SmiU)
Jay Haas Larry Mize Gary Hallberg Joe Inman Skeeter HeaU) Blaine McCallister Jim Nelford Mike Donald Scott Hoch Gavin Levenson Bruce Fleisher Jon Chaffee Mike Wynn Rick Pearson Tommy Valentine Wayne Levi LannyWadkins John Cook DA. Weibring Tom Kite DougTeweii Jodie Miidd Mike Holland Danny Edwards Payne Stewart George Bums
PtS
Pet.
.511
.506
500
GB
LarryZiegler Curt^rum Tony Sills Lyn Lott DougBlack DanForsman Mike Sullivan GregPowers Bill Rogers John Mahaffey Bobby Wadkins Nick Price Richard Zokol JimBooros Lee Eider Mark Lye Ronnie Black Jim Colbert Lou Graham.
Keith Fergus John Fou^t Curtis Strange Vance Heafner Raiph Landrum Ray Stewart Buddy Gardner Franx Fhrer Darrell Kestner Mark Hayes Don Pooley Steve Liebier Rex Caldwell Mark Coward Mark McCumber Howard Twitty Pat Lindsey T.C. Chen Rafaei Alarcon Allen Miller Mark Calcavecchia Bob Boyd Lindy MUler Ed Sneed Jim Dent Mark Brooks Roger Maltbie Jeff Sanders Tony DeLuca J C Snead Ken Kelley JeffSluman Steve Hart
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Garvey Satisfied USFL Creates 'Actual' Free Agency In NFL
By DAVE GOLDBERG AP Sports Writer
Ed Garvey can be forgiven for gloating.
The former executive director of the National Football League Players Association, vilified by some of his own union members for not making free agency an issue in last years players strike, can now sit back and watch the United States Football League make him look good.
As training camps open, and NFL teams hustle to bring in the holdouts, free agency exists in fact, if not in law.
H escalates salaries way beyond any agreement between management and the players association, says agent Bob Wolff. And Garvey, now deputy attorney general of Wisconsin, and away from what he calls the nonsense, just chuckles.
Finally, the financial floodgates are opening, says the man whose demand for 55 percent of the NFLs gross revenues was considered revolutionary. By 1986, the owners are going to be sorry they didnt settle for 55 percent of the
gross.
Until now, the average NFL salary was less than (100,000, far below the (250,000-plus average of baseball or basketball. But thats changing rapidly. Mostly because the USFL makes moot the NFLs restrictive free-agent law, which makes the cost for signing a blue-chip NFL free agent so prohibitive that only one team has done so in a decade.
An NFL Management Council study of 14 rookie contracts shows first-year salaries up 59 percent over last year. That becomes a whopping 89 percent if John Elways (1 million-a-year pact with Denver is included.
Moreover, veteran free agents need only whisper USFL, and the ante is upped. Dan Fouts of San Diego, who also cited Elways contract, is one example; Doug Williams, the quarterback of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and comerback Everson Walls of the Dallas Cowboys - still holdouts - are two more. Then there are players, like Roger Carr of Seattle, seeking renegotiation.
Suddenly they have a club to hold over their teams.
The precedent is there.
Jim Smith, Tyrone McGriff and Ray Pinney of Pittsburgh, Stan White of Detroit and Fred Dean from Washington defected to the USFL this season and the new league has signed for next year or the year after the likes of Cris Collinsworth and Dan Ross from Cincinnati and Joe Cribbs from Buffalo. Low-paid offensive linemen like McGriff and Pinney - just the people Ed Garvey claimed to be working
CHICAGO (AP) - Hockey gained a new lease on life along the Mississippi riverfront thanks to the efforts of investor Harry Omest and a group of associates who gained conditional control of the St. Louis Blues franchise in a (12-million deal.
I started wanting to be an owner at the age of 6, and its taken me 54 years to get this far, Omest said with a laugh. I didnt do it unblinkingly.
National Hockey League President John Ziegler made the announcement Thursday
RonSlreck 40-36-76
Joey Rassett 40-37-77
Pete Brown 38-3977
BillSakas 39-38-77
Mark Carnevale 38-3977
Tom Jones 38-3977
Antonio Cerda 39-39-78
Woody Blackburn 40-38-78
Wally Armstrong 38^0-78
a-Birfsibbick 41-38-79
RickDalpos 40-39-79
Jim Simons 40-3-79
DeWitt Weaver 3940-79
Mike Peck 41-38-79
Rocky Fryar 40-39-79
Jack Snyder 43-3780
David Peoples 42 38-80
Woody Fitzhugh 42-38-80
Dave Eichelberger 43-40-83
Tom Wine 38-51-89
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Thuriday first-rouDd scoret In the $100,000 Ladles ProIessioDal GoU AaaocUUoos Mayflower Qassic at the (,101-yard, par 72 Country Qub of Indianapolis course: JoAnnWasham 34-33-67
35-32-67
Lauren Howe Vicki Tabor Laura Hurlbut Sandra Haynie Donna Caponi DaleEggeling Karen Permezel Kathy Martin Betsy King Jane Lock Bonnie Lauer Carole Jo Callison Jane Blalock Janet Coles Connie Chillimi Jenny Smith Jan Stephenson Patti Rizzo Chris Johnson Beth Daniel Muffin Spencer-Devlin Cindy HiTi AyakoOkamoto Judy Clark Donna White Alison Sheard Debbie Hall Sandra Palmer Kathy Whitworth Cindy Lincoln SueErtl Martha Nause Becky Pearson Jeanette Kerr Alice Miller Charlotte Montgomery Dot Germain Debbie Austin Nancy Rubin Lynn Adams Lauri Peterson Lori Garbacz Sue Fogelman Mindy Moore Janet Anderson Vivian Brownlee Barb Bunkowski Carole Charbonnier Colleen Walker Judy Ellis
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Shelley Hamlin Myra van Hoose Tern Luckhurst Marga Stubbelfield LeannCassaday Joan Joyce Rosie Bartlett Marlene Hagge JaneCrafter Kathy Hite Lynn Stroney Catherine Panton Murle Breer PamGietzen Cathy Mant Laurie Rinker Barbara Mizrahie Kathy Postlewait Joyce Kazmierski Beth Solomon Sharon Barrett Lenore Muraoka Pat Meyers Anne-Marie Palli S Bertolaccini Susie McAllister Lauri Rinker Lori Huxhold Beverly Klass Sandra Spuzich JerilynBritz Stephanie Farwig Marty Dickerson Vicki Fergon Kathryn Young Sydney Cunningham Holly Hartley Betsy Barrett Kelly Funks Brenda Goldsmith Dianne Dailey Barbara Moxness M.J. Smith Judy Rankin Beverly Davis Linda Hunt Valerie Skinner Debbie Meisterlin Kellii Rinker Susie Beming Lauri Rinker Julie I^ne Mary Dwyer a-Julie Carmichael a-Janis Kleiman Susan Stanley Pia Nilsson Marianne Huning Renee Powell Marjorie Jones Deborah Petrizzi Julie Waldo Mina Rodriquez a-Jackie Gallagher Pat Bradley Patty Hayes Alexandra Reinhardt
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39WD
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DQ
FOOTBALL NaUooal Football League BALTIMORE COLTS-Signed Vernon Maxwell, linebacker, to a series of one-year contracts CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed Steve Lively, guard, and Don Miller, tackle DALLAS LOWBOYS-Cut Larry Alleyne, Yogi Jones and Art Lowery linebackers. Steve Duddy quarterback. Billy Hite, fullback. David M^er, punter. Cecil Newton, safety, and Don Robert, running back.
DENVER BRONCOS-Signed Louis Wright, comerback, Ken Lanier, tackle and Luke Prestridge, punter, to a series of one-year contracts. Waived Mike Bingham and Mark DeRose, linebackers. Wiine Thomas, Phil SwiUer and Bennie Johnson, defensive backs. Tod Nix, Lynn Gross, and Dan Mackie, offensive linemen, and Gary Blackwell, running back. Placed Victor White, defensive lineman, and Mike Mitchell, defensive back, on the injured reserve list NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Released Tom Skoruppa, kicker Signed Clarence Weathers, wide receiver NEW YORK JETS-Placed Robert
Brewer, tight end, and Ernest Pennington. running back, on waivers.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS-Cul Billy Blaylock. safeU Gerald Pride, running cx and Mike Smith, punter Canadian Football Leag
back and Mike Smith, punter
ague
CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGL'E-
Fined Ken Miller, defensive back of the Ottawa Rough Riders. ilOO for fighting in a game against the Montreal Concordes MONTREAL CONCORDES-Named George Cortez director of player personnel
United States Football League TAMPA BAY BANDITS-Announced the resignation of D J Mackovets, director of public relations, and Steve Gerrish, assistant director of public relations, to occupy similar positions with the new Houston (ambler franchise HOCKEY American Hockey League Named Jacques Demers, coach and general manager of Fredericton Express, coach-of-the-year
COLLEGE DOMINICAN COLLEGE-Named Judy Selby women's head softball coach and Oscar Moreno men's assistant soccer coach
Tronsoctions
By Tbe Associated Press BASEBALL American League
SEATTLE MARINERS-Optioned Or lando Mercado, catcher, to Salt Lake City of the Pacific Coast League. Called up Jamie Nelson, catcher, from Salt Lake.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-Signed Emie Whitt, catcher, through the l9e5season.
PiQMcrLeMue
Suspended and fined fTj. Carey, manager of the Helena Phillies, for pushing an umpire
BASKETBALL Natloaal R9*4hii Associatk
UTAH JAZZ-Named David Fredman vice president in charge of Las Vegas operations.
Saturday,luly 23
THE GREEN LEAF
Restaurant & Entertainment Center
Open House
This Saturday from 5 to 9, you can see the beautiful new Greenleaf Restaurant & Entertainment Center while enjoying Steve Hardys original Beach Party over our high quality sound system. During this 4 hours, you can sample our new dance floor, have a free beverage & snack along with a chance to obtain a ticket to Chubby Checker who will appear in person at the Greenleaf on July 27. See you at the Greenleaf, 1104 N. Memorial Dr., Greenville, across from the airport, home of big-name entertainment.
Phone 757-3107
for - are particularly well positioned to make a bundle from a new league weak at non-skilled positions.
A typical example is Gary Dunn, a defensive lineman just re-siied with the Pittsburgh for (1.09 million over four years.
Dunn, though, is unhappy that Gabriel Rivera, the Steelers first-round draft choice, wUl make more, though he has yet to play an NFL game.
But when the New York Jets gave a (1.7 million over four years to Ken OBrien, a hitherto-obscure quarterback from Cal-Davis, (350,000-a-year incumbent Richard Todd said: Thats the way times are. The more money he makes, the more money other people are going to make in the long run. Im for anybody making money.
So is Garvey, who says his negotiating strategy last year was based on his belief that the mere existence of the USFL^ would drive salaries up.
I spent an awful lot of time trying to make sure the USFL was going to be a reality, he says. Historically, in every sport but baseball, salaries have only gone up when theres a competing league.
Does it bother him that Ken OBrien will be making more than Richard Todd, Gabriel Rivera more than Gary Dunn?
Not really.
Ornest Saves Blues
following the leads Board of Governors sp^ial session.
Were gratified to find a way to keep hockey in St. Louis, said Ziegler. But were not there yet. The rest is up to Mr. Omest and his group.
Both men declined to provide the vote of the l8-member board other than to say it carried by the necessary three-quarters majority. They also concurred that not all the conditions set down were financial ones, but again declined to elaborate.
Have a Good Time On Your Vacation
But (dont miss out on all the news while youre away. Just call
The bally Reflector
before you leave and your newspapers will be saved
for you in a Let us know when you are leaving
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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
752-6166 752-3952 (after 5 p.m.)
Good Musical Portrait Of Billy Joel Sunday In HBO's Concert
ISA A Awr / Tku6t
ROY SCHEIDER
ByFREDROTHENBERG AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Billy Joel doesnt disco on the revolving talk-show, videodance TV circuit. You wont catch him trading barbs with Johnny, talking Hollywood with Merv or high-steppin on Solid Gold. But, in a very rare TV performance, you can see him in concert on HBO Sunday night.
Joel, rock n rolls "Piano Man who had 14 years of classical-music training, avoids the "Plastic Man label by shunning TV. He
TV Log
For comptete TV programming information. consuit your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Daily Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
FRIDAY
7 00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough e 00 Dukes 9 00 Dallas 10:00 Falcon Crest 11 00 News9 II 30 Movie 3:00 Nightwatch SATURDAY 6:30 Rascals
7 00 Kangaroo e 00 Pdpeye
8 30 Pan
9 00 Meatballs
9 30 Bugs Bunny 10:00 Dukes 11 00 Bugs Bunny 13:00 Soul Train 1:00 Matinee 5:30 Sports Plus 6 00 News 6:30 News 7.00 Solid Gold 8:00 Walt Disney 9 00 AAovie 11:00 News 11:30 Dance Fever 13 00 Special 1:00 Solid Gold
thinks it would be selling out his audience, says Pierre Cosette, producer of the Grammy Awards show, which has been unsuccessful in luring Joel to perform.
Joel also routinely rejects offers from the Tonight show. I wouldnt have control of the production, he says. 1 dont like the silver-foil curtains in the background or being follow^ by Julia Child. It doesnt represent what we do.
Until the HBO broadcast, Joel did perform on the younger, hipper Saturday Night Live, which is known for the quality of its sound system and its hands-off policy toward the acts.
At first, Joel resisted HBO, too. He was afraid it would be an artsy documentary, and the whole point of being a musician is to play, not make movies. He also was concerned that cameras would block his fans views and interfere with the communication between us and the audience.
But he changed his mind for several reasons, not the least of which was that HBO wnniHnf have to Rtop the
music for words from the ^nsors. A show has a flow to it, and I didn4 want commercial interruptions, he says.
In addition, Joel wasnt going to tour the United States this year, and a lot of peq)le havent seen us live. Its a good representation of what we do, as long as pe(^le turn up the sound loud.
Joels fears - that TVs minuscule ^kers wouldnt capture the full sound of his six-man band - were alleviated by an agreement with 82 stations across the country to simulcast the broadcast.
Getting radios audk) into perfect sync with HBOs video r^uires that we get the radio feed before it ^ up on satellite for the video distribution, says Fred Moore, chief engineer for WNEW-FM in New York. Otherwise, there will be a slight time displacement.
HBOs lively 65-minute broadcast, edited from a 24-hour concert Joel performed last December on his native Long Island, captures him at his sassy-brassy best, belting out his biting lyrics, pounding the piano
wiTN-TV-ch.7 'Men At Work' Open U. S. Tour
FRIDAY
7 00 Jeftersons
7 30 Family Feud
8 00 Roots
10 00 Eischied
11 00 News
II 30 TorightShow 13 30 Lefferman I 30 Overnight 3 30 News SATURDAY 7 00 Better Way
7 30 Treehouse
8 00 Flintstones
8 30 Shirt Tales
9 00 Smurfs
10 30 Gary Coleman
11:00 Hulk 13:00 Thundarr 13:30 F Gordon 1:00 Wrestling 3:00 Baseball 5:00 Golf 6:00 News 6:30 News 7:00 K Rider
8 00 Oiff. Strokes 8:30 Silver Spoons
9 00 Quincy
10 00 Monitor
11 00 News
II 30 Night Live I 00 Closeup 1:30 News
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
FRIDAY 8
7 00 Santoraa 10
7 30 B Miller II
8 00 Benson 13
8 30 Special 13
9 00 Movie 1
11:00 Action News 4
11:30 Nightline 5
13 30 Starsky 6
130 An Evening 7
3 30 Early Edition 8
SATURDAY 9
5 30 Telestory 10
6 00 Great Space II
6 X Snuggles 11
7 00 CartoonTime II
8 00 Supertriends 4
X PacAkan 00 Scooby 00 Mork&
00 Special :X Bandstand X AAatinee 00 Road to L A 00 Sports X In Search of 00 Wrestling M T J Hooker X Love Boat 00 F. Island M Action News 15 ABC Weekend X Cinema M Edition
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
FRIDAV 7 00 Report
7 X Old House
8 00 Washington
8 X Wall St
9 M Victory at
9 X World War
10 X Europe
11 :M Monty Python I1:X Doctor In I3:M Sign Off SATURDAV
8 :W Spokesman
8 X Under Sail
9 M Business
9 X Quilling
10 X Oil Painting
10 X Painting
11 X A Wok Thur
11 :X Great Chefs 13 X Bits. Bytes I3 X Sport Fishing I X Soccer 3 X Dr . Who 3:X Adventure 4:X Victory G. 4:X Cooking 5:X Woodwright's 5:X Old House 6:X Previews 6:X Poseidon 8:X Nature of
9 00 Horseman
10 X Avengers
11 X Twilight Zone 11 X Two Ronnies 13 X Sign Off
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AI - The trailblazing Australian rock n roll group Men At Work opened their first American concert tour by practicing their newfound Southern accents on an enthusiastic, mostly teen-age crowd.
Hi, yall, lead singer-guitarist Colin Hay and woodwind-keyboad player Greg Ham said as the group greeted the soldout crowd of 4,400 at the Grand Ole Opry House Thursday night.
At the start of the 14 hour concert, security guards succeeded in keeping the > crowd in their seats, except for two mini-skirted teen-age girls who jumped on stage and joined Hay as he danced a New Wave jig.
The pair were quickly whisked away by the Opryland security guards.
The gimrds efforts to keep the audience off their feet proved in vain when Hay asked, Are you allowed to dance in Nashville? and added, As far as Im concerned, you can dance.
With that, the fans were on
their feet, clapping, singing and dancing in the aisles and in front of the stage.
Toward the end of the concert. Ham, who had said at a news conference earlier Thursday that he didnt know why the groiq) was inning its three-month U.S. tour in Nashville, told the audience, I know now.
Olivier cast HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Laurence Olivier continues to tackle American television with a starring role in The last Days of Pompeii, a seven-hour miniseries for ABC-TV.
David (Seven Brides for Seven Brothers) Gerber will produce the series in conjunction with Columbia Pictures Television.
Olivier will portray Gaius, a Roman patrician who acts as a catalyst between the Christians and pagans in a cast that includes Ernest Borgnine, Ned Beatty, Linda Bum, Nicholas Clay, Olivia Hussey and Duncan Regebr.
and whistlmg as if be bad a separate instrument in The Stranger.
For those who want cwh cert renditions to exactly mimic the records, Joel duplicates the studio sound on all his numbers, including Allentown, My Life, and the rousing Only the Good Die Young.
The chief flaw in the broadcast, which will be repeated July 30, is the direction. Its too busy to the point of distraction. The camera rarely stays on one performer for any length of time, shuttling from player to player ^ something the eye wouldnt do neariy as much at the concert.
Close-ups of Joel emphasize his good-natured hamminess, as he plays one-handed, jumps on the stage and mugs for the audience. I didnt realize until I watched this how much communication goes on with the drummer and others, be says. Theres a lot of inside stuff that this picked
One novelty is seeing Joel water down the keyboard after his next-to-last number. He explained that his manic hand-slides on the piano rub his skin raw, so he adopted Jerry Lee Lewis water therapy during the final stops on last years tour.
Unlike the new group Duran Duran, which makes videos first, then writes matching songs, Joel composes music for the sound, not the chance to be seen on MTV.
Video will never replace records, he says. You cant get Beethoven on video.
* Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
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COMING SOON!
THE GREEN LEAF
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Opening Wed., July 27! Featuring
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Featuring The Finest Dining & Entertainment In Eastern North Carolina Meiorkil Drive Dreeevllle
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RAINED OUT Diana Ross, dressed in a RUnfighf jumpsuit, ignores the downpour during a free concert Thursday evening in New Yorks Central Park that drew an estimated crowd of 800,000 people. After about 45 minutes she was forced to cut the concert short as a severe thunderstorm moved over the city. (AP Lasophoto)
Sunday Buffet ^ 12 Noon til 3 p.m. ^
W Wcd.&Fri. ^ Night Buffets /L 5 p.m. til 10 p.m. ^
(Friday night buffet ^ will be mostly seafood) ^
Specials on Tuesdays andThursdays jL
JEAN-YUNG CHINA RESTAURANT 4
Chocowinity, N.C. ^
^ Phone 946-5607 Corner Hwys. 17 & 33 ^
-fc Alt
George Jones To Stand Trial
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Country singer George Jones has been ordered to stand trial on cocaine charges next month after defense attorneys failed again to substitute a benefit concert for prosecution.
Hinds County Circuit Judge L. Breland Hilbum had revoked all deals with Jones in April because the Sept. 16 concert date came after a court-imposed deadline. On Thursday Hilbum refused to reinstate the plea bargain, which would have also called for six months probation, and ordered trial to begin Aug. 2.
Jones was charged with cocaine possession after being stopi^ for speeding on a Jackson highway on March 29, 1982. The concert was to have aided programs to fight drug abuse and child abuse.
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The good news is Jonathan's having his first af^.
The had news is she's his roommate's mothera
JACQUELINE ' BISSET
ACOMEDY IN A CLASS BY ITSELF!
Lawmakers Boost State Employee Ins. Premiums
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Press Writer RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State employees insurance premiums will increase 25 cents per person each month as a result of a bill enacted Thursday by the General Assembly.
The Senate voted 37-0 and the House 90-1 to enact the premium hike and several improvements in the existing state employee Insurance plan as it pushed to complete its work by today.
The 1983 session already has set the record as the longest odd-year session. It surpassed the record set by the 1971 session, which convened on Jan. 13, on Thursday. The1981 session began Jan. 12.
The premium increase and a matching state contribution would be used to defray the cost of converting from the state policy to a private insurance plan when employees leave state government.
Other changes in the new law;
- Make the board of trustees which administers the
health plan a freestanding board, removing it from tbe state budget office. The board will continue to consult with the General Assembly before making any major change in the plan.
- Extend coverage of dependants from age 18 to 19 if the state employee is legally responsible for the child and age 26 if the child is in school.
- Extend coverage of inpatient treatment for mental illness, alcoholism or drug addiction for more than 30 days a year with approval of the insurance plan administrator.
- Extend coverage to developmental and congenital orthognathic or jaw surgery when it is medically required or when it is the only treatment to correct a deformity. The surgery would have to be approved by the plan administrator.
- Limit coverage of home health agency services to 60 days a year unless extended by the plan administrator under the new law.
The House and Senate re-
BEARD DISPUTE - Beverly Bonnell, 23, sports the small black beard she has had since she was 16. Ms. Bonnell says she lost her job at the Seattle YMCA because her superiors objected to tbe beard. YMCA officials say they object to tbe besurd, but that Ms. Bonnels work was below standard and she quit - was not fired. (AP Laserphoto)
Find Interferon Is A Wart Treatment
DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -Interferon helps treat resistant and persistent genital warts, according to researchers at Duke University Medical Center.
Im encouraged with the results because these are patients who have not responded to any other type of therapy and appear to be responding in an excellent manner, said Duke gynecologiest Dr. Stanley Gall, who directed the preliminary study.
Gall and his colleagues treated 16 patients whose genital warts had not responded to standard treatments and had persisted for six months or more.
Fifteen patients, or 94 percent, responded to the
treatment. The warts completely cleared up in six patients.
Gall said 95 percent of the people who get the warts are easily cured by one or two applications of either podophyllin or trichloroacetic acid.
After testing various other treatments. Gall chose injections of interferon, which is being tested as a treatment for various viral diseases.
jected a pnqposal estunatea to bring $3 million to the state each year. The change would have required those covered by the state insurance plan to give ^ the right to file suit in certain cases.
Under the pr(^)osal, a state employee dio was injured in an automobile accident would be covered by insurance but would turn over to the state his right to sue the driver who caused the accident
In other legislative action:
ConstnKtion The Senate Appn^riations Committee approved a bill to abolish the Capital Building Authority which oversees all state construction, but the Senate refused to su^nd the rules to immediately consider the bill.
That means the Senate will vote Friday whether to establish a new State Building Commission under the budget office. The existing building authority is under the Department of Administration.
The nine-member commission would consist of five people appointed by the governor, two by the Senate president and two by the House speaker.
The grotq) would adopt rules and procedures for building projects, bidding and awarding contracts, engineering, issuing permits and other duties assigned by the governor.
The bill would transfer to the budget office many duties of the Insurance Department and about 34 employees from that department who are Involved in building inspections.
The bills sponsor, Sen. Conrad Duncan, D-Rockingham, said there now are 18 agencies that deal with builders and the bill would simplify the procedures. He said there is not enough building inspection going on now and the bill also should correct that.
Several people questioned whether the commission should be moved from the Department of Administration because its job is to administer already existing laws and because the budget office has said it does not want the added responsibility-
Neuse River The Senate unanimously voted to approve a bill to review water pollution problems and water resource needs of the Neuse River basin. The Legislative Research Commission could spend money toward the
study.
Sen. Joe Thomas, D-Craven, introduced the bill because he said be was concerned about problems with algae in the river and the problems of upstream pollutmn.
Auditor A bill revising the powers and duties of the state auditor was enacted by the Senate, 33-1. The new law is aimed at making sure the auditor is independent from tiie rest of state government and to update departmental procedures to comply with guidelines issued by the federal governments General Accounting Office.
The Senate rejected an amendment by Sen. Russell Walker, D-Randolph, to give the governor discretion to withhold an agencys funding for failing to meet annual financial statement requirements.
Sen. Bob Warren, D-Johnston, said that would give the governor Instead of the auditor the power to enforce state audit laws.
The amendment was tabled, 22-11.
Child Pom A bill strengthening North Carolinas child pornography and prostitution law was approved unanimously by both houses after a joint conference committee resolved differences between
Senate and House versions.
Under the bill, it would be a felony for a parent or guardian to have sex with a person under a^ 16 or to facilitate prostitution involving children. Allowing children to distribute pornographic material would be a misdemeanor, while using children in any pornographic film, magazine, play or other form of entertainment would be a felony.
The conference committee removed language objectionable to the Senate that included simulated sex acts in the definition of pornography. Sen. Dennis Winner, D-Buncombe, had argued that that provision would outlaw such movies as Romeo and Juliet.
I think weve provided a remedy that strengthens our child abuse statutes already on the books without hurting innocent people, said Rep. Parks Helms, D-Mecklenburg.
Alcohol At School
The Senate enacted a bill barring possession of alcoholic beverages on public school grounds after amending it to specify that the law pertains to possession on ones person only.
That will make clear that its not illegal for a teacher to have a case of beer in the trunk of his car, said Rep. Joe Mavretic, D-Edgecombe.
Hit and Run The House voted to concur with a conference committee bill rewriting the states hit-and-run law, which the state Supreme Court ruled was too vague.
Under the bill, its a felony not to stop after an accident in which the driver has reason to know that an injury or death has occurred. It would be a misdemeanor to fail to st(^ without such knowledge or when just property damage is involved.
An amendment was added to specify that the driver must remain at the scene until dismissed by a law enforcement officer, unless he first must drive to a telephone to summon help.
Rocky Road South
Downtown Grihon Located At The Stoplight
At-Home Atmosphere Dress Comfortably
Come On Down!
Rocky Road South
^Presents
Silver Strwt
Fri., July 22 & Sat., July 23 Open Tues.-Sat., 4until
/ BARGAIN MATl
Movie Magic!-US/ today
SUPERMAN III is the best yet!
TIME MAGAZINE
EE *2.25 TIL 6 PM DAILY
MOST ENTERTAINING ADULT MOVIE YOULL SEE * THIS SUMMER!!
PLACES0I
DAN AYKROYD
IT ONLY HAPPENED ONCE BEFORE... THE MAN. THE MUSIC. THE MOVIE. NOW...ITS HAPPENING ALL OVER AGAIN!
rtS^iWler
'Dr.RoSfrx>v
continues
ur oWoW
Sunday 11.-00 a.m. WPTF-28
9KK) a.m. WCTI-12
11:30 a.m. WWAY-3 8.-00a.m. WRAL-5
10KK) p.m.
FOOTLIGHT THEATRE
and
LOLLIPOP PLAYHOUSE
announces
AUDITIONS
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THE KING AND I
A musical based on the diary of Anna Leowens
Directed by Willie Sumner and Don Pocock
JULY 24
2-5 PM & 6-9 PM
Call Backs July 25
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3 Women, 5 Men 2 Teenage Boys OTHER CHARACTERS 10 Men. 15 Women 10 Dancers 15 Children For information call 633-3775
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Ct09BW0rtl By Eugene Sbeffer
ACROSS 1 Supply the party 6 Conflict SDeckhand
12 Worship
13 Black bird
14 Top the cake
15 Subject
16 Fancy headgear
18 Scoundrels
20 Wallet fillers
21 Lair
23 Divided by
24 Hilarious
25 .Andys parier
27 - Daughter" (1970 movie)
29 Lamb meat
3lBoU
35 Skillful
37 Portal
38 .Madame Curie
41 -.Miserables
43 Pod unit
44 Roman road
45 Bother
47Toinis return feature 49 Lulu
52 Building wing
53 Bauxite,
e.g.
54 Elevate
55 Cunning
56 Canary, e.g.
57 Actress Burstyn DOWN
1 Cougar or puma
2 Bother
3 Hairdo feature
4 Ireland 5Sp1s
summary 6 Moist 7Spanish years 8Shred
9 Titan
10 Quartet doubled
11 Girls nickname
Avg. solutioD time; 23 min.
aw DQSI ' WSEi
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Answer to yesterdays puzzle.
17 Provided shelter U Nemos creator
21 Hoover, e.g.
22 Aussie bird 24 Compass pt. 2IEsadator
parts 28 Fall flower
31 Keats w(Mt
32 Schooner feature
33Dogardoi work 34 Baseball stat.
36 Orb
38 Small amounts
39 Ring (rf isles
40 Answer 42 Cavalry
sword
45 Take on
46 Cose tightly
48 Burst
50 Employ
51 Decimal base
25
29
38
47
52
55
22
39
40
26
36
23
30
53
56
27
45
36
28
24
42
20
37
49
54
46
32
43
10 11
33
34
50
CRYPTOQUIP
7-22
WMS WXYSZWSQ HDDV WRJZSQ BRIG-
HGXZ YGVSI WMS VSWWYS QJRB.
Yesterdays Cryptoquip THE PEACEABLE SCULPTORS RECENT NEW SHOW WAS A BUST.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: W equals T.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitutioo cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, shml words, and words using an apostre^ can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
C IWKIngFMlurM$y(Kl<cte. Inc
GOREN BRIDGE
BY CHARLES GOREM AND OMAR SHARIF
1963 Tribun* Company Syndicat*. Inc.
Both vulnerable. South deals. NORTH
Void 9 9732 0A643
87542 WEST EAST
J108532 4K9764 9K85 964
0 97 0 1085
93 K106
SOUTH
AQ 9AQJ10 0 KQJ2
AQJ The bidding:
South West North East
3 NT Pass 4 Pass
4 9 Pass 5 9 Pass
6 9 Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead; Jack of .
Declarer took tricks Atierever he could. Unfor tunately, when it came to adding up the total, he had only 11-one fewer than he had contracted for.
Once North established via the Stayman convention that his side had a 4-4 heart fit, he raised over game as a slam invitation. This specifically asked for trump quality, and Souths trumps were certainly good enough to accept.
West led the top of his spade sequence, and declarer was delighted that he had been offered a free finesse. Declarer took his two spade tricks, discarding clubs, then crossed to the ace of diamonds and tried the trump finesse. West won and exited with a trump, and declarer eventually had to concede a club trick for down one.
Correct technique will allow declarer to make the slam after trying all his rhances. He should ruff the .pade lead in dummy and :.ike the trump finesse. Best defense is to allow declarer to win the first trump. Declarer gets back to dummy by ruffing the ace of spades and takes another trump finesse. Now West wins and forces declarer with a spade. South ruffs and draws the last trump, then cashes the king-queen of diamonds as both defenders follow. Now he can overtake the jack of diamonds with the ace and try the club finesse. When that succeeds, declarer can
TOO MANY WINNERS
get back to the board by overtaking the two of diamonds to repeat the club finesse and land the slam.
Found Body Of A Third Victim
SNEADS FERRY, N.C. (AP) - The body of a Limiberton man was recovered late Thursday near New River Inlet where a fishing boat broke up Wednesday, drowning two other men.
The Coast Guard identified the third victim as Sam Williams of Lumberton. His body washed ashore about 6 p.m. Thursday about 2>^ miles from the inlet.
Blaine It On The Moon
Dont be surprised if your newspaper reports an unusually high number of crimes for the next few days. W'hy? Because the moon is full. Researchers have found that crimes increase during full moon periods. So do incidents of suicide, auto accidents, and strange behavior in general. Some experts believe the moons gravitational pull affects peoples bodies, just as it affects the ocean tides. Bizarre occurrences associated with the full moon are nothing new. They gave rise to the word lunatic and have appeared in literature and folklore for centuries. As Shakespeare wrote in Othello: It is the very error of the moon. She comes more near the Earth than she was wont. And makes men mad.
DO YOU KNOWWhat composer wrote the famous Moonlight sonata?
THURSDAYS ANSWER-The Bureau of Labor Statistics compHes the Consumer Price Index.
__^c. Inc. 1983
FORECAST FOR SATURDAY. JULY 2S. 1963
GENERAL TENDENCIES: A day to pretty much confine yourself to whatever wwldly tasks and obUgations or responssibilities face you so that you can build up your good name and credit
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Fine day to find out what your position is in the businesi worid and how you can best improve it Sedi assistance.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Get into the practical details of any new outlets you are cmiUmplating to get into so that you know what you are doing.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Do only those practical things that are important and then get busy trying to please your loved one more.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) A fine end to find out what aOiea ezpact of you and make a list of them. Handle these tasks with alacrity.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Good day for catching up on Saturday routines that you have been nej^ecting lately as well as other practical affairs.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sq>t. 22) Do only those things that are necessary and then out i<x recreetion that you need to relieve tensions. Watch your money.
LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) Get your home fixed up more as you want it to be and feel happier there in the future. Entertain tonight
SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Get ywir shopping done more efficiently today and save time and money. Later enjoy the company of good friends.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study your property for possible needed rqiairs and make any changes around the house you like.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Good day to do whatever will improve your personal appearance and make you feel more sure of yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Forget about being gregarious now and study your finances and pn^rty and know how you stand.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Talk to a g(^ friend who can assist you in gaining benefits you desire and should have. See long-lost friends tonight.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will be able to go ahead with a practical plan once every angle of it is well studied and understood. Be sure to give an academic education and then you can be sure your progeny will become successful.
"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!
1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.
Alfred Henderson of Lumberton and Ernie Jones of Brooklyn, N.Y., drowned after the accident Wednesday morning. Their bodies were recovered later that
PEANUTS
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BLONDIE
DAOf^OOO, VOU HAVE TO Piy THE SCREEN DOOR
BEETLE BAILEY
same day.
James Jones of Laurinhurg was the only survivor when an offshore swell pushed the 21-foot fishing boat onto a sandbar and capsized it.
FRANK A ERNEST
CENTER FOR ARISTOTELIAN STUDIES
YOU ARE HERE
Rib Eye Dinner
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PUBLIC NOTICES
IN THE GENERAL COURT
SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT VANC FLEMING, JR .and VANC FLEMING, III,
Plaintiffs
THECITYOFGREENVILE.etal,
Defendants
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION TO: Thomas D. McMillian and wife Elizabeth W.McMillian 112 Park Drive Greenville. N.C 27834 Ann H. Elvington and husband. If
fSTpark Drive
Greenville. NC 27834
Charles Lynn Anderson and wife
Verna V. Anderson
121 Woodlawn
Greenville, NC 27834
Vann B. Stokes and wife, if any
Address Unknown
Alma Duckworth Johnson and husband, if any Address Unkrtown W.F. Worthington, Sr.. Widower 202 Harding Greenville, NC 27834
Take notice that a pleading seeking reliet against you has been filed in fhe above-entitled action. The nature of fhe relief being soughf is as follows:
A suit for declarafory judgment and other relief concerning resfric-tive covenanfs and an alleged road in Highland Pines Subdivision.
You are required fo make defense to such pleadliM not later than September 2, 1983, and upon your failure to do so fhe party seeking service against you will apply to the court for fhe relief soughf.
This the 19th d^ ot July, 1983. James Leon bullock Attorney for Plaintiffs P .O. Box 7151 Greenville, NC 27835 7151 July 22, 29, August 5, 1983
Having quatif^ed as Executrix of the estate of Karl Pace Stocks late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims againsf fhe estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix on or betore January 2, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estdte please make immediate payment. This 28th day of June, 195. Christine Stocks Heath Rt.8, Box 84 Greenville. N.C. 27834 xecutrix of fhe estafe of Karl Pace Stocks, deceased.
July 1,8. 15, 22, 1983
IN THE GEN
SUPER NORTHCAROLiNA
i^COURT "IVISION
OF PITT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF HARLIN RICHARD PHILLIPS, DECEASED
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of HARLiN RICHARD PHILLIPS, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all
^_______ jng claims againsf the
Estate of Harlin Richard Phillips to
present them to the undersigned E x ecutrix, or her attorneys, on or before January 18, 1984, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate ment.
}ils 11 day of July, 1983 MARGARET PHILLIPS MILLER
1406 East Wright Road Greenville, NC 27834 E xecutrix ot the E state of Harlin Richard Phillips. Deceased Gaylord. Singleton, McNally 8. Sirlckland Attorneys at Law Post Office Drawer 545 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 July 15, 22, 29, August 5,1983
wm^^lSJIf/^^u'siiess
Enterprises to bid as subcontractors on NC Dept, of Transportafion projecfs 8.2220102 in Pift County, NC and 8.1190101 in
Jones-Onslow counties, NC. Letting luly 26, 1983. Contact C.F Kienast. EEO Officer. Barrus Con
struction Company, Kinston, NC, 919/527 8021, ext. 4o. An EEO/AA employer.
July IS, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 1983
REQUEST FOR 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. I, 1984. Cut-off time for receiving proposals is 2:00 PM, Monday. August 8, 1983. For specifications, proposals and additional information contact: Ted Bowen. Eastern Regional Personnel Oftlce, 404 South Andrews Street 27834, 919 756 7812.
July 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 1983
. RO^IEW A^LLISON STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT Having qualified as Executrix of the Esta% of Rommie W. Mallison, late of Pitt County. North Carolina, all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against the estate of Rommie W. Malnson are nofified to exhibit them to Mrs. Willie Cox Mallison as Executrix of Mr. Malllson's estate on or before January 22, 1984, or be barred from their recovery. Debtors of Mr. Mallison are asked to make im-dlate payment to Mrs. Mallison. his the 22nd day of July, 1983. Mrs. Willie Cox Mallison Executrix 215 S. Church Street WInterville, N.C. 28590 DeLyleM. Evans Attorney tor Law P.O. Box 522 Ayden, N.C. 28513 July 22, 29. August 5, 12, 1983
NOTICE OF^F(^l|ECLOSURE
Under and by virtue ot the power of sale contained In a certain deed of frust made by Lawrence Matthews and wife, Faye B. Matthews to TIM, INC., Trustee(s), dated the I3th day of September, 1977, and recorded in Book Z45, Page 657, Pitt County Registry, North Carolina, Default having been made in the payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of trust and the un^signed, H TERRY HUTCHEnT having been substituted as Trustee in said deed of trust by an Instrument duly recorded in W Office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina and the holder of the note evidencing said Indebtedness having directed that the deed of trust be foreclosed, the undersigned
It the CourthmM Dim, in the City of Sreenville, Pitt County, North :arollna at Two forfy-five (2:45) o'clock P.M. on Friday, the 5th day of August, 1983 and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following real estate situate In City of Greenville, PIft County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows:
Being all of Lot No. 7 of the Sharon Subdivision as appears In Map Book 24, page 154, of the PIH County Public Registry. Including the single family dwelling located thereon;
iSSXWS.
Carolina.
This sale is made subject to all taxes and prior liens or encumbrances of record against the said property and any recorded
A cash deposit of ten percent (10%) of the purchase price will be required at the time of the sale.
This 15th day of July, 1983.
H. Terry Hutchens.
Substitute frutee HUTCHENS &WAPLE Attorrwys at Law TV 40 Building 230 C^ldton Street P.O. Box 650
Fajyettevllle^Morth Carolina 28302
PUBLIC NOTICES
?PtVc^c&*n^y^'^*
Having qualified as Executors of fhe E^^e of ANNIE MAE JOHNSTON, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to exhibit them to The undersigned Executors or their attorney, on or before the 22nd day of January, 1984. or sante will be pleeded in bar of their recovery. Ail persons indebted to said estate, please make
ImjnediateMyment
C L A R E NC iVRANlft.' I
This the:
1983.
SMITH.
Route I, Box 217 WInterville. N.C. 28590 LEROY SMITH,
2607 Dunn Street Greenville. N.C. 27834 E xecutors of the Estate of Annie AAae Johnston ROBE RT BOOTH, Attorney Box 514, Ayden, N.C. 28513 July 22, 29; August 5,12.1983
ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed proposals will be received 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 Interior Renovations Washington Daily News. Inc. at which time and place bids will be opened and read.
Complete plans and specifications for this project can be obtained from the Engineer Dibble & Associates, P.A., 15l'/i West Main Street., Washington, N.C. 27889 or the Architect Frederick A. Schneider, 826 A. Hinton Avenue, Charlottesville Virginia 22901 during normal office hours after July 20,1983.
Plan Deposit $50.00 (Fifty Dollars) The Owner reserves the un qualified right to reject any and all proposals.
Marvin Pike, General AAanager Washington Daily News 217 N. Market St., Washington, NC 27889 July 21, 22, 1983
LEGAL ^^VEt^l|EMENT
Sealed bid proposals will be received until 3:00 p.m. on August 11, 1983. in the Board Room, PiH Community College, Greenville, N. C. for construction of a modular classroom, lab and office building at which tinne and place bids wiirbe opened and read.
Complete plans and specifications for this project may be obtained from W.H. HOWELL. DEAN OF FISCAL AFFAIRS, PIH Community College during the hours of 8:00 a.m and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Thursday, beginning July 25, 19KJ. No plan deposit is required. No bid deposit is required.
Alt contractors are hereby notified that they must have.proper license under N. C. State laws governing their respective trade; which license number will be a part of the bid.
A Performance Bond and Payment Bond will be required from the successful bidder for one hundred percent of the contract price.
Payment terms are specified in fhe bid proposal, with payment in tull to be made upon completion of
fnd acceptance by the Board of rustees of PiH Community College following a complete inspection of all parties concerned fo determine if the completed facility has been constructed strictly according to all terms and specifications of the agreement.
Ho bid may be withdrawn aHer the closing for the receipt of bids for a periodof thirty days.
The owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive informalities.
July 22, 1983
002 PERSONALS
NEED MONEY FAST?
Call 756-8100 or come by National Finance Company, XO-A Plaza Drive. All loans subject to our liberal credit policy
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 All replies confidential_
007 SPECIAL NOTICES
FREE I Stop in and register at Floyd G Robinson Jewelers, Downtown Evans Mall for free gift to be given away weekly. Ho purtho$onoce$>ory,-
010
AUTOAAOTIVE
RENT A WRECK Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save. 752 2277_
Oil
Autos For Sale
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autoflnders Way! Authorized Dealer in PIH 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. $1450.75f 5027.
013
Buick
1969 BUICK LeSABRE Power steering and brakes, air, radial tires, 3S0 with 4 BBL engine. $1500 or best offer. 752-6185.
1977 BUICK SKYLARK 2 door. air. Call after 7 p.m., 756 3191.
1977 CENTURY SPECIAL V6, 2 door, 1 owner. Exc. condition. New tlre$, 9,WQ mllg$. Zpp. 758 0Q28.
1979 BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruise, power windows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mlleaoe. Make offer. 756-8539.
014
Cadillac
1981 CADILLAC Coupe Devllle. Loaded with options. Priced to sell. CalinaBliT - William Handley 752-6889._
015
Chevrolet
1971 CORVETTE convertible, automatic, air, new paint, tires, and rugs. Excellent condition. $7.030/offer. 1-823 7178.
1976 NOVA One owner. 50.000 actual miles. Call 752-0675 after 6
p.m._
1977 MONTE CARLO, Power steering 8, brakes, AM-FM, air condition, radials. Like new. Extra clean. Tilt wheel, bench seat. $69.000 miles. Call 752 4561._
1978 CHEVETTE 1 owner Automatic, AM/FM, 61,000 actual miles, new tires. Excellent condi-tion. $1900. 756 3974.
1978 NOVA, 4 door, automatic, power steering, air condition, 6 cylinder, price negotiable. Call 72 3925 or after 6. 752 6910.
1979 CHEVY MONZA 2 door, automatic, air, power steering, AM/FM $3200 neootlable. 752-8870.
016
Chrysler
1973 NEW YORKER, $750. Call Z$6jZiL
1974 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL LaBron. Power steering and brakes, air, sun roof, electric windows, cruise control, 2 door. $1,000 or best offer. 758 3658._
018
Ford
1969 MUSTANG Clean, original. Excellent condition. 758 0495.
1970 MUSTANG, power steering, automatic transmission, air condi tioning, good condition. 756-0801
ofttrfpni
1973 FORD WAGON Power win dows, steering and brakes. $1500 or
dows Anc
best offer 756*>209.
1973 LTD, 2 door sedan. Needs minor body work. Asking $750.
Z5ZJ6
1975 FORD GRANADA, 1 owner, air, excellent condition. 746-2624 gft9L5p,m
19 78 FORD CHATTEAU Customized Van. Refrigerator, air, U-shaped bed and table. Econo 250. $4995.757 3111
|978 THUNDERBIRD, extra clean.
1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757-0451, ask for Mr. Carrawav.
020
AAercury
1975
door
MERCURY MONARCH. 4
r 6 cylinder, 3 speed, AM/FM, condition. $800.756 9034.
021
Oldsmobllt
1975 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA V8, power steering and brakes, air, AM/FM cassette. $1700. 752 2331
atter 7
1976 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME Loaded. Real clean. New radials. 752 4080 or 756 8759.
mlleaoe. $4.200 neootlable. 758 449f.
021
Oidsfnobilt
1982 CUTLASS BROUGHAM, loaded, 18,000 miles. Like new n priced to move. Call 752 4561.
022
Plymoufh
1975 PLYMOUTH FURY 318 engine, beige, 1 owner, 74,000 miles. $9g>. 746 23. _
1980 PLY/MOUTH VOLARE, 25,000 miles, AM-FM, air, power steering and brakes, cruise control, 1st owner, excellent family car. $4.350. 756-4262 after 5 pm
1981 T 1.000. Excellent condition. 32,000 miles. $4200 negotiable. 355-2339 aHer 5._
023
Pontiac
PHOENIX, PONTIAC, 1981. 3.670 miles. 4 door, radio, good mileaM. Call 752 4104
1982 PONTIAC WAGON. $8.000. Call atterp.m^??*-W6._
024
Foreign
AUDI 5000S 1982. Fuel injected. Like new. In perfect condition. Electric sunroof, complete stereo system. Call aHer 6 p.m. 1-975 3179.
OATSUN 310 GX 1980. Excellent condition. 4 speed, air, sunroot, AM FM cassette. 54,000 miles. $3900. Call 758-5097 aHer 6 p.m
MERCEDES 240-D 1981. 4 speed, sunroof, new tires, cream. Excellent condition. $14,800. Call 756-6336 days. Ask for Lorelle. Nights or weekends call 756 1549
TOYOTA SERVICE, 4 cylinder tune special $20. 4 cylinder valve Adjust $14. 5 years e>erience Toyota East. Ben's Fork Garage. 756-3796.
1968 VOLKSWAGEN BUG Needs
work. Price negotiable. 752 2331
afferz
1971 VOLKSWAGEN Rebuilt engine and carburetor. New starter battery and tires. 752 1134
1972 MG MIDGET Good condition. Have to see to appreciate. Phone 258 2259
1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUS Looks and drives good. Fold down bed and table. Asking $1095. 752 1037._
WHEN SOMEONE IS ready to buy, they turn to the Classified Ads. Place your Ad today for quick results.
1 973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs $1700. Call 758 2300 days.
1973 OPEL GT 28 miles per gallon. Very good condition. $2,000. 975-2527;.\^ajhLngton.
1974 FIAT 124, 4 door, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AM/FM casseHe, good con-affion. $650. 756-9034.
1974 MAZDA RX3. 49,000 actual miles, air, Michelin tires, new paint job. $1200. 756 3241
1974 TOYOTA Stationwagon. $250. 756 1788._
1975 OPEL Body in excellent condition. Needs some er\gine repair. 1200. 757 1633..
1975 TOYOTA COROLLA 5 s^.
Very good 752^7|r^
1976 DATSUN 710 Stationwagon, automatic, air. $1800. Call 758-6042 after 7 p.m
1976 FIAT stationwagon. 1 owner. Low mileage. Good gas mileage. $975. 753 2381:
1976 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe Automatic. $1100. 746 3502.
1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
Good condition. $2400. Call 746 6483. 1981 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA 5 speed, air, digital AM/flA stereo cassette. 31,000 miles. Call 758-3047 after 5 p.m.
1982 AUDI 4.000 S DIESEL AM/FM cassette, sunroof. Immaculate. Warranty - 7.000 miles. 756T499.
1982 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT LS Diesel. AM/FM, air, low mileage, Ilfc9haw..758-66S9.
626 MAZDA, 1982, 4 door sedan. Can see on Saturday at 102 Carlson Street, Westwood area.
GIVE US A call soon. We'd like to help you place a classified ad in this newspaper today. Call 752 6166.
030 Bicycles For Sale
ADULT 3 WHEEL bicycle with booster motor. 756 2446.
RED RALEIGH 10 speed bike. I year old. RareJ^ used. Excellent
condition. 757-10
032 Boats For Sale
SAILBOAT NEWPORT 17, with cabin, trailer, new 5 horsepower Aftarlner motor, $3500.758 3608.
IIW' PLYWOOD BOAT with 1 trolling motor. 48 month battery, 1 baHery charger. 2 seat cushions, 2 paddles, 1 boat cover. All like newl Call 758 1316. _
17' BARBOUR BOAT. 135 horse power Mercury, trim tilt, tilt trall-er. $900 or best otter. 758-2128.
1974 16' AAerrlmac, 65 horsepower AAercury motor and trailer. Best offer. 756-3377._
1978 BONITA Open V - 17'. 85 Mercury. Really nicel 825-4931.
23' O'DAY. 9.9 oufboard. VHF, shore power, exfras. Must sell! 756-6406: _
23' SPORTCRAFT BOAT Inboard/Outboard. Loaded with extras. Galvanized trailer. Like new. Call 752-7474 aHer 6 and weekends
5 HORSEPOWER OUTBOARD -used only on small sailboat in fresh
>nly
water, $5,756 5027 aHer 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-
sm
NEW JAYCO POPUPS Close RrlW 746 35?0
out
TAURUS 1977. 24'. Sleeps 8. Rear
ning. Excelk
tlon.$4995.756-7dV
bath. Air. Awnir
ilent condi-
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Briants, Raleigh. N C 834 2774,
1973 WILDERNESS 23'. Sleeps 7. Air, tent type awning. Excellent condition. Hitch and jacks Included. Bargain at $3,695. Call 756 0360 after 6p.m
1976 FORD 22' Eldorado motor home. Call 756-5241 aHer 6 p.m.
1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self contained. $5300 09gpti8t?lg. 7^6-65^._
036 Cycles For Sale
BULTACO 125, brand new engine, electronic Ignition, great enduro bike, fast, many extras. Call Pete after 5.758 0304.
1970 HONDA TRAIL 70. Good con ditlon. About 1500 miles on enlgne. Good gas mileage. Call aHer 6 p.m., 752 4877 and anytime weekends.
1973 SUZUKI GT 550 K Very good reliable transportation with exrn $625. Call 355-6125._
1974 HQHDA 350, 4 cylinder, all extras. Excellent condition. $550 or best offer. Mr. Brown, 756-0982 after 5:30._
1976 HONDA CB125. Good condition. Needs work. Best offer. Call 756-23yVfltt8tf
1977 MOTTO GUZZI Italian built touring bike. Wind jammer and molded saddle biras. Only 3,300 miles. $2100. Call 7-5626 after 5
am
1978 100CC Yamaha, on and off the road. 900 miles. Call 756-3377,
1980 HONDA CB400T Good condl tlon. Call 752 5647 aHer 5 p.m.
1981 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 400 Custom. Showroom condition. Serious inquiries only. Call 758-7345 a*t8f6B-fP
1981 YAMAHA 250 EXCITER 5
eed, electric, 1,550 miles. Excellent condition. $800. 752 2331 after 7._
039 Trucks For Sale
CHEVROLET EL CAMINO 1980. Loaded. Nice truck. Call Leo Ven-ters Motors, Ayden, 746-6171.
FORD COURIER, 1982, $4800. Call atterOp.m., 756 9886
TRUCK COVERS Seahawk and
7M*3530 t'Vs- Ayden,
1973 TRIAXLE CHEVY 15 yard
dyniB. Call 746 3296.
1979 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER, 4x4, Immaculate condition. Call Washington, 946-4924 days; 946-7971 alflhtt/W99k9Hd>,
1980 BLUE 4 wheel drive Toyota tfuck short bad, $3500 negotiable. rallaHerOp.m., 795 4419.
1981 OATSUN Pickup, air, AM/FM with cassette, T-top. 756-8948 aHer
1983 MAZDA truck. Phone 752 5220.
040
Child Cart
AFTER SCHOOL CARE for 3rd grade boy. Prefer someone caring tor boy/s same age. Win dermert/Cherry Oaks. 7d 0322
WOULD LIKE fo baby sit In my home Monday through Friday. PKone 756 1057,
040
Child Cart
WANTED; /Mature lady to keep small Child In our home. 758-6659.
046
PETS
AKC BLACK LAB PUP, male. Pick of IIHer. Parents certified Tree of hip dysplasia. Field trial champion blood line. $150. 746-4793 aHer 5
AKC anytime after
me after 5.1 442 4517._
AKC REGISTERED Siberian Huskie pups. Price negotiable. Call 792-1409._
CFA REGISTERED Seal Point Himalayan, 2 year old female. Good breeding stock, nice pet, $175. 758 9614
COCKER SPANIEL puppies for sale. 2 black males, 1 blonde female. Call 758 6633 aHer 3 30
OOBER/MAN PUPPIES Red, black and rust. Male, $85. Females, $80. 749 4741
.BERAAAN PUPPIES 4 red, 2 lack. $75each. 752 4609aHer 6
DO
biaj
FREE PUPPIES, half Lab. Call 524 5430, Grlttona^6p.m
GERAAAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES AKC females. $75.752 3735.
LHASA APSO. 2Vz years old, AKC registered, $50. Call 756-0010._
RAT TERRIER puppies. Will be weened July 31. $S6 each. Call 746-6679._
SCHNAUZER YORKE
3Vj months old female. $100. :all 752 7194.
5 PLOT PUPPIES. 6 46 Plot, and '/* wplKer. 747 5834._
051
HtlpWanttd
ACCOUNTANT CPA or CPA candidate with I to 4 years experience 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 of a challenging opportunity? It you are and have sales experience, call Conner Homes for an aPDolntment. 756-0333
AUTO/DIESEL INSTRUCTOR Candidate with Vocational Diploma preferred. Primary responsibility will be to provide instruction In the skills and competencies required to inspect, diagnose, repair, adjust and overhuatdiesel engines utilized In diesel powered farm equipment, trucks, autos, boats and industrial equipment. In addition, the instructor will be required to recruit, advise and assist in the placement of students. Practical work experience required. 5 to 10 years work experience preferred. Industrial and farm equipment experience required. Position available September 1st. Applications accepted to August lOth to Employment Security Commission, Williamston, NC 27862. /Martin Community Col lege as Equal OpportunI tv/Afflrmatlve Action Emolover.
AVON REPRESENTATIVES have
summer fun with the money they earn during hours they choose. Work In your own neli earn uptofo%! Call 752
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 at mosphere. Steady employment. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 ^th /Memorial Drive._
DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED
DIRECTOR OF ELECTRIC Utilities: To supervise operation, planning and maintenance for Municipal Electric System serving 3,500 customers. BSEE/PE with experience in municipal operations, load management, substation and system analysis preferred. Salary open. Send resume to: Town Manager, TO Box 217, Aydm, NC 28513. An Equal Opportunity Employer._
Exceptional Opportunity
WILL YOU EARN
$15,000 fo $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
2l years of age or over
Aggressive
Anibitious
In good health
High School graduate or better Bondable with good references
IF YOU QUALIFY YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED:
$1200 per month guaranteed to start
2 weeks expense paid training Hospitalization and Profit Sharing
Unlimited advancement opportunity, no seniority. Opportunity to advance Into management as rapidly 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 COOK to work nights and weekends in local seafood restaurant. Apply In person at Fosdick's Seafood, /Monday between 1:30 and 3, Tuesday 4:30-6. No phone calls please
EXPERIENCED HAIR STYLIST needed full or part time. Excellent working conditions and good benefits. Call days 355-2076; nights 756-6544.__
EXPERIENCED greenhouse grow er. Must be wilting to work Call 758 5757 tor appointment.
FLORAL DESIGNER Experience necessary. Send resume to Design-er^.pgLfig< 1967. Qrtwviiife nc_
FULL OR PART TIME waitress needed at Szechuan Garden. Waitressing experience required. No phone calls. Application torms given out 3-5 p.m
INSTRUCTOR, Electrical Installa tlon and Maintenance. Candidate must have a minimum of a Vocational Diploma. Primary responsibility will be to provide a training program In the basic knowledge, fundamentals and practices Involved In the electrical trades. In addition, the instructor will be required to recruit, advise, and assist In the placement of students. Five years practical work experience preferred. Industrial and Electronic experience preferred. Position available September 1st. Applications accepted thru August 3 to Employment Security Commission, Williamston, NC 27892. Martin Community College an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer
LIBRARY ASSISTANTS 2 part time, 1 full time. Assist patrons at
public service desk. Require some college training. Experience helpful. Job descrVtlons available
at Sheppard /Memorial Library, 530 Evans Street, Greenville. Apply in writing only. No phone calls
LOCAL MANUFACTURER of pre cision, molded rubber products has
an Immediate opening tor a Quality ontrol AAanager. 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 manaMrlal experience. Resume should be forwarded to GSH Corporation, P O Box 37, Snow Hill, N C^580. Equal Opportunity Employer
MAINTENANCE PERSON needed. Must be knowledgeable in all areas of general maintenance Including plumbing, heating, and air condP tioning. Reply fo Maintenance Person, PO Box 1967, Greenville,
MANAGER TRAINEE need trainee for Butler's Slwe Store. Apply In person at PIH Plaza, QrwnvHlftNC
MANAGER WANTED for automotive parts in business. Must have knowledge In parts and business, and be able to deal with the PWb!it,75?:6i?6
MECHANIC AND SALESPERSON NEEDED
Due to fhe increase In service business and a future move to the By pass, we are In need of an experienced mechanic and an experienced salesperson. Excellent pay plan and benefits. Apply to: Boo Brown or Robert Starling at Brown-Wood. Inc., 1205 Dickinson Ayi,_The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Friday, July 22,198317
051
Help Wanted
MISS LILLIE LANGLEY is looking for someone to live In with her, but work wherever they wish. I have two rooms for sonteone to live in. I prefer a women or girl between 21 or 25 or an older woman. Address 2103 PendletoaPrive, Greenville
NEED GOOD BASE and lead guitar player with playing experience to loin Gospel group. Just starting, so there will be no pay. Prefer serious musicians only. If interested, call 758-2798 from 9 to 5 or 758 6007 from 5 to 10._
PARTS COUNTER PERSON Ford
tarts experience necessary, xcellent advancetnent opportunity to parts manager position for the right person. Call 75rg72
PERSON needed to do light office cleaning work evening hours, 5 days a week. Send reply to Job, 1409 NgrthQyer.Iggkj Srwnvllle, NC
PERSON WANTED for general office work. Exp-lence required. Apply In person between 8-9 only at Larmar AAechanical Contractors, 756.4624,
PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5 years experience. 756-7961
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 to qualify for chauffeur's license and be able to supply personal references. Applications to be received through August 5, 1983. Contact Group Home Coordinator, 946-0151 8 to 5, Monday through Friday, EOE
PRINCIPAL POSITION Located at Dobbs School Kinston, N^ School for adjudicated youth. Requires valid NC P CerHflcate. Resume must be received no later than July 27 to E B Hunt, Personnel A6anag-er. Division of Youth Services, 705 Palmer Drive, Raleigh, NC 27603. EOE/AA
RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, Director at Nursing, 943 21II
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 please
SERVICE WRITER needed Expe rience preferred. Ability to com-municafe with public a must. Call 756 4272._
STOP!
Ask yourself! Where will I be and what will I be doing 5 years from today. If I continue what I am doing now? Outstanding management opportunity can be yours in as little as 6 to 8 months. Earnings range from $20,000-535,000. Commission in management. 2 week training program then will field train you in new sales in servicing with world leader of long standing disability accounts. Must be bondable, over 21, ambitious, have a good car and be competitive. Previous sales ex-
Kirience desired, but not required, ospital plan, dental plan, profit sharing, and liberal fringe benefits. Your chance of a lifetime If you qualify. Call for appointment, Fred West, 1 800 662 8851, 9 a.m. 5 p.m., Monday^F^y. Equal Opportunity
THE TOWN OF TARBORO is
recruiting a civil engineer in the enginnerlng division of the public works department. Completion of accredited college with degree in civil engineering. Experience in surveying and engineering design desirable. Interested persons apply PO Box 220, TarboroTNorth cSro lina 27886. Affirmative Action, Equal Opportunity Employer.
THE TRAINING NEVER STOPS
Consider an exciting career in Real Estate. We offer the training and help you need to be successful.
Residential and Investment Training Classes To Begin Soon. Join our new company at our new office,
105 W Greenville Blvd. Call RodTugwell 756-6810
CENTURY 21
TIPTON 81 ASSOCIATES
WANTED: Persons to install duct work. Experience preferred, but will train. Apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Construction, between 8 and 9 only
7 TO 11 AND 3 TO 11 positions available for LPN'sor RN's. Please apply at Oak Manor Nursing Home, Snow Hill. 747-2868. Competitive salary.
059 Work Wanted
AIR CONDITIONER SERVICE
window units. Call 757 0533.
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 aHer 6 pm. 752-7765._
CARPENTRY WORKIII Over crowded - need room to breathe?? For real savings, call Gary Dancy at 756-1788 for additions to houses and trailers; as well as new homes, storage buildings, etc. No job too bio or too small
CARPETSPECIAL
2 rooms and hall Hom8Cai^C!W.ngrs
$39.95
756J453
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 Hiflhi
CLEANING SERVICES available for churches, office buildings, stores, theateri, banks, etc. Call 746 4240frpm9fl,m. 9p.m
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call for free estimafe. Days 756 9123, Night 756 1007
GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752T34I
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752-5583
I DO ODD JOB Services. Yard work, window cleaning, etc. Call 752 4942
LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranty. Call 757-3353 after 4 p.m ., weekends anytime
MAGICIAN SHOWS for adults and children. .Magic, balloon animals, iuqgllnq. Call 746-6146 aHer 6. SANDING and finishing floors. Small carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service, 756 268 anytime. If no answer call back.
WHEN IN NEED OF a pickup truck, call Gerald 752-9267. Will help move any household or deliver any Pdckage
WHEN YOU NEED your grass cut, call Gerald 752 9267. Air sizes of YUrti.wyh._
060
FOR SALE
063 Building Supplies
DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do vour house cleaning. 752 3758.
064
Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P StancIL 752 6331._
065 Farm Equipment
ATTENTION TOBACCO Farmers! Agri Supply carries a large line of supplies for you Including; 12 volt winches for harvesters $143.95; no volt hoists for bulk barns $383.95; seats for Long harvesters $12.49; racks; clips; clampbars and tines for Powell and Dixie barns. Many other parts in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville. NC 752 3999
IRRIGATION Complete EZ rain system. Like new. Good price. Call 919^5 4241.___
LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR, 317 John Deere with 48" mower d8L..nffaUEgty CPtH 756 6100
LONG TOBACCO Harvester with a 4 cylinder diesel engine. Call 758-232.
ONE ROW POWELL automatic tobacco primer with both heads. Ready to go to field. 758 1956.
066 FURNITURE
ASSUME PAYMENTS of $29 26 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World. 757 0451.
BASSETT SOLID WOOD table and 6 chairs, china hutch and oase. Take over payments on only $67.37 per month. 757-0451. Furniture World, 2808 E loithSt._
066
FURNITURE
6ED0ING&WATERBEDS
ShM now during Factory Mattress anrf Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one halt Next to PiH Plaza 355 2626
067 Garage-Yard Sale
BEDROOM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest Take over payments on only $26.33 per month. 757,0451 Furniture
YARD SALE Baby items, maternity clothes Hudson's Crossroads near Black Jack.
CALL US AND SEE why people are coming to Tarboro to buy their complete home furnishings Call 823 W34. 9:30 to 5:30 or by ap Dointment._
COLOR TV
Want one? Check out ColorTyme. check out Tele Rent, check out Curtis Mathes. and then check out Furniture World. We rent to own for less money than any store in Greenville. 757 0451. Remember that Furniture King will not be undersold. He don't play.
COUCH FOR SALE In excellent condition. $90. Call 758 9684._
FOR SALE, gold queen size hide-a bed sofa. $150. Loveseat size convertible foam sleeper. $50. Can be seen by appointment. 758 7888 after 1 p.m._
FOR SALE: bedroom suit, double bed and dresser, excellent shape, can see on Saturday at 102 Carlson Street. Westwood area.
FURNITURE! FURNITURE!
THE FURNITURE KING has it all! For the lowest prices on bedroom, dining room and living room furniture, pick up the phone and call 757 0451. We finance in our store. Remember the 'Furniture King' will not be undersold at Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St
AAATTRESS WORLD at Furniture World. We keep a truck load all the time. We finance. For the lowest price on bedding, visit Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St or phone 757 0451 _
RECLINERS We have 50 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 piece solid wood living room suite, sofa, chair, rocker and 3 tables. Only $29.26 per month at Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St. Phone 757 0451
RENT TO OWN Three piece living room suite, sofa, chair, loveseaf $26.33 per month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St or phone 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 Call 752-7798 after 6 and weekends.
TWIN BED with new Serta box springs and mattress. Maole bookcase headboard. $125. 756 42^
Help fight Inflation by buying and selling Through the Classified ads Call 752 6166
067 Garage-Yard Sale
BIG YARD SALE 205 South Library. Turntable, smalt appli anees, clothes, books, kitchen stuff. Saturday, 8a.m._
CARPORT sale, Saturday. July 23, 8 a.m. until noon. Girt s clothes, sizes 5 to 7, 8 to 12 slim Lots of jeans, sneakers, etc Some paperbacks. 8-track tapes. Polaroid camera, Instamatic camera. 1022 West Wright Road, College Court
CORNER OF I3TH and Cotanche Street. Saturday. July 23 at 7 a.m. Antique trunk, good condition, $75. Finaf odds and ends ot moving 'mm Virginia sale at low lowpricest
FRIDAY 2 UNTIL 7, and Saturday 8 until 2 - Yard Sale. 102 Lakeview Drive, Lake Glenwood. For in formation call 752 2778
GARAGE YARD SALE, Saturday. 305 South Jarvis Street. 8 a.m. Rain or shine. No early birds. Sofa bed, bar. rocker, other household items, 3 families
GIANT FLEA MARKET Tice Drive Inn. Saturday, 6 a.m. Spaces available!_
GIGANTIC YARD SALE, Saturday, 2 families. Small appliances, like new toys, bed linens, clothes. CBs, no junk. Priced to sell. 8 a m on Mumtord Road next to VFW
GIGANTIC YARD SALE, located in parking lot of Vann's Hardware, 1300 North Greene 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 hold items._
GREAT BARGAINS 705 Johnston Street. Children's clothes, toys, pool 18" X 8'. Much more. 8 a.m. til.
INDOOR/OUTDOOR yard sale everyday at Old Fairground. Mon day-Friday from 9 to 6. Saturday. 7 until._
AAOVING SALE! 9 to 2 Saturday, July 23. 1808 Forrest Hills Drive, Greenville. Garden tools, large amount ot furniture, toys and games, books, records. Gt refrigerator, clothes, lawn mower, many miscellaneous items._
MOVING SALE I Saturday. July 23 Furniture odds and ends. 339 Cannon Road, Ragland Acres in Wlnterville.8:30 to 12:00.
SATURDAY, 8 fo 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 ot
YARD SALE 600 River Hills Drive Household items, curtains, clothes. QtSjtg II, Saturday, 3>;ly23
YARD SALE Saturday, 7 to 12. Moving overseas. Must sell household goods, toys, weights and bench, stereo, recreation equip ment. 1973 Datsun 610 plus 1973 Chevy wagon. 804 Jeanette Street Weatnington Heights, WInterville. 756 8718.
YARD SALE Saturday. July 23 9 to 1. 33 Bavwood Drive_
YARD SALE Saturday, July 23 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Furniture, clothing, household items, appliances, etc. 105 South Eastern Street.
YARD SALE, Saturday. 117 Greenwood Drive. No sales betore 8 a.m. Children's clothing, etc
YARD SALE, State Road 1128 near PIH Community College, Saturday,
YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 a.m. until. Intersection of 264 Bypass and 264 Business in the Red Oak Com munltv._
YARD SALE, Saturday, July 23, 7 a.m. 10 a.m. at 121 Banbury Circle In Brook Valley, off King George Road. Clofhes, toys, books, etc.
YARD SALE, Friday and Saturday 9 to 6. Moving to California. Washer/dryer, anfique bedroom, lawn furniture, sewing machine, weights with bench, and much miscellaneous. Vernon Avenue, WInterville, off Main Street._
YARD SALE, Saturday, July 22. 8 a.m. Apartment A3 Langston Parks. Stancil Drive, 752 1961.
YARD SALE, Saturday, 8 12, 105 Prince Place. Eastwood Sub division. Children's clothes, toys
YARD SALE, Saturday, July 23, 8 a.m., 404 East 2nd Street, 2 blocks from Overtons at the cul de sac. Clothes, shoes, small household appliances, knick knacks
YARD SALE 1st house behind Fast Fare 302 Venters Street, Ayden, Toys, furniture, and miscellaneous items. 8 to 1
YARD SALE St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Parish Hall, Third Street Entrance, Saturday, July 23rd, 9 a.m. 1 p.m., clothes galore, bicycles, weed eaters, and furniture
YARD SALE, everything but kitch en sink, behind Sunshine Garden Center and across from Sunnyside Eggs, 23 Baywood Drive, Saturday, 9 a.m. Cancel it rain,
YARD SALE, Saturday. July 23. 8 a.m. until 12. Children's clothing (mainly infant to toddler sizes), men's clothing, kitchenware, etc. 3403 Tucker Drive
YARD SALE SATURDAY, 9 to 2 p.m. 718 Hooker Road_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
YARD SALE, Saturday, July 23, 2708 Shawnee Place. 3 family. Wide variety._
YARD SALE Saturday, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m Men and womens clothes, dishes, dolls, and much more! 202 Allendale Drive (RedOak).
YARD SALE Saturday, July 23 8 fo 12. 3 miles East of Greenville on Highway 33 Look for Big Robert's sign on right. Children to adult clothes, miscellaneous items, and brie a brae._
514 B EAST 1ST STREET Fan, clothes, appliances, storm door. furniture. 8 until 12_
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237
REGISTERED APPALOOSA
Gelding, rides English or Western, also Thoroughbred Bay Mare, been hunted and shown successfully 756 3821_ ^
073 Frults and Vegetables
BLUEBERRIES FOR SALE 45 a
pound, pick your own. Humbles Cage Farm, 2 miles west of Ayden on Highway 102 to County Road
BUTTER PEA^ 16 a bushel. Corn, 90 a dozen. B & B You Pick, Hassell 795 4646.
PEACHESI! Excellent for freezing , and canning. You pick! Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard 3 miles North of Bailey. Highway 581 North. Open 7 a m to 8 p.m Monday through Saturday, 235 4664
FRESH BUTTERBEANS and corn You pick. Bufterbeans $12 a bushel, corn $ 1.00 a dozen 746-6298._
074 Miscellaneous
A 2 SEATER ULTRA LIGHT ride! All day Saturday and Sunday. Cost $20 per person For more informa tion, call 746 4878 or 355 2970
AIR CONDITIONER, GE 15,000 BTU $250 756 4158_
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air
conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced for quick sale Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service, 746 2446 at Black Jack._
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL
Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation 919-763 9734.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CAMPER SHELL for a short bed economy truck. $95 756 9217._
CHEST FREEZER, 10 cubic feet, works fine, $50. Bubble gum machine, $15 with keys. Royal manual typewriter, $40. 7M-2896.
COMPLETE DOUBLE BED, $75
Sofa, $50. Both in good condition. Call 758 5552 or 758 8851.
DEEP FREEZER Chest type, 15 cubic teet $95 756 9217_
ENJOY NEEDLECRAFTS?
Creative Circle needs part time workers in your area. Must be interested in crafts such as: crewel, needlepoint, cross stitch. Will train. For information and applica tions on July 25 Holiday Inn Holidome, 702 North Memorial Drive, Greenville. 9 a.m. to noon.
FOR SALE: Sharp SF 811 copier with stand. 24 copies per minute. Handles 8'zxl1, /axIJ and 11x17 paper sizes. Royal SE 5010 electric typewriter, correcting capabilities. Will sell separately or package deal Call 792 1067 days; 792 6962 nights.
FOR SALE: Dorm size refrigerator, 3 piece bedroom suite, 19" RCA remote control color TV Craig turntable, receiver, and speakers. Royal Aristocrat portable electric typewriter, and much more. Call 752 1961 anytime._
FOR SALE: Radiant King kerosene heater, 1250 BTUs, 1 year old. Best offer Call 757 3145after 7 p.m.
FOR SALE: Harvest gold electric stove, $150. Long Boy double bed with frame, best offer. Call 355-6214 after 5:30 p.m._
FRIGIOARE 20 cubic feet frost free upright freezer, $200. Kenmore 800 Washer. $150 Frigidare Custom Deluxe dryer, $100. Call 752 2804.
FULL SIZE brass bed with Sealy mattress set, $500. 757-3414.
GOOD USED AUTOMATIC washers. Guaranteed for 30 days. $100each. 756 2479.
HOTPOINT portable dishwasher with cutting board. Used very little. $175. Also light fixtures, curtains, dishes. 355 2419_
ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off Barkers Refrigeration. 2227 Memo-rial Drive. 756 6417._
LADIES FOX FUR coat, like new. Appraised at $500. Best offer. Call 752 6706.
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-474TaHer 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.
MAGIC CHEF RANGE - 4 burners with clock. 2 years old. $100. 756 2586_ _
MARGAY PANTHER X racing go carl with motor. $450 $756-73A or 756 2550 anytime._
MICROSCOPE AND LIGHT Bosh and Lomb, excellent condition, $400. Autoclave 777, $150. 752 0973_
MOVING, MUST SELL Sears heavy duty washer, $150. Candlelight wedding gown and veil, best otter. Bedspreads, furniture, much more. 752-3949 aHer 4:30.
MOVING Sears side-by-side frost free refrigerator and deep freeze combination, designed for automatic icemaker installation, color almond, like new. only $375. 19" portable color TV with simu lated woodgrain design and much
more, only fl65. 756 04W._
CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue._
OFFICE FURNITURE; 7 arm chairs; 2 armless chairs; 1 bench table; 1 walnut end table; 1 AB Dick copying machine and stand; 2 metal bookcases; 1 time clock; 2 bucket chairs. All good condition. 752 0973._
REFRIGERATED TRUCK 69' Ford truck. Motor no good. Refrigerated cooler works like new. Wheels on and can be moved easily. Price negotialbe. Call 746-3921 after 6p.m._
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._
SHARP, SONY & GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69 88
SHARP SF501 copier Just t^n serviced. A-1 condition. $800. Call 756 6101, ask tor Joe Smith.
SHOWCASE 60 " long, 39" high. 9 drawers in back, oak wood. Sold for $400, asking $250. 752 4017.
SINGLE MATTRESS, box spring, bed rails, clean, good shape. $30. 758 7304 after 5
SNOOPY TWIN bedspread with
tillow sham and curtain set. $50. lectrolux shampooer. $100. 756-7320 or756 2550 anytime _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Each Saturday During July We Will Be Closed.
Open: Mon.-Fri., 8-6 Expert Shoe Repair
RIGGANS SHOE SHOP
113 W. 4th St. Downtown Greenville
1982 FORD ESCORT
4 door sedan. Blue, 4 speed overdrive transmission, radio, air condition. Nice car.
M13.73
Per Month
Basad on sales price ol SSOOO.OO, '800 down (cash or trade), amount financed $4200.00. 13.5% Annual Percentage Rate, 48 monthly payments. Total of payments $5459.04.
Amerka't I Uk6 Car Company TenlhSltaet8 264By Pass
H
ASTINC3
FORD
s
758-0114
GieentnM N C 27834
074
Miscellaneous
STEREOCITY
Now open featuring Marantz Sansui Sharp and other brands We otter quality compo nents and match systems at dis count prices Financing available. Call 757 0451. located 2808 East lOth Street
A Division ot Furniture World. STEREO SYSTEM, MCS separate components Receiver, turntable, tape deck, 2 speakers, like new
756 3911. _
USED AIR CONDITIONERS
Approximately 10,000 BTU heat and air condition 220 current Price SI35 New Independent Warehouse
758 2017_
USED APPLIANCES for sale Re trigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers VS and ui
Heating, air conditioning, plumb ing, and electrical service. 752 9
r9333.
USED FILING CABINET, legal size, used overhead projector, bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk, secretarial chair Call 758 3761 niohtsor 757 1l91davs
USED 15' REFRIGERATOR frost tree Good condition 756 5577 after
5 30^_^_____
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
074
Miscellaneous
WANTED; Used 8r Call 756 6068 anytime
8mm projector.
WASHER, $60. 2 seated bike. S30 1 seated bike. $30 Refrigerator. $30. 746 3764_
WASHER/DRYER combination. $250 Call 355 2340anytime
WATER BED mattress, liner, heat Sacrifice. 752 5020._
WEDDING GOWN Size 7 8. Veil and crinoline. Excellent condition. $100. 758 6777after 2p.m.
WHIRLPOOL AIR conditiooer. 5,000 BTU. in excellent condition. $100 Call after 6 pm 756 0994
WONDER WIZARD pin ball
machine. Call 756 9886.
WOULD LIKE to buy used window and central air conditioners that need repair. 746 2446
120 FOOT SEARS chain link fence 4' high $300. One Armstrono oil heating plant, good condition $100. Cal I 756 3391 after 6 p
18,000 BTU air conditioner. Used 4 months Asking $375. 758 0682
19" COLOR TV Rent to own $23 11 per month. Furniture World. 757-0451
TOASTMASTER DELUXE broiler oven. Good condition. $15. 752 1231.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SOCIAL WORKER
Excellent opportunities for advancement exists in this large Eastern North Carolina state facility for the mentally retarded serving diverse population. 6SW/MSW only need apply by calling:
JoeWilbik 919-522-1261, EXT. 5278 CASWELL CENTER KINSTON, NC
Minorities are encouraged to apply
1981 Ford Fairmont
4 door. Light blue, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, radio. Like new.
M22.17
Per Month
Based on sales price of $4350.00, 750 down (cash or tradej, amount financed $3600.00. 36 monthly payments, 13.5% Annual Percentage Rate, total of payments $4398.12. Does not include N.C. Sales Tax.
H
ASTING
Iford
s
Ued Car Company Tenth Street A 264 By Pass
758-0114 Greenville N C 27034
SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS
1983 Oldsmobile Firenza
4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.
1983 Honda Accord
4 door. Charcoal gray with gray velour interior. Loaded. 8,700 miles, like new.
1982 Datsun Diesel Truck
Short bed. 5 speed, black with black vinyl interior, 11,000 miles.
1982 Lincoln Continental
Loaded with digital dash. One owner, 26,000 miles. Metallic green, dark green leather interior.
1982 Chevrolet S-10 Pickup
Beige, with beige vinyl interior, 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, 11,000 actual miles.
1982 Chevrolet Cavalier Wagon
Beige with tan vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo.
1981 Datsun Truck ^
Diesel, short bed. Black with black interior, 5 speed, 22,000 miles
1981 Subaru
2 door, burgundy with tan vinyl interior, 5 speed, air, AM-FM stereo. 19,000 miles. Looks new.
1981 Datsun4X4 Truck
Long bed. 4 speed, air. AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Plymouth TC-3
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.
1981 Mercury Marquis
4 door, tan and brown, beige doth interior, loaded, 22,000 miles, one owner.
1981 Datsun 210 Wagon
Light brown with light brown vinyl interior, 5 speed, AM-FM radio.
1981 Olds Delta 88 Royale
4 door. Diesel. Loaded. Light green with light green velour interior. One owner.
1980 Ford Fairmont
Two tone blue, blue vinyl interior, automatic, air, AM-FM radio, one owner. 40,000 miles.
1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic
4 door Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.
1979 Pontiac Grand Prix
Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control. Dark green with saddle landau roof, saddle vinyl interior. 42,000 miles, one owner.
1979 Toyota Corolla
2 door. Yellow with brown vinyl interior, one owner, looks new.
1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale
4 door. White with blue velour interior, 58,000 miles, one owner, automatic, air condition. AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks, looks new.
1978 Olds Delta 88
4 door Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.
1977 Cadillac Sedan De Vine
4 door Silver with burgundy vinyl roof, burgundy interior. Loaded, 54,000 miles.
1977 Mercury Marquis Brougham
4 door, light blue with white vinyl top. blue cloth interior, 29.000 actual miles.
1977 Datsun 810 Wagon
Brown with tan vinyl interior. Low mileage, clean car.
DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators All Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty
1983 Olds Cutlass Clera Brougham
4 door, diesel Loaded White with tan top and matching tan interior
1983 Olds Cutlass Calais
Loaded. Light gray fern, bucket seats.
HOLT OLDS-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
074
Miscellaneous
19' PORTABLE COLOR TV Excellent condition. Call 756 7066 after 5:30.
3 FISH COOKERS, assembled
burners only, $25 each. 115 yolf electric welding machine. $60. Call after 6:30. 752 1488._
3 TON CENTRAL air conditioner unit. Chrysler air temperature Excellent condition. Call 746-3542.
5,000 BTU WHIRLPOOL air con ditoner, $100. Mast, booms, sail and fittings for Sunfish, $75. 5 piece drum set. $40. 4 horsepower garden tiller - good engine, frame, drive, etc. Good for parts only. $35. Call 756 9350 after 5 p.m._
075 AAobi le Homes For Sale
ALL NEW AND just tor you, 1983. 2
bedroom, plywood floors, sheetrock lly turn!
_ _ - ______ payi -
and less than $130 month. 756-9874,
walls, fully' furnished and deco rated, all for a low down
Country Squire AAobile Homes, 264 Bypass, Greenville
ALL NEW QAKWOODS reduced for July "Red Tag" sale. Prices on all new OakwoocT homes at our sales centers In Greenville and Wilson
have been slashed. Call or stop by today! Greenville 756 5434. Wlli 291 7B50._
NO MONEY DOWN
July Special Only
SINGLE WIDE....$8z495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17z995
(Loaded)
Anything ot Value In Trade Boats. Horses, AAonkeys Sorr^^fi^o^l ^1 a ws
FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRAOEWIND FAMILY HOUSING
705 West Greenville Boulevard
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle root, total electric. Payments of fess than $245 per m^tb. Also FHA and conventional firvncing availablel.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenvllla Boulevard
NO MONEY DOWN VA financing. Two dav delivery. Call Conner Homes. 7^ 0333_
TrIS'W
FAMILY HOUSING
Stop in and see why we are the fastest growing Mobile Home dealer in North Carolina.
1. Quality Homes
2. Best Prices
3. Super Service
4. Easiest & Best Financing In Town (Conventional, VA, FHA)
L Pe<la Who Cara TRAOEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 705 West Greenvllla Blvd. _756-4033_
RANELL DOUBLEWIDE. air. woodstove. dishwasher. Immacu-late. Call Tommy 756 7815, 758 8733.
UNIQUE OFFER mobile home. 12x74, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, underpinned, no lot rent, com pletely set up on attractive country lot. Pay low equity and assume payments. Call 746-2313 anytime.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Immediate Opening! FREE ROOM & POSSIBLE PART-TIME JOB FOR CLEAN CUT, MALE ECU STUDENT.
Call For Intanriaw Appointment
752-2101
Don Wilkerson
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
USED CONNER AAoblle Home down and taka over payments. Call
108.01
We're selling all our used homes near cost through July 28 with payments as low $108.01. Ca 6i3i (collect) today for details
12 X 70 PEACH TREE 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, new carpet arxf wall paper. Set up in nice park. Call 756-jon or 757 0723.___
12.75% FINANCING on salactad homes. Call Conner Ho
0333.
12x60 2 BEDROOfM^ 2 baths furnished. Oakwood Trailer Park, $g60P- 4476^
14 WIDES for as low as $170 par month. Call or coma by Art Dallano Homes. 756 9841. _
$15r327.00
New 70 X 14 Aquarius Home. 3 bedrooms. l'/> baths, fully furnished, HUD certified. Free delivery and set up. Call Tri County Homes at 756-013 (collect) now!
1969 FRONTIER Partially furnished. $3900.752-4609 after 6
1972, 12x52, Hatteras. Fully
furnished. Excellent condition. $5500. Call 752 7233.
1972 12 X 5 PARK MANOR 2
bedrooms, i full bath, living room, dining room, partially furnished. One air window unit. Must aelll 300 negotiable. 746-2784
1975 CONNER. 12x65. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, unique kithcen/dining central air plus extras. 355-2441
1976 ZHYENNE, 12x65. 2 bedrooms, fully furnished with central air, freezer, sun deck, and utility barn. Asking $6800 neootlable. 752 8510.
1978 CAROLINA 14x70, 3 bedrooms, 1</V baths, partly furnished. Set up in Pinewood AAgblle Park In Ayden. Price neootlable. 746-2478.
1979 14x60. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments of $155. Call Lawrence at Art Oellano Homes, 756 9841
1981 12x60 CONNOR Furnished. $800 down and take up payments of $194.79. 7M-4629.
1982 TOWN AND COUNTRY. 2
bedrooms. 2 full baths, furnished, small equity and assume loan. Call rorTs-
756 4376 (
1601.
1983 14' WIDE HOMES^ Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas AAobile Home Sales, North AAemorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752-6068.
1984 REOMAN doublewlde. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden tub, storm windows, masonite and shingle roof with 5 year warranty. 12S.WS. Call Lawrence or -Frank at Art Oellano Homes. 756 9841
24X52 USED doublwide. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art P9l!arg.Homw.7$6 9841._
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2754._
077 Musical Instruments
FRENCH HORN, Holton 378. $700. Call 752 1538.
UPRIGHT PIANO, reconditioned andreflnished.CdlT756 0728_,
USED PIANOS AND ORGANS
Y^mahas, Wurlitzers, etc. The Music Shop, Greenville Square Shopping Center, 756 0007.
USED PIANOS buy and sale. Plano 8, Organ Distributors. 355-6002.
078
Sporting Goods
091
Business Services
FREE ESTIAAATES, r)ofing, siding and^^ntl^i^. Gary Jones, Paint
093 OPPORTUNITY
COUNTRY STORE 8. GRILL FOR SALE
LocatedFire C^t., room for growth. Selling for health reasons. _
355-6045 OR 756-3229
FERTILIZER AND^ HARDWARE business for sa e.^Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other Interests. Call 758-0702
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat re;staurant. X seat cocktail lounge, fully equlppjrt, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financIng^. Call Gary Quintard 758-5156 after5._
109 Houses For SaJe
?Y OWNER IN Club Pines. 534 restline Blvd. 2 stary brick Williamsburg, 2400 square feet. 3-4 bedrooms, T/7 baths. Great room with fireplace, large spacious kitchen. Double carport with storage. Fence. All electric. Assumable 9Vi% VA loan. Reduced to $99,500. Open House every Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 5, or call 756-8953 for aopoifitment
BY OWNER ReiTMdelgd 3 bedr^ brick ranch near Eastern Elementary and parks. Fireplace, large kitchen, den and dining room, privacy fenced back yard with pool and deck. $59.999.99. 758-1355 belm^e 7:30 am - after 9:15 pm - anytime Sunday._
laT OR BUY your business with J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8i
AAarketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights
753 4015.
RESTAURANT FOR SALE Very
?ir500.*li.lairi*L';:
7S2.W.L.
RESTAURANT lor sale. 100 seat capacity building, land and equipment. Turn key operation. Less than 10 minutes from Greenvllle^^ 758 0702
TO BUY OR SELL a business
Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752
3575._
095 PROFESSIONAL
Gid Holloman
North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years expenence working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can dav or niohf. 753-3503. Farmvllle
TOPSOIL AND SAND for Mie. Septic tank installed. Rogers Construction Company, 746-4780,
Ayden, NC
100
REAL ESTATE
TOWNHOMES for sale. Located near University on wooded lots. The units consists ot 2 bedrooms, ivj baths, fireplace, and large decks. Contact Russell Fleming at days 756 3453; nights 756 8363._
102 Commercial Property
COtMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted for ortice space. 12 month lease required. Call Clark Branch, Real tors, 756-6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147,-
104 Condominiums For Sale
LEXINGTON SQUARE. 2
bedrooms. 1 ye_ar old. F^A 235 assumable loan
2 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM.
V/i baths. FHA 235 loan assumption at 6^% Interest ($296.47 monthly payment). 355 2286._
106
Farms For Sale
CASTER SURFBOARD 6x4', single fin with leash. Excellent condition. $150. 756 3565._
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: 9 week old female Golden Retriever, no collar, white tip on tail, in vicinity of Rotary Street. RtW9r<fiffirt4 758 7427._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR
SCREENS& DOORS
C.l . 1 uptoii CO.
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
FAR MS FOR SALE
Approximately 72 acres. 18,888 pounds of tobacco - near Greenville. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 756 2)21 or 756 5258_
109 Houses For Sale
ASSUME 9Vi% FHA iMn plus equity. Payment $428.41. Beautiful Williamsburg masonite siding home with bay window, carport. Almost 1688 square feet Wintervllle School district. 2 heating systems (heat pump) alectric baseboard heat, attic fan, 3 large bedrooms. 2 full baths, cozy den with fireplace, formal areas (living room and dining room), kitchen with all extras plus handy utility. Good neighborhood. Owner must sell, no reasonable offer refused. Won't last long I Call Davit Realty, 752 3888, 7367994, 7M-1W7._
AYDEN
TWO BEDROOMS, living room, bath, den with fireplace, kitchen, utility room, central alr/heat. Beautiful location. $38,888.
GET MORE DETAILS on this Ideal home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, living room, dining room, large kitchen, utility room, 2 car garage, on large wooded lot. t77.SOO.
Ayden Loan & Insurance Co 746-3761 746-6474
BY OWNER 1l>/^% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, den, gas heat, central air, fenced backyard. 187 Azalea Drive. 756-8281. _
BY OWNER New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1908 square feet. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R H McLawhorn, 7g2750pr975^.__
BY OWNER Country home with aluminum siding on acre lot. Central heat, 2 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, kitchan has eat in and den area, I ceramic tile bath, large carport, other building Included are: 2 story double garage (ideal for workshop). 2 story storage building. Approximately 4 miles from Greenville on County Home Road. 756-3432
BY OWNER Brick 3 bedrooms, jaths.Tivi
<o, slid
_ _______ JCkyard
assumable FMHA loan
V/2 baths,Tlvlng room, dining room, kitchan, carpon, sliding glass door leads to fenced backyard, heat
wmtyylllft 756-9.719.
BY OWNER North Overlook Drive Assumable 8'/^% loan. 1,558 square feet. 3 bedrooms, I/i baths. Low my 756 49fiZ
BY OWNER: EDWARDS ACRES 3 bedroom home featuring greatroom. kitchen with dining area, v/2 baths, utility room, patio, garage. Located on wooded lot. Good loan assumption. $54.508. Call 756 7901 after 6 p.m. No realtors.
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY
756-6666
BROKER ON CALL John Moye-758-0804
REDUCED OWNER FINANCING
and it's beautiful I The owner Is leaving and really needs to sell this beautifully decorated T bedroom townhouse, with full basement. Take one look inside this immaculate home and you'll be ready to buy at this low price, and owner will you finance the equity. $40;900.
UNIVERSITY AREA - This neat starter home has been reduced and could be just for you. It features l'/> baths, central air, and. the owner
will consider any otter. Come take a peek at a good investmant. $32,588. 459.
BACK ON THE MARKET and the seller is leaving town and wants to sell. Neat 3 bedroom bungalow on lovely wooded lot in quiet neighborhood. Low $38's and great VA assumption anyone can assume. 4454.
INVESTORS - check this package on two houses in a great rental location. 3 bedrooms, central air, IVj baths, total monthly rent of $670.80. Priced in the$50's. #458.
NOT YOUR ORDINARY TWO STORY I A real classic located In Tucker Estates. Designed for gracious living! Three bedrooms, great room wifn fireplace, beautiful wooded lot. Come on out and see this one. It has been reduced! $70's. #441.
WINTERVILLE Owner has re duced price $6.000. This could be what you have been waiting tor. Great room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms on 3 acres of wooded land. $55.500. #503
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$20't&$30't
INVESTMENT POTENTIAL This home has 4-5 bedrooms and two full baths and could easily be converted to a duplex. If you're in need of a good tax shelter, let us show you this one. VA loan assumption. Low Twenties. Break even cash flow.
WHY PAY RENT, we have a new
listing in Meadowbrook that you buy for the sanre monthly
mi Ir neighi _
inthemld$20's.
ly for the sanre monthly payment as rent. Nice home with 2 bedrooms. 1 baths. Quiet neighborhood. Call today. Offered
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
BLOUNTS CREEK 2 bedroom cottage. Good condition with excellent view with water on 2 sides. Less than 38 minutes from Greenville. Offered at $24,888.
UNIVERSITY CONDOMINIUM Why pay rent when you can own a 2 bedroom, 1# bath townhouse for the same monthly payment as rent. This unit was recently re-carpeted. Call today. Low$38's.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHzlNC.
REALTORS
756-6336
AAarle Oavis... ON CALL ... 756-5482
TeresaHewItt..............756 1188
Sharon Lewis ...........756-9987
Ray Holloman..............753-5147
Gene Quinn................756-6837
TimSinith.................752 9811
John Jackson..............756-4368
Toll Free: 1-808-525-8918, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
AT HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
We Are Overstocked With The New 1983V2 Nissan Trucks
4 X 4s, Deluxe, MPGs, Standards A Variety Of Colors And Over 25 To Choose From
Up To $1500.00 Discounts And An Unbelievable 8.8% Financing Rate Available On All Units
Hurry, While The Selection Is Good!
HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN
101 Hooker Rd.
756-3115
10B
Houses For Sale
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on
over 1 acre (also available for purchase 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank financ ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 756-M88; nlghts756 5716
BELVEDERE Thrie bedrooms and, two baths, beautifully landscaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Several quality features. $68's. Call 756-3837 after 5
p.m.,exc8ptigw.ltfn9$-_
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
840't
NEW LISTING Save,time and money and assume this FHA loan of 8'/% with payments of $292.87 on this 1588 square feet home conveniently located to the university. Spacious graat room with fireplace, dining room, fenced-ln back yard with a garage. Offered In the $40's.
WELL KEPT and cute as a button. 2 bedroom, IVi bath townhouse in Windy Ridge. Includes drapes downstairs, glass fire screen and refrigerator. Priced In the mid $48's and convenient to the pool.
COUNTRY LIVING 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch now available with over 1688 square feet and an acre of land. If you're looking for e good buy, this is It. Call for an appointment. Located south of Graenvlll^ $48,988.
BARGAIN HUNTING? Try this FmHA loan assumption in Ayden offering over 1188 square feet with garage, j>rlvacy fence and other sxtras. Owner will consider offer. Low $40's. Call today.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHz INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
AAarie Davis... ON CALL.
Teresa HewlH............
Sharon Lewis............
Ray Holloman............
Gene Quinn
.. 756-5482 .756-1188 .. 756-9987 ..753 5147
__________ .. 756-6837
Tim Smith.................752-9811
John Jackson..............756-4368
Toll Free: 1 888-525 8918, ext. AF43
An Equal HousinoOoi>ortunltv
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
840'S
NEW OFFERING Immaculate home In Fairfield. Wintervllle schools, 1114 square feet. Extra large carport and storage area. Low utility bills with heat pump. Fenced pet ai-ea plus deck and patio doors. Offered at $46,988 and owner will pay points. Excellent opportunity for first time buyer.
LOAN ASSUMPTION 8Vz% loan assumption available in Oekdele. Enjoy payments under $328.88 per month. This home also has 3 bedroorhs, 1# bath with game room and caibort. Large wooded lot. Call today. Offered In mid $48's.
NEW OFFERING IN WIN TERVILLE This 3 bedroom home in Wintervllle offers a lot for first time home bu
s a lot tor you uyers Including . Efficient wiood
fenced in back yard, burning stove, double insulation and solar water heater for low utility bills. Call today becausa it's priced to move at $44,m.
IA4AGINEI A house In the city with so much room priced under $58,888. You'll love the fenced and tree
^aded iM^k^ard ar^_ tlw family
I
bedroom, orne out and sae II
room with big brick flreplact' Extra room with beauty shop could be a place to work at home or extra
today!
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC
REALTORS
756-6336
Marie Oavis... ON CALI 756-5482
Teresa Hewitt..............756-1188
Sharon Lewis..............756-9987
Ray Holloman..............753-5147
Gene Quinn ... Tim Smit
756-6837
Smith.................752-9811
John Jackson..............756-4368
Toll Free: 1 888-525-8918, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES A WEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
$58's8i$40't
LIKE NEW Edwards Acres home with backyard deck, wooded lot. central air and super loan assump tion at l2'/a%. Lots of axtras. too. $54,988.
THE PINES, Ayden. New home available with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths and over 1458 square feet of living space. This home has a large famlTy room with fireplace, separate utility room ancT an energy efficient heat pump. Call today. Offered in the $56 $.
JUST IN TIME for school! You can be settled In this roomy 3 bedroom home in Wintervllle school district by fall. Great low interest loan assumption at 9'/2% Modern built
In kitchan and attractive great room with brick fireplace. Mid $50's. Call today for showing.
RAGLAND ACRES 12</^% FHA loan assumption available in this brick ranch In Wintervllle. Two full baths and formal dining room plus recration room for your favorite hobby. Ottered in the SM's.
LOCATION PLUS extras In this spacious Oellwood ranch. Over 1888 square feet and loan assumption tool Fenced rear yard and patio, bultt-ins In kitchen, new furnace.
Blaster walls. Well built In one of reenvllle's better areas. Call today. Offered at $65,900.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Marie Davis... ON CALI 756 5402
Teresa Hewitt..............756-1188
Sharon Lewis..............756-9987
Ray Holloman..............753 5147
Gene Quinn................756-6037
Tim Smith.................752 9811
John Jackson..............756 4360
Toll Free: 1 800 525-8910. ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HELP WANTED
WANTED; 1 Asphalt Paver Operator, 2 Asphalt Roller Operators. 2 Asphalt Screed Operators, 2 Asphalt Rakers, 1 Asphalt Distributor Operator. Must have experience.
Apply to:
BamBCoBstnGtm Co.
Ball Fork Road JackaonvUla, N. C.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
1(M Houses For Sale
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
nor*
THE CHOICE is yours I Asi^ le existing loan of 9 %% with tota payments of S314.48 or seller will pay points tor a new loan. Conve-nientto the hospital. Mid $48's.
FHA 235 loan assumption. WoorW lot In Oakgrove. Offered at Ml,588 Includes carport and plenty of shaded privacy on a dead m street, income should be under ,888. Cain
$21
I today.
9Vk% VA LOAN assumption available in Griffon with to4al payments of lass than $358.88. This Roma has 3 bedrooms. 1 tath, family room with fireplace. Home Is heated and cooled by l^t pump. Call today. Offered at $48,888.
WEATHINGTON HEIGHTS^ 3 bedroom ranch with fenced back yard and assumable loan if you nuallfy. Flexible terms to suit your Inanclal needs. Call total for your *sonal showing. Offortd in mid 's with noarly 1250 squaro feet.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC. REALTORS 756-6336
Marie Davis... ON CALL Teresa Hewitt...........
.756-5482 .756-1188 . 756-9987 . 753-5147 . 756-6837
............ .752-9811
John Jackson..............756-4368
Toll r
Sharon Lewis Ray Holloman Gena Quinn .. Tim Smith
I ......................
I Free; 1-888 525-8918, ext. AF43 An Equal Housing Opportunity COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East. 1748 square feet Ijving area, plus 448
garage, double lot. Too many extras to lisTlI $74,580. Bill Williams Real E^tptp, 72-261S,.
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
BROOK VALLEY Located at 218 Churchill Drive on the 17th Fairway. Over 3600 square feet of heated area alone. In addition thare is a basement area downstairs for hobby or rec room. Floor plan offers formal living and dining
rooms, large kitchen with big eating area, family room with fireplace, four bedrooms, three full baths,
double garage. Other extra's too numerous to mention. 8175,008.
VISIT COLONIAL Williamsburg. Right here In Greenville sits this lovely two story modeled after a Williamsburg home. Located at 185 Windemere Court on a lovely wooded lot this home offers over 2588 square feet of heated area plus a big double garage. Large foyer, formal living and dining rooms, family room with fireplace, nice kitchen with eating area, four bedrooms, r/2 baths, larga deck. $116,800.
GREAT LOCATION for the summer! Everything Is convenient to this great location at 1113 Hillside Drive in the Elmhurst area. Located on private street this home features (our bedrooms, living-dining area, large kitchen and eating area, play or rec room, t'/i baths, covered patio. Great location. Owner ready to deal. A lot of house for $59,900.
NEW LISTING Great buy in pcu-lar Westhave II Subdivision, ms maculate ranch at 111 Baywood
Lane features foyer, living room,
'------ x>m, family
spaciou!
with eating area, three bedrooms.
formal dining room, family room with fireplace, spacious kitchen
two full baths, deck, outside workshop or storage area. Nice . Priced to sell afS79,'
yard. Priced to sell
900
BRAND NEW AND READY for
you. Located at 1003 Cortland Road In convenient Orchard HIM Subdivision. Spacious plan features large living room, kitchen-dinlhg area with custom cabinets, three bedrooms, two full baths, carport and storage area, deck, unique oil or wood fired central heating system. Lovely Interior. $54.500.
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
xREAT BUY IN COLLEGE Court. >reat location and an Immaculate
home at 182 Graham St. in graat
area. Plan features ft '----
living and dining room, _____
eatin area, cozy family room with
kitchan with
fireplace, three spacious bedrooms, two full baths. Lovely yard. 849,500.
BIG PRICE REDUCTION in Col onlal Heights. Owner must move Immediately. Was priced at $37.500, reduced $3880 to $34,588. Good starter home features living room with fireplace, dining room, three bedrooms, one full oath, enclosad garage for work area, deck. Hard to find anything for $34,580. AAake ut an offerl
IMMACULATE HOME IN HORSESHOE Acres. Great floor plan In popular Horseshoe Acres convenient to the hospital and mod school. Plan features great room with fireplace and dining area, lovely kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths, tremendous lot with lots of room for garden, etc. Possible Federal Land Bank auumptlon. Priced at 142,000.
D.G. NICHOLS AGENCY
752-4012
TWO NEW HOMES under con struction In Orchard Hill Subdivision. Just being started, you may still pick out colors, etc. tor these floor plans which feature walk around fireplace, dining area, graat room, nice kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Seller pays all discount points and closing costs on FHA-VA financing plans. Pricas start at $54,900. Call for more Information.
THE PRICE HAS BEEN greatly reduced on this great at 1103 Courtland Road In Orchard HIM
Subdivision. A real bonus is the extra large lot (most of which It fenced inf, lots of room for pets or a garden. Good floor plan with living room with fireplace, kitchen eating area opening onto a deck, throe bedrooms, two full baths. Garage. Possible VA loan assumption with balance of ajroxlmately $45,580. Priced at SSI.MO.
NEW LISTING near the University, schools, churches and college all nearby this one owner home at 802 Forest Hills Circle. Many features such as a separate den or study with fireplace, large (oyer and formal living room with firaplaca, formal diniiM room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. Nice hardwood floors throughout. Located on a wooded corner lot. Nearly 2800 square feet of heated area priced at 872,000.
IN A CLASS BY ITSELFI This custom built home has lots of extra's worth paying extra for. Lika a kitchen skylight, wood stove insert, ceiling fan, extra large deck and many other features. Great room with fireplace, dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, large heated utility room. 143.500.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING
C i. I iiplon. ( (>
BRIDGESTONE RADIAL SALE
Until July 30.1983
RD-212
P165/75R13 49.00 P185/7SR13 54.00 P185/7SR14-57.00 P195/75R14-61.00 P205/75R14 - 65.00 P215/75R14 68.00 P205/75R15 - 65.00 P215/75R15 - 68.00 P225/75R15-71.00 P235/75R1': - ^4.00
RD-108
P155/80R12-BW P155/80R12-WW P155/80R13-BW P155/80R13-WW P165/80R13-BW P175/80R13-WW P175/80R14-WW P185/80R14-WW P165/80R15-WW P165/80R15-BW
39.00
42.00
41.00 45.00
45.00
- 50.00
- 52.00
- 53.00 50.00
46.00
SI .37 to $2.96 FET. Install Iraa.
ALL RAISED WHITE LETTER ON SALE ALSO*RECAPS 1S.S0 A UP WITH GOOD TRADE HMIMPORTED RADIAIS $29.50 A UP PLUS FET.
QUALITY TIRE & AUTO SERVICE
N Greene SI'Rp! Greenvi^ie NC 7S2-717?
VISA ,r<a VflSTFRCAR
109
Houses For Sale
\W
Houses For Sale
EASTWOOD 4 bedrooms. 2 full bettis, wowM lot on dead end street. Den with fireplace. $57,900 Call Aldridge & Southerland. 754 3500._
ESTATE REALTY CO.
752-5058
MOST ATTRACTIVE three bedroom home in excellent condi tion, family room, formal areas, two baths, fully carpeted, carport. Well established neighborhood near shopping area only $43,500.
NEW LISTING on this three bedroom home in the country on iVj acre, beautiful wooded lot; family room, formal areas, two baths, twqcar garage, detached storage building, located eight miles west
IMMACULATE three bedroom home on large corner lot for only $49,900; fully carpeted, one car garage, deck, outside storage Duildnng. Possible 8% assumame loan.
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours in this three bedroom home located approximately 13 miles west; fireplace insert, detached garage, swimming pool.
Billy Wilson 7n-4474
Jarvis or Dorlis Mills 752-3447
EXCELLENT BEGINNER home complete with 3 bedrooms, i bath, living room and eat in kitchen. Air conditioning and fully carpeted. $42,500. Call now. Sue Dunn, Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500 or 355 25W._
EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Super location and investment for the wise buyer. New 2 bedroom duplex heat pump. Custom built. Low $40's. Call for details. Davis Realty 752 3000, 754 1997, or 754 2904._
FOR SALE BY OWNER Two
bedroom townhouse on wooded lot. Cedar siding with deck. Owner transferred. $45,000. Call days 752 4889, nights 758 9089
FOR SALE BY OWNER A com fortable 1500 square foot house at 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 family. Priced well under $50,000 with excellent financing available. Can be seen during most daylight hours by simply ringing door Mil This i Mond.
HICKORY, POINT 4 bedroom house on river front property with JP** niSds work.
Great fishing, deck with new bulk head. $IOk down, mortgage. (301)530 4149.
assume
horse lovers Nice 3 bedroom, LS?'"- sreatroom, country home.
?i loo* floated area. Nice 7
stall horse stables all on approximately 3 acres. Lease forf $440 month or buy for $85,000. Available Now!
121 Apartments For Rent
A 2 BEDROOM. IVa
kitchen with dining . anees, hookups, convenient tIon. $285. 7mT7714 after 4 p.m weeKtnds.
bath duplex area, appli loca or
HOUSE FOR SALE by owner, grooms. Located on Mumford VFW 2 large lots. Call
758-2461
for large family. Gas heat. $440 per month. Lease and deposit required No pets. Call 754 5217 or 355 2544.
3 bedroom, itures living
RIVERHILLS Lovely :
2'/j bath, split level, fea' room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen greenho pump. C & Souti
, with beautiful
greenhouse window, also heat Call June Wyrick, Aldrldi therland, 754 3500;
754
night
THE CHOICE IS YOURS 3 or 4 tedroom brick ranches with iVj baths and garages. In nice neighborhoods in Winterville. Call 754^ 297 or 754 4854.
THREE BEDRCX3M, 2 bath ranch in the country complete with wood stove in great room and all kitchen appliances remain. Full carpeted. Must see to appreciate. $45,000. Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge 6, Southerland, 754 3500 or 355-2:
UNIVERSITY CONDO bedrooms, 1Vi baths, all appliances, complete carpenting, drapes, and other custom features. Offered Mlow market value to settle estate. Call 754 5058
1500 SQUARE FEET plus large porch left of a burned house. All new shingles for top furnished Easy to move. $37W. 7^5242._
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, irge great room with 8' pool table nd fireplace. Newly carpefed with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 258 0144 or
er expires I
aav. July 25.
HARDEE ACRES Loan assumption 10% FHA Excellent location, 3 bedrooms, iVi baths, large lot, 2 out buildings, country kitchen and den. $42,500. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500._
NEW HOMES-$38,000
Recently Completed
3 Bedrooms, iv? Baths $1350 Down
$435 Per Month Total
Call
East Carolina Builders 752-7194
111 Investment Property
For The Best In
DUPLEXES
Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders 752-7194
SEVEN 1 bedroom units with fireplace near University, 3 years old and fully leased, (.all days 754 3453, niohfs 754-8343.
NEW LISTING Shaded lot, 3 bedroom, IVj bath brick ranch Large family room, also features approximately 600 square feet de tached garage and workshop, excellent locafion. Call now to see this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 5716.
NEW LISTING $48.900 Spacious 3 bedroom. IV2 bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient ation. Call
location.
June Wyrick,
Aldridge & Southerland. 756-3500; nights 7M 5716.
NEW LISTING Charming 3 bedroom home in excellent condition situated on large corner lot. Garage, deck, and patio. Call for complete details on this lovely home for only $49.900. Estate Real'"
Com
QL
impany, 7: 758 4476
5058, nights 752 364)
-SUPERipR HOMEllI ThI
CENTURY21 BASS REALTY
756-6
BROKER ON CALL
John Moye - 754-0404
INTERESTED IN IN TOWN? Heres a very fine in-town home in excellent location on a heavily wooded lot. If you want privacy but the convenience of being close to schools, shopping, etc. This is the home for you! l'/j story contemporary with large loft upstairs. Call for more details. $50's. K04.
EXECUTIVE this home is only for those with champagne taste. Ex-qulsite three story traditional in prestigious Bedford. Formal areas. 14 bedrooms, huge family room with ladjolning solarium, finished room over garage and unfished third story are just a few of the features. Choose your own decor! $143,500. 4552.
OUT OF THE ORDINARY! This .2714 square foot ranch home is unlike alt the others. Walk In on the first floor with formal areas, den with fireplace, eat in kitchen, and two baths. Down to the second floor, this area could be used as a hobby room, extra bedrooms, game room or guest area with private bath $71,900.11574.
YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE, so get the most out of life with a home designed for your comfort and luxury. With tour spacious bedrooms and 2V} baths this Cape Cod style home has room for tne whole family. Tremendous family 'room and dining room, fully equipped kitchen and lots of builf-ins combine to make this charming home as livable as It is beautifuL Conveniently located near shopping mall. Reduced to $89,900. 4500.
WINTERVILLE Looking for the perfect home? Well, this could be it. Three bedrooms, great room with fireplace, on three acres of I, AND just reduced to $57,500.4503.
TWO BEDROOM house near Uni versity. Needs minor work done. Priced mid $30's. Call days 754-3453, nights 754 8343.
WELL ESTABLISHED business with excellent income. Owner fi nancing available. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency. 754 2121 or 754 5258.
115
Lots For Sale
CHERRY OAKS Heavily wooded. 154 foot road frontage. Gloria Street. $14,900. Call lommmy, 754 7815, 758-8733
EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount a, Associates. 754 3000.
LYNNDALE LOT 1 of the last. Call 355 2220._
ONE ACRE LOT between and Grifton on State Road 1110 754 2482. _
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 744 2144 for full details.
'/i TO 5 ACRES, Highway 244 South, Ayden-Grlfton area and Highway 33 South. Call 754 2482or 757 om.
WITHIN CITY LIMITS -Approximately 8.5 acres. Partially wooded. Great for duplex lots. CENTURY 21 B Forbes Agency, 754 2121 or 756 5256._
B"?lrb;r A^e'n'cy.^fii:
2121 or 756 5258._
1 LARGE LOT ('7. 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
NORFLEET SHORES beautiful view of Rungo River from this 2 bedroom, v/i bath cottage. Lot bulkheaded. Has nice pier. $59,500. Cali Sally Robinson, 944-4711, Woodstock RealtvV 943 3352._
PAMLICO BEACH Two nice wooded lots each with 100' frontage on water reduced to sell at $l8.(io0 each or $30.000 for both. Call Sally Robinson, 964-4711, Woodstock Re-altv. 943 3352.
AVAILABLE LATE JULY New 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah Range, refrigerator, dishwasher, and hookups. $310. Couples pre ferred. Lease and deposit. No pets
AZALEA GARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optional
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Club. Shown
Brook Valley Country "y appointment ' Ingles. No pets.
by appointment only. Couples or sin
Contact JT or Tommy Williams 754-7815
BRAND NEW, tastefully decorated, town houses, 2 bedrooms, iVj baths, washer dryer hookup, heat efficient. No pets. $310 per 752 2040. 754-8904._
t pump, month.
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IV1 baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer-dryer hook-ups, laundr' room, sauna, tennis court, clul hgv$ftfl.na POOL. 752 1557_
COOL
CONDOMINIUMS
with monthly payments lower than rent! Units available at Brookhill, Cannon Court, Twin Daks, Treetqps and Shenandoah. Call today for more details. Owen Norvell at 758-4050 or 754-1498, Wit Reid at 758 6050 or 754-0444 or Jane Warren at 758-6050 or 758-7029.
MOORE & SAUTE R 110 South Evans 758-6050
DUPLEX APARTMENTS in Shenandoah area at Shiloh Drive and Alice Drive available August 1 Mrs. Curtis
52?
5 per mont 442or523-
PUPLEX APARTMENT for rent Brand new!! 101 Toby Circle. $275 per month. Phone 522 ()762
DUPLEX FOR RENT, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 apartments available, $250 each. Located 402 Biltmore Street, 754-2488 days. 754 2088 nights
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.
Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive
752-5100
EFFICIENCIES 1 or 2 beds, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates Call 754 5555. Heritage Inn Motel.
FURNISHED APARTMENT for rent. Within walking distance of college and downtown. Call 754-4345.
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpefed. dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to grWHVillggoyntryClub. 746 6849
GRIFTON AREA 2 and 3 bedroom apartments. Central air, carpet and drapes. Call 524 4239 or 524 4821.
IN WINTERVILLE 3 bedroom apartment. Appliances furnished No children, no pets. Deposit and lease. $210 per month. Call 756 5007.
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located <0 shopping center and schools. Located lust off 10th Street.
Call 752-3519
LARGE 4 BEDROOM apartment. 2 full baths, fireplace, 1310A Myrtle
Avenue, $340 per rnonth. Lease'and deposit required.
35S-2S44or746 0489
No pets. Call
SCHRAMS
Waterfront lot
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
JARMAN
AUTO SALES
1982 Buick Regal, 2 door hardtop. $8350
1982 Pontiac J-2000, 2 door liftback. $6150.
1982 Oatsun B-210, 4 door, air condition, 5 speed. $5450
1981 Pontiac Grand Prix, 2
door hardtop. $6650
1911 Toyota Corolta Liftback,
2 door, automatic, air condition. $5650
1170 MaUbu Station Wagon,
ak, automatic. $3650.
1970 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed. $3350
1979 Flat 128,2 door. $1750
1978 Ford Courier Pickup, 4 speed.$2150
1977 Olds Cutlass Supreme, 2
door hardtop, loaded. $3650
1977 Oldsmobile Omega,
broughan, 2 door. $3150.
1976 Datsun B-210, 2 door, 4 speed. $1950
1976 Plymouth Valiant, 4 door, automatic, air. $1750
1967 Chevrolet Pickup,
automatic. $850
12 Months, 12,000 MNm Warranty AvaNaWa
nPBWBMH WlPi V9WW9
Hwy 43 North TS2-0237Buoino88
Grant Jarman.......7S6A542
Edgar Denton--------756-2921
DonaMQarria.......75941929
on Pungo River already cleared, bulkheaded and septic tank in, ready for mobile home or cottage. $20,500. Call Sally Robinson, 5^-4711, Woodstock Raalfv. 943-3352.
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE at Pamlico Beach. 150' pier, boat lift. Cozy, ouief Place. Cair35S 2544.
120
RENTALS
lot; for rent AIso 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Securit' deposits required, no pets. 75f44l3between8and5.
"'
NEED STORAGES w, hav any
Size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, C)pen Mon-dav Friday 9 5. Call 754 99K.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 5ll% less than comparable units), dishwasher. washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall-to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays 9 5 Saturday 15 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
_756-5067
NEikR^HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 2 bedrooms, fvj baths. No pets. 752 3152 or 752-4715, ask for John or Brvant
NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, 1 mile from hospital med school. Really nice. $300. Deposit, le^$g..5 4931
NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex apartment. 2 bedrooms. )'/j bams, fully c anees included
fully can>eted, and appi anees included. Quiet neighborhood near hospital. 757 3998or 795 4323
NEW 3 BEDRObM DUPLEX near ECU Available August 15. Dishwasher, washer/dryer hook up, central air, no pets. $330.754 5344.
NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG AAANOR BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS
Features
2 large bedrooms
l'/2 bafhs
Thermopane windows
E -300 E nergy efficient
Heat Pumps
^acious floor plan
Beautiful individual Williamsburg
interior ^
Patios with privacy fence
Washer/dryer hookups
Kitchen appliances
Custom built
cabinets
CALL 756-7647
OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, disposal included: We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.
756-4151
121 Apartments For Rent 133 /Mobile Homes For Rent
TWO BEDROOM apartments available. No pets. Call Smith Insurance 8, Realty, 752 2754._
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS
Near ECU Most utilities includ $275 up. Available immediately. 758-0491 or 754-7809 before 9 o.m
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, 1'/j bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.
9 to 5 Monday Friday
756-7711
.1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. Available immediately. 752-3311.
2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen applianes furnished, totally electric. $325 month. Call 754 7447.
ip'
BEDROOM, Langston Park . artments, $265 deposit, $265 per month. Available August 1, 752-1941 3
and
- BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE in Quail Ridge. $400 a month. Lease deoosft required. Call 758-9549
704 EAST Third Street. 2 bedrooms, furnished, 2 blocks from ECU Stove, refrigerator. Lease and de-posit. $240. 754 1888 9 to 5 weekdays.
122
Business Rentis
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or
office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only $3.40 per square toot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348.
FOR RENT- 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowlnity. Call Donnie Smith at 944 5887.
4,000 SQUARE FEET - Upstairs downtown Greenville. 5th Street entrance. Call 754 5007._
127
Houses For Rent
FOR RENT in Ayden. Nice house and yard. Call 744-3474._
HOUSE FOR RENT in Winterville. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living room, front and back porches. $250 per month. Deposit required. 758-4128.
HOUSE IN the country. Approximately 8 miles past the hospital. References required. 523 3542._
133 /Mobile Homes For Rent
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. $215 a month. 3923.
ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815.
ONE BEDR(X>M
Carpeted, central moder 3311
APARTMENT
air and heat, rn appliances. $210. Call 758-
RENT FURNITURE; Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.(H) per month. Option to buy. U-REN-CO, 754 3842.
STADIUM APARTMENTS 1 bedroom furnished apartment adjoins ECU Completely modern. Excellent location! 904 East 14th Street. Call 752 5700or 754-4471
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-400
2 BEDROOMS, underpinned, furnished, central air, near Com-munify College. Call 754 3377.
3 BEDROOMS, with 2 baths, washer/dryer. Semi private lot. Call after 5 weekdays, 7^ 7317.lue uauy neuector, ureenvuie, rt.c.-i naay, juiy a, lWB-19
SPECIAL RATES for students Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up. No pets, no children. 758-0745or 754-9491._
12 X 40 TWO BEDROOM furnished , washer, dryer, air conditioning. Good location. No pets. 754 OMI aHer5om._
135 Office Space For Rent
DOWNTOWN Just off mall. Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse. Call 754-0041 or 754-3444
RENT 2500 square feet, e tor office space or com mercial. 404 Arlington Boulevard.
FOR
Suitable
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Wliriams. 754-7815
2500 SQUARE F(X)T building for rent. 327 Arlington Boulevard. Available SeptemW 1. Call Van Fleming, III, days 754-2000; nights 754-4091. _
5,000 SQUARE FEEJ office build ing on 264 Bypass. ing. Call 758 2^days.
bfc I WIIIWV MUIIU*
ss. Plenty of park-
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom condominium, oceantroni, families only. 754 4207 or 724 3849
FOR SALE OR RENT Resort on Neuse River. Nice accommoda-tlons. Cpil 744 3474._
138
Rooms For Rent
R(X>MS AVAILABLE - In pleasant shaded neighborhood. 3/2 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 preferred. 110 South Woodlawn Avenue. 752 0495 after 5 o.m
SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full house privileges. Across from ECU $25 per week Includes all. 752 7278.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.
Across From Wachovia Computet Center Memorial Dr 756-6221
142 R(x>mmate Wanted
FEAAALE ROOMMATE needed Non smoker to share 2 bedroom apartment. Prefer 1st or 2nd year nursing student at PCC or ECU Call 753 43OT anytime
AAALE OR FEAAALE roommate a new
Colonial Williamsburg 2 bedroom townhouse In Shenandoah. $155 per month each, plus utilties (Tall 754 4822 after 4
NEED FEAAALE STUDENT to share new condominium. Slightly abova dorm rates~(704 ) 542 394^
ROOAAAAATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom brick house in Ayden. Call Angela 757 4734 before 3 p.m., 744-4454 after 3:30 p.m.
It's still the garage tale season and people are really buying this year! Get yours together soon and ad ver tise it with a Classified Ad. Call 752-4144.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
144 Wanted To Buy
tractors 8N
Jubilees 601, 80l, and 5,000 Ford Call 758 4669 after 6 o.m_
WANT TO BUY ' 2 acre of land in a radius of 8 miles from Greenville or Winterville area Contact Louis Pail, 756 9078 _
146
Wanted To Lease
LOCAL CHURCH is interested in leasing or renting a building imme diatelv Please call 756 8i9i_
148 Wanted To Rent
RESPONSIBLE WORKING female and toilet framed cat looking for 1 bedroom apartment 757 3709
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CENTIPEDE SOD
Will Deliver
752-4994
1980 FORD FIESTA
3 door hatchback. Tan. 4 speed transmission. One local owner.
^99 85 Per Month
BaMd on sales price of 13200.00, >700 down (cash or trade), amount Bnanc^ *2500.00. 30 monthly payments. 14.5% Annual l^ercentage
Rate. Total of payments *2995.50.
America's I Used Or Company Tenth Si. eel 6 264 By Pass
Hasting
[ford
s
758-0114
Greenville M C 27834
THE REAL ESTATE
CORNER
TAR RIVER ESTATES
1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, house, playground. Near ECU
:1ub
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office - Corner E Im 8. Willow
752-4225
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton. Co.
NEED MONEY FAST??
Call or Come by:
NATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY 300-A PLAZA DRIVE 756-8100
(ALL LOANS SUBJECT TO OUR LIBERAL CREDIT POLICY)
GRANT BUICK-MAZOA, INC.
603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.C.
Great Buys On Young Used Cars
LUXURY & FULL SIZED 1983 Buick Electra Limited -Coupe, black,demo. Real Sharp!
1983 Buick Electra Limited - Demo, loaded. Big Savings!
1981 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham OElegance - Black, wire wheels, load, immaculate automobile in every way.
1979 BuickLeSabre-4 door, 26,(XX) miles, local car. Like new!
INTERMEDIATES
1983 Buick Regal - 4 door, less than 2,(XW miles. Nearly New car!
1983 Buick Regal - 2 door. Low, low miles, power windows, stereo, tilt wheel, white
1982 Buick Regal - 2 d(X)r. White on white. Low miles, nice car!
1982 Pontiac Bonneville -4 door, low miles, wire wheel covers, pretty car.
1982 Buick Regal 4 door, power windows, tilt wheel, nice.
1981 Buick Skylark-4 door, beige, cruise, stereo, power door locks.
1976 Chrysler Cordoba - Power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo, power seat, 36,000 miles, like new!
GAS SAVERS
1982 Mazda GLC -12,000 miles. Like new!
1981 Mazda GIC - 2 door, silver, air. Nice one!
1981 Mazda 626 - Luxury 2 door, blue,loaded with options!
1979 Mazda 626-4 d(X)r, automatic, air, stereo. Local car!
1979 Dodge Challenger - Alloy wheels, air, many options!
1980 Chevrolet Citation - 4 door, automatic, air. clean car. Low mileage.
1979 Buick QentMfy Wagon - Solid car, light blue, local wagon.
TRUCKS & RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
(2) New 1983 Chevrolet Custom Vans. These are one of a kind conversions and are priced to go!
1980 Ford Custom Van -26,000 miles. New conversion.
1982 El Camino - 22,000 miles. Very clean!
1978 Dodge Custom Van - 39,000 miles, new radials, nice van!
Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00
Phone: 756-1877
CYPRESS CREEK TOWNHOUSES
Models Open Saturday And Sunday 2-6 P.M. w. g. blount & associates
756-3000
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
OFFICE OPEN 9-12 SATURDAY AND 1-5 SUNDAY
On Call This Weekend Thelma Whitehurst Realtor, GRI, CRS During NON-Office Hours Please Call
355-2996
DUFFUS REALTY, INC.
756-5395 ^
IMAGWOODS RESIDENCE FOR LEASE WITH OPTION
Retax in hone with rvstk chnnn in one of Wnihington's finest neighborfcoods. 2 or 3 bedrooms, 1 '/i boths, spacious kttcken ond dining nmns, comfortnble fnmily nren with Inrge fireplnce, sunroom, cevtmd porch. All on n quiet wooded lot. $55,000. 1 year lense with option ovnilabie. (919) 828-3848 evenings mid weekends.
For Sale
Several Nice Lots & Tracts of Land
$10,000.00 - lot, 100x132. 621 Albemarle Ave., Greenville N.C. Zoned l-U.
512,000.00 - 1 acre wooded lot on old U.S. 264 now 33, 6 miles East of Greenville near Simpson, N.C.
$12,000.00 - Dwelling & Store. 1706 S. Pitt St., Greenville in need of repair.
$70,000.00 - Dwelling, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, 3175 square feet. 1.25 acres, plenty of shade & fruit trees, located at Rt. 5, Box 129, Greenville, N.C. on Hwy. 33 between SR 1534 & 1586, The seller will pay up to 5% points & up to 3% of the closing.
$99,000.00 - 33 acres of land, 7 cleared 28 wooded, 4 miles north of Greenville Abatted SR 1415 & Crosses 11/13. Reduced from 148,500 or very best offer.
Jo Buy, Sell, or Rent, Contact
D.D. GARREH AGENCY
752-4476
752-7756
752-1764
WATiR FRONT
Once-in-a-lifetime Location
ISABELLA AVE., WASHINGTON PARK WASHINGTON, N.C.
Spacious brick home with large living room with fireplace, dining room, family room, kitchen and breakfast area.
REDUCED-$125.000
a
REALTOR
210 N. Market St. Washington, N.C. 27889
946-7151
CLUB PINES
Exceptional new listing in Club Pines. This immaculate home features hardwood floors through the formal areas. 4 bedrooms, 2V2 baths and double car garage. The beautifully landscaped corner lot helps make this traditional 2 story an exceptional find. For more information call:
Aldrid'c r* Soutlicrland Realtors
756-3500
OrAlltaCanoll, 756-8278
210 N. Market St. Washington. N. C
Phone
946-7151
Walking Distance To Broad Creek-Country Club, Yacht Basin & McCotters Marina
$73,500 - 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen and breakfast area, and screened porch.
$91,500 - 4 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, formal living room and dining room, family room with fireplace, kitchen, garage and utility room.
$77,500 - 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, great room with fireplace, dining room and kitchen, deck with view of river.
$79,900 - 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, large formal living room and ciining room, family room with overhead fan and fireplace, kitchen and double garage.
$9,000 - $15,000 Residential building lots.
$63,500 - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen and porch.
$67,900 - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace and wet bar, dining room, kitchen and double garage.
$58,000 - 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, utility room and porches.
Bud Lynch JoeTaylor Mac Hodges GRI Nan McLendon. GRI 946-7802 946-1305 9464)659 946-7971
With The
Armed Services
Navy Yeoman 3rd Class James M Foreman, son of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Foreman of Greenville, was promoted to his present rank while serving with Patrol Squadron 22, Barbers Point, Hawaii.
Airman Joseph H. Smith, son of Lin wood H Smith of Route 2, Farmville. graduated from the Air Force maintenance management information control system course at Chanute AFB, 111., where he learned troubleshooting techniques, repair of system files and the use of remote terminal devices. He will now serve at Myrtle Beach AFB, S.C., with the 354th Tactical Fighter Wing.
Lackland AFB, Texas, where he studied the Air Force mission, organization, customs and received special training in human relations. He will now begin on-the-job training in the communications operations field at Whiteman .AFB, Md. He is a 1982 graduate of Ayden-Grifton High School.
years of active duty service. He is a native of Williamston and a 1960 ^aduate of East Carolina University.
Staff Sgt. John W. McArthur, son of Mr. and Mrs. George J. McArthur of Grifton, reenlisted in the Air Force at Barksdale AFB. La., after 10 years of military service. He is a metal fabrication technician with the 2nd Civil Engineering Squadron and a 1973 graduate of Ayden-Grifton High School.
Sgt. William E. Johnson, a 1976 graduate of Roanoke High School in Robersonville, received a letter of appreciation for superior performance of duty while serving with Marine Air Control Group 28, 2nd Marine Aircraft Group, Marine Corps Air Station, Cherry Point. Johnson joined the Marines Corps in August, 1976.
Spec. 4 Milton Battle, son of Vernell Battle of Route 3, Grifton, arrived for duty at Fort Lewis, Wash. Battle, an ammunition specialist with the 9th Infantry Division, was previously assigned in Fischbach, West Germany. His wife is the former Aretha Cannon of Grifton.
Pvt. John D. Hines Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. John D. Hines of Route 3, Williamston, completed a basic field artillery cannoneer course at Fort Sill. Okla., where he was taught the duties of a howitzer or gun section crewman. He is a 1976 graduate of Williamston High School.
Airman 1st Class Donald R. Horton, son of Bobbie H. Brown of Route 2, Greenville, participated in Global Shield 83, an excercise involving Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps units and elements of the Canadian forces. Horton is a missile facilities specialist with the 308th Strategic Missile Wing at Little Rock AFB, Ark. He is a 1981 graduate of D.H. Conley High School.
David J. Gray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max T. Gray of Greenville, completed a ROTC field training encampment at Charleston AFB, S.C., where he participated in orientations on jet aircraft, career opportunities, human relations education and equal opportunity training. Physical fitness and survival training were also emphasized. Gray is a student at Mississippi State Unviersity.
Col. Joseph V. Rafferty was assigned to the Armys 193rd Infantry Brigade in Panama where he will be chief of staff. He recently completed a three-year tour of duty with the joint chiefs of staff in Washington, D.C., where he was awarded the Defense Superior Service Medal. His wife is the former Sherrill Harriss of Farmville and they have two children. His family will accompany him on the three-year tour of duty.
SaraE. Baker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Baker of Greenville, completed ROTC field training encampment at Eglin AFB, Fla., where she participated in orientations on jet aircraft, career opportunities. human relations education and equal opportunity training. Physical fitness and survival training were emphasized. Ms. Baker is a student at North Carolina State University in Raleigh and a 1981 graduate of J.H. Rose High School.
Airman Rodney L. McCarter, son of Mary E. McCarter and Benjamin McCarter, both of Ayden, completed basic training at
Frederick W. Lilley, Social Security district manager in Greenville, was promoted to lieutenant colonel by the Army reserve. He is a member of the 360th Civil Affairs Brigade and serves as the units economics officer. He is also responsible for the brigades officer efficiency report program. Lilley has been in the reserve for 20 years and had two
Airman Brenda D. Gibbs (above), daughter of Esther Gibbs of Route 4, Greenville, was assigned to Keesler AFB, Miss., after completing basic training for six weeks at Lackland AFB, Tex. She studied the Air Force mission, organization, customs and received speical training in human relations. She will now receive specialized instruction in the administration field. She is a 1979 graduate of North Pitt High School.
Life As It's Lived
The Stoic Child Poses Real Test For Mother
By GAIL MICHAELS
I'm sure that those of you who still occasionally resort to barbarism when discipling your children have noted that there are two kinds of children in this world, the ones who cry when they are spanked and the ones who dont.
I happen to have two children who could raise the level of the ocean at the sight of a wooden spoon. The merest tap produces a heart-rending torrent from the wounded child, followed in Zacharys case by an I need a hug!" quivered out between sobs.
This plea, of course, isOut Of Wedlock Babies Doubled
WASHINGTON (AP)
The number of babies born out of wedlock has more than doubled since 1960, a 20-year trend that was spurred by a dramatic increase in the number of unmarried teen age mothers, a population expert says.
Wendy H. Baldwin, a demographer for the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development told a House subcommittee that the number of babies born out of wedlock increased from just under 100,000 in 1960 to 270,000 in 1980.
In 1960. babies bom to unmarried teen-age mothers represented 15 percent of the out-of-wedlock births. The proportion increased to 48 percent in 1980, she said.
designed to make the guilty parent feel lower that a sows belly in a subterranean sty. And believe me, it does. The Marquis de Sade should have experienced such remorse. At the same time, thou^, I feel abused in some indirect fashion because Zacharys crafty employment of ultimate agony reminds me so much of my sisters consmate skill in that area.
We never could spank her, my parents would say. "She goes all to pieces, shes sosensitivjB.
So was I, I kept telling them, but they didnt believe me. I was one of those who grit their teeth and refuse to shed a tear until the pain becomes unbearable. I stood there like an idiot, thinking I was proving something. What, I still dont know.
Phillip, incidentally, was a teeth-gritter, too. Finally, my mother learned to use some other form of discipline, he says proudly when discussing it. The catch is that she learned when he was about 11, and Zachary at 3 already has me nearly trained.
After much reflection on the subject, I have come to the conclusion that theres some kind of short-circuit in the reasoning process of the stoic child. And the little boy who lives next door to us bears this theory out.
Talking to this kid is like experiencing a mild concussion. For instance, after his mother has patiently explained the nature of her upcoming Caesarean delivery, he demonstrated his thorough understanding of the subject by responding, Does this mean we can go
out for pizza while youre in the hospital?
Any kid who thinks like this would naturally refuse to follow in the watery footsteps of his older brother. When the two of them decided to get creative and hung a beach towel from the banister of their homes catwalk so that they could swing from the living room to the entrance hall, it was the younger one who provoked most of his mothers ire, despite the fact that he was the one who decided that they had better heed her repeated warnings and untie the towel. Then again, he failed to inform his brother, who was In mid-air at the time of this decision.
But his mother was angrier about her younger sons refusal to cry when she spanked him than she was about his failure to communicate. She felt that she had to make him feel some remorse. The confrontation was grim, and she eventually decided that she had made an impression despite the lack of tears.
But after a half-hour retreat to his bedroom, he emerged with the statement, "Ill bet youd like to know my secret for not crying."
I suppose I would," replied his mother.
Well, Im not gonna tell you.
PALACE FIRE
VIENNA (AP) - A fire broke out on the roof kof Schoenbrunn Palace Thursday, but no one was injured and the blaze was extinguished within half an hour, fire department spokesmen said. i
DAMAGED, DENTED DISCONTINUED
CLEARANCE
SALE STARTS SATURDAY 8 A.M.
TIL 5 P.M.
SALE
Starts Saturday 8 A.M. til 5 P.M.
SALE STARTS SATURDAY 8A.M.
TIL 5 P.M.
MISCELLANEOUS
REG.
1-96820 Picnic Table, Round...........................
2-95302 Hand Trucks.................................
1 -89991 2*x6 Bronze Storm Door With Wrought Iron Grill .
1-15810 Disappearing Stairway......................
1 -89991 2x6* Bi-Fold Panel Door......................
1-89991 2*x6* Bi-Fold H.C. Col. Door....................
1 -89991 Pocket Door Frame...........................
1-89991 3^x3* Insulated Piet. Sash......................
1 3x6* Wood Full View Storm Door...............
1 2x6* Wood Store Door.....................
1 2*x6*S.C. Birch 13/4 Door ...............
1-89991 Formica 5x10'...............................
2-40733 Storm Window 37 7/8"x46 1 /4" ....... .....
400 BUNDLES ROOF SHINGLES 6.00 BUNDLE
Odd Size Screens..............................
1 8x34 Kickplate ..........................
1 2*x6 1 3/8 Aluminun White Storm Door, Full View
45 Bundles Brown Shingles.......................
20 Bundles Green Shingles.......................
16-13866 Lavan Paneling .........................
1-31218 24" Attic Fan Single Speed.....................
1-31219 Shutter For 24" Fen............. .............
1-3124-3 30" Attic Fen Variable Speed........... .......
1-31244 Shutter For 30" Fan .......................
1-94846 Moped E-Z Rider.................. .....
ALL SALES FINAL
REG.
1-89991 3x6* 1 3/4 Wood French Door..
1-89991 3x6* 1 3/4 Ext. H.C. Doors.....
1-89991 3x6* 1 3/4 Ext. Fir Door.......
1-89991 3x6* 1 3/4 Ext. Fir Fan Lite Door
1-89991 6x6' Patio Door Ins. Br........
1-40744 6x6'Ins. Glass..............
.98.43
.58.75
.97.88
109.90
229.88
.87.70
MISCELLANEOUS HARDWARE 1/2 OFF
REG.
1-89991 2 Bi-Fold Mirror Door...........
3-54258 Panosonic Deluxe Stereo W/Case
2-54255 Soundesign Stereo..............
2-54233 Lloyds Stereo W/DG............
2-54259 Panosonic Stereo...............
.82.30
289.99
499.99
299.99
339.99CHRISTMAS IN JULY
REG.
2-51647 Whirlpool Set In Range Gold
1-50013 Air Cond. W.P. 12,000 BTU..
1-92736 10x14 Steel Bidg...........
2-37362 Double Door Steel Stove....
6-37366 Fireplace Insert...........
276-16328 Vinyl Floor Tile............
231-16327 Vinyl Floor Tile............
20-16485 Vinyl Floor Tile............
4-91583 Disston Yard Trimmer......
3-92731 10x93 Side Steel Bidg.....
13789 Grey Barnboard Paneling...
13790 Brown Barnboard Paneling .
3-51020 Dishwasher HP 6 Cycle.....
1-54005 Emergency CB.........
5-50583 Compactor Bag Caddy......
5-29031 Rack System..............
2-95980 Metal "A" Frame For Swing .
3-11134 3 Storm Doors Alum.......
1-20420 5'Tub Fiberglas......
1-52809 Range H.P. C. Clean Almond.......
1-50805 Chest Freezer 10 Cu. Ft............
1-94807 Mini Bike........................
3-95174 5 H.P. Riding Lawn Mower.........
4-95118 31/2 H.P. Push Mower............
1-16199 8'x12' Armstrong Vinyl Beige Floor..
1 -16207 8'x 12' Armstrong Vinyl Brown Floor.
1-16177 12'x15' Armstrong Vinyl Green Floor
1-16204 12'x9' Armstrong Vinyl Gold Floor ..
1-16195 12'x7'Armstrong Vinyl Gold.......
1-16160 12'x7' Armstrong Vinyl Beige.......
1-16371 12'x10' Armstrong Waxless Floor...
1-15280 8'x1 r Indoor-Outdoor Brown.......
400 Bundles Certainteed Shingles......
2-95996 Wood Swing Deluxe 60"...........
1-95992 Wood Porch Swing 48"............
MOULDINGS 6' & UNDER - 5 FT.ONE DAY ONLY
REG.
SALE
40.00
10.00
129.60
75.00
20.00
.39.90
15.00
.39.90
15.00
25.00
35.00
124.69
50.00
141.00
60.00
.58.91
38.00
.54.00
20.00
.26.89
12.00
1.00
2.00
110.99
60.00
.. 7.98
5.34
5.34
..8.99
3.00
123.66
70.00
20.00
159.99
80.00
.48.99
20.00
399.99
200.00
SALE
75.00
30.00
60.00
65.00 125.00
35.00
SALE
30.00
200.00
350.00
220.00 230.00
SALE
349.99
250.00
499.99
390.00
269.99
50.00
499.99
350.00
529.99
350.00
...89
.25
... .89
.25
... .89
.25
29.99
20.00
99.97
20.00
16.00
.21.99
16.00
379.99
250.00
.69.99
55.00
..8.59
4.00
.6.99
3.00
.44.99
25.00
.64.70
25.00
SALE
159.99
105.00
429.99
290.00
339.99
250.00
259.99
190.00
629.99
495.00
159.99
110.00
.59.99
30.00
.59.99
30.00
.87.60
45.00
.64.71
35.00
.60.10
32.00
.48.60
17.00
.93.44
50.00
.29.95
10.00
..8.50
6.00
.49.99
28.00
.29.99
19.00
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