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HOT AGAIN
Partly cloudy through Monday. Chance of rain late Sunday. Highs Sunday around 100. Lows in mid 70s.LEGISLATURE
North Carolinas General Assembly ends its longest session ever. Stories are on Page A-14.TRICKY BUSINESS
Cory Pickos, world record holder in trick skiing, coached Greenvilles Kristi Overton this week. (Page B-1)
Today's Reading
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Arts.........
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Crossword
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Editorial..
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Building
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Enter'ment
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Business
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Opinion
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THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102NDYEAR NO. 157
GREENVILLE. N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
SUNDAY MORNING. JULY 24.1983
106 PAGES 8 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTSCounty Purchased Tract At Nearly $7 A Foot
By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer
The Pitt County Board of Commissioners made a purchase recently that County Manager Reginald Gray says was aimed at meeting future needs, especially with respect to the expanding scope of court activities in GreehvUle and the probable need for additional space.
Gray said the countys purchase of roughly half a block of vacant pr^rty near the courthouse was a move the board felt was in the best interest of the county and for the future of the county
The property, involving about 42,975 square feet, was bought for $300,000 from attorney Frank Wooten with money
nt DMLf Ufucntf
'No Person Con Moke Day Last
Minute Longer'
ByJANEWELBORN
Reflector Staff Writer
There is a cliche that states Time waits for no one There are 24 hours every day to be used as each individual sees fit, and no person can make a day last a minute longer.
Because time is so important, it must be budgeted so that all the activities of the day can be comfdeted successfully.
Time is a crucial ai^t of many jobs. Television stations, hospitals and fire departments must be aware of time constantly.
The news director at WNCT-TV, David Boyd, commented, Time is a valuable commodity around here. Time puts food on everybodys table.
He said a typical newscast runs for 30 minutes and the time is divided into sections - 6-8 minutes for commercials, 4-6 minutes for sports, 3-4 minutes for weather. The remaining 15 minutes is filled with news stories.
Ideally speaking, news stories average a minute and a half in length, Boyd said. The story will lose impact and start putting the viewer to sleep if it is longer He noted that tdevision news reporters get in the habit of using their mental clock when they are writing so the story will fit into the allotted time.
The news director added that time can be divided up to nice little 30 second hunks and can be sold to people for advalisements.
Jack Richardson, president of Pitt County Memorial Hospital, stated that time is a crucial element at the ho^ital.
Prompt r^nse is an imperative in life-threatening situations, Richardson said. People who work in the health care field have a mandate to be prompt and efficient.
Even when the workload is not life-threatening, the employee must be exact and precise so the job will not have to be repeated and corrected, be added.
Medical records chart the time of births and deaths and must be kept correctly, Richardson noted.
Fire departments must also be prompt and efficient because the quick actions of rescue personnel can save lives and money .
Betty Wilson, secret^ for the Pitt County fire marshal, said, The first few minutes of a fire are the most important moments because thats when the fire gets started good. The quicker the department can get there to begin extinguishing the fire, the less dama^ will be done. Someone may be in the building that is on fire and they need to get there bqfore the person is overcome by smoke.
Pitt County is divided into four-mile fire districts, and Ms. Wilson said the response time of the departments in Pitt County is real good. The rural d^artments will answm* a call within two minutes and be at the scene in four to six minutes.
Time is critical in jobs such as the ones mentioned above, but time is of importance to everyone, no matter what they do.
(Please turn to A^)
that was included in the newly adopted 1983-84 county budget. The purchase price amounted to about $6.98 per square foot.
The Wooten tract is located a half-block west of the courthouse and is bounded by Greene Street on the west, by Second Street on the north and by Third Street on the south.
Gray said the property represented the only remaining vacant tract in the vicinity of the courthouse that was available. He said the county had rented a portion of the tract for some time to provide parking facilities for jurors and with an expanded juror roster, those facilities have become inadequate. The manager said that with the courts expanding operations here and with possible jail expansions looming down the road, the county felt it was necessary to pursue
the land purchase for court-related needs, including parking and possibly offices.
Gray indicated that the county had the property appraised by three people but Wooten turned down an offer for the compromise appraisal figure of $236,000. According to Gray, the county had been working on the purchase for several months but Wooten indicated he had a ground rental situation available with a private developer. Gray said the county would have lost the property and the opportunity to meet some future needs if Wootens $300,000 figure was not met.
Gray said the county regrets that it was unable to negotiate the purchase years ago of a block formerly owned by the
Redevelopment Commission behind the courthouse between Washington and Evans streets. He said the county held an option on the property for several months and. although the redevelopment board was cooperative in trying to arrange the sale, negotiations with the city to exercise the option were not successful.
The manager said the county looked at the same block later but the price had gone up and the county felt it could not afford the purchase. He said the county also looked at property where Wheat, First Securities is now located at the corner of Third and Washington streets but was not able to negotiate the acquisition.
(Please turn to A-8)
Pentagon Revives Options For U.S. Action
More Advisers In Salvador Possible
ByROBERTPARRY Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has revived and sent to the White House options for stepped-up training of Salvadoran troops that include as one possibility a doubling of U.S. military advisers to that country, administration sources said Saturday.
The options also were said to include a sli^t loosening of the restrictions currently binding those advisers.
The United States currently observes a self-imposed limit of 55 military advisers in El Salvador at any one time. In addition, U.S. medics are helping to upgrade Salvadoran military medical services, and 100 U.S. troops are training some 2,400 Salvadorans in Honduras.
One source, who spoke on condition that he
not be identified by name, noted that the Pentagon for two years had been pondering various scenarios to increase the effectiveness of U.S. training of the Salvadoran military for its fight against anti-government guerrillas.
The new administration concentration on Central America brought the list of options to the front burner and led to its resubmission to the white House, he said.
The idea has been advanced recently. Nothing has been settled, he said. There are options, and some go has high as doubling. Another source, who also requested anonymity, said he did not know if the options paper had yet been presented to President Reagan.
The disclosures came on a day when a congressional critic of administration policies said he was deeply disturbed by the possibility of a naval blockade of Nicaragua. Administration officials denied that a blockade
was planned.
Another recommendation was said to call for permitting U.S. advisers to accompany their charges into the country, instead of tying them to cities and important military bases.
Currently, U.S. troops may not go into combat with Salvadorans or even into areas where they are likely to be fired upon. The source made no suggestion that the advisers would be permitted to accompany Salvadoran units on combat missions.
Doubling the number of advisers would permit greater flexibility, the first source said.
Pentagon officials have long said that training Salvadoran troops in El Salvador is cheaper by far than training them in Honduras, Panama or the United States, the other options.
The U.S.-trainined Salvadoran battalions are by all accounts, even those of the 7,000-man guerrilla force, considered the best in the 25,000-man Army. U.S. advisers stress vigorous patrolling, especially at night and on weekends, and outgoing Ambassador Deane R. Hinton earlier this month called the Salvadoran Army "damn good.
Though the 55-man limit was laid down down two years ago by the administration, any increase would be almost certain to be opposed by the administrations critics in Congress, who have advocated stepped-up efforts to negotiate a solution to the conflicts besetting Central .America Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., who last week toured embattled Central American countries, urged President Reagan to "bargain, dont blockadb for a solution to political conflict in (Please turn to AS)
Highs May Hit 100 Degrees Again
By The Associated Press Afternoon and evening thunderstorms during the past few days have tempered the heat wave which has caused nine deaths in North Carolina, but little relief was expected.
On Saturday temperatures remained mostly in the 90s, with Hickory reporting the highest - 99 degrees. Charlotte reported 98 and Goldsboro had 96. Fayet
teville,^ Greenville, Winston-Salem and Greensboro were in the low to mid 90s.
The National Weather Service forecast highs for Sunday at or near 100 degrees over the central and southern Coastal Plains, including Greenville, and the Sandhills and in the low to high 90s over the rest of the state.
Thunderstorms Friday af
ternoon and evening knocked trees down across houses and roads and caused power outages in some parts of the state. The National Weather Service also reported a tornado touched down in Winston-Salem, while funnel clouds were reported in other areas of the state.
Some early morning showers and thunderstorms Friday morning pushed southeast through central
North Carolina diminishing over the southeast.
Showers and thunderstorms will be scattered throughout North Carolina through Monday, but are not expected to bring more than a little relief from the hot, humid weather.
The weather service issued a severe thunderstorm Saturday night for southern parts of Anson and Richmond counties.
Rain is what farmers and state agriculture officials are looking for in large amounts, although they say recent scattered showers^ have helped.
But the corn, much of it, has gone beyond the bounce-back stage, regardless of how much rain we get, said Dr. Thomas Hobgood, northeastern district chairman for the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service.
One agriculture official estimated the states corn crop was about 39 percent smaller this year.
The weather service says it will be partly cloudy across the state Sunday with mainly afternoon and evening thunderstorms on tap as another cold front pushes southeast toward the state. This front may push southward into the state late Sunday night or Monday.
Attorneys Object To County Office-Moving Pian
By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Members of ie Pitt County Board of Commissioners early last week met with representatives of the county bar association and the clerk of Superior Court to discuss providing additional space in the courthouse for the clerks office.
One solution advanced at the meeting was the possibility of moving the offices of the tax supervisor and tax collector to the county office building on West Fifth Street.
However, several attorneys contacted Friday by The Daily Reflector voiced opposition to the suggested move.
Fred Mattox was typical. He said Im against it ... as any other lawyer in town should be.
Mattox said, Tax records are an integral part of doing title work, and suggested that the moving of the tax offices would be a burden on attorneys and an ultimate expense to clients.
Mattox also suggested that the move would take a lot of people who now come downtown out of the main business district of Greenville.
While it may be saving the county money by moving the offices, Mattox said it will be costing the citizens more money in the long run to move them. I think it would be foolish. Hu^ Cox said, In not in fovor of it. People traditionally expect the courthouse to have certain services, and the tax records are one of the services closely allied with the register of deeds and the court records.
Im not in favor of it, Garry Pegram said.
I have the basic feeling that there should be some centralization of government services. Having to drive two or three miles to get the information would make it more difficult. However, Pegram said, Something probably has to be done. With the growth the county is having, were going to have to do something,
Mark Owens said, My personal opinion as an attorney is that it is more convenient and advantagious to have the clerks office, the tax offices and the register of deeds in one unit. The thing is that these offices are interwoven and its beneficial to have them in close proximity to each other for the propose of real estate transactions.
Ed Harper, president of the bar association, said a meeting of the bar has been tentatively
set for 4 p.m . Aug. 16 to discuss the situation
Harper said the bars courthouse committee. composed of Louis Gaylord, Kenneth Hite and C.W. Everette Sr., will "make a report and recommendations to the bar as to the course of action that should be followed.
Charles Gaskins, chairman of the Board of Commissioners, said, "I hate to see anything go out of the courthouse." But he said, "If the clerk of court and the Pitt County Bar Association say they need additional space in the courthouse, the county is very fortunate its got some first-class space available at the county office building.
The commissioners are going to follow the advice of those folks who know more about the needs at the courthouse ... the clerk of court and members of the bar, Gaskins said
Theater Manager Says Fans Are To Blame
Movies Are Changing
By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer
Clutching a sweaty, wadded ticket stub in his palm and a bag of popcorn in the other, the kid shouldered through the heavy, maroon velvet divider curtains and scanned the rows for the perfect ^t.
Scrunching down in the scratchy cushions he plunged his hand into the bag and began to wait for the moment when the curtians would swing richly back on the track and his heroes woidd make their entrance.
Experiences such as this once could be found almost anywhere an avid moviegoer might find himself, but the film industry has changed so much over the past 10 to 20 years that the world of colossal screens and heavy swaying drapes are left only in the memories of those once wide-eyed hero watchers. Along with this structural theater change
also came a departure from cowboy and love stories where the heroes, men and women alike, were wholesome and debo-naire and the most serious problem they faced was whether the villain would keep cutting the back 40 fence.
Despite the recent rebirth of traditional heroes in films (Luke Sky walker, Indiana Jones and Superman), local theater manager Roy Griffin and English Professor Mckay Sundwall, an East Carolina University Film Committee adviser, said they are still moved most by the older movies.
The pictures today go into too much detail. They are gross, gory and the language in 99 percent of the pibtures is unnecessary. But the public demand is there for the language, nudity, grossness and gore, so thats what the industry produces, Griffin said.
Its a shame, but public reaction to Diaiey films shows this trend better than
any other example. After the first showing of a Disney picture you might as well close your doors. Some nights you could shoot a cannon into the theater and not hit a soul. But, thats only my experience and opinion, other theater managers could have totally different views, Griffin said.
Although Sundwall said he prefers real Westerns, with cavalry and Indians and Monument Valley, he grants that the international film industry produces pictures that are human, moving, rich in characters and often profoundly philosophical and even theological at times.
It is easy to throw stones at the international film industry and its drive to come up with a blockbuster. Star Wars was wonderful, but its effect on film making was not a healthy one, as we can see in movie after movie with sterotypical cardboard characters, sus-(Please turn to AS I
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ObituariesIn The Area
Corey
STOKES - Mrs. Lina Leggett Corey. 87. died Friday at Pitt County Memorial Hoispital The funeral
sen ice will be conducted at 4 p.m. Sunday at Biggs Funeral Chapel in Robersonville by the Rev. David -Mason. Burial will be in the Robersonville Cemetery
Sunivmg are two daughters. -Miss Sylvia Corey of Greenville and Mrs. Lessie C. Johnson of Stokes; three sons. John Lloyd Corey Jr. of Stokes and Allen G. Corey and Loyall B Corey, both of Robersonville; a sister. Mrs. A B Ward Sr. of Greenville; a brother. Guy Leggett of Williamston; 12 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren.
Grimes
WLNTERVTLLE - Mr. William Owen Grimes. 70, of 608 Hillcrest .Ave.. Win-terville. died at his home Friday. The funeral service will b!e conducted at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Good Hope Free W ill Baptist Church in Win-terville by Bishop W.H. Mitchell. Burial will be in the Live Oak Cemetery.
He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Mandie Brown Grimes of the home; two daughters. Mrs. Carrie G. Green and Mrs. Peggy Staton, both of Winterville; a son. Charles Hardy of Greenville; his mother, Mrs: Katie K. Grimes of Winterville; three sisters. Mrs. Lossie B. Smith and Mrs. Gladys Grimes, both of Winterville. and Mrs. Mary Burney of Washington. DC.; five brothers. Lee Ernest Grimes of Winterville. Jospehus Grimes of Greenville. Clifton Grimes of Gatesville. Thomas Grimes of Elizabeth City and Carlton Boyd of New York; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
The family will receive freinds from 8-9 p.m. Monday at Mitchells Funeral Home in Winterville. The body will be placed in the church one hour prior to the funeral.
Lofquist Mrs. Kathryn W. Lofquist, 84, died Friday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted at 10 a.m. Monday in the First Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Gerald M. Anders and the Rev. Joe R. Cochran Jr. Burial will follow in Greenwood Cemetery.
Mrs. Lofquist. a native of Hampton. Va., spent her early years in Richmond, Va. She and her husband served pastorates in Mobile, Ala., Brookhaven, Miss,, Asheville, Snow Hill and LaGrange. Since 1970, she had been a resident of Greenville and was a member of the First Presbyterian Church-Surviving are her husband, the Rev. Henry V. Lofquist; three sons. Henry V. Lofquist Jr. of Cullowhee, Dr. George W. Lofquist of St. Petersburg, Fla., and William A. Lofquist of Tuscon, Ariz.; a daughter, Mrs. Jack Wilkerson of Greenville; two sisters, Mrs. Ralph R. Jones of Richmond,' Va., and Mrs. S. Ashton
Patterson of Richmond. Va.. and 13 grandchildren.
The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. Sunday at the Wilkerson Funeral Home and at other times will be at the home, 1616 Wright Road. The family suggests that memorial contributions be made to the First Presbyterian Church Memorial Fiind.
Pettiway
-Mrs. Josephine Pettiway of 503-A Darden Drive died Saturday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. She was the mother of Mrs. .Annie Jones and James Plum Murphy, both of Greenville. Funeral arrangments will be announced by Flanagans
Funeral Home '
Roebuck
Mrs. Roland Lewis Roebuck. 75. of 2609 S.
Wright Road died Saturday morning at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Hugh Burlin^on Jr. and the Rev. Linwood Walters. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mrs. Roebuck, a native ' and life-time resident of Pitt County, attended the Belvior and Bethel schools and graduated from East Carolina University in 1931. She was a member of Immanuel Baptist Church and the Carrie Wilson Sunday School Class.
She is survived by a son,
' Larry McCoy Roenick of Gordonsville, Va.; a daughter, Mrs. H.L. Plummer of Seattle, Wash.; four brothers. Mack Lewis of Berkley, Calif., Wadie Lewis and M.G. Lewis, both of tlx Belvoir community, and Eldridge Lewis of Bethel; a sister, Mrs. Jospdi E. Keel of Ahoskie, and five grandchildren.
SUMPTER
AYDEN - Mr. Adam L. Sumpter of 1802 Rusk Road died at his home Friday. He was the husband of Mrs. Nora Harper Braxton Sumpter. Funeral arrangments are incomplete at Norcdit and Company Funeral Home, Ayden.
Winstead Mrs. Barbara B. Winstead,
44, died Friday at Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital. The funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m. Monday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Paul Lanier. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.
Mrs. Winstead was bom and reared and spent all her life in Pitt County. For the past five years she had been a resident of Simpson.
Surviving are her husband, John R. Winstead; three sons, Dennis Ray Winstead of Greenville and Ronnie Lynn Winstead and Phillip Grey Winstead, both of the home; two daughters, Amy Jean Winstead and Lori Ann Winstead, both of the home; her father, Elbert Buck of Greenville, and two sisters, Mrs. Mary Buck of Belvior and Mrs. Judy Hutchins of Greenville.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
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ECU Tuition Bills To Be Delayed
Bills fw tuition and fees ftM* East Candina Umversitys fall semestn- students will not be mailed until late this month because of the extended sessk (d the N. C. Goiaral AssemUy, ECU Business Manager Julian R. Vainright says.
It is a case in which we do not know what the tuition and fees schedule will be. Vainright said. He said statements will be mailed as soon as the 1983414 tuitkn is established by the University of North Carolina general administration.
Studoits who preregistered for the fall semester last ^ring were told that statements for their tuition and fees would be mailed July 8-15. Vainright said he now expects the statements to ^ out July 26 or July 27.
In state tuition and fees for full-time ECU students is $334 per semester. The cost for non-resident students is $1,228. Legislation is pending which would require increasing these amounts. Vainright said.
ECU expects some 14,00 students from most of the states 100 counties and 30 to 35 states this fall.
Pitt Arthritic Group To Meet
The Pitt County Arthritic Gnxq) will meet Thursday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital Rehabilitation Center. Members may bring a covered dish, which will be served from 6:30-7 p.m.
For more information call Bernice Evans at 758-0225.
ECU Schedules Computer Seminars
A series of Saturday computer seminars will be offered at East Carolina University during August and September. The programs are designed for lay users of microcomputers in homes and offices.
The Small Computer Revolution; An Introduction to the Machine. set for Aug. 27, is designed to familiarize participants with the fundamental ideas of microcomputer usage and to give expBure to some elementary features of the popular programming lan^age, BASIC. The course is designed for persons with little or no experience with computers.
"Word Processing, to be offered Sept. 10, is an introduction to microcomputer-based text editing and covers hardware and software requirements for personal business and professional applications.
Introduction to Programming in BASIC, scheduled for Sept. 24, resumes where the Small Computer Revolution course concludes, and presumes familiarity with the fundamental ideas of microcomputer usage and some experience with single commands in BASIC.
Further information and registration materials are available from Computer Education, Division of Continuing Education, Erwin Hall, ECU, Greenville, N.C. 27834, telephone 757-6143.
Grifton Girl Entered In Pageant
Susan Elizabeth Howard, 4, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Howard of Grifton, has been selected to represent Grifton in the 1983 state finals of the seventh annual Miss North Carolina Charm Scholarship Pageant.
She will compete with other r^resentatives from across the ^te in the Little Miss division during the actvities, sdieduled for next Thursday throu^ Saturday at Meredith Cdk^inRalei^.
Susan is the great granddaughter of Mrs. Ida Branch of Ayden.
I
Thomas Named Associate Professor
Dr. Roger ThiHnas has been named associate professor of family medicine at the East Carolina University Sdiod of Medicine. He will be associated with the medical school's Eastern Carolina Family Practice Caiter.
Thomas received his undergraduate degTM from the University of Cambridge in En^and, his doctorate from Yale University in Connecticut and his medical degree from McMaster University Medical School in Canada, where he completed residency training.
He has held teaching appointmoits at the University of Minnesota, Yale University and the University of Guelph in Canada.
Thomas has been a physician with Bu^ and Bonavista hospitals in Newfoundland. Before joining the medical school he was a physician with
DR. ROGER THOMAS
Mulanje Mission Hospital in Malawi, Africa.
Nurses Registry Announced
Registrars taking calls for the Pitt County Professional Private Duty Nurses Registry includes; Grace Turner, R.N., 7564)375, July 25-29; and Helen McArthur, R.N., 756-1854, Aug. 1-5.
The regi^ry is composed of all nurses approved fw private duty at Pitt Memorial Hospital. For emergencies call the above.
ROBOTS PART OF PCC TAKEOVER ... Hero I and friend, Jim Hoovor (left) of the electronics departmoit and Dr. Edgar above, wiU be part of the Pitt Community CoUege display at Boyd, PCC dean of students, look over Hero with Helen Parks, Carolina East Mall Thursday through Saturday. Each data processing instructor. (Reflector Photo By Mary department at the college will be featured in the mall. Ai)ove, Schulken)
PCC Plans Take Over' Of Mall To Show Quality Of Education
By MARY SCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer
Pitt Community College is invading a major shopping mall in Greenville. The college has its strategy mapped out, and the takover will spread from one end of the mall to another.
The invasion will begin Thursday and is expected to be completed Saturday. College officials say they want to show the public education that works.
For three days, PCC will have exhibits set up throughout Carolina East Mall. Each department will have hands-on displays, in
cluding robots, fire and rescue ^uipment and laser surveying.
The theme of this three-day exhibit is See Education That Works, said Edgar Boyd, dean of students at PCC. We want to show the public we prepare peqple and help people prepare themselves for the world of work.
At the mall, he said, will be displays on information most people dont have time to come to the school to see. Theyll be expired to it (information) at the mall, though, he added. People will say, I didnt know Pitt
Community College did that.
Boyd said the exhibits would feature machinery and actual processes. Our goal in doing this is to create a greater awareness ft* the people in Pitt County, Greenville and eastern North
Carolina about what PCC has to offer to help them with their needs, he said.
A few of the exhibits scheduled include;
Criminal ju^ce, law o>-forcemeat and paralegal
(Please tum to A-3)
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Holly Serves As Intern
David Kent Hidly of Greenville is working as an intern this month in Washington, D.C., in the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries (Committee office.
A rising soor at Appalachian State Univmity, HoUey is the son of Dr. and Mrs. William H. HoUey. He is majoring in political science and plans to attmd law scfaoid in the fall cd 1984.
Doctor Joins Orthopaedic Group
Drs. John Wootoi, Sdlo^ Crisp and Gene Hamilton of Eastern Orthopaedic Gitxg) announced the association of Dr. Edwin. Gary Bartlett as (d July 11.
A Greenville native, Bartlett graduated from East Carolina University in 1974 and from the University of North Carolina School of Medicne in 1978. He served an intonship in surgery and completed a resid^ in orthopaedic sur^ry at the Medical Cidlege of Georgia.
Bartlett has comply a fdlowship in sports medicine and has done research in the management of knee ligament injuries. He will serve as the orthcpaedk consultant to the East Candna University Sports Medkine division.
He is married to the former Sandra Eisenhower of Havelock and has 4-year-<dd twins, E.B. and Susie.
Summer Dance Planned Saturday
Alpha Phi Alpha Fratonity Inc. will sponsor a summer dance Saturday at the American Le^ Post <m St. Aixlrews Street in Greenville. Proceeds will benefit the college scholarship fund.
Tickets may be (ddained at the door or from fraternity members for a donation of $2.
Stewart To Attend Reception
Cart Stewart, former spe^er of the North Carolina House of Rq>resentatives, will be in Greenville Wednesday to meet area supporters. Stewart is expected to announce his candidacy for the Democratic nomination for the office of lieutenant governor in the early fall.
A rec^tkm and buffet in Stewartss honor will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the American Legion Building in Greenville. Tickets may be purchased for $7 each by contacting William C. Byrd at 7584)198 or Bob Hursey at 7564)682.
Epilepsy Association To Meet
The (^tal Plains Epilq^ Association of North Carolina will hold its regular nKthly meeting Thursday at the Pitt County Mental Health Crter, 306 Stantoosburg Road, beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Plans for a workshop-training seminar Saturday by the EANC wiU be completed. The Wayne County Chapter of EANC will host the workshop.
For a ride or more information about the regular monthly meeting or workshop, call and leave a message at 752-3769.
Accidents Investigated
GreenvUle police charged a Fannville man, Benjamin Ruben Jones, with failure to reduce ^>eed to avoid an accident Friday after his car and a vehicle driven by Robert Lee Mallard II of 114 Harrell St. collided on East 10th Street.
Although Jones car was not dama^, damage to the Mallard vehicle was estimated at $500.
Also reported this weekeml was an accident involving vehicles driven by Thomas Alonzo Phillips of 2612 Dunn St. and Gloria Moore Bullock of Simpson, whre vehicles coUidr Saturday on Hooker Road.
Estimated damage to the I%illips car was $100 and $300 to the Bullock vehicle. No charges were filed.
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Opa 7 4.14 iaTF.li. Mania tiirMSdMm*y CHARLIS ST., NIXT TO PITTPUZA 81 HIND SWEET CAROUNES 786>084S
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Environmental Issue Key Topic At Eskimo Meeting
FROBISHER BAY, Northwest Territories (AP) Eskimo leaders from Alaska, Canada and Greenland open a week-long meeting Monday, and a key issue is likely to be defense of the fragile arctic environment against proposed energy' projects.
Organizers expect nearly 500 people to participate in the third General Assembly of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, created in 1977 to look out for the interests of the worlds approximately
100.000 Inuit.
Many of the aboriginal inhabitants of the far North object to the word Eskimo -derived, according to Websters, from an Indian term meaning he eats it raw." They prefer to be known as the Inuit, or in the singular, an Inuk.
Most have abandoned sled dogs and igloos for snowmobiles and prefabricated homes with modem conveniences.
Also, they have become increasingly adept in presenting political demands to the governments of the United States, Canada and Denmark.
Greenland, where about
42.000 of a total population ol
PCC...
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technology; The Greenville Police Department and Pitt County Sheriffs Department will have officers at the legal science display to fingerprint children from 6-9 p.m. each day.
Continuing education: Rescue squad trucks and fire trucks will be on display and each night different county squads will demonstrate life-saving techniques. In addition, local crafts such as spinning and weaving, doll-making and country curtain making will be demonstrated.
Nursing; Students will take blood pressure and instructional equipment will be displayed.
Agriculture and farm machinery mechanics department: Equipment including a growth chamber, and electronic farm sprayer control and a turbo-charged, intercooled diesel engine will be on display .
Electronic technology: Two Hero I robots will be put through their paces.
Electronic data processing: Students and instructors will give demonstrations on micro-computers with graphics.
Business education; An
office situation will be featured, including a desk,
50.000 are Inuit, a home rule government created in 1979 now has jurisdiction over such matters as education, communications and social services. Denmark retains control over foreign affairs and defense.
There are approximately
30.000 Inuit in Alaska and about 25,000 in Canada.
Conference organizers hoped representatives of the estimated 4,000 Inuit in Siberia would attend this years assembly, but the Soviet government refused permission.
Canadian Foreign Minister Allan MacEachen, in a letter to Inuit leaders last week, said the Soviets had informed Canada they could not be a party to international gathering that could possibly call into question complete Soviet sovereignty over its arctic regions
Hans-Pavia Rosing of Nuuk. Greenland, president of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, said he was sorry to see a political boundary restrict cooperation between people of the same ancestry and the same culture.
Each of the three countries represented in the conference has 18 voting dele-
transcriber. phone, etc., along with an IBM Dis-playwriter.
Masonry: Students will be^n construction of a brick patio and barbecue grill in the mall.
Electrical installation and maintenance: Students will wire mock-up of a typical residential wall showing how outlets and lights are mounted on studs.
Auto mechanics: Tune-up equipment will be set up on trainers and different types of transmissions assembled.
Respiratory therapy; Ventilators and other equipment will be displayed and a video tape explaining the program will run continuously.
Childhood education: A continuous slide-tape presentation will explain the po-gram and the preschool staff will bring children from the school for selected activities.
In addition a central information booth will provide those interested with PCC applications, scheduled and brochures. Counselors will be available to answer questions and receive applications.
gates to the General Assembly, which meets every three years. The first session was in Barrow, Alaska, in 1977, followed by a 1980 meeting in Nuuk.
Ihe focus of this years assembly will be drawing up a plan for a comprehensive arctic policy to be offered as a model to countries with interests in the area.
Wendy Ellis, the conference coordinator, said the guidelines would encompass all aspects of life in the North.
Along with health, culture, communications, transportation and the like, a central issue is the environmental threat posed by some proposed resource development projects.
"Governments are responding to critical needs instead of following a development plan for the North, Ms. Ellis said.
^ Edwin Clary Bartlett, M.D.
Drs Wooten, Crisp and Hamilton, of Eastern Or thopaedic Group, announce the association of Dr. Edwin Clary Bartlett, M.D., as of July 11. 198,3
Dr. Bartlett was born in Greenville. . NC, graduated from East Carolina University in 1974, and from the University of North Carolina, School of Medicine in 1978. He served an internship in surgery and completed a residency in orthopaedic surgery at the Medical College of Georgia He has also completed a Fellowship in Sports Medicine, his area of major interest He has done research in the management of knee ligament injuries. He is Board eligible in orthopaedic surgery^ He will serve as the orthopaedic consultant to the East Carolina University Sports Medicine Division. He is married to the former Sandra Eisenhower of Havelock and has four year old twins, E.B. and Susie
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Sunday
Opinion
U.S. 264 Work Marks Start Of Major Event
Letting of contracts for the first segment of a new U.S. 264 expressway from Wilson to Greenville is an exciting event for the two communities and the entire east.
It can mean that in a few years the expressway will be open and traffic from Greenville and Pitt County will have an adequate highway to Raleigh and westward. The completing of dual laning from Washington to Greenville, which is also planned, will open a highway corridor of more than 100 miles through the east-central section of the state.
Construction of the Wilson-Greenville expressway was instituted with a $4 million contract for 4.9 miles of construction in Wilson County. That will be the first part of several projects along a 33.4-miIe relocated U.S. 264.
The work that is now begun is the result of years of planning and purchasing of right-of-way. In the future contracts will be let for various segments which may not be contiguous, but will eventallV'tie together to form the new highway.
We should warn that even now the interchanges which will make the highway one of true interstate standards are not included. If we want a highway to serve our needs into the next century we should do all that we can to see that the interchanges are constructed.
Nevertheless, the work on this all important project has begun. The day when this area will have an adequate east-west highway is in sight. There must be no delay it its completion.
Statue Of Liberty Is Worth The Cost Of Planned Repairs
Now 97 years old, the Statue of Liberty finally is going to get an overhaul. Its some sort of a marvel the statue has lasted this long.
The price tag is expected to run around $30 million, presumably several times the original cost of the gift from France. (Inflation is no respector of statues, either.)
A survey has found that as many as 25,000 of the 300,000 rivets that hold the towering figure together have popped out because of corrosion. They must be replaced, as well as segments of the inner frame to which the shell is attached.
To anyone who has ever given any thought to New York Harbors landmark, it is unthinkable the statue be allowed to fall into such disrepair it cannot be refurbished and continue to tower over land and sea as a reminder of the haven our land offers the worlds unwanted humanity.
Occasionally there is talk of another such statue facing westward, overlooking the Pacific.
It would seem wholly fitting.
The Daily Reflector
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Holon
Thomas
Moves
Alvin
Taylor
Sunday Morning Notes
Various publications and journals popped up in the late 1800s and early 1900s as modern printing methods made production practical.
One of them was The Welcome Guest, which was published in Portland, Maine. Walter E. Boswell of 2067 N. Harding St. brought in a copy recently. It was dated July, 1909, only eight years after Boswell was born.
Send 25 cents and get this magazine 12 months, the masthead said. A single copy was 4 cents.
Some of the problems of the day are with us still. An article discussed unemployment. A contingency which for some time past has been baffling city authorities is a remedy for the number of unemployed men daily tramping our city streets in search of work, the story said.
This evil has grown remarkably since the financial crisis the failure of the many large manufacturing concerns throwing many thousands upon the city .
New York offered a striking example as a remedy for this condition. On Lincolns birthday, two hundred white slaves were sold at auction to anyone who offered food, shelter or employment. In the consignment sold were young and old men, some college graduates and men of worldly standing, who, discouraged in their vain search for employment, bartered their freedom and sold^ themselves to the highest bidder.
Another article concerned Mexico. Mexicans look to the United States for a great many things which they formerly obtained from France and Spain; they now wear American clothes, import American
furniture, and ride in American carriages and automobiles. The children of the rich finish their education in the United States instead of France. When they do their semi-annual shopping they go to New York instead of Paris. As a result all the Mexican stores keep American goods where once everything was European.
The Golden West Real Estate Co. advertised California Sunshine, a magazine which tells all about the industries, climate, resources, what land is worth, what it can be bought for and what it will produce in California.
Another ad offered $100 to $200 per month to men who will tell their friends about our wonderful land proposition. Requires no time from regular work. Anyone can interest their neighbors and make big money.
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak
Rates May Be Inevitable
WASHINGTON-As financial markets anxiously awaited the outcome of secret Federal Reserve Board deliberations July 13, President Reagan and his economic advisers were in a private discussion at the White House that revealed the real cause of higher interest rates.
The president and his men - with an exception or two -agreed that economic growth is essential and interest rates should be lowered. But there was a catch: All expressed alarm over growth of the money supply. That, alas, is Ronald Reagans monetary Catch-22. If the Federal Reserve is going to crunch down the money supply, rising interest rat^ are inevitable.
Thus, the threat to the buoyant recovery necessary for Reagans re-election originates in the Reagan administration. Its fetish over weekly measurement of the money supply had led to an unannounced tightening of the money screws by the Feds Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in May. The widely-watched FOMC meeting of July 12-13, stopped cold by the White House plea for no higher interest rates, did no further tightening.
But comments by the president, Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan and others at their July 13 meeting reflected continued close tracking of the money supply
as measured by M-1. Such worries slowed economic recovery in May and could cause the more abrupt future braking despite the administrations overall growth policy.
The Reagan administration does not share the Phillips Curve-pessimism of Wall Streeters who see in each indicator of recovery a warning of inflation. But the president and his secretary of the Treasury have seized on one quirky indicator, M l, as an entrail predicting trouble - a sign of the strong ideological hold of monetarism despite its unbroken record of worldwide failure.
Thus, on May 23, Don Regan complained to reporters about the money supply and called for 6 percent -owth in the money supply for the remainder of the year. An alarmed Fed Vice Chairman Preston Martin, the only governor appointed by Reagan, promptly told an administration official that only a recovery-killing crunch could achieve the secretarys goal.
The FOMC met the next day, and there was no effort to follow Regans prescription seriously. But Volcker (then in reappointment limbo) and Martin both voted with the 7-to-5 majority to tighten money. The administrations fixation on M-1 was the difference in the closest Fed vote in 21 years.
Soon thereafter, Regan
switched from anti-Volcker to pro-Volcker in the reappointment sweepstakes. After additional listening in June was approved by a telephone poll of governors, the Feds restriction on bank reserves pushed up the interest rate on federal funds (inter bank borrowing). Thus, the general rise in interest rates holding back the recovery results not from budget deficits but direct action of the Federal Reserve Board.
If Fed bureaucrats are to be believed, the next step at the FOMCs July meeting was to have been further tightening by boosting the discount rate ( the Feds lending rate to banks). When that word was published, the White House took alarm at such a threat to recovery. On July 7, senior staffers instructed press spokesman Larry Speaks to knock down the discount boost.
He did so, but added Catch-22: We believe that the money supply, which has been running above the target range, can be brought back into line slowly. No economist, Speakes was mirroring administration confusion that the Central Bank can forcibly reduce the money supply without interest rate hikes. Fed sources say the FOMC took no votes on tightening.
The administration has ample reasons to disregard M-1. Supply-side economist Alan Reynolds has noted that not only is there no evidence of
linkage between M-1 growth and inflation, but that higher M-1 numbers signal anti-inflationary confidence, with investors holding low-interest instruments. Beyond that, supply-sider Lew lehrman believes current figures suggest too little money to "sustain recovery.
But no such theories penetrate the administration to help policymakers - Don Regan in, the forefront -eager for growth, lower interest rates and no tax increases. They want nothinjg more said about the presidents unfortunate contingency tax increase to take effect after the election. When Martin Feldstein renewed his tax-increase campaign in a July 15 Wall Street Journal article, he enhanced his bad reputation at both White House and Treasury.
Feldstein, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, argues for his austerity program of tax hikes to close deficits, which he claims are the cause of the interest increases menacing the recovery. The actual role played by the Fed in boosting interest is obscured by the Kafkaesque manner in which the Central Banks governing body functions. But Reagan administration insistence on tracking M-1 as the catch to its growth policy is not Franz Kafka but Joseph Heller.
Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.
WASHINGTON (UPl) - Presideat Reagan is making several moves on the Central American front when polls show a wariness of his policies. The drive s to break the back of the Sandinista government in Nicara^, which he says is being armed by Cuba and the Soviet Uni<m.
Resp(mding to coi^ressHmal demands, Reagan established a bipartisan commisskm to look into long-range U.S. policies toward the region. But the views of most of the panel members are considered hard line.
He named formcr-Swretary of State He^ Kissinger to head it and Kissinger, who once participated in the destabilization of Chile, leading to the downfall of leftist President Salvador Allende, is already on record with his view.
And Reagans own rq)resentative on the commission is U N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, one of the most vocal foes of leftist-led rebellkms south of the border.
If we cannot manage Central America, it wiU be impossible to convince threatened nations in the Persan Gulf and other places that we know how to manage Uk ^obal equilibrium, Kissinger said in an interview in Pi>lic Opinion magazine some time ago.
He also said be would oppose going to war with Nicaragua but would do whatever was needed through covert aid to guerrillas or through a strong presoKe on the Honduras-Nicaragua border.
Reports indicate those moves already have been made -and more with the United States planning to hold a major U.S.-Honduran military exercise near the Honduras-Nicaragua border next month.
The administrations first goal was to halt the so^alled Nicaraguan arms supply line to the inairgents in El Salvador. But now the picture has changed and it appears that Reagan is not willing to settle for less than the downfall of the Sandinista government. To that end be has initiated economic sanctions and is now building up the military pressure.
There is a vital link between whats hai^ning in Nicaragua and whats haf^iening in El Salvador, Reagan said in a speech to the International Longshoremens Association convention in Hollywood, Fla. And the Unk is very simple: The dictators of Nicaragua are actively trying to destory the budding democracy in neighboring El Salvador.
Meanwhile, the president is seeking to convince a reluctant Congress that the United States is more interested in economic and political change in Central America than it is in a military solution.
Reagan insists he is seeking a political dialogue and has said repeatedly that Cubas Fidel Castro resisted an overture he made eariy in bis administration. Gearly, Reagan has not been pushing to talk to Castro or the leaders of the Salvadoran insurgency or the Sandinistas.
That is where the sooalled Contadora Group, made up of Mexico, Panama, Vmezuela and Colombia have come into the picture, ur^g the United States and the oi^ition groups in the region to talk out theirdifferences.
Some of the U.S. pressure may be taking bold. Nicaragua has offered to negotiate the question of arms sup(riies to El Salvador and other regional sticking points. It undoubtedly is feeling the hot breath of American-funded Nicaraguan rebels operating from Honduras on its border.
But while the United States struggles to ke^ Central America in the Western fold, the mistakes of the past are creeping up and need quick solutions. TheUniM States has been aligned with supporting the status quo and the communist countries are pushing for revolutions that appeal to the poor people.
But clearly time is running out and if the United States wants to make the Monroe Doctrine work, keying the other superpower out of the Western Hemi^re, it must add more of an economic and social wallop to its military assistance. And some members of Congress say that should be in the form of a new massive Marshall Plan for Central Amerka.
PoulT.
O'Connor
Arts
RALEIGH - North Carolina likes to call itself the State of the Arts. Over the past decade, that title has become increasingly appropriate.
Statistics released recently by the N.C. Department of Cultural Resources show that North Carolina is now 14th among the 50 states in the number of people who work in the arts. Those figures, culled from the 1980 census, show that the state has improved its position from 19th after the 1970 census.
Furthermore, the statistics show that the South is now the leading region of the country in terms of total workers involved in the arts. Other Southern states with large artist populations are Texas, Florida and Georgia.
Mary Regan, executive director of the N.C. Arts Council, cites two reasons for the growth of the states artist p(^ulation. First, much of the growth in the states population has come in the form of migration from states \^re there are large numbers of artists. As we get more pecle moving in, we get more artists. A lot of the new population would be the kind who have artists among them, she said.
Secondly, the CETA training programs of the 70s created job opportunities for artists. CETA helped put forth the idea that artists ^Mxild be paid and that they are public servants. Many people who started as artists in CETA programs were either hired by private employers or went into business for themselves, she said.
Update on a recent column. Several weeks ago, I reported that a bill rearranging the rights of spouses to testify against each other in civil court had passed the House and seemed certain to pass the Senate. WeU, the day the column appeared, the Senate killed the bill. Legislation has passed this year, however, which allows spouses to testify against each other in criminal court.
James J. Kilpatrick
Nerve Gas: A Move Toward Peace?
WASHINGTON The Senate went through some agonizing debate last week before Vice President Bush cast a tie- breaking vote in favor of moving ahead with the production of nerve gas. It is a matter on which all of us may agonize together, for the question is an exceedingly close one.
The House debatedthe issue in June, and by a margin of 14 votes took the opposite position: Production of these fearful weapons should not be resumed. The specific question before the Senate was whether $130 million should be authorized for two programs in this field. One would provide $18 million for producing 155-millimeter nerve gas shells; the other would provide $112 million for a new nerve gas bomb to be known as Big Eye.
Not since November 1977 had a vice president been required to break a tie in the Senate. The division reflects feelings that are deeply held. Thirty4ive Republicans and 14 Democrats voted in favor of nerve gas production; among the Democrats voting yea were presidential hopefuls John Glenn of Ohio and Fritz Rollings of South Carolina. Their votes were acts of moral and political courage. On the other side were 32 Democrats and 17 Republicans; among the Republicans who voted nay were such respected senators as Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas and Bill Roth of Delaware.
I would have voted in favor of the funding. Opponents made persuasive arguments - often impassioned arguments - but fit seemed to me that in the end, they failed to comprehend the
situation. This business of nerve gas is not at all like the business of nuclear arms. In the area of nuclear arms, the United States and the Soviet Union remain in rough and terrible parity: Each nation has the capacity effectively to obliterate the other. In the area of chemical weaponry, no r-uch * parity exists. Here we are fearfully vulnerable.
We should understand what nerve gas is. It is a colorless, odorless, almost undetectable compound chemically related to certain pesticides. The Germans invented the first of them in the 1930s a gas called Tabun in the course of research on insecticides. In 1938, recognizing the military possibilities, the Germans secretly develop a more lethal offshoot known as Sarin.
These gases are stored as liquids. Packed into bombs or artillery shells, they are dispersed in vapor or droplets, "rbey enter the body by inhalation or by absorption through the skin. They act within milliseconds on the central nervous system; victims suffer uncontrollable vomiting, ciHivulakms, jblind-ness, bronchial constriction and paralysis. If the gas has been inhaled, death comes within minutes; if received through tte skin, death comes within a few hours.
Neither Tabun nor Sarin was used in World War II. The Allies sent word that if the Germans employed gas, there would be retaliation in kind. This was not altogether a bluff: In 1940 the Allies still bad stocks of gases man^actured during World War I. After Worid War II, the United States Britain v
and Russia divided the Germans stockpile of nerve gas. We dumped most of ours in the sea. The Soviets had another idea.
For the past 40 years the Soviets Unm has engaged obsessively in the devdopment and production of the weaponry of nerve g^. Former Congressman Richard Ichord of Missouri made himself an expert on the subject. He has disclosed intelligence to this effect: The Red army includes a
entire U.S. Army -^8M00to\^^ c^^mide^edmni. - -At some 40 sites in Eastern Europe, these forces train intensively for chemical warfare ... Approximatdy evry third Soviet missile and rocket warhead, and up to 10 percent of artillery projectiles, mortar shells, land mines and aerial bombs, are loaded with a chemical agent.
Against that threat, the United States is now virtually helpless. We have devdoped excellent gas masks and protective garmenU; our tanks tffe better protected by flRratlon systems than befme, but any ttnreat we mi^t vdee U retaliation would be an empty threat ~ and the Soviets know it. Our small remaining stocks are (kterioratlag.
Let us remember a maxim from the golden days of Rome.
The Antonines, Gibbon tells us, preserved the peace by constantly preparing for war. It was a sound policy then; it remains a sound policy now.
Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate
Public Forum
To the editor:
Watch your words! Let no cornet communication proceed out of your mouth. Ephesians 4:29.
The tongue is responsible for nwre good and more evil than any other member of the bodyt. For this reason, we should learn to "see our words before we translate them into sounds that can never be called back.
A woman who had developed a very serious throat condition was prescribed medication by her doctor, but she was told that, because her vocal cords needed total rest for six months, she had to write notes to her husband and six children. Surprisingly, many hastily written notes were crumpled up and thrown into the wastebasket before she gave them to anyone to read. Seeing her words before anyone heard them had an effect that she didnt think she could ever forget.
Lets learn from that womans experience. Whether we join in a coffee break, talk on the telephone or engage in friendly conversation over the back fence, we must let the Lord control our speech. If a shady story, a morsel of gossip or an unkind remark surfaces in the mind. His spirit will check us and help us see what we are about to say before we say it. Guard welt your lips, for none can know What evils from the tongue may flow; what guilt, what grief may be incurred By one uncautious, thoughtless word!
Be sure your brain is running before you put your tongue into high gear.
Mrs. Beatrice C. Maye Greenville
To the editor:
The attorney generals office has done it again! A simple request for investigation into cocaine use by one Wake County public official has been turned into a witch hunt on attorneys in Wake County with some discredit and taint to that group no matter whether it is one or none guilty.
This poor judgment in performance of duty is just as derelict and dangerous as the Jimmy Green investigation which was a set up that was inappropriately turned over to an exhausted DA.
Ill bet Raleigh has a few hot and red-faced attorneys who do not like the cocaine investigation and the reporting any better than Lt. Gov. Green did in the Greenscam.
Potential discredit and defamation exist in both these cases for very reputable and honest citizens and that should not be.
Wake up, people. A popularity poll does not correlate with competence.
Dr. Charles 0. Boyette Belhaven
To the editor:
This past weekend during the course of two round-trips to Laurinburg. 1 was impressed once again with the high quality of programming available on FM radio west of Interstate 95 and south of the border. As one travels south on 1-95, there are at least five FM stations available which carry classical music. Most also are affiliates of National Public Radio which features outstanding, in-depth news reporting. During the hours on the road 1 reveled in the opportunity to enjoy the riches denied to those of us who live east of 1-95. How much longer must we wait?
As many of your readers know, a large group of citizens from Greenville-Pitt County and officials of ECU made a concerted effort last year to get WUNC-FM to build a satellite station near Greenville in order that National Public Radio would be available in this area. Meetings were held with officials from WUNC. Letters of support were written by over 500 of us. As a result of these efforts, WUNC applied to the FCC for a license and to the Commerce Department for a grant to build the satellite station near Farmville. It was expected that broadcasting would begin in mid-1984.
Now comes the disheartening news that a television station in Wilmington (of all places), WECT-TV, has stopped the whole process by filing a protest with the FCC. It seems that they are afraid that the proposed station will interfere with their audio. As if this were not enough, the protest was timed in such a way that the Commerce Department, which viewed the grant proposal favorably, could not consider the application for funding in the new fiscal year. I call that dirty pool. And I, for one, find the actions of WECT-TV repulsive and intend to do everything possible to see that justice is served. I encourage your readers to fight this unjustified interference in the affairs of our region by contacting local and state officials, including Rep. Walter B. Jones.
Robert Hause 2208 Charles St.
Greenville
Letters submitted to Public Forum muid be no longer than 300 words. The editor reserves the right to edit longer letters.
Harry
Rosenthol
WASHINGTON (AP) Midyear is a rotten time to talk about good intentions gone astray. The waistline that was going to be three inches smaller by summer isnt. Quitting smoking when the weather got nice didnt happen. And Sally Ride, determined not to be celebrated for being the first American woman in space, has spent this week smiling through the Washington celebrity whirl.
There was a time not so long ago, June 24 to be exact, when Ms. Ride felt so strongly about being singled out as a woman that she snubbed a NASA employees proffer of roses-for-the-lady. That was when she and her four crewmates returned to Houston after a six-day space shuttle flight.
What I would really like to do when I finish the flight, she was fond of saying, is take two weeks off and go back, ^t in line for another flight, and go up in the shuttle as soon as I could for a second time.
Shes been in line all right this week - the receiving line. And, heck, it mi^t as well be said, the honors have come,to a woman from women.
Never before, for instance, has a high-ranking group known as Executive Women in Government thrown a luncheon for astronauts.
For Sally Ride, It's Part Of The Job
But there was one Thursday for Ms. Ride and, oh yes, those other four guys on Her Flight.
After their California landing, the astronauts spent one week in debriefings, one week on shuttle program work and one week on leave. Last Monday, as Washington temperatures neared the heat of i^ition, they started on the Washington honors circuit.
Day 1 - Ms. Ride is presented a 17-foot scroll signed by 714 women who work for the government. She accepts it graciously and allows that she doesnt taiow where shell hang it, but shell try. To a reporter she says that all the fuss tieing made, about her is part of the job.
Day 2 - Ms. Ride, in a pale pink formal gown, is at a state dinner in the White House, seated next to the guest of honor, the emir Isa bin Salman Khalifa of Bahrain. She gives him a picture of Bahrain, taken from the shuttle. The astronauts knew in advance theyd be invited to the dinner.
Day 3 - Ms. Ride is at the Ubor Department where Secretary Raymond Donovan says she has shown thousands of American women that their contributin to the achievements of this nation need not be
confined to traditional roles.
Day 4 - Ms. Ride is honored at the executive womens luncheon.
Day 5 - Ms. Ride appears before the National Press (Hub for a question and answer session.
Of course, the four male astronauts. Bob Crippen, Rick Hauck, John Fabian and Norman Thagard, gamely accompanied Ms. Ride even to those events that were purely aimed at her. But the focus always was on Sally. In all, the schedule for the week showed 16 events, ranging from a rec^tion at the Air and Space Museum to congressional appearances, to breakfasts, luncheons and dinner.
There is a ritual all astronauts go thi^gh when they return to Earth. They say nice things about the peq)le on the ground who made it all wonderful, they get a tel^bone call or a welcome home or an invitation to the White House from the president add they are summoned by the House Science and Technology Committee to appear and hear praise.
In the question period after the House Science committee appearance, a congressman wanted to know how Ms. Ride will react when her husband, astronaut Steve
Hawley, goes into space next year - a flight that also has a woman aboard.
Im going to be a very interested observer, said Ms. Ride, who is very adept at answering sly-dig questions NASA never had any intention of granting Ms. Rides desire to be treated as just one of the astronauts. She faces a major tour this fall of at least six European countries. A NASA spokeswoman says they just love astronauts over there.
The space agency cant be blamed for spotlighting one astronaut who has flown on the shuttle and not the 20 others who have done the same thing.
Ms. Rides flight, the seventh in the two-year-old ^ace shuttle series, came along just about the time when interest in the program had declined to the point when even the locals didnt turn out any more to see a launch. Suddenly, space news - spelled Sally Ride - was on the cover of news magazines, on the network talk shows, in newspapers.
Ive come to realize I will be a role model, even though thats not what I intended it to be, said Ms. Ride in her pre-flight press conference. Now shes come to realize that its also part of the job.
Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
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'M !C[>m K sns< M sniK
Chet
Curriei^
NEW YORK (AP) - With 11 million Americans out of work, its hard to see how anyone could be very sanguine about the employment outlook.
But some observers say the recovery from the recession is beginning to produce real process on that central economic issue.
The Labor Department reported Thursday that the number of people collecting state unemployment insurance has fallen to its lowest level in more than a year and a half.
On the surface, other recent numbers look less impressive. The civilian unemployment rate stood at 10
Job Showing Progress
Noel
Yancey
Truth May Hurt
As a writer of state history. Dr. Hugh Lefler was often embroiled in controversy. In fact, he once observed that in North Carolina history, the truth will get you in trouble. He explained that this resulted from the fact that there are certain things in the history of this state which people like to believe but which you just cant prove.
Lefler, who died in 1981 after teaching history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for 35 years, once said if the historian questions such sacred cows as the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence or the contention that the Battle of Alamance was the first battle of the Americal Revolution, he gets a reputation for debunking.
Lefler angered folks in Burlington and Graham when he pooh-poohed their assertion that the Regulators who opposed the forces of royal Governor Tryon in the Battle of Bunker HUl.
It was not the first battle of the Revolution - thats one of the big myths in North Carolina, asserted Lefler, who contended the Regulators were fighting for honest local government.
An even bigger myth is the claim that on May 20, 1775, the citizens of Mecklenburg County declared themselves free of English rule - more than a year before the Continental Congress got around to adopting the Declaration of Independence.
Although both the state flag and North Carolinas Great Seal continue to proclaim that date, Lefler asserted that no professional historian living or dead has ever accepted the Mecklenburg Declaration as historical fact.
Lefler also caused some raised eyebrows when he stated that Virginia Dare was not the first white child bom in America. However, his listeners were mollified when he explained that she was the first English child bora in America. He pointed out that the Spaniards settled in Florida and raised children long before Sir Walter Raleigh sent his ill-fated colonists to Roanoke Island.
Like all historians, Lefler ran into folks who asserted that they should speak nothing but good of the dead. He observed that many of these persons had ancestors with tarnished reputations and contended that the fact that
theyre dead has nothing to do with whether they were honest or dishonest when they were living.
He noted that politicians may applaud the historian who refers to corruption in the oppositions party, but they may give trouble to the state historian who suggests that there had been a governor of the dominant party who mishandled state funds.
Lefler said one of the touchiest problems for a historian was writing about school segregation in the South. A North Carolina historian who includes a mere factual statement about the Pearsall Plan, Lefler said, will be branded as an integrationist by many whites and as segregationist by the NAACP.
As a writer of history textbooks, Lefler found that more politicians than historians are appointed or elected to the school boards responsible for selecting textbooks for children. And school board members frequently are pressured by people who want history taught according to their own personal beliefs rather than what the historial record sjiows.
He summed it up be recalling that an American Legion Convention once adopted a resolution saying, We favor history taugh truthfully but optimistically.
Although Lefler felt that optimism or pessimism should have nothing to do with the writing of history, he and the late Dr. A.R. Newsome encountered it when the State Board of Education was considering the adoption of its book, The Growth of North Carolina, as a textbook for the public schools.
Taking the position that the Lefler-Newsome text was too critical of the state, the board approved the adoption of a history written by Juie W. Warren, then executive secretary of the North Carolina Education Association. The board found out later, much to Its chagrin, that the Warren book contained so many errors - both in grammar and in facts-- that it had to be recalled and revised.
Lefler, a native of Colleemee in Davie County, was a highly popular lecturer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Although he did not exactly revel in controversy, he was never known to run from a fight.
percent in June, having inched down a tenth of a percentage point in each of the last two months. When members of the armed forces stationed in this country are included in the computations, the June rate was 9.8 percent, down from 10 percent in May.
Thats still a long, long way from what economists speak of as full employment - a jobless rate of about 6 percent. To get there, notes Morgan Guaranty Trust of New York, the number of people without jobs would have to shrink to about 6.75 million.
In short, the banks economists said, more than 4 million new jobs need to be created - in addition, of course, to job creation to take care of normal ^owth in the labor force. Obviously, such a major task cannot be accomplished quickly.
Yet some economists maintain that the raw
James
Gerstenzang
WASHINGTON (AP) -Mort Allin is leaving the White House. Again.
Allin, known formally as Lyndon K. Allin although hes never been known to answer to his formal name, has been the deputy White House press secretary specializing in foreip policy since President Reagan took office.
He is a career foreign service officer who was hauled back to Washington from a post with the U.S.
statistics dont fully reflect some positive developments. In a recent report, Paul J. Groncki of New Yorks Citibank said the slight decline in June was more than the continuation of a downtrend that began after the rate peaked in December.
In previous months, Groncki said, the gains were due mainly to the departure from the labor force of discouraged workers. Through May, he said, there was a net decline of 400,000 in the labor force.
But with Junes report comes the news that 1.2 million additional people reported they had jobs, resulting in the first rate decline clearly driven by employment gains in this recovery. It was, he said, the best indication we have so far that the rate is dropping because employment, not pessimism, is on the rise.
Moreover, the job count
has improved across a wide spectrum of industries. All major industrial sectors except services and finance, insurance and real estate suffered employment losses during the downturn. But by June, employment was above Decembers level in all but a handful of sectors - the exceptions including oil and coal production, mining and transportation and public utilities.
While most industries have only begun to regain their employment losses from the recession, Groncki concluded, the extent of the employment pickup presages a recovery thats strong enough and broad-based enough to keep the unemployment rate on a downtrend.
If the trend is in the right direction now, however, Morgan Guarantys economists still see a long road to full employment.
WASHINGTON American Express Co. has always had a knack for advertising. Through an appealing series of ads. the financial giant some years ago implied that its cardholders could walk into any watering hole this side of Calcutta and see waiters snap to attention. Later, of course, it conceived the much-parodied Do You Know Me? series.
This summer, AmEx is back with a new theme: "The American Express Card - Part of a lot of interesting lives. Designed to lure more women to the card-carrying set. the new campaign features, in various scenarios, women taking their children and husbands out to eat. In one of the better spots, a man just treated to dinner asks his wife, First it was back to school, then a job, and now its an American Express card... what next?
Replies the woman: Youre cute when youre worried.
American Expre^s nw pitch might seem to reflect a new sensitivity on Madison Avenue: With more women working, advertisers cant afford to alienate the female market.
AmExs new series represents an unusual break from an otherwise unfortunately archaic tradition in most advertisements. For exai le, in the latest pitch for Neet, a cream depilatory, actor hn Stamos of televisions "General
Hospital runs his 1 id over the calves of three women, announcing after each caress whether the limb has been smoothed with Neet or simply shaven. The overt sexism of the ad is enough to make you toss your TV (and bottle of Neet, if you keep it around) out the window.
For Keith Reinhard, chairman of the Chicago-based advertising firm of Needham, Harper and Steers, the Neet spot typifies commercials broadcast during daylight hours (when the audience consists largely of female game-show and soap-opera buffs). As Reinhard found in a recent survey of network advertisements, compiled on a single afternoon, ads remain remarkably behind the times.
We havent come very far in the way we portray women in advertising, Reinhard said last month in a speech to the Womens Advertising aub of Chicago."...it is primarily, perhaps uniquely, in the world of television advertising where women have made no appreciable progress (in the last 20 years).
Despite gains by women in the workplace, Reinhard said, advertisers seem wedded to an image that women fret only about the whitest wash, the richest coffee and the best way to prepare au gratin potatoes. That males increasingly shoulder kitchen chores clearly hasnt dawned on Madison Avenue: In most instances, ad writers leave men perched at the dinner table, either to decry drab leftovers or applaud their spouses latest gelatin desserts.
Reinforcing outdated sex roles is bad enough. But advertisements which insult rather than respect the consumers intelligence will, in the long run, win more enemies than friends. Indeed, one need only recall the ring around the collar series of yesteryear to know the inane jingles and slogans often obscure a brand name and do nothing for sale.
Ultimately, backward notions of modern lifestyles only keep Americans suspicious of advertisers and their products. As the number of insulted and offended viewers goes up each year, the effectiveness of all advertising goes down, Reinhard said.
Some companies are waking up to modern times. Proctor & Gamble, the giant Cincinnati-based maker of products from toothpaste to orange juice, recently discarded its age-old flake-and-flick Head and Shoulders ads for scenes with couples arm in arm.
Press Aide Draws New Assignment
Information Agency in Lagos, Nigeria, shortly before Reagans inauguration and has worked at the White House ever since, with the exception of a brief stint at the USIAs foreign press office in Washington.
Now, after 2y^ White House ^ years, and an earlier tour in the press office when Richard M. Nixon was leaving the White House in 1974, Allin is preparing for assignment to the Soviet Union.
It just so happens that
Mort Allin is not a great fan of Yuri V. Andropov.
Larry Speakes, the chief deputy press secretary at the White House, took note of Allins overall skepticism about the Soviet Union when he announced to reporters that Allins departure was imminent.
Hes returning to USIA to prepare for assignment, of all places, to the Union of Soviet Socialist R^ublics. After a year of study, hell be posted to Leningrad. Or St.
Petersburg, as he prefers to call it. That, I presume, is better than going back to Lagos, but not much, Speakes said, managing a crack at the expense of the Russians, the Nigerians and Allin, all in one breath.
Allin, said Speakes, is the only conservative Ive ever known to come from the state of Wisconsin.
The president took note of Allins plans to leave the White House and Speakes offered a public reading of a
letter Reagan wrote. When Speakes got to the part about the presidents deep personal regret about Allins decision to return to the USIA, one wag in the audience sugjgested that the letter was written by Charles Z. Wick, the agencys director.
Allin, tightlipped in a tightlipped White House, is not a household name for newspaper readers. He made no attempt to hide this.
Steve
Gerstel
Bush Gets To Vote
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Vice President George Bush, after being shut out for two and a half years, has finally cast his first vote.
The great moment came last week when Bush, in his role as president of the Senate, broke a 49-49 tie and gave the administration a victory in efforts to go ahead with production of new nerve gas bombs and artillery shells.
The vote underscored once again how little the Founding Fathers found for the vice president to do, except hang around in case something befalls the chief executive of the nation.
The Constitution is explicit: The vice president of the United States shall be president of the Senate, but shall have no vote, unless they be equally divided.
And for a long time - probably until the presidency of Dwight Eisenhower - vice presidents did little more than that.
Which led John Nance Gamer, FDRs first vice president, to comment that the post was not worth a bucket of warm spit.
Of course. Gamer, then the speaker, knew all that when he accepted FDRs invitation to the ticket.
As another Texan, Lyndon Johnson, knew It when he became John Kennedys vice presidential candidate in 1960.
Starting with Richard Nixon, vice presidents became much more active and Bush has carried on the latter-day tradition.
Althou^ still very much an invisible agent in the administration - in contrast to the White House troika or the top Cabinet members - Bush has quietly carried the message for President Reagan, here and abroad.
But this is no thanks to the Constitution. Whatever Bush does for Reagan Is up to Reagan.
Although Bush spends almost all his time away from Capitol Hill, he has been summoned, sometimes urgently, to the Senate by Republican leaders on the chance of a tie vote.
Until last week, those trips proved washouts, the Senate deciding the issue without his help.
Last weeks vote was a rarity but it did show how handy it is to have a vice president.
The question of nerve gas production - one of the most controversial issues in the military bills for several years - last year went against the Pentagon in the Senate.
In effect. Bush provided the vote the administration needed.
It can, however, be argued that the two missing senators, Goldwater of Arizona and Murkowski of Alaska, both pro-administration, could have been found or the vote oostponed until they surfaced.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C-Sunday, July 24,1983-A-7
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A--The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 24,19S3Time...
t Continued from All "Business and industn realize time is money, said Dr. Wilbert R Ball of the East Carolina University Counseling Service "If business and industry focus on time, then why shouldn't the individual who wants to be more efficient with the 24 hours he has each day.
"Everyone manages his own time, but sometimes its not in the most efficient way, Ball continued. "Being aware of time is the beginning of time management .
He said that an individual needs to raise his level of consciousness of the limited time he has and then learn to be more selective about his activities to make each day more productive.
In order to become more aware of how time is spent. Ball recommends keeping a time log for a week. By recording all activities, an individual can see how his time is actually laed. "When you look at the log. you will be amazed by all the wasted time." he said. The activities should be reorganized so that time is used more effectively.
"Budgeting your time helps you compartmentalize your day. the counselor said, "You need to know what is expected of you. You need a certain amount of structure in the day because people function better with a schedule. He recommended using a calendar or appointment book and making notes to remind yourself wliat must be done.
Each person should rank his activities in order of importance and decide what needs to be accomplished each day. Bail said. "Individual values and the goal the individual is trying to meet decide priorities, he relat.
Ball said each person should budget time for work as well as for enjoyable activities such as recreation and entertainment. "Self-time can be very productive time. he said. "You will be more constructive if you give yourself time to relax , and regroup. You need a good balance of all activities.
To save time, Ball suggested grouping activities that can be accomplished together. For instance, he recommends making all telephone calls and answering all correspondence at the same time, thereby saving effort.
"Dont procrastinate, he continued. "Procrastinators get immobilized and feel like they are swamped under. If you see something that needs to be done, go on and do it or make a note of it so you will not forget. He said that if a person puts off doing something, the chore often takes more time and effort at a later date.
He said it is good planning to plan for nothing. "Leave some free time in case something else comes up that is important but wasnt planned for, Ball added.
In his time management book, "How to Get Control of Your Time and Your Life. author Alan Lakein says, "Part of the real secret of getting more done is to make a To Do List every day. keep it visible and use it as a guide to action as you go through the day.
Lakein says the basics of the list itself are simple: Head a piece of paper "To Do, then list those items on which you want ot work; cross off items as they are completed and add others as they occur to you.
Lakeins tips for using a list for time management include: Write all your "To Do items on a master list or lists to be kept together, rather than jotting down items on miscellaneous scraps of paper.
Do not list routine items but list everything that has high priority today and might not get done without special attention.
Look at your goals, then decide what you want to do with your time and what activities you want to eliminate.
Decide on specific activities that you can do to help achieve your long-term goals.
Set priorities. Classify activities by importance.
Set deadlines for various activities and schedule them into the next seven days.
Follow your schedule.
Time waits for no one may be a cliche, but the truth in the saying hits home for many people who feel there are not enou^ hours in the day. Each individual can complete his r^uired activities and have time for recreation if he budgets his time more efficiently.
Options...
(Continued from Al)
Latin America.
I respectfully remind President Reagan that a blockade is war, and the Constitution places the decision to go to war in the hands of Congress, Edwards said in the official Democratic response to Reagans weekly radio talk.
This is what our Constitution requires in Article 1, and any violation would be judged by the people of the world, the people of the United States, and, in accordance with its constitutional responsibilities, perhaps even the House Judiciary Committee, said Edwards, chairman of the committees subcommittee on the Constitution.
The administration has announced plans for joint exercises involving two carrier fleets, one on the Atlantic coast of Central America and the other on the Pacific. Pentagon officials acknowledged last week that among the task forces planned exercises are blockade practice maneuvers.
Administration officials told The Associated Press Saturday the exercises will involve coordinating command and control of the twoSaudi Minister To Discuss Feud
JIDDA, Saudi Arabia (AP) PLO chairman Yasser Arafat and Syrian Foreign Minister Abdel Halim Khaddam will arrive Sunday in Saudi Arabia to meet with King Fahd, a high-ranking Saudi source said.
The source, who asked not to be identified, said Saturday that the twin visits indicated the Saudi monarch would make another attempt to mediate the feud between Arafat and Syria. He said he did not know if Arafat and Khaddam would have a face-to-face meeting.
Meanwhile, Arab League Secretary-General Chadli Klibi left Tunis for Damascus after meeting with Arafat to begin another* mediation effort. He also announced an Arab League summit meetir November in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Arafat was expelled from
Sytia by President Hafez Assad on June 2ner he accused Syria and Libya of supportingrebels within his Fatah group of the Palestine Liberation Oi^anization.
Syria denied the accusations and the state-run media . called Arafat a traitor and a "liar. Syria demanded Arafat apologize as a condition for settling the differences. ^
Arafat loyalists say the main issue is the PLO retaining its independence from Syria and other Arab nations.
The rebels began what they called a reform campaign on May 7 and refused to take Arafats orders. Clashes and assassination attempts followed in the Syrian-controlled Bekaa valley of eastern Lebanon and at Palestinian bases in Damascus.Movies...
(Continued from Ad)
pense, actions, thrills, but nothing human, nothing to touch or move us, Sundwall said.
Yet, despite this overwhelming tendency, every once in a while, big movies come along which are human and moving, even from the Lucas factory, which gave us Ridley Scotts Blade Runner, a fine film, rich in its characters and profoundly philosphical ... as well as technically beautiful and stunning in its special effects.
And it is these special effects that seem to be drawing more and more youngsters to movie theaters, much in the same way the cool heroics of John Wayne and the wicked whip cracking of Lash LaRue enticed boys and girls to movie houses not so long ago.
The science-fiction type movies with strange characters and action bring in the most customers, Griffin said. For instance, during the first ei^it weeks we ran Return of the Jedi, 20,586 people bought tickets.
Tina Glisson, a 12-year-old who was at the Wednesday matinee of Return ofthe Jedi with her younger sister and brother, said that the action and bizarre creatures were what made her want to see the film. I enjoy science fiction, the strange animals, and the action and characters are also Interesting, she said.
I dont like the love movies as well, she added, because the love scenes and dirty lan^age are turn-offs. Her sister agre^ with her.
Children, and even adults, can still get into the movies at relatively reasonable
rates if they attend matinees like Tina and her brother and sister do. But, unfortunately for most people, work gets in the way, and entertainment has to be pursued in the evening.
Should a couple decide to attend any of thp six local theaters (Bnrcaneer Movies. Hwy 264 Playhouse, Park Theater, Plaza Cinema, Plitt Theaters and the Tice Drive-Inn) they can plan to spend up to $11 - $8 for admission and $3.20 plus tax for two large drinks and a box of p<^m. Of course prices do vary slightly depending on which theater you go to, and whether special rates are offered.
1 guess that is kind of expensive when you think that as kids we used to get into the movies for 14 cents, 9 for admission, 5 for a candy bar, and the water was always free right from the fountain, Griffin said.
Gales Hurt 27 At Ohio ShowLand
(Continued from A-I)
The county did purchase a 13,745-square-foot tract, located at the northwest comer of Second and Evans streets behind the courthouse, from the Redevelopment Commission in 1971 for $20,617 or $1.50 per square foot. The parcel is now used by the county for parking.
The Redevelt^ment Commission purchased a severance on Greene Street from Wooten in 1973 for the widening of the corridor. The purchase of 2,705 square feet of property between Second and Third streets was made for $5,700 or $2.10 per square foot.
Comparable prices for a number of parcels sold by the commission to developers in the downtown and fringe areas, included: $54,774 or 76 cents per square foot for a 71,507-square-foot tract on Cotanche Street between Reade Circle, to Tom Taft (1976); $16,091 or $1.45 per square foot for a parcel containing 11,098 square feet on Greene Street between Third and Evans streets, to E. Hoover Taft III (1974); $35,838 or $1.73 per square foot for a 20,776-square-foot tract on Greene Street across from Jarvis Memorial Methodist Church, to the owners of Carolina Office & Equipment Co.;
$48,867 or $3 per square foot for a 16,289-square-foot tract on Evans Street across from the library, to the law firm of Dixon & Horne; $17,350 or $1.88 per square foot for a 9.186-square-foot parcel on Greene Street between Fifth and Fourth streets, to George Pugh; $32,060 or $2.63 per square foot for a 12,190-square-foot tract at the northwest comer of Washington and Third streets, to T & C Corp.; $62,780 or $4.51 per square foot for a 13,920-square-foot tract on Dickinson Avenue, to Taft Furniture Co. (1977); $12,493 or $1.15 per square foot for a 10,864-square foot parcel at the northwest comer of Pitt and First streets, to John Grier; and $32,032 or $1.52 per square foot for a 20,994-square-foot parcel at the southwest comer of Reade and Se^d Street, to Smart-Woodall & Associates.
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -Gale force winds knocked down several tents at an air show attended by 75,000 people Saturday, and at least 27 were injured, an air show spokeswoman said.
An undetermined number of people were hospitalized, but many of the injuries were minor and were treated by medics at the scene, said Shawnee Lee Culbertson, spokeswoman for the Dayton International Airshow & Trade Exposition.-
We have three persons with possible broken bones and three additional injuries which could be considered serious or critical. All the others were minor, she said.
Ms. Culbertson said officials had about a 30 minute notice there was some type of weather moving our way. We never got any notice it was severe. When it came it was high winds.
We issued that information to key people in strategic areas, but not to the crowd because we didnt want to panic people, she said.
The National Weather Service said winds gusted as highas56mph.
The air show, held at the Dayton International Airport, ended for the day
after the hi^ winds, and was to continue Sunday.
We had no major aircraft damages, Ms. Culbertson said. We had three ultralights destroyed. Most of the damage was from winds and flying debris.
This years show commemorates the 200th anniversary of the first manned hot-air balloon flight and the 80th anniversary of the first successful powered flight by Wilbur and Orville Wright.
The airshow is sponsored by the Dayton Area Chamber of Commerce and the City Department of Aviation.
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fleets with the Southern Command located in Panama, a skill that would be needed in the event of a future blockade or quarantine.
But the officials, who spoke on condition they not be identified, said the exercises were intended more as a show of American resolve in the region, not as a dress rehearsal for a military quarantine of Nicaragua.
Were showing the flag to Cuba and the Soviets to reinforce the impression that we take things there very seriously, said one official.
Another official said the exercises provide our friends down there with a demonstration of our commitment and might help convince the Sandinistas to join in regional negotiations.
He added, however, that the (^tion of blockading or quarantining Nicaragua, raised by some administration officials over the past three years as a possible way to stop leftist gunrunning in the region, was no more likely now than it has been in the past.
Its an option thats there, said the official. But if you decide to do it, youre committing yourself to a lot of forces for a longtime.
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Youth Gangs Touch Off Violent Outburst In N. Y.
The DaiJy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Sunday, July 24,1983-A-9
NEW YORK (AP) Hundreds of marauding youths swept out of Central Park after a free concert by Diana Ross, slashing and mugging people in their path down an avenue through midtown Manhattan.
The swarming youths blanketed the area along Eighth Avenue between 59th Street, at the comer of the park, and 40th Street, site of a major bus terminal near Times Square, for nearly two hours Friday ni^t before police were able to control them, said Gerard Kerins, assistant chief of the Manhattan North precinct.
They struck like lightning, Kerins said, adding he did not believe the youngsters were part of any organized gang. They were just a bunch of kids raising hell and ripping people off," he said.
Mario Suriani said he heard a roar between 8:30 and 9 p.m. and looked out his adartment window onto Eighth Avenue to see an entire street filled with kids running south. When anyone was in the^way, they would surround them and rob them. In 30 seconds I saw them overwhelm three or four people and grab things from them.
Kerins said 17r complaints were made and 84 people were arrested on charges ranging from robbery to inciting a riot. But he said the arrests included ones made throughout the day while people gathered for the concert, which drew 350,000 fans.
He said 600 officers were deployed to control the gangs. Most of those arrested were teen-agers from throughout the metropolitan area. The concert had been patrolled by 900 officers and park rangers.
One teen-ager was shot when he lunged at a plainclothes officer with a knife.
One group of youths robbed diners at Tavern On The Green, a swank restaurant inside the
park. Kerins said they climbed on the restaurants roof, leaped down off that onto a terrace where people were dining, knocked over some tables, took some purses and then left.
The youths split into groups of about 20 to 50 by the time they reached the area near Times Square, said Sgt. Ed LeSchack.
Its hard for us to say that it was the kids from the concert. All we have is that... there were roving bands of youths. Officer Connie MontanarO, a police spokeswoman, said Saturday. Whether or not they were at the concert, were not going to state.
The victims included Michel and Madeleine Roche and their 13-year-old son, Lionel, tourists who had just arrived from Paris when they were attacked by a group of 10 to 20 youngsters in Times Square. The youths cut Mrs. Roches neck with her gold chain as they ripped it off, and tore away the the couples watches.
"The police said, Thats life. Goodbye, said Roche, who took refuge with his family in a mens shop. The Roches said they would cancel their five-day vacation and return home.
Police said the shooting occurred when three Transit Authority officers saw a man with a knife slash another man at a subway entrance at 81st Street and Central Park West. The man, identified as Richard Cruz, 19, lunged at one officer after they tried to intervene, and another officer shot him, Ms. Montanaro said.
Cruz was recovering Saturday from surgery at St. Lukes Hospital, a spokesman said.
Last week, plainclothes officers arrested 77 people during a sweep designed to crack down on youth gangs that have been preying on tourists.
D.C. Moves Inmates Out Of Crowded City Prison
WASHINGTON (AP) -Busloads of prisoners left the smoke-stained District of Columbia Jail for the citys reformatory in suburban Lorton, Va., Saturday as officials tried to reduce overcrowding that led to two days of disturbances last week.
James Palmer, director of the D C. Department of Corrections, ordered the inmates moved after fires were set during a dis
turbance at the prison Friday afternoon. Three separate mattress fires filled two floors of cellblocks with dense smoke, resulting in several injuries, including a fireman and a jail guard critically hurt.
The fires occurred two days after a scuffle at the jail resulted in six guards and four inmates being injured.
Buses and some smaller vehicles, accompanied by D C. police to the city line
School To Rehire White Professor
WASHINGTON (AP) - Howard University, a predominantly black institution, is rehiring a white faculty member a judge ruled was discriminated against when the school dismissed him and promoted blacks with less experience.
Under a consent judgment filed Friday in U.S. District Court, the school agreed to pay Antonio Planells $125,000 plus legal fees. The school is also offering Planells a position as a tenured associate professor of Spanish.
Planells, 46, had filed a lawsuit under federal antidiscrimination laws, saying he had been wrongfully dismissed by Howard University because he was white.
In a memorandum filed just before trial in May, university lawyers had argued that as a predominantly black institution, Howard could consider race in hiring and promoting professors.
That contention was strongly rejected by U.S. District Court Judge John H. Pratt, who ruled Howard had given disparate treatment to whites in its Romance language department and had promoted blacks with fewer qualifications than Planells.
The university now feels the Planells case was an instance of a miscarriage of justice at a departmental level that is inconsistent with our principles and our history, Michael R. Winston, the universitys vice president for academic affairs, said Friday.
Winston said Howard has a dual nature. . . We focus on the concerns of blacks but we are a university that is open to all who share that concern regardless of their background.
and then by Virginia State Police, left the jail about every 45 minutes Saturday to bring 196 prisoners to Lorton. according to Leroy Anderson, a corrections department spokesman. About 260 were moved Friday evening, he said.
Officials in Fairfax County, which borders on the 3,000-acre Lorton complex, immediately protested the citys actions. Jack Herrity, chairman of the county board of supervisors, said he would seek a court injunction Monday.
All 456 transfer prisoners had been convicted of felonies and would have been brought to Lorton earlier except for overcrowding there also, Anderson said. He said the city had already planned to move 500 to Lorton after Aug. 1 into a building formerly used for a program for alcoholics.
The D.C. Jail, designed to hold 1,355 prisoners, was holding about 2,380 Friday before the fires. Palmer said.
The cells where the fires had occurred were quickly cleaned and damage to the facility was mostly cosmetic, Anderson said.
A federal judge recently ordered Mayor Marion Barry Jr. to come up with a plan to alleviate the overcrowding at the jail.
The city has plans to spend $12 million for expansion renovation at Lorton during the next several years, a plan objected to by Fairfax County, where leaders have called for the closing of the facility.
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A 10-The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C-Sunday, July 24,1983
Opposition Forms New Pact In Lebanon
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Three of Lebanons top opposition leaders joined Saturday in a Syrian-backed National Salvation Front to challenge President Amin Gemayels govcnunent and scuttle a U.S.-sponsored pact between Lebanon and Israel.
After a two-hour meeting in the north Lebanon mountain resort of Ehden, former Lebanese President Suleiman Franjieh, a Maronite Christian; ex-Premier Rashid Karami, a Sunni Moslem, and Walid Jumblatt, leader of the countrys Druse, announced they would run the front as members of a Presidency Council.
In a separate news conference, Jumblatt also took full responsibility for the shelling of Beiruts international airport on Friday and the artillery bombardment of Christian areas of Beirut and an army training camp. The attacks killed 23 people and wounded 65 others, including three U.S. servicemen who were injured by shrapnel or flying glass.
He said the attacks were a message to Gemayel and the Christian Phalange Party, which was founded by Gemayels family and controls the countrys major Christian militia.
We have to make them (the Phalangists) understand by the language they know best that we will not tolerate their presence, nor that of their army, in our areas, Jumblatt said.
Christian and Druse militiamen broke a truce and resumed fighting in the hills overlooking Beirut late Saturday, using rocket propelled grenades, mortars, artillery and machine guns.
Several fires could be seen between the mountain towns of Aitat and Souk El-Gharb as tracer bullets lit the sky over the Christian town of Kfarshima and nearby Druse stronghold of Shweifat about six miles southeast of Beirut.
Pro-Syrian groups and leftist factions, including the Soviet-line Communist Party, joined the new anti-government coalition, and Syrias official news agency claimed the group had the support of
Shiite Moslem leader Nabih Berri, although Bern did not attend the Saturday meeting.
The opponents of Gemayel stopped short of forming a rival government, apparently awaiting Gemayels reaction to determine whether he is willing to compromise.
But the threat of a breakway government appeared implicit in the naming of the presidency council, headed by Franjieh, and the formation of a Cabinet-like national councU of 12 members.
In his earlier news conference in the Syrian-held town of Baalbek, Jumblatt said the three-man council would set up committees to run the military, economic, financial and social affairs of the population in the Syrian-controlled regions which make up about one-half of Lebanons 4,015 square miles.
The coalition represents the most serious challenge to Gemayels government since the 41-year-old Maronite Christian leader was elected by Parliament last September.
Gemayel Says U,S. Credibility At Stake
GIFTS FROM ANDROPOV - Back at her home in Manchester, Maine, Saturday, Samantha Smith holds up one of the gifts she received from Soviet President Yuri V.
Andropov during tier two-week tour of the Soviet Union. The 11-year-old girl received an invitation from Andn^v after she wrote him. (APLaserphoto)
WASHINGTON (AP) -Lebanese President Amin Gemayel, declaring his country will not barter away so much as an inch of our sacred land, said Saturday the United States credibility is at stake in the drive to remove foreign troops from Lebanon.
Addressing an estimated 2,000 Lebanese-Americans who cheered and applauded, Gemayel called for the unity of all the people of Lebanon, saying that threats, and warnings and bombings no longer strike terror in our hearts.
But Gemayel did not refer in his speech to the latest threat to Lebanese unity, the announcement in Lebanon Saturday that Druse leader Walid Jumblatt has formed a national salvation front against the Israeli occupation of parts of the country and against Gemayels government. ^
Jumblatt vowed that the Druse would fight the Lebanese army and the multinational peace-keepingSamantha Returns With Gifts
MANCHESTER, Maine (AP) - When Samantha Smith and her parents left for the Soviet Union on July 7, they took eight pieces of luggage. When they returned, they had 24 - but no trouble with customs.
"We didnt spend any money, said her father. Arthur, "but we were laden with gifts.
The famUy was whisked right through customs they gave us the VIP treatment, Smith said after returning to the United States on Friday. "I didnt expect it, but it was very convenient.
The centerpiece gift was a samovar and tray given to Samantha by Soviet President Yuri V. Andropov, her in-absentia host on the two-week tour.
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force if they attempt to enter the Druse-held mountains in the event of an expected Israeli withdrawal to positions farther south.
Gemayel offered optimism that the problems that have plagued Lebanon for decades soon can be solved.
However great may be the difficulties, however intractable may be the problems, however dire the warnings ... we will not barter away so much as an inch of our sacred land, Gemayel said.
His partisan audience, invited from Lebanese-American communities throughout the eastern United States, stood and cheered.
Although Gemayel publicly thanked Presient Reagan for tireless efforts on behalf of )eace, he added that no U.S. diddle East peace initiative can succeed unless the United States is firmly committed to Lebanons cause.
We may even go so far as to say that the future of peace in the area and the credibility of America and
her stature in the world will in the final analysis depend upon the success of the American commitment to Lebanon, as upon the success of the United States in assisting Lebanon to effect the complete withdrawal of foreign troops from our soil, Gemayel said.
Following his speech Gemayel ate lunch with Secretary of State George P. Shultz and then prepared to leave Washington for stops in Houston and Detroit.
The Reagan administrations foreign policy establishment, meanwhile, was adjusting to the changed diplomatic landscape caused by Reagans decision Friday to replace chief Middle East envoy Philip Habib with deputy national security adviser Robert C. McFarlane.
Reagan made the announcement during a White House departure ceremony for Gemayel.
The Lebanese government is seeking a complete but coordinate pullout of all foreign forces, including 28,000 Israeli soldiers, 50,000
Syrians and 12,000 Palestine Liberation Organization fighters.
Although Israel and Lebanon have reached a troop withdrawal accord, Syria has refused to pull out its troops, which first entered the country during the 1975-76 civil war.
In addition, the Syrians had refused to talk with
Habib.
The practical result of his leaving appeared to be a takeover by the White House of direct control of U.S. Middle East policy at the expense of State Department professionals.
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The large urn, customarily used to warm water for tea, was surrounded by the dozens of roses the 11-year-old girl received when she deplaned in Augusta. One bouquet contained Samantha roses, a red variety named long before she wrote her now-famous letter to Andropov about her fear of nuclear war.
When Samanthas mother, Jane, unpacked a gold-trimmed tea set, another present from Andropov, a chorus of oohs and aahs swept through a crowd gathered on the back porch of the familys home.
Andropov, who never met Samantha, also gave her two 100-page books full of color and black-and-white photographs of her trip and a hand-lacquered jewelry box with a picture of Red Square.
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Reaaan Issues Appeal For Child
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan ordered an Air Force plane to stand by for emergency duty as he appealed to the nation Saturday for a liver donor to save the life of a dying ll-month-oW baby girl.
Time is running out," Reagan said, using his regular weekly radio broadcast to plead.on behalf of Ashley Bailey, a Texas infant now in critical condition at the University of Minnesota Hospitals in Minneapolis.
Reagan urgc^ anyone who knows of a potential liver donor to telephone the Living Bank, an organ transplant center in Houston, at 800-528-2971.
Ashley has biliary artresia, an incurable disease that hardens the liver. She has been hospitalized during the nationwide search for a donor.
Fire Kills Fireman In France
CHATEAUROUX, France - One fireman was killed and two were injured Saturday in a blaze that destroyed a department store on the outskirts of this central French city, officials reported. They said about 1,000 shoppers and 120 employees were evacuated.
Fire department officials said explosions of bottled gas in the stores warehouse severely hampered the 100 firemen who battled the blaze.
Dodge Thanks Syria For Release
NEW HAVEN, Conn. - American educator David S. Dodge, who was held in Lebanon and Iran for a year after being kidnapped at his Beirut home, thanked the Syrian government Saturday for helping with his release but would not discuss his captivity.
Dodge, acting president of the Anierican University in Beirut when he was kidnapped, said he was unwilling to discuss his experiences publicly because no useful purpose would be served." He appeared briefly before reporters after two days of examinations of his physical and mental health at Yale-New Haven Hospital and debriefing by the State Department.
Dodge was hit on the head and abducted by two armed men as he strolled from his campus office to his home in Beirut on July 19,1982.
Poland Begins Releasing Prisoners
WARSAW, Poland - The first of nearly 800 prisoners eligible for amnesty under a new decree have been released and more cases will be considered next week, the official PAP news agency said Saturday.
Polands communist govefnment has ruled out amnesty for seven leaders and five advisers of the outlawed Solidarity trade union, however. They were interned under martial law, which was lifted Friday, and have been charged with plotting to overthrow the system.
Car Bomb Goes Off In Lebanon
BEIRUT, Lebanon A car filled with explosives blew up outside the Voice of Hope television station near the Israeli border Saturday and Israeli-backed militia leader Maj. Saad Haddad said the attack had been aimed at him.
The right-wing Voice of Lebanon radio station in Beirut said the driver of the car was killed, but it mentioned no other casualties.
Haddad, a renegade Lebanese army major who commands pro-Israeli militias in southern Lebanon, blamed Syria for the blast.
Floods Kill 45 In Japan
TOKYO - Flooding and landslides killed 45 people, injured 38 others and left 59 missing Saturday after torrential storms dumped up to 22 inches of rain on southwestern Honshu, the main island of Japan.
Exactly one year ago similar floods left more than 300 dead in the same region
The National Police Agency said the hardest hit area was the prefecture, or state, of Shimane, 380 miles west of Tokyo The agency said 41 people were killed, 30 injured, and 58 others missing there in 1964, rains left 112 people dead or missing in Shimane.
Parents Sue Over Boy's Death
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. The parents of a 6-year-old boy who was kidnapped from a shopping center and beheaded have sued Sears. Roebuck and Co. and the shopping center, blaming lax security for the unsolved abduction two years ago. The case of Adam Walsh spurred a new federal law to intensify searches for missing children.
John and Reve Walsh filed suit Friday in Broward Circuit Court asking for unspecified damages in excess of $5,000.
The boys head was found in a canal Aug. 10,1981. The rest of his body was never found and the case is still unsolved.
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Hawaiian Volcano Erupts
VOLCANO, Hawaii - Glowing yellow and red lava spewed 500 feet into the air in an angled fountain Saturday as activity intensified in an eruption on the flank of Kilauea Volcano.
The roar created by the huge gusher of liquid rock could be heard throughout the area, including in the community of Volcano about nine miles from the eruption, said Reggie Okamura of the U.S. Geological Surveys Hawaiian Volcano Observatoi7.
Scientists on the ground near the eruption estimated the lava was pouring out at a rate of 100,000 to 200,000 cubic meters per hour, Okamura said.
Nursing Home Deaths Investigated
PHILADELPHIA - Police are investigating the deaths of at least seven women at a nursing home after one woman was strangled and another died a suspicious death the same day.
The bodies of Eugenia Borda, 90, and Mildred Alston, 83, were found Tuesday in their adjacent apartments at Christ Church Hospitals Kearsley Home in west Philadelphia, police said.
Lt. Michael Tobin of the city homicide division said that because of the deaths, police have decided to review five other deaths at the nursing home since January.
Cuban Population Increases
MEXICO CITY - Cuba has 9.7 million people, and 47
percent were born after Fidel Castro gained power in January 1959, the official Cuban news agency Prensa Latina said Saturday in an announcement of census results.
The report, received in Mexico City, said the census began in 1981 and lasted 22 months.
Weapons Seized In Miami
MIAMI - FBI agents seized weapons and ammunition
Record Low Temperature Claimed
MOSCOW - Soviet polar explorers in Antarctica, braving
Begin Marks 70th Birthday
JERUSALEM - Prime Minister Menachem Begin marked his 70th birthday Saturday with a quiet gathering of relatives, close friends and a few political allies. There was no indication he planned to resign.
There had been speculation in the Israeli press that Begin might announce his retirement from public life now that he is 70 - a pledge he made a few years ago but later retracted.
The speculation was triggered by his bleak mood over continuing clashes in Lebanon and by his abrupt cancellation of a trip to Washington scheduled for this week.
Begin was bom Aug. 16, but celebrates his birthday according to the Hebrew calendar on the first Saturday after the Tisha BAv holiday.
conditions like "the eternal cold of outer space, have recorded a new record low temperature of minus 128.6 Fahrenheit, Tass said Saturday.
The official news agency said the record low was registered July 21 on platinum thermometers outside the Soviet research station Vostok, where the previous record of minus 126.9 Fahrenheit was recorded Aug. 24,1960.
The Soviets use the Vostok station for exploration of polar and glacial conditions.
Saturday from the apartment where they arrested a man believed to have masterminded eight years of terrorist bombings and killings by the anti-Castro group Omega 7.
Investigators said they took a sub-machine gun, several .45-caliber handguns with silencers and other handguns, knives, walkie-talkies, electronic components, a remote control switch and a mans wig out of the Little Havana apartment Saturday morning.
Agents on a stake-out arrested fugitive Eduardo Arocena there Friday afternoon. Arocena, 40, was jailed without bond on charges of conspiracy and interstate transportation of explosives in a March 25, 1980, attempt to assassinate the Cuban ambassador to the United Nations.
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Paper Says FBI Planted Fake Bombs
CHICAGO - FBI agents slipped into a safe house used by four suspected FALN terrorists last spring and planted fake gunpowder in pipe bombs intended for an attack on two military posts, the Chicago Sun-Times said in Sunday editions. The newspaper said the break-in was part of lengthy court-authorized surveillance.
It led to the arrest of the four people on June 29 in an alleged plot to set off bombs at Army and Marine reserve posts in Chicago on the Fourth of July, the newspaper said.
The surveillance also led to the May 26 arrest of fugitive FALN leader William Morales in Puebla, Mexico, the Sun-Times reported.
FALN is the Spanish acronym for Armed Forces of National Liberation, a group which advocates independence for Puerto Rico and has claimed responsibility for more than 100 bombings in recent years.
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The nuclear-powered submarine USS James Polk fired a Poseidon missile Saturday while cruising underwater about 30 miles off the coast of Cape Canaveral.
It was the 76th Poseidon ever launched and the 56th launched from a submerged submarine since the program began in August 1968. The Poseidon, carried aboard 31 of the 41 United States missile-firing submarines, has a range of 2,880 miles.
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A-12-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 24,1983
Soviets Release Anti-Whaling Demonstrators After Five Days
ABOARD THE RAINBOW WARRIOR (AP) - Seven jubilant anti-whaling demonstrators headed home across the Bering Sea on Saturday after being released from the Soviet Union, where they had landed without permission to photograph a whaling station.
The members of the environmentalist Greenpeace Foundation said the worst part of their five days in custody was boredom.
Five Americans and one Canadian were arrested Monday after they landed and took photographs and handed out anti-whaling leaflets. Greenpeace members said the whale meal was fed to minks, a violation of international whaling
accords.
Another American was captured as he fled in a boat.
The seven were released late Friday along the International Dateline, about halfway between Alaska and Siberia, when they were transferred from a Soviet ship, the Fedor Matisen, to Greenpeaces ship Rainbow Warrior. A warship and three other Soviet vessels waited in the background.
The Rainbow Warrior was expected to reach Nome late Saturday, said Patrick Moore, Greenpeace Canada director.
The seven said they were fed well and kept in comfortable quarters in what appeared to be military barracks.
"The Russians treated us very well, said Barbara
Higgins. 25, of Philadelphia.
We had a good talk with them, said the groups photographer, David Rindiart, 35, of Albany, Ore. "We made it clear why we were there.
Chief Mate Jim Henry and Ms. Higgins said the biggest problem was finding something to do. The Soviets gave them a chess game and a Rubiks Cube, but there was little other entertainment other than some Soviet propaganda magazines, they said.
That was the biggest torture of all the boredom, said Henry, 33, of Orrs Island, Maine.
The six arrested at the whaling camp were Rinehart; Ms. Higgins; U.S. Greenpeace director Chris Cook, 35, of Washington, DC.; cameraman Ron Precious, 36, of Vancouver, British Columbia; Nancy Foote, 35, of Washington D.C., and Pat Herron, 32, of Seattle.
Henry was picked up off the coast from an inflatable boat.
They said they were seized by armed soldiers at the whaling station. At one point, they were led to believe they mi^t spend from one to three years in prison, Henry said.
They said that after their arrest they were flown by helicopter to a military base, then back to Lorino for interrogation, then again to the base, where they spent most of the week.
Reagan Aides Got Help For Loans
WASHINGTON (AP) - A California tax accountant who holds a $10,000-a-year appointment to the U.S. Postal Services board of governors arranged loans for two of President Reagans top staff members, government documents show.
Edwin Meese III, Reagans counselor, and Michael K. Deaver, the deputy chief of staff at the White House, were given the loans set up by accountant John R. .McKean at about the time McKean was given a presidential appointment to the board.
Deaver was traveling in Asia on Saturday. Meese was said by an aide, who refused any comment, to be traveling in California. Deputy White House press secretai^ Peter Roussel said there would be no official comment.
McKean was neither in his home nor office in California.
According to financial disclosure forms filed by the officials, as required by law.
Meese received two loans from McKean, each listed as valued at $15,001 to $50,000. The loan to Deaver, from a man described as a partner of McKean. was valued at $50,000 to $100,000.
According to the Washington Post, Meeses loans totaled $60,000 and the money came directly from McKean.
The newspaper reported Saturday that McKean said he set up the transaction but considered himself a trustee because the money was raised from clients who were unaware that Meese would be the recipient.
The Post said Meese was loaned $40,000 in July 1981. It quoted McKean as saying that later that month, Deaver called him to ask if he was interested in the presidential appointment. The second loan, of $20,000, was made in December 1981, a month after McKeans nomination was announced by the White House.
Deaver was given a loan of
Reynolds Buried In Arlington
WASHINGTON (AP) -Television anchorman Frank Reynolds was buried Saturday in a cemetery of American heroes, with the president of the United States among the mourners. From the Vatican, Pope John Paul II sent condolences to Reynolds widow and five sons.
Reynolds, who died Wed
nesday of viral hepatitis complicated by bone cancer, was eulogized by a priest at St. Matthews Cathedral as a man of deep convictions who had a refreshing consistency about application of his values.
President and Mrs. Reagan were in a front row seat in the crowded cathedral.
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$58,000, also arranged by McKean, in October 1981, the newspaper said.
It said the note, which Deaver and his wife used to buy a tractor-trailer truck that has since been leased out, is held by a business partner of McKeans in Idaho.
According to the financial
disclosure document, the note is held by Helmut Moss, of Boise, Idaho.
The newspaper quoted McKean as saying he did not expect anything in return for his assistance to Deaver and Meese and didnt think the two presidential aides were returning a favor by getting him the appointment.
COMING HOME - Released Greenpeace activist Tism Henry, left, prepares to heave a line aboard the Rainbow Warrior as he and six fdlow anti-vdialing dmonstrators returned to the United States Saturday afta* being rdeased by the Soviet Union. Other returnees include Cook (rear, btdding antenna), Ron Precious (seated ri^), and Nancy Foote (seated second right). Tl^ had been taka into custody afta landing in tbe Soviet Union without permission. (APLaserpboto)
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The Day Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 24.190-A-13
Averys Losing Plea May Affect Other Cases
BvEUSSAMeCRARY The Ij^flinc onnian/toH Mrc I.nriin caiH wac DOSt-traumatiC StueSS dis- oeoDle he couldnt remetnher he was clean - a mnHel reivahiv aivp millinn hinrract im
ByEUSSAMcCRARY Associated Press Writer DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -Attorney Ann Loflin says Leonard Averys murder convictiofl doet change her opiniofl that the Vietnam veteran was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder when he attacked an ffiM plant last summer.
She said the verdict wont keep Averys plea of insanity from having an impact on otb criminal cases involving veterans.
Avery, 39, of Raleigh, was convicted Friday by a Durham County Superior Court jury of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Ra^rfi Glenn, 53. Avery bad been fired from his IBM job before the incident in IRMs Research Triangle Park plant Aug. 30 The panel will decide Monday whether to sentence Avery to death in the states gas chamber or life in prison.
At the beginning of the trial, 1 said whatever the verdict, the case would be significant, and 1 still believe that, Mrs. Loflin said, its as clear to me today as the first time I beard about the case that Leonard Avery was so mentally ill that day that be didnt tmow what be was doing.
Mrs. Loflin and her husband, Thomas, both of whom were appointed by the court to represent Avery, say they will appeal the conviction.
The case was the first of its kind in the state and one of only a handful in the nation in which a defendant has pleaded that he was legally insane because he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.
The illness is characterized by flashbacks, d^ression and paranoia. Psychiatrists say the disease stems from severe stress in combat situations.
When Avery was arrested last Aug. 30, he was dressed in green Army fatigues and carrying a .45-caliber semi-automatic rifle. Witnesses at the IBM plant who saw Avery tossing homemade firebombs and firing rounds of ammunition down the hallways said he acted like he was fighting enemy sddiers.
Coed Says No To Any New Poses
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - The only Wake Forest University coed to appear in a Playboy pictorial feature on Women of the Atlantic Coast Conference says she wouldnt pose for Playboy again.
But its a decision I made and I will have to live with it, said Anne Parker Ballance, 20, in a telephone interview from her Atlanta home.
She said it was a-social experiment for her to pose for the back-to<ollege issue, v^icb is due to hit the newstands later this week.
Miss Ballance was one of about 25 students at the Baptist-affiliated school who re^xmded to an advertisement Playboy ran in the college nev^aper asking for women to model for the picture feature.
Along with several other women in her dorm, she sent off a snapshot of herself in a bikini.
At first it was pretty much a joke, she said. She passed Uie initial screening and was one of the four Wake Forest students chosen to model.
My dad will be glad to hear I have my shirt on, she said, adding that her parents considered her posing an act of rebellion. ^
The picture shows her seated in front of an easel in a painting studio at Wake Forest, wearing jeans and an unbuttoned shirt.
I have a real problem with how people view Playboy as exploiting women. The exploitation of women is a very big issue in Playboy, but who is exploiting who? Is Playboy exploiting women or are women exploiting them^lves? I wanted to find out about that.
The magazine presents views that I dont agree with that the only value women have is youth and beauty, she said. I dont feel that way about myself.
I feel that I am respected at Wake Forest, and that even though I did this people can still respect me.... It was almost a social experiment.
The Loflins contended during the five-week trial that Avery slippl back in time and thou^t be was back in the jungles of Vietnam.
Mrs. Loflin said she was convinced that Avery was suffering from the illness after reading newspaper accounts of the incident.
IIk Loflins first heard of post-traumatic stress disorder three months before the rampage at IBM when they attended an attorney seminar in Atlanta. A Boston lawyer discussed one of his cases in which a Vietnam veteran had been found innocent of a crime because he was suffering from the disorder.
He didnt ^ to escape being identified, be did nothing to disguise his appearance, she sakl. In your ordinary, everyday crime, the person tries to do something to avoid detection. Leonard Avery did nothing.
Medical records at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Durham show that Avery bad been diagnosed as suffoing from
post-traumatic stress disorder and had been treated in group therapy sessions with other veterans since July 1961.
Putting together an insanity defense meant proving that Averys behavior dmnged after his two tours of duty in southeast Asia.
Under Nwth Carolina law, a person must be unable to tell ri^t from wrong or to know the quality of his actions to be declared legally insane.
The Loflins sifted through Averys military records, seaning for the names of
pe(^le he couldnt remember who had served in the Army with him. Half a dozen of his former colleagues were located around the country and testified about Averys combat experiences.
His family testified that they saw him change from a happy-go-lucky young man to a heavy drinker and brawler. They said he began to argue and fight with his supervisors at work and lose jobs, write worthless checks and run into trouble with the law.
The records proved that before be went to Vietnam.
he was clean - a model citizwi, Mrs. Loflin said. Afterward, it all began to fall apart. He was mentally ill, and he didnt know why .
Attorneys acknowledged that the insanity defense isnt a popular one and that the public doesnt like it. Ronald Stq)hens, the prosecutorin the case, says hes afraid the Avery case will bring a rash of insanity pleas from other veterans charged with crimes.
"The fact that the defense didnt succeed might discourage some, he said. But it still could con
ceivably give 24 million Vietnam veterans an excuse to use such a defense whether its justified or not ' But the Loflins say strict state laws governing legal insanity will keep the plea from being abused "There have only been a few cases of such a defense all over the country because an insanity plea in general is very unpopular. .Mrs. Loflin said. "1 dont think this is going to make it any easier for a veteran or anyone else to prove to the court that he's insane
She said she believes the
biggest impact of the Avery case will be on public awareness that post-traumatic stress disorder is a recognized mental illness.
"The most important aspect of this case probably will be out of the courtroom and in VA hospitals, she said "If this case can help other veterans deal with their violence and their inability to lead normal lives, then in way, the verdict has nothing to do with whether we succeeded or not. This case will definitely reach beyond the courtrooms of North Carolina.
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Leaislature: Budget, Driving Law May Be Major Actions
By MARY ANNE RHYNE
Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH. NC. i.APi -Gov Jim Hunt and legislators seem to agree that a tougher new law against drunken drivers and a S12.6 billion, two-year budget were the major achievements of the 1983 General .Assembly session.
But others said the 1983 session will be remembered as one of the most ineffective in the Legislature's history-because of the long list of important issues which never were resolved.
The new driving while impaired law was the first bill to be introduced in the session, which began Jan. 12 and ended Friday, making it the lon^t session in the states history.
Beginning Oct. 1, the bill will bring a set of changes including elimination of plea bargaining, an increase in the legal drinking age from 18 to 19 to get alcohol out of the high schools, immediate 10-day suspension of a drivers license for having a .10 percent blood alcohol content.
"The grassroots movement against drunk driving is national in scope, but no state in America has taken as comprehensive an approach as North Carolina, Hunt told journalists recently.
Sen. Russell Walker, D-Randolph, said the new law is important because it was "something that was needed and the public was demanding to get it implemented.
Others said the biennial budget was the major accomplishment of the session, especially in light of warnings that the year would
be marked by tough financial times for the state.
We passed a budget," said Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green. The state wont run without a budget.
Hunt praised the budget for providing investments in education ami skills training that are needed for economic growth. He specifically mentioned money for new industry training in community colleges and funds for a computer science building and microelectronics programs at state universities.
Drunken Driving Law Highlights '83 Legislative Crime Package
ByJOHNFLESHER Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, NC. (AP) - Eighteen-year-olds wont be allowed to drink beer. Shopkeepers who sell alcoholic beverages to minors could be sued. People charged with drunken driving will find it all but impossible to plea bargain.
Those developments and more will take effect Oct. 1, thanks to a comprehensive revision of North Carolinas drunken driving laws that some observers called the 1983 Legislatures crowning achievement. The bill overshadowed dozens of crime and court issues that confronted lawmakers.
In addition to raising the minimum age for drinking beer and wine from 18 to 19, the bill replaces driving under the influence and lesser related charg^ with a sin^e offense -driving while impaired. Thats designed to eliminate the plea bargaining that critics claim has made a mockery of existing DUl law.
The new law should result in more drunken driving trials, exacerbating an already serioius problem of court overload.
The law bars drivers from any drinking and allows license revocation for driving with a blood alcohol content of 0.10 or higher - the level at which a jrson is considered legally di^ Those convicted of DWI will be sentenced according to a prescribed formula that includes jail terms in especially severe cases and community service for virtually all offenders.
Convicted drunken drivers also would lose their licenses for up to a year and if they continue to drive could have their cars impounded.
While not as highly publicized, nearly 100 other court and
crime bills were enacted, scrapped or delayed.
A century after the 13th Amendment outlawed slavery in the United States, North Carolina enacted its first antislavery statute. The law makes it a feltmy to bold anyone in involuntary servitude, kidnap someone with the intent of enslaving him, or Jtice someone into slavey.
The Legislature created the states first crime victim compensation plan, allowing people who promptly report crimes and cooperate with authorities to ai^ly for hundreds or thousands of (tollars in assistance.
Child pornography and prostitution laws were stren^ened, making it a felony for a parent or guardian to have sex with a child under 16 or to facilitate prostitution involving youngsters.
Additional funds for court operations and personnel were raised by Increasing costs of everything from a speeding ticket payoff to filing a civil suit. Several parts of a package designed to reduce prison overcrowding were enacted, including a bill encouraging judges to assign community service over imprisonment.
A bill to eliminate capital punishment was killed before it even could reach committee. But death row inmates were given a choice of execution by injecUon of lethal drugs or the gas chamber in what one lawmaker called one of the toughest decisions he made this session.
Bingo and raffle laws were revised to stop what critics said was exploitation by professional operators who s^honed off nearly all the profits. Charities now must run their own games, pay winners by check, keep careful records for state scrutiny and own the facilities and equipmmt.
Changes Rewrite Slavery Laws
By F. ALAN BOYCE Associated Press Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -An anti-slavery law, midwifery regulations and a 250-page rewrite of public health laws helped improve human resources in North Carolina this legislative session despite low funding, lawmakers say.
Were the only state since California with an involuntary servitude bill and ours is stronger than Californias, said Rep. Malcolm Fulcher, D-Carteret. who sponsored his slavery bill in response to several federal cases in which migrant workers were enslaved in North Carolina.
The bill, opposed by the N.C. Farm Bureau and extensively rewritten several times, was enacted in a form that makes it a felony to enslave someone or in any way recruit him for the purpose of involuntary servitude.
But Fulcher said he was surprised when the Senate tied the bill into North Carolinas kidnapping statutes. Now, someone convicted of aiding and abetting involuntary servitude may face up to 40 years in prison, Fulcher said.
Another landmark for migrant workers was the establishment of a Farmworkers Council in the Department of Administration to advocate the rights of farmworkers.
lo rewrit^ the. health laws, a joint conference committee decided to require inspections of housing in which 13 or more peq)le lived. Fulcher said a study commission on the health laws had recommended inspections for all housing, while the House agre^ to require it for housing with 10 or more people, including dependents.
It isnt any less important to have sanitary conditions for one person than it is for 10, he said. That was the one area where we could have seen the greatest improvement the fastest.
Another controversial issue was the licensing and regulation of midwives. Practitioners said efforts to require that they be supervised by doctors would effectively prevent at-home births, while supporters of regulations said Uiey wanted to be sure pregnant women got quality care.
The resulting compromise
requires that midwives be licensed and work in conjunction with a physician.
Besides strengthening the migrant sanitation laws, the recodification tightened laws governing communicable diseases including veoeral disease and tuberculosis, enlarged the powers of local health directors to embargo and destroy items that are
adulterated or misbranded, and added mandatory rabies shots for cats. It also requires that impounded animals be held 72 hours before being sold or given to licensed research iacmties.
Child support, mental health and day care were among other areas with significant legislation.
Drivers, Workers Benefit By Changes
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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina drivers and workers can afford to be a little less careful thanks to insurance bills passed by the General Assembly this session, but legislators say industry also made out well.
Drivers with clean records who are caught speeding 10 mph or less over the posted limit are now exempt from insurance points, as long as the violation was not in a school zone. And the Legislature enacted a law allowing up to $200 in fend-er-bender accidents without increased insurance premiums. Under previous laws, rates could increase up to 40 percent with such driving infractions.
Insurance Commissioner John Ingram said the changes would cost each driver about $I in premiums as insurance companies made up for their losses.
For businesses, the biggest improvement came with legislation allowing insurance companies to offer discounts
in workers compensation j coverage, Ingram said.
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I think it (the 1983 session) will be remembered for returning the state employees and teachers raises and for filling in some of the gaps in aid to the aged and handicapped," said Rep. Allen Barbee, D-Nash.
The budget contained money to raise state workers salaries by 5 percent, to raise legislators salaries by 10 percent in 1985, to raise the governors salary by 47 percent in 1985 and to establish a retirement and medical benefit .system for lawmakers.
Barbee said the General Assembly made a great contribution to the state by finding enou^ money to match all the available federal funds for highways.
Green said the session was lengthened and made difficult, however, because Hunt oppc^ a general tax increase and offered no money-raising alternatives.
The people couldnt bring themselves to vote for taxes until they had agonized over it long enough, Green said.
Few leg&ators cared to remember the tax package they passed to raise an ackUtional $219.2 million next year. The money would come from higher taxes on new and used cars, video gam^, alcohol for mixed drinks, accelerated corporate taxes and repeal of the $200 interest exemption on income taxes.
They also approved a law giving counties the authority to raise the sales tax by one-half cent to generate money for public school buildings and water and sewer facilities.
We (raised money) with what I felt was a fair tax increase," said Rep. Dwight Quinn, D-Cabarrus, House Finance Committee
chairman. I dont see any major tax reform in the near future. So long as the economy stays healthy well beallri^t.
Lawmakers said that one of their biggest disappoint
ments was failing to get a hazardous waste bill enacted, which represented somewhat of a (tefeat for Hunt also. The Legislature adjourned Friday after two conference committees
failed to reach a compromise.
Thats ie area weve talked about the most but done the least with, said Rep. Martin Lancaster, D-Wayne.
Tax Changes Will Raise $230 Million In Revenue
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - North Carolinians may remember the General Assembly each time they play a video game, swallow a mixed drink or buy a new car because lawmakers this year raised the taxes on each of those items.
The tax increases were part of a $219.2 million a year compromise to balance the 1983-85 state budget. The tax plan was approved late in the session, at the urging of a 14-member conference committee.
Another major tax bill, allowing counties to raise the sales tax by one-half cent to repair public schools and expand water and sewer facilities, was approved during the final days of the session. It also will allow five counties and three cities to levy a tax on motel room rent.
The budget-balancing package will levy a $15 per machine tax on video games, raise the tax on liquor purchased by bars and restaurants from $10 a gallon to ^5, raise the price of mixed drink permits, lift the 2 percent sales tax ceiling on new cars and boats from $120 to $300 and for the first time levy a sales tax on used car sales and trade-ins.
Other parts of the bill raise the cost of a motor carrier fuel tax sticker from $l to $10, lift the price of annual car license registration from $16 to $20, repeal the $200 income tax exclusion for interest earnings, accelerate corporate tax payments for some companies and levy a sales tax on vacation home rentals.
Money-raising ideas rejected by the conference committee included a bill to reduc the discount to retailers for collecting sales taxes and one to raise the tax on liq^ior and wine by one-third and the tax on beer by one-half.
The sales tax bill will generate $104.2 million this fiscal year to help financially pressed
local governments fund capital projects. Money from the tax increase will be distributed according to population, a change designed to benefit rural counties.
For the first five years, 40 percent of the counties money must go for public school iMiildings and 40 percent of the cities money goes to water and sewer projects. Those percentages drop to 30 percent for the , following five years and there are no spending! requirements after that.
Local governments could petition the state for more flexibility in spending the money.
The rest of the package was designed to help some areas raise money to attract tourists or control beach erosion. It would let the counties of Mecklenburg, Buncombe, Haywood, New | Hanover and Forsyth and the cities of Ocean Isle Beach, Topsail Beach and Surf City levy a motel room tax.
During sales tax negotiations, lawmakers ' rejected the idea of raising the sales tax statewide while phasing out the food tax. They ^ said it would be too costly and politically impossible to eliminate the food tax.
To avoid a statewide loss of $7 million in . property tax revenues, the Legislature clarified a 1981 law offering companies a tax break for installing air-pollution equipment inside their plants.
The 1981 law was aimed at encouraging cotton mills to install equipment to reduce cotton dust and protect workers from brown lung disease. But loopholes allowed other industries, including utilities with nuclear power plants, to take advantage of the deduction.
The bill enacted this session makes it clear the tax break is limited to textile manufacturers.
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CAROLINA EAST MALL GREENVILLE, N.C.
No. r Sits idle These Days
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPl) It occupies a spot in the driveway outside the governors mansion, but aides say No. 1 - a 17-foot-long, gas-guzzling automobile -gets little use because its not'Gov. Jim Jlunts style.
The chauffeur-driven No. 1 once was the de rigueur mode of transportation for North Carolinas governors.
Every governor has had a fancy car, said John Harden, press aide for Gov Gregg Cherry in the late 1940s. It has been a long-standing practice
But the present edition of No. 1, a 1977 Cadlac Fleetwood, gets lUtle use in a trend begun by former Gov. Jim Holshouser during gasoline shortages in 1973. Holshouser rarely rode in the limousine after that, instead favoring a fuel-saving compact.
Nevertheless, Holshouser traded a lim
ousine that dated from Gov. Dan Moores administration for the present model, which cost $15,400.
Hunt has continued the practice of avoiding the limo, usually relying on an unmarked state Highway Patrol cruiser for tran^rtatkm. As a result. No. 1 has less than 10,000 miles on the odometer.
There was a time when citizens expected their governor to ride in fine fashion, said Hunt spokesman Brent Hackney. I dont think they expect that anymore.
Hackney said he last remembers Hunt using No. 1 in Januaiy when the governor rode from the mansion to the Legislative Building for the State of the State speech.
I dont think most governors today are comfortable traveling around in grandiose cars, Hackney said. I know this governor is not. Its just not part of
his make up.
The car, which gets about 17 miles a gallon on the hi^way, is used mostly to ferry visiting dignitaries and industrialists.
Last week, for example, retired Navy Adm. Hyman Rickover used the limousine for a trip to Durham to tour the North Carolina School of Math and Sciences.
But when gasoline was cheap and American cars were extravagant with steel and engine size, the limousine saw almost daily use and was a familiar sight in towns across the state.
During tours of the state, former Gov. Robert Scott would stop at country stores, take children for a spin and present them with No. 1 ridership certificates.
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Federal Drug Officer Says Law Forces Break In Ties With State
WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPl) - The federal governments chief drug enforcement officer in southeastern North Carolina Mys his agency will break its ties with state courts and district attorneys because of a new state law giving criminal defendants access to confidential information about their cases.
In an intei^iew published Saturday, Michael Grimes said he agreed with local district attorneys who believe the law will make it impossible to prosecute drug cases in state courts.
We cant take a chance that the confidential information we collect will be turned over to defendants, and that means we just cant work with the state anymore, he said.
In The State
Doster Heads Press Association
ASHEVILLE - Joe Doster, publisher of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel, was elected president of the North Carolina Press Association Saturday. Doster succeeds James E. Milligan of the Laurinburg Exchange.
Hal Tanner Sr. of the Goldsboro News-Argus was elected vice president during the groups llOth annual convention.
New directors elected were Robert Benson, Greensboro Daily News and Record; Fletcher Good IV of the Elkin Tribune; and Ken Wilson of the Waynesville Mountaineer.
Audit Calls For $798,984 Refund
PINEHURST - An audit by the Department of Human Resources has ted to a recommendation that Sandhills Mental Health Center repay the state $798,984 in alleged improperly used funds.
The audit turned up allegations of conflicts of interest involving former center director Steven Dingfelder and bookkeeping arrangements that allowd the center to keep on hand more money than state regulations allowed.
The audit report raised quosUons about arrangements between the center and two other organizations. Growth Institute Inc., a for-profit company offering psychiatric counseling services similar to those of the center, and Sandhills Mental Health Development Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization which acquired property and leased it to the center.
Police Arrest 14 In Greensboro
GREENSBORO - Greensboro police have arrested 14 of 26 suspects in a cocaine and heroin roundup culminating a three-month undercover investigation known as Operation April.
Those arrested, all Greensboro residents, will face 109 felony charges, of which all but 18 involved heroin and cocaine. The rest were LSD, marijuana and hashish charges, plus one larceny count.
Man Changes Plea In Drowning
KENANSVILCe - Zachary Justin Beard, 25, of Davenport, Iowa, has pleaded guilty in Duplin County Superior Court to second-decree murder in the drowning of Jacksonville police officer William T. Whitehead.
In February, Beard and William B. Payne, 23, of Philadelphia, were charged with first-degree murder in the May 28,1981, death of Whitehead. Beard and Payne entered pleas of not guilty after their arrests.
Whiteheads handcuffed body was found in the New River near Jacksonville.
Plane Makes Emergency Landing
WINSTON-SALEM - A small plane landed on its belly, Friday night at Winston-Salems Smith-Rejmolds Airport after problems with its landing gear, police said. None of the six peale aboard was injured.
The pilot of the Super Kingair plane. Cal Readinger of Philadelphia, said that just after takeoff the planes landing gear failed to retract properly. He said the plane circled the airport for about 20 minutes while trying to manually force the landing gear back down. When those attempts failed, Readinger was forced to land the plane without its landing gear.
Readinger, a crewman and four passengers were en route* to Philadelphia after a business trip in Winston-Salem.
Heat Doesn't Worry Ice Plant Manager
FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Most peale in North Carolina are suffering from the heat, but Rusty Callahan is enjoying every minute of it.
Callahan, you see, is the manager of the Home Ice Co. This is his time of the year.
Its just about as crazy as it can go, Callahan said. Everytody wants ice. Restaurants cant keep up; hotels cant keep up; convenience stores cant keep up; the business is really booming with this weather.
Callahans plant is capable of producing 87 tons of ice a day, and he said its taking all of that ice to keep up with the demand.
Were producing everything we can make right
now, Callahan said. Its not unusual for hotels to buy 500 to 1,000 pounds a day. We even have one that ordered 1,500 pounds today.
Were in production and delivery around the clock. Weve been delivering ice at midnight. If the stores are open, were out there.
Even the construction crews are (King more ice.
Usually theyll come in and fill up those big coolers three times a week, but now they are filling up with fresh ice every day, Callahan said. Its just too hot. The ice doesnt last as long. Callahan said hes enjoying his good fortune while it lasts, because, in the ice business, there is a definite season to the work.
The law passed by the General Assembly requires the state to divulge in written or recorded form the substance of any oral statements that were made by defendants.
District attorneys have told Gov. Jim Hunt the law will prohibit them and investigators from protecting the identities of their confidential informants. Grimes said that without such informants, building cases against drug rings will be impossible.
If they know were taking cases into state court under this law, the information is going to stop, Grimes said. Ive already had calls from imformants on pending cases who were concerned, and I can make no guarantees that we can protect them.
Grimes said the Drug Enforcement Administration routinely turns its cases over to the state for prosecution. One recent case, the Gateway probe of drug smuggling through Brunswick County, was conducted by the DEA and prosecuted by the state. That case resulted in the conviction of Brunswick County Sheriff Herman Strong.
With the new law, that sharing will end. Grimes said. He said the law also means local school boards no longer will be eligible for profits from seized property and forfeited bonds because state prosecutors no longer will handle the cases.
Anything now seized by the DEA will be kept by the DEA, disposed of federally, and the money will go into federal coffers - the general fund. Grimes said. It wont even come back to the DEA to help fight drugs.
Samuel Currin, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, said the law hurts efforts to fight drug smugglers at a time when North Carolina is getting a reputation of being tough on drug smugglers.
Currin said he may end up appointing state district attorneys as federal prosecutors to try drug violations in federal court. .
Rep. William T. Watkins, D-Granville, added the amendment to which Grimes objects to a bill introduced by Rep. William T. Blue, D-Wake.
Blue, who said his initial bill was designed only to codify several rulings by the North Carolina Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court, has said Watkins amendment will not have the effects prosecutors have predicted because existing state law gives district attorneys the authority to ask judges for protective orders to shield their informants.
Crash Survivors Appealing Suit
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Attorneys for two survivors of the 1974 Eastern Airlines jet crash near Charlotte say they will take their case to the U.S. Supreme Court.
The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Va., this month reversed a $4.1 million jury award to the two survivors.
Gary Hemric of Charlotte, one of the plaintiffs attorneys, asked the appeals court Friday to stay its decision pending the filing of a petition requesting Supreme Court review.
Hemric said he and Washington lawyer Robert Smiley III have 90 days from the July 8 appeals court ruling to file the petition.
This action by plaintiffs is not being taken frivolously or merely for the purpose of delay, the three-page motion seeking the delay said. The issues to be addressed in the petition to the U.S. Supreme Court do present substantial questions of justice.
The motion also mentions the contentions the lawyers intend to present to the Supreme Court.
One such contention is that the appeals courts 5-4 decision to rehear the case was not by a majority of the 10 appeals court judges as required by law. One of the 10 judges disqualified himself from the hearing.
In November 1979, after a 16-day trial, a U.S. District Court jury in Charlotte awarded $3,027,500 to Richard Arnold IV of Portland, Ore., and $1,137,500 to Francis Mihalek of Charleston, S.C.
This months appeals court ruling reversed a 1982 4th Circuit decision by a three-judge panel upholding the $4.1 million jury award. The panel also reversed a $797,000 award to Helen Weston, widow of a crash victim.
The appeals court said the award to Arnold and Mihalek was reveresed partly for reasons set out in the panels dissenting opinion, which citid improper conduct by the survivors attorneys.
Eastern contends the plaintiffs attorneys improperly appealed to the jury for sympathy and contrasted the victims poverty with the airlines financial assets.
The appeals court also ruled that Eastern and its insurance carriers were improperly linked as defendants. The ruling said that knowledge of Easterns insurance coverage ... implanted in the minds of the jury resulted in prejudice.
The lawsuit by Arnold, Mihalek and Weston was the last one outstanding from the DC-9 crash that killed 72 of the 82 people aboard. Of 75 other claimes, 74 were settled out of court. One was tried in Charleston, S.C., where a jury awarded $550,000 to the estate of a passenger who was killed.
Rapid Rise In College Costs
WASHINGTON (API -College costs are increasing at an annual rate of 9 to 10 percent, three times the general rate of inflation, according to the American Council on Education.
The council reported that it will cost students $4,618 to attend a typical public college this fall and $8,939 to attend a private university.
The report said private colleges were trying to recoup from a period of hi^ inflation in the late 1970s and early 1980s that forced these institutions to defer pay raises and construction.
State budget cuts has forced public colleges to raise tuition, the report said.
Colorado has the highest average elevation of any state in the United States -16,800 feet. According to the Rand McNally Road Atlas, this is because the state has 53 mountain peaks above 14,000 feet elevation. Delaware has the lowest average elevation of any state in the United States -just 60 feet.
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A 16-The DaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 4,1963
- V. ^
Adopt-A-Pet
'H.'W''
Engineer ^ Cites CP&L Shutdown
The Adopt-a-Pet of the Week is a 4-month-old black female kitten, good with children and dogs. 757-3681.
Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following;
An 8-week-old black female kitten, litter-trained; a neutered male gray cat, litter-trained, has shots: a ^ayed female Irish setter, house-trained and shots; a spayed female part-miniature Doberman pinscher, house-trained, has shots; a spayed female part-Labrador retriever, house-trained, has shots; a female white German shepherd; a spayed female part-German shepherd, has shots; a female 6-month-oId black-with-brown German shepherd. Humane Society, 756-1268.
Two white kittens 9 weeks old - one male, one female. 756-3243.
A 6-week-old part-German shepherd. 757-1881.
A golden hamster about 8 months old, with cage. 756-7939.
Four 6-week-old kittens - one black and white, one orange and white, one orange, and one calico. 756-1415.
A 7-month-oId white and brown male shepherd-lab combination named Prancer. 752-7582.
A red Irish setter-shepherd combination, very friendly. 756-5656.
Two 6-week-old hunting puppies - one male, one female; an orange male 3-month-old kitten; a 3-month-old solid white female kitten. Humane Society, 756-3251.
Black kittens with green eyes, 8 weeks old, litter-trained. 752-3920.
Three 6-week-old male and one female part lapsa-opsa puppies, shaggy, white with dark brown spots. Will be small house dogs, 758-4846,
Need indoor home for two 4-year-old declawed cats. Male is a champagne-colored newtered full Persian. Female is part-Persian with silver and gray markings. Need home together. 756-5772.
Lost 9-week-old female yellow retriever puppy, 758-7427.
Two white and one yellow tabby 8-week-old kittens, 756-6585.
Lost 6-week-old gray collie puppy, 756-9280.
Six 8-week-old mongrel hound dogs, three male and three female, mixed colors. Call 752-6903.
One 6-month-old male solid white dog. Part pit bull, great watch dog, all shots. Call 752-6662, after 4 p.m.
An 8-week-old collie shepherd male, friendly and gentle. 758-0097.
A male 3-month gray cat. Call 756-0262.
A Mam& cat and three kittens. CaU 758-5569.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -An avoidable shutdown of the Brunswick Nuclear Plant for 78 days last summer raised Carolina Power & Lights expenses by $26.5 million, an engineer has told the state Utilities Commission.
Thomas S. Lam, an engineer with the commissions Public Staff, said at a rate hearing Thursday that CP&L admitted the shutdown of two of the Southport plant units was avoidable.
The 78 avoidable days of the outage resulted in avoidable fuel expenses of approximately $26.5 million, Lam said.
The added expenses resulted from replacing lost nuclear capacity with costly coal-fired power and power purchased from other utilities.
The shutdown began after the discovery that CP&L had failed to test certain safety systems at the plant. Tests and an overall review of the safety testing program were conducted after the shutdown.
Lam noted the company had admitted violations stemming from the missed tests in a filing with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which has. proposed fining CP&L $600,000.
CP&L is seeking a $165 million rate increase, which would boost the typical customers bill 17 percent to $74.36, an increase of $10.82 a month. The typical customer uses 1,000 kilowatt hours a month.
The increase will cover construction financing costs for Unit 1 of the Shearon Harris Nuclear Plant now under construction in Wake County and the recently completed Unit 1 of the Mayo coal-fired plant.
The company has defended its proposed increase, saying it hasnt had a significant rate increase since December 1981.
Smo
/enfezi
To place an anfmai for free adoptfon throu^ this column, Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage,
published tree of charge each St 756-4867; Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; Barbara Haddock, 752-9922; or Carol Tyer, 752-6166.
Venezuela on July 24, 1783. By the time of his death in 1830, he had led his nation to freedom, as well as five others: Colombia, Panama, Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia, which was named for him when it was created in 1825.
Report Leaves Answers Open
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Duke Power Co.s report to the state Utilities Commission on the electrocution of a Charlotte youth does not say why the company failed to fix a downed power line for four days after being notified.
Robert McCord Jr., 17, died Monday night when he picked up the downed line while hunting blackberries with a friend. Duke officials have acknowledged that the company had been told about the line four days before.
But a three-paragraph report to the Utilities Commission provides no information that wasnt already known about the accident. #
Our initial investigation reveals that the electrical line involved had been knocked down by a Caterpillar backhoe operated by an employee of Floyd King and Sons, the report said in part.
Officials of Floyd King and Sons of Matthews said they called Duke to report the July 14 mishap.
Duke chairman Bill Lee said Friday the full investigation still is not complete because it is a very complex series of events.
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Double Coupons Tuesday, July 26, and Wednesday, July 27, 1983 only, on all food orders $10.00 or more. Manufacturers coupons will be redeemed for double the face value on purchase of the product as stated. Restrictions: Redemption value may not exceed purchase price. Maximum face value allowed before doubling is 50^ Coupons over S0 may be redeemed for face value only. No cigarette, drink, free item coupons or trial sizes eligible for double value. Limit 15 coupons per customer per day. Limit one coupon per item per customer. No rainchecks available during the special double coupon days.
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Byner, Baker Lead Prate Backfeld
By JIMMY DUPREE Reflector ^rts Writer
When Art Baker accepted the position of offensive coordinator and associate head coach at East Carolina University, he inherited a backfield of experienced starters and reserves full of potential.
Then it was time to recruit.
There, too, he managed one the Pirates most successful campaigns, signing highly touted Bubba Waters of Bath and Terry Paige of WhitevUle.
Waters and Paige were both highly recruited nationally, Baker said. They could be the two best backs to come to ECU at the same time. They could develop quickly, but itll be awefully hard for them to come in a play a lot. Our offense is rather complex, so it takes a white to get used to it.
Senior fullback Ernest Byner and sophomore tailback Tony Baker lead the ECU backfield, with experienced reserve juniors Reggie Branch and Jimmy Waldon challenging for playing time.
Baker (5-10,175) averaged 6.6 yards per carry in 1982 while running for 82.7 a game. Byner carried in six touchdowns, averaged 5.5 yards a carry and raced for a season-high 180 yards against William and Mary.
When Byner came out of Baldwin High School in Milledgeville, Ga., his accomplishments had been ovehadowed by a back in a nearby school Herschel Walker. But the Pirate coaches have been satisfied with his progress.
Ernest Byner could play for anyone in the country, Baker said. His ^>eed is not great, but its deceptive. The thing about Byner is that he will not go down easy. Hes a smart runner and very disciplined.
Baker was thrust into action a year ago when injuries plagued the Pirate starting corps, but he responded with performances beyond the coaches expectations.
Its exceptional to know that youll have your leading rusher for three more years, Baker said. "If he were a little bigger, theres no telling how far he could go. Hes one of the best backs Ive seen at 5-10.
Walden and Branch give us two-deep at both positions. Theres not much difference between those two and the starters. I would feel comfortable no matter which ones are in there. Freshman Pat Bowens (5-10, 195) had an excellant spring according to Baker and will be counted on at fullback. Sophomore tailback Bubba Bunn (5-10, 190) remains an academic
(Please turn to page B-3)
Earnest Byner
Counterfeit Scheme Linked To Get Sales
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) - Investigators tracing the source of counterfeit $100 bills also turned up allegations of gun sales to Third World countries, and of crimes including drug violations andinsurance fraud, court documents show,
A long affidavit describing those allegations was used to back up a request to wiretap the telephone of Dr. Billy A. Cannon, the former Louisiana State University and professional football star who pleaded guilty in a $6 million counterfeiting case.
The report quoted information compiled by Secret Service agents based on undercover investigations, confidential informants and other law enforcement agencies.
Mentioned throughout the report are the names of Cannon, who pleaded guilty July 15 to conspiracy to counterfeit $100 bills, and others charged in the case.
Cannon is free on $100,000 personal recognizance bond; Charles Whitfield of Ponce de Leon, Fla., is being held on $500,000 bond, William Glascock of Pensacola, Fla., on $100,000 bond and Timothy Melancon of Thibodaux, La., on $2.5 million bond.
After reviewing the document released
Friday. U.S. District Judge Frank J Polozola authorized wiretaps June 13 and 17 on lines to six telephones - three in Cannons orthodontia office and three at Asian International Ltd.. where two of the men charged in the case were arrested.
Other court papers indicate that more wiretaps may have been authorized and many tape recordings made from them, then sealed by the court to prevent release of any information.
Due to the sheer numbers of the tapes, it is requested that the court order the tapes be sealed by the Secret Service, said a motion filed by the U.S. Attorneys Office.
The affidavit released Friday recounts at length the investigations progress from isolated buys of phony $100 bills to a wide-ranging probe as more and more people were arrested - some agreeing to give information in plea bargains - and confidential informants became involved.
It described Whitfield as a drug dealer who had some counterfeit money.
Whitfield was using the name Oscar Olsen and was partner in Asian International with a man named Norm Bartlett, the affidavit alleged.lond, Ruiz Win WhenlTourney
Catherine Land took the championship of the girls 14-and-under division and David Ruiz captured the boys 12-and-under in the Wheat First Securities/Greenville Recreation and Parks Department Junior Tennis Tournament Saturday at the River Birch Tennis Center.
Land won the title when Kelly Wall, also of Greenville, was forced to retire in the second set. Land taken the first set 6-3.
Ruis defeated Ako Barnes of Greensboro 6-2,6-2 for the title.
Andrea Byms of Kinston took the girls 12-and-under championship when Lauren Dunlap of Greenville retired at 2-1 in the second set. Temperatures reaching over 95 degrees plagued the participants throu^out the tournament, which is sanctioned by the USTA.
Summary;
GIRLS 12
Andrea Byrns (Kinston) d. Lauren Dunlap (Greenville), 6-3,2-1. retired.
GIRI^M
Catherine Land (Greenville) d. Kelly Wall (GreenvBle),6-3. retired.
GDU^ll
iiaura Rots (CaWWW '^'Wssy vFniJher (Washington), 64), 64.
GIRLS II
Susan Muwell (Moyock) d. Carol Jo Hiner (Greenville), 6-1,6-1.
B0YS12
David Ruiz (Greenville) d. Ako Barnes (Greensixiro), 62,62.
BOYS 14
David Hutson (Durham) d. Sonny Shields (New Bern). 64). 60.
BOYS 16
Craig Stone (Raleigh) d. Clay Jackson (Greenville). 64.61.
BOYS II
Greg Loyd (Raleigh) d Ray Gold (Kinston), 64, 2-6, 63.
Sutton Takes Six-Shot Lead In Anheuser-Busch Golf Classic
Boys 12-year-old winner David Ruiz returns a shot
WILLIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) - Hal Sutton said the big, six-shot lead he holds going into Sundays final round of the $350,000 Anheuser-Busch Golf Classic is comfortable, but far from decisive.
Six shots may seem like a lot, Sutton said after hed chipped in for an eagle-3 that served as the highli^t of his 2-under-par 69 in Saturdays third round.
"But there are some very good players right behind me. If they get it rolling and I let my tail feathers fly up a little bit, there could be a change, a real sudden change, in the golf tournament.
Im going to keep on trying to make birdies, hit the ball at the flag and see what I can do.
Sutton, golfs Rookie of the Year^last season and currently leading the PGA Tour in money-winnings, completed three rounds over the 6,746-yard Kingsmill Golf Club course in 201, 12 strokes under par.
With 18 holes to go in the chase for a $63,000 first prize, his leading margin matched the largest three-round lead of the season. His six-stroke advantage after two rounds also was the high for the year.
That big margin was cut to four shots at the turn, but Sutton birdied the lOth and 12th holes, then chipped in for the eagle-3 on the 15th and pulled away again.
Defending champion Calvin Peete declined to concede, however.
I never really count myself out until its over, said Peete, who one-putted 10 times in a round of 66 that lifted him into a tie for second at 207 with Payne Stewart. Too many things can happen in
18 holes of golf, Peete said, and pointed out he was seven shots behind going into the last round of the Atlanta Classic, which he won earlier this season.
Stewart also shot a 66 in the hot. sunny weather to gain his share of the No. 2 spot.
Phil Hancock and Scott Simpson were next at 208, seven strokes off the pace. Hancock had a 68 and Simpson 70.
Leonard Thompson and Tim Norris, each of whom shot 68, were at 209.
Lanny Wadkins, a Virginia native, rewarded a big gallery of "old friends, a lot of people 1 used to play golf with,
with a course-record, 8-under-par 63 that lifted him into a group at 210.
Wadkins, second to Sutton on the money-winning list, played the back nine in 29, scored an eagle and seven birdies, one-putted for a bogey and used only 24 strokes on the greens.
Theres still some big-money tournaments coming up. Wadkins said of the money-winning race, but if Sutton wins here, and I didnt do very good, then hed sure have a big edge.
Really and truly, no one got anything started early on. and tha| was fortunate for me, Sutton said.
Guidry, Kemp Pace Yanks In Victory Over Royals
NEW YORK (AP) - Ron Guidry pitched a five-hitter and Steve Kemp went four-for-four to pace the New York Yankees to a 5-1 triumph over the Kansas City Royals Saturday night.
Guidry, 12-5, joined Texas Rick Honeycutt and Clevelands Rick Sutcliffe as the top winners in the American League.
Guidry struck out eight and walked none in pitching his ninth complete game of the season. He now owns a 10-2 career mark against Kansas City.
The Yankees touched Larry Gura, 11-6, for a run in the first inning on a two-out double by Lou Piniella and a single by
Don Baylor.
New York made it 3-0 in the fourth when Kemp, who had doubled in the second inning, singled to right and Jerry Mumphrey walked. Andre Robertson and Burt Campaneris each delivered run-scoring singles.
In the fifth, Piniella singled, Baylor doubled, and Steve Balboni followed with a sacrifice fly. Kemp then singled home Baylor.
No Royal had advanced past second base until Leon Roberts drilled his third home run of the season with two outs in the seventh. It was the first home run Guidry had allowed in 71-3 innings.
Corey Pickos
Record Holder Passes Another Milestone
By JIMMY DUPREE Reflector Sports Writer Seven trick skiers have scored over 8,000 points in competition; two have scored 9,000, but only Cory Pickos has topped the mystical 10,000-point barrier in a tournament.
Pickos was at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Parker Overton near Grimesland this week coaching junior girls trick record holder Kristi Overton.
When you get the opportunity to train with the best, youve got to take it, Parker Overton said. Cory is too modest; hes far above the rest of the trick skiers.
Competition consists of two 20-second sets with a point value assigned to each trick. Pickos said he likes to work in 20 tricks per pass.
Thats a trick a second so I really have to concentrate on speed as well as the move itself, Pickos said.
Pupil Kristi Ovarton rounds a gate in slalom practice < ' \
Fifteen years of practice and competition paid off June 4 at the Greater Sarasota 3-Round Trick Tournament when he improved his own world record with a score of 10,350. Setting the record is nothing new, though; hes done it 12 times already.
Pickos began skiing at the age of four and entered his first tournament two years later. He first took the trick record in 1977 at the age of 13. No one has had it since.
He repeated the 10,000-point feat at the Masters Tournament held July 9-10 at Callaway Gardens in Pine Mountain, Ga. The 30 top skiers from around the world compete in the by invitation Masters, and Pickos chilled the crowd with his performance. The ESPN will broadcast the Masters competition" featuring Pickos and Kristi Overton July 30. (
The people were really yelling when I came around for the second set, Pickos said. I enjoy hearing people get into what Im doing.
Its like a job; I have to work at it every day. Its not like playing around. But the rewards make it all worthwhile - you get respect from your peers, winning gives you a good feeling and there are other things..
Other things includes the boat he won for setting a world record as well as equipment contracts with suppliers.
Its a lot of work, but I cant think of anything else Id rather be doing, Pickos said. Someday I might get tired of (competition), but not anytime soon. Its a good feeling to know youre the best at something.
Pickos currently lives in Eagle Lake, Fla., and attends Polk Community College. He operates a ski school but is considering a medical career because I realize 1 cant do this forever.
Pickos travels to Sweden the first weekend in September as a member of the United States Team in the World Tournament.
Right now I have the drive to keep going, Pickos said. Im not sure how high I can go, but Im witling to try. As long as I have a good time at it Ill keep going.;
(Photos By Angela Lingerfelt)
Braves Rally By Phils Despite Homers
ATLANTA (APi -Philadelphia third baseman Mike Schmidt committed a pivotal throwing error in the ninth inning and ,AI Holland later walked Bob Watson with the bases loaded, giving the Atlanta Braves a 6-5 victory Saturday over the Phillies.
Schmidt drove in four runs, three with his second homer of the game and 21st of the season, a seventh-inning blast that pulled the Phils into a 5-5 tie.
But in the bottom of the ninth, after Rafael Ramirez led off with a single off Willie Hernandez. 4-3, Schmidt fielded Jerry Roysters sacrifice bunt and threw the ball into center field trying for the force at second. It was his second crucial error of the game.
Holland replaced Hernandez, walked Dale Murphy intentionally to load the bases and struck out Bob Homer before Watson walked
on a high 3-1 pitch for his fourth run batted in of the game. The victory went to reliever Rick Camp, 8-8.
Schmidts seventh-inning blast was his 370th career homer, moving him into a t% for 26th place on the all-time list with Gil Hodges. Bob Dernier and Gary Matthews drew walks from starter Ken Dayley before Schmidt pounded reliever Steve Bedrosians 1-2 pitch over the left-center field fence.
Can't Bear To Watch
Philadelphia slugger Mike Schmidt jogs home Saturday after his second homer against the Atlanta Braves Saturday in the seventh inning.
Braves pitcher Steve Bedrosian shoves his cap over his eyes waiting for Schmidt to reach home. (AP Laserphoto)
Aggressive Play Gives Thomsen Baitimore Lead
BALTIMORE (AP) - Jeff Thomsen became more aggressive after a couple of early bogies, shot a 4-under-par 66 and took the third-round lead Saturday in the $200,000 Greater Baltimore Open golf tournament.
Thomsen, who had 206 after three rounds, led by one stroke over Russ Cochran, a former winner in the Tournament Players Series, who also had a 66 on Saturday, and Frank Conner, the leader at the halfway mark, who fired a 69.
Veteran George Archer, a former winner of the Masters, stood alone at 208 after turning in a 65 that included an eagle, with Joev Sindelar,
Downing's Streak Ends
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) -Californias Brian Downing, who set an American Lea^e record for most consecutive errorless games by an outfielder Thursday night, had his 244-game streak halted in the sixth inning of Friday nights game with the Detroit Tigers.
Downings misplay of a line drive by Chet Lemon allowed two runs to score and was pivotal in the Angels 13-11 loss.
"I got there (to the ball) but didnt make the play. It doesn't matter. The damage is done, said Downing.
He broke A1 Kalines record of 242 straight errorless games by being flawless in both ends of Thursdays twi-night doubleheader.
During his streak, which began on .May 25.1981, Downing handled 449 chances. He fell 22 games shy of the major league record held by Don Demeter of the Phillies (1962-1965).
r
Terry Snodgrass and Bob Tway tied at 209.
Mark Wiebe, who made the cut by one stroke, jumped into contention with a sparkling 63 to tie first-round leader Paul Oglesby at 210.
Wiebe had seven birdies without a bogie, while posting a record 63 on the new course of the Hillendale Country Club Course in suburban Phoenix, which was revised for the tournament.
The funny part of the round, said the 25-year-old Wiebe, who has failed at six qualifying schools, is that my back was bothering me on the practice range and I twinged from time to time. '
Thomsen birdied the first hole after starting the round two strokes off the lead, but bogies followed on the next two holes.
After that, said the 29-year-old Thomsen, 1 decided to become more aggressive and to try to get our
group to have a better pace. Thomsen eagled the 531-yard fifth hole, chipping in his third shot from 35 yards, and then rolled in birdie putts of 35 and six feet to close out the front nine in 3-under-par 32.
The eagle, Thomsen said, changed the whole momentum of what I was doing. Before that 1 had some anxiety after the bogies. Cochran, in the same threesome, followed 12 straight pars with four birdies in a row and pulled to within one stroke of his playing partner.
Third-rouod Korai o( the leMlen Sat-In the WO,000 GraWr Baltimore Open on the 6.641-yard, par 70 Hillendale Country aubcourie
Jeff Thomsen Russ Cochran Frank Conner George Archer Joey Sindelar Terry Snodgrass Bob Tway Mark Wiebe Paul Oglesby Jim Kane Kenny Knox Grif Moody Dave Canipe MikeSmitn Jimmy Paschal
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Watson, Murphy and Glenn Hubbard each homered for the Braves off Steve Carlton, who had given up cmly eight homers in 22 previous starts.
Carlton lasted (ly six innings, throwing 103 pitches in the 102-degree heat. He allowed 10 hits and fanned one batter, increasing his all-time major-Ieague strickeout mark to 3,588 - three more than Houstons Nolan Ryan.
Hubbard hit his sixth homer to left field in the second and Murphy lined his 2Ist of the year over the right field fence in the third. Homer doubled following Murphys shot and scored on Watsons single.
The Phillies had taken the lead on solo homers by Schmidt in the first and Kiko Garcia in the second. Watson hit his second homer into the left field seats with two out in the fifth after Homer was safe when his grounder went through Schmidt at third for an error.
PHmA ATLANTA
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Dernier r( 3 I 0 X) RRmrz ss S I 2 0
Matthws If 4 1 1 0 Royster If 4 0 2 0
Schmdt 3b 4 2 2 4 Murphy cf 4 I 1 I
TPerez lb 3 0 10 Horner 3b 5 2 1 0
JelU 2b 0 0 0 0 Watson Ib 3 12 4
Morgan 2b I 0 0 0 Harper rf 4 0 0 0
BDiaz c 5 0 2 0 Hubbrd 2b 4 I I I
Maddox cf 5 0 0 0 Benedict c 4 0 3 0
Holland p 0 0 0 0 Dayley p 2 0 0 0
Garcia 2b 3 I 2 f Bearosn p 0 0 0 0
Lefebvr ph I 0 0 0 Moore p 0 0 0 0
WHrndz p 0 0 0 0 Wshgtn ph I 0 0 0
VHayes rf 0 0 0 0 Camp p 0 0 0 0
DeJesus ss 3 0 0 0
Carlton p 2 0 10
Rose lb 2 0 0 0
Totals 35 S * 6 Totals 36 6 U 6
PtdladdphU .110 000 300-5
AtlanU 013 030 001-6
One oult when winning run scored. Game Winning RBI - Watson iSi E-Schmidt 2 LOB-Philadelphia 10. Atlanta 10 2B-Horner HR-Scnmidt 2 1211. Garcia i2i, Hubbard i6i. Murphy (211, Watson i2) SB-Royster 2 (7i, DeJesus (9) S-D^ley, Royster
Philadelphia
Carlton
WHerndez L.4-3 Holland AUanU Day Irosn Moore Camp W.8 8
H R ER BB SO
1-3
Dayley 613
Bedrosn 0 21110
1 2 3 1 0 0 I I
I 0 0 0 0 1
Bedrosian pitched to 3 baiters in 7th.
WHernandez pitched to 2 batters in 9th
WP-Dayley T-3 20 A-36,501
Pittsburgh.........5
San Froncisco 2
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Dave Parker was batting .241, wasnt hitting for power and had betxmie a platoon player a status not befitting a $1 million a year man.
Now, in ju^ three weeks, hes carried the surging Pittsburgh Pirates, winners of 11 of their last 13, to the top of the National League East standings.
Paricer drove in four runs with a triple and a two-run home run as the 'Pirates, helped by eight strong inning from Jose DeLeon in his major league debut, defeated the San Francisco Giants 5-2 Saturday. The Pirates are 13-3 since the All-Star break.
1 got a chance to do a lot of thinking during those three days, Parker said. 1 knew Id be putting a lot of pressure on myself. I had to sit down and analyze and get myself together.
Parker has raised his average to .265 since then and has become something of a Giants killer. He has 13 hits in 19 at-bats for a .684 average in his last five games against San Francisco, four of them Piratesvictories.
Less than a month ago, Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner said he was going to platoon a struggling Parker in right field.
I wanted him to sit back and take a look at things for a few days, Tanner said. I think it was good for him. I think it relaxed him.
"Parkers the kind of player that when he gets hot, you just grab hold of his shirttail and hold on.
DeLeon, 1-0, was recalled
from Hawaii of the Pacific Coast League (mly last week, but allowed the Giants just one hit in the final five innings he wMted. He struck out nine and walked four.
"He wasnt nervous at all, Tanner said. Even before the game, when we were going over the hitters, he was relaxed.
DeLeon received several loud ovations, including a standing ovation when he batted in theei^th.
It made me feel great, DeLeon said.
The Giants 2-3-4 hitters, Darrell Evans, Jack Qark and Jeff Leonard, went O-for-lO against DeLeon, striking out four times.
What impressed me was that when he got behind the hitters, he came back and got them, said Pirates pitching coach Harvey Haddix.
Giants Manager Frank Robinson, asked about DeLeons performance, said, I dont sit and evaluate other peoples players.
The Giants took a 1-0 lead in the third when loser Renie Martin, l-l, tripled and came home on Johnnie LeMasters double. Martin had entered the game the inning before to replace starter Bill Laskey, who left with tightness in bis right shoulder.
The Pirates came back to take a 3-1 lead in the third when Jason Thompson and Mike Easier walked, Parker lined a two-run RBI triple down the right field line and Tony Pena grounded out to score Parker.
The Giants made it 3-2 in the seventh on Max Venables double and an RBI ground out by Tom OMalley. But Parker came back in the bottom of the inning to drill a two-run
homer, his fifth of the seventh, following a single by Mike Easier.
The Pirates are 13-3 since the All-Star break.
SAN FRAN
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Game-Winning RBI-Parfcer (51. DP-San Francisco I, Pittnwrgh I. LOB-San Francisco 5. Pittsburg 11 2B-LeMasler 2. TPena 1, Morriaan. IB-RMartin. Venable. Parker. HR-Parker (5).
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BK-Urfcin, JDeLeon PB-TPena.
T-2:49 A-14,585
San Diego.........4
Chicago...........2
CHICAGO (AP)-It was by mutual consent that Eric Show didnt get to go the distance Saturday after allowing only four hits through ei^t innini^ as he hurled the San Diego Padres to a 4-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
I wasnt physically tired but my forearm started to tighten a bit, said Show, and it was hotter than heck out there.
Although the temperature didnt reach 100 degrees as it had Friday, it was close to 90 degrees on one of the muggiest days of the year.
They hit four balls sharply in the eighth inning and it was clear that I was losing a lot on the ball, said Show.
Padres Manager Dick Williams also considered the
humidity. We figured if one man got (Ni in the ninth wed have to yank him, Williams said. So why not get a pinch hitter for him and let The Count (John Montefusco) get some work?
If Show wasnt getting tired, I was, Williams added. He did a s^ job in that heat ahd humidity.
Terry Kennedy triggered a twoH)ut, two-run burst against Dickie Noles, 3^, in the fourth inning with his seventh homer of the year. Sixto Lezcano then walked and scored on a double by Garry Templeton.
Noles also was naUed for a pair of two-out runs in the seventh when Juan Bonilla walked. Show beat out an infield roller and Luis Salazar tripled into the ivy in right-center field.
Show, 10-6, was tagged for a fourth-inning run when Rem Cey doubled, was bunted to third scored on Keith Morelands sacrifice fly. Mel Hall hit his fifth homer of the year off Show in the ei^tb, then Montefusco pitched the ninth inning and earned bis third save.
SAN DIEGO
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CHICAGO
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SaoDtago 000 m 306-4
Chicago 006 111 116-2
Game-Winning RBI - TKeniie^ I6i. DP-Chlca| I. LOB-San Diego 5, Chicago 4. 2b-Templeton, Cey. 3B~ Salazar HR-TKemw^ (7i. MHall (5i. S-Johnstone. SF-Motand
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SanDlago
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Show Mntefsco S,3
NoesL>6
BnissUr
Campbell
T-2 29 A-32,224
6 2-3 6 11-3 0 I 0
2 2 3
0 0 0
3 2
1 1
Videotape Aids Permezel Lead
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Checking a videotape of her putting is paying off for Australian Karen Permezel, the leader after three rounds of the $200,000 Ladies Professional Golf Association Mayflower Classic.
I have not putted very well, said Permezel after her seven birdies Saturday gave her a 5-under-par 67 and a three-stroke lead over Donna Caponi and Lauren Howe.
Permezel, currently 109th on the tours money list, had a 9-under-par 207 for 54 holes as she bids for her first professional victory.
Ive made putts that I have not made, said Permezel, who opened the tournament with a pair of 70s. I saw video of my putting Wednesday. I was moving my head and right shoulder coming into the ball, declerating instead of accelerating.
The 67 was a career-low for Permezel, who learned golf playing a 9-hoIe sand green course in a hometown she described as a very small country town ... If you blink youll miss it.
Unlike the other leaders, Caponi is used to being at the front of a tournament going into the final round. But she discounted any advantage that experience might give her.
The girls Im playing with tomorrow are great players or they wouldnt be out on the tour, Caponi said. They played well to be in this
position. Ive got to go out there and beat the golf course. If you beat the golf course, you beat the players.
Howe, who shared the lead after the opening round and was alone at the top of the leader board after 36 holes, fell from the top with four consecutive bogeys on the back nine. After two consecutive rounds of 67, the 24-year-old finished with a 76.
1 was consistent today, except for my putting, said Howe, who needed three putts on three consecutive bogey holes.
After three days of temperatures as hi^ as 99, only seven women were under par at the 6,101-yard par 72 Country Club of Indianapolis course.
Jo Ann Washam, wpo shared the lead after the first day, was alone in fourth at 211, followed by Martha Nause, Vicki Tabor and Judy Clark at 215.
Permezel, a former Australian Amateur champion who qualified for the tour a year ago after leading the womens mini-tour, hasnt finished higher than a tie for 22nd this year.
The 25-year-old from Yackandandah a community of about 1,000 located 200 miles northeast of Melbourne - moved into the lead by leaving a bunker shot about two feet from the ci^ and then making the birdie putt on the 426-yard, par 5, 16th hole.
Permezel, who has missed the cut seven times this year and earned only $4,833 in 17 previous starts, then finished by making a 6-fo(^ birdie shot on 18 after hitting in with an 8-iron.
Clark began the day with an eagle on the 441-yard, pair 5 opening hole that lifted her to 5-under for the tournament. But, she ran into trouble with three bogeys on the front nine and had three more on the backside.
Howe, who qualified for the tour at 18 in 1978 and lost her LPGA card after only eaminj $1,965 in 24 events, had starti the third round at 10-under and had two bogeys and seven pars on the front side.
The longest putt I made on the front ws two feet, said Howe, who had her first birdie of the day with a 12-foot putt on the 403-yard, par 4, lOth hole.
She bogeyed the 13th, 14th 15th and 16th holes, but came back to post a birdie on the 17th.
Walking to the 17th tee, I said to myself, Are you going to let another one get away.
stupid?Howe said.
Caponi, winless since bringing her career total to 24 with five triumphs in 1981, was unable to make a charge as she had three bogeys and only one birdie on the front side.
Permezel, who started the third round in a three-way tie for third at 4-under, started with a 34 on the front and then added three birdies on the back.
The nine holes included birdie putts of 8 and 9 feet and a 15-footer she made to avoid a double bogey on the eighth hole.
Janet Coles, who began the round tied with Permezel and Washam, faded with a double bogey and three bogeys on the front nine. She finished with a 7-over-par 79 to end her title hopes.
Third-round icaret Saturday In the 1200,000 Ladles Proleutonal Golf Aaaoclatioas llayfloMr Omlc at tte 6,101-yard, par 71 Country Club of
70-7067-107
6767-76-210
6967-74-210
67-73-71-211
73-71-71-215 61-75-72-215 7266-74-215
74-71-71-216 74-71-71-216 74-7366-216 74-72-70-211
Lauii Peterson DalcEmeiing Donna white Betsy King Patty Rizzo Jane Lock Jan Stephenson
lyHUI s Stacy Beth Daniel KaUiy Whitworth Kathy Martin JaneBlaloek Janet Cotes JaneCrafler Connie ChUlemi ThereseHesskm Sandra Haynle MakoOkamolo Chris Johnson Kathy PosUewait Debbie Austin Kathy Hite Vicki Singleton LoriGartwcz Catherine Panton
Jeanette Kerr Laura Hurlbut Diane Dailey Mari McDougall
Vicki Fereon Marty Dicker Lori Huxhold
LeannCassaday Rose Jones Penny Pulz Kathm Young LynnStroney JudyEUis SueFogleman SueErfl Bonnie Lauer Barbara Mizrahie
74-7560-217 7075-72-217 72-7075-217
71-71-75-217
72-7075-217
71-77-70-218
72-73-73-211 72-73-73-218
75-7073-218
72-71-75-210
73-71-74-210 71-7077-210 71-73-75-219 716076-219
75-72-72-219
71-77-72-220
74-74-72-220 06-7075-220
72-71-77-220
72-7078-220
76-7669-221
74-73-74-221
75-72-74-221
7075-76-221
74-74-74-222
75-77-70-222
77-73-72-222
7076-70-222 707070-222 74-73-70-223 607076-223
7074-72-224
74-75-75-224 77-74-73-224 77-71-76-224 7072-76-224
75-72-77-224 75-7076-224
73-7260-225 77-74-74-225 75-75-73-225 707075-225
74-77-75-226 73-75-78-226 716075-226
7075-76-227
Karen I Lauren Howe Donna Caponi Jo Ann Washam Martha Nause Vicki Tabor -
Judy Clark Alice MUler Dot Germainn Barb Bunkowsky Janet Anderson
SavUpTo*400 OnALLIS-CHALMERS LAWN MOWERS
HENDIIIX-IIIUIIIIilLL
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707066-206 71-7066-207 67-7166-207 71-72-65-208 726068-209 706070-209 607070-209 75-7263-210 6073-71-210 69-7369-211 67-7569-211 707269-211 69-71-71-211 707071-211 75 7265-212
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Schatzeder Misses Complete Gom After Year
MONTREAL (AP) - Dan Schatzeder, the Montreal Expos pitcher, said he was tired, which is understandable when you havent started a game in more than a year.
"1 was tired, but in looking back 1 was frustrated I couldnt finish the game, said Schatzeder, who came within one out of a complete game. He scattered seven hits and, along with Doug Flynn, drove in two runs as the Expos recorded a 4-1 triumph over
the Houston Astros Saturday night."
Expos Manager Bill Virdon said Schatzeder would get another start next Thursday when Montreal faces St. Louis in a doubleheader.
Thats fine with me, said Schatzeder. I know its because we have some doubleheaders coming up and we need some starting help. Its not a permanent thing, but Im happy doing the job they put me out there for.
Schatzeder, 4-0, was pressed into service because Ray Burris was attending funeral services for his father. He had not started since July 2, 1982. His last victory as a starter was Aug. 18, 1981, when he was with the Detroit Tigers.
Schatzeder, who has a 4-0 career record against Houston, struck out two batters and walked three. He lost his shutout in the eighth inning when Tony Scott walked and Dickie Thon doubled. Jeff
Reardon picked up his 15th save with last-out relief.
The Expos batted around and scored three runs against Bob Knepper, 4-10, in the fourth inning. Gary Carter and Tim Wallach singled and, with one out, Flynn doubled past the outstretched glove of left fielder Jose Cruz for a run. And with the infield drawn in, Schatzeder bounced a single up the middle. Flynn added an RBI single in the eighth inning.
HOUSTON
abrbbi
T.Scolt cf 3 10 0 ^ilmn ph 10 0 0 Puhl rf 4 0 2 0
Thon ss 4 0 11
Garner 3b 4 0 0 0 Cruz If 4 0 10 Knight lb 4 0 10 Doran 2b 4 0 2-0 Bjorkmn c 3 0 0 0 Knepper p 1 0 0 0 Bass ph 10 0 0
Ruble p 0 0 0 0
Tolman ph 1 0 0 0 DSmith p 0 0 0 0 Walling ph 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 1 7 1
Houston Montreal
MONTREAL
ab r ta bi
Raines II 4 0 2 0
Wohifrd rf 4 0 0 0
Dawson rf 2 0 0 0
Oliver lb 4 0 0 0
Carter c 4 12 0
W allach 3b 4 1 3 0 ^ler ss 4 10 0
Flynn 2b 4 12 2
Schudr p 4 0 12 Reardon p 0 0 0 0
Totals 34 4 10 4
000 000 010- 1 000 300 Olx- 4
Game-Winning RBI - F'lynn i3i E-Garner. Thon DP-Houslon
LOB-Houston 9. Montreal 8 2B-F'lynn, Thon SB-Puhl 1131, Rainesi40i
IP H R ER BB SO
Houston
Knepper L.4-10 4 7 3 3 2 1
Ruble 3 1 0 0 0 0
DSmith 1 2 10 0 0
Montreal
Schatzeder W',4-0 8 2-3 7 113 2
Reardon S.15 1 3 0 0 0 0 0
T-2 13 A-28,992,
Cincinnati.........7
New York.........3
CINCINNATI (AP)-Eddie Milners hitting, like the weather, is sizzling hot.
The Cincinnati Reds' outfielder rapped four hits, scored three runs and drove in another Saturday night, fueling a 7-3 victory over the New York Mets.
Milner is 7-for-9 in his last two games, played in oppressively hot conditions in Riverfront Stadium.
Hes about as hot as the weather, said Reds Manager Russ Nixon.
Milner singled twice and doubled in his first three at-bats, coming around to score all three times as the' Reds grabbed a 6-1 lead after four innings. His double also drove in a run.
Dave Concepcion and Gary Redus knocked in two runs apiece to pace the Reds offense.
Every time 1 got on base, it seemed they were driving me ' in, said Milner, who is 21-for-49 in his last 13 games.
I was tired at the end of the
game."
Milner attributed his hitting spurt in part to his return to the lead-off spot in the lineup. Nixon has dropped Redus from the first spot to better use the rookies power, moving Milner back to the top of the lineup.
Now pitchers are trying to get me out, and theyre throwing fastballs, Milner said. When Im hitting the ball well, thats the best pitch for me to hit.
The only thing that detracted attention from Milner Saturday was a rubber chicken tossed through the stands by many of the 16,074 fans.
While thousands cheered, the chicken was flung around the third-base side of the stadium in the eighth inning, sending ushers scurrying to try to retrieve it. The chicken eventually landed on the field in front of the Mets dugout. Thousands of fans loudly chanted, We want the chicken.
The chicken was later tossed back by a Mets player, and thrown around the stands until an usher grabbed it.
The fans had a good time tonight, Nixon said. What the heck, let em loosen up a bit.
Reds starter Bruce Berenyi, 5-10, went 52-3 innings for his first victory since June 9. Berenyi struck out seven and walked five, including a base on balls to Tucker Ashford with the bases loaded in the fourth for the Mets first run,
Milner singled to start the Reds first and scored on Concepcions double for a 1-0 lead.
Nick Esasky tripled to lead off the second and scored the Reds second run on Ron Oesters sacrifice fly off
starter Tom Gorman, 0-4.
Cincinnati made it 3-0 in the third when Milner singled, stole second and took third on catcher Ron Hodges throwing error. He scored on Concepcions ground out.
The Reds scored three times in the fourth for a comfortable 6-1 lead. Oester doubled off reliever Scott Holman, Dann Bilardello walkedand Berenyi forced Bilardello at second. Milner doubled inside the first-base line to score Oester, and Concepcion was intentionally walked to load the bases. Redus then lined a single to left for two more runs.
The Mets scored a pair of runs in the seventh as Keith Hernandez doubled off reliever Bill Scherrer and George Foster drilled his 16th homer of the season to center field.
Esaskys RBI single in the seventh gave Cincinnati its final run.
NEW YORK
ab r h bi
Bailor ss 4 U I u Wilson ef 5 0 2 0 CDiaz p 0 0 0 0 KHrndz lb 4 I 2 0 F'oster If 4 2 12 Strwbry rf 4 0 0 0 Hodges c 3 0 10 Orliz c 10 10 Giles 2b 3 0 10 Ashford 3b 3 0 1 I Gorman p 1 0 0 o Staub ph Holman p Heep ph Swan p Bradley cf 10 0 0 Totals 35 3 10 3
10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0
CINCINNATI
ab r h bl
EMilner ef 5 3 4 1 Cncpcn ss 4 0 I 2 Redus II 4 0 12 Cedeno rf 3 110 Driessn lb 2 0 0 0
Esasky 3b 4 I 2 1
Oester 2b 3 111
Bilrdelo c 3 0 0 0
Berenyi p 210 0 Scherrer p 1 0 0 o Power p 10 0 0
Los Angeles 10
St. Louis...........5
ST LOUIS (AP) - Ken Landreux hit a grand-slam home run and Steve Yeager added a two-run single in a seven-run eighth inning that powered the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 10-5 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals Saturday night.
Landreaux hit his first career grand slam off reliever Bruce Sutter, who walked in a run after replacing rookie Dave Rucker.
Rucker, 1-1, who took over for starter John Stuper, gave up Dusty Bakers single and walked Pedro Guerrero, then Derrell Thomas was safe on Ozzie Smiths error to load the bases. Sutter came in and walked Mike Marshall to break a 3-3 tie before Yeager singled home two more runs.
Bill Russell then reached on a fielders choice and Sutter walked pinch-hitter Greg Brock and Steve Sax to reload the bases before Landreaux hit his ninth homer of the year.
Alejandro Pena, the Dodgers starting pitcher, hit his first major-league home run in the seventh inning. The Dodger pitcher allowed just three hits in 6 2-3 innings. Steve Howe, 4-5, was the winner in relief.
Totals 32 7 10 7
New York 000 100 200- 3
Cincinnati 111 300 lOx- 7
Game-WinningRBl - Concepcion i4i E-Hodges DP-New York 1, Cincin nati I LOB-New York 11, Cincinnati 7 2B-Concepcion, Oester. EMilner, KHernandez 3B-Esasky HR-Foster
116). SB-Cedeno 2 i8i, Giles il2i.
EMilner (22)SF-Oester
IP H R ER BB SO
New York
Gorman L,0^
Holman .Swan CDiaz Cincinnati Berenyi W.510 5 2-3 6 1 I Scherrer 2.3 3 2 2
Power
Hume 1 000
Powerpitched to one batter in 9th T-2 3.1 A-16,074
3 2 2 0
3 3 2 1
I I II
I 0 0 0 I
5 7
0 0
12-3 1 0 0 I I
0 0
LOS ANGLS
ab r b bl
SSax 2b 2 2 0 0 Landrx cf 5 12 4 Baker II 4 110 Guerrer 3b 3 1 12 l.ndstoy 3b 1 0 0 0 Monday rf 2 0 0 0 Thomas rf 2 1 1 0 MarshI lb 3 0 11 Yeager c 5 0 12 Russell ss 4 I I 0 Adson ss 10 0 0 APena p 3 2 11 SHowe p 0 0 0 0 Brock ph 0 10 0 Stewart p 0 Q 0 0 Totals 35 10 9 10
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 2 110
STLOUIS
abrbbi
LoSmith If 3 2 2 0 Rucker p 0 0 0 0 Sutter p JMartin p Uuirk ph Herr 2b VnSlyke cl 4 0 1 1 Hndrck lb 4 0 1 1 Braun rf 2 0 0 0 Green rf 1 I 0 0 Porter c 3 112 Oberkfl 3b 3 0 0 0 OSmith ss 4 0 0 0 Stuper p 2 0 0 0 McGee cf 2 0 11 TotaU 31 S 7 S
Easin' In \
Pittsburghs Mike Easier slides across home plate game in Pittsburgh. Easier scored on a Dave ahead of the tag by catcher MUt May of San Parker double, and the Pirates went on to take 5-2 Francisco during the third inning of Saturdays win.
Australia II Wins A Pair After Canadian Diver Controversy
Walls Rejects Latest Dallas Contract Offer
Los Angeles 002 000 170-10
StLouis 101 000 130- S
GameWinningRBl - Marshall i5i
E DSmith DP-Los Angeles 2. SII,ouis 1 LOB-Los Angeles 7, StLouis 5 2B IxiSmith. Porter, Marshall HR--APena ili. Landreaux i9i SB-LoSmith il8i, VanSlykeiSi S-Oberkfell.
IP H R ER BB SO
Los Angeles
APena 6 2 3 3 3 3 5 2
SHowe W.4-5 1 3 1 0 0 0 0
Stewart 2 3 2 2 0 1
StLouis
Stuper 7 53342
Rucker L.l 1 U 13 2 10
Sutter 1 2 4 4 3 0
JMartin 1 I 0 0 I 0
Rucker pitched to 3 batters in 8th V\ P - Stuper, Sutter T-2 43 A 4:.:>16
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -The leading 12-meter yacht Australia II sailed off with two victories in Americas Cup racing Saturday while controversy swirled about the early-morning arrest of a diver near her dock.
Among the American boats. Liberty won two abbreviated races over Defender, by 37 and 13 seconds. Defender scored a 30-second win over
Liberty in the days middle race.
The third U.S. prospect. Courageous, had the day off.
Australia II topped Italys Azzurra by one minute, 11 seconds in the first race, then defeated another Aussie boat. Challenge 12, by 48 seconds.
Among other foreign entries, Australias Advance was beaten by Britains Victory 83 and by France 3.
Challenge 12 easily got past a France 3 afflicted with rigging problems and Canada 1 handed Azzurra her second defeat of the day.
Behind front-running Australia II holding 8.88 points after the days racing are Canada 1 with 6.72, Challenge 12 has 6.6, Victory 83 with 6.4, Azzurra 5.2, France 3 with 2,12 and Advance 0.8.
Seven foreign yachts and
three Americans are in a summqaSintensive racing in Rhode Island Sound to determine which ciallenger and defender will square off for the Americas Cup in September.
They are now in the third series for challengers and the second for Americans.
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THOUSAND OAKS, Calif, (AP) - Holdout cornerback Everson Walls has turned downed the Dallas Cowboys latest offer, but club vice president Gil Brandt still is optimistic something can be worked out.
Im not going to sign a five-year contract and that is final, Walls said in Dallas. Im retired. Nothing has changed.
Brandt said Saturday that he would continue to try to find a meeting ground with Walls and agent Steve Weinberg.
Our past history is to get players signed and into training camp, Brandt said. By being stubborn we penalize the coaches, fans and administrators.
If there is a way, we can
still do it (get Walls to camp). Maybe Weinberg will have an alternate plan acceptable to both sides.
The Cowboys had offered their holdout All-Pro a renegotiated contract for five years at $1.2 million.
Brandt offered some incentives to be paid in 1987, including $6,000 a year for making All-National Conference, $10,000 a year for All-NFL, and $16,000 per year for making Defensive Player
of the Year.
The bonus would be paid in addition to the $100,000 signing bonus to be paid in 1987.
Brandt also said the offer was protection for Walls in case contract negotiations break down after four years.
Walls wants a three-year contract at $900,000.
He is being fined $1,000 a day for missing training camp. Walls has a two-year contract.
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I Continued (mm page B l)
question mark for the Pirates but will vie for time behind Baker and Walden.
I believe in using a lot of backs, Baker said. It helps keep them from getting injured, and its a long season. Youre only as good as your depth will allow you to be. Baker came to East Carolina after serving as head coach at The Citadel, and he admits the change was harder on him than the players.
When I first accepted the position of offensive coordinator, I decided it would be much simpler for me to learn the terminology they were used to rather than try to put in what I had used at The Citadel.
The change was tough for me. In the spring game, I
found myself using other terms from The Citadel. The kids would just give me a funny look till I figured out what was wrong.
Im back on the field coaching now, and thats what I missed while I was a head coach.
ECUs seven road games bothers Baker as much as the rest of staff, but he remains optimistic.
Id rather have seven home games and four away games, he said. But its not that way here. The mental aspect of the game is going to be so important; we have to overcome the home field advantage.
Its going to be tough, but I know the players look forward to the challenge. They want to win.
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Czechs Down U.S. Federation Team
ZURICH. Switzerland (APi - West German) and Czechoslovakia reached the final of the 1983 Federation Cup tennis tournament Saturday as the United States lost its seven-year hold on the prestigious team trophy.
The U.S.. winners every year since 1976, lost both singles matches to Czechoslovakia and then scratched from the doubles because of a groin injury to Candy Reynolds.
It was only the seventh time in the competitions 21-year history that the United States had failed to reach the final.
West Germany advanced to the Sundays final by defeating host nation Switzerland 3-0.
The Germans were beaten by the United States in last years final, while the Czechs were the last European country to win the trophy, in 1975 when they were led by Martina Navratilova.
In the U.S.-Czechoslovakia semifinal, Helena Sukova got her country off to a perfect start with a 6-7, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Revnolds that could have ended far sooner.
The tall Czech had two set points in the opening set tiebreaker, but lost them both with a poor lob and a volley over the baseline. Reynolds won the set, but it was her opponent who came out stronger in the second.
Sukova took a 4-2 lead after three breaks of serve and won the next two games to square the match.
The turning point of the contest came in the sixth game of the final set after Sukova had edged ahead 3-2. In a game that went to eight deuces, Reynolds had four game points. But the Czech won the game on her fifth break point to take a 4-2 lead.
She then served a love-game for 5-2 and went 0-40 in front when Reynolds served to save the match.
Three match points came and went, but Sukova closed it out on her fourth chance to win in two hours, 10 minutes.
Andrea Jaeger, the worlds third-ranked woman on whom U.S. hopes then rested, began confidently against Hana Mandlikova and took a 5-3 lead in the opening set.
Mandlikova broke back for 4-5 and then saved a set point
/Hoore Out To Set Longevity Record With Hopeful Saints
VERO BEACH. Fla. i.AP)-Derland Moore can remember other years when hopes ran high and confidence seemed justified.
Moore, going into his 11th season with the New Orleans Saints, needs only two more games to establish a team record for longevity.
Archie Manning played in 136 games for the Saints before being traded last year to the Houston Oilers. Moore has played in 135 since joining the Saints as a second-round draft choice out of Oklahoma in 1973.
Hes played end and tackle on even and odd fronts under five head coaches, each with his own defensive philosophy, surviving purges and youth movements that made revolving doors of team rosters.
Hes been with the teams that posted four of the five best records in the teams National football league history - a pair of 5-9 marks in his first two seasons, then a 7-9 and an 8-8 in 1978 and79.
Hopes were high at the mosquito-plagued training camp at Nicholls State in 1975 following thetwo5-9s.
The Saints went 2-12 to set a team record for futility that wouldnt be broken until 1980, when optimism went down to a 1-15 season, the most losses in a season by any NFL team.
"We felt like we had something going, but we were a young team and we had a horrible training camp.
"It rained every day. I dont ever remember my morale being so down.
"We were getting up at 6,
riding a bus to New Orleans, practicing, eating a cold lunch, practicing, then taking the bus back to Thibodaux. You couldnt get any rest between practices.
People were talking playoffs in 1980, too.
Things started going wrong from the top. Moore said.
Before long, the team was divided along the lines of stress between Coach Dick Nolan and one-season General Manager Steve Rosenbloom -divided lines of authority on a delicately balanced team.
"We had an unbelievably talented offense that year, but things started going wrong, Moore said. "Some finger-pointing started.
Later, it would become public knowledge that a number of players were abusing cocaine.
Coach Bum Phillips has predicted that this will be the year the Saints finally post a winning record.
Moore said he believes his coach is right on the money.
Of course, nothings for real until you make it happen, he said.
The difference is that we have a good nucleus to make it happen this time. Barring a rash of injuries, and that could knock the heck out of you, this should be the year.
This year is different. This year we have the people on both sides of the ball to make it happen.
with a dazzling passing shot down the line.
Jaeger, who had drq>ped only four games in three matches leading up to the semifinal, had a second set point in the tiebreaker, but again the Czech foiled her and finally won the set herself with a cross-court forehand.
With her countrys hopes resting on her, Jaeger rushed into a 5-1 lead in the second set as her opponents concentration suddenly evaporated in the blazing heat.
But Mandlikova, throwing caution to the wind with some inspired, spontaneous play, fought back to 5-5, only to be broken at a critical stage.
Jaeger served for the set at 6-5 and took it when her opponent netted a simple backhand.
In the deciding set, Mandlikova - serving and volleying with power and precision - led 3-0 and then had two break points for 4-0.
Jaeger saved those, but could not break back and found herself serving to save the match at 2-5.
She won that game but could do nothing in Mandlikovas next service game as the Czech closed out the match with an ace.
We are obviously disappointed but I have never seen Hana play so well, said U.S. non-playing team captain Nancy Jeffett.
Jaeger failed to attend the post-match news conference, but another member of the U.S. team, Paula Smith, told reporters: It was very difficult for Andrea to get into a groove. Its hard to beat Hana when she plays like that.
Mandlikova, who was just 13 years old when her country won the title ei^t years ago, said the victory was one of the most important in her career.
I went down a bit mentally after the first set, she said, but even if I had lost, I think we would have won the doubles.
Reynolds disagreed.
If the singles matches had been shared, I would definitely have played despite the injury, and I think Hana was aware that we would probably have won it.
Germanys 3^) victory over Switzerland was a disappointment for the capacity home crowd.
Claudia Kohde took 82 minutes to edge Petra Delhees 6-3, 6-4 in two close sets, and Bettina Bunge, ranked eighth in the world on the Womens Tennis Association computer, followed up by hammering Christiane Jolissaint 6-0, 6-3 to gain revenge for her three-set defeat by the Swiss in last months Wimbledon championships.
Germany, which was seeded second in this team champion^ips, went on to win the doubles when Petra Keppeler and Eva Pfaff defeated Delhees and Jolissaint 6-3, 6-1.
The Germans have now lost only one of 11 matches leading up to Sundays final.
Burley Impressive In Summer Heat
WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) - Defensive lineman Gary Burley had no trouble keeping up with his Cincinnati Bengals teammates in wind sprints, even though the temperature was flirting with 100 degrees on the first day of training camp.
I didnt go down, as expected, Burley joked after a quick shower. I worked out more this year.
In the past, such punishing weather might have left Burley heading for the trainer^foom instead of the showers. The eighth-year pro had been sidelined by a variety of physical problems in recent years, some of them admittedly related to his conditioning.
Burley wants this training camp to be different. He figures he has to do something impressive in the heat at Wilmington College or risk getting cut by the Bengals.
I have to do something this camp to stay here, Burley said. Its a do-or-die situation. 1 have to excel at all things on the defensive line. I have to do it all.
That means being in top physical condition, a state that sometimes eluded the lineman in the past. Burley said he lifted weights with teammates in the past off-season, something hes never done before, to prepare himself for the training camp grind. ^
1 turned that fat into muscle, he said. I started really working with weights. Ive never had to before. I was naturally strong.
Ive put on a lot more muscle. Im stronger now than Ive ever been in my life. I had never benched (bench-pressed) over 300 pounds. Now 1 can do 375.
North State All Stars
Membere of the North State Little League All Star team are: (front, L-R) Kevin Jordan, Billy Turcotte, Park Williams, Jamie Hale, Heath Clark, Jeff Bennett; (middle) David Gordon,
Martin Anderson, John Chambliss, Tim Moore, Patrick Joyner; (back) Bill Kuykendall (coach), Walter Gatlin, Nelson Galloway, Paul Powers, Andy Miller, Andre Hopkins, Jamie Brewington and Ron Wing (manager). (Reflector photo)
Reynolds Feels Pressure Representing U.S. In Cup
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) - Its been a tough week for American tennis player Candy Reynolds.
Asked to play singles at the last moment when Kathy Jordan withdrew from the U.S. Federation Cup team, the 28-year-old right-hander from Knoxville, Tenn., has just completed her first international team tennis event -and admits is was an emotional experience.
"I am definitely a little fatigued, said Reynolds after her three-set defeat at the hands of Czechoslovakias Helena Sukova Saturday as the United States was ousted from Cup play in the semifinals
Its been a very difficult week for me with a lot of tension and a big responsibility But 1 feel Ive given everything and I dont think I had anymore
After Andrea Jaeger, the U S No. 1 player, also lost her singles match, clinching the victory for Czechoslovakia, Reynolds, who had injured her right groin withdrew from the doubles as a precaution
",If the singles had ended 1-1,1 would have played But 1 didnt feel that there was any point in possibly endangering my career when we had already lost the tie, she said.
Reynolds, ranked 73rd in the world on the Womens Tennis Association computer, was named to the U.S. team when ^ several other players were ' either injured or unavailable.
She won her first two mat-clMis here but lost the next two
- both long three-set encounters.
"The emotions have been very high this week, she said. "I have enjoyed playing for my country and it was important to me to give my best. Its just a shame we could not win it.
1 would love to be able to play Federation Cup again, or maybe Wightman Cup, said Reynolds. One thing Ive always wanted to do is represent my country, but we have such top players right now that its tough to make the team.
But if I ever get asked again, youre going to get 150 percent out of me.
Nancy Jeffett, the U.S. non-playing team captain, paid tribute to Reynolds.
Ive had a lot of team members over a period of years and Ive never had a more enthusiastic player than Candy, she said. When you have a team member that has given as much as she has, you have to be pleased.
Jeffett said she was disappointed not to make the final, but said Hana Mandlikova, who beat Jaeger in three sets
to give the Czech team an unbeatable 2-0 lead, had seldom played better.
Thats the best Ive seen her play for a long time. Seems she was saving It up for us. said Jeffett.
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FINAL MARKDOWN!
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Davis Pitches Orioles Past Oakland, 7-3
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) -Xoung Storm Davis lost his footing but not his composure And he came away with another victory and a lesson learned.
The Baltimore Orioles 21-year-old right-hander scattered eight hits to beat the Oakland As 7-3 Saturday with the aid of homers by Eddie Murray and Cal Ripken Jr. and a two-run double by Jim Dwyer. But Davis had to get by a rough spot in the second inning.
Leading 1-0 after Murrays 19th homer of the year in the top of the inning, Davis gave up consecutive singles to Dave Lopes and Carney Lansford and then threw the ball into center field on a pickoff attempt.
1 just lost my footing, Davis said. It was a soft mound and I twisted my ankle.
Davis ankle hurt but he kept pitching.
"Thats not a point in the game I want to ask to be taken out, he said.
He struck out designated hitter Jeff Burroughs but Bill Almon drove in Lopes with a checked-swing grounder to tie the game.
1 learn something every game, said Davis. As much experience I can soak in, thats what I want to do.
Oakland starter Tim Conroy, 2-4, gave the Orioles the lead for good in the third inning when Rick Dempsey, who had doubled, went to third on a balk and scored on a wild pitch. Ripken stretched his hitting streak to 11 games when he hit his 16th homer leading off the sixth inning.
The Orioles added three runs in the eighth, two on the double by Dwyer, and Ripken added an RBI single in the
ninth before Almon stroked an RBI single and Mike Heath a run-scoring double in the ninth. Davis, 9-4, struck out
BALTIMORE OAKLAND
abrhbl abrhbi
Shelby ct 5 110 RHndsn II 4 0 0 0 Dauer 2b 5 0 2 0 Peters rf 4 0 10
Ripken ss 4 2 2 2 Murphy cf 4 0 0 0
EMurry lb 3 2 2 1 Lopes 2b 4 110 Roenick rf 2 0 0 0 Lansfrd 3b 4 1 2 0
Singltn dh 3 10 0 Burghs dh 2 0 0 0
Ayala If 3 0 0 0 Burgmr pr 0 0 0 0
Dwyer If 2 0 12 Gross dh 110 0
TCruz 3b 3 0 0 1 Almon ss 4 0 12
Dempsy c 4 1 1 0 Hancck lb 4 0 0 0
Kearney c 2 0 1 0
Heath c 2 0 11
Totals 34 7 6 Totals 35 3 7 3
Baltimore Oil 001 031- 7
OaUand 010 000 DOS- 3
Game-Winning RBI - None E-GDavis, Dauer LOB-Baltimore 9, Oakland 7 2B-Dempsey, Peters. Dwyer, Heath. HR-EMurray il9i, Ripken (16). SB-RHenderson i58) S-Roenicke SF-TCruz
Baltimore
GDavis W.9-4 Oakland Conroy L.2-4 Atherton Wortham Beard
U> H R ER BB so
9 7 3 3 2 4
Conroy pitched to two baiter in 8th, Wortham pitched to four batters in 9th WP-Conroy 2. BK-Conroy T-2 52. A n.m.
four and walked two as he won for the sixth time in his last seven decisions.
Minnesota.........5
Cleveland.........2
CLEVELAND (AP) - A1 Williams said he had good stuff while pitching the Minnesota Twins to a 5-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians Saturday night, but more than anything he had courage.
"It hurts every day, Williams said about his arm after limiting the Indians to four hits over the first eight innings as the Twins snapj^ an eight-game losing streak. I have bone chips in there. I had surgery for them last October, but 1 got some more chips about a month ago. Every start just depends on
how I feel.
Williams, 6-11 overall but 3-0 against Cleveland, also displayed some toughness in. stranding five Indians on second or third base.
You just bear down some more in those situations, and I made some tough pitches. I had a good fastball and change-up, Williams said.
Bobby Mitchells one-run bloop single snapped a 2-2 tie in the seventh inning when the Twins rallied for four runs and Ron Davis picked up his 16th save with a perfect ninth inning.
Mitchell said that his gme-winning hit against Len Barker, 7-10, was on a good pitch, but I just got lucky. I had two strikes, he threw a high, inside fastball, and I just swung.
Williams, 6-11, struck out three and walked four before
Davis pitched the ninth. Williams was hurt only by Gorman Thomas two-run homer in the second inning.
Barker took a 2-1 lead into the seventh but surrendered singles to Gary Gaetti and Randy Bush leading off the inning. Mickey Hatcher then sacrifice-bunted and reached first to load the bases when Cleveland first baseman Mike Hargroves throw to third for an attempted forceout was late.
Barker, who lost to Minnesota for the first time in seven career decisions, then struck out Ron Washington but Tim Laudners groundout scored Gaetti with the tying run. Mitchell then singled to give Minnesota a 4-2 lead and knock out Barker in favor of Bud Anderson. A run-scoring double by John Castino capped the four-run innning.
Minnesota took a I-O lead in the second on a Kent Hrbek double and Hatchers RBI single.
Pat Tabler reached first on Hrbeks error at first in the bottom half of the inning before Thomas cracked his 13th home run.
MINNESOTA CLEVELAND
b r b bl lb r b bi
Mitchell cl 5 I I 2 Hargrv lb 2 0 0 0
Castino 2b 3 0 1 I Harrah 3b 3 0 2 0
Ward 11 4 0 0 0 Franco ss 4 0 0 0
Hrbek !b 4 12 0 Thmtn dh 4 0 0 0
Gaetti 3b 3 110 Tabler II 4 10 0
Bush dh 3 110 GThoms cl 3 1 12
Hatcher rl 3 1 1 1 Hassev c 4 0 10
RWshgl ss 4 0 1 0 Vukvcii rl 4 0 0 0
Laudner c 4 0 0 1 Fischlin 2b 3 0 0 0
Totals 33 5 8 5 Totals 31 2 4 2
Minnesota 010 000 400- 5
Cleveiaiid tao 000 000- 2
Game-Winnine RBI - .Mitchell i2i E-Hrbek DP-Minnesola I LOB Minnesota 5. Cleveland 6 2B Hrbek Harrah, Castino. HR-GThomas ii3i SB-Vukovich 11) S-Halcher
IP H R ER BB SO
Minnesota
Williams W.e-ll 8 4 2 1 4 3
RDavis S.16 1 0 0 0 0 2
ClevelaDd
Barker L.7-10 6 2 3 6 5 5 2 4
BAnderson 2 1-3 2 0 0 I o
T-2:34 A-6,675
Scaleiia Lead U.S. Win Areo Youth Boseboll
ANTWERP, Belgium (AP) - A two-run single by Tom Scaletta of Cal Poly-Pomona in the sixth innning broke a 3-3 tie and the United States went on to defeat Holland 6-3 Saturday and put the Americans in position to take the Intercontinental Cup.
The win made the United States 2-0 in the Cup playoffs with a game left with Cuba. If the United States can defeat the Cubans, who won their first meeting, the Americans will win the Cup.
The Cubans were upset 13-1 by Chinese-Taipei and are now l-l in the playoffs. So is Chinese-Taipei, setting up the possibility of either a two-way or three-way tie requiring a playoff if Cuba beats the United States.
Tim Belcher of Mount Vernon, Ohio, Nazarene. picked up his second Cup victory,
yielding 10 hits and striking out eight in 81-3 innings. Todd Burns of Oral Roberts, who has appeared in six of the American collegians ei^t games, got the final two outs for the save.
B.J. Surhoff of North Carolina drove in the games first run with a ground rule double in the bottom of the first, but Belcher, the first selection in major league baseballs June draft, gave up a three-run homer to Bill Groot in the fourth that put Holland in front 3-1.,
Eric Fox of Fresno State walked with the bases loaded in the fourth to cut the margin to 3-2 and the second homer of the tournament by Keith Miller of Oral Roberts, leading off the fifth, tied the score.
Surhoff singled to drive in Scaletta with the games final run.
Winterville Little League
Farmville.........13
Tri-County.........7
WINTERVILLE - Jeff Tyson and George Burnett each slapped a pair of hits to lead the Farmville All Stars to a 13-7 victory over Tri-County in the District 5 Little League baseball tournament Friday.
Burnette went the distance on the mound for Farmville to record the win.
Ronnie James and Jarvis Epps had two hits for Tri-County.
A solo homer by Monte King
Tar Heel All Stars
Members of the 1983 Tar Heel Little League baseball All Star team are: (front, L-R) Travis Williamson, Chris Christopher, Dwain Williams, Andy Everett, Frankie Pugh, Chris Fuqua; (middle) Richard Lewis (alternate), Blake
Stallings (alt.), Judd Crumpler, Recie Dyer, John Bolen, Joel Daughtry (alt.), Craig Willoughby (alt); (back) Eric Jarman, (coach), Donnell Moore, Wesley Jackson, Maurice Hines, Julius Smith, C!hris Brown, Bill Brown (manager). (Reflector photo)
Casper Takes Senior Open Lead
CHASKA, Minn. (AP) -Billy Casper emerged with a three-stroke lead despite shooting a 2-over-par 73 Saturday in the third round of the $175,000 fourth U.S. Senior Open Championship.
The gather and the scores both cooled down during the windy third round at Hazeltine National Golf Club.
Casper, who opened the day one stroke off the lead at even-par 142 after 36 holes, and in a four-way tie for second place, finished the round with a three-day total of 215, 2 over par for the 6,625-yard course.
Roberto DeVicenzo, Jerry Barber and Rod Funsetb all finished the day at 5-over-par 218.
DeVicenzo, the Argentinian who had entered the third round vfith a one-stroke lead, shot a 77 Saturday.
Barber carded a 73 and Funseth had a 74.
Winds gusting to 28 mph and
sun-baked greens replaced heat and humidity as the major problems and contributed to the high scores.
Zimmer Wants To Manage
NEW YORK (AP) - Don Zimmer, in his first season as the New York Yankees third base coach, said hed like to get back into managing - but that he hasnt been asked to do so and doesnt know how to go about it.
Zimmer, who has a one-year contract with the Yanks, managed in San Diego (1972-73), Boston (1976-80) and Texas (1981-82), compiling a 620-600 record.
When I got fired by the Rangers last year, I knew there were six or seven jobs open - but I never applied and 1 was never offered anything, he said.
Dean Lind of Sacramento, Calif, registered a hol-in-one when he used a six-iron on the par-3,150-yard eighth hole. He still wound up with 22-over-par 235 total going into the final round.
Charles Sifford shot a 73, good for fifth place at 219.
Miller Barber, Dan Sikes and Australian Guy Wolstenholme all shot 78s, good for a sixth-place tie at 220. They had entered the round tied with Casper.
Arnold Palmer had a 75, and enters Sundays final round at 227,12 strokes off the lead and 14 over par.
The 64 golfers, all age 50 or older, are in pursuit of the first-place prize of $30,566.
Third-round scores ol the leaders Saturday In the $175,000 U.S. Senior Open at the ^yard, par-71 Hazeltine National
Golldlub:
Billy Casper Jerry Barber Rod Funseth Roberto DeVicenzo Charles Sillord Dan Sikes Guy Wolstenholme Miller Barber Bob Stone Gay Brewer Peter Thomson Bob Rawlins Freddie Haas Paul Thomas Denis Hutchinson Art Silvestrone Gardner Dickinson Gene Litller DoueFord Arnold Palmer Ed Updevalf Bob Crowley Ed Causey Howie Johnson LionelHebert George Thomas Bob Gajda Bob Goetz Allan Sussel BillyMaxwell Ken Towns Dick Evans Chuck Green
73-69-73-215 71-74-73-218 73-71-74 -218
71-70-77-218
73-72-74 -219
72-70-78- 220
71-71-78-220
72-70-78- 220 71 78-72- 221 76-71-74-221 71-75 75- 221
71-76-76-223
74-73-76- 223
75-78-71-224
74-78-73-225
75-75-75-225
72-76-77-225
75-78-73-226
76-77-74-227
73-79-75-227 81-70-76-227 76-72-79-227
74-78 /6- 228
78-76-74-228 71-74-83- 228
79-76-74-229
76-78-75- 229 78-75-76-229
77-76-76- 229
78-72-79-229 77-72-80- 229 71-77-81-229
75-77-77-229
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capped four run second inning for Farmville, but Tri-County knotted the score at 5-5 with a pair of runs in the fifth.
But Farmville rallied for eight runs in the bottom half of the frame to put the game out of reach.
Southern Pitt 5
Ayden .....2
WINTERVILLE - Tyrone Turnage threw a four-hitter and struck out nine batters to lead the Southern Pitt All Stars to a 5-2 win over Ayden in the District 5 Little League tournament Friday night.
Johnnie Sherrod led Southern Pitt with two hits, while Ty Little had a pair for Ayden.
Southern Pitt scored four runs in the third inning, as Sherrod singled in Calvin Grimes and later scored along with Gene Stancill on throwing error. Eugene Lee scored on an error on a grounder by Roosevelt Hines.
Martin County 32
Tarboro...........5
WINTERVILLE - Randy House ripped four hits in
cluding a pair of two-run homers to lift Martin County to a 32-5 trouncing of Tarboro ^ ,
in the District 5 Little League Saturday night and handed baseball tournament Friday. skidding Rangers their
Toronto...........3
Texas.............2
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - Ernie Whitt doubled home two runs and Jim Clancy scattered nine hits as the Toronto Blue Javs beat Texas
Jorge Orta doubled in one run and Whitt followed with his double to score two more.
Texas had taken a 1-0 lead in the first when Billy Sample singled, took third'on Pete OBriens single and scored on Buddy Bell's sacrifice fly.
The Rangers made it 2-0 in the third when O'Brien walked, went to second on a single by Bell, moved to third on a fielders choice and scored on a single by George Wright.
Darwin has started four times against the Blue Jays this year and has lost all four games. A bat-night crowd of 43,709 set an attendance record at Arlington Stadium.
TORONTO TEXAS
ab r b bl ab r h bi
Collins If 4 (I 1 0 Sample II 4 110
.Muilnks 3b 4 I 2 (I OBrien lb 2 1 10
Mosebv cf 4 U 0 u BBell 3b 3 o 2 1
I'pshaw lb 3 I 0 0 LCPrsh rl 4 o o 0
Drta dh 4 111 Wright cf 4021
WhitI c 4 0 12 Hosttlr dh 3 0 0 0
Bonnell rf 4 0 2 0 BJones ph 1 o 0 0
lore 2b 4 0 0 0 Richrdt 2b 3 0 0 0
GriTlin ss 4 0 10 Rivers ph I o 1 0
Sundbrg c 4 0 2 0
Dent ss 3 0 0 0
Biillner ph I 0 u
Totals 35 3 8 3 Totals 33 2 9 2
Toronto
Texas
000 300 000- 3 101 000 000- 2
Mike James threw a one-hitter and struck out 10 batters for the victory on the mound and added three hits at the plate.
Martin County scored seven runs in the first inning, then broke the game open with 16
14th loss in 18 games.
Clancy, 10-6, struck out seven, walked two and allowed only one extra-base hit. He is 3-0 against Texas this year.
The Blue Jays reached Danny Darwin, 7-10, for all
DPToronto 5 LOB Toronto 6 Texas 7 2B Mulliniks. Orta Whitt, Sundherg 3B-Griffin .SB Bonnell 7 . Rivers i" SF -BBell
IP H R ER BB SO
Toronto
Clancy W.IO-6 9 9 2 2 2 7
Texas
Darwin L.7-10 9 8 3 3 13
T-2 23 A-43,709
in the third capped by Houses fourth to
first homer of the night. His wipe^miL a 2-0 Texas lead, other blast came in the four-run fifth inning.
Brushcutters
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Babe Ruth
Coastal Ploin South 10 East Wake.........7
ELIZABETH CITY - Billy Michelle cracked a tape-measure three-run homer in the fourth inning and Tony Taylor added a two-run blast in the fifth to lead Coastal Plain South all stars to a 10-7 victory over East Wake in the 16-year-old State Babe Ruth baseball tournament Friday.
Tommy Wynn picked up the win in relief.
Taylor was the only player with more than one hit, adding a single in the second inning.
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B-6-Tlie Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 24.19K
France 3 Struggles In America's Cup
NEWPORT, R l. (AP) - France 3, the beleaguered 12-meter yacht, has dents in her port bow, a history of equipment problems and is next to last in the Americas Cup standing. But dont count her out.
"We will not give up! said skipper Bruno Trouble, standing before his red. white and blue boat Friday. We will do our best.
Trouble, who deftly despatched the British yacht Lionheart in 1980 with this boat, said a massive two^ay change in France 3 s wrig has made he go faster,
"We worked, said the skipper. The crew was working day and night todo this" the wholesale change was because France 3 in a heavy breeze tended to go up into the wind. To hold her on course against this weather helm cut her speed.
The changes last weekend moved the mast forward 14 centimeters, including new shroud fittings. The sails were recut.
The French "Association pour le Defi Francais pour la Coupe de I'America is a bargain basement effort with only SI .5 million in an event, whereas the British Victory 83 group is laying out $8 million.
"We are really short of money, said Trouble. Some of the equipment and fittings are old. But he said the lack of another 12-meter to race against earlier was the biggest mistake.
France 3 is now sixth among seven foreign yachts currently in the third set of trial races seeking the challengers place in the Americas Cup finals in September.
Trouble lost to Australia for the finals in 1980.
Strong winds prevented racing Friday. But the French effort has been hampered by problems, such as Thursdays race against Canada 1 France 3 had to quit on third leg because of a rigging failure.
The dents in the bow came after France 3 last week punctured the race committe boat. Mirage.
Franee 3 has beaten Canada 1 and Italys Azzurra once, and has topped Australias hard luck entry, Advance, four times.
French spokesman Renaud de Saint Mars said that the French team is realistic about the odds of defeating the Americans this year.
"I think the Americans have a level .of strength that no challenger here has. not even Australia II, he said. Australia II is the leader among foreign yachts with a 24-3 record.
This is the first French challenge without Baron Marcel Bich. the ballpoint pen magnate who spent millions in four tries for the cup.
Fridays schedule of races was rescheduled for today. Australia II was paired with Azzurra of Italy, Victory 83 of Britain against Advance of Australia and Challenge 12 of Australia opposing France 3. Canada 1 has the day off.
The Americans are conducting separate trials with Liberty, skippered by 1980 Americas Cup champion Dennis Conner, and Defender, with Tom Blackaller at the helm, to race. Courageous, has the day off.
Distributors Ready For ACC Issue Rush
GREENVILLE, S.C.. (AP) ~ Playboy magazine distributors in South Carolina are stocking up on the September issue of the publication, scheduled to carry photos of 19 Atlantic Coast Conference coeds in various stages of nudity.
South Carolina distributors say they already are being hounded with requests for copies of the September issue and they are stocking their warehouses for the pending sales.
"Some people are wondering what kind of young lady would allow herself to be exhibited in a magazine of this sort. said Bob Prince, vice president of E.A. Prince 4 Son Inc:, which distributes in six counties.
To meet the expected demand, Princes company has gotten three times its usual allotment of Playboys. Many of the 4,500 issues will be concentrated in Clemson, although Prince said he has customers as far away as McCormick anxious to see the issue.
Three of the women will be from Clemson, four from North Carolina Slate University in Raleigh, three each from Georgia Institute of Technology and the University of North Carolina, two each from Duke University and the University of Virginia, and one each from Wake Forest University and the University of Maryland.
Bob Alexander, manager of Palmetto News Co., the distributor for the Greenville area, has also received a lot of calls. He believes his 10,000 copies - 3,000 more than his usual allotment will sell out, too.
"This will be 30 or 40 percent bigger than the Christmas issue, which is
always our best seller, he said.
But he doesnt expect sales to top those of a 1981 issue featuring Rita Jenrette, the wife of former Myrtle Beach Congressman John Jenrette.
1 wouldnt go that far, he said. I couldve sold 100,000 of those.
At least one of the three Clemson students who po^. Shannon Hallowell, is curious to see her classmates reaction to a ^ossy pa^and-a-half portrait leading the feature in the nations bestselling mens entertainment magazine.
Ms. Hallowell, 18, of Orlando, Fla., said controversy and mystery surrounded the photo sessions on the Clemson campus last spring. No one was certain which women Playboy had selected to pose, and some students bristled at the thought of Clemson women cavorting through the pages of Playboy.
Ms. Hallowell, who has modeled for several national sports magazines, said she decided in advance she would pose only fully clothed for Playboy, lest someone dig up something to haunt me in the future.
She said she received notes in her mailbox last spring begging her not to pose. Its not time to show your body to men, one note read. But from other students she got a positive response for having the courage to follow through with what I wanted to do, Ms. Hallowell said.
For her, posing for Playboy was like any other modeling job. Because 1 was clothed, I wasnt exploiting my body, even though I was in a mens magazine, Ms. Hallowell said.
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If the daily delivery of your Daily Reflector is less than satisfactory, please tell us about it. Call our Circulation Department and we will do our best to work out the problem.
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Out By A Toe
San Francisco catcher Milt May makes the tag on Dale Berra of the Pittsburgh Pirates in the second
inning of Fridays game. Berra was trying to score on Marvel Wynnes single to right field. (AP Laserphoto)
Downing, Ripkin Records Costly Errors In Losses
By The Associated Press
Brian Downing and Cal Ripken dont make many errors. So when they do, they really standout.
Friday night, Downings first error in 245 games in left field was a factor in the California Angels 13-11 loss to the Detroit Tigers. Ripkens error, only his 12th of the season at short on a potential double-play ball, also was costly, as the Baltimore Orioles dropped a 4-3 decision to the Oakland As.
Downings error was especially noticeable, since it broke an American League record which the California outfielder had set Thursday ni^t, surpassing A1 Kalines old mark of 242 games. It came in the midst of a three-run rally in the sixth that helped the Tigers pull away.
Elsewhere in the American League, New York beat Kansas City 7-6 in the first game of a doubleheader before losing a 3-2, 12-inning decision in the nightcap; Cleveland tripped Minnesota 8-5; Chicago edged Milwaukee
2-1; Toronto outscored Texas 10-5 in 11 innings and Boston edged Seattle 5-4.
With the Tigers leading 6-5, Alan Trammells RBI double in the fifth boosted their lead by a run. Then came the crucial sixth, when Glenn Wilson belted a run-scoring single and Downings three-base error on Chet Lemons fly ball allowed two more runs to score.
During his streak, which began May 25, 1981, Downing handled 449 chances. He fell 22 games shy of the major league record held by Don Demeter ofthePhillies (1962-1965).
Dwayne Murphy and Garry Hancock hit solo homers, and the As later scored their winning run in a two-run seventh with the help of Ripkens error Davey Lopes singled to lead off, and one out later, Jeff Burroughs walked. Bill Almon then hit an RBI single to tie the game and chase Baltimore starter Allan Ramirez.
Reliever Dan Morogiello was greeted by Bob Kearneys sharp grounder that was misplayed by Ripken, allowing pinch-runner Dan Meyer to score the go-ahead run.
Yankees 7-2, Royals 6-3
In New York, Don Baylor hit a two-out, ninth-inning, wind-blown single which fell just inside the third base line and Steve Kemp raced home from first to boost New York over Kansas City in the first ga^e of a. twi-night dojpleheader and extend the
Yankees winning streak to seven games.
Willie Wilson drove in the tie-breaking run in the 12th inning, lifting the Royals over New York in the nightcap. The Yankees tied the game twice before losing - once at 1-1 in the ninth and the second time at 2-2 in the nth.
Indians 8, Twins 5
In Cleveland, Toby Harrahs two-run double in the eighth inning snapped a 5-5 tie and sparked the Indians over Minnesota, saddling the Twins with their eighth consecutive defeat.
The Twins losing streak matches the longest skid in the American League this season. The Seattle Mariners dropped eight straight in June.
Rick Lysander, 2-9, walked Ron Hassey leading off the Cleveland eighth. After Mike Hargroves sacrifice bunt, Ron Davis came on to intentionally walk Broderick Perkins. Harrah then lashed his double, took third on the throw home and scored himself when catcher Dave Engle threw wildly into left field.
White Sox 2, Brewers 1
In Milwaukee, Harold Baines singled home the go-ahead run and Greg Luzinski belted his 17th homer, leading Chicago over the Brewers.
Floyd Bannister, 6-9, who left after five shutout innings because of shdulder soreness, teamed with Juan Agosto and Dennis Lamp to scatter nine hits as the White Sox cooled off the Brewers, who had 10 wins in their previous 11 games.
Bannister earned his third consecutive victory. Lamp worked out of a seventh-inning jam and pitched the final 21-3 innings for his third save.
Blue Jays 10, Rangers 5 In Arlington, Texas Dave Collins fourth hit of the night, a run-scoring double, key^ a five-run rally in the llth inning to lift Toronto over Texas.
Garth lorg and Alfredo Griffin singled before Collinad his double. Ranee Mulliniks alked to load the bases before Lloyd Moseby delivered a two-run single and Willie Upshaw singled to give the Blue Jays a 9-5 margin. Ernie Whitts sacrifice fly capped the rally.
Red Sox 5, Mariners 4 In Seattle, Wade Boggs two-run single capped a three-run Boston ninth inning as the Red Sox rallied to beat Seattle. After fouling off four
3-2 pitches, Boggs singled sharply to center to score Dave Stapleton and Glen Hoffman and pin the defeat on EdVandeBerg,2-4.
Ornest Comes To Terms On Blues
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Beverly Hills, Calif., businessman Harry Omest and his associates have reached a firm agreement for purchase of the Checkerdome, home of the St. Louis Blues, a published report says.
Purchase price of the building serving as the National Hockey League teams home was $4.7 million, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat reported in its editions today. George Kyd, a spokesman for Ralston Purina, told the newspaper, however, that no final agreement has been reached at this time.
NHL governors on Thursday gave Omest conditional approval to buy the Blues for about $12 million, dq>ending upon ability of the Californians ability to negotiate lease or purchase of the Checkerdome.
An associate of Louis B. Susman, an attorney for Omests interests, confirmed substantial pro^ss" in arrangements needed to keep the NHL franchise in St. Louis. We are receiving tremendoius cooperation from the local investors and their legal counsel," said Michael K. Lazaroff.
Ralston Purina, which paid $8.8 million for purchase of the Blues and the Checkerdome, then known as the Arena, in 1977, filed a $20 million antitrust suit last spring against the NHL after refused permission to sell the franchise to Coliseum Holdings Ltd. of Saskatoon Saskatchewan.
Shortly afterward, the multinational St. Louis company announced it was turning the team over to the NHL to operate. The NHL responded to the Ralston Purina suit by filing a $78 million suit of its own based on breach of thie leagues charter.
Ornests arrangement to purchase the Checkerdome would exclude concessiomrights owned by Sportservice Inc., a sxbsidiary of Emprise Corp. q Bffalo, N.Y., the Globe-Democrat said in its stor^ today.
Reds' Hayes Finds Target
By The Associated Press
I threw the ball where I wanted to throw it, Ben Hayes said. Unfortunately for the Cincinnati relief pitcher, Keith Hernandez and Darryl Strawberry hit the ball where they wanted to hit it - over the wall.
The two home runs in the top of the ninth inning catapulted the New York Mets to a 3-2 victory over the Reds Friday night in a meeting of the National Leagues two last-place teams.
Elsewhere, the Atlanta Braves defeated the Philadelphia PhUlies 6-1, the San Francisco Giants tripped the Pittsburgh Pirates 5-3, the Los Angeles Dodgers pounded the St. Louis Cardinals 9-4, the Houston Astros outlasted the Montreal Expos 11-8, and the Chicago Cubs beat the San Diego Padres 5-3.
Frank Pastore was nursing a 2-1 lead when George Foster led off the seventh inning with a single. Bill Sherrer replaced Pastore and got Strawberry on a routine fly ball, then Hayes was summoned in. He kept the Mets off the scoreboard for the rest of the seventh inning and the eighth before the fireworks began.
Hernandez, leading off the
ninth, jump^ on a 1-2 pitch and pulled it into the right field seats for his eighth home run, tying the game. And after Foster was retired. Strawberry pounced on Hayes 2-0 offering and smacked It to the opposite field, over the left field wall for his 12th home run.
1 make no excuses, said the bewildered Hayes, who absorbed his second loss instead of picking up his fifth save. They came out and hit the ball. If youre going to lose a game, you want them to hit your pitch. Thats what they did.
Manager Frank Howard, who recently had accused the Mets of not trying hard enough, was ecstatic over the comeback. That just goes to show you, you can catch lightning in a bottle if you keep trying, he said.
Cesar Cedeno drove in both Cincinnati runs with singles in the first and third innings.
Braves 6, Phillies 1
Rookie pitcher Craig McMurtry is becoming Atlantas stopper. He allowed four hits in 7 1-3 innings and the Braves maintained their 3/2-game lead over visiting Los Angeles in
the West by beating the Phillies.
The outcome also kept the Phils a half-game behind front-running Pittsburgh in the East.
The last time we lost two in a row, McMurtry was the om that stopped the streak, Braves Manager Joe Torre said.
Chris Chambliss, who has hit safely in 16 of his last 17 games, ripped his 14th homer of the year into the ri^t field seats in the second inning, and Jerry Royster had singles to
key Atlantas two-run fourth and thre-run sixth.
Giants 5, Pirates 3 Joel Youn^loods two-run pinch single in the top of the eighth inning boosted San Francisco past the Pirates.
Jack Clark opened the eighth against Rod Scu^ with the fourth of his five singes, Jeff Leonard and Bob Brenly walked to load the bases, then Youngblood nailed a Kent Tekulve pitch to left for two runs and a 4-3 lead. Chili Davis added a sacrifice fly.
Dodgers 9, Cardinals 4
Light-hitting Steve Yeager drilled a pair of two-run homers, the first one tying the score 4-4 in the top of Uie sixth inning, the second one capping a five-run seventh. It was the second time this season he has supported Los Angeles starter Bob Welch with a pair of home runs.
Darrell Porter hit a two-run homer in St. Louis three-run first inning, one of 13 hits off Welch, who beat the Cards for the second time without a loss this season.
Fignon Takes Tour de France
DIJON, France (AP) - Frenchman Laurent Fignon won the 21st leg of the Toiir de France cycling classic Saturday to fortify his overall lead in the race that ends Sunday on Paris Champs Elysees Avenue.
Fignon won the 31-mile individual timed race from Plombieres to Dijon by clocking one hour, 11 minutes, 37 seconds. His average speed was 25 mph. The victory marked the first time Fignon has won a leg since the race got underway July 1.
Spains Angel Arroyo finished second, 35 seconds behind the leader, while Stephen Roche of Ireland captured third place, 37 seconds after Fignon.
Fignon now holds a virtually unbeatable
lead going into Sundays final leg. He has a combined time of 99 hours, 36 minutes and 55 seconds.
Arroyos showing Saturday propelled him from fourth to second place in the standings. He is now four minutes and four seconds behind Fignon.
Peter Winnen of the Netherlands, who finished fifth in Saturdays leg, fell to third place in the standings and is now 4:09 behind the leader.
American Jonathan Boyer finished 37th in Saturdays leg by clocking 1 hour, 16 minutes, 13.59 seconds. Boyer is now in 12th place in the overall standings, 19:57 behind the leader.
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How Do Animals Beat The Heat? - . . . by doing anything from wallowing in mud to climbing a tree, according to the National Wildlife Federation.
When the temperature soars and the sun sizzles, heres how some animals around the world keep their cool:
The white rhino wallows in mud until its body is coated, then cools off as the water in the mud evaporates.
By climbing a tree, the brown bear cub is cooled by the passing breezes, which also blow away black flies and mosquitoes that add to the misery of summers heat.
Snoozing on the beach in the hot sun. the elephant seal stays cool as it molts, or loses patches of hair and skin. It then protects and cools its tender new skin by flipping damp sand all over its body.
Almost like hibernating, Australias cyclorana frog digs underground to escape the heat, wraps itself in a cellophane-like sack make of old skin and stays there until cool rains fall - sometimes for more than a year.
Both the fennec fox and the elephant flap their huge ears to cool off. The bigger the ears, the more blood vessels there are lying close to the skin; heat from the warm blood flowing through these blood vessels then passes quickly from the animals body into the air.
The laughing gull pants like a dog and fluffs out its feathers to let its body heat escape.
Because the cougar hunts and eats in the cool of the night, he sleeps all day. The hotter it gets, the more his body stretches out. The more he stretches, the more heat escapes from his body.
The ferruginous hawk protects its chicks by shading them in the nest with its own shadow while the other parent hunts for food.
The sand-diving lizard does just what its name implies; it dives into the sand and stays there, protected from the suns rays, during the hottest part of the day.
With the hot weather of late, it might be a good idea' to follow some of these techniques if you have to be outdoors.
Woodrow Price Reappointed Wildlife Commissioner -Woodrow Price of Gloucester has been reappointed by Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. to serve another six-year term as wildlife commissioner for District 2 on the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission. His current term of office will expire in July of 1989. In addition, he was re-elected to serve his fourth term as vice-chairman of the Wildlife Commission. Price is also a member of the board of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Foundation, Inc., and has served on many boards and committees within the wildlife commission.
"Woodrow Price has made many valuable contributions to the wildlife commission, and were happy to have him serving another term as wildlife commissioner for Distrct 2, said J. Robert Gordon of Laurinburg, chairman of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission. The sportsmen of North Carolina will be well represented.
Fishing Report - The greatest run of big-eye tuna in North Carolina history kept Outer Banks anglers busy last week. At least 75 big-eye were boated ranging in wei^it from 118-223 pounds. Most were caught on boats based out of Oregon Inlet.
Spanish mackeral were still active off Bogue banks, and a few tarpon have been hooked around Bogue Inlet.
The weather has been so hot that most fishermen have been staying indoors - cooling it.
Imposter Still Says He Is Football Star
NATCHITOCHES, La. (AP)
- The imposter identified Friday as Arthur Lee Trotter still insists he is former professional football player Marv Fleming, a police detective said.
I said, Look, you can stop playing your game, said Detective Larry Vaughn.
Vaughn, a key man in breaking the curious week-old case, said he told Trotter about an FBI report on himself, showed him a four-page FBI rap sheet dating back to 1954 and even told him his Social Security number.
He looked at me and said, Thats wrong. Im Marv Fleming.
Vaughn said Trotter, now in jail under $25,000 bond, got so good at his masquerade that he even got one town to honor him at a Marv Fleming Day.
Its crazy, said Vaughn,
Hes been at this thing almost 30 years. And he is very good at it. How many people can con a whole town?
He said Trotter, who was arrested last Saturday for attempted felony theft by fraud, also had impersonated Bill Russell, the former professional basketball player, and John Mackey, another professional football tight end who played for Baltimore and San Diego.
His real identity was traced by FBI fingerprint experts who had a record on him going back to 1954.
Police said he is 49 years old but they had no hometown for him, although there was reliable information that he had been working for a construction company in the Fort Worth, Texas. He also was reported to be from Pueblo, Colo.
He does favor Fleming, Vaughn said. He is real heavy now ... but the facial features have a definite similarity.
, Vaughn said Trotters car was full of Fleming material
checkbooks with Flemings name; a California and a (Texas drivers license with Flemings name; pictures of Miami Dolphins and Green Bay Packers football jerseys .with Flemings name and number; even three insurance Ipolicies made out to Fleming, listing his occupation as ^professional football player!
There also was a big newspaper clipping, complete with a picture of Trotter and his girlfriend, taken during a Marv Fleming Day celebration in Texas in 1978. The clipping listed no town.
She was identified as Bobby Jane Bryant, 42, and also was arrested in Natchitoches.
Trotter was charged with attempted felony theft by fraud after taking a $2,500 check from a local woman for shares in a phantom restaurant chain. The woman later grew suspicious and called police.
$lkes, Barnes To Coach Lady Pirates
Former East Carolina University standouts Laurie Sikes and Lillion Barnes will serve as assistant coaches for the 1983-84 edition of the Lady Pirates, head coach Cathy Andruzzi announced.
Sikes completed her career in 1981 as the all-time assist leader at ECU, although playing only two seasons. The Marietta, Ga. native transferred from Peace College in Raleigh.
Barnes, who will be Andruzzis chief assistant, was a student assistant last season while completing her degree in psychology. She held the distinction of being the first four-year letter winner m the Andruzzi program. The Wilson native was instrumental in the Lady Pirates NCAA Tournament berth in 1982.
Oakland To Decide On Appeal Of Court Ruling
Price Sworn In term. His current term will expire in
Woodrow Price of Gloucester (right) July of 1989. Here, Price is con-
was recently sworn in as Wildlife gratulated by Judge Gerald Arnold
Commissioner for District 2 after of the North Carolina Court of
being re-appointed to serve a second Appeals.
SALINAS, Calif. (AP) - Oaklands city council will meet Monday to decide whether to appeal a judges decision blocking the citys attempt to seize the National Football Leagues Los Angeles Raiders,
"If it were my decision, I would appeal," Mayor Lionel Wilson said after learning of Fridays decision by Monterey County Superior Court Judge Nat Agliano
The decision prevents the city from using the power of eminent domain,* and Wilson contended it "does not conform to the (state) Supreme Courts decision
He said the judge allowed irrelevant evidence to be introduced and that much of the evidence he used to reach his decision had already been decided in Oakland's favor by the states top court.
Wilson, who along with others in the case refused to say how much was spent on legal costs, said the appeal question would be decided in a closed session Monday.
Moving the team a step closer to making Los Angeles its permanent home, the decision by Agliano said Oakland does not have the right to claim the team under the law cities use to claim private property for public use.
His ruling invalidated a Superior Court ruling and preliminary injunction that would have forced the team to play in Oakland next season.
Among other things, the judge said seizing the team might scare other businesses thinking they could also be seized.
Raiders' attorney Joseph Alioto said the decision upheld "the American dream and free enterprise."
The team, which played out of Oakland since 1963, was moved to Los Angeles by owner A1 Davis in time to play last season. Davis and Oakland couldn't agree on improvements for the ,54,000-seat stadium, including additional seating. The Los Angeles Coliseum has 90,000 seats.
Meanwhile, lawyers say a decison may be forthcoming within 30 days on the NFL appeal of a U.S. District Court jury decision that could be the final hurdle for the Raiders.
The jury decided an NFL rule controlling movement of franchises violated antitrust law.
The NFL also appealed the $16.4 million in damages the jury awarded to the Raiders and Los Angeles Coliseum Commission, which filed the suit. The award was tripled to $49.2 million in accordance with antitrust law.
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WILL TRY ANYTHING LimE ROCK (AP) -Arkansas-at-Little-Rock basketball coach Ron Kestenbaum is ready to try anything to get a decision over Georgia Southern, located in Statesboro, Ga.
In 1981 we made a 15-hour trip by bus to Statesboro and lost, he said. In 1982 we flew to Macon, rode a bus for three hours and lost again. This year we flew to Savannah, rode the bus for two hours and lost for the third year In a row. Next year, we walk.
Save $650.00. Retail Price $400.00 Colonial Sofa And Matching Wing Chair.
Brown Herculon Plaid Sale $ O Shop Worn. Both Pieces . Price
Save $520.00. Retail Price $895.00. Kingsdown Colonial Queen Sleeper
Colonial Nylon Print Three Sale ^ 07 COO Cushion. Skirted. . . Price m V
Save $541.00. Retail Price $840.00. Kingsdown Colonial Style Sofa.
Three Cushions. Blue And Sale S OQQ^^ Beige Check Fabric...... Price dm ^ 7
Save $551.00. Retail Price $850.00 Kingsdown Velvet Traditional Sofa
Light Green Velvet Fabric. Sale $ O Q Q 00 Three Cushion Price ^ ^
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Camel Back. Colorful Beige Sale $ COO And Blue Floral Print.....Price \JJ%3
Save $725.00. Retail Price $1475.00 Colonial Sofa And Chair In Corduroy Fabric.
Three Cushion Sofa Sale $ ^ C/\00 And Wing Chair........ Price I
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Deep Hand Tufted Back Sale$ COO Cordovan Color..........Price %3
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Traditional Style Beige Sale $ OQ QOO And Blue Floral Print Price 833^7
Save $995.00. Retail Price $1890.00 Colonial Sofa, Chair And Love Seat
By Broyhill, All Three Sale $ OO COO Pieces. Herculon Plaid ... Price O %3
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Brown And Green Herculon C C^\00 Plaid Fabric Both Pieces f fce %jO\/
Save $500.00. Retail Price $895.00. Kingsdown Country Sofa '
Rust Floral Print Fabric Sale S OQ COO Gathered Skirt..........Price %3J0
Save $346.00. Retail Price $795.00. Broyhill Traditional Loose Pillow Back Sofa
Quilted Blue Floral Print Sale $ ^^00 One Seat Cushion Price y
Save $645.00. Retail Price $ 1140.00. Kingsdown Queen Sleeper Sofa
Traditional Style. Loose Sale $ COO Pillow Back. Beige Print Price * %3
Save $501.00. Retail Price $900.00. Broyhill Contemporary Sofa.
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B- l-The Dady Reflector. Greenvle, N.C.- Sunday, juiy -4.
SCOREBOARD
TANK 1FNAMAM
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Sports Colendor
sSp
Editor's Sole Schedules ore supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subjec t to change without notice
Todays Sports Baseball American Legion Playoffs 18 Sr Babe* Ruth State Tourney at Elizabeth City 17 18 Sr Babe Ruth State
Tourney at Kinston'
ys Sjjorts
American Legion Playoffs District Little League Tourna ment at Tarboro If) Sr Babe Ruth State Tourney at Elizabeth City 17 18 Sr Babe Ruth State
Tournament at Kinston Basketball Overhill Gang vs Alumni Thriller vs B T Express Running Rebels vs Soul Train
American Legion Plavoffs BasketbaU'
Running Rebels vs Alumni Soul Train vs Sizzlers Overhill Gang vs B T Express sS
Grady White........... 6 12
, Enforcers............. 5 13
WNCT-TV 2 16
District Little League Tournament at Tarboro
Summer Stondingt
CityLeagiK National Division
W L
Final Standings
*Jimmv's66.......17 1
Metal Craft.......11 7
PTA............. .11 7
Libertv Warehouse 4 14
Airborne O'night...... 3 15
Pantana Bob's.....3 15
NatkmalDivi^
*Fire Fighters.......15
Carolina Leaf........12
Vermont-American 12
C.I.S................11
Pitt Memorial........10
Burrough-Wellcome#2 6 Empire Brushes #2 .6
Wachovia Bank........ 6
G. Utilities.........4
East Carolina #2.....2
Belvoir.............. 0
Tuesday s Sports ball
Baseb
American legion Playoffs District Little League Tournament at Tarboro 16 Sr Babe Ruth State Tournev at Elizabeth Citv 17-18 Sr ' Babe Ruth State Tournev at Kinston
American Division
Calif Concepts 14 4
Sunny side Eggs......13 5
J.A.'s Uniforms........11 7
Ormonds.........10 8
Pair Electronics 9 9
Subway..........7 II
Whittiiigton............ 4 14
Divisional Champion
Church 1 NaUonalDiv
Final Standings
Grace..........16 2
Faith Pent...........14 4
Church of God 12 6
1st Presbyterianll 7
Unity...........9 9
1st Pentecostal 8 10
Trinity.........7 11
Mt Pleasant........6 12
Peoples.........5 13
Wednesdays Sports Baseball
American Legion Playoffs District Little League Tournament at Tarboro
Basketball Lakers vs B T Express Franchise vs Sizzlers Omega vs Thriller
Industrial League American Division
Final Standings
Public Works. .......
18
0
TRW
16
2
Empire Brushes ol.....
15
3
Burroughs Wellcome vl 14
4
Union Carbide.........
9
8
East Carolina 1......
9
9
Cox .\rmature
8
9
Coca-Cola.............
7
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American Division
Blackjack......16 2
Memorial Baptist 14 4
Jarvis .......12 6
Oakmont..........10 8
1st Christian........9 9
1st Free Will........7 11
Immanuel Baptist 6 12
Maranatha........6 12
Arlington St 3 15
St. James........0 18
Division Champion
Boseboll Stondings
\ \
Panatta Tops Gottfried In b.C. Tennis Classit
WASHINGTON-(Ai>) - Italys Claudio Panatta refused to say die and as a result he is very much alive in the quarterfinals of the $200,000 D.C. National Bank Tennis Classic.
Panattar 112th in the world rankings, appwred to be in -over his head Friday when he was paired against the worlds 16th-ranked player and theTdumaments No. 3 seed, Brian Gottfried.
Gottfried started off like he wanted to catch a train, Panatta like he was under it.
Gottfried rolled to a 6-0 first-set victory and a 1-0 lead in the second set.
"1 started very badly, then just tried to win one, two games then win a set. Then maybe you can win the match, Panatta said.
After the first set my game dropped off noticeably and his improved. Thats a bad combination, ottfried said.
After losing the second set 6-4, Gottfried fell behind 4-3 in the third, final set.
"I needed the eighth game desperately and did all I could to break his serve, Gottfried said.
Panatta, pushed to eight deuces, finally held service and then held serve in the 10th game to win the match 0-6,6-4,64.
Also advancing to the quarterfinals were the top two seeds, Jos^Luis Clerc of Argentina and Jimmy Arias.
Clerc beat South Africas Derek Tarr 64,6-2 and Arias ousted No. 12 seed Dominique Bedel of France, 64,6-1.
Arias was to meet Ecuadors Andres Gomez, a straight-set winner over Australian Chris Johnstone, in the quarterfinals.
Clerc faced Perus Pablo Arraya, the No. 9 seed, in todays quarterfinals. Arraya stopped Spains Juan Aguilera 64,64 on Friday.
Panatta met Bolivias Mario Martinez, who upset fifth-seeded Mel Purcell, 4-6,7-6,6-1, for his first victory in four meetings with the Kentuckian.
The Italians were well represented in the quarterfinals with Francesco Cancellotti joining Panatta. Cancellotti stopped Frenchman Thierry Tulasne 4-6,6-1,64.
The eight-day tournament, which carries a top prize of $34,000, ends Monday niit.
Delhees Puts Off Vows For Federation Semis
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) - Petra Delhees, the 24-year-old Swiss No. 2, postponed her wedding to play for her country Saturday in the semifinals of the Federation Cup team tennis tournament.
Delhees, ranked 67th in the world, was due to have gotten married today to public relations officer Peter Jaucht.
Instead, she met West Germanys Claudia Kohde as her country made a bid to win the prestigious tournament for the first time.
When we realized we might be in the semifinal, the wedding ceremony was postponed until Monday. But Petra will still have a party for family and friends, said Swiss non-playing captain Janine Bourgnon, About 100 of them will be attending the match to cheer her on.
Switzerland beat West Germany in the 1981 quarter-final in Tokyo before falling to the United States in the next round.
But the Germans have arguably the best singles team in the tournament this year with Bettina Bunge and Kohde, ranked eighth and 16th in the world, respectively.
In addition, Germany - last years beaten finalist - is the only team to have won all three matches in each round leading up to the
semifinals.
The other semifinal is between the defending champion Americans and Czechoslovakia, seeded third.
The U.S. team, led by world No. 3 Andrea Jaeger, is bidding to win the Cup for the ei^th straight year and the 12th time in all, while the Czechs were victorious in 1975, the only time the trophy has gone to a European nation.
Jaeger has dropped only four games in her first three matches here but was expected to face tough opposition in world No. 9 Hana Mandlikova, who - like her American opponent - was unbeaten so far in the tournament.
Candy Reynolds, who lost a marathon three-set match 7-5,3-6,12-10 to Yugoslavias Sabina Goles on Friday - the United States went on to win 2-1 - faced Helena Sukova in the opening singles match. Jaeger and Mandlikova were scheduled to follow, with Reynolds and Paula Smith playing in the doubles.
Charleston Bids For Game
CHARLESTON, SC, (AP)
- Jerry Miles says the NCAA is looking for a permanent home for its Division I-AA football championship and says this historic city may just be the place.
The championship will be played at Johnson Haygood Stadium here Dec. 17 before a national television audience. And Miles, the director of the game for the National Collegiate Athletic Association, says the contest will be good for both the city and the game.
One reason, he said, is because there's interest in Division I-AA football locally with The Citadel located in town and two division powers
- South Carolina State and Furman - located just a few hours away.
Miles, in town to address the local chamber of commerce, said the historic sites and recreational activities offer an added attraction for fans.
Theres a little bit of concern that were playing on the campus of one of the Division I-AA members and some felt thats not good because we should be playing on a neutral site, he said. The stadium is the home field of The Citadel.
"But some coaches Ive talked to think thats good. They say that should truly help enthusiasm for the ^ampionship because they
(fans) are familiar with Division I-AA football.
Miles said there wasnt a lot of local interest in the division among fans in Wichita Falls, Texas, where the game was played the last two seasons.
The NCAA is extremely impressed with the early championship preparations of the city, he said, noting 600
tickets for the contest have alreuKy been sold.
J. NTac Holladay, of the chamber of commerce, said the game committee told the NCAA they could sell 15,000 tickets. But he says ^s looking for a sellout of 24,000. '
The game has no bowl name, its simply called the the national Division I-AA football championship.
ECU Players Prep For All Star Games
Eight future East Carolina Pirate basketball players in Universtiy football players the game since the mid-1960s, and thre future Pirate The football coaching staff basketball players will be will watch eight of 11 North performing in the East-West Carolina recruits batUe in all-star games Tuesday and Thursday nights gridiron Thursday nights in clash. Again, this is one for Greensboro. the largest groups of ECU
The three basketball players recruits in football to ever
are Derrick Battle (6-6 play in the game,
forward) of Northern Nash The eight are: defensive High School, Roy Smith (6-74 back Ellis Dillahunt and forward/center) of Gastonia linebacker Bruce Simpson of Hunter Huss and Jack Jacksonville, linebacker Ron Turnblll (6-9 forward) of Gilliard of Gamer, running
Wilmington New Hanover, back Terry Paige of Smith will play for the West Whiteville, linebacker Vincent squad, while Battle and Smith of Statesville, Turnbill will be on the East quarterback Darrell Speed of squad. Sanford, running back Bubba
The thre? in-state recruits Waters of Bath and linebacker playing in the all star game John Williamson of Laurin-represents the most future f burg.
T
rjti
Toronto
Baltimore
Detroit
New York
Milwaukee
Boston
Cleveland
522 -511 I 500 2
500 2
453 6'-j
389 12'-., 375 14
Divisional Champion
AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pet.
53 38
52 39
52 40
51 40
50 41
47 45
39 53
WEST DIVISION Chicago 48 44
Texas 48 46
CalUomia 47 47
Kansas City 44 44
Oakland 43 52
Minnesota 37 58
SeatUe 36 60
Fridayt Games Cleveland 8. Minnesota 5 New York 7-2, Kansas City 6-3. 2nd game 12 innings Chlca2,MUwaukeel Toronto 10. Texas 5, II innings Detroit 13. California II Oakland 4, Baltimore 3 Boston 5. SeatUe 4
Ssturtiy*^ GtiMs Baltimore i Davis 8-4) at Oakland (Conroy 2-31 Minnesota (Williams 5-111 at Cleveland (Barker7-9). (n)
Kansas City (Gura 8-11 i at New York (Guidry 11-51, (ni Chicago' (Hoyt 11-91 at Milwaukee (McClure 6-7), (n)
Toronto (Clancy 9-6) at Texas (Darwin
7-9), (n)
Detroit (Petry 96) at California (Ktson
8-4), (n)
Boston (Eckersley 6-7) at Seattle (Stoddard 4-10), (n)
Sundays Games Minnesota at Cleveland, 2 Kansas City at New York Chicago at Milwaukee Detroilat California Baltimore at Oakland Boston at SeatUe Toronto at Texas, (n)
Mondays Games Chicago at Toronto. (n) \
Baltimore at California, (n)
.Milwaukee at Minnesota, (n)
Cleveland at Kansas City, in)
New York a I Texas, I n)
Boston at Oakland, mi
Houston 11, Montreal 8 Los Angeles 9, St Louis 4
SatiinUys Games
San Francisco (Laskey 116) at Pit
tsburghiDeLeontHl)
San Diego (Show 96) at Chicago (Noles
3-5)
New York (Gorman 0-3) at Cincinnati
(Berenyi4-10), (n) Houstc
(on (knepper 4-9) at Montreal
(Schatzeder36i, (n)
Philadelphia (Carlton 9-11) at AUanta (Dayley2-J),(n)
Los Angeles (Pena 86) at St Louis
Atlanta. 8; Kaines. Montreal. 7; uawson. Montreal.6; 8aretiedwiUi5 HOME RUNS-Evans. San Francisco. 21; Murphy. Atlanta. 20; Dawson. Montreal. 19: Guerrero. Los Angeles. 19; Schmidt, Philadelphia. 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. Atlanta. 8-1, 889, 3 06; PPerez, AUanta, 10-2, .833, 2 79; Montefusco, San Diei
Kansas City. 43; RLaw. Chica^. 41; Sample. Texas. 30 PITCHING 19 decisions): Righetti, New York. 11-3, 786. 3 28, Haas,
Milwaukee. 7-2, 778. 3.74; Koosman. Chicago. 7-2, .778, 4 22. Tellmann. Milwaukee, 7-2, 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
(Stuper76), (n)
SuDdaytGamei
iscoatPill
San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 2 Houston at Montreal
8-2, 800, 3.99; Ryan, Houston, 9-3,
5, Montreal, 12-5, 706,3 00
idelphia.
153; Soto. Cincinnati. 145; McWilliams,
2 49; Rogers. STRIKEOUTS-Carlton. Philad
SAVES: Quisenbeny, Kansas City. 23, Stanley, Boston. 19; Caudill. Seattle. 17.
RDavis. Minnesota. IS; Lopez. Detroit. 14
iiladelphia at AUanta New Yorti at Cincinnati
Los Angeles at St Louis San Diego at Chicago
MoodAV^ Gimes Los Angeles at Chicago Atlanta at New York, (n) Montreal at Cincinnati, (n) San Diego at Pittsburgh, (n) San Francisco at St Louis, (n)
Pittsburgh. 122; Hammaker, San Francisco, 99; Candelaria, Pittsburgh. 95; Rogers, Montreal, 95; Valenzuela, Los Aimeles, 95.
SAVES Bedrosian. Atlanta, 15; Reardon. Montreal. 14; LeSmith, Chicago; 13; Lavelle, San Francisco, 12. 6 are tied with 10
Transoctions
By The Aiaoclated Press BASEBALL American League
SEATTLE MARINERS-Called
contract
LOS ANGELES RAMS-Signed Henry Ellard. wide receiver, to a series of one-year contracts Announced the retirement of Larry Brooks, defensive tackle, who will remain wiUi Uie team as an assistant coach and scout
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS-Signed Rob Nairne. linebacker, to a two-year contract
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES-Signed Guy Morriss. center, to two one-year contracts Cut Steve Sebahar. center. Jav Lewis, linebacker. Rich McDonald, tackle. Brian Sullivan, kicker. Don Birdsey. punter, and Joe Banaciski. defensive back Added Thomas Brown, defensive end. and Alvin Hooks, wide receiver
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Signed Milt McColl, linebacker, to a one-year con
up Al
Chambers, outfielder, from Salt Lake
tract with an option year WASHING'TON REDSKINS-Waived
Leogue leoders
By1
NJ
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
(I
Montreal St Louis Chicago New York
Atlanta Los Angeles Houston San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati
NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION W L 46 45
45 45
45 46
46 47
43 51
35 59
WEST DIVISION 59 37
54 39
SO 44
47 46
47 47
42 53
Pet,
505
500
495
495
457
GB
/TbeAnoclitedPress .NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (235 at batsi-Knight, Houston, 340; Hendrick, StLouis, Ml; Madlock, Pituburgh. 323; LoSmith, StLouis. .322; Dawson. Montreal. 320; Oliver, Montreal. 320
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (235 at bats): Carew, California. 379. Boggs. Boston. 372: Brett, Kansas City. 358: Griffey. New York, 333: Aikens, Kansas City. 328. McRae. Kansas City. .328 RUNS: Yount, Milwaukee, 67; Upshaw. Toronto, 66; R Henderson, Oakland, 65 D.Evans. Boston. 63. E.Murray, Baltimore. 61; Ripken, Baltimore, 61;
City of the Pacific Coast League Placed Al Cowens. outfielder, on the 21-day disabled list.
NaUonil League
CHICAGO CUBS-Placed Junior Ken nedy, infielder, on the designated for
the
John Boyd, wide receiver, and Marlin Evans and Stan Hollowav. linebackers Placed Shawn Miller, deiensivi end. on
the'leftcamp "list
United States FootbaU Leame
MEMPHIS-Named Charles Thornton
nedy, infielder, on the designated I assignment list and brought iq) . Ixviglio, infielder, from Midland of
League
OES-A
Texas League
uitenatloaal
Wilson. Kansas City, 61.
RBI Cooper. Milwaukee. 73: Rice.
RUNS-Mujyhy, Atlanta, 87. Garvey, San Diego. 72; Evans. San Francisco.
ntreal, 67, Dawson, Montreal.
372 IZ'x
Friday's Gamea
Chicago 7, San Diego 3 Atianfa 6. Philadelphia I NewYorit3,Clnrii*tl2> San Franciscos, Pitt)
815
581 3'^
532 8
505 lO'i 500 II 442 I6>-.,
Raines.
56
RBI Dawson, Montreal. 72; Murphy, AtlanU, 66; Chambliss. AUanta. 63; Guerrero. Los Angeles, 61; Hendrick. StLouis. 60 HITS-Dawson, Montreal, 118; Thon, Houston. 118; Oliver, Montreal. 116; Buckner, Chicago, 107; Cruz, Houston, 107; Guerrero, Los Aiigeles, 107; MunAy, AtlanU, 107.
DOUBLES Buckner, Chicago, 25; Knight. Houston, 25; Oliver, Montreal, 24, Cruz, Houston, 22; Hendrick, StLouis, 22. JRay, Pittsburg, 22; Wallach, Montreal, 22.
TRIPLES-Moreno, Houston. 11; BuUer,
icago,
KansasCiU. 62: Winfield, Suw York, 61 HITS: Boggs. Boston. 128; Whitaker, Detroit, 120; Rice, Boston, 112; Ward, Minnesota, 112; McRae, Kansas City, ill DOUBLES Boggs. Boston. 29; Parrish, Detroit, 29, Mc^, Kansas City, 29; Hrbek, MinnesoU, 26; Brett. Kansas City. 25; Ripken. Baltimore. 25; Yount. Milwaukee, 25 TRIPLES: Herndon, Detroit, 7; Winfield, New York, 7; G.Wilson, Detroit, 6; Griffin, Toronto. 6; K Gibson. Detroit, 6; Moiitor, Milwaukee. 6; Wright, Texas. 6 HOME RUNS: Rice. Boston. 23. Armas, Boston, 21; Cooper, Milwaukee, 21; Kittle. Chicago. 21. Brett. Kansas City, 19
Stolen bases: R Henderson, Oakland. 57; J.Cruz. Chicago. 45, Wil
tidewater TIDES-Acquired Kelvin Moore, first baseman, from Tacoma of Uie Pacific Coast League for Scott Dye. pitcher
BASKETBALL National Basketball AnocUtk BOSTON CELTICS-Placed Nate "Tiny " Archibald, guard, on clear waivers.
PHOENIX SUNS-Cut Bo Overton, guard, and Sam Mosley. Rick Lamb. Edward Bona, and Joe Dykstra, forwards.
FOOTBALL
general manager PHILADELPHIA STARS-Acquired Joel Peters, defensive end, and Artis Carhee. running back, from the Arizona Wranglers after Arizona failed to protect them on the injured reserve list.
COLLEGE CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE-Named Richard A McDuffie athletic director. effecUve Aug_i5 DOMINICAN COLDEGE-Named Rich Martin head baseball coach and Rick Pychewicz assistant baseball coach I)YKE COLLEGE-Named Michael Friedman head basketball coach.
LOUISIANA STATE -Named Jim Sullivan ticket manager UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII-Named Stan Sheriff athletic director
Canadian Football Leagw
1RDES-
MONTREAL CONCORDES-Signed Kurt Garl. linebacker, to a Uiree-year contract
NaUonal FooOmU League
BUFFALO BILLS-Released Joseph
N.C Scoreboard
By The Aaaoclated Press
Ross and Jeff Wilson, punters.
LIONS-Signed "Terry
DETROIT Tautolo, linebacker,
to a muiU-year
I
Carolina League
Kinston 6, Winston-Salem 4 Southern League Charlotte 14. Chattanooga 8
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Gillman To Be Inducted In Hall Of Fame
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Sid Gillman, the only 1983 inductee whose career bridges the three major football leagues in the sports history, will join three former players Saturday for enshrinement into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
Gillman built his reputation as an innovative coach in the old American Football League and then switched to the National Football League.
Now at the age of 71, the Ohioan has come out of retirement once again to serve as the general manager for the Tulsa expansion team, the Oklahoma Outlaws, in the United States Football League.
The 1983 enshrinees also include quarterback Sonny Jurgensen, linebacker Bobby Bell and wide receivers Paii Warfield and Bobby Mitchell. Their inductions will push the halls membership to 119 immortals.
Accompanying their inductions will be the seasons opening exhibition. It matches the Pittsburgh Steelers and the New Orleans Saints in nearby Fawcett Stadium (ABC-TV, 2 p.m. EOT) before a sellout of more than 23,000 fans.
Gillman will become only the fourth modern-day coach to be voted into the hall. Preceding him were the late Vince Lombardi, Weeb Ewbank and Paul Brown.
Gillman, an end in his col-
Toylor Missing From Giants
By The Associated Press Lawrence Taylor thinks he deserves to earn as much as other National Football League linebackers. The New York Giants think he should honor the contract he signed two years ago.
Taylor, the two-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year, wants the Giants to renegotiate the five-ypar pact he signed after the Giants se ected him second overall in the 1981 draft. He will earn approximately $120,000 this year.
So he failed to report to the Giants training camp with other veterans Friday and said his holdout was something Ive got to do, when reached by telephone at Chapel Hill, N.C., where he went to college.
I havent talked to (General Manager) George Young or the coach, said Taylor. This is just something Ive got to do.
There are guys making $300,000, $400,000 and they havent done what Ive done Im looking at the (John) Elways, the Herschel Walkers, at Cris Collinsworth, Anthony Carter, Kelvin Bryant, (Tom) Cousineau. Im at the top of my sport and Im not being paid accordingly.
Im prepared to sit out the year.
Heres the deal. Lawrence Taylor failed to report. He has a valid NFL contract. He will be disciplined within the framework of the Giants fine schedule, said Bill Parcells, the Giants head coach. I have no further comment nor will anyone else in the organization.
Also threatening to sit out the season is Dallas Cowboys comerback Everson Walls, another All-Pro. He received another contract offer from the Cowboys on Friday worth $1.2 million for five years.
Among other veterans who did not reiwrt to their respective training camps were wide receiver Harold Carmichael of Philadelphia, tackle Anthony Munoz and fullback Pete Johnson of Cincinnati, offensive linemen R. C. Thielmann and Mike Kenn of Aanta, tackle Shelby Jordan of New England, tight end David Hill of Detroit and wide receiver Roger Carr of Seattle. Theyre all seeking contract renegotiations.
Munoz and Johnson are being fined $1,000 a day by the Bengals.
Veterans who signed contracts Friday included linebacker Terry Tautolo with Detroit; New Orleans linebacker Rob Nairne; Philadelphia center Guy Morriss and San Francisco linebacker Milt McColl.
Morriss has been the start-. ing center in 135 of the Eagles last 142 games. Lynn Stiles, the Eagles executive director of player personnel, said the teams offer would make Morriss the highest-paid in the NFL.
lege-playing days at Ohio State, generally is regarded as the coach who did more to shape todays explosive pro passing attacks than any individual.
He spent 21 years at the college level, wth an 81-19-2 in one decade at Miami (Ohio) and the University of Cincinnati. Another 18 seasons in the pro ranks produced a 122-99-7 record, ranking him among the top 12 coaches in all-time victories. He was the frst coach to win divisional titles in both the AFL and NFL,
doing it with the San Diego Chargers and the Los Angeles Rams.
Gillman explained his wide-open offenses by saying, The big play comes from the pass. God bless those runners because they get you the first down, give you ball control and keep your defense off the field. But if you want to ring the cash register, you have to pass
He has retired several times in the past 15 years. His latest came after he left as a Philadelphia Eagles coaching
assistant last fall, shortly before his Hall of Fame selection.
Of his new role in the Outlaws front office, Gillman said, "I dont want the responsibility of being a head coach anymore. But I do think I can still help some team with its offense.
Jurgensen, with his 82.8 career point rating, ranks second behind Roger Staubach in the all-time NFL passing category. The native of Wilmin^on, N.C., a Duke University product, completed
2,433 passes for 32,224 yards and 255 touchdowns in his 218-game, 18-year pro career with the Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Redskins.
Jurgensen, the NFL passing champion in 1967 and 1969, posted 25 games of 300-plus yards passing, third on the all-time list. In the 1966-68 period, he threw at least one touchdown pass in 23 straight games.
Bell, a high school quarterback in high school and an All-American tackle at the University of Minnesota,
becomes the first Kansas City Chiefs player to join the shrine. He was chosen on the AFLs all-time squad as a linebacker, however.
The 6-foot-4, 225-pound Bell, a native of Shelbyville, N.C., won all-pro honors eight straight times in his 12-year career. He played in two AFL title games and Super Bowls I and IV.
Mitchell, a 6-foot, 195-pound speedster from the University of Illinois, broke in with the Cleveland Browns as a running back, teaming with Jim
Brown. He wound up his 11-year pro career as a big-play wide receiver for the Redskins, the first black to play for the Washington franchise.
Mitchell ranks behind Brown and O.J. Simpson on the all-time production of total yardage. The native of Hot Springs, Ark., accounted for 14,078 net yards with his running, receiving and kick returns. He had 521 catches for 7,954 yards and 65 touchdowns. No. 15 of all time.
Warfields 20.1-yard
average per catch is unprecedented in the pro game. The Ohio State University product, from Warren. Ohio, piled up 8,565 yards and 85 touchdowns with his 427 receptions during 13 pro seasons.
Warfield was a No. 1 draft pick of the Cleveland Browns in 1965 before being traded to the Miami Dolphins in 1970. He jumped to the fledgling World Football League in 1975, playing with the Memphis Southmen before finishing his career with the Browns in 1975-1977.
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Clerc Moves Into D.C. Semis; Smid In Dutch Final
By The Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Top-seeded Jose Luis Clerc of Argentina crushed Perus Pablo Arraya 6-1, 6-3 Saturday to advance for the fifth straight year to the semifinals of the $200,000 D C. National Bank Tennis Classic.
Clerc will meet the tournament's 15th seed. Mario Martinez of Bolivia, in Sunday's semifinals. Martinez beat Italys* Claudio Panatta 7-6, 3-6, 6-2 Saturday afternoon.
No. 2 seed Jimmy .Arias was to play Ecuadors Andres Gomez, seeded sixth, and Italys Francesco Cancellotti was to meet Eric Korita Saturday night to determine the second seminfinal pairing. Clerc, who is coming off a victory last week in the U.S. Pro Championships in Boston, needed only 82 minutes to dispatch the ninth-seeded Arraya.
The Argentinian, the worlds 10th-ranked player, has now advanced to the semifinal round here every year since 1979. Clerc won the title here in IMl. Last year he was upset in the semifinals by Arias.
Martinez and Panatta battled for two hours and 36 minutes, the match featuring the traditional clay-court style of Panatta and the agreive, attacking form of Martinez.
I like the way he plays, Martinez said of his 23-year-old opponent. He is very smooth, elegant. Very nice to watch.
Panatta, who upset third-seeded Brian Gottfried to advance to the quarterfinals, was kept on the defensive by the attacking Martinez.
"After about four games I have felt him out and know how to play him,
Martinez said of this first meeting beteen the two. I know that I should move him around from side-to-side and should go to the net.
Both players held service through the first set, which Martinez won with a 7-4 tiebreaker.
The first service break of the match came in the second set with Martinez serving at two games to three. Although Martinez returned the favor in the next game, Panatta broke through again to take a 5-3 lead.
Martinez, continuing to run Panatta from side-to-side, wore down the Italian in the third set.
1 know if it goes three sets I am in good shape, mentally ready, said Martinez, who has not lost a three-set match here in three years.
"He was getting tired in the first set
and I knew if I could keq> him running he would never last three hours, Martinez concluded.
The tournament, which carries a tq? prize of $34,000, concludes Monday night.
SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. - Brian Gottfried was seeded first Saturday for the $125,000 Mutual Benefit Life Open tennis championships that begins Monday at the Orange Lawn Tennis Gub.
Gottfried will face West German Davis Cup player Mike Westphal in a first-round match.
Shlomo Glickstein of Israel, the No. 2 seed who beat Dick Stockton for the tournament title in 1981, will meet former Southern Methodist star Tom Cain in a first-round match.
John Alexander of Australia was seeded third in the 32-player field. Marcos Hocevar of Brazil was seeded
fourth; Paul McNamee of Australia, fifth; Fritz Behning, sixth; Mark Dickson, seventh; and Libor Pimek of Czechoslovakia, eighth.
t
Hilversum, Netherlands - Third-seeded Tomas Smid of Czechoslovakia fought off a determined Andreas Maurer of West Germany 6-3,3-6,7-5 Saturday to reach the final of the $75,000 Dutch Grand Prix International Tennis Tournament.
In the final set, Smid swiftly gained a 5-1 lead, but Maurer, who is ranked 150th in the world on the Atari-ATP computer, fought his way back to knot the score at
5-5. The Czech needed six match points to move into the final after fighting off Maurer for more than two hours.
In Sundays final, Smid, ranked 21st in the world, will meet Hungarys Balasz Taroczy, who easily defeated unseeded Roland Stadler of Switzerland 6-1,6-3.
Taroczy, seeded fourth in Hilversum, has won this tournament six times since 1976.
KITZBUEHEL, Austria - Top-seeded Guillermo Vilas moved into the final of the $100,000 Head Cup Volvo Grand Prix tennis tournament Saturday with a 6-1,
6-3 victory over Sergio Casal of Spain.
He meets second-seeded Henri Leconte of France in Sundays final. The Frenchman defeated Jans-Joerg Schwaier of West Germany 6-2, 6-1 in the other semifinal match.
The Argentine star, who has won three tournaments this year, showed overpowing (xmcentration against the nth-seeded Casal, despite temperatures in the high 80s.
Leconte also had a relatively easy time against the 19-year-old German, taking the match in 57 minutes.
Allison After Fourth Straight
Leading Swing
Hal Sutton chips onto the third green on his way to a bogey during the third round of the Anheuser Busch Golf Classic being played at Williamsburgs Kingsmill Golf Course. (AP Laserphoto)
Reilly Mixes NFL, Prison
FULLERTON, Calif. (AP) - When linebacker Mike Reilly finished his first workout at the Los Angeles Rams training camp at Cal Stale Fullerton, coaching aide Ray San Jose drove him back to jail.
Reilly. 24, an eighth-round draft choice from Oklahoma last year, is on a work furlough while serving a year in the Theo Lacy minimum custody facility in the City of Orange.
Reilly pleaded no contest to charges of drunken driving and felony manslaughter. Almost a year ago his vehicle struck the rear of another car about three miles from the training camp. Zachary Scott Thomas, 17, of Chino, was thrown frofn the car and killed. Two others were injured.
"It's just a work furlough program in which' 200 people in there with me are also involved, he said. I dont think they looked at it any differently than they would for anybody else.
National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle is expected to rule whether Reilly should be allowed to remain with the Rams.
Reilly said if he was suspended it would be up to his attorney to determine if Igal action would be taken.
In the meantime, said Coac
John Robinson, Reilly will be treated like any other member of the squad, although obviously with allowances for his special circumstances.
If, in fact, hes in'a rehabilitation process, its important for him to continue his carer. Were trying to go step by step with him. The first step was to get him on the practice field.
The conditions of Reillys furlough are that he cant travel more than 90 minutes driving time from Theo Lacey; must return every night and is allowed out a maximum of six days and 60 hours each week.
No alteration in the conditions can be made, said Stephanie Lewis, supervising probation officer of the Orange County Probation Department.
That makes it difficult to determine whether or not he really is competing with Mel Owens for the left outside linebacker posUionThey (the Rams) are aware of the conditions of the work furlough, said Ms. Lewis. I dont know what their plans are for playing him.
Reillys lawyer, Jim Perry, said he might seek a more flexible work furlough.
Reilly, however, is trying not to worry about it.
Im competing for a starting postition and doing the
best I can... and trying to put everything else in the back of my mind.
LONG POND, Pa. (AP) -Bobby Allison, hoping to ignite a runaway in the championship point race, will be aiming for his fourth consecutive Pocono victory in the Like Cola 500 Grand National stock car race Sunday.
Allison, trying to nail down the first national title in his ig and successful Grand i^ational career, goes into the race at Pocono International Raceway leading two-time defending Winston Cup champion Darrell Waltrip by 202 points.
Pocono has been real good to us in the last couple of years, said Allison, who will start 12th in the 36-car lineup. Well just concentrate on doing well here and not worry about history.
The 45-year-old Allison was referring to the past two seasons, during which he built up enormous point leads over Waltrip, only to see Junior Johnsons determined driver overtake him by seasons end.
A win here could really get us going, Allison said. If we keep on doing well, the points will take care of themselves. Tim Richmond, who qualified at 151.981, and Harry Gant, 150.809, grabbed the front-row starting positions
for Sundays race, but Waltrip, 150.499, will start third on the grid.
I dont think theres any question that this (Johnsons) team is capable of coming back, Waltrip said. Historically, weve been the hot team late in the season.
Now 1 think were in position to finish first, second or third here. Well just keep putting as much pressure on them (Allison and the DiGard team) as we can and see where the chips fall.
Poconos 2.5-mile trioval is one of the toughest tracks on the Grand National circuit because each of the three turns is completely different. They are banked 6, 12 and 18 degrees, consecutively, making the track a crew chiefs nightmare because of the difficulty of coming wp with the right chassis settings.
Its like a road course with no right turns. says Gant. You haze to drive each of the turns differently and, during the race, you keep having to adjust. Its a really tough place to race.
Also in the lineup is seventime national champion Richard Petty, who is hoping to get two more victories this season to reach 200. Petty, 46, has
won twice this season and now has 198 career triumphs.
Ive done very well here in the past, said Petty, who has two victories and three second-place finishes at this track. But its a real tricky
place and Ive also had a couple of bad ones (accidents) here.
You gotta keep your concentration and be a little lucky here in. a 500 mile race. Petty will start ninth on the
grid, just ahead of Dale Earnhardt, coming off a victory last Sunday at Nashville, Tenn.
The race, with a crowd of more than 50,000 expected, will start atlp.m.EDT.
Mirzoyan Records New Weightlifting Mark
MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet weightlifter Oksen Mirzoyan, 22, set two new world marks in the under-56 kilograms category and Soviet underwater swimmers came up with a slew of world records at the opening of the major portion of the eighth Spartakiad Saturday.
Minoyan achieved a snatch of 127.5 kilograms to better the 2-year-old record of Chinese weightlifter Wu ShiHli by one kilo and went on to take first place in his class with a record total of 287.5 kilograms, Tasssaid.
The total mark was 2.5 kilos better than the old record held by Bulgarian Naim Sul-eymanov, according to Tass.
It did not say where or when the old records were set.
In underwater speed swimming competitions in Kiev, Alexei Zhukov of the Soviet Union covered 1,500 meters in 12 minutes 57.59 seconds, improving the old mark of 13.03.28 held by compatriot Mikhail Kaluzhsky.
In the womens 1,500 meter event, Soviet swimmer Svetlana Uspenskaya bettered her own world record of 14:05.13 by completing the course in 13:58.18, Tass said.
A womens team from Soviet Kazakhstan completed the 4 by 200 meter relay race in 6:41.67, a world record, and a
Russian mens team equaled the world mark over the same distance with a time of 5:56.45, Tass said. It did not say what the old records were or who held them.
The records came on the opening day of the major portion of the summer Spartakiad. Several categories, including most track and field events, were completed last month. The second half of the Games kicked off in Moscow with an elaborate Lenin Stadium ceremony reminiscent of the mass ritual which opened the Moscow Olympics three years ago.
Campbell Looking For Winning Combination
Get your
Grants
somesdd
ireinfercemeiit
WEST CHESTER. Pa. (AP) - Marion Campbell says he may not work the long hours that Dick Vermeil did, but his goal is the same: a winning season for the Philadelphia Eagles.
The 54-year-old Campbell, former Eagles defensive coordinator, is succeeding Vermeil as head coach of the National Football League team this season. As training camp opened, he was asked about comparisons between him and Vermeil.
"People forget 1 was here when Dick was. 1 helped get this program going and Im comfortable with it. I want to see it continue, Campbell said.
"Ill do a lot of things Dick does, but I just wont do them as late as Dick. Ive never done that. 1 went to bed earlier than Dick - midnight was it for me, while he stayed up until 4.1 believe in saving some work for the next day,
The burly Campbell, a native of Chester, S.C., and a former star tackle at Georgia,
was named head coach of the Atlanta Falcons in 1974 after Norm Van Brocklin was fired. Campbell was fired from the same job two years later, then joined the Eagles as defensive coordinator.
Earlier, in the middle and late 1960s, be had worked with defensive units at Minnesota, Los Angeles and Atlanta.
He said he wants the challenge of continuing the program he and Vermeil built and of turning around the Eagles dismal 3-6 record of last season.
"Everything weve done last year has to be improved, he said. Last year we didnt score, we didnt stop people. But I think weve got the character to turn it around. Thats the challenge.
He wants more emphasis on the running game, and he expects competition among players who are hungry to win.
I think youll see some of our young kids make some moves early, especially on special teams, he said.
Nor S^ate^s $ljOOOnummum, -nwntiC IX earns 10.13%
(,
Youll earn the highest rates in the state with North States top-rank yielding 6-month certificate. So,your $50 Grants, $100 Franklins and all the rest of your savings money will get some added reinforcement from our higher yields,.
With a $1,000 minimum deposit,youll earn more interest than 6-month certificates requiring much larger minimum balances. And your savings at North
State are insured to $ 100,000.
So, muster up your savings money and open a 6-month C.D. at North State. Youll earn the highest rates in the state.
And that should grant you some peace of mind.
North State Savings & Loan Corporation.
* This is an effecrive annualized \1eld based on a dailv compounding of a nominal rate
of 9.65%.
Get the highest rates at NORl STATE
J
QUARTERLY DIVIDEND The board of directors of First Citizens Cwp. declared a quarterly dividend on common stock of $1.90 per share, payable Oct. 3 to shardwlders of record Sept. 21.
COMPLETED TRAINING Maxine Anderson, manager, and Pat Anthony, travel consultant with Quixote Travels Inc. of Greenville, completed a weeks computer training in Denver, Colo., designed for a complete accounting system with DatasLink, a wholly owned subsidiary of Delta Air Lines.
Mrs. Jackie Goodson, a travel consultant with the firm, returned recently from a familiarization trip to Alaska, sponsored by Westtours for American Express travel agents from the southeast. She visited Anchorage, Valdez, Skagway and Juneau.
JOINS COMPANY
Burney S. Warren 111, president of First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Pitt County, announced that John L. Gray Jr. has joined the association as vice president-senior finance and accounting officer, with overall responsibility for accounting, data processing, and cash mana^ment.
Gray was formerly manager of financial adminisiraiion for First American Federal Savings and Loan Association of Greensboro. Prior to joining First American in 1982, he was employed by East Federal for 24 years.
A graduate of East Carolina University and the U.S. Savings and Loan Graduate School of the University of Indiana, Gray is marri^ to the former Alice Jean Taylor of Kinston and they have four daughters.
JOHN L. GRAY JR.
SALES SEMINAR Kimberly White of Ferguson Enterprises Inc. in Greenville, joined showroom sales personnel from Kohler Co. plumb-ingware distributorships across the country for a three-day showroom sales seminar recently in Kohler, Wise.
Ferguson Enterprises and 37 (rther Kohler distributors were represented at the seminar. Kohler is a manufacturer of plumbing products.
NAMED DIRECTOR
North State Savings & Loan Corp. announced that Tommy Harrington has been named director of operations for the firm and will join North States corporate offices in Greenville.
Harrin^on, formerly Ahoskie city executive, will be replaced in Ahoskie by Kenneth Braswell.
Harrington, a longtime Ahoskie resident, was president of Hertford County Savings and Loan before joining North State last August. With the opening of the Ahoskie branch in January, he returned there as city executive.
Braswell, whose wife is the former Margaret Amy Pittman of Ahoskie, received his bachelors degree in industrial relations from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his master's degree in business administration from the Babcock School of Management at Wake Forest University.
NEW SERVICE OPENS
The opening of a full service word processing and data management service. Word for Word, on the second floor of Georgetowne Shoppes, was announced by Dr. Penny Axelrod, president.
She said the firm provides computerized processing to produce personalized repetitive letters for direct mail marketing mailing lists and labels, manuscripts, file preparation and organization, and other data management services.
The owner was on the faculty of Tufts University in Boston before coming to Greenville.
BANK ELECTIONS
'Hiomas A. Bennett, senior vice president and regional executive of Wachovia Bank & Trust Companys eastern region, announced the election of three employees to new banking posts in Greenville.
Bennett said Jacob Dove Jr. and James Richard Jones were elected assistant vice presidents and James A. Holmes III was elected banking officer.
A Havelock native, Dove joined Wachovia in 1979 as a retail banking trainee and is currently regional personnel officer.
Jones, a Farmville native, joined the bank in 1976 as a field representative trainee and is now retail loan administrative officer here.
A Fayetteville native. Holmes joined the bank in 1979 as a field representative and became a personal banker in 1981.
CASH DIVIDEND I The board of directors of First Union Corp. declared the regular quarterly cash dividend of 34 cents per share, payable on Sept. 15 to shareholders of record on Aug. 13.
New Monetary Policy Confuses Economic Experts
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal Reserve Boards fresh monetary policy guidelines, which caused some confusion when announced last week, are sparking differences of opinion among economists trying to sort out their impact on the economy.
Hes very cleverly evasive, says private economist Robert Gou^ of Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, who revealed the new guidelines during two days of congressional hearings last week.
That has left economists divided over whether the Federal Reserves actions will lead to higher or lower interest rates in the coming months.
Thomas Thomson, chief economist at San Franciscos Crocker National Bank, thinks short-term interest rates will stay where they are for a month or two. And, he says, - theres a one-in-three chance they may be lower by the end of theyear.
We are nearing the end of upward pressures on interest rates, said Donald Ratajczak, economic forecaster at Georgia State University in Atlanta.
But Martin Feldstein, the presidents chief economic adviser, said, Further increases in interest rates may continue in the months ahead: ~ "Business Notes
BW PROMOTION Burrou^ Wellcome Co. announced the promotion of Greenville native Joseph E. Waldrop Jr. to chief accountant at the company Research Triangle Park facilities.
Waldrop received a bachelors degree in business administration from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A Cary resident, he joined the company in 1970.
NEW MACHINE LOCATION Wachovia Bank & Trust Co. said it has received permission from the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency to place a Teller II automated teller machine in Mendenhail Student Center at East Carolina University.
The machine, Wachovias first on campus, is expected to be in operation by the start of the fall term, the bank said.
WILL CITE AGENT Paul D Osman, Greenville agent with Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co. of .Milwaukee, will be cited Monday during the 103rd annual meeting of company agents for sales during the year ended May 31. Northwestern said Osman, who achieved membership in the .Marathon Club for insuring 100 or more people, is associated with Northwesterns William H Fleming district agency here of the Arthur S DeBerry^ & Associates Inc. general agencv in Chapel HUlConstruction Set On 96-Unit ProjectKINGSTON PLACE ... on Greenville Boulevard will feature 96 condominiums built in clusters of two-bedroom, two or two-and-a-half bath configurations, depending on the townhome or garden style floor plan.
Construction is scheduled to begin in late August on a 96-unit condominium development geared for use by East Carolina University students and owned by their parents or other real estate investors, the developers announced Mike Cobb, vice president of FR Corp, based at Hilton Head Island. S.C., said that Kingston Place, a complex of fully furnished condominium apartments, will be developed on. Greenville Boulevard one block from the 10th Street intersection.
Cobb, a 1971 graduate of ECU, said Kingston Place will be located one mile from campus and will be built in clusters of two-bedroom, two- or two and a half-bath configurations depending on the townhome or garden style floor plan The spokesman said the condominiums will be "fully accessorized." having curtains, appliances, bedding, television and silverware. The complex will also include a swimming pool, a clubhouse and washer-dryer facilities.
"Its a well known fact that less than half of East Carolinas 13,000 students can be housed on campus, said Cobb, "and we felt this concept not only takes a step toward relieving the problem but also opens up a new opportunity in this area for ownership of rental property to those who may have a family member studying or working at the university .
Bob Latimer, president of Unicon of America Inc.. the project s sales and marketing agent, said preconstruction prices begin at $59,900 FR Corp. said it has developed, sold and closed over 2,500 condominium units in the last five vears.
A/ts/K
AAA
AAA
AAA
m
FULLY FURNISHED, QUALITY CONDOMINIUMS NOWAVAILABLE NEAR EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
A
limited number of iiilly-fumished two-bedroom, 2 or 2!/2-bath condominium apartments located near the ECU campus are now being offered at pre-construction prices, with 90% financing available.
The new housing will help meet the critical student housing shortages in the Greenville area around ECU. A recent study shows that less than half of East Carolinas 13,500 students have on-campus housing.
Kingston Place condominiums are being sold fully furnished and equipped, ready for rental or owner occupancy on the day of closing.
Decorator matched sheets, AAA towels, flatware, cookware, and housewares are included, as. well as minor appliances.
Ideal residences for University professionals,
students and student families, Kingston
m
KINGSICN
PIACE
Place offers a swimming pool with , clubhouse on the premises for after-hours relaxation, laundr\ facilities and an on-site manager.
Parents of university students should investigate tax shelter opportunities relating to this type of property ownership. New tax laws permit rental to family members at fair market value rates.
Pre-construction purchase reservations are now being accepted on a first-come, first-served basis beginning at S59,900.
Kingston Place is a development of FR Corporation of Hilton Head Island, South Carolina and marketed by Unicon of America, Inc.
For full details about floor plans and financing, we invite you to call our representatives. North Carolina residents ma\ call toll-free 1-800-682-8102.
Others may call collect, (919)756-0285.
We invite your inquir\.
Please rush me more information:
Name
AAA Street Address or PO Box ^ -
City
State
Zip
Home Phone
Office Phone
' Unicon of America, Inc. Dept. B 3101 South Evans Street Greenville, NC 27834 - - ...........
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InlAStl 70 2019 JO' 29'. 29'- s
Intrfsl 120 6 5323 2b, 19, 2b-l' Imrik 2 60 62 213 19 38 , 38 s - s
IBM 3 80 15 42978 U126 . 119'. I24 .-4' IntKla* I 04 17 1342 30'. 29. 29'.- s InlHar* 7826 9' 8'. 9 +
InlMin 2 60 15 33T 40 , 37s 40 -Is TntPapr 2 40 17 5977 54 50' 52 - s
IntTT 2 76 10 19399 046s 43'. 46',-2-InlNrth 2 32 13 3074 39s 36 , 38 ,-1' IoaPS 2 56 10 338 23'. 23 . 23'.+ s
- 1-i -JohnJn I 10 18 18810 47 , 45 s
JonLgn 80 13 534 39'. 38'.
Joslen I 13 389 28', 26'.
jJo\Mfg 140 29 4098 28 s 25,
I . - K-K -
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iKaneb 1 04 8 2098 u20',
KanGE 2 24 7 1810 I*
lKanPLl 2 56 7 1273
Katvin l0 2I8Su2Is ,, IKaufBr 24 1885 22
-.'iKelloM 1 60 9 1685 28',
' Kenai 177 6'.
KerrMc 1 10 9 B20 37 KimbCI 4 20 II 847 (191'
KnghlR I 12 17 4K 58',
Kopers 80 3070 20s
Kroew 188 9 2375 41',
- I^L -LTV 25 8948 15 14
LearPt 20 19 3454 u30',
LearSg 1 60 12 849 44'
LeaRiSs 36 23 128 u25'.
UeEns 64 16 186 23
Lehmnl99e 1195 17'.
LeviUF 1 12 27 181 82',
LOF I 20 25 663 u38'.
Ullv 2 90 II 7387 63 LUlim I 00 12 3072 66 Locfchd I0K02I23',
Loews 1 20 7 757 149 LnSlar 1 90 1270 31
ULCo 2 02 6 7778 16 LLand n 6522 u27 LaPac 80b 67 3351 33'
LuckvS I 16 12 4996 24
M-M
MGMGr 44 25 x1307 14' 13'
90 -4s|Rohrln 9 1712 29'. 27'- 29 , + ls 51'.+3 iRorer I 04 IT2116u31>. 29', 30',+
53 -4 'Rowan 08 II 10783 14s Us 14 -
34',-l .RCCos 1 01 12 207 24' 24 24i.-
RoslD 2 84e 6 7723 46+ 45 46s + l
122 - I2s I RvderS 1 tl8b 15 2524 S7s 55 5*4
-S-S -SCM 2 10 185 324
SalWA S I 40 8 71 26' 25S
SlRegiS I 12 32 2512 30 21'-
SFelnd I 14 82 29 27s
SchrPkl I 68 13 7148 46 s 43'
Schimb I M 13 20*50 ST'. . 54', 25' 9s.
18'. 19', 2Ss 17s 20', 27 5'. 35 85s 54 s 19'. 40
28' 42 24' 23' 16-82 34' 59' 6^^ 109'
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38 - s 28 - 26'.-2'
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Shrwin s 60 13 40 27'. Signal 90 72 7378 36' SimpPt 15 585 11' Singer lOe 3390 2 Skvline 48 38 2585 25's SnikB 2 60 13 5471 74s Sonat I 30 7 4576 35' Sonv-Cp I6e B 19353 14s SCrEli 2 7 2365 19s SCalEd 3 52 7 8447 364 SouthCo I 70 7 13930 16' SouPr s I 50 16 7431 u40
Sperr* 1 92 15 174 u43s 38" SquarD I 04 16 4712 34', 32
32',-34 26 + V 29',+
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314
134
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154
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33
.NEW YORK ..API - Weekly Invest*
Companies giving tlte high, low and pnces lor tfie week with the net cfaanae the preTMUs week s last pnce .All
atMBS. supplied by the Natiooal ol Secuniies Dcolen. lac.
pnces froai I quoUl Association reflect nel asset values, at which secundes could have been sold
B# Uw La Cte 31 32 95 + 96 22 17 21 27 22 17+ 1154 17 84 1154+ 87
454
374
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36'
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28
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Macmil 70b 20 1786 37',
Macys 80 16 3277 57
2e 900 18'
MagiCf 60 21 3521 u38',
viManvl 1849 14',
MAPCO 1 II 4960 25
MarMid I 40 6 474 28
Marriol 36 21 1536 79'
MartM 1 92 19 5790 58
Masco S 44 19 3127 33',
MaseyF 1325 4',
2 II 1955 59
2a 17 848 55'.
Squibb 1 34 15 7*73 48'
StOilCl 2 40 9 15427 31'.
SlOInd 2 9 13789 52'
StdOUh 2 60 8 8448 U55 SlauiCh 1 44 24 98 25'
SleriD* I 12 13 1004 21'
Sle^ 1 20 21 2125 21'
SunCo 2 30 10 5447 45'.
Svbron I 147 1450 27'
Syntex I 40 13! I 55',
Sysco 32 18 5*1* M. 33, 344+4
TECO 2 04 9 7853 u24'- 234 24 + t.
TRW 2 60 15 1921 78. 74', 78',+ 14
TacBls 561 IS' 14', 15
Tallev 16 941 12 IP, 12
Tandy 19 18324 49' 47'. 47+- +
|Tnd*cft 18 236 19 II' 1I+-
iTekfmx 1 25 2221 2 78, 82 +4',
ITeldvn 15 40 168' 160 l66'.+5',
iTelex 19 8065 u32', 28 324+3'
Tennco 2 72 7 11735 40 39
14'- '. Tesoro 40 61147 164 16
)30'-3' Texaco 3 8 10916 36' 35
42'-2'. iTexEst 4 10 11 2745 59' 574 574-14
24' - 7. Texlnsl 2 25 12453 132'- 125', 128'+ 3',
23',- '. Texinl 197 14764 8' 7' V,
17',- s TxOGas 32b 18 8240 50 48
82 .+ 4 TxPac 35 25 35 29'. 29
38'.-4'. TexCtil 2 20 7 9186 25'. 24'
62 - ' Textron I 80 14 1005 33 31',
664 + 3 Thnflv s 46 21 12423 22'. 17
121'-10' Tlgerfn 3748 8', 8
1 29 3068 74' 69'
2 17 1544 76' 74'
1 80 344 63'- 60',
54 17 472 25' 24'.
33 +P Tosco 5 5713 14' 124
23 + '. TWCp 12 12296 29. 27' 284-P-,
Transm 1 50 9 3604
Transcol 92 7 3577 39',
Trailer 1 80 8 6349 3b.
TnCon 2 53e 782 28
Tnco 16 22 347 9'
TucsEP 2 20 9 1422 u30',
Tlgerfn
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544
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Colllnd I 80 14 1377 42 ColGas 3 02 7 *3831 33 CmbEn I 84 8 1626 37 Comdrs 20 12572 52-, CmwE 3 7 16304 27 Cmsat sl 20 I3:M40 40'-ConsEd 188 7 8947 U23' ConFds 2.32 8 6271 43, CnsNG 2 9 1335 U32 + ConsPw 2 44 6 x23119 18' CntlCp 2 60 10 4789 29' CntlGrp 2 60 10 1871 44 ' 434
Contlll 2 7.7128 234 214 ContTel 1 64 11 8373 u254 24 ClDala 60 15 9056 6P.
Coopr 1 .72 22 2490 35 ComG 2 32 17 2687 83' CrockN 2 40 9 796 344 CrwnCk II .720 36 CrwZel I 1325 30', CurtW I 20 13 :188 .76
DD DanaCp I 60 28 2047 424 39', DarlKr 3 84 10 5920 65 63. alaGn 63 6831 69 Da veo 16 136 222 134 DavHud I 20 18 2562 78'
DavH wi 62 39' .
DavlPL 2 7.7049 184 Deere 1 17263 35,
Della.Ar I 27138 39',
Dennys 64 13 6974 . 35',
DetEd 168 8 8722 14'.
yDiamS I 76 12 14780 23
Digital 20 18226 116', Disnev I 20 23 9910 .65'. DrPepp 84 36 2170 15'. DomRs 2 40 8 4019 22'. DowCh 180 23 13360 17'. DowJns 60 :H 2824 ,72'
Dresr 80 122 8462 23' duPiinl 2 40 13 11845 47'
DukeP 2 28 7 8349 23', iJuqLl 2 10 1649 164
- E-E -Easi.Air 6981 9'
EaslGF 1 30 8 1375 23', EsKud 3alM982 l70s Eaton 80 2544 44'
Echlin 64 17 ;1396 u23'. ElPaso 68 10 7060 20' EmrsEI 2 lo t 8088 60'. Enserch I 60 10 4589 25', Esmrk sl 84 11 1079 u8bi Elhvls 8.7 10 2897 24 EvanP I 071 3781 ul9'
ExCelo I 50 II 604 38', Exxon 3 7 26711 ;15',
- F-F -KMC 180 9 3179 40' 39 Eairehd 80 19 8.57 22', Kairld .- 24 13 319 31' Keders 2989 8',
EedNM 16 18823 27'.
FedDSt 2 20 13 2875 64s KnSBar 293 7.
Kircsln 128 8264 18', KBkFlalOB 9 42 23', FiChrt ,80 7066 u35
F.slChic I 32 7 2487 26' Finiste 2 24 8 2464 43'. EleelEs 10 28 6811 37 4 KllgtSf 16 a 487 32', FlaPL 3 I 8 10668 37' ElaPrg 192 8 8724 19' Flwtien 1999 14.
Fluor 80 13 7724 21 4 KordM :)0e 22806 u59'
EorMK 2 40 1 5 336 49' Frpl.Mc 126 6622 24'. Fruehf 40 1210 37'.
GG
GAF 0.5126 6892 15 . 13 <;TE 2 92 10 2.5958 u48'. 42 Gannett 1 80 20 2685 68'. 64 GnDvn I 18 4728 .55 '.
GeiiEl s I 90 13 31186 74' GnFds 2 40 8 6498 46s Gntlous 20 14 793 26'. GnInsI 1 15 24274 49 Gn.Mills 2 1)4 II .7494 53 GMol 2 4(le 16 2.7016 u75'
GPI 16 2171 8'.
GnSignll t>8 1.7 1.727 48 GTire I ih 47 1326 ,TI'. Gensco 1376 9
GaPai 60 IS52H 27 . GerbPd 1 48 12 2:763 u3.7',
Gelh 2le 8 2981 70 GlbrVn III 3749 14'i (.lllelle 2 10 10 72.79 43 , Gld.Ngs 21 13.735 17., (idritTi I -i6 3774 37'
Gi)du 140 9 31765 29 +
Gould 172 21 7993 .39'.
Grace 2 8013 32.71 46 GIAtPc 20 2293 13'. GlWFin 20] :) 11474 2.7., GWI-'in wi I 25
Gre>h 120 11107:16 26'
Gruiiim I M) 19 2494 63'
GlfWsl 77II9W7 27'.
GulfOil 2 80 8 L1203 U40 (ilfSII I 164 7 9387 14
Gulfl Id I .12 8 5108 27'
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CapApr n x Gvlln n Fndaln
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15 53 15 14 15 53+ 38
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15 00 14 65 15 *0-12 74 1281 12 87+ 11 95 11 54 11 95+ 14 42 13 87 14 41 + 18 54 ISB 18 51 + 11 32 11*1 11 32+
9 01 8 72 1 98+
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5.71 5 57 5 71+ 13
10 03 9 IS 10 03+ 40
4 32 4 11 4 32+ 10
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21 55 21 07 21 55+ B 7 03 * 91 7 03 + 07
137 50 134 87 136 97 + 2 25 10 24 9 87 10 24+ 29
10 37 10 lis 10 32+ 15 4 65 4 61 4 63 + 02
16 02 15 25 16 02 + 50
18 50 17 85 18 50 + 59 1524 1491 1524+ 35
152 LSI 152+ 01
14 47 13* 14 42 + 42
15 23 14 I5+ 43
16 (8 KB 18.(7+ 23
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7 4* 721 7 34-
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14 78 14 (1 14 78-1343 13*7 045-8 81 8 45 +
9 91 9 89 9 91+ 01
22 57 21 75 22 32+ 1583 14 * 1583+
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McOnD I 42 10 1701 57' 54'
McGEd 2 11 4353 37 35
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MMM 3 30 18 7451 85 . 82'. +1
MinPL 2 40 6 207 25' 25 25'.- '.
Mobil 2 10 11314 31s 30' 31 + V MohkDt 18 1545 14', 13'. 13'-- .
Monsan 4 20 12 8942 U99', 85', 98' + l3. MntDl 2 24 7 218 28 28 s 27'.+ s
MonPw 2 68 7 841 27 s 27 27'.+ '
Morgan 3 70 7 9747 74 '. 69' 74 +4 '
Morion 1 60 6 3930 68 64 67',* 2.
Motrola 1 60 32 14655 ul48 127", 145'. + 15s MtFuel 260 8 1129 51', 49'- 5frs-l
N-N
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NLlnd 1 11 5*37 18s 17'. I8+ "
NabscB 2 28 8 11241 38 s 37'. 37',-!
NatCan I 8 320 24 s
NatDist 2 20 17 860 29',
NalFG 3 44 9 136 36
NalGyp 1 48 20 2271 32
NSemi 21401 u60
SatlStl 25 2125 26'
Nalom 80 12297 25'.
NevPw 2 72 6 943 26 s
NEngEI 3 20 7 1200 36'
Newmt------
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CMC 60 77 1097 17s CNCRes 602 7s
CSFG 3 84 12 986 53 CnCarb 3 40 23 7817 69 CnElec 164 6 3945 15 tnPac I 80 18 8389 58'. CnirovI 84 12273 ul6
I nBrd 2722 2Cs CSGvps 2 40 17 1958 49 CSIiMl 76 17 1743 I8\
I SSteel I 8156 25
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Norwst I 80 10 1745 35 34 s
00 OcciPet 2 50 89 6157 25 23',
OhioEd 1 80 8 4472 15 14s
OklaGEI 84 8 6471 18. 17", Olin 1 20 13 1873 30' 28', Omark 1 04 37 322 27' 26' ONEOK 2.40 9 353 28', 27', OwenC 120 20 5043 39 s 36 s
Owenlll I 68 31 1663 U37 35
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PPG 2 56 13 211 PacG s I 60 7 17272 15', PacLlg 3 7 697 33
PacPw 2 16 8 5531 23'
Pan Am 52062 7'.
PanbEC 2 30 7 6522 35', 34 Parson I 10 2103 24', 23 Penney 2 16 II 13260 60'. 57 PaPL 2 40 7 4513 22", 21 Pennzol 2 20 II 7301 40s 39 PepsiCo I 62 18 16029 34', 34 PerfcEl 50 30 8242 34'. Pfizer s I 16 18 24657 43". PhelpD 2764 29'.
PhilaE1 2 12 7 6751 17' PhilMr 2 90 9 12384 60', PhilPel 2 20 9 15236 36', Pilsbry 2 48 9 4296 59
Pioneer I 16 23 6541 33'
PitnyB S 92 14 5403 33
Pittstn .20 1495 16 s
Pneum s 50 15 3154 31 Poland 1 34 5183 28', PortGE 1 78 5 2484 14', ProclG S2 40 10 X22925 53', 52 PSvCol 1 84 9 6879 17, 16' PSInd 2 76 6 8316 26' PSvEG 2.64 7 10182 23s PugelP 1 76 7 1631 14 13',
PuIleH s 10 19 13363 29 25
Pyro 15 996 6'. 6',
QuakO 2 44 6776 46. 44
QuakSO 80 12 7633 20'- 18
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RLC n 20 52 I 473U16', 15'.
RalsPur 84 20 11330 u24'. 21',
Ramad 8659 11' 10'
Raneo 84 22 54 20 19',
RangrO 5172 12", 12
RayDin I 40 14 15365 49" 45", ReadBt 80 8 2013 17', 16',
48 41 1535 u37 s 33 . 50 1073 22" 21'
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WIMrts 46 8005 u46s 39A. 45'. + S',
WalUm I 20 10 3123 39 36 38. +1'.
WrnCm I 9 38741 25'-dl9 22,-2s
WarnrL 1 40 13 ISI4 29", 28 2, + l',
AshWt 2 48 7 1246 2(b 19', 20',+ s
WellsF 192 6 1777 35", 32", 35 +bs
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WeslgE 1 80 10 14322 48 s 44s 48' + 3,
Weverh I 30 130 10220 36'. 35s 36',- ', Whlrlpl 1 80 12 6380 54 SO", 53 +1",
Whittak 1 60 13 1230 31' 30'. 31 +
William I 20 20 7710 25' 22 25' + 2N.
WinDx 2 58 13 330 57. 56 56 -I"
Winnbg lOe 39 2*09 2b. 19' 21',-I",
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Wvnns 60 271 20 18', 19',+ ',
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ZaleCp 1 26 41 277 30'-, 29s 30'
ZenithR I17 2200lu29s 24', 29', + 4", Copyright by The Associated Press 19(3
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FarmBuroul n K24 15 78 16 24-
Keslt Equity CalTFr FdoGW Funds Inc: Comrcelnc Inxtjual PiiotFund Simblt , GlTHVkJn ' GT Pacific n GatwvUptn n x Gen Clec lov ElfunTrn EllfunTxEi n S&Sn SliSLown GenSecunf n GmtelEnsa n GBTFd n Growthlnd n GrdnPkAv Ham HDA HartwellGth n HartwltLevr n Herald n Horace Mann n Hutton Grotg) Bond n Emerg n Gwth n ISI Group Growth Income Trust Shares IndustrvFd n Int Investors Invstlndictr n InvestTr Bos investors Group IDS Bond IDS Disc IDS Growth IDS HiYiekJ IDS NewDiro IDSProgr InvMu IDS TaxEx Inv Stock Inv Select Inv VanaU
7K
8
1891
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975
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8 8-K3I 16 0+
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a 34 0 35 77+ 10 83 18.82 10 62-1394 1377 13*-35 K 35 06 78-12 94 12 82 12 94-28 87 2628 28 87+: 19 19 35 19 + *72 6 *72-
17 15 78 17-1
10 10 18 0+
13 1312 13 M-1581 14* 1561 +
6 30 10 41
873
853 3 10 38 I
6 53-3
10 38-8 72+
15 14 70 15 07-1 67 1 39 1 87 +
12 29 11 92 12.24 +
417
994
484
9
40+
9 94-
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DOW Jones Averages
the rang weeken
___________mg ^
of Dow Jones averages Tor the d July 22
STUCK AVERAGES Uflb Low CIOM a
90 1231.17 110 123ri7+B 5 5W.73 5M 579.06+17.75 1091 13232 1091 131.+ 10 Stks 475 45 491 57 475 45 491 41 +14 02 BOND AVERAGES 0 Bonds 71 73 71 71 73 71 0+0.
UtUs 0 77 70.0 077 012-0 10
Indus 73 0 0 77 062 0.67+0.0
COMMODITY FUTURES INDEX
145 08 I 13 144 n 149 0+5.42
Federated Funds
Investrs Resh
723
.Am Leaders
II 14
10*
II W+
0
IstelFd n
K2
ExchFd n
0
33*6
0 31 +
76
Ivv Fund n
14
GNMA unavail
JP Growih
1351
Hi IncmSe
12*
12
12 07 +
JP Income
813
Inco unavad
JanusFund n
14
Short inavail
John Hancock
TaxFree ,
9
9
92+
01
Bond
1415
L'SGvtSec
8
80
sa+
02
Growth X
14
Fidelity Group Assetlnv n
002
24
24*+
16
L'S Govt X TaxExmp x
8
946
CorpBood n
676
60
678-
e
Kaufmann n
73
Ongress n Contrafnd n
3396
0
a+l41
Kemper Funds: Cafif
1310
12
I3M+
07
12 24
DestinyFd n
K
15
K 01 +
33
Income
8
Equtlncm n
0
0*
074+
Growth
60
ExchFd n
0 17
42.
17+1 a
HighVield
10 0
Fredm n
1381
12.41
1301 +
48
IntlFund
14
Magellan
012
0
012+1 16
.MunicpBnd
7
MuniBond n
6
681
6 82+
01
Option
130
Fidelity n
0
190
0+
Summit
292
GovtSec n
90
90
9 0*
01
Technology
15
HilncoFd n
80
8.77
882 +
03
TotRetuni
16
Hi^Yield n
II 0
1124
11 29+
03
LS Gvt
881
Ltd Mum n
8
807
6 09+
02
Kevstone Mass
Mercury
14 II
13
14 11 +
33
InvestBdBl n
16 15
Puritan n
I3W
12
13+
23
MedgBdB2n DiscBdB4 n
19
SelErgy n SelFncIn
10
1001
102+
24
862
1647
15
16 0+
46
IncomeKi n
9
SelHlthn
21 45
0K
21 41 +
0
GrowthK2 n
9
SelMelJ n
150
ISII
15 61 +
SI
HiGiComSI n
ais
SelTech n
0
045
20 + 203
GrowthS3 n
II M
SelUtil n
1350
13.0
1347+
0
LoprConM n Internatl n
8
Thrift n
977
9 74
9 74-
01
5
Trend n
S07
49
a+i M
TaxFree n
7
FiduCap n
190
1942
19 0*
Mass Fd
14
Financial Prog
LeggMason n LenmnCap n x
18 31
Bond n
693
60
6K +
03
13
Dvnamics n
1081
1031
10 81 +
37
Leverage n
11 *
FficlTx n
140
140
140+
07
Lexington Grp
Industii n
5.71
5
5 0+
15
Corp Leadrs Goldfund n
12*
Income n
902
881
8+
18
4
WrIdTc
9
696
90+
0
GNMA Inc n .
775
Fst Investors
Growth n
112
Bond Apprc
14
14
14 60-
12
Research n
0
Discovery
050
1997
048 +
31
Lindner n
182
Growth
II *
II 0
II W+
Loomis Sayles
Income
673
671
673
Capital n
2*
InUSec
1597
15
15 95+
32
.Mutual n
19
NatResc
8
7,75
80+
23
Lord Abbetl
NineTn
13
\373
13
Affiliated
993
Option
60
624
60 +
03
Bond Deb
10*
Tax Exmpt
879
876
82+
01
Devel Gth
1062
FlexFd n
1243
12 16
1243+
23
Income
3
0 Wall Eq
13 17
12*
1317+
46
ValuAppr Lutheran Bro
92
0 Wall St n
21.
00
21 45+
92
FostrMar
6*
60
6+
12
Fund
140
Fndatn Grwth
5
5
50+
0
Income
8
Founders Group:
Municipal x USGovT Sec
7 10
Grwth n
100
10.47
10 79+
23
9
Incom n
1467
14 41
14 67 +
29
Mass Financl
Mutual
II 31
10 93
11 31 +
35
MIT
13 17
Sped n
0 15
071
0 IS+I 16
MIG *'
15
Foursq n Franfuin Group
120
II
120 +
40
MID
9 49
MCD
13
AGE Fund
381
3
3
MEG
16
DNTC
2333
24 43
55+
69
MFD
16 0
Growth
12
II W
12-
31
MFB
12 87
NY Tax
10.
9
9+
MMB
92
CmtionFd
Utilities
7
674
7 +
29
MFH
7 91
5
50
5.K+
12
IntTrBd
10 18
Income Slk
2 12
2
211 +
Mathers n
24
USGovtSec
7
72
72-
02
Merrill Lynch
Resh Capill
12.
12.
12.+
47
Basic value
14
3 3 * 3 *
II 1113 II-7* 70 7*+
11 47 1122 11 45+
3 3.47 347-
230 22 23K+ tn 184 l+
IIJ3 11 IIO+
6.11 7 22+
K 37 15 87 KB+
14 0 14 32 14 81 +
14.97 15+ 80 807
13 67 140
836
927
71
14 46-
8 30-
9 27-
. 71- 02
What The Stock Market Did
12 24 12 24
8 0 8 31 +
15 16 17 + 10 31 10 0 + 14 17 14+ 793 7+
13 03 13 15+
8 0 10- 01
157
917
903
8 62 + 9 0-952+
8 15 882*
5 27 5 + 7 7+
13 0 14^ + 17 180+ 074 M-4 1134 II +
4
70 II 38
1024
3
916
I2tt+ 4 61 + 70+ II 0 + + 18 74 +
992 + 10 88" 100 + 30 + 9 22 +
13 93 14 19 + 8 55 857+ 7 05 7-894 897 +
9 9 48-
12 51 13 25+ 15 160+ 15 35 16 0 +
919
Advances Declines Unchanged Total issues New yrly hghs
Two
This Prev Year Years Week Week ago ago
1,313 699 I.IW 461
6 1.20 727 1.440
20 202 2* 215
2.1* 2.2 2.112 2,116 205 151 152 27
New yearly Iws 27 15 143 152
WEEKLY AMERICAN STOCK SALES
38.9.0 38.60.0 0.70,0 l.318,.572,0 01.80.0
Total for week Week ago Year ago Jan I to date 19(2 to dale
AMERICAN BONDS Total for week Week ago Year ago
Capital Equi Bond Hi Incom Hi^lty IntTerm LtdMat MunHiYld Muni Insr Pacific Phoenix SciTech So Val Mid Amer MidAmHiGr MSB Fund n Mutual Benefit .MdwIGvt n Mutual of Omaha America n Growih Income Tax Free MutKJual n Mull Shrs n NaessThm n N'alAvlaTec n N'atlindust n Nat Securities Balanced Bond
9 22 + 7 82 7 91 +
1013 1017 + 24 24 95 +
14. 14 87 +
0 45 19. 0 45+
II 17 10 II 12 +
8 25 8.24 8 24
to 10.42 10 43+ 10 10. 10 52 +
9.81 9 82+
9 07 9 10 +
7 703+
1318 13+ II 1188 + 9 64 10 16-13 77 14 27 + 7 7 75 +
6 16 6 0+ 22 16 21 22 12+ 14 0 13 93 14 0 + 10 10 10 02 10 +
982 9 10 7
13 72 II * 10 16
14 27 70 60
2 CalTxE 2 Growth
II
1147
II 3* ll2
II i'll -
35
17 97 19
17 A3 19 24
17 97-193-
37
0
I Preferred
72
70
7 2+
.
.MgMim
13 0
13
13 78-
Income
70
7.15
7-
15
ShrmnDean n x
9
913
9*
3 Stock
9 81
90
988+-
3
SierraGrtb n
16 15
IS
KI5-
3 Tax Exmpt
8
1
ia+
Si^a Funds bapMal
12 0
130-
13
7 TotRet
8*
60
6 2-
10
I3M
7 Fairfiefd Fd
1076
1*49
18 0+
16
Incom
7 74
7
7 2-
2
T NatTde
IS
14
15 2-
2
Invest
15 0
14*
15-
26
1 SalHMiwide Fds
SpecIn TnetSh
1513
14 2
15 12-
41
1 NatnFd
10
9*
1*21-
22
10
10 73
18+
22
NIGvrth
8 74
82
8 74-
23
Venture Shr
II 79
1113
II 0-
19
1 MBond
9.31
9H
92+
M
SmthBarEqt n
16 0
162
16 0-
42
3 NELife Fund
SmthBarl G
1015
9
10 11-
18
3 Equity 1 Growth
X
210
21 M
2184 +
41
SoGtu
K
15 K
16-
9
le^
23
054 +
1
Swstnlnvlnc n
4*
4K
4-
2
0 Income
X
1*0
18 0-
0
Sovereign Inv
18 52
It 13
18-
36
t Retire Eqt
2C
210
2-
Stale Bond Grp
7 TaxExml
X
62
6*
6ffl-
04
Commn Slk
60
6 IS
60-
16
6 .Seiibenter Berm
Diversifd
6C
622
6-
21
4 Enere o { Guardian n
1971
19 0
19 71 +
50
Progress
112
II (I
11-
0
41
0
4184 +
10
SlatFarmGth n
1172
II 40
11 71*
18
3 Liberty n
X
4*2
3K
3 96-
StatFarmBal n
14 75
14 39
14 -
3-
0 .Vlanhittn n
6.
603
631-
23
StStreet Inv
7 Partners n
172
KU
172+
ExchFd n
72
on
860+;
191
9 NY Muni D
IK
I
I
Growth n
57 ~
>2
NewtonGwth n
042
0
34 42*
1 5*
Invest
00
766*
79 34*:
!2
3 Newtonlncm n
80
82
82+
M
Steadman Funds
9 Nicholas n
2 24
064
2 24-
48
Amerind n
4
4
4B-
19
3 NrestlnTr n
12 09
12
I2W-
.Associated n
12
I M
12-
01
NrestlnGt n
1213
II
1213+
52
Invest n
1 73
I 66
1 75-
07
3 .NovaFund n
18
17 0
18 25+
39
Oceanogra n
7M
7 47
70-
0
NY Ventur
92
90
9 2*
21
Stem Roe Fds
3 NuveenMuni n
7 42
7
7,42-
01
Balance n x
24
24 17
24+
14
9 Omega fund n 3 OneWUIiam n
132
13 51
132+
a
Bond n
80
80
8 0+
2
X
2193
212
21 2+
49
CapOppor n
S63
31 56
o-
1 66
7 ODoenbeimer Fd
Stock n X
S53
0
SM+I
1
9 Direct
29 V
048
,2+
81
Steii^pFd n StanTax n
17
16
172-
36
eqinc
7*
7*
7H+
12
775
70
7 74 +
2
I Oppenhm Fd 1 HiS Yield > Ofgion
10 82
1*55
102+
Cnivrse n x
2239
21
212+
10
X
19 43
192
1924-
13
StrategCap
8
8
8-
27
M
0
+
S
Straleglnv x
112
10
10 76-
41
S^ial I Target r TaxFree n
24 17
B53
0 17+
S3
StrattnGth n
18 2
It 17
18 2-
*
2
2103
22+
*
SunGrwth
13
12
130*
TO
X
7
7
7*5-
02
TaxMngltl Templrion Group
14
14 0
14 81 +
23
Aim
24 47
02+
57
1 Time
1829
152
160+
61
Foregn
10 0
10 18
10 0 +
37
1 OverCoiHit Sec
79
030
B0-
a
Glohe
253
4I
37+l 0
1 Paramt MutI
13
13 43
13+
29
Growth
9
9 11
9 45-
0
1 PaxWortd n
11.52
II 0
1151 +
17
World
12
I2II
12-
42
1 PennSquare n 1 PennMutual n
90
9
90-
23
Transam Cap
11 66
11
11 *-
22.,
649
642
649+
M
Transam.New n
8
850
8 30-
2
) PermPort
12
12 42
12+
13
Travelrs Eqts
12
12
12 +
i Phila Fund
18
10*
10*+
14
TudorFd n
24 M
a*
24 0*
2
1 Phoenix Senes
20th Ontury
;
) BalanFd
1203
IIK
122-+
15
Grovrth n'
17
K
17 +
CvFdSer
041
1994
048-
0
Select n
V22
2
a-i
i Growth
15 4*
14
15+
48
lllra
10 18
9
10 18-
57
1 HiYield
9*
9
9+
03
ISGv n
2
9733
2-
21
1 StockFund
15
140
152 +
SI
ISAA Group.
1 PC Capit
13
13
13+
2
Grwth n
1709
16
17 09-
57 ..+
! Pilgrim Gro Pilgnm Fd
Income n
1075
10
100-
2 .(
X
1314
12
12-
I*
Snbit n
1962
1907
19 2 +
42
MagnaCap
X
6
6 10
618-
13
TxEHY n
II 2
112
11 2-
0
I Magna Incom
80
8 31
8 31 +
.03
TxElTn
II
II 21
1124 +
2-
1 Pioneer Fund
TxEShn
10
100
10-
2
1 Pionr Bd
910
903
92+
04
Unified Mgmnt
1 Pionr Fund
20
2152
2 24+
61
.Accum n
778
767
7 78-
10
Fhonr II Inc
170
16
17 0+
Gwth n
1775
17 43
17 75-
21
1 Pionr III Inc
12
1259
12.0+
15
Inco n
13
13 19
13-
1 Planndlnvst
21.19
092
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1 PrecMtl n
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10 51
10 II
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Bond
5
5
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15*
15 44
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192
18 48
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! Gwthinc n
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12
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14 14
13 77
14.+
.+
Income n
82
80
80
FiducSh
31 40
72
31 +14i:
1 Inti n
122
1254
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High Income
142
130
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1 NewEra n
18
17*
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Income
3
12
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, NewHonzn n
091
003
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6
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Tax Free n
8.0
8 74
8 74-
02
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5 24
5 18
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; Pro Services
SciEng)
11
II 44
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50
.MedTec n
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12
12
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Vanguard
210
053
21 0 +
66 ,
Fund n
X
10.
100
10 51 +
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UtdSvcGold n
917
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Prudential Bache
Bond n
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II 91
11 2+
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1 Equity
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13
14 M+
43
Fund n
1501
14 50
15 01 +
36
GvtSc
9
981
9+
2
Income n
748
7
7 48+
17
HiYield
X
1014
10 10
10 14-
Levrge Gth n Spec! Sit n
a.
21 42
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HYMuni
1379
130
130+
03
18
17
18-
36 ,
Option
15
15
15.+
Vance Exchange
Qualtv Rsch n
14
140
14 0+
01
CapExch I n
0
20
0+l 14
9
9 47
9-
45
DefiosBsi I n
15
41 *
43+
0
Prudent SIP
142
13.0
14.2+
48
Divers f n
mv
2
77+1
Putnam Funds
ExchFd I n
1. 12.59
1052+203.,
Convert
16
15.74
16 +
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ExchBst 1 n
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CalTax
1371
1361
132+
FiducEx I n
.
57*
+1 19 u'
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a
2
a+
SecFidu 1 n
13
61 03
*13+1 M
InlW
1375
1347
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Vanguard Group
Intl Equ
19
1842
19 04+
64
Explorer n InciexTrust n
442
43 41
0 37+
George
152
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2109
042
21 0-
Growih
1315
12*
1312-6
2
Comln n
31
24
23 18+
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Health '
21
0
0+
GNMA n
909
903
92+
01
High Yield
1743
17
I7+
2
IvestFund n
190
18 48
190 +
46
Income
60
671
6.73+
03
Morgan n MunHiYd n
14
13 81
143 +
43
Invest
120
12.
12+
2
9 18
9 12
9 16-
0 '
Option
13.01
120
12.+
15
MuniShrt n
1518
15 16
15 17+
01 '
Tax Exempt
21
2154
21+
M
Munilnl n
10*
10 61
10 +
03 '
Vista
0
0
0 0+
44
MuniLong n
945
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05
Voyage
0:21
19
0 21 +
a
QualDivI n
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16
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T, .
Quasar n
(963
64 41
+4M
QualDvIl n
80
8 01
80 +
01
Rainbow n
4 16
4
4 16+
02
ShrtTrm n
92
9 8S
985
9 67 9 67 + 04
6 31 6.0+ 19
8 39 8+ 04
9 9M+ .07
15. 1604+ 14 0 0 49. 0 0+ 59 04 64 04 + 2. II 21 10 92 II 18+ 0 13. 13 13 93+
973
60
844
9
1604
1342
355
13 13 1342 + 3.54 3.55 +
RochTax SFTE(il Safeco Secur Equitv n Growih n Incom n .Munic StPaul Invest Capital Growth Income Special n Scudder Funds CommnStk n Develop n CapGth n Income n Intematl n MangdMun n Securi5' Funds: Action Bond
14 14 18 14 52+ 0 1552 140 15+
10* 10 10 *+ 21 054 19 054+ 0 13.32 13.01 13 32 + 0 11 11 11+ 04
1484 140 14 + 16 92 160 16 92+ 10.21 1014 1014 + 0 47 43 0 47+
150 15 71 15 91
150+ I 71 15+1.1
15 15. I5. + 1193 1181 II*-)-2149 0.92 21 45-)^ 7 81 7 0 7 81 +
832 8 10 893 II 24 11.51
8 15 8 32+
8
849
10 93 1124 + 1124 1151 +
8 06- 01 8 92 + 0 24 16
9 8 9. +
23 23 22 * 23 23+
15.03 14 57 15* 140 13* 14-"
9. 910 90+
8 7* 8 +
II II II *+
90 9 9 48+ 14
6ol 6 6.- 02
17 47 17 17 47+ 48 18 17.61 18 61+ 82 0 9I 0 0+ 14 27 18 0 0 2718+ 51
ComL'S n Wellesley n Wellington n IG Bond n HiY Bond n Windsor n Venlurlnco WallSt Growth WeingrtnEq n WTscIncm n Wood Strulhers deVeghM n Neuwirth n PineStr n
n-No load fund f-Previous day's ^le Copyright by The Associated Press
37 0 37+102 12 12 0 12 0+ 05 120 1303+ a
8 03 8 03- 02 8 8 * 01 12 42 12 - 22 II 08 II 15+
9 74 10 16+ 40 22 0 2103 0 0+113
3 3 61 3 61* 01
46 0 44 * 0 +1 '
10 2191 .10+
14 0 13 71 14 0- 52
1307 808 9 1267 II 15 10 16
C.J. HarrisA.ND Company Inc
FINANCIAL a MARKIT;n(, CONSLrANT,
LOANS FOR EXPANSION CAPITAL. SHORT TERM DEBT CONVERSION, WORKING capital, NEW VENTURES. INVENTORY FINANCING OR PRAC TICALLY ANY TYPE OF GROWTH FUNDING
757-0001
Weekly Stock Dollar Leader's
NEW YORK (API -The K.tlowing i list of the most active stocks baseffoi the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded
vilIKT
214
If.ilbln
1 1
12 90.A
Marlncl
7(1
1 Al
Harris
38
24 (203
llarlH s
l A.I6
HfclaM
3 ! 2*2
Hcrculs
1 .!2
lA .A926
Name
IBM
Amer TIcT MerilLy^n s DigitalEq Motorola Gen Motors HewlettPk GenlElect s Texas Inst East Kodak (hrysler PhibroSal s FordMot Honeywell ProctGamb
TotftlOM) Safcs(bds) Lait
$50.993 42976 124 $364,542 57979 61, $212.9 42270 48", $207,30 1820 112 $202,055 14655 145, $I,50SO16 74 $10,9*198 90' $161,70 311 .5:!'; $1.4* 124 10" $1.5* 19(21 09' $1,30 4290 31 $10.337 41019 3b $l.559 226 59' $10.9 10943 I'-, $10,90 X22925 32\
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Possible Heat-Related Shortages Boost Grain, Livestock Futures
By JOHN DOWLING Associated Press Writer Grain and livestock futures made substantial gains Friday as the tripkHligit heat wave that baked much of the nation prompted expectations of tight in coming months.
On the Chicago Board of Trade, com gained as much as 64 cents and closed at $3,234 a bushel for September delivery. Soybeans were 74 cents to 10 cents higher with the August contract at $7,094 a bushel.
Expectations of heat-related damage to com and soybean
29.167
5.S43
2,007
1.341
CHICAGO lAPt The range of commodity futures this past week on the Chicag Board of Trade was
bat"*
&,0M ba miniiiium, doUm per btaiiei
Sep 3,77 353 365^ + 12-4 I.378
Dec 3 95 3 69. 3S3. * 13
Mar 4 02 3 7* . 3 92'^ *15
May 4#I>4 37' . 391-, * 14
Jul 3 *5 3 63', 3 7*'. * 14
Fri. to Thurs sales 136.091 Total open interest 56.73*
CORN
S,m ba fflinifflum; dolan per btabel
3 33-4 3 06', 3 25'.. -r 16 30,122
Dec 3 32 2 99 3 30'; * 34 7*,01
Mar 3.41-4 3.07 3 40'4 * 37 24 060
May 3 47 3 14', 3 47 + 36^4 5.344
3.49'4 3 1*^4 3 48'4 + 34'
3 49 3 28 3 35',
3.33 3 20 3 20
Fri. to Thurs sales 343,983 Total open interest 142.761 OATS
1^ ba mbumw, doUm per biabel
Jul
Dec
4.7*4
370
Dec
Mar
May
Jul
09'. 09-4 10 II
1.74^4 1.56'4 168 1**'4 169'; 18F-4
19? 179 191
2.00 1 *4 1 96',
I 98', I
Fri. to Thurs sales 7.712 Total open interest 9.302 SOYBEAN
S.M ba minimum; doUan per bushel
Aug 7.264 6 50 7 <nh + 63>, 15,8*1 6 59 7 16', + 60^4
6 26'; 7 36 + 62'4
6.90', 7 49', + 6F4 7.06 7 66'-. +.65*4
7.16 7 76'-.. + 66
Sep
Nov
Jan
Mar
May
Jul
Aug
Sep
Nov
7.35
754
769
783
794
8.03
7.97
789
7.30
7.25 723 7.38 715
Fri. to Thurs sales 309,782 Total open interest 99.934
7 81' 7 70 7.40 710
+ 62', + 53';
9.035
61.279
8.949
2.712
785
808
473
12
Total open inU
soybeaKoil
M.OM fea; doUan per 100 Ibt
23 18 20 4 22 93
Aug
o5
Dec
Jan
Mar
May
Jul
Au
+2.24 23.17 + 2 29
+2.^
23 29 21
23 48 21 20 23 35
23 85 21 59 23 66
24 00 21 76. 23 82
24.35 22 15 24 05
24.65 22 40 24 35 + 2.05
24 90 22 70 24 62 + 2 12
25 00 22.75 24 63 + 2 10
11.615
7.616
6.169
2 20 20.020 2.18 6.474
+2 05 1,337
420 183 25
doOan per ton
209 00 I850 202 80 +16 50 11.649
Ai to Thurs sales 88,457 Total open interest 53.859 SOYBEAN MEAL 100 Aug
211 40 188 50 205 50 +17 10
213 SO 191 30 207 80 +16 80
219.30 196 50 212 30 +16 50 16.572
222 00 199 00 215 20 +16 90 5.368
226 00 203 00 219 SO +1710
229 00 207 00 224 50 +17.50
232 00 209 50 228 50 +19 50
1^ 22* 50 +19 00
Fri. (0 Thurs sales 86.093 ToUl open interest 49.231
Dec
Jan
Mar
May
Jul
Aui
7.610
5,595
1.871
317
240
9
Weekly Stocks Ups And Downs
NEW YORK I API - The following list shows the New York Stock Exchange stocks and warrants that have gone up the most and down the most in the past week based on percent of change No securities trading below S2 or um shares are included Net and percentage changes are the difference between last we^s closing and this week's closing.
UPS
Name Last
1 Lanier 20',
2 Nashua Cp 27'.
- 68*1
I6'i 23
Pet Up 414
Teradyne s < Gleasn Wks
5 FaysDmg s
6 Ipco Corp
t; vlRevereCop 8 Unlroyal 9i Adams Drg lit Amfesco n 11' Aileen Inc la TexAmBnch
13 GenRad s
14 Zenith R 13 HeilmBr s
16 NatSemi
17 Gas Svc l RevcoDS s
19 NVFCo
20 Hesston Cp
21 Monsanto
22 Avnetinc s
23 Comptvsn
24 Clevepak
25 EDS s
+ 3 + 4
17. + 3
13
Chg
+ 6
+ 6*4 Up 29.9 + 13*. Up 24 7 Up 226 Up 217 Up 212 Up 209 Up 208
+ 2'. + 2.
+ 3-S, Up
22. + 3*4 7'
44'
+ 1' Up + 6. Up
44*. + 6* Up
203
19.6
188
183
167
+ 4'. Up 16 5 + 4'; Up 16 4
54', + 7\ Up
15'4 + 2'. Up
33*. + 4*. Up
3* + ', Up 16 0
13*4 + 1, Up
98'
Name 1 Anacomp ~ Mattel wt Uinta MGM + UA wt Carlisle MexicoFd Mattel Inc Mobil Home DeltaAirl
10 Genlnst
11 TWCoi
+ 13*. Up 47'4 + 6*4 Up 49*. + 6*. Up 18', + 2*. Up 39 + 5
DOWNS Last Chg lO-'s - 4 e*. - I'j
20 - 3
up
Pel Off 298 Off 159 Off 130 Ol 12.7 124
6. - 1 25', - 3*. Off 4', - V Off 12.2 9*. - l'4 Off 11 5
7. - 1 Off II 3
35*4 - 4*. Off 10.9
44 - 5'4 Off 10.7
11 TWCorp wtA II*.-!*. Off 10 6
12 EmpDE pfB 4
13 StokeVC pf 14
14 WamrCom 22
15 Harris Bnkp 40
16 WillmsEI
17 AshlandOil
18 FstBoston n
19 Kiddeinc
20 DeluxCheck
21 ArchDnM
22 SCM Corp
23 OrionPict pf
24 MngtAsst
25 Goodrich
26 PhibroSal s
27 TWA n
- Off 10.5
- I*. Off 10 4
- 2\ Off 10.3
- 4', Off 10.1
12', - Off 9.9
31'-. - 3>. Off 9.7
- 5*. Off
30'. - 3'.
42'4 - 4'4
22, - 2'4
32', - 3'.
13'4 - 1'4 10*4 - 1 34*. - 3'. Off 31*. - 2. Off 15', - 1'. Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Off
Weekly Amex Dollar Leaders
llowing
list of the most active stocks based on the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded.
TotdlOOO) SalM(hdi) Lait
*28,771 7522 39'a.
abB s Tint A DataPrd s TIE Comm s KeyPhrm s Amdahl
Imp Chem Nat Patent
PetroLew
Verbatim
*24.974 5203 50 *22.054 8442 27>4 *20.810 5721 39*. *18,141 4903 37>. *15.431 6235 25*. *13,903 17379 8
*12.643 4456 29*4 *10.935 6782 17 *10.014 1993 50',
crops pushed prices sha^ly higher in early trading, analysts said, but tbe gains were moderated by profit taking and forecasts of scat-tm^ rain in tbe Grain Belt this weekend.
However, analysts noted that the predicted rainfall wasnt likely to be significant and said long-range forecasts call for more hot, dry weather.
If theres any sign of a general rain, everycme will want to liquidate at once, said Bob Lekberg, grain analyst for Shearson American Express in Chicago. But that just doesnt seem to be in the cards right now.
Falling prices in tbe bond market and a stronger dollar in international currency markets also limited gains in grain futures prices, analysts said.
Fridays close pushed most com and soybean prices to new highs for the current rally, and analysts said some tradters are concerned by the extent of the advances, noting heavy liquidation in Hmrs-days up-and-down trading session.
Once you get at this levd, the market gets a little more nervous, Lekberg said. Tbe higher you go, the iffier it gets.
At the close, wheat was cent lower to ^4 cent higher
with tbe Sqitember contract at $3.66 a bushel; and oats were '/2 cent to 2^^ cents hi^r with the Septenber contract at $1.68 a bushel.
Livestock and pork belly prices also responded to the weather news, based on reduced animal wei^t and shipment and slaughter levels resulting from the hot weather, analysts said.
As long as the runs stay down, therell be a general lack of fresh supply, said Phil Stanley, livestock analyst for Thomson McKinnon Securities in Chicago.
On the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, live cattle for August delivery gained 1 cent and closed at 61.90 cents a pound; August feeder cattle were 62.90 cents, up .90 cent; ho^ for August delivery gained .85 cent, and closed at 45.80 cents a pound; and July pork bellies gained 2 cents and closed at 57.32 cents a pound.
Rising grain prices, which would increase feed costs and tend to result in liquidation of herds, also helped support prices in deferred contract months, Stanley said. Cattle prices received support from traders who bought contracts to balance previous commitments to sell.
Stanley said the weather and grain market news has over-shadowed wholesale demand, which he
- Market In Brief
NY.1 IsMif. (;ofis(li(j.itc(l Ii.kIiikj f fiiliiy July -i Voluiiif* >Sh.ii*. 81,067,370
l;.siK*r. IiiHlfd
1,967
Up
812
Unchanged 3%
Dowri
759
NY SI liKlt'x
97.74 -0.05
S\l' Comu
168.89 -0.17
Oow JoiH*;. Iiiij
/ip_ 1,231.17 4-1.80
r Market Analysis
[)()W JOtlPS JO IrxlustiiiJs
July 18 +38.86
High 1231.17 Low 1189.90 Ck)sed 1231.17
1240-
1210-
1180-1
M T W T F
1300
125a
120a
115a
110a
105a
1000
AP
A M J 1983
MARKET ANALYSIS - The Dow Jones Industrials Index closed Friday at 1231.17, up 38.86 from tbe previous week. (APLaserpboto)
Weekly Stocks In Spotlight
NEW YORK(AP)-
Yearly high-low, weekly sales.
high, low, closing price and nei change of the 20 most active stocis trading for more tnan *l:
70'4
^ Low Sala Higb
50 A'TT 5,797,900 64*4
Low
61'-;
Last (
61,-
8';
2'; PanAm
S.206,200 7,
7
7*4 +
*,
35*,
6*4 Chryslr 62', IBM
4,297,700 32,
30',
31 -
I26>4
4,297,600 I26>4
119', 124*,+ 4'4
56'-;
10'; Merl^ s ir*, PhibSs
4,227,000 52*,
4>',
48*4-
1*4
41
4.101,900 35',
TOh
31*,-
2,
SO-S
19 WmCm
3,874,100 2S'-;
19
22,-
2\
35,
19 NorSim
3,258,800 35,
33,
35*,+
l'/4
36*
21*, Goo^ 31*, GcnEl s
3,176,500 29*,
28>/4
29'/4-
57*4
3,118,600 54>/4
49'.-;
53>i+ 2,
46',
22'; Citicip 10*4 Prime s
2,959,700 40'^
35*,
39 + 2\
30'4
2.833,000 17*4
15,
16,-
1
SI
25*, DeltaAr
2,713,800 39,
34'/;
35*4-
4-S.
38'4
I3>4 AMRCp
2,674,100 3S>,
32'.;
35 + I*,
35*4
24. Exxon
2,671,100 35'4
34',
35 +
*4
48*,
27*4 GTE
2,595,800 48*,
42,
48 + 4's
75';
39*, GMot
2,501,600 75'-.
71*,
74,+ 3'4
44*4
26>; Pfizer s
2.465,700 43*,
39*4
404-
*4
66,
26'V Gninst
2,427,400 49*^4
41*4
44 -
5'4
21,
16'4 ConsPw
2.311.900 18*,
18
18',-
characterized as sluggish, and an Agriculture Department report Thursday indicating that the pace of cattle herd liquidation is slower than had been expected.
Once the market gets wind of a cool front coming in, the whole thing will sell off, he said.
News of hot, dry weather also prompted increases in sugar and cocoa prices, according to Pamela Rockley, director of commodity research for A.G. Becker Paribas in New York.
Sugar prices moved higher for the fourth consecutive day amid reports of possible damage to the European su^ beet crop as a result of hi^i temperatures, Ms. Rockley said. Futures prices rose the .50 cent daily limit in some deferred contract months, and the contract for September delivery closed at 11.13 cents a pound, up .71 cent.
Unseasonably hot temperatures in Ghana, Nigeria, the Ivory Coast and other key cocoa-producing nations led to thinking that output might be reduced, and that in turn helped boost prices, Ms. Rockley said. Cocoa futures on the Coffee Sugar Cocoa Exchange in New York gained $60 to $82 and closed at $2,309 per metric ton.
Gold and silver futures made small gains on the Comex in New York, chiefly as a result of buying by traders seeking to balance , previous commitments to sell. Gold for July delivery gained $2 and closed at $425.20 an ounce, while silver for July delivery gained 2.4 cents and , closed at $12.316 an ounce.
Cotton futures made early gains as a result of buying by speculators and brokers, and the rally gained momentum in the afternoon under the influence of rising grain and metals prices, according to Ernest Simon, cotton analyst for Bache Halsey Stuart Shields, Inc., in New York.
Increasing chances of crop . damage as a result of hot weather in the southern United States also contributed to the gains, Simon said. The contract for October delivery on the New York Cotton Exchange gained 1.54 cents and closed at 77.94 cents a pound.
Texan Uses Bible's Help In Oil Hunt
BURNING PROTEST - Demonstrators in Toronto watch tbe burning of a mock cruise missile Saturday outside the U.S. consulate in the Canadian city. More than 1,000 people took
part in a march through Torontos downtown to show opposition to planned cruise missile testing in Canada. (AP Laserphoto)
Stock Market Breaks Lenghty Losing Streak
ATLIT, Israel i.APi - A Texas oilman is praying that his interpretation of the Bible leads him to the first major oil find in Israel. He says initial indications tend to back his belief.
A productive oil well on the small promontory of .Atlit jutting into the Mediterranean would vindicate .Andy SoRelle before his many skeptics. And it could help rescue Israels economy from a chronic deficit in the balance of payments.
"We believe this is God s well, and we've had the miracles to prove it.' SoRelle said during a recent tour of the drilling site, where the oil rig towers over the seafront ruins of a 13th century Crusader fortress
"There are Jews and Christians all over the world praying for this well. It's probably the most famous oil well in the world, he said.
SoRelle said he was led to Atlit by Deuteronomy 33:24-25 in the King James Revised Standard Version Recounting Moses, blessing of the children of Israel before his death, the scripture reads: "And of Asher he said, Blessed above sons be Asher: let him be the favorite of his brothers, and let him dip his foot in oil. Your bars shall be iron and bronze: and as your days, so shall your strength be.
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market convincin^y snapped its longest losing streak in more than a year with the emergence this past week of new signs of econom-ic vitality and fresh assurances that the Federal Reserve Board would not upset that growth.
Traders, who began the week preoccupied with fears that rising interest rates would send stocks tumbiing beneath recent lows, ended the week speculating on whether the market would break out to new heists.
The attention span of the stock market is about that of a four-year-old, quipped
William LeFevre at Purcell, Graham & Co. Inc.
The Dow Jones industrials average, the stock markets best-known indicator, had been sinking since hitting a record high of 1,248.30 on June 16. The last time the average had slipped for four straight weeks was in the spring of 1982, before the start of the stock markets historic rally.
By the end of the session last Monday, the average of 30 blue-chip stocks had dropped 58.40 points from its mid-June peak.
Traders had been concerned that with the basic money supply growing at a
pace well above the upper limits of the Federal Reserve Boards anti-inflation growth targets, the central bank would make credit scarcer, pushing up interest rates and threatening to cut short the economic recovery.
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Lilly Delayed Death Reports
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -At least 29 European deaths linked to the arthritis drug Oraflex were not reported by Eli Lilly and Co. because they were medically inconsequential, a newspaper quoted a former Lilly researcher as saying Saturday.
Dr. W. Ian H. Shedden, a former vice president of Lilly Research Laboratories, said in court depositions and in interviews with the Indianapolis Star that the deaths were not reported to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration because they were medically inconsequential >and to be expected with that type of drug.
The Star said Shedden
explained that deaths have been associated with similar drugs designed to relieve arthritis pain and reduce joint Inflammation. And he said nearly 750,000 people took the drug in Great Britain, where 25 people died, meaning the percentage of deaths was very low.
Senior officials at Lilly didnt decide to report the European deaths to U.S. officials until after the drug was approved for the U.S. market, the Star reported.
Company officials said
they did not report the deaths tecause FDA regulations do not require such reports among foreign patients under some conditions, the Star said.
Shedden said company policy was to report to the FDA any adverse reactions in patients overseas if they were unexpected, it said.
Dr. Paul H. Plotz, a senior medical investigator for the National Institutes of Health said the concept of medically inconsequential deaths is something foreign to me.
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Third World Debtois
As O Dec 31. 1982
BiHions Ot Doll-if s
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Source Morgan Gkjaranty Trust Co
Global Financial System Faces Threat From Third
World's Debt Load
By DAVID SMYTH Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK I API - The problem is simple: The Third World is drowning in debt, threatening to overload the worlds financial system.
The solution, unfortunately, has not proven so easy to find.
The Third Worlds debt crisis can be outlined in three statements:
-Developing countries around the world have piled up mountains of debt, a large part of which they are unable to repay.
-The private international banks are reluctant to lend them any more.
-And official institutions such as the lnt70/nal Monetary Fund are running out of money to bail them out.
What happes next is an open question.
In the 1930s, a breakdown in the international financial system caused a worldwide depression, and that disaster still haunts the memory of financial experts.
In the latest issue of Foreign Affairs. Bank of America vice chairman William H. Bolin and former IMF official Jorge del Canto write: '
"There is not a very clear public memory of the late 1920s and early 1930s. when shrinking trade combined with financial crisis led to a major depression. Accordingly, there has been little public discussion of the really central problem. What, in fact, will be the source of new financing for lesser developed countries to import capital goods in the future?
So far, the co-authors observe, cash advances from commercial banks, governments and the IMF, as well as debt rescheduling arrangements, have prevented a collapse of confidence in the world financial system.
But the problem has not lessened.
Its solution is vital, and not only for the debtor nations in Asia. Africa and Latin America. International trade and finance and the well-being of rich industrial nations such as the United States. Japan and the countries of Western Europe are also at stake.
Few Americans understand what it means to them, in terms of employment opportunities, that 40 percent of U.S. exports go to lesser developed countries (LDCs). Bolin and del Canto say. Still fewer understand that exports to LDCs will continue only if there
are future flows of credit to the importing nations.
According to the International Monetary Fund, the total external debt of the 115 non-oil producing developing countries came to $612.4 billion at the end of 1962 and will rise to $664 billion by the end of this year.
At least 34 of these nations are seeking to reschedule their loans - to postpone payments on interest and principal. The reasons are varied: falling demand for commodities during the recession, too grandiose development plans, inflationary economic policies.
Many experts say that with help, many of the debtors will be able to dig their way-out.
We are not dealing with economic machines that have broken down. Bolin and del Canto say. Ninety percent of LDC debt to U.S. banks is owed by 15 countries. The basic economic sectors, although under strain, are functioning productively in all of them.
The big commercial banks are helping out by working out new repayment schedules for debtor nations, giving them more time to pay back their loans, but it appears doubtful the banks will provide much new help.
Thus, the debtors are seeking more help from official institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the central banks of individual nations.
Critics argue that giving the IMF more money is a ploy to get the big commercial banks off the hook. The banks, they claim, imprudently loaned billions of dollars to uncreditworthy foreign nations and are now running to the IMF to bail them out.
In the United States, this is seen by some as a raid on the American taxpayer. The ' American contribution to a 50 percent increase in IMF resources, for example, would come to about $8 billion.
The Amencan contribution to the capital increase for the IMF is still before Congress, but the banks are lobbying hard for this approval.
According to Fortune magazine. Citibank alone, the nations second biggest bank, has $5.6 billion on loan to Brazil, a sum equal to 83 percent of the banks capital.
The failure to meet a big debt might be contained or it could set off a self-feeding chain reaction of bank failures and ^faults.
State Becomes Target Of Outside Banks, S&Ls
By The Asssociated Press Out-of-state banks and savings and loan companies are rushing to enter the already competitive North Carolina market, financial observers say. .
The states continued growth, particularly in home sales, and a change and state law have lured several financial institutions into North Carolina.
Citicorp of New York, the nations laragest bank, has applied for permission to open an industrial bank in Charlotte. Its application remains before the State Banking Commission, which has delayed action until at
least Aug. 22.
At least three North Caro-1 ina stockholder-owned S&Ls have been acquired by out--of-state groups, and others have been the targest of out-of-state takeover attempts.
The spate of S&L acquisitions began after the Legislature in May eliminated from state law a prohibition against out-of-state control of stockholder-owned thrifts.
Since then, Control Data Corp. of Columbus, Ohio, has bought Amity S&L of Statesville through its subsidiary, Commercial Credit, and an Ohio groi^ has ac-
in
Miller Bargaining Said Not Hopeless
MILWAUKEE (AP) - A spokesman for the AFL-CIO said Saturday that bargaining between striking Brewery Workers Union Local 9 and the Miller Brewing Co. was difficult but not hopeless.
Charles Hughes of the labor groups national staff disagreed with a statement issued by a Miller spokesman Friday that negotiations last week were fruitless.
"There is no impasse now because there is momentum, there is movement, Hughes said.
"The union is available to bargain, he said, adding that he expected federal mediator William Kurtz to schedule another negotiating session soon.
The brewery workers went on strike June 3. Supervisory personnel have been operating the brewery since. ,
quired control of S&Ls Gastonia and Brevard.
Meanwhile, people associated with Hawkeye Bancorporatioh, Iowas largest bank, have acquired stock in at least three North Carolina S&Ls - First Federal of Hi^ Point, First Federal of Shelby and Fidelity Federal of Hickory.
While their collective holdings in the Shelby and Fidelity S&Ls are described as Substantial, First Federal of High Point president J.D. Dobbins said none of the individuals owns more than 2 percent of his firms stock.
Ron Hawkins, president of Home Federal of Statesville, said the lowans expressed interest in buying into his firm when it converted from a mutual to stockholder-owned association two years ago.
He said the lowans have told him they see North Carolina as having great potential because it is kmwn as a forward-thinking state and also because we are known nationwide to be a cut above in the quality of our (S&L) shops.
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The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.Sunday, July 24,1983C-1
Color Analysts Say
Youre an autumn, Goldsboro color consultant Sissy Weil tells a client during one of toe color sessions she conducts in department stores throughout the state. Mrs. Weil holds consultations in Greenville at regular intervals.
Correct Colors Enhance Beauty
Each individual has one of four distinct groups of colors (about 30 in each group) that best repeat, reflect and enhance his or her natural skin, hair and eye coloring.
Though their approaches, emphases and services vary somewhat, this is the concept on which several different color analysis and consultation businesses are operating in the Greenville area. Each is conducting private and group classes to assist individuals, mostly women, but a few men, what "season of colors is best for them in terms of choosing clothing, accessories, makeup, jewelry even home decor and cars, if one wants to take it that far.
These four groups are designated by naming them for the seasons of the year. Summer and winter colors are cool, blue-based ones, spring and autumn are warm, yellow-based ones.
See you first Wearing the colors that are right for you will make you look more vibrant. People will see you first, then what yoebe wearing, local color consultant Patsy Garzik says. Mrs. Ganik works out of her home, consulting there and in various group situations.
According to local color consultant Marcy Byrd, whose service Let Yourself Glow, is associated with the Beauty for All Seasons nationwide color consulting
firm, wearing the right colors makes your hair appear shinier, your skin clear and freer of blemishes, and your eyes brighter. She echoes Mrs. Garzik, saying, Color should always be an enhancer, not the focal point.
And Mrs. Byrd, who is also a modeling consultant who plans and directs fashion shows for organizations and businesses, makes her point by saying that directors of fashion shows know they must dress models in the right color family, but not in the right season, so people will notice the clothes and not the model. For instance, she said, a model who is a winter would best be dressed in a summer color so she would look good, but not so good that shed outshine the clothes shes modeling.
The color consultation business has come into its own in a past year or so as Carole Jacksons book Color Me Beautiful has been on the best-seller list for about two years. Sissy Weil, a Goldsboro resident who is associated with the Color Me Beautiful color consulting firm run nationwide by Mrs. Jackson, often conducts seminars in Greenville, usually at the Belk-Tyler Store here.
Mrs. Weil says Carole Jackson, with whom she trained, admits that she did
not develop color analysis. It was developed by Suzanne Caygill in San Francisco in 1942 and was taught in the Fashion Academy headed by Gerrie Pinckney and Marge Swenson Ms. Jackson received her training there.
Draping, Framing Keys
Most of the analysts determine a persons season and which colors within the season are most enhancing for them through draping of fabric in various true shades around the shoulders of the client who has removed all makeup. Mrs. Byrd also uses some face-framing cards that serve the same purpose as the drapes. A mirror is provided so the client can observe with the analyst how each color affects her appearance. There are some key colors that will enable the determination very quickly. True white can only be worn well by a winter, as can black. Yellow-based and blue-based shades of the same hue can be tried one behind the other to see which looks best.
In general, winters can wear vivid clear primary colors like deep blues and turquoises, American beauty roses, purples, magentas and icy shades of blue, pink, etc. Clear contrasts are good. Theyre the only ones who can successfully wear pure white or black. True grays and charcoals are good. Navy blues are excellent.
The summer person glows in pastels with cool blue undertones. Her colors are totally feminine and she opts for softness rather than sharp contrast. Soft, not pure, white becomes her,' as do beiges with rose tones. Powdered pinks, roses, lavenders, orchids and mauves are good.
The autumn person wears best the warm rich colors of fall golds and rusts and browns. All warm (gold-undertoned) beiges are good as are vitually all oranges and green that go toward yellow.
Springs must wear the most delicate colors of all the seasons. They must be clear, warm and crisp. Their best white is creamy ivory, with clear warm beiges and
camels, and browns. Clear golds are good, as are several clear shades of blue, peach, apricot, coral and virtually all shades of green.
Could anyone ever be more than one season No, Mrs. Weil says, though a winter can afford to wear a summer, a summer a winter, a spring an autumn and an autumn a spring better than any of the other seasons. In other words, winters and summers just cannot afford to wear colors meant for persons with yellow-undertoned skin and autumns and springs cannot afford to wear those meant for persons with skin with blue undertones.
Most Choose Well
Most women find, Mrs. Garzik said, that most of whats in their wardrobe is appropriate. Theyve just naturally been attracted to the colors that become them. The items that are not in the right color family usually are the ones they leave hanging and may have wondered why they never felt good wearing them. Clear them out, she suggests. Give them away or trade with a friend in another season.
Choice of colors is important to an artist and nature is the best artist of all, Mrs. Garzik points out. Determining the colors that complement ones skin tones always results in the hair and eye color always being complemented as well. The analysts often have to use tact, they all agreed, in informing clients if the artificial hair colors theyve chosen for themselves are uncomplementary to their skin tones and thus to the colors that enhance their skin. For instance, a summer or winter lightening her hair would go toward an ash blond, while an autumn or winter would use a yellower or more reddish blond.
"A winter could never become a redhead and not seriously detract from her appearance, any more than an autumn could dye her hair blue-black and look her best. Nature isnt fooled, Mrs. Garzik said.
(Please turn to page C-2)
Text & Photos By Carol Tyer
Client Mary Vojtecky is draped by Greenville color consultant Patsy Garzik to determine what her season is and what colors within that season are best for her. MdGanik also advises about fabric textuii choics.
Makeup in her season is applied for client Betty Tart during one of Greenville color coiisultant Marcy Byrds color ses^ns held at a local health club.
W edding V ows Spoken Saturday Afternoon
Sandra Ruth Fisher and Darrell Lee Harrison, both of Greenville, were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at two oclock in the St. James Methodist Church. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Dewey Tyson. A program of wedding music was presented by organist Stephen Vaughn and the Rev. Ralph Brown, soloist. Selections included Where the Heart Is. The Wedding and The Wedding Prayer.
sweetheart roses and babys breath accented with mauve silk roses, greenery and ribbon.
The bride is the daughter of Robert Fisher and Mrs. Ruth F. Fisher, both of New Bern. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Euralee H. Harrison of Wake Forest.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents and was escorted by her father. She wore a formal gown of silkened organza over peau de sole. The fitted bodice featured a high neckline and sheer yoke embellished with silk Venise lace reembroidered in pearls and iridescents. Peau dange lace cuffed the full bishop sleeves. The appliqued full skirt extendi into a chapel train, bordered by a deep flounce trimmed in rows of Chantilly lace. She wore a waltz len^ veil of English silk illusion encircled with lace and accented with lace motifs, which fell from a Juliet cap overlaid with silk Venise lace and beaded with pearls. She carried a cascade bouquet of white pixie carnations, pink
Anne Faulkenberry of New Bern was matron of honor. She wore a formal gown of daphne rose lustreglo complemented by a flared ac-cordian pleated skirt. The Victorian-styled gown featured a high neckline encircled with ruffled rachel lace and a sheer yoke of point desprit outlined in ruffled rachel lace and a bertha collar of chrystal pleated chiffon. She wore a matching hat accented with French veiling and silk Venise lace and carried an arm bouquet of silk mauve roses accented with greenery and babys breath, tied with satin ribbons.
greenery.
Sara Jane Fisher of New Bern, niece of the bride, was flower girl and wore a cranberry red dress similar to that of the bridal attendants. She carried a wicker basket filled with mauve silk roses accented with satin bows and wore a tiara of matching flowers.
The father of the bridegroom served as best man. Ushers were Rodney Harrison of Raleigh, brother of the bridegroom; Carl Summerell of Virginia Beach, Fred Horeis of Roanoke, Va. and Butch Talbot of Greenville.
Bridesmaids were Lynne Hilliard of Greenville, Jewel Kay Watson of New Bern, Cindy Craig of Matthews and Janet Bryan of Farmville. Each bridesmaid wore a gown and headpiece identical to that of the honor attwi-dant. They carried smaller arm bouquets like that of the maid of honor.
The mother of the bride wore a pastel blue lace dress with beaded pearls outlining the V-neckline and waistline. She wore a shoulder corsage of red silk roses. The mother of the bridegroom wore a flowing long-sleeved lavender crepe dress with amber and purple trim and a shoulder corsage of yellow silk roses.
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Honorary bridesmaids were Wendy Fisher and Tricia Fisher, both sisters-in-law of the bride from New Bern and Susan Clayton of Knoxville, Tenn, Each honorary bridesmaid wore a sky blue formal knit gown designed with a fitted bcdice and a chiffon cape. Each carried a long-stemmed silk rose tied with bows and
Following the ceremony, the bride and the bridegroom entertained in the fellowship hall of the church. Wedding cake was served by Maiilyn Love and Virginia McMillan. Punch was poured by Rae Troutman and Barbara Wade. Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Warren. Tricia Fisher and Wendy Fisher, sisters-in-law of the bride, presided at the guest register.
The bride and the bridegroom left the church in a
horse^lrawn antique buggy driven by Randy Cole.
A rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom at Parkers Barbeque Restaurant in Greenville. An after-rehearsl party was hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Hal Humphrey of New Bern at the Courtney Square Clubhouse in Greenville. Several other parties and showers were given in honor of the bridal couple.
The bride has a B.S. and M.A. Ed. degree from East
Carolina University ^ a reading and curriculum instruction sp^ialist degrees from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. She is employed as a first grade teacher in the Greenville City Schools at Third Street School. Die bridegroom received a B.S. and M.B.A. degree from ECU and is a sales representative with Xerox Corp.
After a wedding trip to Wrightsville Beach, the couple will reside in Greenville.Summer Dresses
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(Continued from page C-l)
NEW YORK (UPI) Countertop clutter was the No. 1 consumer concern in a usage and attitude survey a couple of years ago, says Thomas J. Albani, a home appliance company executive.
His firm. General Electric, responded with an electric canopener designed for un-der-the-cabinet installation. When It sold out during its first three months in retail stores, the company knew it had the right idea.
At its annual new products news conference in New York, Albani, GEs general manager for housewares, and housewares marketing manager David L. Lessard introduced several more under-cabinet or wall-mounted small kitchen electrics among 22 appliances in the 1983 line.
An electric knife with regular and frozen food blades is designed for wall mounting. New electric drip cof-feemaker models can . be hung from cabinets or used on countertops.
Other new kitchen appliances and utensils from a variety of manufactuers that are either in stores now or scheduled to arrive in the next few months include;
-A GE toaster-oven-broiler that is smaller than other six-slice toaster ovens and includes several features requested in the consumer survey: A cake bake switch, a defrost setting, a flip tap that exposes a warming surface with non-stick coating and a slanted front door that allows the use of a 9-inch pie pan. The cake switch is designed to prevent overbrowning of cake tops that sometimes occurs in small ovens. The unit is expected to be in stores by October. Suggested retail, about (96.
-Wearevers glass bake-and-serve ovenware with SilverStone lining includes 1-, I'i-and 2-quart
covered, round casseroles, an 8-inch square baking dish, an 8-by-12V4-inch lasagna dish and a 9-by-5-inch loaf dish. Price range, from about (12 for the smallest casserole to about (15 for the , largest' casserole and the lasagim dish.
-Rivals new plastic wrap dispenser is a countertop product that can also be wall-mounted. It has full-width neoprene gripper pads to prevent the sticky stuff from wrinkling, tangling or peeling, and a patented cutting mechanism that retracts automatically into a protective sheath after each use. Capacity: A 200-foot roll. Price, about (14.
-Salhm, the first manufacturer of food warming trays for home use, is introducing the first see-through electric warming trays, in two sizes, for (40 and $55.
Other new Saltn products include a countertop warmer with a glass surface and a shallow warming cabinet with glass door below, for about (110; a serving cart with food warmer top and a heated drawer and a warming oven below, for about (495; and an electric wok set . that includes a steam rack, wooden spatula, cooking and eating chopsticks and a 36 page instruction and recipe book, for about (65. The wok has SilverStone coating.
-Electric woks usually have the thermostat on Uk plug that fits under a handle, where it is hard to see and hard to use. West Bends newest electric wok avoids that problem by having the control on the base. The &Kiuart unit has a suggests retail price of about (53.
The company is also introducing a 6-quart stove-top
wok with a flat, slip-resistant bottom that eliminates the need for a cooking ring. It has a red porcelain exterior and Rockcote non-stick interior. The set includes a tempura rack, ^ns, 10
chopsticks and a recipe booklet. Suggested retail
price, $31.75
-Chicago Metallic, a manufacturer of expensive, dark-surfaced, aluminum alloy bakeware, is borrowing an idea from the auto industry. During Septem-ber-October 1983, consumers will be able to trade in any used bakeware for Bakalon products at retail stores at 20 to 40 percait discounts over the regular prices. Company spokesman said Ron Field says the traded-in pans will be donated to charities. The 40 percait discounts apply to a group of (20-00 products, and the 20 percent discounts to a group of (12-(45 products.
The same company is introducing a line of steel-based bakeware with SilverStone interiors and an almond colored, enameled exterior finish.
Krups-North Americas introductions at the 79th semi-annual International Housewares Exposition, scheduled for July 10-14 in Chicago, will include a beverage maker for families who are divided (Ml the coffee or tea question.
The 20-cup Duothek unit brews coffee on one side and tea on the other.
Too thirsty to wait? A ^ial feature allows the user to sneak out a cup or two part way throu^i the brewing cycle. The appliance automatically shuts off while you pour, and then restarts. Expect to pay about $175 for the privilege.
Foundation makeups are chosen by whether theyre rose-based or yellow-based; eye, lip and nail makeup by color family. For instance, a winter would choose a rosie-based foundation and powder and would wear burgundies, deep roses, magentas on lips, cheeks and nafls, and blue, gray and rose eye shadows. A summer could wear the same foundation and shadow, but would wear pastel lipsticks, blushers and nail color. All the analysts have makeup lists, some even giving brand names. Marcy Byrds company sells makeup, she said, but puts the emphasis on analysis rather than selling.
In general silver, platinum, white gold and diamond jewelry is best for winters and summers; yellow gold, brass, coi^r and wooden jewelry for springs and autumns. Pearis are good for both, though the white ones are best for winters and summers, the cream-colored ones for springs and autumns. Eye-^ass frame choices can also be better made if seasons are kept in mind and treated with much the same
guidelines as jewelry.
The beauty of being in ones own season, Mrs. Byrd said, is that once youve achieved it, everything you own is color-coordinated and your needs can be met with fewer items. No more (k> you need dozens of anything. Shoes and skirts and pants and suits can be purchased in neutrals only at first, with colorful blouses and dresses and accessories rounding out everything.
Classes are offered here by the three women interviewed. Mrs. Byrd and Mrs. Ganik, 756-1205, may be reached at their homes. Mrs. Weils classes may be signed up for through Belk-Tylers.. The classes vary in cost from $35 to $50. Mrs. Garzik wUl not accept more than seven in a group; Mrs. Weil, no more than six; Mrs. Byrd, no more than four.
CHILDRENS DEPT.
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Clothing
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SHOE DEPT.
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FUR STORAGE
NEW YORK (AP) -Never store a fur jacket or coat in a plastic bag, advises the American Fur Industry. Plastic prevents air from circulating and can dry out the leather. Use a cloth protector if you want to cover the fur.
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First Graduating Class Of Rose High Holds ReunionI
The 1B5B Class of J.H. Rose High School heW Hs 2Stti Clees Reunion Saturday
night at the American Legion Building Decorations dMicting the SO's theme were '? O'^P by Talli of the fo^", a local band playing
beach music and the top 40 Patsy Coray and Uwrence PerWna presented a short program and a moment o( silence was held by Ebem Allen tor deceased ciasamatea: Rebecca Highamith Fussail. Albert Crawford, and Marietla Northrop Morgan. ^
^ Ou* of the Class of M, the following taachera attended: Mrs. Kemp Bal^n, Ms. Uura Bell. Mrs. Christine Tripp, Mr. James Rodgers. Ms. Francas SmIth.andMr.iMra.OdeilWalborn.
Nlnety.elght people attended the Reunion, including llfty.one claaamalsa, their jpouaea and dates Local ciasamatea attending were: R. Kelly Barnhill, Dartene Willlpa Briley, Patsy Corey, Bennie G. Harrell. Priscilla Weeks Hodges, Ann Moort
Johnson, Hazel Corey Lovett, Ann Parkinson, Lawrence ParklnaVNlna Overton icker StwKill. Camilla Henderson Taft, Martha Corbett West Judy
Powers, Mae Tucker Jolly Whitford. Don Wilkeraon Thoee attending from out of town included: Ebem E Allan, Bethel, Arthur M. Andrews, Kinston; Lenny W Berry, Charlotta; Dr. Robert H. Bllbro. RaMgh; Barbara Dj^ Carson, Bethel: Polly Batts Crouch, King; Bobby Edwards, Winston.6alem; Bmy Fiekta, Clemmons; Cynthia Cranford Hear, Raleigh; Richard V. Hear, RMeIgh; Janet Horton Kirkman, Charlotte; Ginger Lang UeweHyn, Kinaton: Martha Moya,
Fayett^lie; Ruth Young Rhodes. Raleigh: Jwm Milla Riggs, Wintervllie; Sendn laret Aiflln Scott. Raleigh; Ray L. SmMh. Jr.,
Mayo Robinson. Wintervllie; Margaret ______ .. ..........
Raleigh; Nina Harper Stokes, WlntervHle; Ann Qllngton Strickland, Raleigh; Nancy Braxton Taylor, Ayden; Iona Jones Tyson, Qyde; Janice Fordlwm WHIIama. Washington; Carol Tadlock Wyman, Ralsigh
puhOWtate ciasamatea attending were: Owen Johnson Barton. Tacoma Park, . Irglnia Beach. VA; R. Eugene Gurganus, Oiney, MD:
Robert Howell, Gaffney, SC^Ralph Johnson. Lewlavllle. TX; Jerri McDeniel Jordan,
MO; UWan Moya Bolen. VI
Silver Sprlnga, MO; Stuart Boat Lau^, Richmond. VA; BIN Moore, Suffolk.'VA;
I. MASS; Merthe Pierce Schein. Atlanta. QA; HowanK
Jean Waters Muller. Westfield E. Sumraii, Whitetboro, NV The Reunion was organized by Petey Corey with the assistance of Kelly Barnhill. Class Treasurer, Uwrence Perklne end Ebern Allen aesisted with the progrem Decorations were coordinated by Dartene Phillips Briley, Bennie Harrell, Priscilla Week* Hodges, Hazel Corey Lovett, Sandra Mayo Hoblnaon, and Nine Harper Stokes, Stuart Boat Uughon. Camilla Henderson Taft, Martha Corbett West, and Janice Fordhem WilHams provided additions to the hora d'oeuvres served by Ser-vomaHonofECU ^
V>
it-
Every day in
THE DAILY pFLECTOR
Up To
0 Off
MENS DEPT.
Group Of
Mens Slacks
20-50%
Off
Group of Mens
Dress Shirts
20%
Group Of
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1/3
Off
Downtown Greenville
Shop D^jly 10 to 5,: 30
Carolina East Mall Shop Ooily to to 9
MIMI
iim
August, September And October Weddings Set
The Daily Renector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Sunday, July 24.1983-C-3
EDUCATION TAX
ROCHESTER, N Y. (AP) - Romanias recent requirement that citizens who want to emigrate to the West must pay an education tax" may be a sign the country is being pulled more tightly into the Soviet orbit, according to a University of Rochester authority on Romania.
Professor Charles Carlton, who has studied in Romania under four Fulbright-Hays Fellowships sin^'e I07i ave
the tax is a technique utilized by the Russians to combat their own "brain drain.
The tax will affect about 15,000 Romanians annually, including 2,000 who come to the U.S. Noting that President Ceausescu of Romania has often seemed to act independently of Russia, Carlton said that before the recent tax Ceausescu was "one of the friendliest leaders the U.S. has had in Eastern Europe.
Capture That Adorable Face Forever On
Tuesdays
at Deans Photography
Childrens Day prices on sittings and portraits Tuesdays Only Call 752-3980 to schedule your childs appointment
Deans Photography
___^203 Evans Street
CATHERINE LOUISE GAYLOR...S the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Glenn Gaylor of Ayden, who announce her engagement to Donald Wilton Royal Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wilton Royal Sr. of Route 1, Wade. The wedding is planned for Oct. 8.
Stolen Purse, Stolen Memories
By Abigail Van Buren
IMS by Untvmal PraM SyiKScM
DE^ ABBY: My purse was stolen today, and I am heartsick. I had many personal items in it tirat can never be replaced pictures of my kids from the time they were babies, and some letters I treasured. I had some personal papers, my checkbook, credit cards, my address book, unlisted telephone numbers, keys, etc. My purse was part of me!
Abby, appeal to people who steal parses for money to please put the purses in the maillMX so they can returned. I work part-time to help my husband buy food for our family. We have three kids and lots of bills like everybody else.
Ladies, take a good look in your purse today and make sure half your life isnt in it. Clean it out and carry only what you need, so you wont be as heartbrokoi as I am if its stolen.
STILL UPSET
DEAR STILL: Thank you for wanting to spare others the pain and inconvenience you aufliered.
DEAR ABBY: Please advise and take a poll among your readers concerning an acceptable curfew time for an 18-year^ld college girl who lives at home.
She (my daughter) and I have some strong differences of opinion on ^e subject. I feel that 2 a.m. is reasonable. She feels it is ridiculous that her friends do not have to abide by such an early time, if they have any curfew at aU.
In this dty (Spokane), where rape is not all that uncommon, 1 dont sleep until all my cUldren are home.
I would like to know your feelings, and also how others handle this.
SICK OF THE CURFEW ARGUMENT
BELINDA GAY WHEELESS...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. Worth Hill of Smithfield and Mr. and Mrs. Truett Wheeless of Benson, who announce her engagement to James Marvin Worrell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Worrell of Whiteville. An Aug. 20 wedding is planned.
DEAR SICK: Your decision concerning curfew time should not be based on how others handle it. It should be based on how dependable, mature and reaponaible your daughter ia. It ia alao my view that children living at home should make every effort to relieve their parents of stress and worry.
DEAR ABBY: My husband died suddenly three years ago. I grieved endlessly for him, and have done only the necessary marketing, usually taking my dog with me. Only recently I realized I was very lonely.
Last week as I came out of the market into the parking lot, a stranger walking his dog on a leash struck up a conversation with me about my dog, whod been barking in my car. I was quite taken by this mans looks and manner, but I was so insecure and surprised that I left abruptly.
However, Ive been back every evening at 6 p.m. (the time I saw him) and Ive left a card on the bulletin board at the market. I have even driven up and down the nearby streets hoping to see him.
Abby, why am I doing this? I feel demented. Please put this letter in your column. He may read it and come back to the parking lot.
L IN WEST LA.
DEAR L: You are not demented. You are a very lonely woman who realizes that youve grieved enough and its time to get on with your life. Its a healthy sign. ,
Start calling old friends and begin to socialize a bit. Yon may never again see the man with whom
Stanley Home Pro(Jucts
A newborn turkey chick has to be taught to eat or it will starve.
For the Stanley Deqtcaser Kettle Cleaner 8. many other Stanley Home ProrJucts Call /)6-8720 or 752-1 201
if'llair Werkski
Beauty Salon & Barber Shop
Professional Hairstyling for Men & Women
Call for Appointment Walk-Ins Accepted
756-7057
Located on Charles St. beside Carriage House Apts.
The nations suicide rate rose slightly to an estimated 11.7 per 100,000 [X^ulatiota in 1982, according to the American Council of Life Insurance. The rate was an estimated 11.5 peraOO.OOO population in 1982.
RIAGE]
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Call For Your Appointment Today! Phone 756-2355 6 Stylists To Serve Yov[! And Angela Tillman Is Now Back With Us! ^
LAURIE ANNE LOGSDON...is the daughter of Mrs. Joan A. Logsdon and Robert F. Logsdon, both of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Walter Lee Hedgepeth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hedgepeth of Farmville. The wedding is planned for Sept. 3.
you were so taken; he waa probably just a fHendly stranger already taken anyway, so forget him. Good luck, lady. Think positive, and good things will happen.
If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booUet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, HoUywood, Calif. 90038.
Choir No. 5 Queen
Mrs. Azarlene Edge was
crowned Miss Choir No. 5, June 19 at Mt Calvary F.W.b! Church She is the daughter of Mrs. Kathy Edge Other contestants were Mrs. Sarah Williams. 1st runner up and Mrs Vivian Atkinson, 2nd runneer-up Pastor Dr. W.L. Jones
Personal
Aliena F. Craig is a patient in Louise Obici memorial Hospital in Suffolk, Va. She is mother of Margie Farmer of Greenville and Betty Leary of Williamston.
Eastern
Electrolysis
133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE 6 PHONE 734-4034, GREENVILLE. NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST
SUMMER SPECIALS
AT
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For Only ^ 1 Each Charter Members Only lO**
15 Suntan Visitsll**
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Only Chance At These Prices Red Oak Plaza 756-2820
C-4-Tbe Daily Reflecte-, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July H 1*3Couple Marries On Saturday
MRS. DESMOND BARTHOLOMEW
Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor
PATIO SUPPER
Hamburgers 4 Tabtxwleh Fruit and Cookies TABBOLEH
The cinnamon in this version of a Mideast dish adds interesting flavor.
1 cup fine bulgur ^4 cup diced (4 inch) tomatoes cup thinly sliced scallions >2 cup loosely packed chopped (medium fine) fresh mint l-3rd cup olive oil >4 cup fresh lemon juice ^4 tea^n salt tea^n ground cinnamon Lettuce
In a bowl cover bulgur with a 2-inch deep layer of cold water. Soak at room temperature for 1 hour, drain well. Add tomato, scallion, mint, oil, lemon juice, salt and cinnamon; toss ^ntly until well mixed. Refrigerate for at least 3 hours. Toss gently again. Serve on lettuce. Makes 4 servings. Adapted from Great Peasant Dishes of the World by Howard Hillman (Houghton Mifflin).
INFORMAL SUPPER Grilled Franks 4 Relish Potato Salad 4 Carrot Curls Fruit Compote 4 Cookies POTATO SALAD Its the old-time warm version.. 6 medium (2\i pounds) potatoes 6 slices (thin) bacon, diced (4 inch)
I large egg, beaten only until foamy ^ cup cider vinegar 14 teaspoons salt 4 tea^Kxm p^per 3 medium scallions, thinly sliced (l-3rd cup)
Scrub ^toes; do not peel; steam until tender when pierced with a fork - 40 minutes. Drain and let stand only until cool enough to handle; remove skins; slice crosswise about >'4-inch thick. In a 10-inch skillet over moderately low heat, stirring often, cook bacon until crisp, with a slotted spoon remove bacon and add to potatoes. Remove skillet from heat; to the hot drippings - there should be about 3 tablespoons - vigorously stir in egg, when vinegar, salt and pepper until creamy; pour over potatoes and bacon; add scallion; toss well. Makes 6 to 8
servmgs.
Willis Maid Service
12 years in the Greenville Area
Spring Cleaning CALL JUDI WILLIS General Housekeeping LATE NIGHT OR HousesHting for Vacations
EARLY MORNING
The wedding ceremony of Sandra Kate Brown and Desmond Bartholomew, both of Brooklyn. N.Y., was held Saturday afternoon at four oclock in SycanoOTe Hill Baptist Church. The Rev. Howard W. Parker Jr. officiated at the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the dau^ter of Ellis Brown of Greenville and Mr. and Mrs. Kari Kni^it of Baltimore, Md. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Beulah Bartholomew of Brooklyn, N.Y.
Escorted by ho- father, the bride wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de soie designed with a high neckline encircled with beaded alencon lace. The gown featured a sheer yoke of illusion accented with Brussels lace. The fitted boodice was enhanced with aloicon lace that extoxled over the shoulders and down the back bodice. The sheer fitted sleeves were edged in alencon lace and matching lace encircled the waistline. The noodified A-line skirt and attached chapel length train were edged in alencra lace. Appliques of alencon lace were scattered over the skirt and train. She wore a waltz-length veil of illimion edged in alencon and schiffli lace held in place by a caplet overlaid in matching lace beaded with pearls. She carried a bouquet of white orchids, white bridal roses, miniature carnations, stephanotis, daisies and lily of the valley accented with babys breath and tied with lace bridal streamers.
Karaleigh Henson, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. She wore a formal gown of fix^t pink taffeta designed with an open V-necldine outlined in a double ruffle of taffeta. A self-fabric rose accented the modified waistline. The skirt was enhanced with an asymmetrical overiay of taffeta forming a petal hemline. She carried a nosegay of gerbera daisies, pink carnations, pink rose statice and babys breath accented with ribbons. She wore babys breath in her hair.
Bridesmaids included Allie Metters, aunt of the bride, and Gwendolyn Harris, both of Greenville and Jennifer Bartholomew of Brooklyn, N.Y., sister of the bridegroom. They wore gowns in a contrasting shade of aubergine styled identically to that of the honor attendants gown and carried similar nosegays with matching ribbon. They wore babys breath in their hair.
Ele^a Gatlin, cousin of the bride, was flower girl and wore a formal gown of rose print taffeta designed with an open eckline outlined in a ruffle 01 taffeta. The skirt was enhanced with a ruffle of taffeta that extended around and up to the waistline. She carried a white wicker basket with pink and lavender daisies tied with matching ribbon.
Hayden Bartholomew of Fort Bragg, brother of the bridegroom, served as best man. Ushers were Calvin and Walter Gatlin, uncles of the bride from GreojviUe; and Richard Bartholomew of
The
Yardage Shoppe
2802 E. 10th St. Greenville 752-7250
ENTIRE STOCK
OF
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FABRICS
30% 50*/<
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OPEN
mItmrusat. 2802 E. 10th St. Greenville
752-7250
Money
Management
During the course of one day, the human eye blinks up to 11,250 times.
High Noon Ceremony Performed
New York, brother oi the bridegroom. Maurice Cohens of GreoiviUe, cou^ the bride, was nng bearer and carried a white satin pillow.
The mother of the bride wore a formal gown of ivory lustregk) designed with an open neckline and rolled shoulder straps. The motho* of the bridegrottn chose a lilac gown with an A-line skirt and a scooped neckline. Both mothers were remembered with a white orchid corsage and the grandmother of the bride was remembered with a cymbidium orchid.
A program of wedding music was presented by An^la Morris, oiganist, and soloists were Deborah Leathers and Ella Harris. The wedding was directed by Erma S. Carr.
A receptkm was given by the parents of the bride at the American Legk Building fc^wing the ceremony. Yv(xme Jones of Brooklyn, N.Y., presided at the giKst register.
Prior to the rehearsal, a bridal luncheon was given by Sujette Jones and Jocelyn Simpkin at lliree Steers Restaurant. An after-rehearsal pig-picking was given by be families of the bride and bridegroom at the home of Sallye Streeter. A bridal breakfast was given by Joan Eaton, Imogene Dupree and Helen Barnes. Several other parties were given in honor of the bridal (^le.
The bride is employed by Future Care, Agency of CMd Development, New York. The bridegroom is employed by Long Island College Hospital, New York.
The couple will reside in New York after a wedding trip to the Caribbean.
SANFORD - The wedding co-emony of Susan Rose Mann and Ernest Franklin Thornton Jr. took place Saturday at hi0) noon in SL Stephen CatlxHic Church here. Father Maurice illane perfmned the dou-ringctfemony.
So(^ Johnson of Ralei^ was organist for the ceremony.
Parents of the cotq>le are Mr. and Mrs. Ra William Mann of Sanford and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Franklin Thornton of Kinston.
The bride was giv in marriage by her fatho'. Mrs. Rufus Oliver Crawley- Jr. of Sanford, sister of the bride, was honor attendant. Bridesmaids included Sharon Nixon of North Hi^ywood, Calif., Mrs. Ira Bra Miller
Jr. of Ralei^i and Ann Williams Thornton of Rkfamood, Va., sistra of the tnridegrooo.
The fatbra of the bride-grtXHn was best man and ushers included David Lee Ward of La Gran^, Fiurest Brace Keno^ of Kinston and Rex William Mann Jr. of Raleigh.
The bride wore her mothers wedding gown of white dudKss satin which featured a drop sbouldra neckline with a lace bertha, illusion yoke and cathedral train. Hot dhow length veil was gathraed to a headpiece of re-embroidered lace and seed pearis. She carried a bouquet of white roses, babys breath and stqdianotis.
Each of the attradants wore a full length geranium
pink gowns of Insh linen with an asymmetrtcal necMine and flat sdf-fahrk bow on the shoulders with a fitted waist and gathered skvt The parents of the bride
oitertained at a recepoo at ace Country
the Carolina Trace Chi) in Sanford.
m
Greenvflle after a trph)William)urg.Va.
<^egiiuitiig 1 ^ Cadd 752-3486
NEW YORK (AP) -Americas bankers are giving something away free instructions on how to get the ^ most for your money.
Many bankers are volunteering their time to explain how the banking system operates and how the public can handle its finances more intelligently. The Personal Economics Program, sponsored by the American Bankers Association, was originally designed for hi^ school students but has now been adapted for junior high students and adults. PEP works with local schools that have educational programs that include finance and economics.
Teachers and bankers select the topics to be discussed, based on the age level of the students and their special interest. The course involves how to write a check, establish credit, set up a-budget and apply for a loan.
Farmville
Furniture
Company
MRS. ERNEST FRANKLIN THORNTON JR.
Parents Set Tone
For Kids At Piano
CHICAGO (AP) - Parents can help their children succeed at the piano by providing the ri^t environment for practicing, according to the National Piano Foundation.
To establish daily practice as a priority, parents should avoid overscheduling their children into too many other extra-curricular activities, the Foundation suggests. They should a.so experiment with the length of practice sessions: for some children, two or more short daily practice periods can be more effective than one longer session.
These and other tips for parents of young pianists are
offered in a free booklet, How to Help Your Child Succeed at the Piano. It is available by sending a stamped, self-addressed No. 10 envelope to the National Piano Foundation. Dept,.A 230 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60601.
A Complet(" Honit' Furnishinqs C pnler Furniturp-Carppt Drdpprv Oripntal Kuqs
Lamps Pic tuTPS-Mirrors Crystal-Silvpr-China Profpssional Design Sprvice Fine Wall Covering By Albert Van Luit Kat/enbach & Warren
Farmville
Furniture
Company
22 I 2h S MAIN ST l ARMVTl 1 1 N t 7.ST .3101
Elvis Presley failed to win a spot on Arthur Godfreys Talent Scouts when he auditioned for the television show in 1955.
The China Department
at Coin & Ring Man Introduces
SILVER
CHIN/
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Located in the old Best Jewelry Store Next Door To Coin & Ring Man 402 Evans Street-75^-3806 Open Monday-Saturday 9:^0 to ^0luyi
Engagements Announced
The Daily Reflector, Greenvnlte. N C -Sunday, July 24,19C-C 5
VANESSA DIXON MURPHY...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Richard Murphy Jr. of Route 1, Snow Hill, who announce her engagement to Michael West Hardy, son of Mrs. Hazel S. Hardy of Route 2, Snow Hill, and the late Willie Hardy. A Sept. 10 wedding date is planned.
I did something on my vacatiMi this year that Ive been meaning to do for years. I sent myself a postcard saying what a ^ time I was having and wishing I was t^re.
Throughout the years, I have discovered 1 need the assurance once I get home that it was all worth it.
I need it when I open the front door to my house and discover someone ate a banana on the morning we left and threw the peeling in the kitchen sink to decay for 17 days.
I need it when I am ready to fall into a tub and soak away my exhaustion and I am faced with 17 dead potted plants and two inches of mud that
liat a comfort it would be to'know I bad such a great tune while two weeks of newspapers stacked up giving me weather that has already passed, horoscopes that are too late to be effective and television shows 1 missed.
Who doesnt need a lift when they discover that for 17 days their toilet has been running and the sprinkling system outside has not?
You need to know that what you experienced by traveling was worth having to alter all your jackets and blouses to accommodate the three inches your right arm grew by dragging your luggage around the world. You have to weigh the excitement of seeing new thin^ against opening your suitcase and discovering the lemon shampoo you filched from a hotel room in Dublin burst under pressure and saturated every piece of clothing.
And the rock that weighed eight pounds that you picked up on the beach looks like the one that holds your garbage can lid on.
You think youre going to remember your vacation throu^ pictures. Wrong. E^)ecially when your husband took 47 rolls of film throu^ a dirty windshield traveling at 45 miles per hour of a road sign in Gadic, at a cost of $420.
After youve done laundry * for three solid days, tried to revive the crushed souvenirs, cleaned out the green furry things in the refrigerator, paid $83 to get your dog back from the kennel, reinstatee your insurance policy that expired while you were gone, and lived through eight days of getting iq) at 3 a.m. and going to bed at 4:30 in the afternoon, you need a sign, any sign, from God that you did the right thing by going on a vacation.
The card I sent myself really helped a lot. It was a pastoral scene of a donkey pulling a cart. There was 15 cents postage due. It was worth it.
COOLING OFF
WASHINGTON (AP) -Some consumers arent aware of it, but the Federal Trade Commission provides regulations for a cooling-off period for door-Unloor sales.
The law allows consumers to cancel the purchase any time before midnight of the third day after the contract date.
The law includes sales made anywhere other than in the sellers normal place of business. Sales made in home parties and hotel rooms are covered, but not sales under $25, sales made totally by mail or telephone or for real estate, insurance and securities.
*
After
KIMBERLY JEAN ROOK...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John William Rook Jr. of Bethel, who announce her engagement to Kevin George Adams, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry Adams of Grimesland. The wedding will take place Oct. 22.
Inventory
MICE OF MANY COLORS
SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -The widely varied terrain, geography and climatic conditions of New Mexico have produced some striking variations in certain of the states animal species, according to the Mobil Travel Guide.
For example, the -mice (and lizards, too) living in New Mexicos White Sands National Monument area are almost as white as the sands on which they live.
This coloration, a natural protection against predators there, would mean certain discovery in the red sand country nearby - where the mice are reddish brown. Similar mice are black only a few miles north in the black lava area of the state, the guide says.
Sale
CARPET SPECIAL
2 Rooms & A Hall
^39.95 Care Cleaners
Monday, July 25
Folk Art
Yxes Ole Hq
Uniques
Summer Hours Fri.-Sat. 10-5 Sun. 2-5
Reproductions
A Taste Of The Past
75.1,3944
11 Miles West Of Greenville 1/2 Mile Off 264 On Hwy. 1.1 At Langs Cross Rds Farmville
Entire
Summer Stock
Shop WHITES For Greenvilles Largest Selection Of IN STOCK Drapery And Upholstery Fabrics, Notions And trims
Complete
Restoration & Preservation
Oil Paintings
Cleaning
Repairing
Retouching
Varnishing Call Dan Morgan
756-0200
P.O. Box 1923-Greenville. N.C. 27834
Off
Store will be closed until 12:00 noon
. and re-open from 12:00 Noon Until 9:00 P.M.
Come Meet
Alicia Balint Corey
INTERIOR DESIGNER
We are proud to have Allele on our expert staff. She will be glad to offer her knowledge to you at anytime.
See Allele today at the Albritton Company In Qreenville.
Albritton Company
264 By Pass West, Greenville, N.C. Specializing In Carpet, Vinyl, Orientals and Leathers
Monday Only!
VIRGI
ALL LOCATIONS
Raleigh-North Hills Mall Durham-Northgate Mall Chapel Hill-University Mall
Greenville-Carolina East Mall Lumberton-Biggs Park Fayetteville-Cross Creek
C-6-Tbe DajJy Reflector. Greenville, N.C -Sunday, July M, 1963
Wedding Vows Solemnized
SALISBURY - The First Baptist Church here was the scene of the Saturday wedding of Gloria Gail Gilbert and Kenneth Kyle Cloninger. both of Greenville The Rev John Bollinger and Dr Victor G. Cole officiated at the double ring ceremony at high noon.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Jackie Franklin Hodges of Salisbury and parents of the bnde-groom are Mr and Mrs Marion Arnold Cloninger of Dallas.
A program of wedding music was presented by organist Mrs. John Cotten. pianist Mark Hoffman and soloists Eric Jackson and C.V. Morris Jr
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of candlelight silk organza over peau de sole designed with a high neckline outlined in clipped rosepoint Chantilly lace beaded with pearls and rocaille beads. The long tapered sleeves and sheer yoke were appliqued in the beaded lace. The full skirt and attached cathedral length train were edged in the beaded lace. She wore a walking length illusion mantilla edged in matching lace. She carried a T-shaped cascade bouquet of ivory roses, babys breath, ivy, plumosa and ivory poms.
Mrs. Randy Lee Wooten of Dallas served as matron of
honor and Edna Carol Carmichael of Winston-Salem was maid of honor. Each attendant wore an apricot floor length gown designed with spaghetti straps and a matching chiffon jacket. The bodice and the hem of the gown featured three bands of material which matched the underlying material of the gowns. The short puffed sleeves of the jacket were accented with the bands.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Rex Keller Loftin and Mrs. Michael Lee Pegram, both of Willmington: and Mrs. Mark Steven Miller of Macon. Ga. Each bridesmaid wore a gown like that of the honor attendants.
Honorary bridesmaids were Hilda Darlese Darden and Carol Lynne Zoret, both of Greenville; Bonnie Katherine Lyerly of Winston-Salem; and Elizabeth Christopher Ward of .Alexandria, Va. Each wore a pastel floor length gown and carried a single long-stemmed yellow rose.
Best man was the father of the bridegroom. Ushers included Leonard Greogory Allen of Greenville, Ronald Boyd Creasy of Winston-Salem, Ryan Milton Rohm of Princeton, N.J. and Timothy James Rohm of Gastonia.
Mrs. Lawrence Raynor and Mrs. Gary Vestal attended the ^t register.
A reception given by the
MRS. KENNETH KYLE CLONINGER
Princess Di Rings Have Arrived!
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^OUl iSsii Jloo(i, nc. 314 Plaza Dr. 355-2969
parents of the bride was held in the church foilowii^ the ceremony. Serving were Mrs. A.K. Baiter, Jennifer Barber, Allison Baiter, Mrs. C.V. Morris Jr., Mrs. Willford Cloninger, Mrs. James Rohm, Mrs. C.V. Morris Sr. and Mrs. M L. Morrow. Music was provided by Mark and Sandy Hoffman.
A rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom in the church following the rehearsal Friday. Assisting in serving were the Rev. and Mrs. C.V. Morris Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rohm and Mrs. Robert Clonin^r.
The bride is an honor
Births
Kilpatrick Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen Kilpatrick, Snow Hill, a son, Phillip
V.i.P. Visitor
Andrew, on July 16, 1983, in 11^
Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Godbey Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Godbey II, Route 8, Greenville, a son, Jared Bijnin, on July 17,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Jack Thomas, A.S.I.D., Formerly a Greenville resident and currently residing in Naples. Ra.. will be in Greenville, while visiting eastern North Carolina, during August 1983, and will be available for Interior Design consultation: Call for an appointment:
(919)752-3985
Garris
Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lee Garris, Win-tervUle, a son, Brandon Lee, on July 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Walston Boro to Mr. and Mrs. George Truitt Walston, Route 7, Greenville, a daughter, Krystal Monique, on July 16, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.
Williams Bom to Chief Petty Officer and Mrs. Robert Earl Williams, 2500 Wyoming Ave., Norfdk, Va., a son, Brian ChrKtopher, on July 18,1983, in Portsmouth Naval Hospital.
Safety Seats
Tapseotts
Ckiidmi n lulu
^ ScLl
All Christinas Items.. 50% OH
All Other Items.. 20% Off
Sale Starts Saturday, July 23 & Ends Saturday, July 30
222 East Fifth Street Downtown Greenville Open: Mon.*Sat., 10-6 757-3558
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Laws requiring the use of properly designed auto safety seats for infants and small children have been passed in 12 states so far this year -bringing the total to 32.
A report from the Highway Users Federation says signature is virtually assured in states where the new laws have not yet been si^ed by the governors.
The first such state law was passed in 1977 in Tennessee. Similar legislation has been introduced this year in nearly all other states that do not have such a law in force or pending.
At least two bills in Congress would provide grants to states with child restraint laws and programs to fund the loan of safety seats to families unable to afford them.
Child safety seat usage is estimated to be 80 percent to 90 percent effective in preventing injuries and fatalities.
/
Cruise to Bermuda from Norfolk on the "fun ship" for an enjoyable
September 10-17th, the fun ship Mardi Gras cruises to Bermuda from Norfolk. So, be on board for peak season Bermuda with complete package including lodging, meals and taxes for only SSTTtStT (double occupancy).
This is one of only a few Norf olk-Bermuda cruises this year, so call Travel Express today ^or more information.
iuhm
*695,00
F656-B Arlington Boultvard Qrttnvlllf. N.C. 27834 (919)756-4100
V-Shaped Swim Suit Rates An A With Women, Says Company Head
graduate of Salisbury Hi^ Schod and received a B.A. in I^chology from the University of North Carolina-Chapel HiU and an M.A. in counselor education from East Carolina University. She is employed as a guidance counselor at Wellcome Middle School in Pitt County. The bridegroom is an honor graduate of Northern Nash High School and received a B.A. in chemistry from the University of North Caro-Ijna-Chailotte. He will be a fourth year medical student at East Carolina.
After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside in Greenville.
By ALLEN HOUSTON PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) - Designing womens swimsuits is like rewriting love letters thope are (wly so many ways to say the same thing, according to a man who heli choose what women are wearing this summer.
Nevertheless, merchandising manager Bart Blout and his designers manage to come up with new'ways to make Portland-based Jantzen Inc. the nations No. 1 seller in the 8300 million misses fashion swimwear industry.
llie big change is to the one-piece suits that show more skin in three areas -the leg, back and, to a lesser extent, the breasts, said Blout.
The leg is taxiing to ^ higher, and if the leg is peaked in fnmt, it will actually give the person who is shorter the appearance of longer-looking legs, he said of the recent, high-oo-the-thigh cut of one-piece suits.
Backs of suits are cut low because hardly anyone has an ugly back. And plenging V necklines are popular, maybe even plunging to the waist, but certainly there was plenty of bra in there. What women want is full coverage, but they want the illusion.
They dont want to worry about falling out of the suit -in America. In Europe, they take off the t(^s of the suit to tan, so they dont care, he said.
This year the hottest Jantzen seller is a V-striped, belted tank swinmiit that looks a lot like an exercise leotard. With more than 84 million in sales, itll be setting off a lot of tans at pooiside this summer.
It fit a lot of women. It made them look good. The V miter makes them look thin. The belt makes them look thin. It was a flattering iit to a lot of women, Blout said.
That suit and a few other styles helped Jantzen double its misses swimwear sales the last two years, despite\ the recession.
Next year - well, Blout has been in Europe recently and his eye was cau^t by the solid colors and big-top, tight-bottom styles popular in sportswear fashions there.
Solids can be boring, but one desi^ hes looking at is a one-piece with a loose, ti^t-meshed top half with a skin-(dored lining to give a see-thrwigh effect.
Youll have a solid suit thats not solid - a new love letter, be said.
Hes also working on some killer falMics, and watch out for some mteresting geometric designs as wril.
We will continue to see suits that are stron^y fashionable and functional, Blout said. Tank suits, with their exercise-class look, ^ parently are here for a while, e^ially with the Olympics coming up.
And dont give on the bikini, be said. The bikini business is getting better. Sometimes women buy three or four suits - some to tan in, others to parade around in, he said.
The rule now is, if the suit enters the room befwe the person wearing it does, its probably a flop. Its got to be a nice print, a nice statement, but its not a screamer, he said.
Name Tags
Made By
Coastal Uniform
Pitt Plaza. Greenville
Blout culls his ideas from a variety of places. Sportswear fashions set the Ume for swimsuits styles, not surprisingly, since people ^>end more for sptHtswear than swimsuits. If its big in sportswear, chances are it will be big in swimwear.
He also gets brainstorms from such unlikely sources as colors and designs in the backdrops of European fashion ads. Or cosmetics -sometimes women match clothes to their lipstick, he said.
Even though Blout keeps a sharp eye on Europ^ fashion, Jantzen swimsuits arent likely to look anything like the exotic Eun^jean variety.
Theyre sexy styles, and everybody goes Wow! But people dont wear those styles, he said. Even if they could, they dwit think they could or they perceive their husbands wont let them.
Youve got to make it wearable, vm you see a lot of fashion styles, a lot of 22-year-oId bard bodies can wear it, but then you are only going to sell it to somebody 22.
Blout pays a lot of attention to demographics. The baby-boom kids are now in their 30s, he says, and they are the ones doing most of the buying. Designs have to take into account womens bodies and attitudes at that age.
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Eon help protect against rge medkal exp
from long term Iflnessr
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call;
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608 Arlington Blvd. GreenvHle, N.C.
756-8886
Ukeagood
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Oxt fnw Mutuji utomoe KrtKf comwfiy Hom# omct oomngnn anaa
Semi-Annual Black Cat Sale Now In Progress
1/2
Price
The College Shop
194 Carolina East Mall Greenville, N.C.
V2
/it OFF
CONTINUES
NO DIET PILLS, NO INJECTIONS MEDICALLY SUPERVISED
NO STARVATION OR FOOD DECISIONS MISTAKE PROOF FOOD PLAN, NO
CONSTANT CALORIE-COUNTING NUTRl/SYSTEM GUARANTEE: FOLLOW THE NUTRl/SYSTEM PROGRAM AND LOSE WEIGHT QUICKLY, OFTEN UP TO A POUND A DAY. ACHIEVE YOUR GOAL BY THEDATESPECIFIEC.ORPAYNO ADDITIONAL CHARGES FOR NUTRI/ SYSTEM SERVICES TILL YOU DO.
MARSHALL HUMPHREY (OWNER), JENNIFER DUNCAN (MANAGER). MAYOR COX, BETSEY LEECH (BEHAVIOR EDUCATION COUNSELOR). AND PAT HUMPHREY (OWNER) AT RECENT RIBBON-CUTTING CEREMONY.
DUE TO THE OVERWHELMING RESPONSE TO OUR V2 OFF SPECIAL THE NEW OWNERS ARE EXTENDING OUR Vi OFF OFFER FOR 1 MORE WEEK. EXPIRES JULY 29,1983
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GREENVILLEMm
Double Ring Ceremony Held
FAYETTEVILLE -Katbryn Ann Spiegelberg of Fayetteville and Kenan Jackson Fleming of Greenville were united in marriage Saturday afternoon
at two oclock in the St. Patrick Church here. The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Kevin C. Fahey, OSB. A pi^am of wedding music was
performed by organist Brian Cash.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William E. Spiegelberg of Cumberland, Md. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Burney M. Fleming of Greenville and the late Mr. Fleming.
G'ven in marriage by her parents, the bride wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de ie designed with a high neckline encircled with Chantilly lace. The bodice was accented with a sheer yoke of illusion and beaded with pearls. The gown was complemented with ^lit bishop sleeves and Chantilly lace encircled the cuffs. The A-line circular skirt was accented with crystal pleating and featured a chai^l length train of Chantilly lace. She wore a chapel length veil of illusion edged in Chantilly lace and held in place by a caplet overlaid in matching lace. She carried a bouquet of white roses, carnations and babys breath.
Sally Spiegelberg of
Fayetteville, sister of the bride, served as maid of honor. She wore a blue chiffon gown with a full skirt and spa^etti straps highlighted with a blue chiffon cape.
Bridesmaids were Anne Spiegelberg of Cumberland, Md., sister of the bride, and Cherry Fleming of Raleigh, sister of the bridegroom. Each wore a gown like that of the honor attendant.
Burney M. Fleming Jr. of Greenville, brother of the bridegroom, served as best man. Ushers were Marion Crisp and Lyles Stott, both of Greenville.
A reception was held in the social hall of the church following the ceremony.
An after-rehearsal dinner was given by the mother of the bridegroom.
The bride is a graduate of East Carolina University with a degree in early
childhood education. The bridegroom is a graduate of J.H. Rose High School and is employed by Bob Barbour Volvo.
After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside in Simpson.
The Day Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 24,1983-C-7
Bullocks Clipping & Grooming Services
Will Now Be Open
At 6 A.M. 6 Days A Week
For Day or Night Appts.
Call 758-2681
Pencil Post Bed
30%
Off
Solid pine
r.N "'.i
furniture crafted
Pinewood Craft & Furniture
in the.. $ colonial traditiori
j 200 E. Greenville Blvd.
Next door to Greenville TV & Appliance
186 West Main St. Washington 946-5904
Visit Us Soon For Your Needs In: Counted Cross Stitch Needlepoint Persian Wools^Crewel Net Darning Lace Plastic Canvas Candlewicking Quilting Supplies Plus
Grumbacher Art Supplies Stencil Magic & Stencil Decor And All Your Framing Needs
Soft Sculptured Dolls And Many Other Craft Items Beads/Felt/Doll Faces
fljS Also The Best Pick Of Basket Supplies In Town.
MRS. KENAN JACKSON FLEMING
Cooking Is Fun
By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor BUFFETSUPPER Cold Marinated Vegetables Lamb Curry & Chutney Rice Peach-Ra^rry Cobbler LAMB CURRY After roasting a halMeg of lamb, you can use the leftovers in this hot" curry.
1 tablespoon butter I large onion, finely chopped 1 clove garlic, minced '.4 teaspoon cinnamon Hi teaspoon paprika 1 tablespoon curry powder
1 chicken boulilion cube dissolved In Ih cups hot water
14 tablespoons flour 3 tableaus canned flaked coconut
3 tablespoons tomato paste
4 teaspoon Tabasco sauce
2 cups cubed (4 inch) leftover roast lamb Salt to taste Peanuts and chutney
In a medium saucepan in the hot butter, stir together onion, garlic, cinnamon, paprika and curry; add 4 cup chicken bouillion; simmer until liquid has almost evaporated and mixture is a thick paste - about 15 minutes. Gradually stir the remaining 1 cup bouillion into the
flour; add to onion mixture with coconut, tomato paste and Tabasco. Cook over moderate heat, stirring constantly, until thickened. Stir in lamb and salt; reheat. Serve over rice; offer peanuts and chutney. Makes 4 small servings.
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Coupon Must Be Presented Open Thursdays & Fridays Til 9 P.M. Appts. Recommended But Not Necessary
Call Today! 756-2950
Pitt Plaza Shopping Center
^itcSeCCs J^rstyCmg ^ajDs
"The Professionals That Care For You "
Htia _mEDKEN
Downtown
Pitt Plaza
Both stores open at 10:00 a.m.
Shop entire store for unadvertised specials as well. Sorry, no phone orders, C.O.D.s or layaways. Select groups. Limited Quantities. Shop early for best selections.
JUNIORS
Entire Stock Of These Selected Catagories
Swimsuits Summer Skirts Summer Pants Summer Dresses
Summer
Jumpsuits
Sundresses
Lady Thomson Pants and Skirts
Summer Jackets
Summer Blouses
MISSES
Entire Stock
Swimsuits
Short-Sleeve Summer Blouses
Koret City Blues Summer Pants Summer T-tops
Large Size Summer Tops and Blouses
Large Size Summer Coordinates
(Rejoice-basics, navy and black-and Rejoice, creme and blue)
COSMETICS
Charles of the Ritz ' Cosmetics
SHOES
Entire Stock of Better Summer Shoes
Amalfi, Pappagallo, Stanley Philipson, Garolini, Deliso, Bandolino and Vaneli
Entire Stock of Summer Shoes by Red Cross Lifestride & Selby
Childrens Dress Shoes
(Vz price & less)
SUMMER SKIRTS &TOPS
Entire Stock of
Summer Skirts and T-tops
by Sanibel, Surry & others.
(Sizes 6-20, S, M, L, XL.)
Great Selection
Summer Sweaters
by Daniel Caron * in summers newest colors (S. M. L)
Summer Skirts and Tops
Exclusively by Lilly Pulitzer (Downtown Only)
DRESSES
Entire Stock of
Summer Dresses
by Leslie Faye, R&K, Jack Mulqueen and others. (Sizes 4-20. Also in Petites)
i
Entire Stock of Summer
Half-size Dresses
(14V2 to 24Vz)
Entire Stock of
Sundresses
by Malia, Jenny, Etc. (Sizes 4-18) i
BETTER
SPORTSWEAR
Summer Sportswear
by
Liz Claiborne.
Blouses, skirts, tops, pants and shorts (Sizes 4-14)
J.G. Hook for Summer
Blazers, skirts, shirts & shorts (Sizes 6-16)
BETTER
SEPARATES
Summer Coordinates by Emily, Austin Hill, EJE
MENS
Entire Stock
Mens Summer Suits
Entire Stock
Mens Summer Sportcoats
Entire Stock
Mens Swimwear
Entire Stock
Mens Summer Trousers
Entire Stock Mens .
Ocean Pacific Trousers
CHILDRENS
Entire Stock Summer
Healthtex
Entire Stock Summer
Ocean Pacific Sportswear
Boys and Girls
Swimwear
Boys' and Girls
Shorts
Boys and Girls
Summei; Shirts
t
Boys and Girls
Summer Pants
Girls' Summer
Skirts and Dresses
Boys'
Dresswear
Boys and Girls
Summer Coordinates
Girls
Sleepwear
Engagements Announced
NANCY KATHLEEN SMITH...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Smith of Route 7, Durham, who announce her engagement to Earl Henry Hostetler II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Anderson Hostetler of Raeford. The wedding will take place in late fall.
Consumers Shoo
At Supermarke
The Mom and Pop grocery store has generally b^n left behind. Supermarket chains (those having 11 or more stores) accounted for 60 percent of the grocery sales last year, compared with 34 percent in 1948.
But not all of these chain stores are large. The convenience-type store is the 1980s answer to the small grocery of the 50s, says Rachel Kinlaw, extension foods and nutrition specialist. North Carolina State University.
The consumer has also changed. People are more likely to try new. things. Look at all the ethnic dishes in the freezer section. Who ate Mexican or Chinese food at home in 1948 besides the Mexican and Chinese-Americans? Mrs. Kinlaw said.
RISING TIDES
WASHINGTON (AP) - A rise in global temperature from carbon dioxide emissions could melt the ice at the polar caps and cause the level of the worlds oceans to rise four inches to two feet over the next 40
Americans arent eating more. The average person eats and drinks about 1,500 pounds of products each year, the same as 50 years ago. But consumers pay more real dollars for their food. The groceries taken home today are much more likely to be convenience-type products, which makes them more expensive.
Consumers spent 23 pre-cent of their after tax income on food after World War II; today they spent 16 percait; The money saved goes for meals eaten out, says the extension specialist. Twenty-five percent of a persons food dollars will be used to eat out.
In terms of the quantity of food eaten, about a fifth of the eaten at fast food establishments - the hamburger stands, pizza parlors, fried chicken and fish places which have sprung up in all but the smallest to towns.
years.
Tho ]nvimnmonfgl PfQ.
tection Agency, which issued the prediction, said the sea level could be seven feet higher by 2075
Greenville. N.C. Open 10 9
LISA KAY BROWN...S the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F.R. Brown of Kinston, who announce her engagement to Thomas Hobson Groome III, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hobson Groome Jr. of Rocky Mount. The wedding will take place Aug. 19.
A
Bridal Policy
The Daily Reflector will now publish oigagemoit and wedding photographs of a bridal couple pictured together, or of the bride pictured individually. ,
A black and white ^ossy five by sevra pbotograiA is requested for engagement announcements. For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcement will be printed.
Wedding writenups will be printed through the first week with a five by seven picture. During the second we^ with a wallet size picture and write-iq;> giving less descrh>thm and after the second week, just as an announcemnit.
Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflecto one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed (* written neatly.
Fabric Department
July Clearance Sale
Shop Now For Final Markdowns On Our Fine Lines Of Spring And Summer Dress Fabrics
One Group
Bolt Ends
%
Prices Effective Thru Saturday, July 30th One Table
45 *60 Widths Solids a Prints All 1st Quality Values To $5.99
60
Knits
%
1/2
Price
#
100% Polyester Interlock and Linen Weaves. Good Selection of Spring Solid Colors.
Reg. $2.99 *$3.99.
59
One Table
Short
Lengths
Yd.
Entire Stock
45 Linen
%
Polyester/Cotton Blends. Solids & Prints. All 45. Wide. Our Reg. $1.88.
Weaves
Both Top * Bottom Weight Solids* Prints Reg. $3.99 *$4.99
00
Yd.
% *2".
One Group
Printed ^
One Table Large Selection
Interlock
60 Wide Reg. $3.99 Value (If full pieces)
Short
Lengths
59
Yd.
Assorted Fabrics Our Rag. VtfuesTo$3.l8
59
Yd.
Our Fall Fabrics Are Arriving Daily... Pendleton Woolens In Stock NOW
Engineer Has To Think A Lot
By LINDA CABINESS Shelby Daily Star MARION,,N.C. (AP) -Casey Jones might be surprised if be peeked into the cab of number a coal train rumbling along tbe line between Erwin, Tenn. and Danton, Va.
At the controls hed find Neita Lingerfelt, 28, of Jonesborou^, Tenn., one of three railblazers working forClinchfield.
Clinchfield, a division of Seaboard, now employs three women as engineers in what has traditionally been a male field.
Ms. Lingerfelt said shes proud to be a pioneer and mentions that someone recently compared her to Sally Ride, Americas first woman astronaut. Someone told me that Im a pioneer in a field 120 years old and hers is only 20 years old, she said.
On a recent run on the number 92 from Marion to Bostic, she was at tbe helm as two 3,000 horsepower GE engines hauled 83 cars, in-cli^g 11 pi^backs, 13 coal cars and five cars carrying dangerous materials.
Loads of coal have given Ms. Lingerfelt some anxious moments adjusting the throttle and brakes down the mountain.
She said coal is a difficult cargo, with each of the 144 cars holding 100,000 tons. The wei^t makes the train more difficult to control, especially on grades. On steep grades, you pray for dynamic brakes, she said.
1 am scared coming off Blue Ridge Mountain, she admitted. The first time by myself, I drank a thermos of coffee between Erwin and Marion.
But Ms. Lingerfelt said the job as an engineer is physically less taxing than her railroad beginnings as a brakeman, who makes all the moves on the ground, from switching rails to hooking up cars and singnaling the engineer.
Because of a business slowdown, Ms. Lingerfelt is
working fulltime as a railroad fireman and assistant engineer. She said she has encountered no discrimination or resentment from her male cdleagues.
When tbe job market improves and she has more experience, shed like to move into a shifter job. A shifter is a train that makes a daily run to an industry and back. Its a nine-to-five job with the crew going borne eacfani^t.
Ms. Lingerfelt is following a family tradition by working for Ginchfield. All four older brothers work for Clinchfield, although shes the familys only engineer.
She had joined the Army to become a practical nurse, but turned to railroading after her discharge because the pay was better. She said the strength she devele^ from Army training helped prepare her for the brake-mans j(^, which includes uncoupling 75-pound links between trains.
Because she often works a night shift, she said she has little time for other activities.
Rest is important, she said. I have to concentrate.
I have to think about what kind of engine, what kind of track.
Conversation between the engineer and the brakeman, who rides to the left of the engineer, is minimal as she studies the tracks, the speed signs and the whistle signals. They always told me that
once I got used to driving a train, it would be just like driving a car, Ms.
Lingerflt said. But it hasnt got like that yet. I have to think a lot.
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Located: Right On 2M a 29( JunctkMw; Farmvilla, N.C. Batida Tastao-FrMZ
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ELKS CLUB FOR RENT
Meeting Hall With Seating Capacity for 350 Peopla Gama Room
(Pool Tabla, Bar.Juka Box) Full KItchan Facilities
Perfect For: Wedding Parties Class Reunions, Etc. Call Herman at 758-0880
The average person loses 50 to 100 hairs a day.
The Village Groomer
New Hours:
M-F 7:30-5 Sat. 8:30-4
Rivergate Shopping Center
Appts. Made In Advance
752-0151
Certified Master Groomer Barbara Walker
Bed n Bath Boutique
^Carolina East )) Mall J 355-2583
Did You Know We Have A Complete Interior Design Department
Custom draperies Custom bedspreads Roman shades Valances Sheers
CARPET
VINYL
TILE
Choose fabrics From 3 major companies
Come by and let our trained professional help you with your design & decorating needs
WOOD
FLOORING
Free decorating consultations
Throughout the months of July and August We will offer an extra 20% off on all orders through our interior design department.
Offer ends 8-30-83.
^ THE AMERICA COLLECTION
Ml M I M I i| \M1 Kl( ,\ hi| K \K1
Free forty-piece set of America Collection j Dirmerware by Pfaltzgiaff.
1
The DaUy Renector, Greenville. N.C-Sunday. July 34.1983-C-9
Bandleader Lanin Has No Plans To Retire
A SURVIVOR ... FoUowing a string of hits with the Detroit Wheels in the 1960s, Blitch Ryders career came to a virtual s^. Soft, orchestrated rock of the 70s eclipsed Ryders raw, hip-ener^ amalgamation of hard rock and soul. Now, at 38, Ryder is trying to come back to the American pop scene with a new album, Never Kick a Sleeping Dog. (AP Laserpboto byWallyFong)
Carolina Today
Physical fitness, theater and the Air Force are among topics to be discussed by guests^ during the coming week on Carolina Today. The early morning show is aired each weekday from 6 to 8 a.m. over WNCT-TV, Channel 9, Greenville, with co-hosts Slim Short and ^auna Barnaby. The weeks calendar is;
Monday - 6:40 a.m., Melissa Carson talks about cooking with soybeans: 7:15 a.m., Dr. Trenton Davis with details on I the North Carolina Environmental Health Week; 7:25 a.m.,
^ focus on fitness; 7:40 a.m., Pat Byrd has information on the
Pitt County Action Alliance for Teens.
Tuesday - 6:40 a.m., caffeine is the topic for guest Linda Walker; 7:15 a.m.. Colonel Steve Fowler is the guest on behalf of the U.S. Air Force; 7:25 a.m., John Weller, a championship duck, goose, turkey and deer caller is the guest; 7:40 a.m.. The American Academy of Achievement is detailed by guests Susan Roberts, Loretta Grantham, and Timothy Shank.
Wednesday - 6:40 a.m, James Folsom of the Television Information Office of the NBA is the guest; 7:15 a.m., the Education Spotlipt section has as guest Pete Andrews; 7:25 a.m., focus on fitness; 7:40 a.m., Doris Downs and Jim Tyndall provide details on Jacksonvilles Beautification Commission.
Thursday - 6:40 a.m., Parker Phillips, chairman of apibusiness committee is the guest; 7:15 a.m., Cathy Sholar will talk about the Greenville Summer Drama Program and free productions to be presented by children; 7:25 a.m., a spokesman from the Employment Security Commission will be the guest; 7:40a.m., news for your home.
Friday - 6:40 a.m., Mike Pittman with information on the Calvin Bryant Night in Tarboro; 7:15 a.m., Kristy Overton, junior world ski champion and Carey Pickos, mens work ski champion, are the guests; 7:25 a.m., focus on fitness; 7:40 a.m., plant doctor Eddie Harrington.
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Florida, Epcot, Disney Worid.
Aug. 23-28, Sept. 20-25, Oct. 18-23, Nov. 22-27, Dec. 27-Jan. 1
California (22 Day Motorcoach Tour).......................August 6-27
Busch Gardens.............................................August 8
Nashville, TN..........................Sept. 15-18, Oct. 6-9, Oct. 27-30
Texas It The West....................................September 17-27
Hawaii (VMt: hho. kom, miui, unti. kmi. a HonoMui Sept. 21-Oct. 3
Memphis-NashvUle ......... Sept. 21-25, Oct. 19-23
Canadian Fall Foliage.................................Sept. 24-Oct. 2
OzarksrOraMland, Eur*ki Spring*. P**tlon Play, Mountain Mualc Jamberta, ChurcMN Down*)...........,...................................Oct. 1-9
Nova Scotia (Now Srunawlck, P.E.I., HaUlax).......................Oct. 1-9
PA Dutch....................................................Oct. 6-9
Now England Fan Foliago...................................Oct. 8-16
N.C. I TN. Mountains......................................Oct. 13-16
New York............................................November 17-20
Atlantic City And New York.................. November 17-20
Write or Coll for moro Hiformotioii on those and other tows avotlahlo. Our 1913 cotalog is ovoiloblo: Ask for yows todoyl! /
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FULL SERVICE TRAVEL AGENCY CRUISES, TICKET RESERVATIONS EVERYTHING YOU NEED!
Not So Subtle Art Of Photo Manipulation
SUPER McENROE Tennis star John McEnroe, through photo^aphic magic, has acquired a new body thanks to an advertisement for a Dunlop tennis racket. The instant acquisition was possible through the superimposition of McEnroes head on a photograph of the body of Ted Matia, a 22-year old DeKalb College student. The ad reads, Max 200G gives John more muscle. (AP Laserphoto, New York Post)
Top Ten
You
1. Every Breath Take,The Police
2. Electric Avenue, Eddy Grant
3. Flashdance, Irene Cara
4. Never Gonna Let You Go, Sergio Mendes
5.TooShy,Kaja^goo
, 6. Lets Dance, David Bowie
7. Time, Culture Club
8. Wanna Be Startin Somethin, Michael Jackson
9. Our House, Madness
10. All This Love, De-Barge
Top Country
1. The Closer You Get, Alabama
2. Oh Baby Mine, Statler Brothers
3. In Times Like These, Barbara Mandrell
4. I Always Get Lucky With You, George Jones
5. Pancho and Lefty, Nelson & Haggard
6. Snapshot, Sylvia
7. Your Loves on the Line, Earl Thomas Conley
8. Hes a Heartache, Janie Fricke
9. The Love She Found in Me, Gary Morris
10. Highway 40 Blues, Ricky Skaggs
LONDON (AP) Lester Lanin, whose big band sound has lured social and titled royalty onto dance floors on two continents for more than five decades, doesnt plan to retire.
I havent had a day off since 1945, says the 71-year-old bandleader. Its too late to start vacationing now - you sU^ working, you stop living.
Lanin, whose grandfather, father and nine brothers have led bands for a total of 135 years, was recently in England to play at lavish parties for two London debutantes and at a birthday celebration at a country residence in Sussex.
He has 1600 musicians at his disposal to call on to support 45 bands in New York, Philadelphia, Miami and ^ Los Angeles. Nineteen cam'e from New York to play for a wedding reception in Hampshire. His musicians play all tunes from memory, except the latest songs.
We fly over whenever we get a chance, says Lanin. Its really gratifying to have people so far away from home who love us, and we love playing for them.
He wont play for royalty on this trip, but he said hed never forget leading the band for Prince Charles and Princess Diana at their wedding reception on July 29, 1981.
That was a beautiful party for some of the nicest people I ever met. You know. Prince Charles is a regular guy just like everyone else, Lanin says.
On at least 10 occasions,
his bands have played for the
royal family including Queen Elizabeth II, her husband. Prince Phillip, and Queen Mother Elizabeth.
In Europe, Lanins bands often play at the jet set haven of Gstaad, Switzerland, and Monte Carlo, where Prince Rainier of Monaco is a loyal fan.
Although big band swing has lost some of the popularity it had decades ago, Lanin says it still makes up a good portion of his repertoire.
Were successful because we play a danceable variety; a little rock, a waltz, tango, swing, he said. Rock is good music and here to stay, but dancing cheek to cheek is coming back more and more.
Anthony Mayhew, who hired Lanin to play at his 45th birthday party in Sussex said he wanted him because hes the worlds best dance band leader. My friends and I dont call sort of jumping up in the air and waving ones arms around dancing.
The youngest of Philadelphia bandleader Benjamin Lanins 10 sons, Lester Lanin played the drums in his first gig when he was 15.
My father told me to be distinctive, he says. Fortunately, more people liked
than disliked it.
We still operate that way, he says. We adapt ourselves to every occasion.
We ask what kind of music our guests like and give it to them. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Shrimp Salad
1 lb. boiled shrimp 4 hard boiled eggs
3 heaping tbsps. of mayonnaise. (Add more if necessary)
1 tbs. seafood seasoning
Chop shrimp and eggs. Combine with remaining ingredients. Chill & Serve.
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Compliments of
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203 W. 9th St.
752-2332
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(Approx. 1 mlla Weal ol OrNnvilla toward Farmvilla)
PHONE 756-3546
C lO-Tbe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday. July 24,1983
L-ioineuauy iFinal Summer Theater Production Opens Monday At McGinnis
Put an American funny man (Neil Simon) and the Tony Award-winning composer of A Chorus Line (Marvin Hamlisch) together and you get the Broadway musical success, Theyre Playing Our Song, which will play at the East Carolina Summer Theater in Greenville Monday throu^i Saturday at 8:15 each evening. A special matinee pCT-formance has been scheduled for Thursday at 2; 15 p.m.
This recent Broadway bit rated high marks with the New York City critics and won Lucie Arnaz her debut on The Great White Way. The story line revolves around the personal and professional lives of music composer Vernon Gersch and lyricist Soiia Walsk.
FOOTLIGHT
THEATRE
preMnts
The musical based on the comic strip Peanuts by Charles Schulz
WITH 2 ALTERNATING CASTS
JULY 21,23,29
Bill Morgan
as Chartie Brown
Patsy Bruca
As Lucy
DonPococfc ,
as Snoopy Cecil Ball, Jr.
as Linus David Baumann
asSchfoeOer
Melinda Fennell
as Patty
JULY 22,28,30 Willie Sumner
as Chartie Brown
Alicia Ciarfce
as Lucy John Denayer, Jr. as Snoopy Mark Bunn
as Linus
Andrew K. Edwards
asSchroeder
Jenny Houtz
as Patty
MASONIC THEATRE New Bern CURTAIN 8:15 PM
TICKETS: \
$5.00 Adults
$4.00 Children 12& Under & Senior Citizens
CALL 633-3775
FOR RESERVATIONS
OFFICE HOURS Tues.-Fri 11:15*1:15, 4:00-5:45 & Sat. 10-12
Together they write some of the most pof^ar love songs in the country but have a rough time makii^ their own lives as barmonkHis as the music they create. Based on the widely put^cized real-life courtship of compter Hamlisch and lyricist Carole Bayer Sager, Theyre Playing Our Song is zany, full of good humm* and delightful music.
Sara Riva Krieger and John Kuhn play the rdes of this musically talented couple who discover they have much more in commtm than ma^ music.
Miss Krieger has a number of musical and New York City club acts to her credit. She was nominated by the NaticMial Academy of Concert and Caberet Acts for Best Female Vocalist and Performer of the Year. Coincidentally, she is in real life also a lyricist.
Accordii^ to the plays director Edgar Loessin, We found Sara during auditions in New York, immediately saw that she was po^ect for the part; but it was not until later that we realized how natural it is for her to play the role Simia. Not only is she a wonderful ringer, dancer and actress, she also has an insiders knowledge of how hit songs are created. Were very fortunate to have her featured in the show. Summer Theater au
diences are already familiar with the talents of John Kuhn. He was featured as the leading player in the season opener Pippin, and more recently received excdloit notices for his portrayal of Carl Magnus Malcolm in A UtUe Night Music.
Also appearing in Theyre Playing Our Song, will be six actor-ringers who r^re-sent the alter egos or voices of Vernon and Sonia. Personifying Vernons innermost thoughts will be Vonce Kelly, Bob Siarpe and Bob Pilipowich. Sonia will be defended by Sharon Lawrence, Melodie Wolford and Babs Winn.
According to Summer Theater General Manager Scott Parker: When season tickets first went on sale in November, we realized this was going to be a very popular show; so we ar-ran^ to offer a special matinee performance at reduced rates on Thursday at 2:15 p.m. Hiese tickets are $7 each, which is a 30 percent discount off the regular reserved seat ticket. TlKre are still seats available for that performance, said Parker.
Tickets may be purchased at McGinnis Theater in Greenville, corner of 5th and Eastern streets, Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m.-8:30 p.m.; or reserved by calling 757-6390.
2MPIAYII0USE
INDOOR THEATRE
NOW
SHOWING
AT YOUR ADULT atTERTAMMENT CENTER
7X-0M ShowtbiM 6:00 P.M.
Ooort Open S:4S P.M.
PLAYING OUR SONG STARS... Sara Riva Krieger and John Kuhn wUl be playing the lead roles in Tbqrre naying Oar Song, the Ndl Simoo-Marvin Hamlisdi musical next at the East Carriina Summer Tbeato'. Hie final of a quartet of musicals fim the 1963 summer season, the play opens Monday night and runs nightly through Saturday, with curtain time at 8:15 p.m. A matinee perf(wmance will be given at 2:15 pjn. Thursday.
Hospitality House
WASHINGTON, N.C. - Spouse abuse is the topic for Kay Curries Ho^itality Show today, airing from noon to 12:30 p.m. over WITN-TV, Channel 7, Washington.
Guests on the program include Helen Simpson, regional coordinator for the North Carolina Council on the Status of Women; Patsy Scheutzow, a board member, and Janice (last name withheld by request), all of the Tri-County Swvices for Abused Spouses. An unidentified victim will also be on the show.
TOP TUNES 40 YEARS AGO Your Hit Parade July 24,1943
(The number in parenthesis following each song indicates the number of weeks the song has been in the top ten listing)
1. Youll Never Know (12)
2. In The Blue Of Evening
(9)
3. Coming In On A Wing And A Prayer (12)
4. It Cant Be Wrong (17)
5. Lets GetLost (11)
6. People Will Say Were In Love (3)
7. As Time Goes By (19)
8. Johnny Zero (5)
9. Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey (1)
10. ItsAlwaysYou(6)
Local Women Attended Camp
SPARTANBURG, S.C. -Six Greenville, N.C., women, members of the Eastern Carolina chapter of the Sweet Adelines, attended the July Music Camp of the Hue Ridge Region 14 of Swe^ Adelines Inc. held recently at Wofford College in Spartanburg.
Those attending the week-long event wre Jan Kittrell, Mary Vars, Janet Rodgers, Broida Ross, Helen Turner and Helen Walker.
Actress Joan Crawford died in 1977. She was 69.
MUSIC ON HOLD - Browning BryanL 26, a clothes seller I an Easley, S.C., department store, has put his music career on birid while getting an education at Ctonsra University. When be was 11 years rid, Bryant was singing with Wayne Newton in Las Vegas and appearing on shows like The T(i(^t Show and the M^ Griffin show. (APLasopboto)
Three More
Performonces
NEW BERN - Three more performances of Youre A Good Man, Charlie Brown will be presented during the coming week at the Footli^t TheatCT in New Bern. Performances will be on Thursday, Friday and Saturday with curtain time at 8:15 p.m. nightly.
All seats are reserved. Tickets are priced at $5 for adults and $4 for childrm under 12 and for senior citizens. For more information and reservations call 633-3775.
' Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
9:00 P.M.
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703 Greenville Boulevard Greenville Square Shopping Center Phone: 756-9500
...for a Good Look
The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Sunday, July 24,1983C-ll
Studio Teaches Recording Art
DANCED IN CATS.,, Five young dancers from Greenville were chosen to dance in a piece from the Broadway show Cats at the N.C. School of the Arts in WinsUm-Salem on Thursday night. Shown here are: at top, left to right, Sandy Kannen and Anna Harrington, and at bottom, left to right, Ingrid Lalik and Heidei Schellenberger. Not shown in the photo Is the fifth danctt, Carmela Weber.
STAYING ALIVE OR NOT Actw J(^ Travolta performs in one of the dance sceass in his new movie, Staying Alive, in which he plays the same character as in Saturday Night Fever. Critics have panned the movie, but Paramount Pictures expects Staying Alive to be a financial success. (APLaserpboto)
FLORENCE, Ala. (AP) -Its a lot easier to cross the Tennessee River to Muscle Sioals, Ala., home of a booming reccNrding business, than it is to break into the business.
But the owner of Wishbone Studios in Muscle Shoals, Terry Woodford, is doing what he can to hdp students at the University of North Alabama learn what strings to strum and what drums to beat to enter the highly competitive recording field.
There was no schooling for the recording business, said Woodford, whose office walls sport gold records recorded by the Supremes, Wayne Newton, Brenda Lee, the Commodores, the Temptwtions, Hank Williams Jr . and others.
Most people had to learn it the hard way, Woodford said. There was nobody to tell you about recording and publishing, and people who know how often take advantage of those who dont.
That concern prompted Woodford to persuade the university in 1975 to offer the nations first four-year degree program in the commercial music business.
Three years ago the school had its first graduates and six of those won some of the highest awards in the music industry this year.
The courses didn't necessarily make them successful, Woodward said, but they cut five to 10 years off the time usually needed to
achieve their goals, time that most people spend spinning their wheeis waiting for a break.
Woodford himself teaches the classes. His students formed a company, Campus Records, and recently recorded, produced and promoted two s(M)^ that have received some air time on radio. The credits on the record contain 77 names, students who sang, played instruments, handled the engineering, legal work, budget, publicity, and everything else involved.
All 77 own the copyright. The students sold the 1,000 records, often door-to-door, in five days and gave the $2,000 to the university to promote the music department.
The student who sold the most records rec^ved a gold record from her classmates.
1 try to teach them whats going on in the real world, Woodford said. They need to feel what its like to do all the work. They think they are going to have a hit, which is great, because they will more frustrations, more rejections, and will learn how tough it is.
A new artist is bucking 66,000-to-l odds of getting a hit record, he said.
Woodfords aim in teaching the ciasses is not so much to train future recording stars as to train people to run the recording industry.
1 want music people in
control and thats what s going to happen if this school is successful, he said. Musically creative, sensitive people in charge of the recording business would uplift the industry.
To help the students see how the industry needs uplifting. Woodford has top signers, such as Hermans Hermits and The Eagles, and industry people talk to his classes.
Lunch Buffet Lovers, Take Your
PkkCtf Hie Pizzas /Gattih.
Your favorite lunch buffet I* itill here. Stiff serving the best pizxa In town. Honest. Take your pick from our great dally selection of pUaa. spaghetti and salad. Eat to your hearts content. Its all yours.
Corner Cotanche & 10th St Phone 758 6121
The lunch buffet; All the pia. spaghetti and salad you can eat
DAILY 11AM TO 2 PM
Dinner buffet;
All the pizza, ipaghetti. & salad you can eat
MON & TUES 5PMT08PM
The best pmam town -ivri-''
Five Greenville Girls Performed In
I
A Dance Concert At NCSA Thursday
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer Five young Greenville dancers, three teenagers and two pre-teens, performed in concert Thursday evening at the North Carolina School of the Arts in Winston-Salem.
The five were chosen for participation in the dance concert based on auditions held by the school during
PUTT
THEATRES ' 12.25 m 6 P.M. STAYIN ALIVE
1:30-3:30-5;30-7:30-9:30-PG
EDDIE MURPHY TRADING PLACES"
2:35-4:50 7K>5 9:20 R
RICHARD PRYOR SUPERMAN HI
2:004:30-7:00 9 30-PG
THE THIRD DIMENSION IS TERROR.
DENNIS QUAID BESS ARMSTRONG
1:35-3.30-5:25 r== 7:20-9:15 lHl
February and March to determine eligibility for entrance into NCSAs summer dance program. Those selected are Sandy Kannen and Anna Harrington, both 12 years old, Ingrid Lalik and Heidi Schellenberger, both 14, and Carmela Weber, 17. All are students of the North Carolina Academy of Dan-ce-Arts in Greenville, 'Ahich is directed by Sherryl Mercer.
Hundreds of students from all over the United States, from Canada, Mexico, Japan and other nations applied for entrance to the School of the Arts dance
program, Ms. Mercer commented. We feel quite honored that we had five chosen for the program.
The five are members of a selection class which receive instruction at the Academy of Dance-Arts five days each week. These girls also performed in the East Carolina Dance Theaters production in January, Mercer said.
At the summer program in Winston-Salem, the five girls are receiving extensive training from a number of outstanding choreographers inciuding NCSA dean of dance Robert Lindgren,
Sonya Tyvens, Frank Smith, a soloist with the American Ballet Theater, Marcus Alford, soloist with the Gus Girodano company, Diane Markham, and Pandi.
For their Thursday evening performance at NCSA, the dancers from Greenville appeared in the production of a dance from the Broadway musical, Cats. Cnoreo-grapher Kelly Bellefeulle adapted the choreography for the piece from the show.
This has been a great experience for these young dancers, Ms. Mercer commented. They found out about hard work through
rehearsals until 11 or 11; 30 every night. They also have had great experiences in being exposed to young dancers from all around the world who share their own ambition to become dancers.
Today, the five, along with 14 other classmates from thei-N.C. Academy of Da.nee .Arts Studio in Greeenville will be leaving for New York to take part in a week of master classes with dancers such as David Howard, Ann Reinking, and Marina Stauitskaya.
TELE RENT TV 758-9102
2905 East tOth Street in Greenville
' We Now Sell Telephones We Also Rent VCRs and Stereos
PUNK FASHIONS - Tom Dickens, the mana^r of J. Riggins Mens Wear in Hanes Mall in Winston-Salem, drew a stare (of
disbelief?) from this unidentified woman shopper as he modeled some clothes for a ja^ion guide. (AP Laseipho^
ON STAGE AT THE
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
July 25-30 -8:15pm-McGLNNIS THEATRE (comer of 5th and Eastern)
V ^ ^ IN PERSON
iiiiiiiiiimaiiMMiiiiTrO
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
Includes hors d oeuvres
Chubby Checker exploded into popular music 22 years ago with The Twist, a shot heard around the world. His new album, The Change Has Come, 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 along with Elvis Presley and The Beatles.
Added Attraction:
The Dynamic Upsetters
For Your Dancing Pleasure On Wednesday, July 27
Advance Tickets Available At
Greenville Record Bar (Pitt Plaza & Carolina East Mall)
Apple Records (Downtown Greenville) (
Greenleaf Restaurant (1104 N. Memorial Drive Nightly til 9 P.M.)
c 12-The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-Sunday. July 4.1983
Youth Theater Group To Perform Friday
X Summer Pleasure
READY TO GO - Childrai in the younger age grotqi of the Recreation and Parks-sponsored summer youth theater settle down momentarily before going on stage to rehearse. Tliis group, and an oidor gnxqi, will present sbts to the pidilic at 7;30 p.m. FYiday in the auditorium at Jaycee Park, 2000 Cedar
Lane. The shows are free and open to the publk. The two instructors for the program are seated with the childroi -Kathryn Dixon at left, and Kathy Sbdar at right. (Reflects Photo by Jerry Raynor)
By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer
The annual YoiRh Theater Program, a six-weeks training program in theater for children sponsored by the Greenville Recreation and Parks, will soon be coming to a close - eariy in August.
Two instructors, Kathy Slxrfar of Greenville and Kathryn Dixon of Ayden, have been training the children in various ph^ of theater techniq^ which include acting, improvisations, building pn^ and making posters to advotise their forthcoming productions.
The young people were divided into two groiqis -the younger in the 7-9 age bracket, and the older group, those in the 10-13 age level.
At 7:30 p.m. Friday, in the auditorium in the administrative building at Jaycee Park, 2000 Cedar Lane, the children will present three sIkhI skits. The event is open to the public without charge.
The older students are presenting two short play-skits - The Way-Out Wizard of Oz, and PTA Triumphs Again. The cast
f(MT these two skits will include Mark Brewington, Caroline Ames, Jenny Fleming, Carolina Redding, Noel Palmer, J.J. McAUaird and Tberese Lambe.
For their presentation, the younger actws chose the characters tb^ wanted to be, with Ms. Slx^ and Ms. Dixon writing a skit based ( the childrois choices. The skit has been titled Close Encounters in the Enchanted Forest, with characters ranging from traditional knigbts-in-armor to fairies, a Dracula creature, a magic horse, and someUiing from todays imaginary wwid, a maitian.
The cast for the younger group presentation inclu Heniy Clark, John Boyd, Kevin Alligood, Alex Darden, Bob Pleasants, Will Pleasants, Marla Vacek, Joe Brewington, Nancy Anderson, Ivan ShingletiMi, Cody Copely and Lara Rusch.
BACK FLIP - What b^ way to cod when the thtfmometer is pressing 96 than to go for a swim in High Rock Lake south d Lexhagton. Mike Jemigan goes backward offaninnertubeforardrohingsplash. (APLaseiphoto)
Park Program Featuring String Band
The Too Wet To Plow String Band is the group that will be providing entertai-ment for todays Sunday in the Park Concert. The concert, at the Sunday in the Park site on the grassy slope east of Reade Circle, will begin at 7 p.m. The weekly summer series is funded by the city of Greenville and coordinated by the Greenville Parks and Recreation Commission.
Founded in 1977 by fiddler Earl White, the Too Wet To Plow String Band was formed from members of the original group of the Green Grass Cloggers. White plays main fiddle, clawhammer banjo and guitar.
Among others in the group are Nancy and Bill Sluys, who have recently returned to Greenville after spending six years in Florida where they played with the Horsehair and Catgut String Band. Nancy specializes in playing the traditional old time clawhammer banjo, and is the winner of several competitions in this instrument.
Bill Sluys plays the string bass and washtub bass.
Another new member of the group is George Arata of Morgantown, W.Va. Arata is a woodcrafter and furniture maker, and his music speciality is playing the Irish ^itar.
Best Sellers
FICTION
1. Christine, Stephen King
2. BatUefield Earth, L. Ron Hubbard
3. White Gold Wielder, Stephen R. Donaldson
4. Godplayer, Robin Cook
5. The Lonesome Gods, Louis LAmour
6. The Little Drummer Girl. John le Carre
7. The Seduction of Peter S., Lawrence Sanders
8. Legion, William Peter Blatty
9. The Summer of Katya, Trevanian
10. The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco
NON-FICTION
1. In Search of Excellence, Peters & Waterman
2. The One-Minute Manager, Blanchard & Johnson
3. Megatrends, John Naisbitt
4. Creating Wealth, Robert G. Allen
5. Workout Book, Jane Fonda
6. The F-Plan Diet, Audrey Eyton
7. How to Live to Be 100--or More, George Bums
8. Working Out, Charies Hix
9. The Price of Power, Seymour M. Hersh
10. How to Satisfy a Woman Every Time, Naura Hayden
(Courtesy of Time, the weekly newsmagazine)
Swans feed mainly on underwater plants and insects. They use their long necks to reach under the water surface to collect food.
tontPolyCoHo,. J POQ J Mi
Slacks StripMandSoHds. I V and I Q
s'to.-.. 11.14 rhiite..,... ii..i2
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Hwy 264 By-Pass Across From N'Chols
PERFORMING TODAY... Tlie Too Wet To Plow String Band is the groiq) to be performing in the weekly Sunday in the Park concert today. The omcal, to be held on the grassy slope east
of Reade Street, begins at 7 p.m., is free and open to the pubUc. The weekly entertainments are funded by die city of GreaivUle.
Open Mon. Sat 9 30 T.I6 00
Events Set For
Mariners Museum
BEAUFORT - Only two events are on the calendar for the coming week at Hampton Mariners Museum, 120 Turner St., Beaufort.
At noon Thursday, a Cape Lookout National Seashore ranger will present a program at the museum in the Thursday at Twelve Series.
The second scheduled event will be a snorkeling field trip to be made from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Reservations are required, and can be made by calling 728-7317.
COMING SOON!
THE GREEN LEAF
Restaurant & Entertainment Center
Opening Wed., July 27! Featuring
Chubby Chocker
In Person
Featuring The Finest Dining & Entertainment In Eastern North Carolina Meaorial Drive Dreeaville
Watch For It!
Monday-T ues. - Wed Super Specials 4 P.M.-9 P.M.
Fried
PopCorn Shrimp
All You Can Eat
GEORGE JONES IN CONCERT
With The Jones Boys' Band
SPECIAL GUEST STAR O.B. McCLINTON
WMTIm S<lvrwi|.n
UmttadlMRber Of Seats
GEORGEJONES
THURSDAY, lUeUSTIHPJ. LENOIR GOMMURITY COLLEGE GYM, KINSTON
-AIRCONDmONEO-
Tickets: *10 General Admission *12.50 Reserved Seats
DON'T WAIT-GET YOUR TICKETS NOW!
Tickets Available At;
Sound Shop, Vernon Park Mall, Kinston
Apperson Ford, UGrange, N.C.
The Record Bar, Twin Rivers Mall, New Bern, N.C.
Bobs T.V. & Appliance, Greenville & Ayden
The Athletic Attic, Berkeley Mall, Goldsboro
Any Lenoir, Greene, or Jones Co. Law Enforcement Officers Association Member. Produced By: Hometown Enterprises, Kinston, N.C.
Spontorod By Lanolr, OroMM A JonM Co. Law Enforcomont Offkort Auociatlon^
i-RMil^M^ y
Trout..............
All You Can Eat
Steamed Crabs
All You Can Eat Steamed In Spice
4.99
2.99
4.99
' All You Can Eat
Seafood Extravaganza
Alaskan Crab Legs q,
>^0
cs^
Shrimp Creole Deviled Crabs ^ Your Choice Of As Many As 5 Items
Seafood
Hows:
Sunday-Thursday 11:00 AM-9:00 PM Friday
11:00 A M. to ^
lO.-OOP.M. '10N.GrenSt. Saturday Greenville. N.C. 27834 4:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M.
Bar^u
0Y5fep Bap ?
Take Outs Welcome
Catering Specialists I^Cater; Anything Anywhere Anytime
s
I
I
i
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A Review
^A^py Story That's Also Serious Fiction
John le Carre, The Little Drummer Girt, New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1)63, 430
John le Carre has made a career out of turning the material of pulp fiction into serious prose. His earlier novels, especially The Spy Who Came in From the Cold and The Honourable Schoolboy demonstrated that spy stories could be more than mere elaborate chases through a series of exotic locations. Throughout his fiction le Carre combines actifHi and adventure with intelligence and political awareness. The Little Drummer Girl is no exception. It is both a well-written thriller and a serious exami-natkm of Middle Eastern politics.
The Little Drummer Girl is the story of a secret operation by Israjeli intelligence agents to discover and destroy an elusive Palestinian terrorist leader. In order to trap their quarry the Israelis employ unusual bait, an English provincial actress trained to perform the role of a radical sympathizer. Her preparation is part rehearsal airi part brainwa^ing, and as she is led throughout Europe and the Middle East to lure the Palestinian leader into the open we are never quite sure if she is a willing participant or just another victim of the 35 year war between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
le Carres major achievement is his exploration of the uncertainties of the middle ground, the uneasy territory that lies beyond convictions. Charlie, the actress without a script in her most diuigerous role, is drawn to both her controller and her prey, and neither completely trusts her. Her character and confusion are the heart of this emotionally powerful novel.
le Carre also exists in the middle ground. He refuses to take sides in the idofdogical conflict within which he sets his story. In The Uttle Drummer Girl he manages to present sympathetically both sides of Uie Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The intensity of the claims and the counter-claims of identity
real than newspaper headlines as le Carre leads us through Jerusalem and Palestinian refugee camps into the lives of the people involved in the war over the
MOVIE MUSIC
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - The award-winning Eastman Jazz Ensemble has recorded part of the soundtrack for a feature-length film - the first time a student ensemble from the University of Rochesters Eastman School of Music has been so employed.
Led by Rayburn' Wri^t, the ensemble recently recorded the theme song and incidental music for a film based on The Tin Flute by Gabrielle Roy. The film, titled For the Rest of Our Lives, is being produced by a Montreal-based film company in both English and French language versions.
ALICE GOES TO NYU
NEW YORK (AP)-Those looking for Alice need not go so far as Wonderland.
The Alfred Berol collection of Lewis Carroll materials including original editions of Alice in Wonderland, Through the Looking Glass and other writings by Carroll (real name, Charles Dodgson) has been donated to New York Universitys Bobst Library.
This is one of l^e most extensive collections of Carroll material in the world and contains many of his photographs as well. Carroll was considered to be one of the great pioneers of early photography.
He wrote his first book at the age of 14 and went to teach math at Christ Church College, Oxford, where he met the real Alice, Alice Liddell, daughter )f one of the deans. The collection contains letters to Alice Liddell from Carroll and photographs he took of her.
PHOTO GIFT
CHAMPAIGN, lU. (AP) -A gift of Walktf Evans photographs valued at upwards of $1001000 has been made to the University ^ jMis ^Krawert Art
Promised Land.
The Little Drummer Girl makes for uneasy reading. It challen^ us to re-examine our attitudes and ask difficult questions as we follow compelling characters
through a labyrinth of manipulation and deceit. It is serious fiction which just happens to use the conventions of the spy story.
JIMHOLTE
This Week In THE LOFT
At The
BEEF
BARN
Mon. & Tues.
Happy Hour 5-7 P.M. Vegetables & Relish Tray Cheese & Crackers Chips & Dip
Thurs.
Tom Jones Piano & Vocals Pizza Nile Happy Hour
5 P.M.'TIL 7 P.M. 10 P.M. mi 1P.M.
Walter Plemmer 7 P.M. Until... Ladies Night Ladies' Price 5 P.M. Til 9 P.M. Barbeque Beef
Walter Plemmer 7 P.M. until.. Happy Hour
5 P.M. Til 7 P.M. 10 P.M. Til 11 P.M. Peel Your Own Shrimp
Golden Oldies Late Nite Happy Hour
10 PM Until 11PM
Mmjoo
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C-14-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July M, MSNorfolk's Chrysler Museum Plans Major Renovation-Expansion
NORFOLK - Thomas H. Willcox Jr., president of The Chrysler Museum Board of Trustees, today revealed plans for a major expansion and renovation to accommodate the museums growing needs for exhibit, educational and administrative space.
Realization of these plans will also provide our community with an attractive and much needed, centrally located place where visiting dignitaries and other guests can be introduced to one of the areas greatest assets, its rich and varied cultural life, said Willcox.
Approximately 43,000 square feet of space will be added to the museum, with another 31,000 square feet of
the existing 94,000 square feet slated for renovation. The $8 million eiqpansion and renovation will enaWe the museum to exhibit more of its inventory of art treasures, much of which remains in storage due to lack of space.
Initiation of the project is, being made possiUe by a grant of 25 percent of the total cost from the city of Norfolk and 25 percent through the sale of municipal bonds to be repaid by the museum. Funding will be sought from the local private sector to reimburse the city as well as to finance completion of the project. At the of^rtune time, the commonwealth of Virginia will also be approached for support.
The museum, which celebrates ite SOth anniversary this year, will have its entrance returned to its ori-^nal location (Hi the Ha^ side of the building, which last served as the entrance in 1965. The expansion will bring symmetry to the structure with the addition of a second tower and a wing on the north side to balance the existing south wing.
Hie interior courtyard will be covered with a large skyli^t to create a 3,400 sqjuare-foot area for both the di^lay of sculpture and for recqitons.
All of the expanded interior will be arrang^ around a central axis, with paintings concentrated on one floor and other parts of the coUec-
tkm on the (^. A portion of the new space will house the museums Jean Outland Chrysler Art Reference Lib^, one of the finest in the soiith. The additional ^ce will be built around the presmit building, minimizing disnqition of current func-tkms.
As part of the plan, the entire grounds of the museum will undergo extensive landscaping.
The decision was made to expand and renovate the museum for several reasons.
Room must be made for expansion of the museums education staff and for workshop areas for the 30,000
school children and 15,000 adults who take part annually in the museums educatinal programs.
The Jean Outland Chrysler Art Reference Library is curraitly boused in a nearly inaccessible building off-site. The library contains more than 60,000 volumes, including extremely rare 18th ceitury exhibition catali^.
The Institute of Glass requires complete reinstaUatkm in order to meet visitor demand and to exhibit the additional 50 percent of the collection now in storage.
More than half of the entire museum collection cannot be di^layed due to lack of exhibition ^>ace.
Majw storage problems exist because curroit space is filled to capacity, forcing significant (xdlectkms of Art Noveau furniture and costumes to be housed in another building.
A larger photography gallery is required to accommodate the most rapidly growing (xdlectkm in the museum. The Chrysler Museum has the only permanent gallery in the state exclusivdy devoted to photography.
An enlarged conservation laboratory for the restoration and preservation of art is needed to protect the museums substantial investment.
Speaking for the board of trustees, Willcox described nie Chjrysler Museum as the home of the finest collection of art south of Washington. In support of his claim. The WaU Street Journal has called The Chrysler Museum one of the top 20 museums in the country, while Town and Country labeled it a treasure trove of art. John Russell of the New York
Times has written that Berninis scu^ture, Bust of the Saviour, is one of the greatest sin^ works of art in this country.
The Chrsyler Museum currently bouses more than 30,000 objects as a consequence of generous gifts over recent years from Walter P. Chrysler Jr. and scores of other donors.
The architectural firm selected for the project is Hartman-Cox, which was chosen for its proven exportise in similar projects after a national search.
^-
HEY EASTERN CAROLINA: HOW WOULD YOU UKEAVERY SPECIAL HIGH QUALITY CARPET ATAVERYLOWSPECIALPRICE?
V____
THE WEST ELEVATION... of the Cbiysler for the museum. This is the site of the original Museum showing the new entrance off ttie entrance which was moved some years ago. Hague as proposed in the new eq)aosk)n plan (Photo courtesy Chryslm* Museum)
From The Seaside
Poster
Contest
CHARLOTTE - The Southern Womens Show Poster Contest deadline for entries has been extended to S^t. 1. The competition, sponsored by NCNB,is to design a poster that can best r^resent the spirit of the Southern Womens Show scheduled for Oct. 6-9 at the Charlotte Civic Center.
The winning entry will recave $1,000, with $500 offered in other prize money.
For full details, write; Southern Womens Show, Box 36859, Charlotte, N.C., 28236, or caU 704/376^.
Librory Program For Children
An afternoon special, Favorite Folktales, will be held from 3:30 to 4:30 on Thursday in the Childrens Room at Shqipard Memorial Library for children in grades one through four.
The program will include folk stories, songs, poetry and films. Because of limited space, those attending must have a ticket. Free tickets may be picked up at the library or reserved by calling 752-4177.
No Meeting For Writers
SMALL COASTAL DISCOVERIES - Two of the many smaU discoveries in nature to be found along North Carolinas coastline are the attractive roun<Heaied marsh pennywort, which bear small yeUow fkmm in July, and at waters edge, branched fragments oi seaweed was^ from the ocean. (Reflector Photo by Jerry Raynor)
Due to the large number of members of the Greenville Writers Club scheduled to be out of town next week, the regular fourth Tuesday of the month meeting of the club will not be held.
WOODSHOW
By WILLIE NELMS Summertime is a good time to plan and begin do-it-yourself projects. Two new books at Shep^ Memorial Library offer excellent ideas in this area.
Renegade Houses by Eric Hoffman is described as a free-thinkers guide to innovative owner-built homes. It explores creative, economical approaches to housing. Unusual alternatives to traditional homes are shown.
Each example shows the ingenuity and personality of the builder. Arguing that traditional housing is too expoisive and wasteful, Hoffman demonstrated the variety of alternatives, ranging from recycled churches to rejuvenated store buildings.
The book includes color photographs as well as numerous black and white illustrations. Although stepJPy-st^ details on construction are not provided, the various pictures will h^ spark many creative imaginations. This book can serve as a good starting point for prospective builders as well as a good resource for browsing.
The Do-It Yourself Yearbook will delight anyone familiar with Popular Science magazine. The magazine editors have pulled together projects on a variety of subjects.
As with other Popular Science works, detailed drawings accompany the articles. These useful Ulimtratioos are a great aid for the accomplished as wdl as the novice craftanan. Projects range in challenge from a simple footstool to cabinets and outdoor structures. Materlallh^ as well as step-by-step instructkms are provided with many of the article. Concluding sections of the yearbook cover finishing techiuques, tool innovations and tips on buying lumber.
This is the first in what is planned as an annual cumulathm. U future volumes are equal to this first work, this will be an extremely useful reference series.
NEW YORK (AP) - A retractive of work by artist Grant Wood is being shown at the Whitney Museum of American Art through ^t. 4.
Comprising m(H% than 80 paintings, drawings, and lithogra^, Grant Wood: The Regionalist Vision spans Woods entire artisUc career. It traces his development from early Impressionist landscapes, street scenes, and still lifes done before 1929 through his mature work, the American Scene paintings of 1930-42, which depict rural life in his native Midwest.
American Gothic, the painting that brou^t Wood (1891-1^) instant national recognition, is included in the retn^)ective.
GOODYEAR NAMED PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Frank H. Goodyear Jr. has been appointed to the post of president of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
As president, Goodyear holds the top administrative post at the academy. The title was previously held by Charles E. Mather III, who continues as chairman of the board of trustees, and Samuel M.V. Hamilton, who ^tinuei as vice chairman.
Sale
You get extra quality, extra value, extra savings, and extra pleasure by helping Larrys Carpetland reduce their carpet and vinyl inventory. We have just returned from the Atlanta Floor Covering and Home Furnishings Market, and we placed orders for hundreds of rolls of carpet that start arriving soon, and we have to clear out space.
The reason we ordered all this carpet is because carpet prices are going up and there has been a large increase in the demand for carpet; consequently, it has created a shortage in fiber and deliveries will take longer.
So in order for us to give the kind of quality and service we have for the last 15 years, we had to increase our inventory. We have a lot of half rolls, short rolls and long rolls that we are determined to move off our floor-some at prices less than what we paid for then. Since the entire sale is especially planned to quickly clear surplus stock, every reduction on every roll is a BIG ONE. Some as big as 50%. Dont Miss It!
CHEERS by Horizon Reg. 10.95
^95
SalelJ
HEATHER HILL:
by Lees Reg. 16.95
Sale
7
95
Multicolored short saxony. 100% Dupont nylon with Sussen set twist. 2 colors.
A multicolored saxony styled to hide soiling. 100% nylon with Scot-chgard and Biofresh, which fights odor and bacteria and excellent for homes with pets and small children. Three colors-Versale Beige, Persian Brown and Chantilly Linen.
AFTER DARK:
by Lees Reg. 12.95
Sale
8
95
GOOD FEELING ! by Lees Reg 15 95
1 195
Sale X X
A Burln nylon saxony, long wearing, durable and resilient. Lusterset yarns with static protection. Make this a real value. Two colors-Apricot DewandSatinwood.
100% Antron III Nylon. Cut and Loop sculpture with all the extras. Great for every area of the house. Two colors. French Beige and Ivory Leaf Green.
RAINBOWS END:
by Lees Reg. 16.95
BROADMORE:
byJ&BReg.9.95
Sale
12
95
Sale
5
50
Sculptured high-low in a blend of multicolor variations in 100% Antron 111 nylon by Dupont. Easy caring and tough wearing. 4 colors. Green-briar. Clay Pot, Bisquit and Golden Ochre.
100% Olefin level loop indoor-outdoor. Cushion back voracel. Highly stain and food resistant. Three colors: Thistle, Silver Bells and Wood Sarrel.
There are many, many more in-stock from which to choose. All must go. Vinyl Roors by Congoleum, Armstrong and Mannington also on sale at similar savings.
We dare you to match the low, low prices we are asking for this carpet and vinyl. All First Quality, from Major Mills, no special purchases at Larrys Carpetland. The sale is over when theyre gone. So Hurry.
faje bhnection
All Items Subject To Prior Sale No Phone Orders Please
Member Retail
DCarprtlanb
Roor Covering Institute Quality Doesnt Cost, It Pays.
3010 E, 10th St. Greenville 758-2300
AT DAYS END... After the last ferry run has been made, lifeguard John Eichenberger, left, and Jesse Hines, director of the park, watch the pontoon ferry being secured while they talk over the events of the day.
STROLLING ... along the uncrowded beach is one of many casual pleasures at Hanunocks Beach. The coiqile viio agreed to pose for their photograph is Linda Harpe of Morehead City and Mike Purbaugh of Silver Spring, Md.
ON THE SOUND SffiE ... The view from Bear Island, site of the mam pomon of Hammocks Beach State Park, is of stretches of apple green marsh grass interspersed with
The free shuttle ferry (fpentes beginning at 10 a.m. seven days weekly. The last forry returns from the island at 5:30 p.m.
The ferry operates June 1 throu^ Labor Day each year. However, the island is open for visitation year round. Those visiting by private boat are asked to check in at the office on the mainland side before making the trip.
sun-sparked areas of open blue water. On hummocks scattered throughout the marshes, dark green myrtle and cedars grow. Sailboats frequently add color and movement to the scene.
Hammocks Beach State Park Near Swansboro
An Enchanted State Park Island
WATTING FOR THE FERRY ... Tired but tuqipy, men, women and children line the rails of the ferry dock awaiting the last return to
the mainland run of the day. Military persmnel from Camp LeJeune and Cherry Point are frequent visitors to the park.
Imagine an enchanted Island where you, your wife, sweetheart, buddy or family can spend a day of sand and sea pleasure at no cost except for the minimum cost needed for sandwiches, snacks and drinks you bring along, the price of gas to get there and, if youre the fastidious type, a dollar bill for an end-of-the day shower.
Picture a sunny, summer day be^nning with a delightful 25-minute canopied pontoon ferry ride through meandering channels of sun-flecked blue water between a constantly changing pattern of apple-green areas of marsh reed -interspersed here and there by hummocks covered with dark green myrtles, cedars and small live oak trees. Along the way you encounter fishing and pleasure boats on the Inland Waterway leg of the journey. Camaraderie is easily established with other passengers who share your excitement in the outing.
Add to this the graceful flight of gulls soaring overhead, slender egrets standing majestic and motionless, brilliant white against vivid blues and greens. Put in another stroke on the visual palette to show an island in the distance; Bear Island, in colors of sparkling white sand above a shoreiine of dark trees.
Perhaps this sounds like make-believe, something that does not exist in todays escalating cost of vacation wonderlands. The beauty is that it does exist, and its less than 100 miles from the heart of Greenville.
This enchanted place is Hammocks Beach State Park, a four-mile long by one-half mile-plus wide unspoiled paradise across Bogue Sound from the historic village of Swansboro.
Attractive constrasts abound serene, almost impressionistic landscapes on the sound side; the roar of the Atlantic and the shifting sands of dunes on the ocean side. Inland, dunes vary from steep mounds bare of vegetation but rich in beds of scallop shells and the skeleton of dead trees weathered by time and sun to others clothe^l in pennywort or stands of myrtle and cedar. At the northwest comer, a densely forested area is bianketed with wild scupperaong grapevines. Grassy tangles in tidal flats at the eastern end harbor breeding grounds of noisy sea birds.
Best of all. Hammocks Beach State Park is never crowded. Even on holidays and weekends, theres more than ampie space to accommodate daytime visitors who come to swim, fish, make sandcastles, or simply stroll the beach, along with occasional singles or groups who camp out overnight.
For maximum vacation pleasure with minimum economic pain, it would be difficult to find any place to match this incomparable state park.
Text And Photos By Jerry Raynor
DADDY HELPS OUT ... Joe Stanley of Richlands, a former paratrooper, provides a iKlplng hand to his two young children.
Catherine Marie, left, and William Joseph, right, who find building sandcastles a fascinating affair.
_ j k:
Rogged Dunes ragged sand dunes ... that constantly change shape line white sand without vegetation and others covered with plants the southern shore of Bear Isand.In^ behind these dun^ and trees, extend across the haM-me width of the island,
de^ dm ~
Foce jhe Oceon
variety of landscapes exist - de^ dunes, kome of crystal inviting visitors Inclined to
SURF FISHING... may not always result in a big catch during the hotter summer months, but surf fishing devotees will tell you that
Information For Travelers
To get the most pleasure from a visit and to avoid summer heat hazards, a few suggestions are in order:
No special facilities available for the handicapped.
Wear tennis shoes or similar sturdy footgear as the half-mile trek across the island over hot sand can be uncomforable without this protection.
Persons who burn easily should wear long-sleeve shirts, slacks or trousers, and a hat to protect the face.
Since there is but one location for drinks, snacks and water, those planning on long beach or inner island walks should carry a canteen of water and a small snack.
If possible, make the trip on a moderately cool day. The brilliant white sand on very hot days intensifies the heat.
Primary regulations governing use of the park are:
No aicohoiic beverages, no pets (except seeing-eye dogs) permitted.
Persons planning to camp overnight or longer are required to get camping permits at the office on the mainland. Cost is $1 per person pr night. Permits are required whether going by public ferry or by private boat.
The only non-camping fee is a $1 fee for showers.
For complete details, call 3264881. ^
much of the pleasure is just being on the oceanfront, especially in early morning or late afternoon hours.
ONE OF THE CAPTAINS ... who takes the 36-passenger pontoon shuttle ferry on runs is Michael Wood of Swansboro, who commented that ferry operators are called "drivei^, ferryman, boy, captain, or whatever.
D-2-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 24.19B3
Garden
Clinic
Here's the Answer
By ANDY LANG APNewsfeatures
Q. - We are going to finish our attic into two rooms and a bathroom. There is some batt insulation in the attic floor between the joists, put there years ago and inadequate by modem standards. We have heard differences of opinion on whether the insulation should be removed or increased when we begin to make the attic into living quarters. One opinion is that, if the insulation is removed, the heat from the lower floor will help heat the attic. Another opinion is that, since somebody is going to be living in the attic, at least part of the time, we should increase the insulation to help retain the heat that comes out of the radiators. Our feeling is we should just leave the insulation in place and not bother with it at all. What do you think?
A. - Your viewpoint appears to be the soundest. It doesnt make much difference if the heat from below does or does not aid in keeping the attic warm. It should be kept comfortable by its own heating equipment. Besides, heat that does not escape to the attic is useful in the area below and will help in keeping down heating costs there.
Q. - Sometimes I see certain kinds of wood advertised as heartwood and sometimes as sapwood." Whats the difference?
A. - Heartwood is a particular section of the wood with decay-resistant qualities. Sapwood has fewer decay-resistant qualities and is lighter than heartwood, which usually costs more.
*'Q. - You once wrote
something about using the space in a closet above the shelf already there, but I did not save the story. Now I need more ^ace in the closet. I have figured out how o get some, but cant remember about the space above the shelf. Can you help?
A. - 'There usually is a lot of space between the lone closet shelf and the ceiling. You can put another shelf there for the storage of seasonal items, such as blankets and such, but you first must be sure it will be possible to get the items on the new shelf and then remove them. Even if this takes a little maneuvering, it will be worth it, since you may have to use the shelf only once or twice a year.
Q. - A bureau we purchased recently has an excellent finish on it but is badly in need of a cleaning. We were told it could be cleaned with denatured alcohol. Wont this soften the finish?
A. - Note the answer to the previous question. Dia-tured alcohol is a solvent for shellac, not for varnish. Therefore, it can be used safely on varnish as a cleaning agent. However, you have only the word of the person who sold you the bureau on what the old finish was. Many pieces of old furniture were finished with shdlac. So, when you begin to wipe the piece with denatured alcohol, watch very closely. If you see any sign that the fmish is being disturbed, it is likely the fmish is shellac and not varnish. Wax or oil can be removed from shellac with turpentine or paint thinner, usii^ clean rags and wiping lightly.
Tricks Of Display Trade Can Brighten Your table
Q. Can I use grass clippings as a mulch. (E.M., Concord)
A. Grass clippings can be better than nothing as a mulch. They are readily available in the summer and are free. Dont put them more than two inches deep at any one time. Add layers periodically as the previous layer settles and dries.
A When is the best time of day to water my lawn? (O.C., Albemarle)
A. The best time to water is in the morning. This reduces the risk of disease and loss of water from evaporation. This is also a time when the demand for water is low.
However, for many homeowners, evening is the most practical time to water though water pressure may be low. In this case, water as early as possible so that folia^ can dry, reducing the risk of disease. Avoid irrigating at midday since wind sp^s and heat result in a high rate of evaporation and poor uniform coverage.
Q. Are all brightly colored mushrooms poisonous? (L.C., Newton)
A. Contrary to folklore, there are no general rules or ways to separate edible mushrooms from poisonous mushrooms or to make poisonous mushrooms safe.
Q. My tomatoes have rotten, sunken places that are dark and leathery at the tips of the fruits. What would cause this. (R.B., East Bend)
A. Blossom-end rot is a common non-parasitic disease of tomato, pepper and watermelon that is caused by a lack of calcium in the developing fruit. This may be due to a lack of calcium uptake from the soil or to extreme fluctuations in water supply.
Although the ideal calcium levels for preventing blossom-end rot have not been determined, the application of lime to soils known to be low in calicum has helped to prevent the disease.
Soil should be limed according to recommendations of a soil analysis report. Uusing gj^sum (land plaster) as a supplement to liming on calcium-deficient soils has proven beneficial. Lime and/or gypsum should be applied well in advance of planting.
After tomatoes are planted, good results in eliminating blossom-end rot can be obtained by spraying the plants with calcium chloride according to directions on the label. Calcium chloride should be available at garden supply stores. Stress from insufficient or excess moisture in the soil favors blossom-end rot development.
Tomatoes, peppers and watermelons planted while the soil is still cold are likely to have the first fruits affected by blossom-end rot. Removing affected fruits when symptoms are firrst observed may be worthwhile for subsequent develospment of other fruit on the plant.
Q. Wliat is the best time of day to cut flowers for flower arrangements? (W.R., Greensboro)
A. Cut flowers early in the morning. This is when the moisture content is highest and flowers are more turgid. (Joe Love, extension horticultural specialist)
Q. Are Japanese beetle traps just a waste of money? I think all they do is bring more beetles into the yard to eat my roses. (W.R., Elizabeth City)
A. The USDA found that traps reduced populations about 30 percent when used systematically (one trap per acre). Place traps away from the plants you are trying to protect. The traps attract beetles, but all the beetles are caught. The traps are not more attractive than swh Japanese beetle favorites as roses, grapes and plums.
Q. When is the best time of day to water my vegetable garden? (I.E., Rose Hill)
A. Water early enough in the day so that the leaves of your plants will be dry before nightfall. Evaporation is slower at night and water on the leaves enhances the spread of disease.
Q. What are the azaleas I see blooming in June? (O.L., Lincolnton)
A. The Satsuki hybrids bloom in May and June. The most commonly seen is Gumpo, a dense, dwarf evergreen azalea with white or pink flowers. Certain varieties of the Knap Hill, Exbury and Mollis hybrids will bloom in June. Azaleas in these groups are deciduous, where the Satsuki hubrids are evergreen.
Supplied by the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service.
By BARBARA MAYER APNewsfeatures The high cost of going out and widespread interest in ; gourmet cooking have com-J bined to make entertaining at home a p<^ular pastime.
Along with more home entertaining has come a revival of interest in setting a lovely table.
Candy Pratts, a retail promotion and display design specialist in New York, says some of the tricks of the display trade can be used to create interesting themed table settings. She has found
that guests respond with enthusiasm to parties with slightly outlandish decorations.
Recently, she put her ideas to the test by creating a series of party tables for a fragrance manufacturer. Each of the tables was designed to celebrate a different holiday or event. There were tables commemorating New Years Eve, Valentines Day, a bridal shower, the Fourth of July and a Halloween masquerade.
In each instance, the
primary rule of display was used, which is the use of the unexpected. There really are no rules ex(^t for the surprise,she said.
At the fragrance event, each tables theme had an unusual centerpiece. For the New Years Eve table, for example, she covered the table with a black velvet cloth, then placed multicolored paper streamers in the center of the table radiating out towards the place settings. Paper streamers were also festooned to the backs of the,
dining chairs.
A centerpiece - in this case a large, shallow birdbath held black and silver-wrapped packages of guest soaps as party favcurs.
The bridal shower table featured an antique parasol with an ivory handle. The open parasol, landed on the table, was trimmed with tulle netting, lace and bows, and small wrapped fragrance favors were placed inside. A circular floral arrangement surrounded the umbrella.
Another spring table
ByANDY LANG APNewsfeatures Unless you live in a very old house, the chances are your walls are made of a mixture of pulverized rock, hydrated pulp and a chemical binder.
This mixture is gypsum plaster which, when covered with a tough paper, is generally known as g^sum board and sometimes as plasterboard, dry wall, wallboardorsheetrock.
Because it is relatively inexpensive, it has been widely used for many years in place of plaster walls in new and remodeled homes.
While it usually has white paper coverings, it comes in a large variety of decorative finishes, including one with vinyl facing, one that is water resistant and one with
THE sr,
HOUSE
extra strong fire resistance, although ordinary gypsum board is itself fire resistant.
As with regular plaster walls, gypsum board is subject to various ailments caused by settlement of the house, water leaks, abuse, and stud and joint contraction and expansion. But, also like plaster, it can be repaired so the damaged area cannot be detected.
Besides the ordinary list of problems, gypsum board has one special to itself - nail
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Rugged Exterior Characterizes Plan
9264 - Tipton
^ Jerry Bishop
Batten siding, shake shingles, and bnck texture the exterior of this rustic ranch style, with its rugged beauty continued inside. AccessiMe from the foyer of the Tipton, the L-shaped living room and huge country kitchen dominate the living area and reinforce
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1.744 499
the illusion of wide open spaces. Wood-burning fireplace warms the living room, which c^ns to patio via sliding glass doors. Three bedrooms are nestled beyond the entry hall and spotight the master bedroom with immense walk-in closet and full bath.
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popping. It usually doesnt occur for a few years, but when it does, many nails pq) at the same time. You can hammer the nails back in place by placing a block of wood over the pt^ped area and hitting it with a hammer, but the trouble is almost certain to come back a short time later. For a more permanent repair, remove each offending nail and drive home another nail close to the same spot, this time, use a threaded nail of some kind or one of the type called a ring shank plasterboard nail. Drive the nail a tiny bit below the surface with a nailset, then fill it and the old hole with some putty. Sand very lightly and see whether a touchi^ is required.
Patching plaster will do if the im^rfection to be repaired is tiny, but in most cases it is better to use a joint compound, the same kind used to cover the perforated tape on gypsum board joints. Smooth it out with a
putty knife, held almost horizontal so that it wont take a piece out of the board.
When the damaged area needs more attention than a small hole or crack, you will have to make a patch with a piece of gypsum board, which is a good reason why any board or part of it should be saved after an installation or previous patching job. Use a keyhole saw and cut out a square a few inches larger than the marred section. It need not really be a square, but it should be a regularly shaped portion, which will make the task of cutting a duplicate piece from scrap board a bit easier.
The patch should fit snu^y into the opening, but it will be difficult to keep it there as it might fall through behind the wall. To prevent this, figure out a way to ke(^ it there. One way is to drive a long screw into the center of the patch, leaving enough of it sticking out so that you can grasp it with your fingers.
featured a large brimmed hat of pink and natural straw. It was s^ on a p^tal in the coito of the table after being trimmed with pink and ivory ribbons and flowers. A garden of babys breath and roses in bud vases was plaiRed beneath the pede^.
The Halloween masquerade table decoration started with inexpensive white masks. Each mask was attached to a long dowel and then the whole group was set in a tall crystal vase filled about half way with black
Apply joint conqxxind generously to Uie edges of the opening in the wall. Now set the patch in place, bidding it by the end of the screw. When it is solidly in place, gently remove the screw. After the compound has thoroughly s^ sand lightly untU everything is smooth. You will have to judge later whether there are any tiny gaps that must be filled.
When the damaged area is very large, you may have to use a piece of backiq) material before inserting the patch as described in the previous paragraph.
and gold ^larkles. This centerpiece was set on shiny black fabric. At the end of the party, each guest at the table took away one of the masks as a favor.
According to Ms. Pratts, one of the easiest and best ways of estatdishing a festive atmo^here is to provide some sort of party favor. Pecle naturally seem to love the idea of a gift; it doesnt have to be expensive or serious,she said.
At one party she planned, for example, she used as a centerpi c a wor-hing instant camera on a tripod. At each sept was a package of flashbulbs and film. The guests enjoyed snapping each other and then each one ^ to take home a sdection of photos he had takmi.
For a childrens party, she suggests a coiterpiece of go mish in a lar^ 0ass bowl. At the end of the party, each child would get his own fi^ to take home in some water in a zip-close plastic bag.
When deciding on a party theme (hmt be afraid of excess, she said. Oftoi it is excess that makes a theme aiecial. For example, some florists make up animal shiqies - say a poodle out of chrysanthemums.
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L-MntiWfFnir,
Uneasiness Marks Start Of New Tobacco Year
By KEITH SCHNEIDER For The Associated Press
AYNOR, S.C. (AP) - Along the dark, lethargic waters of t.he Little Pee Dee River, which have noticed Horry Countys rich farmland since this region was settled more than two centuries ago, there has always been tobacco.
For a good bit of that time, there has also been the federally supported flueniured tobacco program, a coveted system of price supports, loan guarantees and production controls insuring that growers made a profit and keeping crossroads tobacco towns like Aynor (population 643) satisfied and prosperous.
Here the leaf is called golden, and its place in the economic and social landscape is as important as steel is to Ohio or cars to Detroit.
But just as those industries are declining, so too is tobacco farming. Nowhere is it more evident than in Horry County, this year the nations No. 1 tobacco county.
Production has dropped by 40 percent since 1975. Earnings are stagnant. And more losses are likely to follow as rapidly changing smoking habits, overseas competition and an unfamiliar - for these parts - measure of greed has turned tobacco fanning into an extremely high-risk venture.
Cigarette manufacturers, meanwhile, are demanding lower price supports and higher quality. Most important, the tobacco program during the last two years has been under siege in Washington as Northern liberals call for its abolition and Southern conservatives grudgingly acknowledge that it needs major readjustment.
In Aynor and scores of other Tobacco Belt towns strung across eastern North Carolina and the Pee Dee, there is palpable uneasiness. Behind the gracious smUes of local leaders and the muscular handshakes of sunburned farmers, worried eyes show a fear of financial upheaval not seen here since the Depression.
We got a nice little town, the cleanest little town in America, says Aynors 59-year-oId Mayor Hoyt Johnson, a
from the Carroll Rlghter IneHtute
FORECAST FOR SUNDAY. JULY 24.196S
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Aftw aon dtUys in the very eerly morning, this full MOON day end evmiing has every sort of opportunity for you. Take advantange of thia great day.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) You have been concen* trating on new outlets for the past two days and now you un take the intial steps.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) You are inapired anew how best to make progress and should make plana toward such ends. Take advantange of good aspects.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Conae to a better understandii^ with your mate and know what is moat desired at'this time uid be happier u^;ether.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) A partner will tell you how it will be possible to have a more jwofitable relationship in the future.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) You have received a big favor and can now show your gratitude in some charming and ingenious fashion.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept 22) You have a faariwHng new idea of a creative nature and can later study the details thereof so that it can work.
LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) You can view a family affair very clearly and wUl know just what haa to be done in order to make ImnM life mme successful SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov. 21) Morning is fine for getting your ideas well organised in your mind, and let the afternoon be happy in the company of kin.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Concentrate on new ideas in the morning that can bring you a greater abundance in the future.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You have fine ideas for advancing in your personal life but have to be noore practical in order to gain your aima.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Be sure of what your ambitions are and then take steps in such directions. You know some very interesting personaliities.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Personal desires much delayed must come first now and then handle those tasks ahead of you in a unique fashion.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she wiU early understand how to achieve benefits by applying ones self in an accepted numner, and thereby learn the habit of work, and can make a good deal of money early in life, if properly trained. Teach good health habits.
FORECAST FOR MONDAY. JULY 25,196S GENERAL TENDENCIES: Today ia a vary interesting day for it is one of those times when you will be able to start the week right by looking into all sorts of new and modern methods. Think dramatically.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Contact individala who are progressive and operating on a more advanced platform and find out how you can make headway.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Become more e^gnlMtit of the new technological trend and you find that sucosas will come easier in the future.
GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Study newspaper and brochures well so that you gain knowledge concerning how to become more progressive.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Study into new business methods so that they can bri^ten up your future considerably, if you start using them.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Good day to confer with successful persons in the modem world and to find out what their methods are, so you can emulate them.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Use new mechanisms so that you can keep promises you have made to others more easily. Co-workers wUl amptnt.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct 22) Follow through on amusements suggested to you by your good friends and have a good time. Drive carefully.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Study your home and figure out how to make it mine charming and comfortable and increase harmony there.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study those periodicals at hand and get ideas and suggestions for int proving your mode of life.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Study some noperty which has recently been renovated or built and get good ideas for improving your own.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You know the answer to certain problems that are bothering you. ao get busy and solve them now.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) You get a sudden inspiration that should be put in motion so that you can increase vour abundance more easily.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she wUl be unpredictable and this is the very quality that will br ing the greatest amount of success during the lifetime, peculiarly enough.Dont forever try to correct your progeny. but be sure you plan now for a good education.
The Stars imp^ they do not comp What you w**! of your life ia largely up to you!
1 1983, McNauidit Syndicate. Inc.
liquor store owner and retired fanner. Tobacco is everything to us. So many people depend on it. If we lose the pro^am, there aint gonna be nothing left here but dust.
There is no other cn^ quite like tobacco. It is at once the pampered poodle and despised jackal of agriculture. Grown from brown seeds no larger than pinheads starting in December, transplanted after the last frost in April, carefully groomed through harvest and curing in July, tobacco has been the difference between ruin and riches here for gerierations.
In America, where the founding fathers used tobacco as collateral to close some of the nations largest land deals, local, state and federal taxes each year generated from nearly 325 billion in sales now total $6.6 billion.
Nearly $40 million of that is South Carolina state tax, according to the Tobacco Institute. A recent survey shows almost 30,000 people in South Carolina are employed in tobacco farming, another 340,000 in North Carolina.
Yet tobacco is decried by devout Christians as sinful, loathed by health enthusiasts for its disease potential and
exploited by some congressional legi^ators who see it as an easy mark for gaining votes and notoriety.
Growers, nevertheless, have prospered during the past five decades. Cadillacs and fancy tractoro abound in tobacco country.
In South Carolina, the No. t flue-cured producer behind North Carolina, tobacco is a $200 million annual crop, 20 percent of all farm income. Horry County accounts for more than a fourth of that.
The wealth is due primarily to farmers who produce the worlds finest tobacco, and a flue^iured program established in 1938 to control wildly fluctuating prices and supply.
Under the Agricultural Adjustment Act, Congress mandated support prices for each of dozens of tobacco grades to be determined each year by the secretary of agriculture.
It also allocated acreage aUotments to farmers based on their average yields at the time, usually between three and six acres per farm.
A farmers cooperative was started, financed by federal loans and guarantees, which bought all tobacco that didnt
sell for at least a penny above the support price. The co^)p stored the leaf in private warehouses, and loans were repaid as the crop was sold to manufacturers here and abroad.
The program has had some fine tuning since then. In 1965, for example, limits were set on poundage coupled with acreage, instead of acreage alone, because of production increases caused by mechanization.
After a contentious start, the program has worked itself into the heart and belly of Aynor. Farmers know at the start of each season how much they will grow and what they could earn from tobacco.
As a result, bank loans are easier to secure. Equipment dealers, chemical distributors, laborers and shop owners count on revenues from the crop.
The program has also spawned a pension system. Retired farmers lease their allotments to active growers, until recently for 30 cents a pound. If a farmer held a 10,000-pound allotment, the lease arrangement provided a significant portion of his retirement income, one that could be passed to his children.
Each ot these advertised items is required to be readily availabte lor sale at or below the advertised pnce m each AiP Store except as specilicaiiy noted m this ad
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WED., JULY 27 AT AAP 703 GREENVILLE BOULEVARD IN QREENVILLEf N^C.
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU
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I ^ ^ r-
THE QUIZ
worldscope
(10 points tor each question answered correctly)
1 The federal government of (CHOOSE ONE. Canada. Mexico) gave the L S. permission to test its cruise nuclear missiles there beginning in 1984.
2 A bomb planted at the Turkish Airlines counter at Orlv Airport in Paris. France killed and wounded scores ot people (CHOOSE ONE: Armenian, Iranian) terrorists claimed responsibility for the attack.
3 Nations from the East and the V\est. including the L.S.. reached provisional agreement on a securitv and human rights pact at the European Security Conference m Madrid. Spain, The accord is a followup to the 1975Accords.
a-Geneva b*Helsinki c-Paris
4 Changes in energy costs caused a .5 percent (CHOOSE ONE: decline, boost) m wholesale prices in June.
5 The Census Bureau reported that the L.S. population in (CHOOSE ONE: small towns, large cities) grew by more than JO percent in the 1970s.
newsname
(10 points it you can identity this person in the news)
As President of Mexico, I met recently in Cancn with the leaders of Venezuela. Colombia, and Panama to discuss peaceful solutions to troubles in Central America. Who am I?
matchwords
(4 points for each correct match)
1-penalty a-division, barrier
Answers Below
THE WEEKLY QUIZ IS PART OF THIS NEWSPAPERS SCHOOL PROGRAMPEANUTS
I NEVER 6ET TO RIPE IN THE CAR..
A SHOLP HAVE SEEN' ONE Of THOSE PLASTIC P06S WITH THE 5066LE HEAPS....
KAVfe.A^lYrHlM^
XO CK? vVfTK vol.
newspicture
(10 points it you answer this question correctly)
The Michigan Panthers stopped a last minute come-back
attempt by the Philadelphia Stars to win the first United States
Football League championship in Denver by a score of 24-22.
The USEE announced that it plans to award its 18th franchise to a
new team m for the 1984 season.
a-Buffalo b-Laramie c-Memphis
peoplewotdi/sportlight
(2 points for each question answered correctly)
1 Chairman of the Chrysler Corporation, announced that his company will pay back the $800 million it borrowed from the U.S. government seven years ahead of schedule.
2 Britain's Prince Andrew visited Newport, Rhode Island to attend the opening of the Americas Cup. an international (CHOOSE ONE: rowing, sailing) event
3 Sergei Shlibashvili. the Soviet (CHOOSE ONE: diver, swimmer) who was injured at the World University Games in Edmonton died at the University of Alberta Hospital.
4 Tom Watson of the U.S. scored his fifth career win at the British Open Golf Tournament in Southport, England. TRUE OR FALSE: No British golfer has ever won the British open.
5 Undisputed middleweight champipn of the world, (CHOOSE ONE: Marvin Hagler, Larry Holmes) agreed to meet Roberto Duran in a championship match in November.
2-parody
3-parley
4-partisan
5-partition
b-ally, supporter c-takeoff. imitation d-punishment, handicap e-talk, discussion
roundtable
Family discussion (no score)
Do you support the continued development of nuclear power^ plants to supply our nations energy needs? Why or why not?
YOUR SCORE: 91 to 100 points TOP SCORE) 81 to 90 points Excellent 71 to 80 points Good. 61 to 70 points Fair
VEC. Inc., 725-83
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APRPIMT TO
HEAP UP A coMixree UE3AUZ6P PESAHEI^r.
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BLONDIE
I'VE GOT A RACKACe POP OAlSy eUMSTEAD
I'LL TAKE IT... ITS A SPECIAL PLEA COLLAR WE OBDBJEO ^
BEETLE BAILEY
S.C. Nuclear Reprocessing Plant To Close Before Formal Opening
LESS PRINlKINl(5, LESS LIVER.V 6ET THE PICTURE?
PHANTOM
ByWHLLESTER Associated Press Writ^
BARNWELL, S.C. (AP) - James A. Buckham took over the reins of the Barnwell Nuclear Fuels Plant the day Jimmy Carter was elected president.
Buckham managed a government fuel reprocessing plant in Idaho before he took the job as president of Allied-General Nuclear Services reprocessing facility at Barnwell in November 1976.
I thought it would be nice to get out where you were doing this kind of business in a competitive market situation, he says. We expected two or three other plants to be built right behind ours and we were going to be vying for business and making the most money .
The facility - a $250 million joint investment by Allied Corp.. Gulf Oil Co. and Royal Dutch Shell - was planned as the biggest, most sophisticated commercial reprocessing plant in the world. And it was only two years from opening.
In April 1977, Carter banned nuclear reprocessing by the private sector. At AGNS the ban is known simply as the Carter decision.
The president also urged other countries to rein in reprocessing,^ but industrialized countries such as France, England, Japan and West Germany ignored him.
In 1981, President Reagan lifted Carters ban. But two years later, Allied-General Nuclear Services is shutting its plant down without ever reprocessing a shipment of spent fuel from commercial nuclear power plants.
Federal funding of $14 million a year for research, mostly on security systems and reprocessing equipment, runs out July 31.
If the plant had operated, it would have been used to separate spent nuclear fuel into uranium, plutonium and worthless nuclear waste. The extracted plutonium and uranium would have been recycled for nuclear fuel.
The plants equipment hasnt been used enough to tarnish or be scratched, and the Orwellian computer room is used only for imaginary situations and what if propositions.
George Stribling, public relations man at the plant, giv^ tours to the curious. He proudly points to a plutonium security system that reads voice prints and measures fingertips - a security system that has never been used to protect plutonium.
Stribling, who hates to see the plant wasted, has a hard time concealing a slight bitterness when he describes what has happened to AGNS.
Its a tragedy, he said.
The plant had 300 employees at the beginning of 1983 but has cut that number by a third and will termihate all but a skeleton crew by years end, said plant officials.
The remaining workers are conducting an inventory of plant equipment. The plants owners plan to sell off any that
WORLDSCOPE: 1-Canada; 2-Armenian; 34); 4-boost; 5-small towns
NEWSNAME; Miguel de la Madrid MATCHWORDS: 1-d; 2-c; 3e; 4-b; 5-a NEWSPICTURE: c
PEOPLEWATCH/SPORTUGHT: 1-Lee lacocca; 2-sailing; 3-aiver; 4-false; 5-Marvin Hagler
could be ruined or outmoded by the passage of time.
The basic structure, storage tanks and stainless steel reprocessing equipment will remain, just in case a buyer comes along.
Tbe owners have sued the federal government for $500 mUlion, claiming they were seduced and abandoned by a government eager for nuclear progress, then frightened off by potential dangers.
One plant employee, who asked not to be named, likened the awkward relationship between industry and government at Barnwell to a couple of porciqiines trying to make love.
The Carter ban was intended to answer the threat of pluUmium being stolen and used to build nuclear weiq)ons.
It was a farce, said AGNS head Buckham. It is quite possible to prevent this from getting into weapons as long as you systematically protect it.
Kermit Laughon, an Energy Department official, said nuclear fuels could be stolen from such reprocessing plants. But he said the United States could decrease the risk of nuclear proliferation by joining other countries in reprocessing and developing model safeguards.
The main problem at AGNS since President Reagan lifted the ban is the lack of a commercial market for reprocessed plutonium, which is not ready for use in a reactor. Carters decision also slowed development of facilities to cimvert reprocessed plutonium into fuel for commercial reactors.
In recent years, the nuclear industry has experienced a slowdown that left a ^ut of uranium. Prices dropped, and the urgent need for reprocessing dropped with them.
Because the plutonium market would depend on federal decisions, plant officials say tbe federal government should be involved at Barnwell. The federal governments willingness to get involved will also determine whether plutonium fuel plants are developed or breeder reactors like the propci^ Clinch River Breeder Reactor project in Tennessee are constructed, said Buckham.
The Reagan administration is hung up on It must be private without thinking why it cant be totally private, he said. Everybody realizes closing it is the wrong answer. But our owners in good conscience cannot continue to pour money into the project.
One of toe problems was that we got (too far) out in front in our thinking and perceived a more rapid implementation of nuclear energy than turned out to be necessary. TTiere were grossly incorrect forecasts of the rate of ^wto of oieigy demand.
Bamweli was nofthe first attempt to bring eommotial reprocessing to this country.
The first plant in West Valley, N.Y., operated for five years after its start in 1966 but shut down when new fieral regulations Imposed prohibitive costs on toe owner, W.R. Grace Corp. Tbe second plant was built in Morris, Di., but never opened because of problems that turned up in tests as it geared up to operate.
The Barnwell plant is the only practical opportunity for commercial reprocessing in the United States in tbe next 10 years, Laughon told industry officials at a meeting in Vail, Colo., eariier this month.
LaugiKMi, director of DOEs Office of-Spent Fud Management, acknowledged the inability of govemmoit and indudry to work together was a major roadblock to rqHOcessing. But he predicted commercial reprocessing is inevitaUe.
A variety of plans for saving the Barnwell plant have been bandied about by utilities and companies in the nuclear industry. Among them are converting it into an international plutonium storage facility or operating it as a demonstration
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33 Homestead 34MorseE 3fGoad 37 Property transfero-38Clnnical coiqxwnd 41 Wire snags
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CRYPTOQUn* 7-23
BKTLT WTCVYJTL FEYB-LTSYJMW SYE-HTF MLT FVYLTP-HE VKT FWQFK CQEP.
Yesterdays Cryptoqnip: THE TALENTED COOK TURNED MUSICIAN LIKES THE KETTLE DRUM.
Todays Cryptoquip clue: K equals H.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in vdiich each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is aconnplisbed by trial and error.
e 1W3 King Fenturcs Syndkiti. Inc
Florida County Is Stung Again By Corruption
LAKE CITY, Fla. (AP) - After World War II, it was prostitution. Later a circuit judge was charged with using his office as a racketeering enterprise.
Lake Citys reputation for public corruption was revived recently when a former sheriffs deputy and jailer were accus^ in a plot to take confiscated marijuana from the countys evidence room.
Theres enough corruption in Columbia County to keep the preachers preaching and the lawyers lying for a long time to come, Lake City Mayor Gerald Witt said five years ago when a circuit judge was indicted on racketeering charges.
Witt still believes that.
1 dont think you ever get them all, he says.
Former Columbia County Sheriffs Deputy Angus Wade Harris Jr. and jailer Harry James Kapes have pleaded innocent in federal court on marijuana-conspiracy charges. They were indicted July 7, along with Jack Leo Thomas, father of a local jailer, who also entered an innocent plea.
Kapes was fired June 10 along with another jailer as a result of an investigation into ie alleged theft of 12 bales of marijuana from the jail compound. Harris left the department in 1982, said Sheriff Steve Spradley.
The sheriff, elected in 1980, expects to survive the scandal and seek re-election next year.
On the surface, Lake City seems an unlikely spot for public corruption. Religion is-strong and politicians tend to be conservative in rural Columbia County, whose population was less than 36,000 in the 1980 census.
Churches battled in the mid-1970s to keep out a jai alai fronton for fear it would bring outside criminal elements to the area.
This is Bible-totin country, said Rep. Wayne Hollingsworth, D-Lake City, among the most conservative members of the Florida House. These people hate crime, especially burglaries and violent crime.
But along with law-and-order politics has been a tradition of lawlessness.
Don Caldwell, publisher of the Lake City Reporter, said the town was once known for prostitution, which drew customers from nearby Gainesville, home of University of Florida.
Longtime Sheriff Ralph Witt, known as High Sheriff, resigned in 1967 after the Florida Senate was asked to investigate charges that he protected prostitution.
State Senate hearings were never completed because Witt suffered a heart attack and stepped down.
In 1975, Lake City Mayor Jim Ward assumed office with a pledge to crack down on crime. But he resigned a year later, voicing concern for his family because of anonymous telephone threats of violence unless he permitted pn^titution and gambling to return to Lake City.
Meanwhile, a new vice had arrived in Lake City -marijuana profiteering. Locals say the town is strategically located for the drug trade because its nestled near the intersection of Interstates 75 and 10, and two other federal highways cross In the heart of town.
Six years ago. Circuit Judge Sam Smith of Lake City was convicted of conspiracy to distribute some 1,600 pounds of confiscated marijuana, sending him to prison for 20 months. He was impeached.
Sams a likable fellow, always has been, Mayor Witt said in 1978. No one treats him like a criminal since he was always quite frank about his illegal activRies long before he was arreted.
In 1978, the FBI described Smiths 3rd Judicial Circuit as a racketeering enterprise, citing alleged bribery, gambling, prostitution and grand jury packing.
After a second trial, the judge drew a 12-year sentence on the racketeering charges. However, that conviction was overturned in 1981 by a federal appeids court on procedural
0rogi|k
MONEY In Your Pocket!
When you need money, cash in on the items that are laying around tt\e houserfems that you no longer use
Our Family Rates
3y|Lnes 4 Days M.OO
Family Want Ads Must Be Placed By An Individual To Run Under The Miscellaneous For Sale Classification. Limit One Item Per Ad With Sale Value Of 5200 Or Less. Commercial Ads Excluded. All Ads Cash With Order. No Refund For Early Cancellation.
Use Your VISA or MASTERCARD
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
Classified Ads 752-6166
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
MISCELLANEOUS
Personals.............
In Memorlafn.........
Card Of Thanks.......
Special Notices.......
Travels Tours........
Automotive...........
Child Care............
Day Nursery..........
Healthcare...........
Employment..........
For Sale..............
Instruction............
Lost And Found.......
Loans And Mortgages.
Business Services.....
Opportunity...........
Professional,
Real Estate...........
Appraisals............
Rentals...............
002
003
.005
.007
009
010 .040 .041
043
.050
.060
000
0S2
.085
.091
.093
.095
100
.101
120
WANTED
Help Wanted.......
Work Wanted .....
Wanted............
Roommate Wanted Wanted To Buy .. Wanted To Lease... Wanted To Rent____
RENT/LEASE
Apartments For Rent , 121
Business Rentals................122
Campers For Rent..............124
Condominiums for Rent.........125
Farms For Lease...............107
Houses For Rent................127
Lots For Rent...................129
AAerchandise Rentals...........131
Mobile Homes For Rent.........133
Office Space For Rent...........135
Resort Property For Rent 137
Rooms For Rent................138
SALE
Autos for Sale...............Oil 029
Bicycles for Sale................030
Boats for Sale....................032
Campers for Sale...............034
Cycles for Sale................ . .036
Trucks for Sale.................039
Pets............................046
Antiques........................061
Auctions ...................062
Building Supplies...............063
Fuel, Wood, Coal................064
Farm Equipment...............065
Garage Yard Sales..............067
Heavy Equipment ..............068
Household Goods................069
Insurance.......................071
Livestock.......................072
Miscellaneous..................074
AAobile Homes for Sale..........075
Mobile Home Insurance.........076
Musical Instruments............077
Sporting Goods.................078
Commercial Property...........102
Condominiums for Sale..........104
Farms for Sale..................106
Houses for Sale.................109
Investment Property............Ill
Land For Sale...................113
Lots For Sale...................115
Resort Property lor Sale 117
YOUR AD COULD BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS
SPACE
ADVERTISE
WITH THE CLASSIFIED
PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE '
July 24. 1983
Pursuant to authority given by Ar tide 5, 95 47 2 of tSe General Statutes of North Carolina to the Commissioner of Labor Notice is hereby given that:
Charles Randolph Thomas. Jr., 104 Martha Loop, Farmville, nC 27828 has applied for a license to
operate a private personnel service located in the cih[ of New Bern. NC to be known as Thomas & Thomas
Personnel Service Any person or persons who wish to protest the issuance of this license should notify the Commissioner of Labor. 4 West Edenton Street. Raleigh. North Carolina 27601, in writing within ten days from above date Written protest fo be signed by person filing the protest or by his authorized agent or attorney and shall state reasons why the license should not be granted.
JohnC. Brooks Commissioner of Labor July 24. 1983
NOTICE TO CREDITORS NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator CTA of the Estate of Clyde L. Stauffer, deceased, late of Pitt County. North Carolina, this is to notify allj>ersons having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 23rd day of January. 1984, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersign-
this the 20th day of July. 1983. Harry C. Pair 104 Commerce Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 Underwood & Leech Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 527 , 201 Evans Street Greenville. North Carolina 27834 July 24. 31. August 7. 14, 1983
WANT
ADS
752-6166
002
PERSONALS
NEEDMONEY FAST?
Call 756 8100 or come by National Finance Company. 300-A Plaza Drive. All loans subject to our liberal credit poUcv
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 giff to be given away weekly, no purchase necessary
WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers. 407 E vans Mall, Downtown Greenville.
010
AUTOAAOTIVE
RENTAWRECK
Rent dependable used cars at low rates and save. 752-2277_
Oil
Autos For Sale
BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar
DONOVAN USED CARS North Lee Street. Ayden, 746-4660. Good used
cars, big and small, all priced to move. Special this week: 1977
Chrysler New Yorker. 2 door, fully
equipped, new parts and tires.
SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford Call 758 0114.
012
MAC
AMC RENAULT Alliance, 1983, air, 4 speed. AM/FM stereo. S500 and assume payments. 1-524-5384 anytime
1979 AMC CONCORD DL WAGON
Power steering, 4 speed. Excellent condition. High mileage. Must see to appreciate. S1450. 752 5027._
,013
Buick
PUBLIC
NOTICES
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator
_ Ingqualil ________
of the EslaVeof ROBERT PARKER, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the
to pi _
undersigned, whose mailing address is Post Office Drawer IS, Greenville. North Carolina 27835-0015, on or before the 30th day of December, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded in
bar of their recovery. All persons In id Estate will please make immediate payment to the
debted to said
undersigned
the 30tn day _ Michael A. Colombo
This the 30th day of June, 1983.
Post Office Drawer 15 Greenville, N.C. 27835-0015 July 3, 10,17,24,1983
undersigned hereby authorizes all
rtrsons having claims against state to present them to the ui
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the EstaTeof EDNA W PAYNE, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the
hi
vl
topi
signed, whose mailing address Is Rt 2, Box 431, Greenville. North Carolina, 27834, on or before the 30th day of December, 1983, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 30th day of June, 1983.
Elmers. Payne Rt. 2, Box 431
Greenville, N.C. 27834 I A. Colombo JjHjTE, CAVENDISH
Attorneys at Law ,,
Post Office Oravrer 15 Greenville. N.C. 27835-0015 July 3, 10,17, 24,1983
INTHEJ
SUPERIOR
NORTH CAR0LI1
.COURT
blVISION
OF THE ELBERT
HARDrE.jSECEASEC
NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the estate of JASPER ELBERT HARDEE, late of Pitt County, North
laivui wwuiiixr i^uriri
Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against fhe estate of Jasper Elbert Hardee to present
them to the undersigned Executor, or his attorneys, on or before January 11, 1984, or this notice will be plead In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.
This6dayof July, 1983 ARDENJ HAPDEE
Route 1, Box 57
trimesland, NC 27837 xecutgr of the Estate of Ji^r Elbert Hardee,
Ga^lwd^lngleton, McNally 8i
Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, NC 27834 July 10,17, 24, 31,1983
NOTICE
Having qualified as Administrator of the eslate of Roy Gorham late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator on or before January 17, 1984 or this notice or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment. This 12th day of July, 1983.
James Roy Gorham 3500 Jekater Court Winston-Salem, N.C. 27105 Administrator of the estate of Roy Gorham, deceased.
July 17, 24, 31, August 7,1983
1969 BUICK LeSABRE Power steering and brakes, air, radial tires, 350 with 4 BBL engine. $1500 or best offer 752 6185
1977 CENTURY SPECIAL V6, 2
door, 1 owner. Exc. condition. New tires. 69.000 miles. $2700. 758-0028
1979 BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruise, power windows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mileage. Make otter. 756 8539.
014
Cadillac
1981 CADILLAC Coupe Deville. Loaded with options. Priced to sell. Call BB8.T William Handley 752 6889.__
015
Chevrolet
CASH FOR your car, Barwick Auto Sales. 756 7765.
1971 CORVETTE convertible, automatic, air, new paint, tires, and rugs. Excellent condition. $7.000/Otter. 1-823 7178
1976 MONTE CARLO, silver and maroon, air, stereo. Firestone 721 radials, 63,000 miles. $2200. 756 3709
1976 NOVA One owner. 50,000 actual miles. Call 752-0675 after 6
p.m._
1978 CHEVETTE - 1 owner.
Automatic. AM/FM, 61,000 actual miles, new tires. Excellent condl-tion. $1900. 756 3974
1978 NOVA, 4 door, automatic, power steering, air condition, 6 cylinder, price negotiable. Call 752 3925 or after 6. 752 6910._
1979 CHEVY MONZA 2 door, automatic, air, power steering, AM/FM $3200 negotiable. 752-8870.
2 EXECUTIVE DRIVEN CHEVROLET CITATIONS
1981 4 DOOR white hatchback, 4 cylinder, power steering and brakes, air conditioning, AM-FM and cruise control. Each slightly over 55,000 miles. $4250 each. Call 753-2631 days only._
016
Chrysler
1973 NEW YORKER, $750. Call 756 8781._
1974 CHRYSLER IMPERIAL LaBron. Power steering and brakes, air, sun roof, electric windows. cruise control, 2 door. $1,000 or best offer. 758-3658._
017
Dodge
1980 DODGE OMNI 2+2 Hat chback. Must sell I No reasonable otter refused. 756 8037 between 8:30 and 5:30._
018
Ford
1965 MUSTANG All original. Restored. See to appreclafe. $4,000.
1978 THUNOERBIRD, extra clean. Call 746 6209.
031
Oldsmobile
039
Tnicks For Sale
1965 MUSTANG Automatic, new paint iob, new wire hub caps. $2200. y56 490anytlmatter7:3Qp.m.
1975 OLDSMOBILE OMEGA V8. power steering and brakes, air. [ AM/FM cassette. $1700. 752 2331 I after 7._ i
FORD COURIER. 1982 $4800 Call atterSD m . 756 9886
1976 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME Loaded. Real clean. New radials. 752 4080 or 756-8759
TRUCK COVERS Seahawk and Cobra Camptown RV's Ayden. 746 3530
1980OLDSA6OBILE CUTLASS LS, 4 door. V6. Excellent condition High mileage. $4.200 negotiable 758-4491.
1966 CHEVROLET TRUCK Fair condition $150 746 4052
1966 FORD VAN. chrome wheels, new tires, rebuilt engine, inside fixed up nice for campirtq 757 0307
022
Plymouth
1972 DATSUN PICKUP Excellent condition 756 8288
1975 PLYMOUTH FURY 318 ine. beige. i owner. 74.000 miles.
engine, beige. $900. 746-23
1980 PLYMOUTH 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.
1973 TRIAXLE CHEVY 15 yard dump Call 746 3296
1974 TOYOTA truck in good condi-tign Coll 757 3pi4
1979 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER, 4x4. immaculate condition. Call Washington. 946 4924 days, 946 7971 nights/weekends
1981 T 1,000. Excellent condition. 32.000 miles. $4200 negotiable. 355-2339 after 5._
023
Pontiac
1969 MUSTANG Clean, original. Excellent condition. 758 0495.
1970 MUSTANG, power steering, automatic transmission, air conol tioning. good condition. 756-0801 after 5pm.
1973 FORD WAGON Power win dows, steering, and brakes. $1500 or best offer. 756 7209.
1975 FORD GRANADA, 1 owner, air, excellent condition. 746-2624 after 5 p.m.
^9 78 FORD CHATTEAU
Customized Van. Refrigerator, air, U shaped bed and table. Econo 250. $4995.757-3111._
019
Lincoln
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL, 1966
Very good condition. Call 758 7708.
020
AAercury
PHOENIX, PONTIAC, 1981 3.670
miles 4 door, radio, good mileage Call 752 4104_
1978 BONNEVILLE, blue. air. AM/FM stereo. $3100 or take up payments. $139 month. 758 0611
1980 PONTIAC SUNBIRO - Light blue. Air. AAA/FM, power steerir\g. 4 spe^. mint condition. Negotiable.
1982 PONTIAC WAGON. $8.000 Call after6o m , 756 9886_
1980 BLUE 4 wheel drive Toyota truck short bed. $3500 negotiable Call after 6p.m. 795 4419_
1981 DATSUN air. AM/FM
1981 FORD F100. 6 cylinder. 3 speed with overdrive. AM/FM, power
steering, low mileage. $4695 757 0222 or 752 44
on gas.
1983 AAAZDA truck Phone 752 5220
040
Child Care
AFTER SCHOOL CARE for 3rd grade boy. Prefer someone caring for boy/s same age. Win dermere/Cherrv Oaks. 756 0322
024
Foreign
DATSUN 310 GX 1980. Excellent condition. 4 speed, air, sunroof, 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 1 549.
TOYOTA SERVICE, 4 cylinder tune special $20. 4 cylinder valve adjust $14. 5 years experience Toyota East- Befl's Fork Garage, 756-3:
1965 VOLKSWAGEN, almost com iletely rebuilt. Rebuilt motor. 1200. Call 752 5596 aHer 6pm.
1968 VOLKSWAGEN BUG Needs work. Price negotiable. 752 2331 after 7
1969 VOLKSWAGEN BUG Newly rebuilt engine. Call 756 7021
1971 VOLKSWAGEN Rebuilt engine and carburetor. New starter rerv and tires. 752 1134
1972 MG MIDGET Good condition. Have to see to appreciate. Phone 758 7259_
1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUS Looks and drives good. Fold down bed and table Asking $1095 752 1037_
1 973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good $1700 Call 758 2300 days
1973 OPEL GT 28 miles per gallon Very good condition. $2.000. 975-2527. Washington._
1974 FIAT 124, 4 door, 4 cylinder. 4 speed. AM/FM cassette, good con dition $650 756 9034
MOTHER OF 2 wants to keep 1 or 2 children in my home near Industri-al Park- I love kids! I Call 752 3290
WOULD LIKE to baby sit in my home Monday through Friday Phone 756 1057_
WANTED: Mature lady to keep smaJI child in our home 758 6659
046
PETS
AKC REGISTERED GREAT Dane
pups Championship blood line. Call anytime after 5. 1-442 4517
AKC REGISTERED Siberian Huskie pups Price negotiable Call 792 1409
BORDER COLLIE PUPS Registered, working parents, champion bloodlines Excellent stock and companion dogs. Whelped June 21st. $125. Tupelo Ranch. Robersonville, NC 57871. (919)
795 3604__
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 after 3 30
DOBERMAN PUPPIES - Red. black and rust. Male. $85 Females. $80. 749 4741 _
DOBERAAAN PUPPIES 4 red. 2 black $75 each 752 4609 after 6.
FREE PUPPIES, half Lab Call 524-5430, Griftonaffer6o.m
GERAAAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES AKC temales. $75! 752 3735_
051
Help Wanted
I'LL KEEP IT A SECRET that you are looking! I have an exciting Bookkeeping position waitir>g for you Salary negotiable $10K $12K Call Gertie. 758 0541. Snelling & Snelling Personnel
INSTRUCTOR, Electrical Installa tion and AAaintenance Candidate must have a minimum ot a Voca tional Diploma Primary responsi bility will be to provide a training program in the basic knowledge, fundamentals and practices in volved in the electrical trades In addition, the instructor will be required to recruit, advise, and assist in the placement of students Five years practical work experi ence preferred Industrial and Electronic experience preferred
Position available September 1st . (d ft ployment Security mission. Williamston. NC 27892
Applications accepted fhru August 3 to Employment Security Com
Martin Community College an Equal Opportunity/Affirmativ Action Empfover_
INTERIOR DESIGNER Take charge individual with strong background in interior design Can Gertie. 758-0541. Snelling 6 Snelling
JOURNEYMAN PAINTERS NEEDED
Wages up to $7.(X) per hour depend ing on skills. Apply at A 8 Whitley Inc aHer 4 30 p.m , 1311 West 14th Street, Greenvifie. NC. 752 7131
LABORER I: Applicants must have basic skills in appliance, building and grounds repair and maintenance Previous experience re
3uired Must have a valid NC rivers license Equal Opportunity Employer. Starting salary $8,091 Applications being taken at 1103 Broad Street, Greenville Housing Authority, until 12 00 noon on July 27. 1983_
LIBRARY ASSISTANTS 2 part time, 1 full time. Assist patrons at public service desk Require some college training Experience helpful Job descriptions available at Sheppard AAemorial Library. 530 Evans street, Greenville Apply in writing only No phone calls.
LHASA APSO, 2'3 years old. AKC registered. $50. Call 756 0010.
1974 AAA2DA RX3. 49,000 actual miles, air, Michelin tires. r>ew paint iob $1200 756 3241
1974 TOYOTA Stationwagon $250 756 1788_
1975 FIAT 124 Spider Convertible. 5 speed, 55.000 miles, AM/FM, $3506. Days 823 2646, Nights 752
1975 OPEL Body in excellent con dition. Needs some engine repair. $200. 757 1633
1976 DATSUN 710 stationwagon. automatic, air. $1800. Call 758 6042 after 7 p.m._
1976 MAZDA MISER 4 door, 4 speed. 88,000 miles. Good condition. $TlOO. 758 4625.
1976 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe Automatic $1100 746 3502
1976 TOYOTA CELICA liftback, air. AM/FM casseHe. Asking $2500. 757 1353._
1977 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
Good condition. $2400. Call 746 6483. 1979 COROLLA Craig AM/FM cassette. $2500 negotiable. 746 4014.
1981 ISUZU. 4 door diesel, air conditioned, AM/FM stereo, automatic, white with red velour Interior, low mileage, approximately 40 miles per gallon, sacrifice $4495. 757 0222 or 752 4470
1981 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA 5 speed, air, digital AM/FM 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. 756 7499
1982 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT LS
Diesel. AM/FM, air, low mileage, like new. 758 6659
626 AAAZDA, 1982, 4 door sedan Can see on Saturday at 102 Carlson Street, Westwood area._
030 Bicycles For Sale
ADULT 3 WHEEL bicycle with booster motor. 756 2446
RED RALEIGH 10 speed bike. 1 year old. Rarely usm. Excellent condition. 757 I02i.
032 Boats For Sale
SAILBOAT NEWPORT 17, with cabin, trailer, new 5 horsepower Mariner motor, $3500. 758 3608
ll'/i' PLYWOOD BOAT with 1 trolling motor. 48 month battery, 1 battery charger, 2 seat cushions. 2 paddles. 1 boat cover. All like new! Call 758 1316._
17' BARBOUR BOAT, 135 horse power Mercury, trim tilt, tilt trail er. $900 or best offer 758 2128.
1978 BONITA Open V 17'. 85 Mercury Really nice! 825 4931.
23' O'DAY 9.9 outboard, VHF, shore power, extras. Must sell! 756 640^_
23' SPORTCRAFT BOAT
Inboard/Outboard. Loaded with extras. Galvanized trailer. Like new. Call 752 7474 after 6 and weekends.__
5 HORSEPOWER OUTBOARD -
used only on small sailboat in fresh wafer. $225. 756 5027 after 6._
034 Campers For Sale
cox POPUP CAMPER Contains sink, icebox, water and electrical connections. Sleeps 6. Good tires with extra spares. Needs new canvas top. $600 756 8492 or 752 5124._
NEW JAYCO POPUPS Close out prices. Camptown RV's, 746 3530. TAURUS CAMPER, folly self con tained. sleeps 5. $3800. Can be seen at 1314 North Greene Street._
TAURUS 1977 . 24' Sleeps 8. Rear bath. Air. Awning. Excellent condi-tion. $4995. 756 7587
TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and ^rtsman tops. 250 units In stock. O'Brlanfs, 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 after 6 p.m.
1977 16' COACHMAN trailer. Air condition, roll out awning. Excellent condition. Reasonable. 753 3718._
1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self contained. $5300 ngggtlflblg. 7^6 ;5?9.
1979 N0A6AD 21', factory air. like new, on Oceanfront lot at Emerald Isle. Call 756 7765 days, 355 2070 nights
27' HOLIDAY 5th wheel will trade. May be seen at Hastings Ford.
7M-6582.
036
Cycles For Sale
MALE DOBERAAAN 5 months old. brown. $100. 746 4052_
PITT BULL BOXER puppies. Brindle and fawn. $75 7S8 3276 or 758 0041_
RAT TERRIER puppies. Will be weened July 31 $50 each . Call
SCHNAUZER-YORKE I' j months old female. $100. :all 752 7194
5 PLOT PUPPIES, 6 Plot, and walker. 747 5834
051
Help Wanted
ACCOUNTANT CPA or CPA candidate with 1 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
ACCOUNTANT FEE PAID Must have 2 years of experience with a degree. Income and sales tax
background a plus. CPA certificate helpful Fee paid $13K $25K Excellent benefHs. Call Ted, 758-
0541. Snelling 8, Snelling Personnel.
AGRONOMIST 14K Must have degree and be familiar with all aspects of field crops and soil. Excellent benefits Call Judy 355 2020, Heritage Personnel.
ARE YOU READY...
To take that important step that will lead to financial success? We have an unusual sales opportunity which can mean $15.000 - $20,000 or more your first year. Excellent training program for the right person. Call for appointment:
Mr. Johnson Monday-T uesday-Wednesday 9a.m. -1 p.m.
758-3401
ASS ISTANT AAAN AGE R I f you are at ease with people and would fit
into plush surroundings this company wants your gooa skills. Must have experience in foods. Call Ted,
758 0541, Snelling 8, Snelling.
ATTENTION: QUALITY LIFE AGENTS
Suffering from fhe replacement blues? Solve your money problems by looking at a mass marketing
iroduct that is sold by an A plus Best rated company that is having it's finest year yet in 44 years. Send resume to:
JOHN FLOWE PO BOX 12W RALEIGh"nC27605
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 ana overhuafdiesel engines utilized in diesel powered farm equipment, trucks, autos, boats and inaustrial equipment. In addition, the instructor will be required fo recruit, advise and assist in the placement of students. Practical work experi ence required. 5 to 10 years work experience preferred. Industrial and farm equipment experience required. Position available Sep
tember 1st. Applications accepted fo August lOfn fo Employment Security Commission. Williamston, NC 27892. Martin Community College as Equal Opportuni-tv/'Affirmative Action Employer
AVON REPRESENTATIVES have
summer fun with the money they earn during hours they choose. Work in your own neighborhood. earn up to 50%! Call 752 7006._
BANK TELLER Prior teller expe rience required. Apply in person at Pgop.les. Bank, GrgenvllLe^
BEGIN $255.80 WEEKLY National Distributors needs person for full or part time work. For application mail a self addressed stamped envelope to J F , PO Box 416, Grimesland, NC 27837.
BODY SHOP MANAGER needed Excellent salary and benefits. Apply to Herbert Powell, Hastings Ford. 758 0114
CASHIER
Convenience . store. Good atmosphere. Steady employment. Apply at Dodges Store. 32(19 South Memorial Drive._
DENTAL ASSISTANT WANTED
DIRECTOR OF ELECTRIC
Utilities: To supervise operation.
planning and 'maintenance for Municipal Electric System serving 3,500 customers. BSE E/PE with
experience In municipal operations, load management, substation and systenri analysis preferred. Salary open. Send resume to: Town Manager, PO Box 217, Ayden, NC 28513, An Equal Opportunity Employer.
BULTACO 125, brand new engine, electronic Ignition, great enduro bike, fast, many extras Call Pete
EXPERIENCED Word ProcesjWi^
Iter. 'Call for an
pointment.
needed on Wang, Lanier and II____
DIsplaywrlter. Call for an ap-
1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757-0451, ask for Mr. Carrawav.
1975 MERCURY AAONARCH, 4
door, 6 cylinder, 3 speed, AM/FM, condition. $800. 75^9034.
flS&sLi
many efter5,7,58QM.4
1970 HONDA TRAIL 70. Good con diflon. About 1500 miles on enlgne. Good gas mileage. Call after 6 p.m., 752-48/7 and anytime weekends.
Manpower Temporary Services
118Reade Street
757-3300
1973 SUZUKI GT 550 K Very good reliable transportation with extras. $625. Call 355-6125.
EXPERIENCED C(X3K to work nights and weekends In local
1974 HONDA 350, 4 cylinder, all extras. Excellent condition. $550 or best offer. Mr. Brown. 756-0982 after 5:30._
seafood restaurant. Apply In person Seafood, Monday be tween 1:30 and 3; Tuesday 4:30-6.
at Fosdlck's
No phone calls please.
1976 HONDA CJ9125. Good condition. Needs work. Best offer. Call 756 2399 after 4
EXPERIENCED HAIR STYLIST needed full or part time. Excellent working conditions and good benefits. Call days 355 2076. nights 756 6544._
1977 MOTTO GUZZI Italian built touring bike. Wind jammer and molded saddle bags. Only 3.300 miles. $2100. Call 827 5626 after 5
1980 HONDA CB400T Good condl tjgn. QqI! 752 564.7afte.r^.jn.
1981 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 400
Custom. Showroom condition. Serious inquiries only. Call 758-7345 after 6 p.m
1981 YAMAHA 250 EXCITER 5 eed, electric, .1,550 miles. Excellent condition $800. 752 2331 fler 7_
039
Trucks For Sale
EXPERIENCED greenhouse grow er. Must be willing to work. Call 758-5757 for appointment
FEE PAID COST ACCOUNTANT
Excellent opportunity for person who has 2 years experience with computer background. $18K $22K Super benefits. Call Ted, 758-0541, Snellirio 8, Snelling Personnel
FLORAL DESIGNER Experience necessary Send resume to Design er, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC
FULL OR PART TIME waitress needed at Szechuan Garden. Waltressing experience required. No phone calls Application forms given out 3 5 p.m
LOCAL A6ANUFACTURER ot pre cisin, molded rubber products has an immediate openii^ tor a Quality Control Manager The successful candidate should possess the follow ing minimum requirements: a 4 year college degree with emphasis in math to include statistics, a minimum of 2 years Quality Control and mana^rial experience Resume should be forwarded to GSH Corporation, PO Box 37, Snow Hill, N C 28580 Equal Opportunity Employer
AAAINTENANCE PERSON needed Must be knowledgeable in all areas of general maintenance including plumbing, heating, and air condi lioning. Reply to Maintenance Person, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834 _
AAANAGEMENT Climb the ladder with a progressive company Outgo ing person with good ability and a background in restaurant groceries or retail business will land you this super position. Advance into cor porate management positions Call Ted, 758 0541,knelling 8. Snellino
MANAGER
person for to
Money motivated Iqp spot with outstanding company. Must have retail sales
menf skills. Position local, no re locating Call Gertie. 758 0541. Srtellino 6 Snelling Personnel._
MANAGER TRAINEE need trainee for Butler's Shoe Store. Apply in person at Pitt Plaza. Greenville, NC_
MANAGER TRAINEE Take charge! If you have what ii takes to
supervise people in store operation for well established cornpany, don't miss out on this one! Call Gertie,
758 0541, Snellino 8, Snellino.
just
change your job. change your life! If you have what if takes to motivate employees and an imagi native ideas. I nave a firm that is exploding with expansion. Call Ted,
758 0541, Wiling A Snellino_
MANAGER WANTED for automotive parts in business Must have knowledge in parts and busi-rtess. and be able to deal with the public. 752 6124.
MECHANIC AND SALESPERSON NEEDED
Due to the increase in service business and a future move to the By pass, we are in need ot an experienced mechanic and an experienced salesperson. Excellent pay
Ian and benefits. Apply to:___
Jrown or Robert Starling at Brown-Wood, Inc., 1205 Dickinson
Ave.
MISS LILLIE LANGLEY is looking for someone to live In with her, but work wherever they wish I have two rooms for someone to live in. I prefer a women or girl between 21 or 25 or an older woman. Address 2103 Pendleton Drive, Greenville.
OVERSEAS, Cruise Jobs $20.000 $60.000/year possible. Call
80S 687 6000 Ext J 8752_
OWNER
OPERATORS
Come grow with one ot fhe largest trucking firms in the industry today. If you have a tractor, we have the freight. We offer short hauls, high loaded miles ratio.
bobtail insurance, trips paid weekly, advances available towards trips. Fast loaded turnaround, NO LAYOVERS Call Ike 919 758 6036 or 1 800 682 6574
PART TIME SECRETARY (25
hours). Must have excellent typing and handle a variety ot duties Send resume to P O Box 1 704,
Greenville, N C 27835
PART TIME TYPIST Work Only 20 hours per week afternoons so you can sleep late in the mornings. Must have medical experience and type 60 65. Excellent pay. $6.50 to $8.00 per hour. Call Ted. 758 0541. Snell-ino a. Snellino Personnel
PARTS COUNTER PERSON Ford
tarts experience necessary, xcellent advancement opportunity to parts manager position for the riont person. Call 756-4272
PERSON needed to do light office cleaning work evening hours, 5 days a week. Send reply to Job. 1409 North Overlook, Greenville, NC
PERSON WANTED for general office work. Experience required. Apply in person between 8 9 only at Larmar Mechanical Contractors, 756 4624.___
PERSONNEL CONSULTANT If you are a highly motivated individual, a self starter with previous sales experience, we'd like fo lalk to you about joining our staff. Call Randy at Thomas & Thomas Voca-tional Services. 757 1098._
PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO MANAGER
Career opportunity with CPI, Corp., operating studios In over 600 Retail Stores. Successful candidates will participate In an intensive training program covering all phases of our photographic marketing program. Competitive salaries, bonus programs and excellent benefits. Apply In person Tuesday only, 1) a.m. 3 p.m., at the bears Personnel Office m Carolina East Mall. Ask tor Michelle Bokln.
Eoual Opportunity Employer M/F
PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5 yearsexperlence. 756 7961
POSITIONS AVAILABLE Group home manager and relief personnel to work In home living situations tor adults with mental retardation. These are manager/instructor positions. Applicants must be 21 years old, high school graduate, able to quanfy tor 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 "
POSITIONS
The Personnel Service Division ot Thomas & Thomas Vocation Service is currently seeking qualified applicants for;
NDT Technician
Secretary Data Entry Clerk Manager Trainee
jales Representative Electronic Technician BankinqOtticer Survey Party Chief Construction Superintendent Field Representative
757-1098
PUBLIC RELATIONS Secretary Good personality and office skills will land this fantastic position. Call Judy for interview. 355-2020 Heritage Personnel.____
RECEPTIONIST Exciting at mosphere with lots of public con
1 lots ot pt personality office skills will land you this job tor you. Call Gertie. 758 (3541, Snelling & knelling Pqrsgnnel._
tact. Pleasant office skills wil
and good his job for
CHEVROLET EL CAMINO 1980 Loaded. Nice truck. Call Leo Ven ters Motors. Avden, 746-6171.
HARDWARE SALESMAN Must have hardware experience. Send resume and income requirements to B R D , PO Box 17137. Raleigh. NC 27611., _ _
RESTAURANT MANAGER TRAINEE Outstanding opportunity for individuals with college background. Degree desired. Op pprtunlties for advancement and a situation where you could own your own store. Starting salary $9500 to $11,000. Potential earnings after once you become a manager will be $25K to $45K pending on tne volume I of business. Call Ted. 758-0541, I Snellino 8i Snellino Personnel, y
D^The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.-sunday, JulyJi ISW 051 Help Wanted
PRINCIPAL POSITION L^ated at
059
Work Wanted
Dobbs School Kinstor NC School lor adiudicated youth Requires valid NC P Certilicate Resume must be received no later than July 27 to E B Hunt. Personnel ManM er Division ot Youth Services. 70S Palmer Drive. Raleigh. NC 27603 EOE AA
RETAIL MANAGER TRAINEE
9K to UK Join the encitinq world Ot retail management Great opoortu nity with large corporation Rapid advancement and super benefits Call Judy 3SS 2020. Heritage Personnel _
REVENUE CLERKCASHIER CITY OF GREENVILLE
To collect and post tees and pay ments from customers tor City taxes, licenses, assessments, and tines High school graduation and experience in computer and cashiering operations required. Must be oondable and be familiar with general office accounting procedures. Starting salary 110,899. All candidates must register with the Employment Security Com mission by July 79 and be tested tor
typing sfcills EOE/AA M/F_
RN'S AND LPN'S Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, Director of Nursing, 963 2111
magician shows for adutts and
children Magic, balloon animalv Call7M SANDING Small carpenter |obs. counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service. 7M 2M8 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 package
WHEN YOU NEED wr grass cut. call Gerald 752 9367 Air sizes of yard work_
060
FOR SALE
063 Building Supplies
DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tir^, need more time? Let someone else do your house cleaning 752 3758.
064 Fuel, Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor
sale J P Stancil, 752 6331_
SALES It you are mature and career minded we have the position tor you This person should have retail and general experience Super company that treats you as a person j 150 $225 per week Re viewed after 6 months, 'j of fee
raid Call Ted, 758 0541, Snelling 8. nellino Personnel._
SALES MERCHANDISER
Housewives, are you pleasant, ar tractive, and get along with people? Why not put your personality to work calling on food stores? Na tional Consumer Products Company has a part time opening. Hours 9 a m to 3 p m., Meinday Thursday, local territory Must provide trans portafion Hourly wages and car allowance Phone 758 3401 between 10 a m and 2 pm, July 25, 1983, ask tor Mr Robinson._
065 Farm Equipment
BULK BARN RACKS to tit Powell and Dixie barns Prices for 10 or more, $20 49 each Clamp bars $3 59 Clips $42 00 for 100. Tines $17 00 tor 100 AAany other supplies tor the tobacco farmer in stock. Agri Supply. Greenville, NC 752-
FOR RENT: 2 Powell Bulk Barns. Located in Pactolus township on State Road 1550 1 mile oft Highway 264 752 4139
INTERNATIONAL 464 gas tract, engine just rebuilt, excellent condition; tractor comes with 3 bottom plow, cultivator, planters, and 6' mower $3500 757 0222 or 752 4470.
SALESPEOPLE
OPPORTUNITY FOR TRAINEES It you're smart, you'll start your career in sales with a first-class company that will help you move ahead fast.
Cleveland Cotton Products has built its success on finding individuals who want rapid professional and financial growth and who thrive on being successful
It you are energetic, drive a late model car and are willing to dedicate yourself to achieving fop income potential, you should talk to us about the opportunity that now exists
You'll be trained to successfully represent CCP. the company that for over 60 years has led the nation in the development of industrial wiping materials and related products used by thousands ot manu tacturers, fleet operators, automotive shops and other com mercial accounts across the country.
Following initial training, you will be relocated to your territory There you will be given additional supervision to enhance your success
We are prepared to hire a new trainee this week. It you're ready to get started now, arrange an immediate interview. Call
Jim Fisher 756-2792 A6onday,1p.m.-9p.m. Tuesday,9a.m.-9p.m. Wednesday, 9 a.m. -12 noon
If unable to call, please send your resume to Mr. Chuck Peters.
Cleveland Cotton Products
P O Box 6873 Cleveland, OH 44101
An Equal
Ogjwtuni^ Employer
SALESPERSON NEEDED Auto sales experience preferred. Excellent company benefits Call 756 4267_
SALESPERSON NEEDED Must have lots of enthusiasm and excellent salesmanship. Good pay, commission. 355 2626
SECRETARY For small chain of preschools. Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone calls please
IRRIGATION SUPPLIES
Transfer punrips 3 horsepower 2 pump $176.66. 5 horsepower r
pump $194 95 Stainless steel pumps in stock also. Sprinkler stands 36" detachable stand $6 99, 36" lawn and garden stand $11.49. Sprinklers start at $6.99. Hoses and fittings in stock. Agri Supply. Greenville, NC 2.3999
LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR, 317 John Deere with 48" mower deck new motor. Call 756-6100
LAWN A40WER ENGINES Made by Briggs and Stratton. 8 horsepower vertical shaft, $239.95. 5 horsepower vertical shaft $184.95. 5 horsepower horizontal shaft $183.49. Sizes from 3 horsepower to 10 horsepower in stock. Others available. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752 3999
LONG BULK harvester for sale. Field ready Call 756 5989.
LONG TOBACCO Harvester with a 4 cylinder diesel engine. Call 758-
ONE ROW POWELL automatic tobacco primer with both heads. Ready to oo to field. 758 1956
ROPE WICK APPLICATORS
Perfect for use with round-up. 4 row (14') $143.95, 6 row tor 30 " rows 05' 10 ") $179.49 Hand held applicators single head $12.95. Agri Supply. Greenville: NC 752 3999
4 LONG BIG BOX tobacco barns. W H Chambliss, Emporia, Virginia, (804 ) 634 2360after 8 p.m.
066
FURNITURE
ASSUME PAYMENTS ot $29.26 on a 6 piece Western living room suit. Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World. 757 0451
BASSETT SOLID WOOD table and
6 Chairs, china hutch and base.
'0451. Furniture
Take over payments on only $67.37 per montfr 757-04J'
World, 28p8E lOttiSt,
BEDDING &WATERBEDS
Shop now during Factory AAatlress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one halt. Next to Pitt Plaza. 355-2626.
BEDROOM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest. Take over payments on only $26,33 per month. 757-0451. Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St._
074
AAiscellaneous
CALL CHARLES TICE, 75^3013, tor small loads ot sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work.
CHEST FREEZER, 10 cubic teet, works tine, $50. Bubble _9uth machine, $15 with keys. Royal manual typewriter, $40.7M-2896
COMPLETE DOUBLE BED. $75 Sofa. $50, Both [n_M0d condition
Call 758 5552 Of 758 _
CRIB WITH MA'TTRESS. $50. In tant todier car safety seat, $25. Maternity and children's clolhes.
CUT YOUR FOOD BILLI Coopon Shoppers Club. PO Bo* 2942,
Greenville
sNJOY NEEDLECRAFTS7 Creative Circie needs part time workers in your area. Must be interested In crafts such as: crewel. needle;point. cross stitch. Will train. For Information and applications - on July 25 - Holiday Inn Holidome, 702 North AAemorlal Drive. Greenville. 9 a.m. to noon
FOR SALE: Dorm size refriga tor, 3 piece bedroom suite, ^9' JkCA 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 kerosm heater. 1250 BTUs. 1 year old. Best otter, (tall 757-3145after 7p.m
FOR SALE: Cast Iron lamp with glass shade. 12 string guitar with case. Sewing machine cabinet, music stand. i(M skeins of knitting yarn, canner. roaster, pressure cooker. Call 758 1995
FRIGIOARE 20 cubic feet frost-free upright freezer. MOO. Kenmgre 800 Washer. $150. Frigldare Custom Deluxe drver. $100. Call 752 2804..
FULL SIZE brass bed with SMiy mattress sat. $500. 757-3414.
GE WASHER and dryer harvest gold, heavy duty. Excellont condition. 2 ladies bikes, regular. Brakes, large seat, rides good. 2 air condi-tioniH-s 1 15,000 and 1 8700 BTU Call 7M-4576.
GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture
Shop Stripping, Repairing A Re^ finishing. (Formerly of Eastern Carolina Vocational Center)
Located next to John Deere
Equipment Company on Pactolus
Hiohwav. Call 75f3509.
HOT POINT FRE^ER
refrioerator. $150.758-*582.
No frost
HOTPOINT portable dishwasher
with cutting board. Used very little. $175. Also light fixtures, curtains, mishap, ?55 ?4T9..
HUNDREDS OF USED kitchen cabinets, doors, windows, ranges, bathroom fixtures, furniture, shelving, display counters, floor tile, lots moi7 FA J Salvage. 2717 West Vernon Avenue, Kinston,
ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off. Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memo-rial prlvT775*-|41.7,
LADIES FOX FUR coat, like rww raised at $500. Bast offer. Call
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
ALL NEW AND just tor you. 1983. 2 bedroom, plywood floars, sheetrock walls, fully furnished and deco-
_ - ly tu
rated, all for a ------
and less than $1X month. 754-9874. Counhy Squire Mobile Homes. 264 BypMS^Greenyille
093
OPPORTUNITY
new Oakwootf homes at our sale$ centers in Greenville and Wilson have bew slashed. Call or stop by todayi^reenville 756 5434. Wilson
NOAAONEYDOWN VA100% Financing
New double wide 3 bedroom. 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of Im than $245 per nrvonth. Also FHA and conven tional financing avaiiablel.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Grawvllle Boulevard 7564)191
IK2 MONEY DOWN VA financing. Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes. 7^4>333_
TrXB'W
FAMILY HOUSING
Stop in and see why we fastest growing Mobile dealer in North Carolina.
we are the
Home
1.Quel^HofT
2.BestPHw
3. Su|^ Service
^-RAffiwfNDFl^ HOUSING 705 West Greenville Blvd. 756-48S..
RANELL OOUBLEWIDE. air. woodstovc, dishwasher. Immacu-lato. Call Tommy 756 7815. 758-8733.
UNIQUE OFFER mobila home. 12x74, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths, underpinned, no lot rent, com pletely set up on attractive country lot. Pay low equity and assume navmento. Call 746-2313 anytime.
USED CONNER AAobile Home. $295 down and take over payments. Call 754 71a,
12.75% FINANCING on selected homes. Call Conner Homes, 756-
gm.
12x60 2 BEDROOMS 2 baths furnished. Oakwood Trailer Park.
55809=
12x65 AUBURN 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, air conditioning, woodstove, under pinning; 12x5 porch with top, 275 gallon oil drum. Excellent ondlTton. $7800. 752 2439
14 WIDES for as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Hpmg$, 756^.1.
1969 FRONTIER Partially turnlshad. $3900. 752 4609 after 6
1972, 12*52, Halteras Folly
turnlshad. Excellent condition. $5500. Call 752 7233
LADIES 18 KARAT yellow gold necklace. Fashion design double layer bottom. AAedium to heavy weight. Heavy saftay catch. AppralMd at $1400, Sacrifice for 3^^gll758mi
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756 4747efter 6 p.m., Jim Hudson
LAWNMOWERS New and used for sale, parts and sarvica, trade-ins accepfed. Rentals on lawn garden and equipment. Call 756-0090 nights and weekends
1972 13 X 65 PARK MANOR 2 bedrooms. 1 full bath, living room, dining room, partially furnished. One air window unit. Must sell! $5.300 negotiable. 746 2784.
1975 CONNER, 12x65, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, unique kithcen/dining area. central air plus extras. 355-2441.
1975 RIVERIA. 65 x 13. Central air, 1</y baths, washer/dryer. 2 bedrooms. Days 823 3646, Nights 752 7390.
1976 ZHYENNE, 12*65. 2 bedrooms, fully furnished with central air. freezer, sun deck, and utility barn. Atlstpg W99nW9ti9b!9- 752 8SlO.
LIVING ROOM SUIT, 4 place Western, $275. Wedding dress, white velvet, $60. Tent, 8x10, new. $75 Qgll 756,_i.7?5
MAGIC CHEF RANGE 4 burnws with clock. 2 years old. $100. 756 2586._
MARGAY PANTHER X raciiM go cart with motor. $450. $756-73 or 756 2550 gpytim^.
AAARY KAY cosmetics. Phone 756 3659 to reach your consultant tor fg<;lglorrg9rgr$,
CALL US AND SEE why people are coming to Tarboro to buy thair complete home furnishings. Call S23&34. 9:30 to 5:30 or by ap oointment.
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. Hedon'tprav
SECRETARY Excellent opportuni
ty for the person with good office skills. If you are career minded this could be the job tor you. Shorthand
or speedwriting skills a plus. Great benefits. Fee n^tiable. $1IK Call Si/fan, 758 054j,fnel!ing& Snelllnfl
^ECRETARY Type well? Excellent opportunity tor a motivated energetic individual who wants a position with advarKement. Call Gertie. 7S8 0541. Snelling & Snelling Personnel
SERVICE WRITER needed. Expe rience preferred. Ability to communicate with public a must. Call 756 4272_
THE BEST JOBS come to Snelling & Snelling. shouldn't you? Give yourself an advantage in the job market. See the pros. We have positions available for secretaries, retail and restaurant management, sales, engineering, accounting, and data processing. Some of these are
fee paid with salaries between $8500 to $45.000 per ye<
Susan, or Ted. 758 0541, Snelling &
year. Call Gertie,
Snelling Personnel.
THE TOWN OF TARBORO is
recruiting a civil engineer in the enginnering division of the public works department. Completion ot accredited college with degree in civil engineer.,ing. Experience in surveying and' engineering design desirable Interested persons aoply PO Box 220. Tarboro, North Carolina 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 Rod TugwelI 756-6810
CENTURY 21
TIPTON & ASSOCIATES
WANTED: MECHANIC/and or body man to work full time in body shop Salary based on commissions. Cair746 405lask tor Henry
WANTED: Persons to install duct work. ExperierKe preferred, but will train. Apply in person at Larmar Mechanical Construction, between 8 and 9 only
7 TO II AND 3 TO 11 positions available tor LPN'sor RN's. Please apply at Oak Manor Nursing Home. Snow Hill 747 2868 Competitive salary
059
Work Wanted
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE Licensed and lully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P StancH, 752 6331
ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK
Carpentry, masonry and rooting. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm
CARPENTRY WORKI Over crowded need room to breathe?? For real savings, call Gary Dancy at 756 1788 tor additions to houses and trailers, as well as new homes, storage buildings, etc. No job too bio or too small
CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprises 756 9123 day, 756-1(X)7 night_
CLEANING SERVICES available for churches, office buildirms. stores, theaters, banks, etc. Call 746 4240 from 9 a m. 9 p.m
FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood
and metal. Equipment formally ot Dip and Strip All items returnee within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques
Call lor free estimate. Days 756 9123, Nioht 756 1007
GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341
HAVING A PARTY? Hire a iug gler. Great for kids parties. Call
I DO ODD JOB Services. Yard work, window cleaning, etc. Call 752 4942._
LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and_ deliver. All work guaranteed Call 757 3353 after 4 p m ., weekends anytime._
COUCH FOR SALE In excetlent
condition. $90. Call 758-9684._
FOR SALE, gold queen size hide a bed sofa, $150. Loveseat ^ze 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 103 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 pKone and call 757 0451. We finance in our store. Remember the 'Furniture King' will not be urtdersold et 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 Toth St. or phone
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 ancT 3 tables. Only $29.26 per month at Furniture World, 3808 E 10th St. Phone 757 0451.
MICROSCOPE ANO LIGHT Bosh and Lomb, excellent condition, $400. Autoclave-777~$150. 752 0973
MOVING, MUST SELL SMrs heavy duty washer, $150. Candlelight wedding gown and veil, best offer. Bedspreads, furniture, much more. 752 3949 after 4:30
^VING Sears sldmb^^e. frost
________________ __jlgne_
automatic icemaker installatton.
free refrigerator and deep freeze
combinalion, designed lor
color almond, like f^, only U75.
woodgrain design more.ondv?l65.7S6g4fe
19" portable color ____________
latea woodgrain design and much
CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center. West End Shoeing Center And
Dickinson Avenue.
NOW FORMING - Christian band. Need backup singers, guitar players, drummer, pianist. If Inter ested call 757-^ between 8 5 ot 756 4155after 5:30
OFFICE FURNITURE: 7 arm chairs; 2 armless chairs; I bench table; 1 walnut end table; I AB Dick copying machine and stand; 2 metal bookcases; 1 time clock; 2 bucket chairs. All good condition. 75SSZ
REFRIGERATED TRUCK - 69-Ford truck. Motor no good. Re: frigerated cooler works like new. Wheels on and can be moved easily. Price negotlalbe. Call 746-3931 after
Aajn
SEARS CRAFTSMAN LAWN
tractor. 8 horsepower, 33" cut, headlights. Very good condition -New banery.$6o6. 635607
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI.Rent sharnpooers and vi Tool Company
I vacuums at Rental
SHARP. SONY A GE closaout sale now at Goodyear Tire Canter, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at fM
SNOOPY TWIN bedspread with
tillow sham and curtain sat. $50. lectrolux shampooer. $100. 756-7?2fl9r752S59gfiytlmt=
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
TWIN BED with new Serta box springs and mattress Maple bookcase headboard. $125. 756-42^.
067 Garage-Yard Sale
INDOOR/OUTDOOR yard sale
everyday at Old Fairground, Moo-y Frida until.
da
day from 9 to Saturday, 7
072
LIvesttxk
CHICKENS FOR SALE Several varieties Call 756-4933._
HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman
Stables. 752 5237.
LEATHER REPAIR
North Hills Saddlery, 746 2134. REGISTERED APPALOOSA Gelding, rides English or Western; also Thoroughbred Bay Mare, been hunted and shown successfully.
ZW.3821.
2 NUBIAN GOATS, Unrege.
Excellent pets $25each. 752-0304.
073 F ruits and Vegetables
BUTTER PEAS, $6 a bushel. Corn, 90< a dozen B 8, B You Pick, Hassell. 795 4646.
PEACHESM Excellent for freezing You ptcki Finch
Nursery
ling.
and
ry and Peach Orchard. 3 miles North of Bailey, Highway 581 North. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 235-4664,
FRESH BUTTERBEANS and corn. You pick Butterbeans $12 a bushel, corn $1.00a dozen. 746-6298.
074 Miscellaneous
A TODDLER CAR SEAT; JC Penney bedspread and matching
curtains 757 ^7.
A 2 SEATER ULTRA LIGHT ridel All day Saturday and Sunday. Cost $20 per person. For more informa tion, call 746 4878or 355 2970
AIR CONDITIONER, GE 15,000 BTU $250 756 4158
ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air
conditoners. freezers, renges, washers and dryers are reduced for -uick sale Call B J Mills, lufhorized Appliance Service, 746 2446 at Black Jack.
ATTENTION LADIESIII Size 6 to 10 Petite Exclusive estate sale. Designer dresses, evening gowns, beaded and imported wool sweaters, lounge wear, pant suits, cashmere coafs some with fur, hats, silk and wool scarves, elegant shoes - 6Vj B, many dress gloves, lingerie All in excellent condition. July 27 10 to I. Clothesline at
Jarvis Church
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 7A3 973i
BUYING-INSTANT CASH
TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold & silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewrit ers, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games & cartridges, power tools, musical Instruments, microwave ovens video recorders, bicycles. We also loan $$ on above Items. Southern Pawn Shop, located 405 Evans St., downtown. 752-2464._g_
STEREOCITY
Now open Marantz-Sansul-
featuring Sharp-and other
brands. We offer quallly components and match systems at discount prices. Financing available. Call 757-0451, located 3808 East 10th Street.
A Division ot Furniture World
STEREO SYSTEM. MCS separate componants. Receiver, turntable, tagi^^k. 3 speakers, like new.
TOASTAAASTER DELUXE broiler oven. Good condition. $15.752 1231
USED AIR CONDITIONERS Approximately 10,000 BTU - heat and air condition. 220 current. Price $135. New Independent Warehouse.
TSgjaiL
USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re^ trigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb-ing, an^otectrlcaljli!rv|ce 752-9333.
USED FILING CABINET, legal size; usad overhaad projactor, bookcase, adjustable shelves, desk, secretarial chair. C^all 758-3761 nlohtsor757 H9idavs
JtANTED: Used 8mm projector. v97S.^.4PYtJmt.
WASHER, $40. 2 SMted bike, $30. 1 seated bike, $30. ^frigerator. $30. Z4&2ZM
WASHER/DRYER combination. $250. Call 355 2340anytime
WATER BED mattress, liner, heat-ftr.Jiflri;9:?i9
WEDDING GOWN - Size 7 8. Veil and crinoline. Excellent condition. tM,7ai9777 9ft9r7pnri
WHIRLPOOL AIR conditioner. 5,000 BTU, in excellent condition. $100. Call aftersom. 756-0994.
WONDER WIZARD pin ball machine. Call 756 9886
WOULD LIKE to buy usad window and central air conditioners that need reoalr. 746-2446
1 WHITE CRIB and 5 drawer chest for sale. $150. 746 6838
120 FOOT SEARS chain link tanca 4' high - $300. One Armstrong oil
-------- 1 condition-$
A1
to MxWV, S/IIV
heating plant, aood condition - ilOO.
Cflzg 5yi
18.000 BTU air conditioner. Used 4 mgnths AsKIno $375. 758 0482
19" COLOR TV Rant to own. $23.11 r month. Fornitura World. 757-
19" PORTABLE COLOR TV Excellent condition. Call 754-7044 attar 5:30.
2 FISH COOKERS, assembled burners only, $25 each. 115 volt electric welding machine, $40. Call
electric welding n aHer6:30. 752 U88
075 AAobllBHomBS For Sale
NO MONEY DOWN
July Special Only
SINGLE WIDE....$8z495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995
(Loaded)
Anything ot Value In Trade Boats, Horses. AAonkeys
FINANCE PIANS AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRADEWINO FAMILY HOUSING .._705WastGrwnyll.!govtgyartf
1978 CAROLINA 14x70. 3 bedrooms, 1'/2 baths, partly furnished. Set up in Pinewood Awlle Park in Ayden. Price negotiable. 744-2478.
1979 14x60, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments ot $1M. Call Lawrence afArt Dellano Homes. 756 9841
1981 12x40 CONNOR - Furnished. $800 down and take up payments ot $194.79. 756 4429
1982 TOWN AND COUNTRY, 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, furnished, small equity and assume loan. Call 7?9 437t.?klWl-
1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales. North AAemorlal Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068
1984 REDMAN doublewide. Microwave, stereo, paddle tan, fireplace, garden tub, storm windows, masonite and shingle root with 5 year warranty. $2S,W5. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano
Hornni
24X52 USED doublwide. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Artpg|ian9Hafn9$.T56B4i_
076 AAobilc Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance - the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 753-
2m_!_
077 Musical Instruments
FRENCH HORN, Holton 378. $700. Call?------
gajr753i538.
UPRIGHT PIANO, reconditioned and retlnlshed. Call 756 0728.
USED PIANOS ANO ORGANS Yamahas, Wurlitzers, etc. The Music Shop, Greenville Square Shoooino Center. 756-0007._
USED PIANOS buy and sale. Piano 8i Organ Distributors. 355-6002.
078 Sporting Goods
CASTER SURFBOARD 6x4", single fin with leash. Excellent condition. $150. 756 3345._
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST: 9 week old female Golden Retriever, no collar, white tip on tail, in vicinity of Rotary Street. Reward ottered 7M 7427._
091 Business Services
FREE^STuSATK^g^dirw
and painting. Gary Jones, Paint Pros. 758 4lg. __
093 OPPORTUNITY
COUNTRY STORE & GRILL FOR SALE
GOOD LOCATION Located near Eastern Pines Fire Dept., room tor growth. Selling for health reasons.
355-045 OR 756-3229
FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 31 years. Owner deceased, family has other Intrtitf.C^Tl 758 0702
FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT tor sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, M seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 758 5156atter 5._
1ST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights 2514815
MINIATURE GOLF COURSES De livered In 3 days, outdoors or Indoors. Price $3,900 up. Financing available. LOMMA Enterprises, Scranton, PA 18505. Telephone (717) 344-5559.___
YOUR OWN BUSINESS
EXERCISE B FIGURE SALON tstablished with repeat clients. Profitable. Good second income situation.
MODERN RESTAURANT Brand new facility one year old. Growing volume. Owner has other Inferesf Buy for less than original invast-ment.
ft MEN'S CLOTHING
dutiful shopping center store.
Established many, many years. V^yfjijofltable. Highly confidential
QUICK COPY CENTER Neat as a pin. Established. Well operated. Well equipped. Bargain price.
BARB-QUE ft SEAFOOD Restaurant. This Is a real winner Grossing better than 1750,000.00 yaar-ln and year-out. Well located In fine eastern Carolina city. A money-maker. Priced right on terms.
CONVENIENCE STORES Chain ot
annually situa-tio opera tioi Supervisory man
xcell^nt cash flow
six grossing, almost two million (ally. E
Ver
ugh
agement _
Me. Vary con-f idential situation.
sltua-tion. Very professional a tion. Hugh military market
CARO ft GIFT SHOP Very et tractive shop in shopping canter, (rowing situation. Ideal for wife wishing to work. Illness forces sale. Buy for $5,000.00 plus current inventory.
aHractlvo buslnou aoloctlon of commorclal
have oltwr affracti itMMplus a good marcial krls and
situatl comi land
SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES
wjUs_
BUSINESS & REAL ESTATE OPPORTUNITIES
We have businesses and real estate for sale througlMut Eastern North Carolina includring the toltowing:
Alteration Shop Buildings (commercial)
Car Wash (automated)
Cleaning Service (mobile)
Clothing Store (retail) Convenience Stores (city or country)
Distribution Companies Downtown AAall Dry Cleaner Farms (largeor small)
Figure Salon
Groceries (city or country)
Ice Cream Slvippe Land(alittleoratot)
Laundry
Lots (commercial or residontlal) Manufacturing Plants (large or small)
Mobile Home Park Meat Packiijg Plant Motorcycle Store Printing Companies Restaurants (full service) Restaurants (fast food)
Seafood Company (wholesale) Seafood Mark?(retail)
Shoe Store Store/Grill
Surplus Discount Store Swimming Fwl ft Bath House Tire Recapping Company Video Outlet Wallpaper Store Washerette
and AAANY. AAANY MORE!!
and, if we don't have what you want, we'll find it tor you. We'll also help you with the details of buyiito your own business (including financing).
FOR A CONFIDENTIAL APPOINTMENT, CALL HAROLD CREECH. BUSINESS ft REAL ESTATE BROKER WITH THE AAARKETPLACE. INC 752 3646
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
NIGHT CLUB Eastern NC Prof itable.
AUTO ACCESSORIES and toys. Eastern NC Profitable.
LADIES LINGERIE SHOP -Eastern NC
SERVICE STATION on busy thoroughfare In eastern NC Established over 20 years. Profitable. Priced to sell.
AAOTORCYCLE SHOP - AAajor line. Profitable. Some owner financing. Eastern NC
PIZZA SHOP On busy highway. Eastern NC
PIZZA SHOP - AAorehead City. Profitable.
SHOE SHOP - Greenville. Several fine lines of ladies shoes. Good location. Some financing available.
CANDY SHOP - Excellent location. Eastern NC
CWVENIENT STORE - Eastern
ing.
Very profitable. Some tinanc-
PRINT SHOP Eastern NC Well established, profitable. Priced to sell.
SEA FOOD - Profitable, grossing $500,000. Eastern NC SOme financing available.
NOVELTY SHOP - Greenville. Very profitable.
THE MLM COMPANY - Eastern NC Very, profitable, token investment n>eded, will train.
local management
Plus many others.
CONFIDENTIAL BROKERS
756-0664
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Otmil
Rmptioiibt
Receptionist with a growing group practice. Good salary and fringe benefits. Six months experience as a receptionist and typing skills. Send Rosumo to: Dental Receptionist, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, N.C., 27834.
093 OPPORTUNITY
OWN YOUR OWN Jean or LadlM Apparel store. 380 brand names. Jor^he. Levi. Klein. Zene. $7,900 to $15.500 includes training. Inventory, fixtures and much more. AAr.
RESTAURANT FOR SALE Very
good business. Owner retiring. $t9.500. Bill Williams Raei Estate.
19,
7 2615
RESTAURANT for sale. 100 seat capacity building, land and equipmant. Turn key operation. Less than 10 minutes from Greenville. 758-0702
TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals. Financing. Cot SNOWOr
EN AS
Brokers. 401
mi
FinanciiM. SSOCIATeS, W First Sti
ontact LIcensad treet. 752-
TYPEWRITER - BUSINESS machine - small computer technician. Retired Borroughs employee seeking similar parson to form partnership in repair business. In-^Iries held confidential. Write to Partnership, 305 Pinewood Road, Greenville. NC 27834._
WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them tor ca( with a Classified Ad.
095 PROFESSIONAL
4EY SWEEP Gid Holloman. Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years expenence working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can 3503. rmvllle
CHIMN North
' years experi _ ineys a " tfdYorniahfi?
TOPSOIL AND SANO for sale. Septic tank Installad. Rogers Construction Company, /46-4780,
Ayden. NC
100
REAL ESTATE
TOWNHOMES tor sale. Located near University on wooded lots. The units consists of 2 bedrooms. l'/i baths, fireplace, and large decks. Contact Russell Fleming at days 754-3453; nights 756^._
102 ComnrMrciBl Property
COMIMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month lease required. l?I Clark-Branch, Raal-tors. 754-4334 or Ray Holloman 753-5147._
104 Condominiums For Sal
LEXINGTON SQUARE, 2 bedrooms. I year M. FHA 235 g$$ymgblfi IgWI PhBfW 75^ 79^.
2 BEDROOM ^DOMINIUM. l>/> baths. FHAnS loan assumption at 646% Interest ($296.47 (nonthly paympnt). 335 3394
109
Houses For Sale
ASSUMPTION Only 9','2% FHA! Lovely bedroom, 2 bath home.
intercom system, garage door opener, really nice Icn. Aldridge, ft Smherland 754-3500. Jean Hopper
754-9142.
ATTRACTIVE Contemporary I Wooded lot in nice subdivwon. No city taxes. Excellent floor plan. 3 targe bedrooms, I'/"! baths, oreatroom/fireplace. Heat pump. Tl>/i% loan assumption. Upper $SO's. Call 754-8171. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
30X1 DESK
M69
CMUMimEEWmtH.
Comor of PIN ft OrMn St.
Immediate Opening! FREE ROOM & POSSIBLE PART-TME JOB FOR CLEAN CUT, MALE ECU STUDENT.
Call For Intarviaw Appointment
752-2101
Don Wilfcerson
NEED MONEY FAST??
Call or Come by:
NATIONAL FINANCE COMPANY 300-A PLAZA DRIVE 756-8100
(ALL LOANS SUBJECT TO OUR LIBERAL CREDIT POLICY)
PHYSICAL THERAPY OPPORTUNITIES
Edgecome General Hospital, an affiliate of Hospital Corporation of America, located in Tarboro, is currently seeking a Physical Therapist and a licansad Physical Therapist aide.
Both positions require a N C license and at least 1 year experience in a hospital setting.
Our 127 bed JCAH accredited hospital offers opportunities for growth, both personally and professionally, with our developing new departmental programs for inpatient and outpatient services. Our benefits package includes a flexible Paid Days Off Plan, employees stock options, education tuition rein-bursement and many other company paid benefits including life insurance and retirement. Interested candidates should submit resume to:
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT EDGECOMBE GENERAL HOSPITAL 2901 Main Street Tarboro, N.C. 27888 or cell Area 919-841-71S6 EOE
NEWS BUREAU PHOTOGRAPHER
Needed for Univerelty etafi poeitlon. Muet have proven skills at a photoloumallst with experience in news, feature photography, and dark room expertise for wide range of photographic asalgnments. Creativity and inlative atreaaed in addition to camera work, dark room production, writing of dlscrtptlve material, maintenance of filea. Inventory and records. Salary commensurate with training and experience.
Submit deUUed resume to: PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
East Carolina University
GREENVILLE,
NORTH CAROLINA 27834 919-757-6352
An l.oual Opporii.n.fv Alfirmddi'iAc fiun hmp/ovrr
ECU
109
Houses For Sale
AYDEN
TWO BEDROOMS, living room, bath, dan with fireplace, kitchen, utility room, central air/heat. Beautiful location. $38.0M.
GET MORE DETAILS on this Meal home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, living r^, dining room, large kitchen, utility room. 2 car garage, on large wooded lot. $72,sdo:
Ayden Loan & Insurance Co 746-3761 746-6474
BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home In the country. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal living room apd dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on over I acre (also available tor purchase . 2 adjoining acres). Possibly Federal Land Bank financing. Call June Wyrick. Aldridge ft Southerland, 754^; nights 754-5716._
BELVEDERE Three bedrooms and two baths, beautifully landscaped home on Crestline Boulevard. Several quality features. $60's. Call 756 3S37 after 5 p.m.. except weekends
BELVOIR Cute as can be! Great kitchen with lots ot cabinets aiM large dining area, pine panelled den, 2 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, caiport! $30's. Aldridge ft Southerland 756-3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142._
BY OWNER ll</z% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den, gas heat, central air. fenced backyard. 107 Azalea Drive. 754 *281
BY OWNER New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet. 3 bedrooms. 2 bathv
fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R H McLawhorn. 75T2750 or 975-2488._
BY OWNER Country home with aluminum siding on acre lot. Central heat, 2 bedrooms, living room with fireplace, kitchen has eat in and den area, 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 Ro<M 754 3433
BY OWNER Brick 3 bedrooms.
t/i baths, living room, dining room ifport, 'y ^
lumb, assumable FaXha loan
kitchen, cai. leads to fenced
sliding glass door backyard, heat
WIntervllle. 754 8718.
BY OWNER North Overlook Drive. Assumable 8V>% loan. 1,550 square feet. 3 bedrooms. 1V> baths. Low $40'S. 754 4987
BY OWNER 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
living room, dining room, kitctien, famlTy room, central air. Nice neighborhood. Call 355 2282._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR
SCREENS& DOORS
CL. I Upton C o
109 Houses For Sale
BY OWNEM: EDWARDS ACRES 3 bedroom home featuring greatroom. kitchen with dlni^ area. )Vj baths, utility room, patio,
758 7901 after 4p.m. No reattors.
CAMBRIDGE Great oppopunlty for smart buyer. This i-story 3 bedroom beauty is reduced and owner said "Sell! Don't miss it! Aldridge ft Southerland 756-3500; Jean Hoooer 756-9142._
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMES AWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
STO'sftSSO'f
FARMVILLE Beautiful 4 bedroom home with 2 bedrooms upstairs, two downstairs. 2 full baths-with formal living room and dining room. This home has a rustic den that will
........ storage. Walk-
distence to all schools. Call
make everyone feel at home. 2 car carp^ with lots of ing distance tt today. Low 570's.
A great neighborhood, to schools and shopping W, with all the letesi
BAYTREE A
convenient to sc___________ .
Almost new, with all the latest energy efficient features. Formal dining room, great room and Florida room. Ottered at $74,500.
OWNER FINANCING Located on Stantonsburg Road. 2170 square feet. 3 bedrooms. 2/i baths, prick ranch. Excellent condition: $75,900.
CLUB PINES 846% loan assumption available on this lovely home in Club Pines. Extra large den with woodburning stove. All formal areas, garMe, bullt-ins. intercom system ana much, much more. $62.500.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC. REALTORS 756-6336
Marie Davis... ON CALL... 756-5402
Teresa Hewitt..............756-1188
Sharon Lewis..............756-9987
Ray Holloman ......... 753-5147
Ge^ 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
WAMTEDK!
RNS and LPNS FULLTIME. Salary com-mnsurate with experience. Call 946-9570 for further information. An equal opportunity
employer.
1981 Ford Fairmont
4 door. Light blue, automatic, power steering and brakes, air condition, radio. Like new.
M22.17
Per Month
Based on salM price of $4358.00, *758 down (cosh or trade), amount financed $3800.08. 38 monthly payments, 13.5% Annual Percentage Rate, total of payments $4388.13. Ooee not Include N.C. Sales Tu.
^ UastinbC
Used Car Company Tenth Sesal & 264 By Pass
758*0114 Cireanyde M C 2^34
SOCIAL WORKER
Excellent opportunities for advancement exists in this large Eastern North Carolina state facility for the mentally retarded serving diverse population. BSW/MSW only need apply by calling:
JoeWilbik 919-522-1261, EXT. 5278 CASWELL CENTER KINSTON, NC
Minofitlus are encouraged to apply
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
PROFILE:
FAST TRACK
MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITY...
COME
TO
If you're looking for an opportunity that's significantly different... look to Denny's. As part of Denny's progressive management team, you are carefully selected and thoroughly trained to achieve the highest level of professionalism. The continuous training is second to none in the country. Our firm commitment to promotion from within gives you an outstanding advancement potential. If you have either food service management experience or other customer-oriented, direct managerial background, you should investigate our management possibilities.
More than an excellent salary, Denny's will provide you with a superb benefit package and bonus plan plus fast-track opportunities with one of the most respected employers in the industry.
Openings currently exist in the Atlanta area. To apply, pleaw send your resume in confidence to: DENNY'S, 1119 Travis Straet S.W., Marietta, Georgia 30060.
Equl Opportunity Fmp4orr M F
109 Houses For Sale'iNeLaio < ''reer/,Ut, N l iinday, Juiy24,1983--D-7
ESTATE REALTY CO.
752-S058
most attractive three
t^room home in excellent condi tioo; family room, formal areas, two baths, fully carpeted, carport. Well established nei^borhood near shopping area only S63,SOO
new listing on this three biedroom home in the country on 1' j acre, beautiful wooded lot, family room, formal areas, two baths, two car garage, detached storage building; locatied eight miles west
IMMACULATE three bedroom home on lar corner lot tor only $49,900, fully carpeted, one car
garage, (^k, outside storage uildTng. Possible 8% assumatne loan.
COUNTRY LIVING can be yours in this three bedroom home located approximately 13 miles west, fireplace insert, detached garage, swimming pool.
, Billy Wilson ' 7-4476
Jarvis or Oorlis Mills _753 3647
109
Houses For Sale
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
SIOO's
RUSTIC BEAUTY A touch of country in Windermere. Over an acre of wooded lot surrounds this cedar home built for the warm of heart. Four bedrooms, three baths, cozy kitchen with eat in area and
separate dining room. Garage plus large front porch and wooden decli out back. 121i% loan assumption Call today. Low siOO's
AYDEN Large traditional home availavie across from the Ayden Golf and Country Club. Over 2800 square feet of living space with large family room and game room. 3 bedrooms, 3't baths. Lots of extras plus 2 car garage Walking distance of pool and golf course and tennis courts.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH JNC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Marie Davis.. .ON CALI 756 5402
Teresa Hewitt..............7560188
Sharon Lewis ..............756-9987
Ray Holloman..............753 5147
GeneOuinn . . .:............ 756 6037
Tim Smith ................. 752 9811
John Jackson ..............756 4360
Toll Free: 1 800 525 8910, ext AF43
An Eoual Housing Oooortunitv
CLARK-BRANCH SELLS THREE HOMESAWEEK SOMETIMES FOUR
sso's&tao's
IF YOU'VE BEEN waiting for a loan assumption in Quail Ridge, this Is it. 1432 square feet with 12^% variable loan with payments of $555 per month total. Patio, well land scaped and in front of pool and tennis courts. Offered at $58.500. Sound good It is. Call today, it won't last long. Only two story available until November.
RED OAK 4 bedrooms offered in upper 60's. Over 2000 square feet with fenced in back yard and plenty of room in all large rooms. Recently painted and ready for occupancy.
INVESTMENT POTENTIAL This brick ranch is in immaculate con dition and located in Red Oak. Over 1600 square feet. Presently leased Best offer. Priced in low $60's.
PLAN YOUR BARBEQUE on the patio in this unique and livable plan nearly 1500 square feet. Builder pays points for 12Vj% fixed financ Ing. Complete this fall in excellent location Camelot", exceeds E 300 standards. Call now and select your decor. Offered at $63.800.
LOVELY RANCH on Hillside Drive In Elmhurst. Features formal rooms, kitchen with dinette area, oversized den with fireplace and built-ins, 3 bedrooms, iv^ baths, carpet over hardwood, deck, lovely shaded lot on dead end street. Priced in the upper $60's.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCHJNC.
REALTORS
756-6336
Marie Davis. . . ON CALL. 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
IM's
CLUB PINES Luxury abounds in this new 3 bedroom home completed in July. Wet bar, extra molding and excellent floor plan. Decorated in style. Ottered at $81.600 Excellent financing available at l2'-2% Shaded back yard.
OREXELBROOK Immaculate best describes this 3 bedroom home with all large rooms and spacious back yard not to mention the rear screened porch Over 2000 square feet in one of Greenville's most prestigious areas. New heat pump and roof. Call today. Offered in the upper $80's.
REDUCED and lovely area Located in prestigious Easthaver. on a large wooderTwell landscaped
gious Easthaven well landscaped lot. Traditional 2 story home wifh oversized living room, unique fireplace, den wifh adjoining dining area. Downstairs bath and study with built ins. Kitchen with almost new dishwasher and refrigerator remains. Four bedrooms, 2 baths upstairs. Custom built with cedar lined closet, laundry chute, split gas heat, central air. Reduced to $87.000. Call today.
REALTY WORLD CLARK-BRANCH, INC REALTORS isi-tm
Marie Davis ON CALL
Teresa Hewitt...........
Sharon Lewis ...........
Ray Holloman ....
GeneOuinn .............
Tim Smith ..
John Jackson
756 5402 756 1188 756 9987 753 5147 756 6037 752 9811 756 4360
..............
Toll Free. 1 800 525 8910, ext. AF43
An Equal Housing Opportunity
CLUB PINES A cedar ranch on a nicely wooded lot. Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplace, breakfast area, screened porch. Possible loan assumption. $84,500. Duffus Realty Inc.. 756 5395 _
COLLEGE COURT 2 bedrooms, den. 1 bath. 1400 square feet, large corner lot, garden space. $48,500 by owner. 752-1628 after 5._
COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East. 1740 square feet living area, plus 440 garage, double lot. Too many extras to list!! $74.500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615._
EXCELLENT BEGINNER home complete with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room and eat in kitchen. Air conditionit^ and fully carpeted. $42.500. Call now. Sue Dunn, Aldridge 8. Southerland, 756 3500 or 355 25M
CAMELOT Energy efficient solar heated home with heat pump backup. Lovely floor plan features huge den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, garage Exceptionally nice kitchen Aidridge 8. Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756-9142._
CHARMING is just the word for
PUT EXTRA CASH in your pocket today. Sell your "don't needs with an inexpensive Classified Ad.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY '
109
Houses For Sale
FOR SALE BY OWNER Two bedroom townhouse on wooded lot. Cedar siding with deck. Owner transferred. $45.000. Call days 752 6889. nights 758 9089
FOR SALE BY OWNER Great buy without paying realtor fees. Nice home in Cherry Oaks. Call after 6 p.m. weekdays, 756-8386
GREENVILLE BOULEVARD Perfect location for professional couple! Easy access fo anywhere in
town. Living' room with fireplace. 2 edr
iRshelv
plus deck_________ _______
756 3500, Jean Hooper 756 9143
large bedrooms, office wifh bookshelves, large eat in kitchen, Tus deck. Aldridge & Southerland
HICKORY POINT 4 bedroom house on river front property with lots of frees. House needs work. Great fishing, deck with new bulk head. $10k down, assume mortqaoe. (301) 530 6169_
HIGNITE REALTORS 756-1306
LOCATED OUTSIDE the city limits in Tuckahoe. A proven plan by one of Greenville's best builders! three large bedrooms, two full ceramic baths, den with fireplace, eat in kitchen, two car garam, and pretty landscaped lot! Only $M,000.
LOCATED IN ONE of Greenville's nicest sections! Four bedrooms, three baths, living room, kitchen, den and priced To sell at only $57,000
PASSIVE SOLAR home on Joseph Street in Cherry Oaks. Three bedrooms, two baths, full basement with lots of extras. Built by a builder for himself. Now on the market for $79.000.
MEADOWBROOK boasts this IVj story home with four potential bedrooms, living room, den, kitchen. and extra lot tor only $27,000.
TWO FARMERS HOMES available in the Ayden area. Call for more details.
FIVE ROOM HOUSE in Ayden with hardwood floors and owner financing! Call quick on this one. Only $24.000.
HEAVILY WOODED LOT of one acre located three miles outside the city near Frog Level! This will be sold this weekrOnly $6,000.
HORSE LOVERS Nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath, greatroom, country home. 2379 square foot heated area. Nice 7 stall horse stables all on approximately 3 acres. Lease fort $460 month or buy for $85,000. Available Now
HOW WOULD YOU like to have a brand new home? How does no
down payment and 9.9% annual rcentage rate sound? For ap-intment, call 848 3220 collect. A
percent,
=*athway Home.
LAKE GLENWOOD Beautiful corner lot provides perfect setting for this all Wick 3 bedroom. 2 bath home. Williamsburg colors, lovely floor plan with all formal areas, double garage, hugepatio. Aldridge 8i SoutherTand 7n-3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142
LOAN ASSUMPTION If you've been looking lor a 3 bedroom, 2 bafh home on a wooded lot in a quiet neighborhood, this could be "it'. If you ve been looking for a good loan assumption, this IS 'Tt". 8%
assumable loan with a balance of ^proximately $41,000. Lower 60's. For more details, call Allta Carroll at Aldridge 8, Southerland, 756 3500 or 756-8276 for more information.
COUNTRY HOME by owner.' Wooded lot, 3 bedrooms, V/7 baths, fireplace with Craft stove, patio, fenced in backyard, workshop. By appointment only. Call 756-0552.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ARMY SURPLUS
CAMPING SPORTING MILITARY GOODS Ov(>! (000 D'llerenI (Ipmb Sp* and Used
ARMY-NAVY STORE
1501 S. Evans
THE SHOE OUTLET
Name Brand Shoes at Discount Prices
WORK SHOES
CASUAL A DRESS SHOES
SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY
Next Door To Evans Seofood
1980 FORD FIESTA
3 door hatchback. Tan. 4 speed transmission. One local owner.
'99.85
Per Month
Based on sales price of $3200.00, 700 down (cash or trade), amount financed $2500.00. 30 monthly payments, 14.5% Annual Percentage Rate. Total of payments $2995.50.
Amenca's I Uk-d Car Company Tenth Si eel & 264 By Pass
H
ASTING
FORD
s
758-0114
Greenville N C 27834
TOBACCO FARMERS
PRICED TO SELL
Taylor Tobacco Equipment
2 Rowe Qolf-propelled harvefiO^
2 rowui Mif-propelled
harvesSO*'
2 row self-propelled
harvester
1 New 230 MF, 10 hours, $7000.00 2 row pull type harvesters
2 row pul^l^ijwvester
2 row pull typeharvesters
(6 harvesters, field ready, remaining
Bulk barns (5 Sets SOLD, 1 set remaining)
TraAOtl
Tayibr hig
2 row
I
rvester
high crop sprayer, regularly $23,000. Now $15,000.
Cutter Bars (Tip'n Head) $2000 per row (Many SOLD Several Remaining)
Equipment Can Be Seen At
LUMBERTON SALES CO.
205 E. 1st St., Lumberton, N. C.
CONTACT OSBORNE TAYLOR
Dial (919) 738-2421 Day Dial (919)739-7357 Night
109
Houses For Sale
Look Whafs Home!
New house under construction in beautiful Baytree. Country charm wifh city convenience in this com
beautiful Baytree.
fortable. affordable house with a touch of luxury.
CALL 758-4410
Diversified Financial Services, Inc. or your REALTOR
LYNNDALE Exceptional home features all formal ^areas, 4 bedrooms, 2 full and 2 half baths, office and playroom. Best pri you'll find in this area! Aldridge Southerland 756 3500. Jean Hopp
756 9142
a.
Hopper
NEW LISTING, AYDEN This older home features 3 bedrooms and 1 bafh downstairs and a partially finished upstairs with room for 2 bedrooms and t bath. The large yard, convenient location and 18 X 26 garage are other good features about this property. $27,500. Call Alita Carroll at Aldridge 8. Southerland. 756 3500 or 756-8278 for more information.
OVERTON & POWERS 355-6500
$39,900. Back on the market! Very conveniently located. Private loca tion with room for garden. 2 bedrooms, family room, pretty kitchen.
$30,900. A better buy you won't find anywhere. Payments less than rent. All appliances furnished. Central heat and air. Near university. Make us an offer.
$31,000. NEW LISTING Owner fi nancing available. Save on closing costs. 'Near university. All appliances furnished. It's a great oppor tunity.
$34,500. Here's a great deal! 3 bedrooms, IVj bafhs, garage. Brick with newly painted exterior. Lovely neighborhood.
$42,900. Looking tor a place for your son or daughter who's in school? This is if! Only 8 months old. Beautifully decorated townhouse. All appliances including dishwasher furnished. Located on quiet cutde sac in woods.
$62,900. Seller will be leaving in August. Needs to sell this lovely home. Fantastic neighborhood and location. Children will love the large backyard. Mom and dad will love the spacious interior. Has abundant closet space and large
$M,900. Brand new listing in Elmhurst. This home will sell quickly. Corner lot. 3 bedrooms, great room with fireplace, formal dining room or downstairs bedroom. Great storage area. ERA warranty for one full year.
$65,000. Consider these special features. 1900 sguare feet, custom built home with formal areas, large den, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, hardwood floors, double garage, central heat and air, attic, fenced backyard. Very nice neighborhood.
$79,900. Country estate? This is It! Located on country lane. 4 bedrooms, great room with fireplace, formal dining room, extra large playroom, additional large building which can be utilized tor many purposes. Excellent VA 8% loan assumption._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
109
Houses For Sale
109
Houses F or Sale
PRICESSLASHED!
$37,500 NOW $35,500. Country home with fireplace, newly painted exterior, all appli anees turnished including washer/dryer.
$41,500 NOW $39,900. Kennedy Estates Is the location of this nice home. 3 bedrooms. IVi baths, F central heat and air. totally fenced in yard.
$42,500 NOW $38,500. Take a look at this home. Spread out in this 3120 square foot home. 4 bedrooms, large garage or workshop. Carport
$49,900 NOW $45,900. Located on Stantonsburg Highway. 1900 square feet. Central heat and air. 4 bedrooms.
baths. Decorate Inside to your liking.
$46,500 NOW $44,500. Beautified tri-level condominium near university. 1485 square feet, heal pump, thermopane windows.
$64,900 NOW $62,900. A home with everything. Corner lot,
?ireaf room with .fireplace, ormal dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2baths, double garage.
$143,500 NOW $138,500. We em phasize Make us an offer! This is the best opportunity you'll have to own a home in Lynndale. 3000 square feet. 4 bedrooms, large game room, beautiful solid brick den with fireplace, formal living room, formal dining room, double garage. Large exterior building. 3 baths, heat pump.
OVERTON & POWERS 355-6500
NEWHOMES-$38,000
Recently Completed
3 Bedrooms, IV2 Baths
$1350 Down $435 Per Month Total
Call
East Carolina Builders 752-7194
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SPECIAL Safe
Model S-1 Special Price
Reg. Price $177.00
TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569S-EvansSt. 75-2175
BROWNIE MOTOR SALES
Corner of 14th Street And Farmville Blvd.
Brownie Tripp
Herman Hill
752-0117
1979 Chevrolet Blazer 1979 Pontiac Wagon 1981 FordThunderbird 1977 Mercury Comet 1977 MG Midget
1977 Toyota SR-5 Pickup
1979 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
1980 Datsun 280-ZX GLP 1980 Chevrolet Citation
BRIDGESTONE RADIAL SALE
Until July 30,1983
RD-212
P165/75R13-49.00 P185/75R13-54.00 P185/75R14-57.00 P195/75R14-61.00 P205/75R14-65.00 P215/75R14-68.00 P205/75R15-65.00 P215/75R15-68.00 P225/75R15-71.00 P235/75R15-74.00
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
$1.37 to $2.96 FET. Install free.
ALL RAISED WHITE LETTER ON SALE ALSORECAPS 15.50 & UP WITH GOOD TRADE INHMPORTED RADIALS $29.50 & UP PLUS FET.
QUALITY TIRE & AUTO SERVICE
N. Greene Street, Greenville, N.C. 752-71 77 VISA and MASTERCARD
RESTAURANT
EQUIPMENT
What: ABSOLUTE AUCTION When: Saturday, July30,1983-10:30 A.M. ' Where: 703 Dickinson Avenue Greenville, N.C. (Next to Tysons Furniture Company,
1 Block from Police Department)
Partial List Includes:
Steam Tables S/S Sink Electric Grills Glass Door Refrigerator S/S Tables Gas Fryers Food Warmers 10X12 Walk in Cooler
Hobart Slicer(Auto)
Hobart Food Chopper Crescor Warming Cabinets NCR Cash Register Upholstered Chairs Hobart Mixers-20 qts.*
3 Door Refrigerator 2 Door Freezer
And Many More Miscellaneous Items We Reserve The Right To Add To Or Delete Items. Auctioneer: Gene Langley State License No. 2158 TERMS: Cash Or Approved Check Call:
919-756-4254
'm SafB Buy loused Cars
1983 Pontiac T rans Am
Pewter. T-tops, power windows, cruise control, tilt wheel, stereo radio, S.CXX) miles. Excellent buy.
1983 Ford Mustang GT
Red. T-tops, S.O litre engine, 7,000 miles, fully equipped.
1983 Ford Conversion Van
New. Raised roof, sport wheels, custom paint. Save thousands!
(2)1983 Lincoln Town Cars
Coach roof, leather interior, spoke wheels, like new, low mileage.
1983 Mercury Lynx RS
Fuel Injection, S speed transmission, 7,000 miles. RS package.
(2)1982 Lincoln Continentals
Low mileage, fully equipped. Save thousandsi
1982 Lincoln Town Car
White, red velour interior. 22,000 miles.
1982 Mercury LN-7
3,000 miles, like new, fully equipped, sport package.
1982 Lincoln Mark VI '
4 door. Loaded. 20,000 miles.
(2)1981 Mercury Cougar XR-7
Local one owner cars. Low mileage.
1981 Mercury Grand Marquis
Green. 26,000 miles, local one owner.
1980 Buick Century
4 door. Maroon, fully equipped, new tires.
1980 Lincoln Mark VI
2 door. Local one owner, low mileage, extra clean.
EAST CAROLINA
NCOLN-NERCURY-GMC
West End Circle Greenville. N.C.
109
Houses For Sale
109
Houses For Sale
NEW LISTING Shaded lot, 3 bedroom, I'.j bafh brick ranch. Large family room, also features approximately 600 square feet de tached garage and workshop, i excellent location Call now to see i this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge ' & Southerland. 756 3500. nights
iqh
town, but situated on
STRATFORT Right in the heart of d (
ly area 3 largi bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, carport, plus a huge screened porch! Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142
NEW LISTING $48.900 Spacious 3 bedroom, V/i bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient location. CalT June Wyrick. Aldridge 8, Southerland. 756 3500. niqhts756 5716_
NEW LISTING Arendal Circle, Winterville. Like new. 3 bedroom. 2 bath ranch, all formal areas, plus family room with fireplace, eat-in galley kitchen, finished playroom or study upstairs, pull down stairway to attic and attic tan. $62.900. #585. Listing Broker: Mary Chapin.
CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 756 6&56
RUSTIC CONTEMPORARY in
Candlewick super location for medical school and hospital. This home is like a hunting lodge in the mountains great room with vaulted ceiling and fireplace, lott/bedroom, Ji/j baths, master bedroom with fireplace, one acre lot. Many extras. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142_^_
3 BEDROOM. II3 bath, GE heat pumo, fireplace with insert, pay $13,^ and assume 7>/4% loan. PavmentSOt$305 05 PITI 756 5212
UNIVERSITY CONDO 2
bedrooms. 1Vi baths, all appliances, complete carpenting, drapes, and other custom features Offered below market value to settle estate Call 756 5058._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
C.L. Lupton. Co.
THE CHOICE IS YOURS 3 or 4 bedroom brick ranches with 1'j baths and garages In nice neighborhoods in Wmferville Call 756 1297 or 756 4854__
WESTWOOD Terrific home lovely lot! All formal areas, den with fireplace, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, covered patio, garage Can also be rented! Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500. Jean Hopper 756 9142.
1500 SQUARE FEET plus large porch left of a burned house All new shingles for top turnished Easy to move $3700. 75? 5242
THREE BEDROOM, 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 & Southerland, 756 3500 or 355 2588
RIVERHILLS Lovely 3 bedroom, 2'7 bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat pump Call June Wyrick. Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights 756 5716.
1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room. 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' pool table and fireplace Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7 years old Located 3 miles from Greenville Priced in the $50's 758 0144 or
752 7663
2 BEDROOM LOG HOME in private wooded setting 17 minutes South of Greenville. Serious in quirers Call 524 4782 after 5 p m
RED OAK Reduced and ready for smart shopper! Excellent floor plan, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, detached garage and dog run Aldridge & 'Southerland 756 3500. Jean Hopper 756 9142._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY I CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
1982 FORD ESCORT
4 door sedan. Blue, 4 speed overdrive transmission, radio, air condition, Nice car.
M13.73
Per Month
Based on sales price ol $5000.00, 800 down (cash or trade), amount financed $4200.00. 13.5% Annual Percentage Rate. 48 monthly payments. Total of payments $5459.04.
Amen<d I (ised Cdr Company
Tenth Slreei & 264 By Pass
H
ASTING
FORD
s
758-0114
Gieenviiie N C 27834
Greenville's Finest Used Cars!
(Located At Honda Store)
1981 Honda Accord
Medium green with velour interior. Power steering, 5 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, digital clock.
1981 Cadillac Eldorado
Leather interior, sunroof, all the options.
1980 Volkswagen Sport Truck
Red. 5 speed transmission, like new. Real nice.
1980 Ford Granada
2 door. Red and white, one owner, wire wheels, automatic, AM-FM stereo.
1980 Honda Accord LX
Bronze with velOur interior. Automatic, air condition, stereo with cassette, digital clock, hatch release. Local one owner car.
1980 Jeep CJ-5
Renegade. Blue. Just like brand new.
1980 Buick Regal
2 door. Silver and black. Air, tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo with cassette, power windows, low mileage, one owner.
1979 Honda Accord
Beige, automatic transmission, air condition.
1979 Toyota Corolla
SR-5 Hatchback. Green, excellent condition, 5 speed transmission.
1979 MGB Convertible
Like new, 47,800 miles, green with black convertible top, AM-FM stereo.
1979 Pontiac Lemans Wagon
Automatic transmission, air condition.
1977 Honda Accord
2 door hatchback. Silver, automatic, air condition, low mileage, one owner,
1977 Olds 98
4 door. Blue with blue vinyl roof, full power.
Bob Barbour
HON
3300 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500
1977 BMW320
2 door, red, AM-FM stereo, air condition.
1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Gray. Real nice car.
1981 Honda Accord
Medium green with velour interior. Power steering, 5 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, digital clock.
(Located At Volvo Store)
1983 Renault Alliance
1000 miles. Get a brand new one it a used price.
1982 Jeep Wagoneer Limited
All the options, like new,
1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans
Maroon, maroon vinyl top, fully eyuipped with tilt wheel, cruise control, sport wheels.
1981 AMCJeepCJ-7
Renegade. Hardtop, one owner. In excellent shape.
1981 Volvo DL2SA
One owner. In great shape, hard to find car,
1980 Renault LeCar
Air condition, stereo radio.
1980 Olds Delta 88 Royale
Brougham. Has every option available. Low mileage, like new.
1978 Olds Cutlass Salon
2 door. Runs great, nice car
1978 Chevrolet Monte Carlo
Silver. Runs great, like new.
1976 Ford Thunderbird
Power windows, oower seats, air condition.
BobBarbour
V(MA() \\K Jeep Renault
il7 W. Tenth St./Greenville '758-7200
or maybe youre thinking about a family car-think Plymouth Reliant.
Plymouth Reliant
9.8% APR
or
Up to $750.00 cash rebate (on selected vehicles)
NOW You CAN Afford Americas Most Beautiful Driving Machines!
Joe Cullipher Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge Peugeot
3401 S. Memorial Dr.
Greenville, N.C.
^ 756-0186
D-aThe Daily Reflectur, Greenville, N.t. iunociy, Jmy 4, i^
111 Investment Property
For The Best In
DUPLEXES
Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders 752-7194
111 Investment Property
TWO BEDROOAA hou&e near Uni versity. Needs minor work done. Priced mid $30's. Call days 756 3453. niohts 75A 8343_
GRIFTON 7 brick rental houses being sold to settle estate. Annual income S14.970. Very attractive investment Call W G Blount & Associates 756 3000 Evenings 1 975 317V
SEVEN 1 bedroom units with fireplace near University, 3 years old and tully leased Call days 756 3453, niohts 756 8363_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
113
Land For Sale
9 ACRES - WOODED Near hospi tal 75? 4139. Leonard Lillev._
115 Lots For Sale
MACGREGOd DOWNS 3 5 acres, beautiful wooded. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500; Jean Hop 756 9142._
Topper
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
115
Lots For Sale
LOT FOR SALE. 95x146. Isteview Beach, South Creek near Aurora with or without 1979 mobile home. 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, air. Excellent condition. Nice fruite trees. Septic tank, well, low taxes. Access to the water. For more intormatloncalll 322 5419.
Lowest Single Family Lot Prices In Greenville!
It you are lookin, wooded lots within 1
ing for affordable,
___________ ntheclty limits,
you must see BAYTREE start as low as $11.000.
758-4410
Prices
ONE ACRE LOT between Aydar, and Grifton on State Road 1110. C^all I56JMI_
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
HASTINGS FORD MAKES 13 LUCKY DURING OUR 13TH BIRTHDAY SALE
Any New Ford Car Or Truck On Our Lot During July
NO DOWN PAYMENT NO OUT-OF-POCKET EXPENSE
Through Special Arrangements With Red Carpet Lease
We are now celebrating our 13th Anniversary. Now is the time to take advantage of this money saving opportunity. All you need is approved credit and you can drive away a new Ford with no out-of-pocket expense. Better hurry, with deals like these, our inventory wont last long!
HastngC
jPORD Q
Dealer No 5720
Tenih Sireei & 264 By Pass
Dealer No 5720
758-0114
Greenville N C 27834
JULY IS TRUCK MONTH AT PHELPS CHEVROLET
Over 50 Units To Choose From
Prices Start at
^5995
9.9/c
00
Plus Tax
0 APR FINANCING OR $300 CASH BACK On Selected Models
.GREENVILLE
GM QUALITY SERVICE MRTS
1
GENERAL MOTOiS PARTS DIVISION
1982 Pontiac Trans-Am - Sparkimg red metallic with velour trim. Tilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, power door locks. AM-FM stereo cassette, 10,000 miles, local trade, like new 1982 Pontiac Grand Prix - siate gray with blue cloth interior, blue padded landau top. Extras include tilt wheel, air condition, stereo radio 60-40 split seat, wire wheel covers, 24,000 miles 1982 ChBvrolBt Citation 4 door silver metallic with burgundy vinyl trim. Power steering and Drakes, automatic, air, radio, cruise, clean car 1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wagon - ught jade with cloth trim. Power steering and brakes automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, local trade. 1982 Pontiac 6000 Charcoal with gray cloth trim Power steering and brakes, automatic, air tilt wheel, AM-FM stereo.
1981 Buick LeSabre Beige with cloth interior. Options include power windows and door locks, tilt wheel, air condition, AM-FM radio local trade, only 13,600 miles.
1981 Olds Delta Royale Brougham Dark
blue with velour trim, options include tilt wheel cruise control. AM-FM stereo, wire wheel covers' 33,000 miles,
1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme silver metallic with blue cloth trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio rally wheels, 27,000 miles,
1981 Datsun 280-ZX - 2 plus 2 Bronze
metallic with tan leather trim. Power steering, power windows, cruise, control, automatic, AM-FM ^assette, 38,000 miles, sharp car.
IT
115
Lots For Sale
CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 75-666
CORNER LOT in a country sub division is almost an acre in size and is baaufifully woodad. It has Simpson watar, and It priced at StO.MO. 154
HIGHWAY 43, 5</> miles north of Vanceboro. 1.27 acres plus or minus, wooded, no restrictions. Listed at S5000.1572.
BROOK VALLEY Approximataly /> acre of heavily woooad lot. slopas down to lake in back. Percolation
test has been parformed. 955.
122.000.
HORSESHOE ACRES Two nice lots on Blacksmith Lane. Call office for lot sizes or map. $7,200 and $8,300. 1498.
ROSEWOOD SUBDIVISION Your choice of several beautiful lots in this nict residential area. Drop by the office tor map of subdivision, or call tor more details. #567.
CHERRY OAKS Heavily 156 foot road '
Street. $14,900.
756 7S15, 75f 873?.
'rontage Call T(
woodad.
Gloria
EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount S Associates. 756 3000.
HUNTING RIDGE Large resi dentlal lots. Convenient to Medical Center. 752-4139 Millie Lllley, owner-broker.
LARGE LOT in Baywood. $17,500. Aldridge & Southerland 756-3500, Jean riSwer 756 9142.
LYtmOALE LOT 1 ot the last Call 355 2230._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
115
Lots For Salo
ORCHARD HILL Subdivision. Four beautiful lots for sale by owner. tOOO so. ft. minimum building size. ^-FHA approved. $10.000 firm per lot. Call 752-6715 attar 5
121 Apartments For Rent
THE PINES in Aydan. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, Drestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Mosalay-^rcus Realty at 742i44ifiCJtfl|4tti!!*
y> TO 5 ACRES, Highway 364 South, Aydan-Grifton area and Highway 33 South. Call 756-3683or 757-oj77.
117 Resort Property For Sale
NORFLEET StMRES beautiful view of Pungo River from this 3 bedroom, 1V5 bath cottage. Lot ^Ikhaaded. Has nice pier. $59,500. Call Sally Robinson. 964-4711, Woodstock Paaltv. 943-3353._
PAMLICO BEACH Two nice wooded lots each with 100' fronte on water reduced to sell at $18.C each or $30.000 for both. Call Sally Robinson, 964-4711, Woodstock Re eltY. ?43:M?a
SCHRAMS BEACH Waterfront lot on Pungo River already cleared, bulkhaaded and septic tank in, ready for mobile home or cotta $30.500. Call Sally Robinson, 9 4711. Woodstock Raaltv. 943-3352;
2 BEDROOM COTTAGE at Pamlico Beach. 150' pier, boat lift
CpuY.qviQipiot;
ISO' plar.
2544,
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT , bedroom mobile homes. Securl
deposits required, no pets 75f44i3 between a and 5
Also 2 and Security Can
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. CafI Arlington Salt Storage, Om Mon day Friday 9-5. Call 756-9933.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Estate Auction
Saturday, July 30th, 1983-10:00 a.m.
Inspection from 8:00 day of safe.
PLACE old Wachovia Bank BIdg. now Goldsboro Tower*, Comer of Walnut and Jame* in downtown Goldsboro, N.C.
Selling realduc from the home of Herman Well, deceased, who built GoMaborot finest bonsc. and Hems from two homes In Kinston, N.C. antiques from a boms In WUllaoMton, N.C.. as well as Items from a local lady who lived In China In 1929.
EXCELLENT ESTATE ITEMS-EARLY AMERICAN. ENGUSH. VICTORIAN. SEATING WnX BE VERY UMITEDCOME EARLY OR CAU FOR RESERVATIONS.
In part-Walnut NC slant front desk with french feet, pine school masters or plantation desk, table top walnut desk, tilt top candlestand. N.C. walnut huntboard with tapered legs, English mahogany chest on chest with dental moulding, serpentine chest, several other chest of American and English origin, American grandfather clock case, 6 oil paintings, one New England oil signed, several fables including Queen Anne and Pembroke, 3 beds including 2 tester of cherry and walnut finish, American antique hutch table and good Windsor bench, period American Hepplewhite sideboard with inlay, another demi loon Georgian sideboard, min. walnut chest, some toleware, quilts, great child's chair In old paint, oak fancy side by side Williamsburg repro wing chair, old Chippendale sofa, 8 mantel clocks, Seth Thomas and other makers, N.C. walnut chest signed White, Oxford, NC, Walnut NC tavern table with drawer, scrub lop farm table, blanket chest, Chinese campaign chest, oriental alter table. Rosewood bod with cherub carved on headboard, marble lop dresser, Wellar vase, French mirror, old brass candlesticks, 2 matching small finger carved love seats, some marble top, walnut lady's kneohold desk, some sllverplale, 5 piece sterling silver tea set, collection of sterling silver souvenir spoons (60), 8 pieces old cut glass. 1 early Hummel, walnut hall tree, set ol 4 fine maple chairs. Walnut NC day bed pegged, NC drop front desk, set of 4 custom Hepplewhite chairs, French provincial dining room set cost $2,000 now. Queen Ann chair, some old stain glass, oriental rugs, some early bottles, tapered leg tables In walnut, set of china, inlaid bookcase, over mantel mirror (appraised $1200), color T.V and on^and on.
Call or write for free flyer wUh photoe.
L.E. Warrick, Jr., auctioneer
Ucenee No. 997
P.O. Boa 974 Goldaboro, NC 27530 735-4648 or 735-6061
A 3 BEDROOM, tv, bath duplex, kitchen witfi dining area, appliances. hookups, convenient location. $385. 756^7716 after 6 p.m. or
AVAILABLE SOON 3 bedroom townhouse. Convenient to hospital and mall. $310. Couples preferred.
Lease and deposit. 4746.
No peta. 756
AZALEAGARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.
All energy efficient designed.
Queen size beds and studio couches.
Washers and dryers optlorwl
Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.
All apartments on ground floor with porches.
Frost-free refrigerators.
Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country CLub. Shown
by appointment only, singles. No pets.
Couples or
Contact J T or Tommy Williams JSfcZtlS.
BRAND NEW, tastefully decorated, town houses, 3 bedrooms. 1W baths, washer - dryer hookup, heat efficient. No pets. $3i0 per mu>ni 753 3040: 756 8^.
pump,
mumtn.
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IV, baths. Also i bedroom
npactors, patio, tree cable isner;dryer hook-ups, laundry tennis court, club
apartments. Carpet, dishwashers,
------
look-ups, la house aite^^L. 752-S57
comj
wa
room.
COOL
CONDOMINIUMS
with monthly payments lower than rent I Units available at Brookhlll, Cannon Court, Twin Oaks, Treetqps and Shenandoah. Call today tor more details. Owen Norvetl at 758-6050 or 756 1498, WII Reid at 758-6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050or 758 7039.
MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ADD SPACE AND VALUE TO YOUR HOME-a
SUNSVSTIM
FRCFAMCATEO
SOUR SUNROOM
FOR FREE BROCHURE AND MORE INFORMATION
Contact HaraU Cretch I AsMieiates P.O. Box 1SC1, QreonvWa, N.C. 2713$ TaiaplMMW(l1f)7S243M
DmIbt Inquiries Invited
SUN SYSTEM
Pretibricited SOLAR SUNROOM
ON DEMAND 4-WHEEL DRIVE
GL4WD Hatchback
Take on rough roads with Subaru "On Demand 4-Wheel Drive." The flick of a lever provides that extra measure of safety and traction. And the exclusive Dual Range "'transmission provides the durable versatility to take you over any road in most types of weather.
SUBARU.
INEXPENSIVE. AND BUIIJ
= Tomimm. =
Subaru Of Greenville
60S W. G reenvide Blvd.
Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885
Greenville
SFffUPkiOmUTY, and DOmmintOSf!
1981 Dodge Aries K Wagon 4 door, tan with tan vinyl Interior. Automatic, air condition, stereo radio, 23,000 miles.
1981 Cadillac Sedan De Ville - state gray with padded vinyl root and gray trim, fully equipped, 30,000 miles.
1980 Mazda RX-7 Silver metallic with burgundy trim, S speed transmission, air condition, stereo, local trade.
1980 Olds Delta Royale Dark burgundy metallic with burgundy vinyl top and trim. Extras Include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, WMO aplit seats, air, wire wheels.
1979 Bukk Skylark Light green with tan ' vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, 50,000 miles.
1979 Pontlec Bonneville 4 door. Dark blue metallic with blue vinyl top and blue velour trim. Optlone Include tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM cassette, air condition, rally wheels. 57,000 miles, local trade.
1978 BMW Sparkling black with tan trim. 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, sharp car.
1979 Cadillac Sedan De Villa - Dark green metallic with leather trim. Equipped with most factory options Including wire wheel covers.
1979 Oldt Cutlaee Cruiser Wagon -
Medium blue metallic with blue vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, tilt wheel, cruise control, luggage rack, 55,000 miles, trade-in.
1977 Cadillac Eldorado white with blue leather trim, and blue landau top. Fully equipped. 60,000 miles. Excellent condition, one owner trade. 1976 MG Midget Burgundy metallic with a naw black convertible top and black vinyl trim, 4 speed transmission, 32,000 miles, local car 1976 Pontiac Grand PrIx white with burgundy vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, 81,000 miles, local trade. 1973 Pontiac Grand Prix Black wnn txack vinyl top and white Interior. Optlona Include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control. AM-FM stereo with tape, 77,000 miles, local trade.
Dickinson Ave.
Brown-Wood, Inc.
7S2-7111
PONTIAC
T
Before You Trade Your Used Car See Us WE BUY GOOD CLEAN LATE MODEL USED CARS Or We Will Sell It For You
121 Apertmen! For Rent
DUPLEX APARTMENTS In Shenendoeh area at Shiloh Dr Allc* Driya ayallabta Au
lizf
I Allc* Driva available Auou: 5 month. Call Mrs. Ct 643Qr533 l07iT_
Iva ist I.
DUPLEX APARTMENT for rant Brand naw! I 101 TobyCi onth. Phone 53241783.
Circle. 5275
DUPLEX FOR RENT. 3 bedrooms, t bath. 3 ap^manta avallabla. $350 each. Located 403 Biltmore Street. 756 3488 days. 756-3018 nlQhta._
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
337 ona, tvxo and thraa badroom garden and townhousa apartmants. featuring Cabla TV, modarn appliances, central heat and air conditioning. ctaan laundry facilitias, three swimming pools.
Office - 204 Eastbrook Drive 752-5100
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apertment For Rent
EFFICIENCIES 1 or 3 beds, maid sarvica. caWa, pool, weekry rates Cell 756-5555. Harltaoe Inn Motel
tor
FURNISHED APARTMENT rent. Within walking dlstanca ot colleoe and downtown. Call 756 4345,
GreeneWay
Larga 3 badroom garden ments, carpefed. washer, cable Tv, laundry rooms, balconias. spacious grounds with abundant parking, aconomlcal
GRIFTON AREA 3 and 3 Bedroom apartmants. Central air. carpet and dFape$:^all 524 4239 or 534 ssIl-
KINGS ROW APARTMENTS
On# and tvrg bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, refrigerator, dithwashar, disposal and cable TV Conveniently locat^ to shopping center and schools. Located lust off toth Street.
Call 752-3519
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CENTIPEDE SOD
Will Deliver
752-4994
fSt
AUCTION
Saturday, August 6th 10:00 A.M.
Location: Bayview, N.C.. Behind water tower. Watch for auction signs.
House With Large Lot
3 bedroom brick home built on 4 lots. Fenced in. 3 years old. Well maintained. Will sell all furnishings first, then house.
For complete listing of furnishings, watch this newspaper for further ads.
Sal* Conducted by
('t)CMHY CDYb AUCTION AND A1 TY (O 0. Hi)\ , W,is!iiti(]ti)n, Nciith (,in>li
Phiin,- I'll- iiiMl St.ili- liii-n-.. No
OOUC CURKINS Greenville. N. C. 751-1175
SOT RSSPOSSIBL FOR ACCIDtSTS
RALPH RESPESS I
SHOP THE 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 Datsun 4X4 Truck
Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.
1981 Plymouth TC-3
Blue, blue cloth interior, loaded.
1981 Mercury Marquis
4 door, tan and brown, beige cloth interior, loaded, 22,000 miles, one owner.
1981 Datsun 210 Wagon
Light brown with light brown vinyl interior, 5 speed, AM-FM radio.
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 Mallbu 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
1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale
4 door. White with blue velour interior, 56,000 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 DeVllle
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, 20,000 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
T
t
'i
..
121 Apartments For Rent
part
r^t. Weal or couple
e07 West 4i St. Rent $200 pef
month, lease and deposit requirW. ciu^ U water.^sewer.
No peU. Included Is water, hot .water. Call 7W-63? after i
LARGE 4 BEDROOM Martment, 2 full bathv fireplace, mOA Myrtle
Avenue, $340 per month. Lease'and deposit required. No pets. Call 331S44or7S 0489
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartmen llvfnq with nature outside youi door.
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces heat pumps (heatinq costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash
SK-. washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to-wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra Insulation.
Office Open 9-5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday 15 Sunday
AAerry Lane Off Arlinofon Blvd.
_756-5067
NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available Immediately. 2 bedrooms, I'/j baths. No pets. 752 3152 or 75J^S, ask for John or Brvant.
121 Apartments For Rent
3 BEDROOM DUPLEX near U Available August 15. Dish
washer, washer/dryer hook up, central air, nopetsTstoo. 75* 5340.
NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG AAANOR BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS
^ ^ Features
> 2 large bedrooms
> l'/2 baths
Thermopane windows
Heat Pumps Spacious 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- Dish
ments. 1212 Redbanks Road.
washer, refrigerator, range, dis ppsal included^ We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to PiH Plaza
nd University. Also some urnlshed apartments available.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
756-4151
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
121 Apartments For Rent
NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE, 2 bedrooms, 1 mile from hospital med school. Really nice. $300. Deposit,
NEW ENERGY EFFICIENT duplex apartment. 2 bedrooms, l'/a balhs, fully camted, and a anees included. Quiet neighborl - near hospital. 757-3990 or 795
rT!.
ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near can^M. No pets. $215 a month.
IS::
ONE BEOROOM/ furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7015
ONE BEOROOM APARTMENT Carpeted, central air and heat, modern appliances. $210. Call 758
ONE BEOROOM unfurnished lartment, 1 block from university.
apartment, 1 block from university, single occupancy, heat, air and water furnished. No pets. Call 758 3781 or 758 0889
PROFESSIONAL MALE - I bedroom completely furnished apartment with 8 months lease.
zlimL
RENT FURNITURE; Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.W per month. Option to buy. U-REN-CO, 758 3882.
STADIUM APARTMENTS 1
bedroom furnished apartment adjoins ECU Completely modern. Excellent location! 904 East 14th
Street. Call 752 5700or 758 4871.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
GRANT BUICK-MAZDA 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 DElegance - Black, wire wheels, load, immaculate automobile in every way.
1979 Buick LeSabre - 4 door, 26,000 miles, local car. Like new!
INTERMEDIATES
1983 Buick Regal *'4 door, less than 2,000 miles. Nearly New car! i
1983 Buick Regal 2 door. Low, low miles, power windows, stereo, tilt wheel, white
1982 Buick Regal - 2 door. White on white. Low miles, nice car!
1982 Pontiac Bonneville 4 door, low miles, wire wheel covers, pretty car.
1982 Buick Regal 4 door, power windows, tilt wheel, nice.
1981 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 door, 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 Century 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
GREAT
Used Car Values!
Stock No. Deacription
4199A - 1970 Olds CutUss Convertible
43S5-A 1978 Ford Futura
4368-A - 1980 Mercury Bobcat
4392-A - 1980 Mercedes 300-SD
4459-A 1983 Toyota Clica
4514-A 1980 Chrysler LeBaron
4521-A 1981 Toyota Pickup
4543-A 1981 Buick Century
4568 A -1981 Buick Regal
4577 A - 1978 Toyota Corolla
P-8214 1982 Toyota Wagon
P-8260 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8261 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8271 - 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8274 1980 Honda Accord
P-8276 - 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8282 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8284 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8285 - 1982 ToyoU Corolla
P-8289 1982 Toyota Corolla
P-8295-1982 Pontiac
P-8308 - 1982 Chevrolet Chevette
P-8315 - 1982 Olds Cutlaaa
P-8316-1982 Olds Cutiaaa
P-8318 - 1982 Chevrolet Monte Cario
P-8323 - 1982 Olds Cutlass Clera
P-8324 - 1982 Olda Cutlaaa
P-8325 - 1982 PontUc Grand Prix
P-8326 - 1982 Chevrolet Chevette
P-8331 - 1982 Chevrolet Chevette
P-8332 - 1982 Chevrolet Chevette
P-8336 - 1982 Toyota Tercel
P-8337 1982 Toyota Tercel
P-8339 - 1982 ToyoU Tercel
P-8340 - 1982 ToyoU Tercel
P-8341 - 1982 ToyoU Tercel
P-8342 - 1982 ToyoU Tercel
P-8343 1982 ToyoU Tercel '
P-8344 - 1982 ToyoU Tercel
P-8345 - 1982 ToyoU Tercel
P-8346 1982 ToyoU Corolla
P-8347 - 1982 ToyoU CoroUa
P-8348 - 1982 ToyoU CoroUa
P-8349 - 982 ToyoU Celica
P-8351 - 1979 ToyoU CoroUa
R-7083 - 1982 ToyoU Truck
R-7092-1981 ToyoU Truck
R-7114-1979 Ford LTD
R-7126 - 1977 Chevrolet MonU Carlo
R-7127-1981 ToyoU Truck
R-7129 - 1981 ToyoU Truck
R-7130 1982 ToyoU CoroUa
R-7131 - 1980 ToyoU CoroUa
R-7138 - 1979 ToyoU Track
Everything Is Priced To Sell!!
TOYOTA
EAST
109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228
T
121 Apartments For Rent
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Li ve CABLE TV
Office hours 10 a.m. to5 p.m. AAonday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
TAR RIVER ESTATES
121 Apartments For Rent
2 BEDROOM. Langston Park Apartments. $245 deposit, $265 per month. Available Auoust 1, 752-1961
3 BEOROOM TOWNHOUSE In
Ouall Ridge. $400 a month. Lease isltr
and deposit required. Call 758 9549.
704 EAST Third Street. 2 bedrooms, furnished, 2 blocks from ECU
Stove, refrigerator. Lease and de-posit $260.7V1888 9 to 5 weekdays.
122
Business Rentals
1. 2, and 3 bedroorns, washer-dryer |M^. club
hookups, cable TV, pool, house, playground. Near
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm 8. Willow
752-4225
TWO BEOROOM apartments available. No pets. Call Smith Insurance a Really, 752 2754.
TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS
Near ECU Most utilities included. $275 up. Available immediately. 758^91 or 756-7809 before 9 p.m.
VILLAGE EAST
2 bedroom, IV: bath townhouses. Available now. $295/month.
9 to 5 MondayFriday
756-7711
WEDGEWOODARMS
2 bedroom, IV2 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.
756-0987
I AND 2 BEDROOM apartments. .......... 7i2 3311.
Available Immediately.
2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen applianes furnished, totally electric. $325 month. Call 756 7647.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
STORM WINDOWS DOORS& AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton, Co.
To Buy Or Sell A BusIkss In Confidence
contact Harold Creech
The Marketplace, he
2723 E. 10th St. 752-3666
Rent To Own
CURTIS MATHES TV
756-8990
No Credit Check
FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call Donnie smith at 946 5887
2100 SQUARE FEET of retail space for lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge & Southerland Realty, 756-3500; nights Don Southerland 756-5260._
6,000 SQUARE FEET - Upstairs downtown Greenville. 5th Street gntronty . Coll 756 5007._
CLASSIFIED DISPLAYThe DaUy Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C.-Sunday, July 24.1983-D-i
122 Business Rentals
127 Houses For Rent
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or office space. Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet. Only $3.60 per square foot. For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752-4348.
2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Griffon. Phone 524-4147, nights 5244007.
129 Lots For Rent
127 Houses For Rent
VILLAGE TRAILER Park Ayden Paved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection. First month tree or we pay moving expenses. 746-2425 or72 7l48.
COLONIAL HEIGHTS 3 bedrooms. 1 bath. $350 a month. Security deooslt and lease required. 756-5772.
COUNTRY HOME - Near hospital. Appliances furnished. $250 monthly, $250 deooslt. Call 355 6500.
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
FOR RENT in Ayden. Nice house and yard. Call 746-3674.
SPECIAL RATES for students. Furnished 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. $125 and up. No pets, no children. 758 0745or 756 9491.
HOUSE FOR RENT in Wintervllle. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living room, front and back porches. $250 per month. Deposit required. 758-4128.
12 X 60 TWO BEDROOM furnished . washer, dryer, air conditioning. Good location. No pets. 756-0801 after 5 pm.
LARGE 4 BEDROOM house, 500 W 4th St., recently redecorated. Ideal for large family. Gas heat. $440 per month. Lease and deposit required. No oets. Call 756 5217 or 355 2544.
3 BEDROOMS FURNISHED With air conditioner - no washer and dryer. Located in Colonial Park. Rent $165. 746 2542.
1
-
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
135 Office Space For Rent
DOWNTOWN Just off mall Singles and multiples. Convenient to courthouse. Call 756 0041 or 756 3466.
FOR RENT 2500 ____
Suitable for office space or mercial. 604 Arlington Boule 756 8111
square feet.
com-ivard.
OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
5,000 SQUARE^FEEJT office build
ing on 264 Bypass P Lnfl.-Cal.l 758/380 days
ss. Plenty ot park-
137 Resort Property For Rent
ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom
condominium, oceantront, families only. 756 4207 or 726 3869.
BEECH MOUNTAIN condo for rent by the day, week or month. Tennis, golf and swimming. Call 946-3248 lavs, 946-0694 nights.
CONDO AT ATLANTIC BEACH: 3 bedroom. 3 bath, special weekday rales of $60 per night. Oceanside, pool and Jacuzzi, tennis. Call 758-4111 Bev_
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
The Real Estate Corner
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY A NEW TOME!
Brand new nome^waHm apnvision with light cream siding and soft blu^m f^^ras 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Walk-in closet In AA bedroom. Custom-built cabinets in kitchen, separate olmng room. Great room with fireplace. Ready to move In. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs.
>1*4-
CAMBRIDGE
New cedar siding E-300 home with country porch just waiting for you. Well planned living area featuring lovely decor. Convenient location to shopping centers and medical center. We will pay up to 4 points plus closing cost. Low SSOs.
CHERRY OAKS
New brick home in Cherry Oaks has 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Large Master bedroom has adjoining dressing area. Great room with fireplace, foyer and dining room all accented with crown moulding and chair rail. Energy-efficient. Low $70s.
baths, sliding glass ^n $300 per month if you
FHA 235 ASSUMI door in dining rc qualify. Exceller CAMELOT SUBDIVISION. Cedar siding. Three bedrooms, 2 full baths. Great room with fireplace. Kitchen with eating area. Separate dining room. Buy now and be your own decorator! Choose all your wallpaper, carpet, vinyl, paint colors. Will pay up to 4 points plus closing costs. $60's.
N.C. HOUSING FINANCING. 10.15% interest mortgsge money svsllsble to qusllfied sppllcsnts. Cell for detsils.
The Etfans Company
Call 752-2814
OR
Faye Bowen Winnie Evans
756-5258
752-4224
Of GreenviUe. Inc
701W. Fourteenth St.
It HOME FEDERAL ANNOUNCES THE AFFORDABLE 12% MORTGAGE
(PER ANNUM RATE)
THIS COULD BE YOUR KEY TO HOME OWNERSHIP! WITH HOME FEDERAL'S ADJUSTABLE RATE MORTGAGE. YOU CAN
QUALIFY FOR MORE HOME THAN WITH A HIGHER RATE LOAN
HAVE SMALLER MONTHLY PAYMENTS
HAVE A MORTGAGE AT LOWER THAN MARKET RATES AND NO NEGATIVE AMORTIZATION
HOME FEDERAL'S Adjustable Rate Mortgage Guarantees No Rate Changes During The Adjustment Period. Our 1 Year Ad-justoble Rote Mortgage Is Available Right Now. And Longer Adjustment Periods Are Also Available.
CALL OR COME SEE US FOR MORE INFORMATION ON OUR NEWEST KEY TO HOME OWNERSHIP
APR = 12.27% baied on 80% loan to value and first payment date 30 days after closing. Index based on 1 yeor Treasury Bills. Offer lubjcct to change with market conditions.
HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA
t=7
I0U4I HOUSW, LENDER
Downtown Greonville Arlington Boulovord
7S8-3421
750-2772
Esn:;
T
D-10The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday. July 24,1983
137 Resort Property For Rent
FOR SALE OR RENT Resort on
Neuse River Nice accommoda tions Call 746 3A74._
138
Rooms For Rent
PRIVATE ROOM for rent. SW a month t block from campus. Cprinii-i female student. 758-7587. ROOMS AVAILABLE In pleasant shaded neighborhood. V'l blocks from university. 2 medium sized and 1 large enough to use as living room, bedroom, and den Limited kitchen facilities. Utiiities included. Share bath with 2 other women. Older or graduate students preferred no South Woodlawn
Avenue. 752 0495after 5p.m._
ROOMS FOR RENT Call from * a m 9 0 m , 752 6583
SEMI PRIVATE ROOM Full tKMjse privileges Across from ECU S2S per week includes all 7S2 7278._
SINGLE FURNISHED room in nice home near Pitt Plaza for discreet male student or young businessman. $125 per month. Call 756 5667 after 5 p.rn__
142 Roommate Wanted
ROOAAMATE WANTED to share 2
bedroom brick house in Ayden. Call Angela 757 4736 before 3 p.m., 746 4456 after 3 30 p.m
142 Roommate Wanted
CONGENIAL MALE to share luxu ry townhouse with two teachers. $122 month plus ' 3 utilities 756-8095.
FEAAALE ROOAAMATE needed. Non smoker to share 2 bedroom apartment. Prefer 1st or 2nd year nursing student at PCC or ECU Call 753 4389 anytime.
AAALE OR FEAAALE roommate needed to share a brand new Colonial Williamsburg 2 bedroom townhouse in Shenandoah. *155 per month each, plus utilties. Call 756 6822 after 6
YOUNG FEAAALE ROOMAAATE
needed. Good responsible person. Room and board free as long as she is willing to help take care of household chores, buch as cooki cleaning, and so forth. Call B
as cooking, ling, and so forth. Call B J Mills. 746-2446. 10 miles from
Greenville, near Black Jack.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
142 Roommate Wanted
NEED FEAAALE STUDENT to share new condominium. Sligt above dorm rates. (704 ) 542 394^
144 Wanted To Buy
BEASLEY LUMBER Products will pay up to $150 per M for good grade standing Pine Timber. Also top prices paid for good grade Pine log! delivered to Scotland Neck n^l Call Gene Baker - 826-4121 01 826 4203.
WANT TO BUY TRACTORS 8N Jubilees 601, 801, and 5,000 Ford. Call 758-4669 after 6 p.m._
WANT TO BUY </2 acre of land In a radius of 8 miles from Gi Winfervllle
ius of 8 miles from Greenville or . iterville area. Contact Louis Pail. 756 9078. _
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
For All Your New And Used Car And Truck Needs, Come To HASTINGS FORD. Ask For DALLAS TRIPP And IT! Get You A Good Deal. Well Sell Your Car Or Truck For You. Call Me At 758-0114.
148
Wanted To Lease
LOCAL CHURCH is interested In leasing or renting a building imme diatelv. Please call 756-8191._
HERE'S ALL YOU have to do. Call the classified department with your ad for a still-god item and you'll make some extra cash! Call 752-6166.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
148
Wanted To Rent
RESPONSIBLE WORKING female and toilet trained cat looking for 1 bedroom apartment. 757-3709.
CLASSIFI for you to unused items phone 752-6166.
ED AOS will go to work find cash buyers for your ems. To place your ad.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
NOTICE
Do You Need Small Repair Jobs Done Around The Home Or Business.
GIVE ME A CALL IDO IT ALL!
Jimmy Hughes 757-3121
S&S REPAIR SERVICE, INC.
Cnty. Rd. 1125 WIntervllle, N.C.
756-5989 (Day or Night)
LONG HARVESTER
Large inventory of parts Obsolete and rebuilt parts 12 volt hoist and repairs Field service offered Tobacco trucks and dollies
WELDING
All types welding Portable equipment Steel fabrication
WISCONSIN ENGINE
Factory built parts New engines Rebuilt and exchange engines
MACHINE SERVICE
Complete machine shop Line boring
Heavy equipment rebuilding including idlers and rollers on bulldozers & draglines
210N.MarkatSt. Washington, N. C
Phone
946-7151
Walking Distance To Broad Creek-Country Club, Yacht Basin & McCotters Marina
$73,500 - 3 bedrooms, Th. 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, 2V2 baths, great room with fireplace, dining room and kitchen, deck with view of river.
$79,900 -3 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, large formal living room and dining 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 946-7802
Jm Taylor 946-1305
MKHodgMGRI
9468659
Nan McLtndon, QRI 946-7971
iloBeleQlHarcuH ficaltg
Your Way to Better Living
Office 746-2166
THE LOAN FELL THROUGH and the buyers are crying the blues so this neat, extra clean, 2 bedroom home in Ayden is back on the market. Take a look today. Beautiful corner lot and the home has double carport family room, formal areas and a 12 x32' upstairs that can easily be converted into more rooms and a bath. We know you will love the neighborhood. $43,500.
THIS HOME in Ayden boasts a big covered patio, 16x20 workshop with underground utilities, chain link fence and lovely landscaped lot. The home is brick ranch, only 5 years young and has 6 rooms including den with wood burning stove, living room, 3 bedrooms and kitchen with built-ins. Theres 2 baths, central heat, air, carpet, big double garage and much more. Drive out and see this one now. $65,500.
NICE BRICK RANCH in Ayden surrounded by young green pines. Home features heat, air, formal areas, large den with wood burning stove, IVz baths, and a great location. Only $43.500.
HOME FOR RENT. Great location in Ayden. 3 bedrooms, Vh baths, den, fireplace, formal areas, extra nice yard with frees. $350 Month,
GREAT STARTER home in the country. 2 bedrooms, large kitchen with double oven range, living room, den with wood stove, central heat. $29,900.
KENNEDY ESTATES. Ayden Brick home has 3 bedrooms, bath, den, living room, kitchen-eaf-in area and large lot. $36,000. $45,000. 3 bedroom brick ranch, immaculate condition, living room, dining room, large kitchen, den with wood stove, detached workshop, fenced well landscaped yard. Ayden.
$43,500. OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE. Older home boasts 3 or 4 bedrooms, big family room, kitchen with pantry, central heat. Situated on a corner lot with plenty of trees. Ayden.
$47,500. DESIGNED TO FIT your family needs. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room with fireplace, spacious kitchen, family room, large back yard. Ayden.
$56,500. UNIQUE HOME IN QRIFTON. Big lot with trees. Home has 2 fireplaces, 2 bedrooms, Texas size living room, screened porch, basement.
$67.500. AYDEN COUNTRY CLUfl. Large 4 bedroom brick home with 2 baths, heat, air, den with fireplace, attached garage,
$54,900. ONE GREAT BARGAIN. Ready for immediate occupancy is this 3 bedroom, 2 bath, brick ranch. Family room, utility room, kitchen, screened back porch, well landscaped fenced back yard.
$35,000. AYDEN. Home converted into nice duplex. Each side has 2 bedrooms, living room, bath and kitchen.
$38,000. FOURPLEX. Ayden. Three 2 bedroom apartments and one 1 bedroom. Loans can be assumed. Shown by appointment,
$10,500. THE PINES. 130x150 corner lot in excellent neighborhood. Paved streets, curb and gutter.
$19,900. OWNER SAYS SELL and that is why this house is such a bargain. The location is great but the home needs some work. 3 bedrooms, bath, living room with fireplace, den, eat-in kitchen, garage and detached workshop.
$38,500...QUALITY, CHARM AND CHARACTER is this 2 story older home with 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room, dining room, kitchen, central heat and detached garage. In a prestigious neighborhood and convenient to everything.
LAND FOR SALE. 5 acres wooded between Ayden and winter-ville. $18,000.11 Acres cleared $86,000. Call tor more details.
Open Sunday 1 To 5 P.M.
On Call Today - Louise H. Moseley, GRI Non - Office Hours 746-3472
The Real Estate
Corner
WHY WAIT!! YOU MIGHT BE TOO LATE!!
POPULAR WESTHAVEN III. This beautiful home in popular Westhaven III Subdivision wont last long. The immaculate interior features foyer with formal living and formal dining room, well planned kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace, three bedrMs^mttfMI bajfi^carport with storage, deck off family room%|p#atAwiirks|oAr hobby room. Priced to sell at $79,900. MiMblUKd Drive.
OUT OF THIS WORLD! Thats the best way to describe this lovely home on the golf course in popular Brook Valley subdivision. The large and spacious floor plan with over 3600 square feet of heated area features a large foyer with winding stairway. formal living and dining rooms, large kitchen with separate eating area, large family room with fireplace, downstairs master bedroom, three upstairs bedrooms, three full baths, rec area in basement plus workshop area, large utility room, numerous other extras. Located at 218 Churchill Drive. $175,000.
NEAR THE UNIVERSITY. Great location in a great neighborhood at 802 Forest Hills Circle. This once lived in home features lots of extras like hardwood floors throughout, two fireplaces, separate den or study. Theres a large formal living room off a large foyer, formal dining room, kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths, porch, wooded corner lot, conveniently located to schools and the college. $72,500. Owner ready to move!
HARD TO FIND ANYTHINGI Anything priced under $35,000 that is. Located in Colonial Heights subdivision at 2810 Jefferson Drive this good starter home offers living room with fireplace, formal dining area^l|fejFtedor|nMne bath, enclosed garage, kitchen, outlR|^|^^^^t^i^ and deck. Possible
OWNER SAYS SELL! With interest rates on the rise this 13% Fixed rate VA Loan assumption is looking better and better. Immaculate interior of this home features living room with fireplace, kitchen-dining area, three bedrooms, two full baths, deck off eating area, garage, enormous lot partly fenced in. Located at 1103 Cortland Road this great loan assumption has a balance of apprx. $46,600 with payments of $575.00 PITI. Priced to move at $51,900.
CONVENIENT COLLEGE COURT. Great location at 102 Graham street in lovely and convenient College Court Subdivision. The interior of this well built home is spotless and features foyer, separate formal living and formal dining room, great kitchen with breakfast area, cozy family room with fireplace, three spacious bedrooms, two full baths, large lot well landscaped. Priced to sell at $69,500. Owner has eye on another home. Make us an offer!.
POPULAR ELMHURST AREA. Located close to everything including recreation areas, schools, churches and shopping. This older and well cared for home at 1113 Hillside Drive offers 4 bedrooms at a price hard to find on todays market. Another plus IS a rec or all purpose room. Also there's a large kitchen with big eating area, I/i baths, living room with fireplace and dining area. Private street and priced at $59,900.
LOTS OF BITES. Lots of bites but no fakers on this lovely authentic Williamsburg in lovely Windemere Subdivision at 105 Windemere Court. Two story floor plan features large formal toyer, big living and dining rooms, well planned kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace, four bedrooms, 2V2 baths double garage with finished interior, tremendous deck
SLS'X
TWO NEW HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION. Two new homes with really different floor plans in the new section of Orchard Hill Subdivision. Floor plan features an unusual walk around fireplace between the great room and dining area, convenient kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths. The real plus though IS the FIXED RATE FHA-VA FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH BUILDER PAYING POINTS AND CLOSING COSTS. Theres lots of interest on these two homes at 208 and 214 Freestone Road Priced at $55,500.
BEAUTIFUL KITCHEN. The lovely custom built cabinets are only one of the special features on this brand new home at 1003 Cortland Road In Orchard Hill Subdivision. Theres also an efficient oil or wood fired central heating system hard to find in homes of this type. Floor plan features living room, kitchen with eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths, carport with storage. Builder ready to Deal! $53,500.
FEDERAL LAND BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE. This home qualifies for the lower interest Federal land bank financing at 119 Blacksmith Lane in Horseshoe Acres Subdivision close to the new Pitt County Hospital in Med Schools Complex. Well kept home features large greatroom with fireplace and dining area, well planned kitchen, three bedrooms, two full baths, tremendous lot with outside storage building and patio. $62,000.
OWNERS MOVE IS YOUR GAIN. The owner of this home puts lots of extras in this custom built home with no intensions of ever moving. A job trarister makes this one a kind home available. Build on a large wooded lot at 218 Freestone Road in Orchard Hill Subdivision this home features large great room with formal dining area, lovely kitchen with skylight, three bedrooms, two full baths, lots and lots of deck, heated utility area. Priced at $63,500.
BIG CORNER LOT. This big lot at 200 Freestone Road offers a lovely view from the deck of this great buy. Owner has moved and must deal. Floor plan features living room with fireplace, kitchen-eating area, three bedrooms, two full baths, garage, well decorated interior with bright colors. 12 3/8% Adjustable mortgage available at a steal. Make an otter. $45,500.
IK D.t. NICHOLS AGEMCY
752-4012 355-6414
GROWING TO HELP YOU
T
FOR SALE BY OWNER SPACIOUS HOME BETHEL
Two story, good condition, land-tcapod 4 bedrooms, study, don, formri dining and Uving rooms. baths. Comer lot, large sior^ house. $49,900.
Telephone 825-1905
9to5PMonly
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Recently remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch leu than 1/4 mllo from Emtorn Elementary School and recreational parka. Buutiful carpet and hardwood floor combination. Largo IMng room, sunny kHchan with plenty of ubinota, aaparato dining aru, cozy den wHh firaplaco. Laundry room with atorago aroa. PIcturoaoua, encloaod back yard with 6 foot naturally woatharad fonco to givo privacy to your 1SX36 Inground pod. Almost a yoara aupply of pod clwmlcala and auaonod wood for next wintora' flraa indudod - a atad at IM.999.19!
758-1355 before 7:30 AM or after 9:30 PM Sunday Anytime
MEMBER
Duffus
Realty
Inc.
201 CommerciS^^
RELQ.
WOPLD LEADCn INRELOCATIOM
TUCKER ESTATES
Adorable ranch on a nicdy landscaped woodM lot. Foyer, great room with fireplace and axposed beam ceiling, dining area, three bedrooms, two baths, wood deck. Possible loan assumption. $81,500.
756-5395
ON CALL THIS WEEKEND
Thelma Whttehunt REALTOR, GRI, CRS
During Non-OMce Houra PleiweCaU
355-2996
COMMERCE STREET
Very impressive tour bedroom, two bath two story, traditional style home. Living room with fireplace, dining area, central air,T>atio, garage. You will like It. $54,900.
, aouraFOMEs
Comer lot Three bedroom*, beth. IMna room, breMtulvee.s*rtge (23.000
This three bedroom and btth home on Thirteenth Street need* lixins up. Ju righl lor the handymen Lmhg room. dMng room. Selling m as is condition S23.0n , WOOOUWN AVENUE
nedxad m pnce. Within waltung distance ot the Umversity Four bedroom*, bath, liying room. Ismiiy room, csrpoft Now priced at (20.900
FMYOUISnJDENT
Conyenieni to downlown and the unryeraily Living room, Oming room, three bedroom*, brh Deep lot . (27.000
CONDOHmiUN Buy a condomtnium lor your student and ttwy will not have to worry about housing. Two bedroom*, VA baths, living room. dMng room, patio. (30.m.
STOKES
Cut* bungliow styl* home neir Sloties with three bedroom*, btth. hying raom, dining arte in Hi* kitchen Oil h*u.(31JOO.
CONIMMaNMI Buy thit Id kv* In. a* an inveatment. or for yotir student Two btdcooms. IV* iMht. kvlng room, dining aree, rttngeraior, pWK). (32,0,
UNIVOWTV CONDO Great locetlon. Two bedrooms. 1W btih*. king
room, dining aras. pwio. atove. relrigtrtlor anddishwaaher (32.5M.
lOAosnEer Three bedroom and bath, cottage atylc. Living loom, dining room, lonily room, central m, nicely landscaped. (SejNO.
KIVOBMGHWAV A (hr** bedroom, on* bath ranch home. Living room, dining area, carport, central airOlO. COUNIRVSqUUE A WaUIUulH your |\hare to ^^YiUiar'sllAe, Fmoru. The sellar mFHhIhe p#itland lositJcoalt PtaaseMlirliJtMMnioluian^^ REOUCEO-HUSDAU And a poaalbia FHA loan aatumpiion. Thraa badrooms. bath, living room, firaplaca. dining room. Owet straat Now only (3(.0.
nunCAVENUE Three bedrooma. IVi baltia with living room, recreation room, firaplaca. fencing. (3t.SU TOIKNHOME A really great townhoma with a poaalbia loan aasumplion Two badrooma. Ilk bathe, living room, dining area, unliniahad baaamant. Wildwood Vklaa. (42,900
REDUCED GKECNMAR Thi* home has bean reduced m pricel Three bedrooms. Ilk bMh*. living room, dining area, carport, central air. atoraga. lancad rear yard (44.SOO ^
FAMJCO BEACH Pretty beach Ironi cottage with new aluminum siding Thraa badroomi, bath. Hying room. 1 tool pter. storage buUding. (,0.
UraVEniTYAlEA idaal tocaban lor your aludant or tor a (acutly 'hember Three badrooms. bath, kving room with llreplaca. dining room, patio, atoraga space (45.S00
COUNTRY SQUUE New homes with lVk\ APR flnanelng. Three bedrooms, ilk baths, UvIng room, kitchen. CtoamgcoetaandpoMspaid.
EDWARDSflKn Four bedrooms and two baVta wHh kslng room, dining araand palto. Buytolva in. oraaa rental mvaatmanl.HTM.
OUrUXMAVDEN Choica area at Aydan. Two badrooma, bath, kvino room. dMng mom. tankly loom on one side Two bedrooms, bath, (amky room on other skto Una In one aida. inl tie olhar. Ooubla carport (47.W
CBOE DRIVE A three bedroom and Ilk bath home In Hardee Acre* vmg room, dWng araa. garage Poiaible loan laaumptlon. (,9.
SUV DRIVE What a pratly liltia ranch and what a pretty yard. Three bedrooma. Ilk bathe. kvIng room With firaplaca. dining room, carport Taka advantage at this opportunity (41.900.
OUPIEX
In Colonial village with two bedrooms, beth. living room end kitchen on each side. Central air Both sxtoa ranted. Poaalbia myaalmenl opportunity (49.000.
One ol. bath
youngd--------
PAMJCOIEACH Hare ia your vacation cottage! Thiea badrooma, bath, living room, dining araa and sunporch With soma lurniatiingt. (91.900
PIEASANT RIDGE New homea to be bukt in Pleasant Ridge. Ayden. ThfH bedrooma, Vk baths, living room, dMng area, hast pump. Closing cost* and points paid (91.900
FAMLANE
Poaalbl* loan asaumpllon Three bedrooma. Ilk bath*, loyar, kying room. Ismily room, carport, mealy landscaped (92.900
EDWARDS ACRES About a year old with kvmg room, dMng area, ttvad badrooms and Ilk baths Panaiad garage, cmdral atr wNh heat pump (92.9H COUNTRV
A two badraom. two mi hems in the country on 8R 17. Foyar with parquet floor, great loom with hraptaea. caking Ian, central ak. Nica.SSJH.
NEW H09CS - MkkI AM FMANCMG Yea. you can buy one ot these new homes in Edward* Acra* and finance tham at I01k% APR FHA or VA. Amazing, bacausa the current rwM rato la t2ik% APR. Thraa badrooms. Ilk buha. kraplaca. wood deck, paneled garage. Ctoaing coats paid. (94,9.
C09MEKSTIEn Vary knpraaaiya tour badroom. two both two ttry. TiidNtonal ilyla heme. Uying ream with Srsplaca. dtoing area, cantial ak. patio, garage. You wWkkaK. (94,9
PRETTY RANCH WWi thraa badrooma and two baths in Ayden Living room, dining are*, family room, braektaat area. Two car garage. tencMi, garden and grape vln*.(S.on.
VAUMNASSmmON At 9% APR Hath payment of the equity Loan batane* ol approiimetoly (40.9M and payments ol 1421. Living room with llrtplac*. dining room, lamlly room, three bedrooms, bath, three car garage. (.om.
LWDEUROAD Very pnvale and convenienl. Very nice three bedroom, bedi, living room with fireplace two car garage, lancing. Poaalbia loan assumption and owner wkl consldar secondary financing, 156 000
FOURDEOIOOMS A tour badroom and two bath home In Coghili Living room wllh kraplaca. dming area, deck It you need a lour badroom boms, hare It la and wllhanaltontobtoprtc* t.SW.
law R API GREENWOOD FOREST A pretty three bedroom and Ilk bath, new home, ear the hospital and medicti school Lntng room with kraplac*. dining area, pretty kitchen. aUdkig glass doors, wood deck, paneled garage. I0ik% APR, FHA or VA. in,4n.
N. EASTERN STIEn
You wkl Hk* the localion and the home Brick ranch with thraa badrooma and bath Uving iOdffl. dining araa. family room. (M.9U.
P06iULEASSU9TION ADoul thraa years old. On a cuLda-sac In Edwards Acraa. TTitm badrooma. ilk baths. Using room with kraplac* and wood stove, dining an*. ni,9N.
PlIAiANTRBlGE Thraa badroom and two bath hrmhouat style home on the edge ol Ayden. Greet room with kraplac*. dining room, heat pump, garage, deck, tonckig. Poaslbto loan assumption 157,0.
WINDY RIDGE Two stocy condominium in a vary prtvate aaction thrM badroom*. 21k bath*, living room wNh kraplac*. dkkng room, braaklsst bar, extra inaulalion. comptotoly koorad attic, p*tto.S57.9n.
UNIVERSITY Thi* pretty horn* ha* thraa or tour badrooma and two baths. Uvkig room with kreplace. dkkng room, lamky room. Maatar badroom upatokt wtth DMi. Fanclng. S.9.
REDUCED RANCH HOME In Hard** Aero* and a larger Hard** Acres hom*. Thro* badroom*. two baths, living room with kraplac*. dkkng araa, acreaned porch, panaiad garage. 197.9.
NEAR HOSPITAL And in the country. Foyar, great room,
X, dining room, thraa badrooms, two brtaktaslara*. storage building (.9
aavEOEU
A nice araa and a nice hom* lor your lamlly Thraa bMrooms. two baths, living room, panaiad lamlly room, carport, wood deck, tmostnawfumacsandak SSt.UO UNIVERSITY You can walk to th* unlvaraity from this nic* tvro story horns on FIftti Straat. Three badrooms. Ilk bath*. IMng room, ftraplac*. dlnmg room, solarium. SS.9.
RED OAK
Corner lot. three bedrooma. two batha. Foyar. IMng room, dining room, lamily room, doubto Poaaibly some owner financing.
EASTWUGHTROAO A ranch home with thraa bedrooms wid two batha. IMng room, famky room, dining ara*, screanad porch, carport. (99.9.
NEAR HEOKAL SCHOOL In Horaashoa Acraa . Only a tow yaara old Wllh three bedrooma and two batha. Foyar. graal room wtth kraplac*. dining room, carport (.0.
|Thra*
with
Son
REOtJCED.
A ranch home in a nic* araa and on a cornar lot. Thraa badrooma. two batha, toyar. kving room, formal dining room, lamily room with kreplace, carport, fencing, 3,9.
0AKHUR8T A APkt lie* lUMM. Three
REDUCED m FOREST HUS A substantial reduction on this Forest Hklt ranch home Now is th* Hm* to le* it! Three bedrooms, two batbs, toyer. IMng room, dining room, tankly room with krspUc*. caiport 9(7.0
Or I Vt^^COnACE ^
On this home in Cemelol Corner lot. Three bedrooms, two batha. toyer with hardwood ttoors. great room with fireplac*. formal dining room, wood deck. Jenn Aire rang* Now only 1(9,9
FOUR BEDROOMS Four bedrooms and 21k batha In River Hills. Foyer, Hying room, tormal dining room, famky room with fireplace (72.9
FOUR BEDROOM CONDO And these are ditkcult to find! Foyr. IMng room, family room with kreptoce. 21k bath*, lenced patio Clos* to recreiiional area* YYIndy Ridge (72.SM
OffRRYOAKS Two year old corner ranch home Three bedroom*, two baths, toyar. great room with Hraptaea. dining room, garag*. Short walk to racraatlonai are*. (72.0.
ROOK ROAD Convantanl to averything, this pretty three badroom, two bath ranch It loealad on a cornar kk. Foyer, IMng room, dining room, family room with tkaptoca, acroaned porch, doubt* garage, aimoal new llbar^ root. Poaalbia lom* owner knencing. (73,1.
REDUCEOHIWAYUSOITTH This pretty home in th* country het been aubatantitky raducad In pric*. Four batkooma, thraa baths, toyer, IMng room, dining room, famky room, two firtpltcaa. dual heat pumpa, carport. Now only (79.0.
GRTTON
Sptcloua and graclout. Four badrooma. 21k batha, toyer, IMng room, breektaat area, famky room garage (79.0.
STRATFORD Oiky three years (kd and on a quiet ilraat. Convenient to evarythlng. Two story traditional with thraa bedrooma. 21k baths, great room with hrtplaca. dkkng room, wood deck. S79.9.
CHERRY0AK8 Spacious ranch. Thraa bedroom*, two bath*, toyer. IMng room, dining room, lamily room with lireptoce. garage. (7S.9U.
DREXELBROOK A really great araa in which to llv*. Ranch home with three bedrooma. two bath*, toyer, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplace, carport (79.0
TUCKER ESTATES Adorabto ranch on a nicely landacapad wooded lot, Foyar, great room with kreplace and expaoed beam calling, dining araa. three bedrooma. two batha. wood deck. PoaUbto lo*n***umptton.((1.9M
CONTEMVRARY In Westhaven ni Greet room with Hrtptace, dkkng iraa. three bedrooms, two batha. olkc*. wood deck, carport . Poasllk* loan assumption L9.
CU PINES A cadar ranch on a nicaiy wooded lot. Three bedroom*, two baths, foyer. IMng room, tonnel dkkng room, lamily room with firaplace. braaklasiara*. icraanad porch. (94.9 LOVUYRANCH And on a baauUfuky landacapad lot In Cwnalol. Three bedrooms, two bath*, toyar. great room with kraplaca. dining room, wood deck, garag*. 9M.9
COUMIA.N.C.
Great tor raikamant or paac* and qutol. On Albamarte Sound. Fkr* badrooms. 31k baths, kwng room, dkkng room, lamily room, two kraplac**. icraanad porch, about 1.4 acras Ranovaiton iraadi to b* compiatad (K,0.
RCDUCED-CLUR PINES A big raducbon on this tour badroom and thraa bath, two story hom*. Only a taw years old. Foyer, IMng room, termal dMng room, lankly room with kraplaca. nkcrowava, solar hot water, woodad tot. Storage. (.790.
NEARCUBHOUSE But vory aacludad and prtvate. In Brook Valtoy wllh tour badroomi and 21k baths Recroltlon room Of khh badroom Foyar, IMng room, dto^room, lamily room with Hreplic*. large
reduced LYNNDAU
Four badrooma and 2lk baths A tradHlonal two alory wtth toyar, kving room, formal dining room, limky room with firaplace. wood deck, aarag*. Poaaitk* ummptlon. Now (134.9M DEUGHTFa CONTEMPORARY On I litg* woodad lot Four or fly# bedrooms and 21k bath*. Foyar, IMng room, dining room, larga famky room with fireplace, pretty kitchen wood deck, screened porch, garage. (150.(1 LYNNDAU
ktipreaiiy* to iiy the leiat with six badrooms and tour beth*. Gorgeous foyer with fountain. IMng room with kreplace. spacious dmmg room, pretty kitchen Mth breakfast area, family roornwm stone koor and fireplace, wet bar. comtortabto study. All badrooms are large with ample ctosela. Screened porch, carport
(in.ou
BROOK GREEN
Exceptional. Five bedrooms and three baths Foyer, Hying room, dining room, solarium, dining tree, towar level family room, three kreplace*. sewing and laundry room, workahop, carport Many, many extras (1(3.6.
FIVE BEDROOMS In Lyrmdal*. Take advantage ol this lowered prtc*. Fly* bedrooms. 3Vk batha.IMng room, spactoti* dkkng room, lankly room, two kraplicet, screened porch, garage. Additional areas that can be finished (1H.0
GREENVIU COUNTRY CLUB On* 0 a kkid. Foyer Mth tile koor, sunken IMng room, apacMis dMng room. lamHy room *, tour bedrooma, 31k batha, sun
KStwriswo
' HOLLY HUS ESTATE BatuMul ranch hom* and thro* nicely lend-scaped acres. Four bedrooms, three beth*, toyer. sunken IMng rooni. tormtl dining room, lamky room, solarium, two kreplacea. garage, deck*. Large fenced awmunlng pool. Absolule-lytoyely.
CAIUjOT
A kn* tot In ttks Ike* subdivlaion. Bukd your new hom* here or purchaae tor your tutur* Inveatment. ,5.
POUR ACRES In Bethel, zoned tor bualneu. Look at this locMian!(40,0.
AYDEN^aOFTONLOT Between Ayden and GrMon. this tot may be just what you are looking for! (7.0.
RED OAK LOT Spaclou* tot wllh nic* trea*. Bukd your new home her*. .9M.
PINEWOODFOKEST Choice wooded tot In PInewood Forest. Partect ail* tor your new hom*. (K.O.
COMMERCIAL U)T Ttks tot on Commarca Straat already has the parking tot initall*d (20m
=1 WE SELL GREENVILLE
ECtOALHd OPPORTUHITY
ThcliBaWUtthMitieALm6ia.CIIS...
......355-2996
Sue Henaon. REALTOR......,..,.........
Evdyn Dmm, Bnkm........
Catherine Creech, REALTOR................
........756-6537
KayDMl8,Bfokcr............................
Charlene Nielsen. REALTOR. Rentab......
........752-6961
Nanette WUclufd. REALTOR.................
.......756-7779
Anne Duffus. REALTOR. GRI................
........756-2666
Sue Casteilow, Broker And Insurance..........
......756-3082
Jack Duffus. REALTOR. GRI. CRS...........
........756-5395
Deborah HylenKHi.Brdwr....................
I
I
I
9
9 I 1 9 I 9
9 >1 ! I > I I 9
THE REAL
ESTATE CORNER
NOW
Is The Time To Build Your New Home
Build Now While luterest Rates Are Down Build Now Before Material Prices Increase
Lot Bowser Construction Company Quality Construct Your New Custom Home. We Have Building Lots Available In The Following Subdivisions:
Club Pines Bedford Lake Ellsworth Cambridge
BOWSER
The Name Of Quality Call Now For Details
756-7647
w.g. blount & associates
REALTORS - DEVELOPERS
756*3000 llllMjHHi
Cyprc88 Creek Towi)Ijoipe8
MODELS OPEN EACH SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2-6
GRAYLEIGH: Under construction. 4 Bedrooms 3 baths, possibiiity of 5th bedroom or gameroom, garage, located on a corner lot. Can choose your own colors and decorate to your own taste. Call for price and details. $142,500.
BAYWOOD: Unique 3 bedroom contemporary located on a beautiful wooded lot. Stone fireplace. 2112 baths. Decks. Kitchen to delight the most avid connoisseur 1135,000.
GRAYLEIGH: Beautiful Williamsburg featuring 3 bedrooms, l^h. baths, living room, formal dining room, den with fireplace, deck and garage. $110,500.
STOKES: Stately Southern mansion located a short distance from Greenville. Completely renovated. 4 bedrooms, SVu baths, 4 fireplaces, screened porches. Must see to appreciate. Owner anxious to sell. Any reasonable offer will be considered.
CLUB PINES: Brick two story featuring great room with built in cabinets, fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, dining room, kitchen, garage. $84,500.
DRESDEN PLACE CONDOMINIUMS: Close enough to walk to class. Located at the corner of 11th and Charles St. Two bedrooms, IV2 baths, kitchen with all appliances, living room/dining combination. Good loan assumption. $43,600.
VILLAGE EAST TOWNHOUSES: Near the University. Brick townhouses featuring 2 bedrooms, IVi baths, outside storage, patio, kitchen with all appliances. Special financing. Call for details. $41,900.
ROBERSONVnXE/STOKES AREA: Large Colonial with pecan grove located on Highway 903. Completely renovated. 4 bedrooms, 2% baths, formal areas. Can be financed Federal Land Bank $69,900.
HORSESHOE ACRES - Price Reduced! Owner ready to sell. 3 bedroom home on % acre lot. Great room with fireplace, 2 tile baths,' kitchen, dining room, garage. 162,500.
OPEN HOUSE2-5TODAY
107 Guinevere Lane. Camelot
HOSTESS
PARADE OF HOMES WINNER! 3
bedrooms, 200 year old mantel, handmade brick fireplace, fenced yard, wooded lot. Many extras.
CENTURY 21 B. FORBES
756-2121
2717 W. Memorial Dr.
Greenville's First Century 21 Location EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED
STABLE
FOR SALE BY OWNER: DR. GUPTON 758-0062 or 756-6146
23 stalls, bunk house, two rings, inside riding, rental house (rented), 5.7acres, good pasture, treated 4 rail fences.
WILL FINANCE
Only Serious Calls for Appointment
BobBaikcf 975-3179
Blount 756-7911
Betty Beacham. 756-3880 Stanley Peaden. 756-1617
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-SuiMlay, July 24,1983-D-ll
a/l/{cuja!Buttiry^ealiy 758-0655
SMART HOME BUYING BEGINS HERE!
CHERRY OAKS-Traditional styling offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace and french doors to deck, eat-in kitchen, dining room, laundry room. baSe-ment, double garage and large yard with storage
1 building. $81,000.
CHERRY OAKS-Williamsburg decor features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, eat-in kitchen features bay window m breakfast room, dining room and foyer have oak floors, great room with fireplace. Builder has left all interior and exterior color choices and all floor coverinas up to buyer. $69,900.
FAIRLANE-Brick cape cod styling sets off this convenient floor plan offering 3-4 bedrooms (use one as an office!), 2 baths, great room with fireplace and dining area with french doors to deck, eat-in kitchen, laundry room, walk-in attic and large yard. $69,500.
CAMELOT-Spacious contemporary offers 3 bedrooms (master is huge!) 2 baths, great room with woodstove, dining room, roomy kitchen, sliding glass doors to patio, double garage and convenient location! $67,900.
THE PINES-Ayden, features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all formal areas, nice kitchen, family room and fireplace. Home offers 3 porches (2 screened) and lots of storage-$64,900.
DELLWOOD-Preferred family area...home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen, den with fireplace, carport with storage and is within walking distance of all schools. $63,900.
HORSESHOE ACRES-New Construction otters 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, eat-in kitchen with laundry area, sliding glass doors to 20x20 patio, carport with storage and extra large lot. $61,900.
FAIRLANE-Large family home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all formal areas, den with fireplace, eat-in kitchen, laundry room, deck and carport with storaqe. $59,900.
PINERIDGE-Charming contemporary offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, sunken great room with fireplace and sliding glass doors to patio, galley kitchen for efficient cooking, dining room and lovely wooded lot. Good VA loan assumption. $58,500.
PINERIDGE-New offering-unique floor plan offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, dining room, galley kitchen, laundry room, beautiful lot with storage shed. $56,500.
GREENWOOD FOREST New construction-contemporary floor plan features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, dining area, galley kitchen, laundry room and lovely wooded lot. Builder has left all color options and floor covering up to the buyer. $54,900.
TWIN OAKS-Unique contemporary offers 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, great room with woodstove, loft, kitchen with dining area, solarium, 2 decks, patio, privacy fencing and beautifully landscaped corner lot. $55,600.
GREENWOOD FORREST-New construction-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with fireplace, dining room with sliding glass doors to deck, carport and wooded lot. All options of color choices and floor coverings up to buyers. $55,500.
ORCHARD HILLS-New contemporary ranch offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace and dining area, sliding glass doors to deck, work kitchen-located on a quiet cul-de-sac. All color choices and floor coverings up to buyer. $54,200.
TWIN OAKS-Cottage styling sets off this 2 bedroom, 1V2 bath home. Popular location also features great room with woodstove and french doors to brick patio, laundry area, roomy kitchen and dining room. $53,900.
BETHEL-Brick home features 3 bedrooms, IV2 baths, den, kitchen with eating bar, living room with fireplace, dining room, breezeway from den to garage, small office area and dogpen. $52,000.
RED OAK-Lovely wooded lot surrounds this brick rancher featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen has laundry area and carport with storage. $49,900.
NORTH HILLS-Ayden, is the setting for this fine home with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, country kitchen with dining area, garage with workshop area and a back yard just right for the kids! $49,500.
ROBERSONVILLE-Brick rancher features 3 bedrooms,
2 ceramic baths, living room, eat-in kitchen, den with bookshelves, carport and nice garden spot. $45,900.
AYDEN-Park area-starter home with VA loan assumption. Offers 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, living and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen, fenced back yard and nice front porch. $36,900.
UNIVERSITY AREA-Perfect starter home features 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, living and dining areas, nice kitchen, fencd back yard and secluded front porch just right for a swing.
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
LINDBETH DR.-New 2 Story brick townhouses. Plan offers 2 bedrooms, 1V2 baths, great room with dining area, kitchen with all appliances, private deck and storage area. Zero lot line allows for each side to be purchased separately. $72,500.
RIDGE PLACE-2 story duplex lets you have a home that pays for itself. Live in one side and rent the other-features include 2 bedrooms, IV2 baths, kitchen with stove, refrigerator & dishwasher, great room with dining area, private patio & outside storage. $60,000.
WINTERVILLE-Large frame home with 2 apartments and 1 trailer on same lot. Apartment have stove and refrigerator-Trailer has stove, refrigerator and some furnishings. Rental income of $455 per month. $39,900.
SOUTH EVANS-Lovingly cared for older home features 2 bedrooms, 1 full bath, living room with french doors to dining room, eat-in kitchen, nice front porch and privacy fencing. $27,000.
LOTS FOR SALE
ARBOR BLUFFS-Tranters Creek-waterfront lots 100x221 $16.500100x201 $18.500
OAK GROVE-lovely wooded lot 73'x299. $6,000.
SHIRLEY MORRISON-BROKER (ON CALL) 758-5463 MAVIS BUTTS-REALTOR CRS, GRI752-7073 JANEBUTTS-BROKER 756-2851 ELAINE TROIANO-REALTOR 756-6426
LOT FOR SALE
CHERRY
OAKS
GLORIA STREET
Heavily Wooded
M4,900
756-7815 758-8733
THE REAL ESTATE CORNER
JEANNETTE COX AGENCY
REALTOR 756 1322
I5I Grwnvillc BIvh
IF YOU ARE VOVING TO GREENVILLE
Call 7S6 im or write P 0 Bip* 4*7. Greenville N C for rour free copy of' Homes For Living , a monfftir publication packed witb pictures, details and prices of bornes and available locally
IF YOU ARE MOVING TO A NEW
CITYf
Gel your free copy of "Homes For Living", in me city you are going to Know the real estate market before you gel there Your copy is in our office We can help you buy, sell or trade a home any place in the nation
Discount Prices, High Quality Guaranteed
ininiiuiEASiwoi)Dn)iisMTnicowjiiiY
111 Blacksmith Lane P.O. Box 3181 Greenvttle. N.C.
758-7354
Residential & Commercial
New Work Renovations Roofing
MARTIN COUNTY FARM LAND
InvestnMnt
500 acres total land. 252 acres cropland. 34,345 pounds tobacco, 90,200 pounds peanuts. 200 sow modem swine complex. Numerous knprovements with huge tax write-offs. N.C. Real Estate Broker with 23 years agribusiness expereince avalabie to manage if desired. Priced at $1,250,000 negotiable. HARRELL REALTY, 798-8321.
WAIER 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
REALTOR
210 N. Market St. Washington, N.C. 27889
946-7151
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY
2-5 P.M.
Here is the two story Country Farm House youve always dreamed of...tour bedrooms, or three and study with fireplace. 2V5 Baths, large family room with fireplace, formal living and dining rooms...eat-in kitchen, double garage, corner lot and reduced for quick sale! Buy now while rates are low... Assumable loan tool
201 Harrell Street, Cherry Oaks FOLLOW THE OPEN HOUSE SIGNS AT ENTRANCE OF ELEANOR STREET
HIGNITE, REALTORS
_756-1306
TIPTON & ASSOC.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION in
Lynndale, outstanding bedrooms, 3 full bath home featuring all formal areas, double garage and over 3000 sq. ft. SIOOs UNDER CONSTRUCTION in Club Pines, 18th Centui Georgian that features bedrooms, 2Vi baths, targe room and over 2000 sq
great
n.SIO'
SM's
THE CHARM that says "you have come home" welcomes you to this lovely 4 bedroom, 3 bath traditional. All formal areas. Lovely screened in Heavily wooded lot
UNDER CONSTRUCTION in
Horseshoe Acres. Still time
to pick out colors on this traditio
iitional 3 bedroom, 2 full bath home on large lot. $64,500.
IT SPARKLES and so will your eyes when you see our new listing in Eastwood. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath brick ranch with fenced in back yard. Possibl 11loan assumption. $63.000.
FARMERS HOME assumption available on this 3 bedroom, Vh brick ranch on wooded lot. $41,500.
NOT ELABORATE but nice and clean; not big but comfortable; not expensive but affordable. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, huge lot with fruit trees. Assumable loan. $49.500. DUPLEX. 3 bedroom, 1 bath each side. Stantonsburg road area. Possible owner financing $45,000
raiME COMMERCIAL space, over SOOO sq. ft. for sale or lease in the downtown area. Building has potential for many uses. $125,000.
756-6810
Nights, Rod Tugweli 753-4302
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
29.500Near E.C.U.1st Street, rental, 4 bedrooms. doWn payment ol Sfi.OOO, payments less than monthly rent. Good tenants.
45.000Duplex. University sres. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath each side. 49.900106 Emma's Ptsce. Duplex, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath each
side. $400 per month income.
55.000Grimesland. Service station with 5 seres of land. T9.
55.000DUPLEX. $6,000 per year income, close to ECU, good condition, excellent return. C12.
59.500Riverbluff. Duplex. 1550 square feet total. 2 bedrooms each side, assumable fkisncing, balance of $37.000.00. Age 2Vi years.
65.000Commercial building. Dickinson Avenue. 1640 square feet heated, large paved parking lot.
220.000Eight unit apartment building, walking distance from E.C.U.. Excellent construction, low meintenance.
205,000Homes of this caliber are not available in the GreenvHle area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Routs 9. the home has 3000 squara feet, sits on 4 acres of land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential tor 5. formal areas, huge family room with tireplaco, recreation room, many extras.
149.900LynndaleCedar farmhouae. 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer, stained hardwood floors. 2 fireplaces, solar hot water heat, kitchen with Jenn-AIra, many extas.
121.900Lynndsle-4 bedroom two story In thto fine area. Formal entry foyer, living room, dining room, kitchen with many extra features, playroom for the kids, deck, much more!
98.000Farmville. Located in one of the finest areas, this home Is a delight. Beautiful entrance toyer, formal areas, pecan paneled family room, two Hrapiaoetk toot ceWnga. and much more.
94.000Tree Tops. The country llfeetyle with city convenience. 3 bedrooms including master suite. oNice. great room with fireplace, formal dining room with stained hardwood floors. Almost new and immeculele. Dnty a transfer makes this home avaUabie.
92.500Brook Valley. Beautiful location In this desirsbie area.
92.500Brook Valley. Attractive 2 story in this wonderful area. 4 bedrooms, 2V4 baths, formal entry foyer, IMng room and dining room.
92.500Assumable VA loan! 2 story iradHkmal home located in Tucker Estates. 4 bedrooms, 2V5 baths, lovely kitchen with Jenn-Aira range, family room with tireplaco and formal aroaa. Dnty 3 years young.
M.900Brook Valley. Dramatic contemporary ranch! 3 bedrooms. 2 fuH baths, aU iormel areas, den with firepiaco. dock, playroom and beautiful fenced back yard.
89,900Peace and quiet. Beautiful homo on over an acrt sized lot. 2100 square feet of healed area, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large family room wHh fkopiece. formal areas, double garage. Low Inlorost financing available.
19.500Dvor 5,000 square feat within walking distance of the downtown eree. ExcoHent houee tor fraternity.
SHEKAHDOilH
VILLAGE
IOW40% 2BPBMH
' ALDRIDGE & SOUTHERLANO Phone 756-35D0
Shenandoah Village Townhouses Begin At $39,900
Builder Pays Discount Points And Closing Costs
Down Payment Dniy $2000.00
Monthly Payments Comparable To Rent
Dver 1,000 Square Feet Dt Heated Area
Excellent Location
Frost Free Retrigeralor With Ice Maker
G.E. Appliances
Professionally Landscaped And Decorated
No Exterior Maintenance Dr Landscaping
Private Patio
isSias^M mI*"*' Costs, Price
87.500PamHco Rhrer. Beautiful permanent home only 25 mMes from Greenvkle! Dn the water with pier, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room with cathedral ceMing and fireplace. Deck circles home with screened porch, full basement-gsrage.
82.500Rustic contemporary situated on 1 acre wooded lot. Large great room with vaulted ceHing and fireplace, with loft overiooking room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge deck, garage and storage room. Just lovely!
79.900Glenwood. Mora tor the money! Huge 4 bedroom ranch on tremendous comer lot. Formal areas, IsmHy room wllh fireplace, fenced back yard.
79.900Aydens finest! Dver 2500 square feel of heated area, with extras loo numerous to mention! 4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces, huge rac room thats fantastic! Must see!
79.500Country living with convenience. Abundant acreage with beautiful WNIiamsburg, located only 5 mHes from GreenvHle. This 4 bedroom home could be the one! CeH fordataHe.
79.500606 Eleanor Street. Unique contemporary in Cherry Daks. 3 bedrooms, ZVi baths, large great room with fireplaca and garage.
79.500Cherry Daks. Sunken great room with lireplace. feeling ol space at great room opens into kitchen with eatbig area. 3 bedrooms, including master suite. Really super Interior!
79.500Camelot. Dramatic contemporary on heavHy wooded, prvete lot. The bast Is In every room, from kitchen with buHt in microwave and Jenn-Aire, to the spacious bedrooms with wonderful view of downstairs den, or the trees outside. Includes double garage and pianty of decks.
79.000-Contemporary Wooded, private setting. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, high ceUlngs. 2 fireplaces, spacious deck under atiady treat. If you are a contemporary lover, youve got to see ihia one!.
78.900Tucker Estatee. WUiiameburg! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room wtth fireplaca. kitchen with eating ares, well decorated, better hu^ on this one!
78.000-Cherry Daks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken greet room wllh old brick fireplece. slate foyer, super floor pien!
77.900Tucker Estatee. Beautiful WHIiameburg!3 bedrooms, 2 ftrii baths, formal sraas, huge kitchen with separata eating area, famHy room with fireplece. E18.
76.900Grifton Country Club. Well buHl custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial. Formal areae, large den.
74.900Once in a lllatime. Unique contemporary located within walking distance of E.C.U., yet setting in secluded area on the river. Lots of glass (insulated) end deck. Vary special!
74.500Lake ENsworth. Large 4 bedroom. 2 bath ranch. Formal living room and ining room, dan with firaplaca, roomy kitchen with separata braaktaet area. Attumabia loan with low equity. J45.
73.500Camalol. Solar heat supports highlights this tine home. Formal living room, kitchen with eating area. famHy room with fireplace. 3 bedrooms, 2 fuH baths. Csfl us tor more details.
71.000-Universify area. Located In solid residential area but stHt close to E.C.U. 3 bedroomt. 2Vt baths, formal areas, cozy famHy room, kitchen with many nica features, beautiful lot.
69.900Camelol. Custom buHl by one ol the best. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Great room with lireplace, modem kitchen with ell the goodies. Decorated to T.
69.900Lake Glenwood. Wall kept ranch style home on large corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, den with lirepleca, kitchen wllh convenience and braakfesi res. Double garage and patio.
69.900Stratford. Charming, convenient, privatecan you ask for more? 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with bsy window, huge screened porch, much more!
67.500Westwood. Specious 3 bedroom. 2 bath brick ranch In mint condHkm. Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.
66.900Ragland Acres. Roomy 3 bedroom brick ranch in this desirable area. Modem kitchen with eating area, formal dining room, huge great room, private ollica and more!
66.900Red Dak. Almost an acre lot on quiet, trefile free circle.
3 bedroomt, 2 full baths, formal areas, famHy room with tireplaco.
66.500Dakhursl. Beautiful SfilH level in this quiet, popular area. Huge temUy^^^B^iltpia^^ih room tor ptoyroom ^office. 3 ^y^m^2^^bi|h^ofmel areas, fenced
06,000-Country Lhring. Yet only a couple mHee from GreenvHle dty Hmits, or the industrial park. This Southern Coloniai has the charm of another lime. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room wtth fireplace, modem kitchen.
16.800St. Andrews. Convenience Is the name of the game. Ckwe to etrarything. 3 bedrooma, 2 tuH baths, (peat room with tireplace, 12% assumption with low squity.
15,100Lsks Ellsworth. 3 bsdrooms, including (psdous master auna. bright and sunny kHchen, huge great room with fksplaco. Immaculate interior.
69.900DeNwood. Assumable loan, 3 bedrooma. 2 full baths, formal Hving and dining rooms. Completely remodeled kitchen, famHy room with fireplace, rec room, new carpet throughout, huge back yard.
19.900Four bedrooms In this aHordable price range. Located in Lake ENsworth, with pool membsrship avsHaMs. Inlsrior fsaturss formal araas, lamHy room with flraplaca and roomy kltchon with asparais sating araa. A raal bargain.
99.0M 819% VA loan assumption. 3 bedrooma, 21^ bath 2 story. Don with firtplaca and formal arses. Beautiful
Imdscspwl y&f.
84,808"Tha Pinos Aydan. Naariy 2000 squara faot on a basulHul woodsd lot. 3 badrooma, 2 baths, living room with fkoplaca as waN as a don with Hroploco. 2 car garage and sxtra inaulalion instaHad ovorhaad and undomaath tha floors.
84,l-CMiwlot. Vary sttractlvo aplH lovai in this popular araa. Family room with flraplaca, formal araas, 3 badrooma, 2 full bath. PossHHa rant wHh option, also.
84,881 Horaoehoa Acras. Naw homo undar construction, 3 badrooma, 2 lull baths, great room with flreplaco, formal dining room. SINI tima to pick colors.
83,900 RNar HiUs. Charming brick ranch on haavHy wooded prWata lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal araas, dan wHh flreplaco. Rosily apaclal with an 1% VA aaaumplion!
83,000Woatwood. Excoilant aU brick ranch on wall landtcapod lol. All formal araas, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, garage, covered patio. Owner wHI soil FHA, VA or convontlonal.
82,900RhrortiWs. Spflt lovol with 3 badrooma, 219 baths, and altractlvaly landacapod wooded lot. Tha flroplace-bookcaso wall In tha famHy room and the large graontwusa window In the kHchan make IMs home
ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND RAY SPEARS.............. ..758-4362
CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-528-5832, Ext. 335D
756-3500
Aldridge Southerland Realtors
LOOKING FOR A HOME?
Dial PHONE A HOME and leam aO about our
newegt UatingB 24hourgaday!
756-5522
62.500Forest Acres. 3 badrooma, 2Vi baths, formal araas, lamHy room with flrapiaca and wood kisort. Baautiful wooded lot!
58,800Wright Road. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch in this convenient area. Formal entry foyer, formal living room, famHy room with flraplaca. dock. ^
90,100Contemporary closa to Khools and shopping. Docks and glass galoro! Huge groat room, slap saving kHchan, two large bedrooms, 2 lull baths, loft araa and full basamanl.
91.900Camalol. Idoal location in growing neighborhood. 3 bedroom contemporary ranch. Entry loyar, formal dMng room, great room wHh woodstove, wooded lot, wood dock, E-310; energy offldsnl.
98.000Ragland Acres. Largs 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiot cut-do-sac. Well landacapod lawn, doubla carport. Interior foaturoa 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. kHchan with eating araa, don with liroplaco. 086.
99.900SInglotreo. Almost now brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, lamHy room with flreplaco, fancad back yard with datachod doubts garage. AssumaMo 019% financing.
58.900Cambridge. RasHy apodal 2 story in Ihia convenient localion. 3 badrooma, 219 baths, formal areas, dan with flraplaca, dock for those dalighHul evenings!
98.900Rod Dak. Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, super kitchen, double garage, 8% assumaUo financing.
51.500OouMo your|lllb^f^[ifi a IBY^tory homol BaauUfui fancad bac' Ml dJ IwHlI fMplMO, huge eat-in kitchen, 3 bedwawnliwAalaoolMM.
57.900Rod Oak. 4 br ,oom ranch Ilka thto one to hard to find. Formal entr er and IMng zoom, famHy room, garage with autor jtti oor opener. Now the bast part, 919% aasumab ioa , with low equity. Botlar hurry!.
57.900Eastwooo4 bodrooms.derritic araa and aupar price! FamHy room with flrapiaca. kHchan tH for tha gourmal, fenced back yard, and qutol dead-end street!
95,108Weethaven. 10% assumabla loan. 3 bedrooms, formal araas. cozy dan. kHchen wHh eating area, garage, wonderful araa!
95.900Aydan. Cholea brick ranch on largo fancad, comer lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with fkeptoce, kHchen wHh eating araa. A lot for tha money!
55.900Hardea Acres. FHA 245 10%! Yas, you can afford H. Cute as a button, 3 bedrooms. 119 baths, basutHiri deck and pool. Dont miss It!.
59.990Untoaralty araa. 4 bedrooms, 2 tuH baths, central heal and air. FamHy room, large kHchen with eating area, attractive bungalow styling.
59.500Griffon Country Club area. Maintenance free 3 bedroom ranch. Formal areas, large back porch and double garage. Beeutlfully landscaped.
59.000Qrimastond. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, den wHh fireplace, formal HvIng room, fenced back yard, double detached garage.
94.900Orifton Country Club. Better than naw 3 bedroom, 2 bath home at the Country Club. Features beautHul great room with cathedral ceHing and fireplace, spacious dMng area, and InvHIng deck. M8.
Street. Ouiel araa artthin walking dtolanca of imlveraHy. Large ranch with maintenance free siding. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge kHchen with eating area, great room wHh firoptoce.
53.500Charming all brick ranch in Pleasant Ridge. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, great room wHh firaplace. kHchen with many buHI-ins. Almost new!
9*.*96Griffon. Lovely brick ranch. Hving room with fireplace, formal (flning room, large kHchen. 3 bedrooms. moveJn condHion. Mil.
41.500-Univ64sHy araa. 2 story frame house wHh the Southern Colonial accent. 3 bedrooma. 219 baths, lamHy room wHh firoptoce, charming home.
tt,900-Memortol Drive. Cute 2 story, 3 bedrooms. kHchen with eating area. famHy room.
49.908-Convenient flopping, vary
famHy room
49.500-Slngtolree. Cute rancfl! 3 badrooma, country kHchen. famHy room wHh chimney tor woodstove. E-300!
47.500-Grimeatond. 3 bedroomt, bath, famHy room, kHchen with eating area, (^minutas from GreenvHle.
47.500UnlvertHy A^WHinW Al cfMlk stucco atyto, privata
taiuiyjroom, kHchen with
47,508-Grifton. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch. LMng room wHh firoptoce, exceOent condHion. energy etflctont. WHI consider rant with option.
99.900BHtmore. Duplex toss than block from campus. 2 badrooma aach aida, rocently ramodaled. Rant $500.00 a month.
49.000-araenbriar-MMr/llL IraN M\brick ranch. Immacu-
45.000-Belvoir Araa. taatalulty dacoralad 3 bedrooms, 2 bath ranch. Qraat room wHh flrapiaca. kHchan wHh nuny axtras.
45.000-Supar nica aH brick 3 bedroom homo. LMng room with flraplaca. pina panatod dan. garage and workshop. J33.
42.900Shenandoah. Naw townhouse wHh 2 bedrooms. 119 baths and flraplaca. Soft earth tone decor with great decorating postibilHtoa. Perfect tor tingle or couples.
42.500Hardee Acre^^yrlbi* brick ranch locatad
**den su|mI(iwF **
42.900Coiontol Heighta. Cute 3 bedroom brick ranch. 1 bath, kHchen wHh eating area, shady, fenced back yard. Cl.
42.900FamMlle. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, formal IMng room, famHy room with tireplace, carport, aaaumabie financing.
41.900Farmers Home aaaumplion available on thto 3 bedroom, 119 bath brick ranch wHh carport. Tll^
41.000-Ayden. You cant beat thto one for price and condHionI Over 1900 square feel, aH brick. 3 bedrooms, many axtra fe'turee. Call for appointment to tee thto fine home.
41.000-UnlversHy Area. 3 bedrooma. 1 bath bungalow has living room with M^to^^il sefif^ dining room. Pay equHy and iMuA off Ftf lAn. Excellent tiarler
pREsk ONjhE
MARKET
$99.800Club PInM. Immaculite 4 bedroom, 2Vi bath tradnional wHh hardwood floors throughout the formal area. BeautffuHy landscaped lot in an axcallani location.
39.900Jeffaraon Drive. Assumable 10% financing, payments Hke rentl 3 bedrooma. bath, kHchen with eating area. tottefuHy decorated Interior, detached garage.
39.000E.C.U. Area. 3 bedroomt. dan with firaplace. formal dining room. Could ba atartar homa, or invaatmant property.
38.000Colontol Heights. 3 bedroom bungalow for the young couple. FamHy room, kHchen with eating area, beautiful wooded lot.
30.900CharmingCute bungalow Just outside the city limits. 3 bedrooms, famHy room, kHchen with eating area. Pine paneUng. pecan trees, excellent condHion.
35.000Untoersity area. Cuta 3 bedroom, 1 bath bungalow. Walking distance from campus. Parted tor rental or first home.
27.900MacQregor Downs. Dver 3 acre wooded buUdIng site In thto fine area.
27.500New Usting. Ayden. 3 bedroom. 1 bath older home on large lot in good location. Room tor expansion by flntohbig two upstairs bedrooms.
29.900W. 13th Street. First home buyers, or Investment. 3 bedrooms, torga kHchen and famHy room. Has been rented for $290 per month.
10.500 MobHe home and lot.
OPEN HOUSES TODAY
OPEN HOUSE 1-3 P.M.
1802 Greenville Blvd.
Super location, closa to everything. Parted lor professional couple, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, naw heat pump. $49,900. Your Hoates Jean Hopper.
OPEN HOUSE 3-5 P.M.
100 Pineridge Road Lake Glenwood
WaH kept ranch alyto homa on corner lol. 3 bedrooms. 2 full batha, formal araaa, dc.i wHh flraplaca, kHchan with convenience and breakfast area. Double garage and patio. $90,900. Your Hostasa; Jean Hopper.
.7I64)M9 JeMWyridi.. .76B-1119 NaraDey..... .766-eMt RavBpean... .SS8-19IB AMtoCaneU..
.796-5716 MIAIdrtdga.....
.5M-S004 IrtaCemoe......
.7964361 NtMAIMga.... .7964176 OaeSeethmlmid.
...........3SS4700
...........746-1639
...........756-7371
.....756-9166
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THINKING OF BUYING A HOME?
THECENTUBYaSWSimi SELLS MCEHCMES THAN ANY OTHERKEAL ESTATE SALES ORGANIZATION.
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Call One Of Our Neighborhood Professionals Today!
^oker On Call Sunday: Eddie Pate 752-6560
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
NEW LISTING
1t1 HILUNDALE. HARDEE ACRES
SOMCTHMIO SPECUUJ Look at tha Ktk) eonalruclion ol brick and alona, and tha axtra insulation in lha attic-than add 3 badrooma. lit baths, spacious ben with fireplace and picture windowall on a nice comer lol-and you can't afford to pass it up. Coma out to see it today, and youH agree that this is a good buyaltuatMt.JM.No.472
JahnUoye.Jr.
17M BMiMionl Drtw, Engtmaood
LARGE FAMH.V - VOU'U LOVE THIS HOME! A traditional style brick home with S bedrooms. 7V baths, formal areas, large family room, 2 fireplaces, all kitchen appliances, and a garage 24M actuare feet to spread out in. and owner la wining to finance pan of the equity. Don't watt on this one, it vron't last long! MS.MI No. 387
S47 CRESTLINE BLVD.. CLUB PINES
AT LAST1 A beautiful contemporary in Club Pines Now you can enjoy the spaciousness of contemporary living Relax this summer on your deck or enjoy next winter by the fireside in your greatroom. Style and comfon is all arranged for you in your huge master suite on the first floor This 4 bedroom. 2Vt bath home is' priced at only JM.IM. No S83
Janet Boarsar Ustlng Broker
104 HARDEE CIRCLE. EASTWOOD EASTVfOOO - If you are looking for a Brick Ranch with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths this may be it! Mas a family room with fireplace, lormal area, porch and garage, and the utility bills are very reasonable Call the office lor your private showing of this new listing priced at UT.IM. No 584
Ann Bass UsUng Broker
HIGHWAY 33 RT 3
LIKE TO ENTERTAIN? This 3 bedroom split-level home has a super family and rec room area on lower level Plumbing is accessible lor wet bar in rec room Home has a lemlic kitchen with an solid wood cabmeis dishwasher and trash compactor Large dining room is open from foyer and kitchen This country home features double garage ana extra large utility room with workshop S7I.IH. No 582
Qaya Waldrop Listing Broker
143,500-SUPERIOR EXECUTIVE HOME-This home is only for those with champagne taste! Exquisite three story traditional in prestigious Bedford. Formal areas, 4 bedrooms, huge family room with adjoining solarium, finished room over garage and unfinished third story area just a few of the features. No. 552.
1M,900-BUY YOUR BEST HOME now! This 4 bedroom showplace in Lynndale has to be seen to be appreciated! All formal areas, den with fireplace & walk-in wet bar for entertaining, large kitchen with dining area, and many extras. No. 407. 13S,900-UPPER BUCKS! Dont miss your chance to see this home m Lynndale with 4 bedrooms, a playroom, formal areas, den with a fireplace, and a wet bar. Formal and casual entertaining are easily achieved in this prestigious home. No. 341.
109,PRESTIGIOUS GRAYLEIGH! This 2400 foot 4 bedroom had bMn reduced just in time for summer fun. See the formal ari^ for entertaining and the spacious kitchen for that special
110,000^)NDER CONSTRUCTION in Club Pines. This 4 bedrooms will be loaded with all extras including all formal areas, large den with fireplace, wrap around porch, sundeck and circular drive. No. 528.
97.000-FOR THE SELECT FEMALE. Out of the pages of your better decorating magazines comes this two story home in Oub Pines. Spacious greatroom with french doors leading to a deck. Designer kitchen featuring custom cabinets and desk for planning. Located on a shaded wooded lot. Call for more details. No. 256.
93.900-BROOK VALL
could want. 4 pliances Includ Sell! Reduced t
led with everything you , iths, kitchen with all ap-I, trash compactor. A Must
89.900-SUPERBLY LOCATED on one of the most desirable lots in Club Pinos. Offers spacious living areas, modern kitchen with all conveniences. Very tastefully decorated. A special home for special people. No. 500.
r 99,900-TREAT YOURSELF! Impressed you'll be when you enter the foyer of this four bedroom home in Club Pines. Skylights, [ Casablanca fan and greenhouse are just a few of the extras. Master bedroom has it's own deck for those romantic summer nights. Owners transferred so this can be yours NOW. No. 481.
95.900-OWNER SAYS SELL! Dont miss your chance on this beautiful home in Cherry Oaks. Located only a stones throw from pool and tennis courts with A acre corner lot. It's just waiting for you and your family to move in and make it home. No. 380.
95.900-PRETTY-PERFECT AND PRESTIGIOUS-Williamsburg design home now under construction by one of Greenvilles best builders. Youll love the floor plan, greatroom with fireplace, formal dining room, and three bedrooms. Buy now and you can choose appliance colors, wall papers, etc. No. 549.
95.900-GOOD BUY CITY! HELLO COUNTRY! This two story home just past Cherry Oaks offers 4 large bedrooms, enormous kitchen, formal dining and a greatroom for casual enter-taininq. All located on a football field size lot. No. 346.
W,900-TEN ACRES OF LAND, and over 2000 feet of house, make for a good buy. Located south of Greenville, in the country, this new house is just waiting for you. No. 160.
94.900-4 BEDROOM, 2 bath contemporary. 200 square feet of sheer space. Cathedral living room, dining room with skylights, master bedroom with private deck, and gourmet kitchen, and comfy den are just a few of the extras. Call now. No. 556.
91i500-CLUB PINES REDUCED-This elegant home offers 3 bedrooms with 2 baths, den, office, or study, living room with fireplace beautiful mantel and built-ins, main bath is 13x11 with dressing area, 31x7 patio with azaleas and trees surrounded by fenced in yard and a winding walk through the trees. No. 524.
75.900-SOUTHERN CHARM describes this roomy plantation style home. Featuring white columns, spacious grounds, stables, split rail fences, and an assumable loan. This beauty needs a good look. No. 451.
01.900-LETS BE PRACTICAL! Every day you wait to buy a home it is going to cost you more money. Invest now and reap the rewards. This home may be perfect for that decision and is located in Club Pines close to shopping, churches, schools, and yet nestled in the trees on a quiet picturesque street. Lots of space for the growing family is offered by the four bedrooms floor plan with eat in kitchen, formal dining room, and warm sunny family room with fireplace. No. 477.
91,0004EW WILLIAMSBURG HOME in Westhaven IV. Every detail done to perfection. Greatroom with a fireplace, formal dining area, spacious kitchen with an eat In area. Located on a wooded lot In a most prestigious area. Buy now and choose your own wall papers, carpet, etc. No. 550.
79,000-YDUR HEART will melt |Mfl^you see this adorable home in Colonial Heights! Ihis^A features 3 bedrooms, walls of built in bookc|llk%pA#dlning room, and large laundry center. Mp #1 iJblii abundant cabinets and pantry in the kitchen.UfemHrwill be delightful in this enormous back yard. No. 438.^^
79,500-WHEELCHAIR READY! Thats right-this 2300 square foot home in Cherry Oaks was built to accomodate a wheelchair. Extra wide halls & doorways. Large open living, dining, & kitchen areas. Screen porch and a carport. No. 212.
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79.500-ONE OF A KIND! This new listing just abounds in quality throughout. Beautiful parquet floors, exquisite custom built woodwork. Large master bedrooms, 2/^ tile baths, formal dining, intercom, central vacuum, and fenced yard. Plus an expandable walk-in attic. Loan is assumable. No. 563.
79.500-RUSTIC CEDAR FARM HOUSE-This listing in Tucker Estates offers superior construction. Pewter light fixtures and period wall paper give the home a Williamsburg flair. Floor plan is a reproduction of the owners Grandmas home and lends a touch of nostalgia. Owners transferred and regret having to sell. Call now for your private showing. No. 441.
][*>*-STEP INTO CQ|V(IAT^^^ the plush new listing in Tucker Estate^Klfw^kAonlwhen with breakfast area, large mud roori^^MdsJb MwWhelter for your car plus formal dining roonMb iWdrooms. No. 565.
70.000-OWNER SAYS SELL!! Moving from Greenville and wants to buy another In Virginia. You will love the interior of this spacious 3 bedroom home-and thats not all-the location is ideal with swimming pool less than a block away. Make them an offer Now! No. 505.
74.900-PRACTICALLY NEW! REDUCED Only a year old with energy saving heatpump, formal areas plus den. Located in a great neighborhood for walking, riding bikes, swimming, playing tennis. Call for showing. No. 423.
74.900-STATELY OLDER HOME in Bethel. Havent you always loved those beautiful older homes on Main Street? Now you can own one! The owners of this 2900 square feet home have priced this one to fit your pocket. Call today! No. 455.
74.000-COLONIAL ELEGANCE-This two story home has everything you could want. Four or five bedrooms, all fornial
^ areas, family room with fireplace and much more. Best of all it is located outside the city limits for the plantation feeling! No 520.
571,900 - This 2714 square loot home offers 3 bedrooms upstairs with 2 baths and formal areas and den with fireplace. Downstairs can be used as a private area for that older kid that likes privacy and music, or a guest area with its own private bath. Take a look at this one. No. 574.
69.900-SUPER STAR-Thats what youll be when you own this beautiful contemporary home located in Cherry Oaks. Cant beat the kitchen for work ability and space. Greatroom with fireplace, three bedrooms and a beautiful lot. No. 479.
69.900-NEW LISTING: BELVEDERE-This two story home, nestl-M among the trees is the answer to your home buying needs,
It features a foyer, formal areas, plus a cozy den. Owners regret having to leave this 3 bedroom charmer. No. 555.
69.900-COME HOME TO SOMETHING SPECIAL! This one of a kind IVi story ranch has room galore. Send the kids upstairs to the playroom while you relax in the large greatroom with fireplace downstairs. Lots of attic storage behind the "secret bookcase entrance". Really unique. No. 507.
68.900-COUNTRY COMFORTS abound in this new offering just minutes from town in a quiet subdivision. It is nestled on a corner lot and features a sunny eat in kitchen with a bay window, formal areas, cozy den and a spacious walk-in pantry Owner says sell, so help us out today. No. 541.
66.900-BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wood siding home with deck. Energy Efficient. Vaulted ceiling in greatroom with fireplace, spacious one car garage, ear-thtone colors, unique indirect lighting. No. 487.
05j900-USE YOUR IMAGINATION and turn this quality built 4 bedroom in the University Area into a palace. This 2337 square foot beauty features two sunrooms and a hot tub in the large back yard. Call the office for more details. No. 558.
U,000-IF YOU WANT QUALITY then we have what you are looking for-an exceptional 3 bedroom home in beautiful Forest Acres. You can sit on the screened in porch and view your acre plus private wooded property. No. 311.
84.900-HIDDEN AMONG THE TREES is the beautiful contemporary on almost 2 acres. Features 26 foot great room, beautiful kitchen with all modern appliances and 3 roomy bedrooms. Excellent areas for entertaining. No. 529.
64.900 - DELIGHTFUL 3 bedroom, 2 bath with over 1800 square feet. Has greatroom and formal dining room, and a pretty kitchen. Partially floored attic. See it now! No. 415.
563.900 - EASTWOOD - A convenient location. This 1571 square foot 3 bedroom brick ranch, with formal areas, den with fireplace, spacious eat-in kitchen, main bath with lots of "elbow room, carport and a very spacious attic. Call for your appointment today. No. 575.
62.900 REDUCED!!! This 3 bedroom brick ranch with formal areas, den with wood stove, and enclosed garage, has a wooded lot and is beautifully landscaped. Chain link fence, and a detached workshop or garage. Owners most anxious to sell, so take a look and make an offer today. No. 576.
62.900-RECIPE FOR HAPPINESS-Take one nice 3 bedroom home, add a den with fireplace and formal areas and you have the makings for years of sweetness for a family. Spacious yard with a split rail fence. No. 499.
62.700-CONVENIENT TO THE HOSPITAL-this home has 1600 ^uare feet, chair rail, wainscotting, beamed ceiling in greatrcMm, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and low utilities with its heatpump. Excellent condition. No. 447.
562,500 - CAN BE HAD for a reduced price. Im a 3 bedroom ranch with low assumable loan. I offer all formal areas, den with wood stove, eat in kitchen, closed in detached garage is not included in square footage, could be a workshop. Chain link fence in back yard, & separate fenced double dog run. No. 576.
61.900-DAYS FRESH! Charming brick rancher, three bedrooms, 2 baths, beautifully groomed. Den with fireplace, half attic is floored and has plenty of storage. Located in beautiful Lake Ellsworth. Make a point to see this one today! No. 504.
61,500-3 BEDROOM, V/2 bath Split Foyer in Rosewood. All modern appliances in kitchen, plus a living room, foyer, and family room. Has a heatpump for low utility bills, plus an attic fan and outside storage shed. No. 546.
M,900-lf you are looking for a three bedroom 2 bath home, with living-dining combination, family room with fireplace, kitchen appliances, carport, and a large backyard here it is! Dont miss out. call today. No. 515.
59.900-CLOSE TQif owner has just painted
and recarpeted tKewe ftBe-l||Pew. Be one of the first to see this 3 bedroq^rlfc||hc!o4o. 515. Reduced to 559,900.
59.900-COLONIAL FARMHOUSE-Three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas and large detached workshop. Island in kitchen No. 389.
59.900-NEAR HOSPITAL this California Farmhouse is situated on a shady, private, lane and features a den with fireplace, living room, detached workshop. 2 ceiling fans and lots more. Its priced right and the owners are ready to deal. No. 389.
59.900-CONTENTNEA CREEK-Dont miss your chance to see this lovely home. If away from the hustle and bustle of city life is where you want to be, then this is the home for you. No. 511.
59.900-SMACK DAB in the middle of one of Greenvilles best areas, Belvedere, this 3 bedroom home has all your family will need. Formal living room and a den with a fireplace, kitchen with a breakfast nook. Double garage. No. 513.
58.500-WiNTERVILLE-Looking for the perfect home? Well this could be it. On three acres of land. Three bedrooms, greatroom with fireplace. Even has a space for that summer garden. Better hurry. No. 503.
57.900-NO QUALIFYING TO ASSUME LOAN-low down payment, low interest rate! 3 bedrooms, deck and carport Call today. No. 508.
57.500-INTERESTED IN IN-TOWN? Here is 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, shopp-ing etc. then this is the house for you. 1>/i story contemporary with large loft upstairs. Call for more details. No. 506.
49.500-THREE BEDROOMS. baths, spacious den, and pric ed below 550,000. Your family can move right in and enjoy now. No. 472.
40.500-CHARMING & DELIGHTFUL. Except to be envied b your friends when you buy this like new brick ranch in Ayden Hardwood floors have just been refinished. New paint job in side and out. Plus it has an assumable FHA loan. No. 517
46.500-CANT GET START
be th break youye University area built in microwa No. 566.
46.500-NEGOTIA
bedroom home ,
Large fenced bac
lys you can't? This ma Sparkling clean home i r, central air. dishwasher this sounds like you, call now
Its to move soon. Thre
in nice neighborhooc
!-in kitchen. No. 501.
56,500-A PASTORAL Si
with every modern That is what m^s miles from Ind now. No. 543.
[ovely rural area combined home owner could want, le the place to be. Just 3.5 Hwy. 11. Newly listed-so phone
55.900-SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! ON THIS FIXED rate assumption you can save closing costs and initial investment. Owner is willing to help you with reasonable terms. Spacious greatroom with dining room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Conveniently located near the hospital. No. 535.
54.900-UNIVERSITY AREA-Attention Professors! This older home is within walking distance of ECU and is loaded with character and charm. This 4 bedroom home offers you space galore. All formal areas, fireplace, and a gourmet kitchen. No. 561.
54.900-ENJOY THIS FLOWER filled yard with room for a city garden. Spacious family room, three bedrooms, den with a fireplace and all located in College Court. No. 470.
54.900-SPACIOUS TOWNHOUSE CONDO. Has many extras such as 2 large bedrooms with private baths. Craft fireplace insert keeps you snug in the downstairs greatroom. Louvered shutters at every window. Really special. No. 436.
54.900-CONVENIENT TO UNIVERSITY-This four bedroom 2 bath home of 1820 square feet is ready for occupancy. Freshly painted inside. FHA 8% accumption with payrhents of 5238.68 PITI. No. 537.
U,^ENJOY SUMMER in the freshly painted home located in Bethel. Features three bedrooms, two baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace and a garage. No. 467.
53.900-OWNERS SAYS SELL-So they are sacrificing this 3 bedroom, 2 bath double garage home on a large country lot for a great price. Call now for your appointment to see it. No, 294,
53.900-WHISPERING PINES CONTEMPORARY-For the small family, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, plus a greatroom, dining room, and kitchen with appliances. Wood stove in the fireplace to keep you warm next winter. Come out and take a look! No. 554.
49.900-OWNERS HAVE OUTGROWN this two bedroom two bath home in College Court. Excellent condition! Extra insulation, refinished hardwood floors, knotty pine den, and lots more. No. 440.
49,900-REDUCED! Owners bath home in assumption. Tol on this one. No.
Beautiful 3 bedroom 1 luced. Great VA 11V2% per month. Better hurry
45,500-STOP RENTING-This cute home can be yours for just little money down. You can have the pride ow ownership ye payment cheap as rent. Located in University Area. Be the firs to see the solarium in this home No. 497
44.900-FRESH AS A SPRING BREEZE! You won't believe you ears when we say that a Farmers Home Loan assumption I available on this beauty. Take a drive today and see fo yourself how lovely this country home really is. Located 0 Stanton Drive. No. 471.
44.900-SELL THE CAR, you'll be able to walk every place from this lovely bungalow in the University area. Living room large, featuring fireplace with bookshelves on each side. Larg kitchen, sun porch and 2 or 3 bedrooms. New gas furnace an well maintained home. No. 444.
44^LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME? Then look n mwe. This three bedroom home is perfect for the small family
Call today for more details. No. 510.
43.900-ATTENTION LARGE FAMILIES! Here's your chance own that 4 bedroom home you've been wanting for unde 550,000. This brick ranch offers you very roomy kitchen. V/2 baths plus carport. Large corner lot located only a few blocks fromshcool. No. 545.
41.900-LOVE A FRUIT ORCHARD? Then this is the home fo you. 3 bedrooms, formal areas, greatroom with fireplace, anr plenty of fruit trees, plus a grape arbor. This is a home for frui lovers. No. 465.
540.900-REDUCED, owner financing and it's beautiful! The owner is leaving and really wants to sell this beautifully decorated 2 bedroom Townhouse with full basement. Take one look inside this immaculate home and you'll be ready to buy a
low price, and owner will help you finance the equity. No
39.500-SUNNY LANE-Thls home will bring sunshine into your f^ily. Three bedrooms, eat in kitchen, and much more. No.
39,900|VALUE PACKED! Come see how far a dollar can still stretch in the 3 bedroom ranch. A hugh 4 car garage 26x30. A comfortable home at a very affordable price. No. 502.
36.500-COLLEGE COURT-Handy man special-needs some paint here and there. Three bedrooms, wooded lot Owner will finance FHA, No, 394.
537,900 - University Area. Nice 3 bedroom bungalow with formal areas, family room, nice kitchen, and 1 bath. And priced to sell. See this one today, it wont last long! No. 573.
37.900-THIS HOME needs an owner now! Call for all the details and well work out the financing for you. There's a home for everyone, and this one may be for you. No. 509.
33.900-UNIVERSITY AREA-This neat starter home could be just for you. It features 1/i baths, central air, and the owner will consider any offer. Come fake a peek at a good investment No. 459.
30,800-TAKE A LOOK at this well kept older home. New heat pump and central air, 3 bedrooms, formal areas. Charming! No. 452.
35.000-NEW LISTING: Great starter home. If you area looking for your first home, or a retirement home, this one is for you. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, combination family room dining & kitchen, with nice pantry. Ceiling fan for these warm days. Call and let us show you this comfy home in Ayden. No. 560
M.WO-QUAINT AND COZY and only $30,800 is this two bedrwrn condo. Conveniently located to shopping and cam-pus. No. 544.
28.000-RENTING YOUR MONEY AWAY? If you want your own place, have we got the place for you! And it comes with a 12x12 workshop to give you a place to spread things out. No. 564.
11.000-WHAT A BARGAIN-Located onSR 1334 about 20 minutes from Greenville, this home is unfinished, but is just right for the handyman looking for a deal. Call us for details. No. 204.
527.000-HANDYMANS SPECIAL. Put your many talents to work on this 2400 square foot home in good neighborhood.
See Our Lots For Sale In The Classified Sections.
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2424 S. Charles St.
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FOR SALE-THATS RIGHT! We are go-
ing to build a new office to replace our old one. House Station has been great. We just need more space! Office has two restrooms, two conference rooms, kitchenette, two offices down and three offices upstairs. Drop by for your personal showing or call for more information.
GOREN
BRIDGE
By CHARLES GOREN AND OAAAR SHARIF
1963 Tnbune Company Syndicata. Inc.
MEREDITH'S MOMENT
Both vulnerable. East deals.
NORTH
A86
^AKJ3
0 AJ84
AJ6
WEST
EAST
K742 01093
^Q109 '78S4
0 752
OKQIO
A84
1053
SOUTH
5
^762
0 963
KQ972
The bidding:
East SoBth West North
Pass Pass Pass 1 0
Pass INT Pass 3 NT
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead: Two of .
In 1955, a strong British team came to New York to try to wrest the Bermuda Bowl from the United States, which had won the trophy every year since the best teams of Europe and the United States had first competed for the trophy in 1950. One of its stars was the late Adam Meredith, a mercurial player known for opening three-card spade suits and other eccentricities.
In one room the United States played one no trump and made six tricks. Meredith became declarer at three no trump on the auction shown, and West led a spade.
Declarer was not a favorite. The defenders need only hold up the ace of clubs one round to shut South out of his hand forever, and that is exactly what the British defenders did against routine play.
Meredith ducked the opening lead but won the spade continuation with the ace. Now he came up with one of the greatest deceptive plays we have ever seen-he led the jack of clubs from the table and overtook with his king!
West, one of the worlds great players, thought that declarer was trying to steal an entry to his hand to take the heart finesse, and he was not going to allow that. He rose with the ace of clubs and the defenders cashed one spade trick before shifting to a diamond.
Now Meredith revealed the beauty of his concept. He won the ace of diamonds and led a club from dummy to his nine. When this finesse held and the suit broke 3-3, he ended up with ten tricks via a heart finesse - four tricks more than did the declarer in the other room!
Funds Raised By Public Radio
WASHINGTON (AP) -The financially troubled National Public Radio network has sold its 20 percent share of a data distribution system to raise (5 million, officials said.
NPR said it has agreed to sell its share of the joint venture with National Information Utilities, a computer services and software firm based in McLean, Va. The deal is contingent on National Information Utilities selling enough stock to become a publicly-held corporation.
The joint venture, to be known as INC Telecommunications, would use NPRs satellite system and facilities of its member radio stations across the country to distribute data to businesses, government agencies and consumers.
The City Council recently enacted an ordinance prohibiting trucks from traveling on ctain streets or parts of streets in the city. For more informatioii, call the City engineering Department at ^-37.
Life As It's Lived
By GAIL MICHAELS
DEAR READERS: We heve had meay reqoeeta ever the years for those haads that we eoBsider to he oar favorites. That makes qoite a Bst. For the time beiag, therefore, we are devotiag the Soaday cal-omn to a series of faaoos haads. At the ead ri the series, we will go back to ear weekly qoestioB aad aaawei columo.
After all these years oi making fun of childrearing theories that seem to be more applicable to the behavior of rats and rabbits than of children, I am stuck with my own in-house psychologist. Meg has closely observed ZiwAarys behavMtf, and she is more than ready to assist me when my attempts to discq}line him fail.
And fail they often do. Zachary is not, as Meg has pointed out, a civilized person. And be has become less so as he seeks to attain
the same level (rf ind^ien-dence that be attributes to all the people around him;
Thus he insists upon dressing himself every morning. Now I have nothing i^amst this; in fact, I was beginning to wonder if he would ever willingly assume that simple re^nnsibility. The problem is that he refuses to wear anything but underp^ts, and half the tinoe I find those discarded in the middle of the kitchen floor as just beyond the kitchen door he cavorts wildly in his sandbox.
"Im hot, he eq>lains whenever I attenqR to introduce the concept of modesty.
He has also begun, with the air of a barstool, to be^ himself to the bounties (rf the kitchen. "I got my own breakfast," he yriled into my ear eariy the other morning. "Guess what I ate?
I peered out from under my pillow at the brown ring around his mwith. What? Choclate chip cookies! "Its just a stage, Meg assured me over lunch. "You know, Mother, that small
children go througi stages. You just hiw to be patient with him.'
1 thanked b- for her advice,' but she wasnt fmisbed. And anotbo- tlung, hed probably irrttate you a lot less if youd learn to ignore him. Thats what I do.
"I would if I tbou^ that the neigbtm could.
"I dont mean about that. I mean like )ri)en he intemg>ts me while Im saying the bles^. He ju^ waiRs attention. But I go right (n talking.
That haa always beoi one of her taleats. She went right on talking as Zachary climbed from hb place at the table, leaving most of his sandwich behind him.
"Zachary, I intemq)ted, "if you ^ down from this table. Im going to throw your linch away, and you have to eat all ^ lunch if you want any ice cream later.
He grinned at me and trotted out of the rocun. "You alumys say that to him, Meg said, "and the meal is
always there when be cmnes back. You have to mean what you say.
I g(R ig) and dumped the limchintfaesink.
But even Meg occasionally finds herself in a double bind when dealing with our young savage. Later that afternoon, she had just finished helping me dean up the doi when Zachary swept 10 pimles off his table with his arm. Pieces flew everywhere.
Zachary! Meg screamed. You pick those up!
Zachary stood there with his arm crossed.
"Meg is right, I said. "If you (hmt have those puzzles picked up and put back together by the time I come downstairs again. Ill have to give hm* the paddle.
1 came back downstairs to find M^ putting together the last puoK. "I told Zachary to do that. You certainly didnt have to help.
"I know, she sighed. Its just that, as awful as he is, 1 cant bear to see him spanked.
WIN A DIAMOND!
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Billy Dee Goes Shooting For Series
By JAY BOBBIN those moves all the time.
Given that, Williams sees Relatively few television Shooting Stars as the right producers have the so-called move for iim at this point in his golden touch, or the ability to career. It gives me an oppor-create a hit virtually every tunity to show many facets, time. Thats what makes Aaron both on the humorous and Spelling so unique in Holly- serious sides. The situation wood; though many critics are lends itself to a lot of comedy, quick to lambaste his series and because these guys dont know TV-movies, the man seems to what the h~ theyre doing most have a pulse on what will of the time! Tlieres a lot of fun attract an audience. With ongo- and a lot of action. Doug Hawke ing projects like The Love is an interesting character to Boat and T.J. Hooker and play; he was formerly an air-others such as this falls plane pilot, a cop and a stunt Hotel waiting in the wings, man, so hes bigger than life. 1 Spelling (along with partner find this very different from Douglas S. Cramer, whos also most of the tngs you find on his co-executive p^ucer on TV these days, and I think the Fantasy Island) is ready to chemistry between Parker and try again with ABCs special myself is really strong. Theres movie presentation Shooting still talk of it becoming a mid-Stars on Thursday, July 28. season series, so I suppose this
The lighthearted action- is a test. adventure tale relies on the The airing of Shooting buddy system that served Spell- stars adds more fuel to what ing so well during the run of has become a very hot summer ^rsky And Hutch. The lead- for Williams, since hes also on ing characters of Shooting view at hundreds of movie Stars are actors Douglas theatres as the heroic Lando Hawke and Bill OKeefe (por- Calrissian in the third Star trayed respectively by Billy Wars saga, Return Of The Dee Williams and Parker Ste- Jedi. Hes about to travel to venson), who played detectives South Carolina for a role in the in a TV series... until the show upcoming CBS mini-series was cancelled. They decide that Chiefs with Charlton Heston they enjoy solving mysteries and Wayne Rogers, then he too much to give the career up, returns to New York to star in even if they were only play-act- Dick Garks production of ing at first, so they become Adam Gayton Powells life sto-real-life sleuths. They operate ry for ABC. out of The Nantucket Light, With all that activity, Wil-their jointly owned restaurant Hams claims he hasnt been which also serves as home base paying a lot of attention to for their supportive group of Jedis torrid action at the box friends (played in the film by office. Im so busy trying to Edie Adams, Fred Travalena, get all of these other characters Dick Bakalyan and Frank ready that Im not reflecting McRae). too much on whats already
As is the case with many been done. I like to play heroes. Spelling productions, Shooting as long as theyre devoid of Stars is actually the pilot for a cliches. Perhaps the ultimate projected series. Billy Dee Wil- hero Williams will ever play is Hams has resisted doing a Lando, and he admits that he weekly show for quite a while, enjoys the reception accorded but he had a special reason for that dashing space scoundrel; saying yes this time: I really The whole idea of being in want to stay consistently busy comic books, appearing on cups now. When youre doing fea- and glasses and having dolls tures, you find yoi^lf always made of you is an awful lot of looking for the right kind of fun. Not many people have that scripts to do, and those are very kind of experience. hard to come by. Ill still be For Billy Dee Williams,
doing theatrical movies and aBCs Shooting Stars is quite other things if the series gets a different experience, and one the go-ahead, but television has that satisfies him both person-also become very important. ally and professionally. This is
I used to think that if you an ideal situation, he states, did TV, he continues, and because working with Aaron youd be around every single Spelling is very special for me. week, you were overexposing He was instrumental in helping yourself. These days, though, me during the early60s when I that doesnt necessarily hold first went to California, so this true. More and more actors are is Hike a family reunion. moving from television into Whether that reunion will films, then back to television, become a weekly event, though, and they continue to make remains to be seen.
Edie Adams is at home at the keys as a restaurant manager in the first-run movie Shooting Stars, to air on the "ABC Thursday Night Movie July 28. Billy Dee Williams and Parker Stevenson are also featured.
TV 2-The Diily Reflector. GiWBvUle. NC.-SiMidy.Julyl.tlC
Sunday Daytime
&:M(DNi(ktTncki Kenny Foreman (SPN) Movie "Rangle River" 11939)
(SHOW)Biiarre &:30 Health Firid Eases Nest (ESPN) ProfeanMial Rodeo (R>
S 00 O John Wesley White ONews
Please Dont Eat The Daisies OILoreLocy OCDMacNeU 0 Cartdina Dimensioos 0 Week In Review 0 James RobisoQ (SHOW) Faerie Tale TVatre (HBO) Movie "Ruckus" (1980) 6:30 O The Deaf Hear O Light Unto My Path (D Private Secretary OGospelSiiig
O Charles Yomg Revival 0 A Better Way 0 Gospel Singing Jabilee 740ONewsight O Breath Of Life 0(B The World Tomorrow (S Jimmy Swaggart O Charles Yoong Revival 0700 Club OPraiseTime O Lone Ranger / Zorro 0Hamanside 0JimBakker (SPN) Intematioiial Byline (SHOW) Short Picks (NICK)Pinwheel (USA) Cartoons 7:30 O Jewiik Voice Broadcast O Leonard Repasa OChorch Of Onr Fathers O Jimmy Swaggart O Kenneth Copeland 0Kwicky Koala 0HisLove 0 It Is Written (SPN) Travellers World (SHOW) The Last Of The Cad-
does
(ESPN) luide The USFL(R) (HBO) Movie "The White Lions' (1981)
HO O Zola Levitt OSnnshBW For Today O Robert Schnller (D Frederick K. Price O Day Of Discovery 0Kidswarid
0 Amasing Grace BiMe Gass 0Cartoais 0 Kenneth Copeland (SPN) Home Based Basinesa (SHOW) Movie "Oliver Twist (1975)
(ESPN)SportaCeater 8:300 The Lesson O Paul Brown OOOOral Roberts O Christian Viewpoint 0 For Your Informatioo 0 Jim Whittington (Sm) Bible Answcn 0:00 O Kenneth Copeland O Bey Of Discovery OTheWaltoos d) Jerry Falwell O The Kiws Children O Jimmy:
O0Sonday
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(SHOW) Movie "Papillon" (1973) (ESPN)CFLFootbaU (HBO) Movie Clash Of The TiUns"(1981)
10:000 Lloyd Ogilvie O David PanI O Day Of Discovery d) Tom And Jerry OGoodNews O D. James Kennedy
SHOUVTDME Presents
Diana Ross
Live from Central Park
Live Broadcast OnSHO\)/riME July 21,1983 At 6:00 P.M.
Encore At 10:00 PM
On July 21,1903 SHOVTlME piesenis ihe legtndiy Dwrw Ross in pjy cable s fifsi inteicMiionai live music event Ms Ross wnl petfotm SIX decades of great music ftom tne Dius of Biiiie Holiday to tne magic of Motown to net dyiiamic nits of tne 70 s and 80 s Tnis live concett is one mote example of SHCMTTiME s commitment to offering out suD-scriDets me most innovative pay television eniettamment and winy Ail Eyes Turn Fot Snowtime
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AtlEYCSnmFOR
0 Jerry Falwell 0 James Robisaa (SPN) Kcnseth Copeland lO:d30 lighter Side lOtSie Larry Joaes OO Jerry Falwdl eSpiritnal Awakening (B Movie Rocky MounUm" (1950)
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OBrnestAn^
0 Movie "Charro (1969)
0 Marilyn Hkfcey 16:35 0 Movie Red River" (1948) llMSJbamySwaaart O First Presbyterian Chnrch O&nestAngley O First BapM Chnrch 0jifflBakker (SPN) Oral Roberts (NHX) KidsWrites (USA)Wrmtliig 11:360 Robert Sctaller O The World Tomorrow OJimBakker
0 This Week inth Divid Brink-
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OS^tectrsm O HotpitiUty Home
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OO Meet The Presa OFIMim Fever 0FaoeTteNatiaa r 0ThBeAanonoced (SPN) Real Brtate Action Uw (ESPN) NFLa Grcateat
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0CtarckTrisniphaiit (SHOW) Paper Chase (ESPN)SportsCentcr (HBO) Movie Arthur" (1981) (NKX) Yon Cant Do That On Televisioo
(USA) Kum Fa Theater 12:30 O O This Week With David
r; f I
(NKX) Reggie Jackaoas World OfSports '
1:000 Beynod The Horisoo: U.& /japuMagasine OMonitor OHeeHaw OTheWattoos 0 The Rocfcted Files 0 Movie The Good, The Bad And The Ugly (1967) 0RW.Schwand>ach 0FiriiLiae (SnOFMaadalbqMry (SHOW) Movie Popeye (1980) l:30OTbBeAmMnced O Movie Wooder Woman (1974)
0TheLaHayes
(SPN) Name Of The Game Is
Golf
(ESPN) Horseshow Jnmping (NKK) Against TV Odds IJS 0 This Week In BasebsB Hie Movie Uttle Big Horn (1951)
d) Movie Flight To Holocaust (1977)
OOGolf
O Solid GoU Cekhrates Thi 7li
0 Movie A Step Out Of Line (1970)
OReiHnmbard SMerchaotsOfGraiB (SPN) Real BMate Adioo Line (HK)) The Who Tdv Ittt TV Final Show
(NICK) TV Adventares Of Black Beaity
(USA) Greatest Sports Legends H50BasebaU
The comedy mystery Rooster, to air on the ABC Sunday Night Movie on July 24, features a tall (Pat McCormack) and short (Paul Williams) investigative team out to solve a collection of curious crimes.
(Suuaos rcMTvv the n(St to make lait-miDute dian(a I
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IMePUlArms (SPN) ChristiaB Childrens Fund (NICK)Uvewite (USA) Scholaatic Sports Academy SJIOGoH O Movie The Proud Rebel (1951)
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OOSportfWorld O0 Sports Sunday 0KimgPn 0Divid Ralston 0 Undersea World Of Jacques Cousteau
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(SHOW) Short PIcV (NICK) TV Adventnres Of Black Hearty (USA) Co-Ed S:0 Undersea World Of Jacones Cortteai 5:50^) Movie The White ons(1981)
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(ESPN)SportaCenter (NICK)Uvewire (USA)Tenbs 7:50Wiestlin8 7:30 O Swiss Puaily Robinson 0 Camp Meeting, U5A. (HBO)FraggleRock
1:000 Red West Actors, directors and critics discuss recurrent themes in Western movies (1 hr.)
o o O Matt Houston
(SHealthBeat
OOCHiPs
O O One Day At A Time 0 Evening At Pops Steve Lawrence And Eydie Gorme" This husband-and-wife team. sUrs of TV, Broadway and the nightclub circuit, sing with the Pops in a special tribute to the 95-year-old Irving Berlin, including a medley of his hits. (1 hr.)
(SI^ Scandinavian Weekly A
tour of the Scandinavian countries with an eye to culture,
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(SHOW) Diana Rom Live Prom
Central Park On July 21 this premier performer will sing more of her music than in any previous concert appearance in a live concert from New York Citys Central Park. (2 hrs.) (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Momenta Mighty Men And Magic Moments ll hr.)
(BM)) Billy Joel b Concert Joel performs many of his chart-topping hits, from "Just The Way You Are to "Its Still Rock N Roll To Me in his first televised concert, taped at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island. (1 hr., 5 min.)
(NICK) The Third Eye The Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Mrs. Palmer is convinced that Cassie has inherited her psychic powers and is anxious to meet the mysterious Mr Dcverill. (Part 4) (1 hr.)
8:950 NabvUle Ahve! Guests: Bobby Lord, Connie Cato, Ronnie Robbins, Gamble Rogers. (1 hr.)
3:39 (SMillera Court OO One Day At A Time 0Oral Roberts 9:OOObToach O O O Movie Rooster (1982) Paul Williams, Pat McCormick. Two mismatched invesgators try to rise above their personal differences when they are partnered to probe a case of possible arson. (R) Q (2 hrs.)
Merv Griffin 0 O Movie Coin South (1978) Jack Nicholson, Mary Steenburgen. A captured horse thief is offered a chance to escape hanging by marrying a young lady from the town in which he has been imprisoned (R)(2hrs.)
o O The Jefferaoos ffiJimBakker
0 Masterpiece Theatre A
Town Like Alice Jean travels to outback Australia in search of Joe, who is in London looking
forher.(Part4)(R)n(lhr.)
(SPN) Telefrance u:S.A. C^ don Bleu Cooking: Sala^ De Faisan / The Roads Of Exile "Entracte: Worry ln Per-formance; LE^fante El Lcs Sortileges (3 hrs.)
(ESPN) Old Timers Baseball "Cracker Jack Classic (from rFK Stadium in Washington, DC). (2 hrs.)
(NICK) Joseph Papp Prewb And Bones Anne Jackson. Tom Aldredge and Cliff De Young sUr in David Rabes bit-
ing play about a blind Vietnam -veteraii t2 M.1 -9:950 Week b Review 9:390 O Newkait
(HBO) Not Necessarily The
News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satine uke-off
19490 Ben Haden News
O O Trapper John, MD.
0 Robert SdwUer 0 The Good Neighhon (SHOW) Paper Chase Cinderella" The plight of a single mother struggling to raise her chiljd. support them both and attend law school touches Hart, his fellow students and even the forbidding Prof Kingsfield (1 hr.) (HTO) Movie Arthur 11981) Dudley Moore. Liza Minnelli While his family attempts to force him into a pre-arranged marriage, a drunken, hedonistic playboy falls in love with a poor woiiiing girl. PG (1 hr.. 53 min.)
19450News 19J9BJohnAnherberg OddConle 0 Dave Alin At Large 19:350Sporta Page 1141B The King Is Coming 00000Newa Movie Report To The Com-missiooer (1975) Michael Mori-arty. Susan Blakely A rookie cop who misukenly kilk a female undercover narcotics agent during a shootout becomes involved in a cover-up of the incident. (2 hrs.) OGoodNews OCBSNewi 0Gene Scott 0 Twilight Zone (SHOW) Movie Body Heat (1981) William Hurt. Kathleen Turner. A smalltime Florida lawyer is persuaded by his lover to murder her husband R (1 hr,, 55 min.)
(ESPN)SportaCenter (NICK) Great Poets, Great Writ-en Featured: Walt Whitmans "A Song By Myself
(USA) Ovatioo Peter Allen And The Rockettes - Man In The Clouds (2 hrs.)
11:05 OJerreFalweU 11:1500 ABC News O Jack Van Impe 11:280 CBS News (NICK) Nightcap "New Forms In The Broadway Musical Guests: composers Marvin Hamlisch, Stephen Scwartz 11:300 Contact OEmergency
THe Daily Reikelar. GrcMtrtUt. N C -Suiday. July *, l*-TV J
"Amelia Earhart :1}450 Fate Of The Earth
The'Case For Respun
O Movie _______________
11976) Susan Oark. John fbr sythe The independent lifestyle and air exploits of the famed aviatnx capture public imagination in the 1930s. (3 hrs )
O The Devlin Connectioo Private detective Nick Corsello (Jack Scalia) is hired by a woman iJulie Sommars) whose husband plans to frame her for the murder of her lover. 11 hr) 0JimWhittingtoa O Movie Breakbeart Pass (1976) Charles Bronson. Ben Johnson. A disguised federal agent, transporting a prisoner by tram through the West, is suddenly caught up m a dangerous sequence of events as tram passengers are murdered |2 hrs.)
0Two Ronnies 11:35 O Ehttertainment This Week 11:450 Movie "Footsteps (1972) Richard Crenna. Joanna Pettet A doHir-die football coach is hired by a small college to shape up its team. (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie "Tarzan, The Ape Man (1981) Richard Hams, Bo Derek, While accompanying her father on a search for the legendary Elephants Graveyard, a young woman is abducted by an uncivilized white man who was raised by apes in the jungle. R' (1 hr.. 52 min.)
1198 BLanr Jones O Charles Yoong Revival OJimBakker (SPN) In Ihe Spotlight (ESPN) Auto Racing NASCAR Budweiser 400" (from Riverside. Calif.) (R) (2 hrs.)
sible World Leadership Audu bon Society president Russell Ik Peterson, former governor of Delaware, speaks to the 1982 first Biennial Conference spon sored by ihe Friends of the Earth '
12:300 John Osteen O Dnsty A cynical Los Angeles cab driver i^ul Rubmek) gels the chance to live out his fanla sy of becoming a private eye 11 hr I
Bfkispe) Ministries (SPN) Mediterranean Echoes
The music and dance of Greece IS presented (2 hrs.)
11350 For Onr Times Religion In Nigeria Chrislunity The one-third of Nigerias popula lion who are Baptists,- Methodists. Presbyterians. Anglicans. Catholics and members of other esublished and independeni African Chrisuan churches are profiled (Part 2)(R)
(B Open Up 12:450 Movie Get Christie Love!' (1974) Teresa Graves. Harry Guardino. (1 hr.. 15 mm., 1:00 OZcda Levitt David Soskind (SHOW) Movie Beach Girls' (1982) Debra Blee. Val Kline (1 hr., 30 min.)
(USA) Don Drysdales Baseball
The former Dodger pitching great examines the latest news and events in the world of Major League Baseball (R)
1:050 Movie DO.A. (1949) Edmond OBrian. Pamela Britton. (1 hr. 45 mm.)
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(NlCK)Plnwhed (USA) (CAD Calliope 9:050 Movie (Mon) The Glass Menagerie (1973KTue) In Old Chicago (1938XWed) Champagne For Caesar (1950)(Tho) Doctors Wives (1971XFri) Arrivederci, Baby! (1966), 9:300 All In The Family 0 Contact (MnO ShUoh Christian Retreat (Tue) Frederick K. Price (Wed) Ught And Uvdy (Thu) HeriUge USA. Update (Fri)
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(Continued On Page 9)
Michele Will i ell
By Michele Marks
DEAR MICHELE: Conid you pletse give me some informa-Hon on Jenny Gardner of the daytime series Al My CWldren"? I woold also like her address. KEVIN LASKA, CHAPEL HHl,
N.C.
10 KEVIN IN CHAPEL HHX: Kim Delaney portrays teenager JeiHiy Gardner on AMC. Tte is Kims first television role Bom in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on November 29, Kim grew up in the Philadelphia suburb of Roxborough. After her graduation from Hallaban High School, she headed for New York to pursue a modding career which began in Philadelphia. Her agent suggested acting classes and she enrolled at an actors studio where she continues to take classes. Then things snowbaUed, Kim recalled. Along came commercials and an audition for the nrie of Jeni^. Kim has four brothers, and enjoys all sports, from bicycling and basketball to water skiing. Write to Kim in c/o All My Oiildren, ABC-TV, 1330 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y., 10019.
DEAR MICHELE: I am interested in knowing more about the Isdy who pUys Emms Channing on Falcon Crest" Please give me an address where I can write to her. PATRICIA WALLS. AYDEN. N.C.
TO PATRICIA IN AYDEN: Margaret Ladd portrays the zany Emma on Falcon Crest, Bom November 8, in Rhode Island, she is the younger of two daughters. Her father, a former ice skater, is an executive with an office supply company and a pianist. Miss Ladds mother is an artist, and her older sister Betty is a Spanish historian. A graduate, with a theater arts majOT from Bard College in New York state, Miss Ladd was unanimously accepted as the youngest member of Lee Strasberg's Actors Studio. Her credits are numerous, including Broadway, off-Broadway, feature films, daytime series and prime-time series. In 1969, Miss Ladd came up with an innovative concept of having professional theater actors work with hospitalized psychiatric patients. She and Lyle Kessler, her actor-writer husband, later created the Imagination Workshop, a non-profit organization operating through the auspices of several hospitals in Los Angeles and New York. Margaret and Lyle are the proud parents of triplets. Off-screen she enjoys sewing, cooking and reading. She also skis, rides horseback, sings and plays the guitar. The Kesslers live in Santa Monica. California. Fans may write to Margaret in c/o Falcon Crest, CBS-TV, 7800 Beverly BWd., Los Angeles, Ca.. 90036
DEAR MICHELE: Will you pleax tell me the name of the actress who plays Jenniier on Square Pegs" and where I can write to her? Abo, bow old U she? MELISSA WINDERS, FREMONT, N.C.
TO MELISSA IN FREMONT: Nineteen-year-old Tracy Nelson, who portrays Jennifer DeNuccio in Square Pegs," was bora on October 25 in Hollywood, California. Her family tree reads like a Whos Wbo in show business - she is the daughter of actor-musician Rick Nelson and actress (Christen Harmon Nelson, granddaughter of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, granddaughter of sportscaster Tom Hannon, and the great, great, granddaughter of legendary film mogul Cecil B. DeMille.
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8KI50 Movie The Last Wagon (1956) Richard Widmark, Felicia Farr. A condemned man comes to the rescue of wagon train survivors following an Indian atUck. (2 hrs., 5 min.) 8:300 O FamUy Tia Elyse soon regrets her decision to hire an underqualified, overbearing friend (Brooke Alderson) as her secretary. (R)
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(NICK) The Third Eye The
Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Mrs. Palmer efforts to exorcise Deverill are strangely thwarted. (Part 6)
9:00 0 700 CTub Featured a look at top fashion model Rene Russo. (1 hr, 30 min.)
Merv Griffin Guests Roger Moore. Anne Edwards, Leo Sayer, David Burnham. Dr Charles Kingsley Levy. (1 hr.)
O O Movie "The Prisoner Of Zenda (1979) Peter Sellers. Lynne Frederick A confusion of identities leads to both comic and dangerous situations for two look-alikes, one a king and the other a common subject, in the mythical land of Ruritania. (2 hrs.)
o O Tuckers Witch A flamboyant Hollywood hairdresser (Joe Penny) asks Rick and Amanda for protection when he learns that a hit man is after him. (R)(l hr.) m Jim Bakker
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Brideshead Revisited The Bleak Light Of Day" Sebastian returns to school seemingly bent on his own destruction after his mother (Claire Bloom) asks an Oxford don to watch over her son. (Part 3)(R)(-)(1 hr.)
(SPN) Teleranc UAA. Fiction The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 4) Night Music Carol Laure "Tele-Stones Horses Of The Sun (Part 3) ' "Artvtew: Frances National Heritage "In Performance; Monsieur Ravel (4 hrs.)
(SHOW) Movie The Betsy (1978) Laurence Olivier. Robert Duvall. Based on the novel by Harold Robbins A powerful and relentless Detroit auto tycoon brings a daredevil racing star into his company to develop a revolutionary new vehicle. R (2 hrs., 5 min.)
(NICK) VII InteroatioDul TchaikoyAy Competitiaa Cellists. violinists, pianists and vovalists from 40 countries take part in this prestigious musical competition. (1 hr., 45 min.) t:Se(ESPN) Off-Road Racing From Pomona, Calif. (1 hr.. 30 min.)
(EDO) Movie The Pirate Movie (1982) Kristy McNichol. Christopher Atkins. A shy teenage girl finds adventure and romance when a dream transports her to the world of a 19th-century pirate. PG (1 hr.. 40 min.)
10:00 (I) News O O Cagney A Lacey Succumbing to job burnout when her long-awaited vacation is postponed by Lt. Samuels, Mary Beth quietly disappears without alerting anyone. (R)(l hr.)
0 Letter Snmrall Teaching 0 The Glory Of The Garden James Mason narrates a docu-menUry film describing how Phillip de Rothschild designed and created one of the worlds most spectacular gardens - the Gardens of Exbury (1 hr.) 10:100 News 10:300 Star Time 0 Jerry Savelle 10:45 (NICK) A Night At Astis American soprano Ashley Putnam hosts a visit to Astis, the landmark New York lUlian restaurant, where guest artists, the waiters, maitre d and even the owner join customers to sing operatic favorites ll:OOOOOOO00News Odd Couple 0 Introduction To Life 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(ESPN)SportsCenter 11:05 All InThe Family (SHOW) Movie Squeeze Play" (1981) Jim Harris, Jenni Hetrick. The girlfriends of softball players decide to form their own team as a way of avenging their neglect, "R(lhr.,30 min.) 11:25 (NICK) Nightcap Opera Guests; Roberta Peters of the Metropolitan Opera, Grace Bumbry, the first black to sing at the Bayreuth Festival in Europe and soprano Wilhemenia Fernandez, featured in the French film, "Diva
11:300 Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nightline Kojak
O O The Best Of Carson Host Johnny Carson Guests: Larry Gatlin, Leonard Waxdeck and high school birdcallers, Carol Wayne. (R)(l hr.)
O Hart To Hart Jonathan and
The Daily Reneclor. GreenvUle. N C -Sunday. July 24.1983-TV .i Jennifer are on opposing sides 3:05 (HBO) Howard Hughes: The
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when they trv to solve a murder in which iheir best friends are the suspects. (R) 11 hr. 10 min.i 0 Charlies Angels 0 The Blackwood Brothers 0 Doctor In The House (HBO) Movie Hanky Panky (1982) Gene Wilder. Gilda Radner An innocent architect who was framed for a murder and a woman whose brother committed suicide under mysterious circumstances are thrown together in a dangerous game of intrigue. "PG" (1 hr., 45 mm)
11:350 The Catlins
12:00 O Bums And Allen 0 Jim Bakker
(ESPN) PKA Full ConUct Karate (R)
(USA) Hot Spots "Bricks Mor-ur (from The Springhouse in Hellertown. Pa.).(l hr.)
12:050 Movie " Sirocco" (1951) Humphrey Bogart. Marta Toren.(2 hrs, 5 min.)
12:300 Jack Benny OOneOnOne More Real People Newi
O O Late Night With David Lettennan Guests; pop singers Simon and Garfunkel. actress Mary Tyler Moore, author Fran Lebowitz. (1 hr.)
Inside Story Home movies, siill photos, letters, documents from previously secret files and film clips provide the substance for this investigation of the life ol the reclusive billionaire il hr i 3:30 News
3:550 Movie The Killers (1964) Lee Marvin. Angie Die kmson (2 hrs. 5 mm i (SHOW) Movie The Betsy
(1978) Laurence Olivier. Robert Duvall. (2 hrs.. 5 mm i
4:000 News 0 Today With Lester Sumrall 4:05 (HBO) Movie Haywire
(1979) Lee Remick. Jason Robards (2 hrs.. 25 mm )
4:15 (SPN) Movie Napoleon 11 L Aiglon (1961) Jean Marais. Bernard Verlev (2 hrs. 15 min ) 4:300 Roes Bagley O All In The Family (ESPN) International Soccer New York Cosmos vs. Hamburg (R)(lhr.)
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0 Star^ And Hutch 11:400 Movie More Than Friends (1978) Rob Reiner. Penny Marshall. (1 hr.. 20 min.) 12:45 (SHOW) Movie " Private Lessons (1980) Sylvia Kristel, Howard Hesseman. (1 hr., 30 min.)
1:0001 Married Joan O Rat Patrol ONews
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O O NBC News Overoi^t 0 Mission: Impossible (SPN) Movie "Honeymoon Limited" (1935) Neil Hamilton. Irene Hervey.(l hr .30 mm.) (ESPN) Inside Baseball (R)
(USA) Tennis "DC National Bank Classic" Men's finals (from Washington. DC). |R) (4 hrs.)
2:00 O Bachelor Father ONews
Private Secretary O CBS News Nightwatch 0 Jim Bakker (ESPN)SportsCenter 2:100 Movie Invisible Stripes (1939) Humphrey Bogart. William Holden. (1 hr . 45 min.)
2:15 (SHOW) Movie Summer Lovers" (1982) Daryl Hannah. Peter Gallagher. (1 hr . 40 min.) 2:300 Life Of Riley O All In Family O0Newis 3:000 700 CTub Featured: a look at top fashion model Rene Russo. (1 hr. 30 min.)
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0 Robert Schuller (SPN) Movie 'Shake Hands With Murder" (1944) Iris Adrian, Frank Jenks.d hr, ISmin.) (ESPN) Off-Road Racing From Pomona, Calif. (R) (1 hr.. 30
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(D The Saint O O The A-Team O 0 On The Road With Charles Kuralt Correspondent Kuralt presents vignettes about the people, places and events he encounters as he travels through America.
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0 Nova "City Of Coral" Viewers are taken on a voyage through one of the world s most fascinating and colorful ecosystems - a coral reef (R) p (1 hr.)
(SPN) Pout Time (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Momenb "Upsets And Underdogs. Hot Dogs And Heroes" (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie "The Inglorious Bastards " 11978) Bo Svenson. Fred Williamson Two men form an unusual friendship dur
ing their efforts to survive enemy attacks and violent death during the tumultuous days of World War 11.(1 hr., 33 min.) (NICK) The Tomorrow People A Rift In Time Galius has robbed the Tomorrow people of their special powers and recognizes that they are not ordinary Romans. (I^art 3)
(USA) Movie Two-Way Stretch" (1961) Peter Sellers. Wilfred Hyde-White. A trio of prison inmates plan to break out. then break in again with a truckload of diamonds. (2 hrs.)
8:30000 Joanie Lova Chachi O 0 Our Times With 8iU Moyen
(SPN) Scuba World (NICK) Against The Odds
Robeson And Lindbergh The son of a former slave, Paul Robeson was an athlete, scholar and one of the greatest actors in the history of theater and Charles Lindburgh opened up the possibilities of air travel by doing the unthinkable when he flew solo from New York to Paris.
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bout against cancer and its
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(SHOW) Movie Victory (1981) Sylvester SUlIone, Michael Caine. During World War II, Allied POWs see their ticket to freedom in a match between their soccer team and the German National Team in Paris. PG(1 hr., 57 min.)
(ESPN) Billiardi Final Match Wilbe Mosconi vs. Luther Lassiter (R)(l hr.)
(NKX) A Christmas Carol The American Conservatory Theater of San Francisco performs this Charles Dickens clask. (2 hrs.. 10 min.)
8;S8OO08To5 10400 O 0 Hart To Hart (SNews
O O St Elsewhere 0 Lester Snmrall Teaching 0 Merchaiits Of Grain An
unprecedented look at the secrets of the international grain industry includes an investigation into how grain is used by governments as a political and economic weapon. (1 hr.) (ESPN) The World Sportsman "British Giff Climbing / Motor-less Aircraft Soaring Guests: Henry Barber. Susan Oliver. (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie Cat People (1981) Nastassia Kinski. Malcolm McDowell. Falling in love poses a problem for a young woman who turns into a ferocious big cat if she mates with someone who is not of her own kind. R (2 hrs.)
(USA) Don Drysdiles BasebaU The former Dodger pitching great examines the latest news and events in the world of Major League Baseball.
10:300 Star lime 0John Osteen (USA) Sports Look (R)
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TV Chatter
By PoUy VoMta
NBCs Yellow Rose, starring SAM ELLIOTT and DAVID SOUL, is the one I would like to Be Hiere for Saturday nights Featuring an all-star cast that includes SUSAN ANSPACH. CYBIL SHEPHERD and NOAH BERRY, it is a drama about a powerful family in modem Texas struggling to run a vast ranch and keep their own Uves in order . This leads to many soapy situations ala Dallas, Dynasty and Falcon Crest However, it is SAM ELUOTT who stands out as a mysterious cowboy named Chance, who drifts onto the ranch as a cowhand. The pUot was good, and SAM wiU definitely give TOM SELLECK some competition in the heartthrob department this year.
Starring THOMAS DYRD in the tle role, Boone" is about a young singer in Tennessee who wants to become a country music performer at any cost. I thoroughly enjoyed the pilot (which now will be the 7th or 8tii episode) Hie one thing MR. HAMNER was most emphatic about was this is not the story of ELVIS PRESLEY
0 Monty Pythons Flying Grcm
(SHOW) Loviog Friends And Perfect Conples (E5PN)^nrtsCenter (USA) Hot Spots Robert Hazard And The Heroes (from The Bijou Cafe in Philadelphia. Pa ). (1 hr.)
11:10 (NICK) Grent Paintiiigs Fea-I tured: Leonardo Da Vincis Virgin And Child With St Anne. 1145(NICK) ne Making Of A Song A pure jazz orchtration of My Funny Valentine is followed from conception to actual performance.
11:300 Another Life OO0 ABC News Nlghtline (SKojak
Q O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Linda Evans. David Steinberg, Free Flight. (1 hr.)
O ()HDcy Quincy tries to put a stop to abuse of the elderly by their children. (R) (1 hr., 10 min.)
0ChariiesAngds 0LifeAnew 0 Doctor Id The Houm (SHOW) A New Day In Eden Fair Warning To Miranda
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(SHOW) Movie Friday The ISth, Part II (1981) Amy Steel, JohnFurey. (1 hr., 27 min.) (ESPN) CFL Football Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Winnipeg Blue , Bombers (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(USA) Radio 10M(R)
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(HBO) Movie Ruckus" (1980) Dirk Benedict, Linda Blair (1 hr., 35 min.)
12400 Jack Benny OOneOnOne O More Real People (SNewi
O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: comedian Richard Morris, baseball player Mark Fidrych, newscaster-interviewer Barbara Walters (1 hr.)
O Carter Country OStarAyAndHntcfa (USA) PBA Bowling Kessler Open (from San Jose, Calif ) (R)(2 hrs.)
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Movie "A Fistful Of Dollars (1967) Clint Eastwood, Marianne Koch. The mysterious "man with no name enters a gang war between two factions eager to sell whiskey and guns to Mexicans and Indians, (2 hrs.) O O Real People Featured: a convention of college cheerleaders; America's Womens Alpine Ski Team; a centerfold photography session for Playboar Magazine; a profile of a narcotics agent. (R)(l hr.)
O 0 Movie "The Ordeal Of Dr. Mudd" (1980) Dennis Weaver. Susan Sullivan. The Maryland doctor who unwittingly helped assassin John Wilkes Booth escape by setting his broken leg after Abraham Lincoln's murder is placed on trial. (R) (3 hrs.) Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
The Making Of Superman The Movie Christopher Reeve hosts a behind-the-scenes look at the 1978 blockbuster with film dips, outtakes and interviews with some of the film's stars (1 hr
(SPN) American Baby Featured the eighth month; teaching baby to swim.
(SHOW) Paper Chase "Cinderella" The plight of a single mother struggling to raise her child, support them both and attend law school touches Hart, his fellow students and even the forbidding Prof Kingsfield.d hr.) (ESPPO Auto Racing Formula 1 British Grand Prix" (from Silverstone England) (1 hr.. 30 min.)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
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8:05 0 Movie Two Rode Together" (1961) James Stewart. Richard Widmark. A pair of adventurous men attempt to rescue a group of people who were captured by Indians. (2 hrs., 15 min.)
8:30 (SPN) Nikki HaskeU (NICK) The Third Eye " Under The Mountain " A mystical stranger saves infant twins from certain death. (Part 1) 9:000 700 Club Featured Lynne Marie Perry, who recovered from a violent car accident to become Miss Arizona. (1 hr.. 30 min)
o o 0 The Hamptons (Premiere) The fashionable section of Long Island is the backdrop for the saga of an elegant department store s managing director
(Michael Goodwin), his wife (Leigh Taylor-Young), an heiress (Bibi Besch) and her younger husband (John Reilly), the president of the store. (1 hr.) o o The Facts Of Life Blairs half-sister (Eve Plumb) visits Eastland and announces her decision to become a nun. (Part
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behind-the-scenes look is taken at Jim Hensons new feature film about a mystical world inhabited by the heroic Gel-flings, the evil Skeksis and the gentle Urru. (1 hr.)
(SPN) Tdefrance UKA "Tele-Stories: Horses Of The Sun (Part 3) / "Artview: Frances National HeriUge" / In Performance; Monsieur Ravel / "Cine-Club: Two English Girls (4 hrs.)
(SHOW) Movie Zapped!" (1982) Scott Baio, Willie Aames. A high school science genius uses his accidenully acquired psychoki-netic powers to improve his love life.R(lhr..35min.)
(NICK) Point Counterpoint French painter Georges Seurat and his revolutionary style of painting - pointillism - is profiled, (1 hr., 20 min.)
9:3000 Buffalo BUI (ESPN) PKA Full Contact Karate
10:000 O 0 Dynasty Adam reveals to Alexis his role in causing Jeffs irrational behavior. of which Fallon is becoming increasingly fearful, while Blake and Krystle's attempt to adopt Danny runs into complications. (R)n(l hr.)
News
o O The News Is The News
From New York City, a repertory cast including Michael Davis and Simon Jones presents a live, lighthearted look at major events of the day Lester SumraU Teaching The Making Of Gandhi This documentary of the making of Richard Attenboroughs epic film biography of Indian leader Mohandas Gandhi includes commentary from cast members Candice Bergen. John Mills. Martin Sheen and Ben Kingsley (1 hr.)
(HBO) Movie "Six Pack (1982) Kenny Rogers. Diane Lane. A race-car driver turns a sextet of juvenile car strippers into a winning pit crew "PG" (1 hr., 45 min.)
(USA) Golf "International Challenge" Round 6 (1 hr.)
10:20 News (NICK) Oscar Remembered
Maxim Mazumdar stars in this one-man play examining the career and loves of Oscar Wilde (1 hr, 40 min.)
10:300 Star Time O O Taxi Alex takes a second job as the part-time assistant to
a Broadway producer. |R)
Join Ankerberg 10:40 (SHOW) Thats Stupid! Comedian Gallagher spoofs the silly things of the world in a series of comic shorts. 11:000000000 News Odd Couple Bible Pathways Monty Pythons Flying Circus
(SHOW) Movie Double Exposure" (1982) Michael Callan. Joanna Pettet. The murderous nightmares of a disturbed photographer begin to take on a life of their own. "R" (1 hr., 35 min.) (ESPN) SportsCenter (USA) Hot Spots The Numbers
& "The School Boys" (from The Outdoor Cabaret in Wilmington, Del.). (1 hr.)
11:300 Another Life O O 0 ABC News Nightline Kojak
O O Tonight Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: actress Carrie Fisher (Return Of The Jedi"). Bill Ojala and his dog. (1 hr.)
O PoUce Story A Chicano policeman (Richard Yniguez) goes undercover to expose a smuggling ring that exploits illegal Mexican aliens. (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
0 Charlies Angels TheCatlins Sound Of The Spirit Doctor In The House 11:50 (HBO) Not Necessarily The News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric takeoff.
12:00 0 Bums And Allen 0 Movie Arizona Bushwack-ers" (1968) Howard Keel, Yvonne De Carlo. (1 hr.. 55 min.) Jim Bakker
(ESPN) Old Timers BasehaU
"Cracker Jack Classic (from RFK Stadium in Washington, DC.). (R) (2 hrs.)
(USA) Radio 1990(H)
12:20 (HBO) Movie The Pirate Movie" (1982) Kristy McNichol. Christopher Atkins. |1 hr.. 40 min.)
12:300 Jack Benny OOneOnOne O More Real People News
o o Late Night With David Lettennan Guests: comedienne-actress Sandra Bernhardi harmonica player Toots Thiele-mans. (1 hr.)
0 Carter Country Starsky And Hutch (USA) Pick The Pros 12:40 (SHOW) Movie "Friday The 13th" (1980) Betsy Palmer. Adrienne King. (1 hr.. 38 min.) 1:00 01 Married Joan O Here's Lucy ONews
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2:15 (SHOW) Movie "Liars Moon (1982) Matt Dillon, Cindy Fisher (1 hr, 45 min.)
2:30 Life Of Riley O All In The Family 0News 3:00 O 700 Club Featured Lynne Mane Perry, who recovered from a violent car accident to become Miss Arizona. (1 hr.. 30 min.)
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o o MngDum, PI A reporter (Tyne Daly) arrives in Honolulu to investigate an anonymous tip that an island republics prime minister has been marked for murder. (R)(l hr.)
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0 Sneak Preview* Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at whats new at the movies.
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(NICK) TW Tomorrow People
The Doomsday Men A secret society whose aim is to preserve war encounters the Tomorrow People. (Part 1)
490 Movie The Conversa-on (1974) Gene Hackman, John Cazale. An obsessive surveillance expert makes the fessional ntake of becoming involved with murder. (2 hrs., 6 min.)
1:310 Wild Amertea WUd Dop Marty Stouffa^ looks at the roles and social structure of the donestic dogs wild canine cousiu - the wolf, coyote and fox.(R)
(SPN) Sharper Imar LMi CMikg
(NKK)Apiilt The Odd* Beethoven And Bessie Smith These two musicians advanced and expanded their musical forms -Beethovens genius in classical composition stunned 16th century Europe and Bessie Smith elevated the Uues toan art form. (USA) Spoita Look MIB 7N Chib Featured: learn how to triumph over the social and family pressures of today.
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Merv Griffin Guests; Tom Wopat, Maud Adams, Howard Stevens, Rome correspondent Gordon Thnas.(l hr.)
O 0 A Break The
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O 0 Simon 4 Simon 0JimBakker 0 Diamonds In The Sky (SPN) Tdefrance U5A. Fiction: The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 4) / Night Music: Carol Laure / Tele-Stories: Horses Of The Sun (Part 3) / Artview: Frances National HeriUge / ln Performance: Monsieur Ravel (4 hrs.)
(SHOW) The Lone Star Bar 4 Grill One Step At A Time Club owner Buddy Tyler is forced by his financial problems to borrow money and a mysterious fire engulfs the club. (1 hr., 30 min.)
(EffN) Top Rank Boxing Fred Hutchings Ernest Rabotte 10-round Junior Middleweight bout (live from Las Vegas, Nev.). (2 hrs., 30 min.)
(HBO) Movie Penitentiary II (1982) Leon Isaac Kennedy, Eiiiie Hudson. An old priron enemy murders a boxer's girlfriend, forcing him to return to the ring. R (1 hr., 50 min.) (NICK) Performen Showcaar
A Conductor At Work - CUudIo AblMdo A year in the life of aaudio Abbado, principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra, is traced. (1 hr.)
(USA) BaiebaU St Louis Cardinals at Montreal Expos (Subject to blackout) (2 hrs., 30 min.) 3:300 O Cheers 10:0000020/20 News
o O Hill Street Blues O 0 Knots Landing 0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circvs
(NICK) The Greeks Scenes from the great Greek writers are dramatized, focusing on works by Homer and Aeschylus. (Part 3){lhr.)
10:100 News 10:300 Star Time 0 Eagles Nest 0 Two Ronnies (Sffi)W) Bixarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-
ier than anything yonve ever ' seen.
114OBeOBOO0News
OddCoople 0 Today In BHrie Prophecy 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circns
(SHOW) Loving Frieods And Perfect Couples
(HBO) The Comedy Storos 11th
AmiTCrsary The West Coast nightclubs anniversary is celebrated with performances by Richard Pryor, Robin Williams, Jimmy Walker and Sandra Bernhard, as well as up and coming young comedians, taped at several Comedy Store sites. (Ihr.)
(NKK) Handmade In America Weaver Lia Cook of Berkeley. California uses both traditioDal and Don-traditioaal tediniqae: in her Umestries. U490AIIInTteFhmily 11J9 (NKK) rafhtcip Street Performers - Part 2'^Stads Torkel and Calvin Trillin look at the street performers who entertain in New York Otys Washington Square. llJI0ABSlhHrLife O00ABCNewsNifMIiBe
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0 Movie The Lindbergh Kid-napinng Case (1976) Cliif De Yoloig, Anthony Hopkms. ^uno Hatipinm" is arrested and tried for the kidnapping and murder of the famous aviators son. (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
0Gontnct 0 Doctor In ne How (Saow) A New Day h Eden
SheUey Finds Love
(Mr. Mom ), backwards singer David Fhrer. (I hr.)
eStari^Aadl (ESPN) The Worid Sportanan Steeplechase / Tuna Fishing / Auto Racing Guests: Kathy Kusner. Lee Wulff, Candice Bergen. (R)(l hr.)
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(SPN) Movie Silence Of Dean Maitland (No Date) MaxweU Gram.(Ihr.,20min.) * (ESPN)8^ortM'Wmn(R)
(USA) Bmeball St Louis Cardi-nals at Montreal Expos (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
1:40 (HBO) Movie The Soldier (1982) Ken Wahl, William Prince. (1 hr 30 min.)
1400 Movie Lady Godiva (1990) Maneen OHara. George Nader. (2 hrs., 9 min.)
34lBBMhelorPM4ir
(USi^Pi^ The Pros (R)
11490 The CatUne 1340 BBuni And AUea 0 JimBakker
(SHOW) Movie Star Wars (1977) Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford. (2 hrs.)
(HBO) Movie Friday The 13th, Part III (1982) Dana Kimmel, PaulKratka.(l hr., 35 min.) (USA) Hot Spots Orleans (from The Tallyho in Wilmington, Del). (1 hr.)
12:050 Movie The Brothers Rico (1957) Richard Conte, Dianne Foster. (1 hr., 45 min.) 12:300 Jack Benny O More Real People News
o o Late Night With David Lettennan Guests; Fee Waybill of the rock group The Tubes, comedian-actor Michael Keaton
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(SHOW) Movie Penitentiary H (1932) Leon Isaac Kennedy, Ernie Hudson. (1 hr., 50 min.) (ESPN)SportiOalcr
24O0Ufe Of Riley BAD In The Family BBNews
190 (SPN) Movie Three Steps To Love (No Date) Keoneth Thompson. (1 hr., 39 min.)
3400 700 ClOb Featured: learn how to triumph over the social and family pressures of today. (1 hr., 30 min.)
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(E9T4) Top Rank Boxing Fred
Hutchings / Ernest Rabotte 10-
round Junior Middleweight boot
(from Las Vegas, Nev.). (R) (2
hrs., 30 min.)
3:10 (HBO) Movie Hanky Panky (1982) Gene Wilder, Giida Radner. (1 hr., 45 min.)
3:300 News
3:50 (SHOW) Movie Papillon (1973) Steve McQueen, Dustin Hoffman. (2 hrs., 25 min.)
3450 Movie BI<mdie In Society (1941) Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake. (1 hr., 30 min.)
4400 News 0TbeCameroos
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O The Cracker Brothers Milton Berle guests in the story of three misfits (Derek McGrath, Mark King, Kevin Scannell) who wreak havoc on unsuspecting people with a series of relentless pranks. (1 hr.)
O Roots: The Next Generations Will Palmer's daughter Bertha becomes the first of KunU Kintes descendants to go to college, where she meets the young and ambitious Simon Haley. (Part3)(2hrs.)
o o The Dukes Of Hazxard Camp Meeting, U.S.A.
S Washington Week In Review (SPN) Home Based Business (ESPN) The World Sportsman "Black Marlin Fishing / Kayaking Sky Diving Guests: Ernest Borgnine, William Shatner.(R)(l hr.)
(HBO) Movie "Lookin' To Get Out" (1982) Jon Voight, Ann-Margret. A pair of gamblers flee to Las Vegas from New York with the mob on their trail. R(l hr.,45min.)
(WCK) The Tomorrow People The Doomsday Men At Glen College, Stephen has to prove to Douglas that he is tough enough to join the Brotherhood of the Doomsday Men. (Part 2)
(USA) PGA Golf "Canadian Open" Second round (from Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville, Ont.). (2 hrs.)
8:05 (D Baseball AtlanU Braves at San Diego Padres (3 hrs.)
8:80 O Swiss Family Robinson O 0 Venice Medical A dedicated young doctor (Michael Brandon) heads the staff at a beachfront medical clinic with a colorful clientele.
Wall Itreet Week Overboard On Over-The-Counter Guest: Robert J. Flaherty, editor, 0-T-C Review.
(NICK) The ndrd E)ye Under The Mountain A sightseeing trip to Aucklands dormant volcanoes provides further evidence that Rachel and Theo have a dangerous mission to ful-
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9:000 700 Onb O O 0 Movie "Golden Gate (1981) Perry King, Richard Kiley. Conflict erupts among various members of a San Francisco publishing family when a ruthless investor attempts to take over a highly regarded newspaper. (R) n (2 hrs.)
S) Merv Griffin O Knight Rider Michael and Devon are pitted against an earlier prototype of their computerized car that doesn't share KlTT's concern for human life. (R)(lhr.)
OODallas Q) JimBakker 0 Victory At Sea (SPN) Telefrance UB.A. "Cine-Club: Two English Girls / Fiction: The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 4) / Night Music: Carol Laure (4 hrs.)
(SHOW) Movie The Pirate Movie (1982) Kristy McNichol, Christopher Atkins. A shy teenage girl finds adventure and romance when a dream transports her to the wcrld of a 19th-century pirate. PG (1 hr., 40 min.)
(EffN) CFL Football Toronto Argonauts at Saskatchewan Roughriders (3 hrs.)
(NICK) By Design: Elliott Erwitt The versatility of photography as a tool of the applied art is illustrated throught the works of this famous photographer. (1 hr.)
9:800 World War I 10:00(1) News O O Eischied O 0 Falcon Crest 0 Lester Sumrall Teacbing 0 Europe: The Mighty CooU-nent
(HBO) Movie Zapped! (1982) Scott Baio, Willie Aames. A high school science genius uses his accidenUlly acquired psychoki-netic powers to improve his love life. R(lhr., 35 min.)
(NKK) Rubens 1577 - 1640 The work of Flemish painter Rubens is examined. (1 hr., 40 min.)
' (USA) GoH International Challenge Round 6 (R) (1 hr.)
18:10 estar Time 0Bsp Baden llMOOOeOOeNews 3) Odd Couple eK-DimensigoMagaziiie 0 Monty Pythons Flying Orcui
(SBOW) Movie Summer Lovers (1982) Daryl Hannah, Peter Gallagher. Two American college students spend a free-spirited summer on a Greek island. R(lhr.,40min.)
(USA) Night Flight Gary Theroux / At The Apollo /
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O O Tonight Host: Johnnv Carson.
O Movie Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) Richard Burton, Linda Blair. A (wiest and a female psychologist attempt to end a 12-year-old girls nightmarish ordeal of hizarre visions and dreams of flying. (R) (2 hrs., 15 min.)
O Movie The Big Country (1958) Gregory Peck. Charlton Heston. An Easterner becomes embroiled in a bitter feud between two Texas ranchers over water rights. (2 hrs.) 0Ufeguide 0 Doctor In The House 11:850 BasriMll AtlanU Braves at San Diego Padres 3 hrs.)
11:40 (NICK) Great Paintings Featured: Rubens Mercury And Argos.
11:45 (HBO) Not Necessarily The
News Comedy sketches combine with classic film and news footage in an offbeat, satiric Uke-off.
12:000 Bums And Allen 0JimBakker (ESPN) SportsCenter 12:15 (HBO) Movie The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) Edward Albert, Susan George. (1 hr., 30 min.)
12:800 Jack Benny OOneOnOne ORockNRoUTonite (BFM-TV
O O Friday Night Videos
(Premiere) Elton John and Styx perform in the world premieres of musical mini-features based on their newest works; a Private Reels profile of Rick Springfield on tour and additional videos by Michael Jackson, The Police, David Bowie. Duran Duran, Rod Stewart and Bonnie Tyler are also presented. (1 hr., 30 min.)
0 Starsky And Hutch (ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Fred Hutchings / Ernest Rabotte 10-round Junior Middleweight bout (from Las Vegas, Nev.). (R) (2 hrs., 30 min.)
12:45 (SHOW) Movie Beach Girls' (1982) Debra Blee, Val Kline. (1 hr., 30 min.)
1:0001 Married Joan O Heres Lucy 0ZolaLevitt (SPN) Nikki HaskeU 1:80 O News
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Monday-Friday Daytime Cont
(Contlniied From Page 4)
ing With Nancy (Wed) American
^^Aerobidae (Mon, Wed) (SHOW) Movie (Tuc) Grease 2" (1982)(Fri) The Unholy Garden" (1931)
(NICK) Todays Spedal (USA) Are You Anybody?
2:800 At Home With Beverly Nye (Moo) Family Chef (Tue) Fresh Ideas (Wed) Geaning Up Your Act (Thu) Together Shirley And Pat Boone (Fri) (lMU|ht(Fri)
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0 The Lesson (Moo) Oral Roberts (Tue) Pattern For Uving
(SPN) Mediterranean Echoes (Mon) Japan 120 (Tue. Thu) Scandinavian Weekly (Wed) Holland On Satellite (Fri)
(SHOW) Movie (Mon) "The Scapegoat (1959XWed) Liars Moon" (1982)
(ESPN) Auto Racing (Moo) Professional Rodeo (R) (Fri)
(HBO) Movie (Mon, Thu) Hanky Panky" (1982KFri) Breakthrough" (1979)
(HBO) Gabe Kaplan As Groucho
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(NICK) Dustys Treehouse (Mon-Tlm)
(USA) You: Magazine For Women (Moo, Toe, Fri) Woman s Day USA (Wed, Thu)
2:85 0 Woman Watch (Tlin) 8:000 700 Qub O O 0 General Hospital (BPopeye And Friends OO Fantasy O 0 Guiding Light 0PTLSeminar 0 Teaching Students With Special Needs (Moo. Wed) Programming For The Gifted (Tue. Thu) Over Easy (Fri)
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(NICK) What WUlTliey Think Of Next?
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8:80 The Flintstones 0 Reading Rainbow (SPN) Hello Jerusalem (Wed)
Traveller s World (Fri)
(SHOW) My Mother Was Never AKid(Fri)
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0 Today With Lester Sumrall (Moo) Kenneth Copeland (Tuei Time Of Deliverance (Wed) Calvary Temple (Thu) Ford Philpot (Fri)
(SPN) International B^ (Fri) (SHOW) Movie (Tue) Challenge To Be Free" (1975)
(SHOW) Benji Takes A Dive At Marineland (Thu)
(ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) (Tue) Soccer In America (Wed) PKA Full ConUct Karate (Ri (Thu)
(HBO) Dr. SeussTheCatlnTbe Hat (Wed) Little Orbit. The Astro Dog (Fri)
(NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) Alive And Well'
4:050 The Flintstones (Mon.
Tue, Thu, Fri)
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Leave It To Beaver O Little House On The Praine 0 Hes Lucy (Moo-Wed, Fri) 0 Wonder Woman 0 Signs Of The Times (Wed)
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(SPN) Paul Ryan (SHOW) Noel Buys A Suit (Mon) (SHOW) Movie (Wed) Oliver Twist" (1975)
(SHOW) Ann Of The Wolf Clan (Thu) Faerie Tale Theatre (Fri) (ESPN) CFL Football (Tue) (Continued On Page 12)- - w
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AtMetic Sti^Bbiid ends up In Hospital
By Uaaberiy Redmomi
You'll probaUy never see Jimmy Lee Htdt of "General Hospital" demoBStrating his equestrian abilities on the small screen, but Steve Bond, the handsome actor who plays Jimmy Lee is an accomplished horseman.
Movie "Challenge To Be Free (1975)
(HBO) Movie "Ruckiis (1980) (USA) Scteiadk Spots Acade-"W
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2504 S. Charlas Streai QraanvWa, N.C.
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Aroehcan Heart Associatioo IB CoUfflsviUe. Pa. Later, in Cincinnati. Tyb was preyed with the Junior Achievement Award. Thnmgs of the soap stars' ardent female admirers went wild when their favorite heartthrob hit town to be honored with this prestigioas award.
.f^Abo#w6ifci|Fler darityjll
were Catherine Mary Stewart (Kayb Brady). John de Lande (Eugene Bradford) and Jim Reynolds (Abe Carver) of "Days of Our Uves." who participated in a celebrity bowl-ii^ evem to raise funds for the B^ Sisters and Brothers Orgaaizatioo.
(fiave a gnestioa ahont soap operas* Write JDmter/y Red-mood at 290 Park Aveaae' Room sot New York NY
jom/
Steve Bond
Although raised in the heart of urban Los Angeles. Steve began breaking in horses after school at a Burhank. Cahf.. staUe. and soon jmned the UtUe Britches Rodeo While in hi^ school, he join^ the professional circuit. His trophies mounted, until at 17 he tangled with a huge Brahma bull, and was forced to end his rodeo career. After turning to acting. Steve was never employed as a stuntman, but he has drawn on his athletic abilities while acting in several films. He did his own high-diving in "Massacre at Central High. " his own stunt driving in Cat Merkil and the Silks." and climbing for the upcoming film "Prey."
"I've never done a Western." he says, "but one (rf my dreams is to play Billy the Kid before I get too old." He began bis acting career starring as Boy in "Tarzan and the Jungle Boy. "
b W
"Guiding Light star Michael Tylo raised money for charity recently along with former "GL " co-star George Kappaz (Gunther). The duo participated in a one-day cable TV telethon for the
FUmiiig For CBS
Valerie Bertineili, who Stan m "One Day At A Tmw," will star in " The High Rollers,' a CBS-TV film. A quick production start is planned to enable the actres to finish the film in time to begin work in the comedy series for next season.
The story is about a young woman wed to an intern who compulsively plays the tracks and the casinos.
I
Pat Summerall heads the CBS broadcast team for the CanadiaB Open golf coverage on Satirday, Jaly 31. Kea Veatari, Frank Glieber, Ben Wright and Sieve Meteyk wi also be on hand at the Glea Abtey Golf Clab ia Oakvilk, Ontario, Caaada for the third-roaad coverage.
Western
Sizzlin
STIAK HOUSE
July Dinner Specials
Mon.-Thur. 5 P.M.-IO P.M.
Buy any steak at reg. price and pay only half price for second steak of same or less value. All meals served udth King Idaho Baked Potato or French FrieaandTeaTopat._____
Lunch Specials
Mon.-Sst. 11 A.M.-SP.M.
4Aoa.
Jr. Sirloin____
8 oz Chopped Sirloin.......
$019
with salad bar
$049
with salad bar
*319
349
, Weekend Specials
Fri. Sat. Sun. July 29.30,31 SOz.USDABeef Tips with Salad Bar
$>149
^ All oreak served with King Idaho Bdccd Potato ^ _or Freth Fries end Tesas Toast_^
1903 E. 10thSt.-7S8-2712 500 W. GneavHk Blvd.-7S6dM0
i;-- i'"V ' '.,A':'''
Sports This Week
Saturday Evening
SUNDATS SPORTS JULY KINS U:N#PMt Pitt Golf lfcSptPta
Gotf Aofaenser Busch Classic Final round (live from Kills HiU Golf Hub 10 Wil liamsfanrg, Va.). (2 hrs.) iNS SpartaWorld Scheduled boxinK - N LaRocca vs. Pete Ransany in a 10-round welterweight bout (Uve from Udine. Italyl; the men's survival run in the Survival of the Fittest competition (from Sun River, Ore.) (1 hr., 30 mia) S:SO0BneballBHKli
MONDAYS SPORTS JULY 25,1M3
8:00 O BaiebaU New York Yankees at Texas Rangers 13 hrs)
SATURDAYS SPORTS
JULY 30,1983
1:00 OPntt Putt GoU 1:30 O Southern Sportsman O Baseball Bunch Lou Pinella. batting coach and designated hitter for the New York Yankees, discusses the importance of
a proper batting stance and correct balance. (R)
2:000 Wide World Of ^wrts AFC-NFC Hall Of Fame Game" New Orleans Saints vs. Pittsburgh Steelers (live from Canton. Ohio). (3 hn. 30 min.)
8 Rueball Regional coverage of Milwaukee Brewers at Boston Red Sox or Kansas City Royals at Detroit Tigers (3 hrs.) 5:000 Wrestling 5:300 Womens US. Open Golf Third round (Uve from the Cedar Ridge Country Club in TuIsa.Okla.)(l hr.)
11:300 Wrestling
Sunday Features Bicycling, Boxing
Tbere tfe a variety of ways to NASCARs all-time win leader, in that wreck, and hed like to see take a 2,312-aiile tour of France. wUl be among the racers. Petty if he cant make a run for the but very few can compare in won this years Winston 500 on checkered flag this time. exdtement or endurance with the Alabama track, and hes Buddy Baker, who is the all-the Tour of France, the worlds ready to score another victory in time winner (with Darrell premier bii^ race. Proceeding what has become known as the Waltrip) at the Alabama Speed-worWs most competitive race. way, will be in the pack trying to Petty and his son Kyle were stop the Pettys. Why shouldn't I the first to file entry for the 1983 be confident? posed Baker, who ^uu> w . Talladega 500. We both want will be piloting the Wood
Brittany, Bordeaux, the Pyre- another crack at Talladega, but Brothers Thunderbird. Ive won nees, the Midi, the Alps and for different reasons," explained there four times and so have the Burgundy to the finish line on the the elder Petty. I would like to Wood Brothers. That's eight wins (Tiainps-Elysees. be the second driver to win it worth of experience, and at Talla-
On CBS Sports Sunday, July twice, and the fourth to win both dega. that is the most valuable 24 (4-6 pjn.), the network will air Talladega races in the same sea- thing you can have, especially at the fiirii of the Tour De France son. (Last year) Kyle was running the end of the race, when you bicyde race. The program will real good, in the lead draft, when have to make just the right also feature two fights-a sc^- be got caught with no place to go move."
comterdodtwise from the sub-uitMof Paris, 140 riden and 2,500 offidab travd through the regions of Flanders, Normandy,
uled l^rottnd United States Boxing Asaociation bout between Marion Starling and Tommy Ayen, and a scheduled 10-round bout between Roln Blake and Tony Baltaiar. Tim Ryan, Gil Clancy and Sugar Ray Leonard will provide the commentary from ringside.
Next week, CBS will broadcast the Talladega 500 from the Alabama International Motor Speedway, and Richard Petty,
Peete Plays Inspired Golf
maon
Phone Locally
758 0696
Few stones in any sport are more inspirational than the Calvin Peete story What he's done recently on the PGA Tour certainly has to rank with the outstanding achievements in any sport
Since last year, the 40-year-old Peete has won five titles and more than a half million dollars, and ranks for the second straight year as the No 1 man in two key statistical categories driving accuracy and hitting greens in regulation
This week Peete will return to Kingsmill Country Club in Williamsburg. Va., to defend his title in the Anheuser-Busch Qassic. NBC will air the final round of
1 SATURDAY EVEN!
m
7:00
7:30
8:00
8:30 1
9:00 9:30
10:00
10:30
e
ISpy
1
Movie; Flame 01 The Barbary Coast j
Sing Out America 1
o
HwHaw
T J Hooker
Love Boat | Fantasy isianfl
e
Saturday
RealPeopie I
T.J Hooker i
Love Boat | Fantasy island
d)
3's Company
1
M'ASH
Movie. "A Little Night Musk News Page Five
o
Dance Fever
Am Top Ten
Ditl Strokes
Stiver Sp
Qomcy B Mandrell
n
Kntghl Rider
Ditf Strokes
Silver Sp
Ouincy 1 Monitor
FI
SoMGoM
Walt Disney
Movie Holocaust 2000
n
Hee Haw
1
Walt Disney
Movie Holocaust 2000
0
Wrestling
T.J. Hooker
Love Boat |
Fantasy Island
o
Wrestling
Movie: Shamus"
News 1 Baseball
0
God's News
RockCburcb
J. Van Impe
Jim Bakker
Kenneth Copeiand
The Poseidon F
ies
Nature Of Things
A Horseman Riding By
The Avengers
SPN
Jipan 120
TetetranceU.S.A |
SHOW
Movie "Popeye"
Movie: 'Pnvale Lessons
StupK)'
ESPN
CFL FootbH: British Columbia Lions at Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Biltiards
HBO
Movie: "Victory"
Movie. "Fighting Back'
BiHy Joel In Concert
MCK
SpecMOeNvery
Third Eye
Twyla Tharp Scrapbook
New World Ballet
USA
Sports Probe
Sports Look
Ovation
Alfred Hitchcock Presents
RENT-TO-OWN
NO CREDITORS CHECKED!
the tournament on Sunday. July 24 (2-4 p.m.)
Peete was 23 years old when he first picked up a golf club back in 1966 The game was of no interest to him because he had to struggle to make a living for himself and his family.
Bom in Detroit. Mich., Peete spent most of his life on a Florida farm with his 18 brothers and sisters - through two marriages by his fathers. He was forced to drop out of school at an early age.
Like so many black families.' Peete said, "most of us kids had to get jobs as soon as we were old enough to work so we could help out with the expenses.'
While still a teenager. Peete got into the business of selling goods to migrant farm workers The field hands had bttle chance of getting into the city stores, so Peete would pack clothes, rings, watches and anything else he could squeeze into his station wagon and take off. From Florida, it was a series of selling stops along dusty roads as far north as Rochester, N Y
Peete had friends in Rochester, and each year his buddies would invite him to play goli
"I alwavs turned them down, he said i thought the game was silly Who wants to chase a little ball around under the hot sun"
Finally, in 1966, Peete tried the game and was hooked
8:000 The Monroes (SKnuFn OOOIDNews
O The Blackwood Brothers S Sneak Previews (SPNjHoUand On Satellite (SHOW) Paper Chase (ESPN)SportsCento-(HBO) Movie "Victory" (1981) (NICK) Reggie Jacksons World Of Sports (USA) Co-Ed 8:05 (D Wrestling 6:30 O This Is Robeson County ONews OONBCNews OCBSNews (D Reflections"
0 In Search Of ...
0 Breath Of Life 0 The Poseidon Files (USA) You: Magazine For Women
7:0001 Spy O 0 Hee Haw O Carolina Saturday Threes Company O Dance Fever O Knight Rider OSoUdGoId 0 Wrestling
0 Gods News Behind The News
(SPN) Japan 120 (SHOW) Movie Popeye ' (1980) (ESPN)CFLFootbaU (NICK) Special Delivery (USA) Sports Probe 7:300 More Real People M*A*S*H O Americas Top Ten 0Rocfc Church (USA) Sports Look 8:000 Movie "Flame Of The , Barbary Coast (1945) John Wayne, Ann Dvorak. A cattle rancher travels to San Francisco where he becomes involved with gamblers, danger and romance. (2 hrs.)
O O 0 TJ. Hooker Hooker stalks an arsonist who plans the death of a veteran investigator (Eddie Egan) to cover up his crimes. (R)n(l hr.)
Movie "A Little Night Music (1977) Elizabeth Taylor. Diana Rigg. Musical score by Stephen Sondheim Several 1900s couples become involved in marital and extramarital romances, (2 hrs.)
O 8 Difrrent Strokes Arnold invites a street-corner Santa (Garrett Morris) to join the Drummonds for Christmas dinner. (R)n
O 0 Walt Disney "The Sky Trap " A young sailplane pilot (Marc McClure) is blackmailed into smuggling a cargo of heroin across the Mexican border (Part 1)(R)(1 hr.)
0 Nature Of Things
(HBO) Movie "Fighting Back (1982) Tom Skerritt. Patti Lupone. An angry Philadelphian organizes a vigilante force to stem the tide of violent crime in his neighborhood R (1 hr. 40 min.)
(USA) Ovation "Whicker s World
Down Under The Vocation
"The Assassin Years: Martin Luther King " "City Lights Jerry Lewis" (2 hrs.)
8:050 Movie "Shamus (1973) Burt Reynolds. Dyan Cannon While hunting down stolen diamonds. a detective becomes involved with beautiful women and sinister men. (2 hrs.)
8:300 8 Silver Spoons Ricky and Edward spend Christmas with an impoverished father and son (Rick Lenz. Joey Lawrence) living in a cave behind the mansion. (R)
0 Jack Van Impe
(NICK) The Third Eye The
Haunting Of Cassie Palmer Mrs. Palmer efforts to exorcise Deverill are strangely thwarted (Part 6)
9:00 O O 0 Love Boat An elderly man (David Wayne) meets a former college friend (Ted McGinley) who apparently hasn't aged. Isaac has an ill-fated romance with a beautiful woman (Tracy Reed), and a newly married couple (Lynda Goodfriend. David Naughton) encounter shipboard disaster (R)n(l hr.)
O 8 Quincy Quincy is jailed for contempt of court after trying to defend an innocent man against abuse from a grand jury attorney (Eugene Roche) (R)(lhr.)
O 0 Movie "Holocaust 2000 (1978) Kirk Douglas. Simon Ward. A demonically possessed young man proves to be the key to impending nuclear disaster and ecological destruction. (2 hrs.)
0 Jim Bakker 0 A Horseman Riding By (SPN) Telefrance U.S.A. "Cor-
Decrevisses' "Film The Short Memory' In Performance: Alexander Nevsky" i3 hrs.)
(SHOW) Movie Private Lessons" (1980) Sylvia Kristel. Howard Hesseman A housekeeper has an ulterior motive (or providing her employers leen-age son with his first sexual experience R' (1 hr.. 30 min )
(Continued On Page 12)
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Saturday Evening Continued
(Continued From Page 11) (NICK) TwyU Tharp Scrapbook; 1K5 - 1N3 Eicerpts of modern dance choreopapher Twyla Tharp s work include clips of figure skater John Curry, football player Lynn Swann, ballet dancers Mik^l Baryshnikov and Peter Martins. (1 hr.. 5 min.)
10:00 O SiM Out America 0 0 6 Faataiy liland Two
newlyweds (Linwood Boomer, Randi Oakes) learn that one must die so the other can have eternal life, and a woman (Sandra Dee) is surprised by her date with a movie sUr (Ron Ely). (R)
S(1 hr.)
News
O Barbara Maodrell k The llaodreU Sisters Monitor SKemethCopdand OTheAvengen (ESPN) Billianb U.J Puckett vs. Irving Crane (R) (1 hr.)
(HBO) BUly Joel In Concert Joel performs many of his chart-topping hits, from ' Just The Way You Are " to "Its Still Rock "N" Roll To Me" in his first televised concert, taped at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island (1 hr., 5 min.)
(USA) Alfred Hitchcock Presents
10:05 6 News (NICK) New World Ballet The
debut of the New world Ballet Company, performing in association with the 1982 New World Festival in Miami, is presented. (1 hr. 10 min.)
10:30 (S Page Five (SHOW) Thats Stupid! Comedian Gallagher spoofs the silly things of the world in a series of comic shorts.
^JD;|50 Baseball AtlanU Braves at San Diego Padres (3 hrs)
11:00 O Rock Chnrch Proclaims OOOOOO0News (SOddCoople In Touch 6 Twilight Zone (SHOW) Bizarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything you've ever seen.
(ESPN) SoortsCenter (USA) Night Flight -Poghat' / "Nick Lowe / Def Leppard
(4 hrs.)
11:150 06ABC News (NICK) FH^tcap Animation Guests: Ralph Bakshi. Larry Elin, Don Bluth.
11:300 Solid Gold OWrestUag
( Movie "The Revengers (1972) William Holden, Ernest Borgnine. A Colorado rancher hires six prisoners from a chain gang to help him find the gang that massacred his family and destroyed his home. (2 hrs.)
O O Twilight Theatre D Leslie Nielsen and Mr. T host a showcase of music and comedy vignettes, featuring a debate between G. Gordon Liddy and Moon Unit Zappa; other guests include Toni Basil. Dick Gark, The (}o-Go's. Steve Martin. Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas, Martin Mull and Father Guido Sarducci (Don Novello). (R) (1 hr., 30 min.)
O Dunce Fever Q Movie Support Your Local Sheriff (1969) James Gamer, Joan Hackett. A gold rush and the ensuing riot are brought under control by a stranger who is appointed sheriff. (2 hrs.)
Movie Voyage To The Bottom Of The Sea (1961) Walter Pidgeon, Joan Fontaine. An experimental submarine attempts to dispose of a radioactive belt. (2 hrs., 15 min.)
6 LoweQ Umdstrom STwoRomiies (SHOW) Movie "Double Exposure" (1982) Michael Callan. The murderous nightmares of a disturbed photographer begin to take on a life of their own. R (1 hr., 35 min.)
(HBO) Movie Friday The 13th, Part III (1982) Dana Kimmel. Paul Kratka. Unwary teenagers travel to a remote cabin at Crystal Lake, the stalking grounds of a deranged monster who wears a hockey mask. R (1 hr., 35 min.)
12:00 O Beyond The Horiaoo: U.S.
/ JaPBB
OM Of Midnight Special 6JimBakker (9*N) Looking East (ESPN) NFLs Greatest Moments Lombardi (1 hr.)
12:300 Soul Train O Movie 5 Card Stud 11968)
Dean Martin, Robert Mitchum. (2 hrs.)
140 011 American lYail O laMoy / Jet Celebrity Showcase
O Christopher Clooeqi OSolidGold SPTLClHb(Spanisb) ^m)JoeBa^Jan (E9*N) Baseball Film The Old BaUGame(R)(l hr.)
1:10 (SHOW) Movie Body Heat
(1981) William Hurt, Kathleen Turner. (I hr., 55 min.)
(HBO) Movie Tarzan, The Ape Man (1981) Richard Harris, Bo Derek. (1 hr., 52 min.)
1-SO a 700 Chib S) Movie "The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976) Claudia Jennings, Jocelyn Jones. (2 hrs.) O Mask Magaidne ONews OKaJeidoMope 1:35 6 Night Tracks 1:456 Movie At The Earths Core (1976) Doug McClure, Peter Cushing. (2 hrs., 15 min.) 100 O AO In The Family O Night Tracks (Coatd)
5 JimBakker
(SPN) Movie HeUs Devils (1939) Alan Ladd, Steffi Duna. (1 hr., 45 min.) (ESPN)SportsCenter 2:30OONews 3:000 Heritage Singen OReiHiimbard (ESI^ CFL FootbaU British Columbia Lions at Hamilton Tiger-Cats (R)
(USA) Night Flight Foghat / Nick Lowe / Def Leppard
(R)
345 (SHOW) Movie Six Pack
(1982) Kenny Rogers, Diane Lane. (1 hr., 45 min.)
(HBO) Movie Victory (1981) Sylvester Stallone, Michael Caine. (1 hr., 57 min.)
3:300 HL Dong d) Movie The Boys In The Band (1970) Cliff Gorman, Laurence Luckinbill.
O AO In The Family OPhOArms t-45(SPN) Movie Riders Of The North" (No Date) Bob Custer. (1 hr., 15 min.)
4.400 Westbrook Hospital OOONews
6 Night Tracks (Coatd)
6 D. James Kennedy
4400 Ron Bagley
Monday-Friday Daytime Cont.
(Continued From Page 9)
Masters Of Aerobatics (R) (Wed) Top Rank Boxing (Fri)
dal (Mon) Magic
Shari Lewis (Tue) Fraggle Rock
(Wed)
(HBO) Movie (Thu) "Odyssey Of The Pacific (1981)
(NICK) The Tomorrow People
Rocky III (1982KThu) Star Wars (1977KFri) Grease 2 (1982)
(ESPN) Aostralian Roles Football (Bioa) Vics Vacant Lot (R) (Wed) Auto Racing (Thu)
(HBO) Movie (Mon) Under The Rainbow (1981)
(HBO) Video Jokeboz (Tm) Fraggle Rock (Fri)
(NICK) Livewire
5:35 6 Starcade (Mon) Bewitched (Tue-Fri)
"5'iVDO Chain Reaction 0(D Happy Days Again OO Beverly Hillbillies O People's Court 6 The Jeffosoos (Mon-Wed, FYi)
6100 Huntley Street 6 Mister Rogers (R)
(SPN) Life Of Riley (Moo-Wed)
Telephone .Auction (Thu) Looking East (Fri)
(SHOW) A Far Out Fourth (Moo) (ESPN) Sportswoman (Wed) (HBO) Movie (Wed) "Haywire"
(1979)
(NICK) The Third Eye (Men, Wed, Fri) Against The Odds (Tue. Thu)
5:056GomerPyle 5:300 Lets Make A Deal O More Real People OGomerPyk (BStarTrek ONews O Dark Shadows O Andy Griffith
es Court jRainbow Public Defender (Mon-Wed)
(SHOW) Movie (Mon) Odyssey Of The Pacific (1981KTue)
Peter Sellers has a double role in the 1979s The Prisoner of Zenda. The movie, to air Monday, July 25 on NBC, features the late actor as a royal heir and bis cab driving half-brother.
iSutMoiraMrveUicnflitU) make Un-mimiu chama.) .
Put the heat in your favor..
jpijhen at od<ds on how to jQy dress for steaming Summer temperatures, Polo knits provide a perfectly logical solution. Whether you want the interlock or mesh knit, you can pick from almost all the colors of the rainbow as well as the traditional basics.
Quality construction and materials helped us to select Polo by Ralph Lauren as the knit shirt for our store. We firmly believe it is the best buy for your money in a quality knit. . '
>f^an's
MtNS WEAR
Downtown Greenville Carolina East Mall-Greenville Tarrytown Mall-Rocky Mount
Most items at reduced prices
Sale ends Saturday, July 30, unless otherwise specified
Save ^3 to M
Kids' jeans and tops
For little boys
>99
Western style denims Reg. $ 12.99 'W pair
100% cotton denims are good looking and great fitting. Sizes 4 to 7.
$10.99 Yarn-dyed shirt 4 to 7.....7.99
For bigger boys
Corduroy jeans, reg. $15.99 | 099 Denim jeans, reg.S 16.99 I Apair Both have authentic western styling and are 100% cotton. Boys sizes 8 to 16.
$16.99 Plaid shirt, 8 to 20. ......12.99
For bigger girls
13
99
Cotton denims
Reg. $17.99 I Wpair
New Horizon fashion denim jeans with a designer-inspired look. Sizes 7 to 14.
$14.99 Woven top, 7 to 14.......10.99
TTfo U oft Selected
children's wear
Were $3.99 097 /197
to $12.99 X toO
Choose from novelty tops and pants for little and bigger boys and girls.
Hem ft not ^ ^ wch s/appaivMs aryjl fuml-
tfiiieeddri|leeMpui^UM. turaweimentoriedirtowdistfib^ regular pdod^i^iPMialpiifChaMk andwiiibescheduiedforpiciHipordeihry.
reducadirenexceotjonai value. Delivery it not included in seliing prices.
ilXMit Sears Credit Plans
7124183
X7
40% off
Selected Group of Ladies raincoats CLEARANCE
If 8 raining, ifs pouring and the savings are souring during Sears Super July Sale. Polyester and cotton poplin and 100% polyester coats in a variety of styles are now reduced 40%! Choose long or short styles in misses, petites and halfsizes. Hurry, while quantities lastSave ^4Choose our pull-on pants, denim skirt and colorful shirtsPants, skirt or shirt Reg. $14 each
each
Feel free and easy in our comfortable stretch jeans and save $4 during Sears Super July Sale. Cotton and Dacron* polyester navy denims come in misses sizes. Buy yours today.
$17 Womens sizes 12.99
Add dimension to your dressing with our versatile plaid and striped shirta And the savings pile up during this grand sale. Polyester and cotton shirts in misses sizes.
Pre-washed all-cotton denim skirts are just what you need to go from summer into falL Slash-pocketed wrap style skirts come in misses sizes Come in today and save.
In our Sportswear Department Ask about Sears Credit PlansSpecial PurchaseLeather handbags
997
#each
While
quantities last
All the classic looks are here in top grain leather. Choose from shoulder straps, totes and mora With inside pockets
2A
Save ^5
Wrangler
eans and activewear sets the style for juniors!
10
13
15
Polo shirt Reg. $16
Pre-washed
jeans
Reg. $24.99
Striped top Reg. $19
Pants Reg. $21
Two-tone
top
Reg. $18
Wrangler rounds up all the right looks for a junior's lifestyle. Like activewear from colorful tops and polo shirts to easy-f itting, elastic waist pant& And, of course, those famous Wrangler pre-washed or stone-washed western jean& Come in and save during our Super July Sale.
Not shown:
$26.99 Stone-washed jeans............21.99
In our Junior Bazaar
Save ^5
Men's comfortable Per ma-Prest stretch slacks
10
99
pair
Perma- Prest* stretch woven slacks of 100% polyester with stretch Ban-Rol* waistband. Choose from basic and fashion colors. In mens waist sizes.
30% off
Men's sport shirt clearance
Hurry in today and save on all the sport shirts you need! Choose from long and short sleeve styles of woven and knits in a wide array of solids, prints and plaids. Men's sizes. While quantities last
In our Mens Store
Save 30%
Men's Perma-Prest dress shirts
2.0,! 1
Savings are yours during Sears Super July Sale. These Perma-Prest* dress shirts of polyester and cotton are easy-care. Reg. $8.00 each in mens sizes
Save 25%
Men% 100% cotton underwear
T-shirts or briefs Reg. $5.99
49 pkg.
Boxers Reg. $6.99
pkg.
Styles shown are representative of Sears assortment
Comfort and savings - a winning combination. T-shirts, briefs or boxers in packages of 3.
699
Replacer series central air conditioning
If you have a central air conditioner that is old, inefficient and failing, nows the time to install an energy-efficient REPLACER system. Thermostat refrigerant tubing and instah lation extra
199
99
$100 off 30>inch energy efficient whole house fan
Energy-efficient fan cools naturally. Easy-to-install...no attic joists to cut or frames to build. Comes with white louvered shutter. Reg. $299.99. Thru Saturday.
20-ia fan, reg. $259.99 ... 159.99 24-ia fan, reg. $269.99 ... 169.99
Ask about Sears Authorized Installation
FREE ESTIMATES!
149
$40 off convertible jet pump
Delivers 20 to 40 iba pressure from shallow or deep wella Reg $189.99.
149
$40 off shollow well jet pump
Delivers 20 to 40 Iba pressure from wells as deep as 20 ft Reg $189.99.
Summer Natic
OUR LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR for these one-coat interior paints. Save over $7!
077
Satin flat
$18.99 Easy Living semi gioss.........gat 11,.77 Reg. $169.99, gaL
Sears Best Easy Living* interior latex resists stains and spots, withstands scrubbing. Dries fast 23 colorfast colors.
For one-coat results, all Sears one-coat paints must be applied as directed
bOUSB
f*AlNT
$7offWeatherbociter 10
Our best exterior latex, 10 years durability. 46 colors. Reg 24.99.
599
gat
1/2 price exterior latex
One-coat house paint with value! Easy clean-up 5 colors. Reg $11.99.
i
itional Paint SALE!
OUR LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEAR for these one-coat exterior paints. Save over $8!
Our firre quality Weatherbeater 1-coat ^^^77 latex. Outstanding durability in 46 non- low luster
yellowing colors. Mildew and stain resis- ^ satin
tant Washable. Reg. $17.99, gal
$21.99 Weatherbeater gloss finish gal. 13.77
Ask About Sears Credit Plans
Q99
W each
$3 off Wilfon*
activo wear
Choose from V-neck shirt or shorts with elastic waist Reg. $ 12.99. In our Sporting Goods Dept
Ask atwut Sears credit plans
39
99
$20 off 7x7-ft sport tent
Nylon taffeta tent has rear screened windows with inside zippered storm flapi Reg. $69.99.
14
99
15
99
$200 off 1-HP air compressor
Delivei 7^ SCFM at 40 PSI. 100 PSI max 12-gaL air tanK more. Reg SSOaOQ Ttw5Uitiifrtavf-
74005 1/2 price interior latex
1-coat paint. In 6 colors Reg $11 -9a $13.99 1 -coat semi gloss gal. o.
DIAWA spinning reel
Line capacity. 200 yds 8-lb. test not included. Reg. $21.99. SAVE $7!
ZEBCO spincast reel Line capacity 100 yds of 10-Itx test included. Reg. $t 9.99. SAVE $4!
19
$13 off stooping bog
3-lbs insulatioa Machine washabls Reg $32.99. Sale ends Saturday.
90212
3.04tP, 20hii mowr
1 39^ SAVE $60
Reg. $199.99
Convenient operator-zone starting. Automatic choke, manual height adjustment
Propelled reor-bagger
2^ ^99SAVE$60
Reg. $379.99
Eager-1.4.0-RP, 22-ia cut 2 walking speeds Solid state ignition. Gear drive. With catcher.
Eager-1 propelled mower 4|9Q99 SAVE $70
wAT Reg. $399.99
4.0-flP, 22-ia cut Gear-drive, two walking speeds Quick height adjustment
Save ^20
Craftsman trimmers
49
Each
Reg. $69.99
Electric Bushwacker
Sears Best! 1/4-HP UL listed with 22-in. blade.
Electric WeeciwcKker
Sears Best! 3/4-HP, 17-ia cut double Insulated. UL listed.
6A
3-sped reversible 52<:in. ceiling fan
99
i99
RaS1SS.99 Circulates cool floor air up in summer, warm ceiling air down in winter. With wood blades and braaa-finished detalla
9355/9356
Also available in white finish.
Installation available, extra
Mk about Sears credit plans
Save ^5
HueraKent worklight
99
14
Reg. $19.99 48-la fixture complete with two 40-watt bulba Mounts on chains or ceiling.
89023
Oectrkal needs
$1.29 Handy box $1.29 junction box $1.29 Romex connectors $1.29 wire connectors
1884
69 Reg. $89.99 Save $20 Smoker grill
Rust-resistant cast aluminum. Covered.
199
6442
Reg. $6.99
244ieur timer
Save $2. Turns lamp or appliance on or off at preset time.
9330
|29
I Reg. $2.29 Save on 34bs.
Sears defergent
Use H-cup for average famity-sized load.
69^
each
plug or switch 894 grounded duplex receptacle. 994 quiet switch.
12
49
6078
Half Wkel
EUctrk rapcrir Ut
Crimpers, auto testera terminaia 40-pc. kit while quantities last
Will be $24.99 in 1983 Power and
Hand Tool Catalog
Save
more than 1/2 price!
>99
Each. Reg. $22.99
for Sears Steady Rider RT shocks
Sears Best radial-tuned shock with comfort valve helps smooth ride without giving up performance. For most cars and light trucks.
Sears Heavy Duty shocks start as low as
Save MS
Booster shocks by the pair
Increases carrying capacity in front or rear of most American-made cars.
Reg. $49.99 pr. Booster shocks ^
Not available ^ Shock installation extra in Shelby or Williamson
422
Reg.S4.99 Presione anti-freeze
3DAYSONLY!Saveon winter coolant and summer anthfreeze.
422
Reg. $5.40
All-weather oil
Buy the handy 5-quart container of 1W-30 and stock up now!
Sears Is kiIdlstrllNitor of Hdcet op- * plications for 1M4 LOS ANGELES OLYMPICS
Sears 40 battery SAVE ^20
34
Replace your worrisome weak battery with thisSears40. Features 380 amps cold cranking power to help give fast starts. Groups 24, 24F, 74. Installation included. Also in Groups 22F, 42 and 72.
99
Ask about Sears credit plans
Exch., Reg. $54.99 INSTALLED
SAVE *20
/ T Reg. $99.99 Cor-tep carrier
Rugged, easyto-load X-Cargo* carrier has 16.8 cu. ft space.
999$
Reg. $119.99 Speed control Savo $201 Features preset resume-speed after braking
24
Reg $34.99 6-omp charger Save $101 Charges most batteries in 4 to 6 hours.
19. 69
Motorcycle batteries
Sears standard and Diehard batteries for most motorcyclea 12-volt
AUTO CENTER OPENS8AM
Mondoy-Sotunkiy
BRIKC lOOfor
disc Of drum systom, 2-whcl
69
with coupon book described below S79.99 without coupon We'll replace shoes or pads, brake fluid, brake springs and front oil seals. Turn atxf true drums or rotors; rebuild cylinders or calipers. Repack bearings. Other parts extra
Not available in Shelby or Williamson Cooling system flush
19
with coupon book described below $29.99 without coupon We'll flush cooling system, install 2 gallons of antifreeze/summer coolant and install anti-rust/water pump lubricant
Not in Shelby or Williamson
Engine tune-up diognosis
9
with coupon book described below $19.99 without coupon We'll set timina adiust carb., do scope analysis test when applicable. We then suggest only parts and senrices you need.
Service for most Americai cars, and many imports
Save 40%
on RoadHandler 78 steel-belted radiis
7S radial whHewaS
Regular
prtco
each
Sals
price
aach
lusFET* aach and oMWa
AR7S-13
94 99
S4J9
1.90
BR78-13
101.99
91.19
2.03
DR78-14
11499
UM
1.97'
ER78-14
119.99
71J9
2.15
FR7S-14
124.99
74J9
227
GR78-14
129.99
77M
2.32
HR78-14
134.99
90J9
2.90
GR78-15
134 99
99J9
2.46
HR7S-15
139.99
99J9
2.97
JR78-15
144.99
9SJ9
3.05
LR78-15
151.99
91.19
323
AR78-13WW Regular $94.99
56
99
Plus$150FET* and Old tire Hurry, while quantities last! Two steel belts for strength and long wear. Low rolling resistance helps save gasolirre. Radial design adds responsive handlirtg Tread grooves channel water away for good traction on wet roads.
Save 30%l Fiberglass belted tires
A78-13WW Reg. $49.99
SuparOuordZS
wtiWawaWs
Regular
price
each
Sale
price
aach
nusFET each and oMUn
A78-13
4929
UM
1.67
C78.13**
60.99
42J9
123
079-14-
63.99
44.79
2.00
E7014
65.99
49.19
206
F7B-14*
66.99
49J9
223
G78-14
60.99
40J9
2.40
Q78-1S
74.90
52.49
2.44
H78-15
79.09
S3J0
2j99
L78-15
7999
55J9
2.73
34
99
plus $1.67 FET* and old tire
Two fiberglass belts for strength and long wear. Two polyester plies add a smooth ride Tread grooves channel water away for good wet tractkxv
Mounting and rotation included. Ask about Sears credit plans
Steel-belted
rodials
As Low As
Guardsman 21. Smooth-riding bios-ply tires
34
Plus
$1.64 FET P165./80R13
Great low price for a steeFbelted tire. Other sizes also available.
Sears
Low
Frica
PluaFET* each and aMBM
MacfcwaN
P186O0O13
2940
140
P17SO0O13
3040
1.50
P196f79014
3040
196
P21S/75D14
4340
229
R219/75015
4340
229
PI 55/80012
OO Plus $1.29 FET and old tire A great low price for a tire with such a long wearout warranty. Polyester body pbes are durable yet flexible for a smooth ride Sper^l purchase, quantities are limited.
CAR CARE SAVINGS COUPON BOOK
SAVE $M off rogulor labor prices Yours for V A99
of selected services ^
when you use all tho coupoiw We install confidence
Good At All Sears Auto Centers
Front wheel elignment front end ports MacPherson struts or 4 shocks insUlied
4-wheel eleclronic bolance
Engine tune-up
Okrtmer change, lube (2 each) v' Brake serivce
Wheel bearing repack
Tianaiwissien IhdABIer change or coaling ayalam Suah
Statingcliaiging syotae dwck
Bonua cOMpon S5 oO
Bonua coupon SIO oHam
LOOK INSIDE! DON'T MISS THIS SALE!
HOME FASHIONS, APPIIANCES and HOME IMPROVEMENTS
THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
Choose from the merchandise listed below, then ...
YOU PUT IT ON SALE!
Ask about Sears Credit Plans
You can count on
SCARS. ROHUCK ANO CO
Sears pricing policy: If an Item is not described as reduced or a special purchase, it is at its regular price. A special purchase, though not reduced, is an exceptional value. Satisfactien guoRMiteed or your money bock
20% OFF
any regular priced merchandise listed below
20% OFF 20% OFF 20% OFF 25% OFF
Our entire stock of
OCCASIONAL TABLES, thru Tuesday
Our entire stock of DINETTES, thru Tuesday
Our entire stock of ACCENT CHAIRS, thru Tuesday
any regular priced merchandise listed below
25% OFF 25% OFF 25% OFF 30% OFF
Our entire stock of FAMILY ROOM FURNITURE, thru Tuesday
Our entire stock of TEEN BEDROOM FURNITURE, thru Tuesday
Our entire stock of DINING ROOM FURNITURE, thru Tuesday
any regular priced merchandise listed below
30% OFF 30% OFF
Our entire stock of LIVING ROOM SOFAS. SLEEPERS, and CHAIRS, thru Tuesday Our entire stock of MATTRESSES and BOX SPRINGS, thru Tuesday
20%-40% OFF 20% OFF 30% OFF
Custom Shop Sale!
20%-
40%
OFF
The regular price of ALL DRAPERY LINING, thru Tuesday The regular price of ALL CUSTOM SHADES, thru Tuesday The regular price of ALL CUSTOM SHADES, thru Tuesday The regular price of ALL CUSTOM WOVEN WOODS and our entire stock of BLINDS, Horizontal and Vertical, thru Tuesday Only.
FREE LABOR on ALL CUSTOM FLOOR LENGTH DRAPERIES, thru Tuesday. Custom Shop not in: Ashland, Greenville, Rock Hill, Williamson__
20%-50%
OFF
The regular price of our entire stock of CARPET. REMNANTS and 12-ft NO-WAX VINYL, thru Tuesday only! Hurry for good selection of colors and patterns. Cushion, installation extra.
HURRY, PRICES THRU TUESDAY!
PLEASE READ THIS This fantastic sale is Umited to the merchaiKit#* ottment IWed above in our retail
store stock when purchased Thru Tuesday. J uly 26.1983. This discount does nrt apply or surplus store purchasea Installation available at extra costa This dlscount^does^t apj^ priced merchandise or special purchasea Furniture notavallable '"Conc^Danvilto.G^^aGr^^^ High Point Rock Hill and Rocky Mount. Bedding not available in Concord, Greenville. High Point Ro^ HilL
TpeTnot srin C^oXoanvi;;, Goldsboro. Greenville. Rock Hill. Large items such as and
appliances are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delnrery or pickup delivery is extra ________________
7/24/83
THRUTUESD
Ktnmor* heavy-duty washer
97Q
A# 7 THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
Regular $329.99. Heavy-duty washer has 3 wash/rinse temperatures and 3 water
SAVE *20!
Kenmere electric dryer
259
99
Regular $279.99. Timed cycles and automatic terminatioa Top-mounted lint screea Sale ends July 30.
19.0 cu.fl. side-by-side
THRU TUESDAY ONLY! RegulBr $74a98i Laise capeoNy rafrtgerator haafood crisper and plenty of storageindoora
SAVE *50!
Lorge-copocity wtnher
299
>99
Regular $348.99l Has 2-cydea; cotton/ sturdy and permanent press. 3 water temperature aettingaSwatarlevela, Thru July3a
SAVE *1001
18.0 cu.ft. rafrigeroter
|99
dOO
THRU TUESDAY ONLY! Regular $599.9& 1370 cufl fresh food
section, 4.30 cu.ft freezer. Has twin crisper, storage in doors.
n.lcM.11. aide by ride
sida-byslds tMs big ctlspor and oMot paa Stonga in dooia Thni July aa
SAVE *301
1-cyde electric ibyer
10099
I THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
Regulw $229l99. rmied termination qrs-tssL Cotton/sturdy plus atronly cyde. Top-mounted lint screea
21.0 cw.ft. refrigeralor
699
,99
Regular $849i90i Has convenient ice mafcsr.hoolr-upisextra.Twincrispersatrd meat paa Sale ends July 3D
93262
SAVE *301
Tl5 mM, lefrigeroter
fniRU TUESDAY ONLY!
ing^pimoacuf tiiiiiiHuiekiHs gnat for dona dSlce or lec RMMSt Any-
isr
Kenmere portoble IF gas grill
139
THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
Rsguiar $170l99. Has 271 sab. cooWng area Dual cowlroa Rola easity on its
\
ST
20-
OF
THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
Regidw Speoe^evinft OiS call
adCTDuawe oven wih meclienicritl^. Start enioying adcioanwa coaMngL todeyl
Large items such as appNances are inventoried in our distribution center 2B and will be scheduled for delivery or pick-up, delivery is extra.
Each of these arivertised Items is re
PLEASE READ THIS! This fantastic sale is limit^ to
below in our retail store stock when purchased thru Tuesday. July 26 1983 only^^ count does not apply to any catalog, outlet or surplus store purchases. I nstallation av^^labie at extra cost Some merchandise comes partially assembled.
SAVE *160!
Kenmore 30-in. electric range
99
THRM TUESDAY ONLY!
Regular $549.99. Automatic oven Viai-Bake* window. "91531 cord 8 extra.
*20-*100 off
Save on Kenmore
window air conditioners
Choose from quality Kenmore single and multi-room models. Many are high-effi-ciency models with EER ratingsas high as 9.6. Beat-the-Heat this summer at Sears! Sale ends July 30.
41703
SAVE *501
Big-screen color TV
Regular $349.00. Big 19-ia diag. measure picture forfamily-size viewing. What a terrific price!
12331
SAVE
*70!
. , . 88641
, BwlroiiicfaiKkmicwwava
329
, Reguler$39mHa$touchcontrol8a^tem-pwaluie probe. UigeKsepectty oven to han-
j dteiaoatteodi. Thru July aa __
Klily available for sale as advertised
Kenmore vac or sowing hood
_ ^ aOO thru TUESDAY 1 ONLY!
I YOUR CHOICE
Reg. $179.99. Vac has eSe cteanlng. Reg. $199.99 Sewing head converts to free-arm machine
15-pint Kenmore Dehumidifier Kenmore freeiers
179
,99
_ THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
Regular $199.99. Soaks up damaging moisture. Has a 15-pint capacity. Makes your house feel more comfortable.
Sears VCR s at* dastgrwd to expand opportunities lor
your personel in-home TV viewing and not lor any usage
which might vilele the copyright lews.
349
each
THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
R^ular$399.99. 15.0 caft. upright or 15.1 caft chest with foam insulation. Both come in white.
5309
SAVE *100!
Video caueHe recorder
399
99
Regular $499.99.5-hr., 3-day/1-program Beta VCR with BetaScan. Dont miss this great buy!
Compoct stereo system
159
Regular $229.99. Has ca^e P'jjj; record and 8-track player. With AM/FM stereo receiver, record player.
32501
5000
SAVE *20!
Kenmore upright vacuum
AO
THRU TUESDAY ONLY! Regular 89.99. Strong twin fan suction with beater bar brush for deep cleaning. Has twin tana and edge cleaa
SAVE *30!
Hock t whit* pwtobl* TV
k99
69
THRU TUESDAY ONLY!
R^ular $99.99. 9-in. diagonal measure future for personal viewing. Great for kitchen or bedroom.
MORE GREAT VALUES INSIDE
ChooM from mordicmdiso littod, thon ...YUiUT IT ON SALE!
THRU TUBS DAY ONLY!
40% OTF AnMiM V fMM ffrfMic r
S0% Off fraM vinyl ckaiii IM( fmM MMc
TMRUTUe
449M KItctwn fMioM wHh apriMr...............MM
3AVE TIWU lUESMY 04 %ne fabric ntan yOM tMiy tanc*
poelAlcH mils end littlnga aliigiler pM
thrauah SomaiMl mbaiva a4^oo wsigala snrr Mtnimum
ihRwohSooiaafMl k* 15041 fandemw
please READ THIS' TNs (MMHc Mt* ! NmM 10 Mw MHOl
nMmoMbiOUinM
Mockt
MKptiN oro purcti
puKiiMdllMiTyMdaJMlyiaimonly.TMinwnldOMMloprtrlDWyoMli.oMMar
ropufrtino 8oiiioiimrtioiiiiioooiin*portimyowowblod.Dtooountaooowc<n>>ylNwSy
You can count on
SearsSatisfacfhii Guanmtd or Yovr Monty Bock
nAaa, Bowicx ANO CO.
Each of theaa advertised Hems is readily available for sale as advertised
Aak about Sam Airihorizad mataMion for initaWart Mama on thia paga. PRK ESTMATESI SHOT VOim :iEAIIESr SEAMS aETAH. sroai
Hickory. High Point, Jackaonvilla, RaWgh, Rocky Mount, \Mfmlngton, WinalorvSalom SC: Columbia. Floranca. Myrtia Beach, Rock h
VA OanvHIa, Lynchburg. Roanoka KY: Ashland j
WV: Baibooravma. Backlay, Bluafiald, Charfoaton
4B
the daily reflector
GREBWUl^ K.C
>K.
LOS ANGELES - Jwiet Lelgh found Universal Studios very fair and very nice" in their negotiations with her regarding the famous shower scene from Psycho for reuse in Psycho II. But she was put off at first when the sequels executive producer, Bernard Schwartz, called her.
Sand your quaotion. on a poatcant. lo "Aah." Fandly WMakh^ 1515 L Wi'H pay S6 lor puMaOad quaationa. Son% wa can tj
Naw Ydrfc. N.V Kjm odiara.
Janel. Jamie Lee: no tradmg places.
Schwartz, better known as Twiy Curtis, is also Leighs ex-husband, and their divorce was not amicable. Janet, 56, will deal with the marriage in the autobit^raphy shes putting together. Im going to be truthful. she says, but not ugly, and not below the bell.... Meanwhile, Curtis and Leighs daughter, Jamie Lee Cnrtia, now starring in Trading Places, lost out for the Psycho II ingenue-in-danger role that went to MegTTUy Producer Hilton Green vetoed studio attempts to sign Curtis, 24, the star of such slasher movies as Halh-iveen. Her image would have hurt the picture, he says Tom Selleck is such a dedicated volleyball ace that he interrupted the filming of his Lassiter movie in London to fly to Memphis for a match at the United States Nfolleyball Association National Championships. Tom led his Outriggers team to the championship in the over-35 division. Admires singer John Duvid-on, the new vice president of U.S.V.B.A., I just play beach volleyball. But Toms not just a celeb. Hes a real player. . .Steven Spielberg's E.T., the most movie ever, raking in more than $360 million, is being pulled from theaters for at _ least one year before a major Cover photo by Steve Shapiro/Sygma!
re-release, with no network, cable TV or.home^ideo deal an unprecedented situation. Producer-director Spielberg, of course, also owns big chunks of Jaws, Raiders of the Lost Ark and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the No. 4, 5 and 12 films of all time. But at the wrap party for his newest. Twilight Zone, cast and crew had to pay for their drinks at a cash bar./Steves great to work with, says one crew member, but Mrs. Spielberg sure taught her son to k^ his money in his pocket.
Robert Windeler
NEW YORK - Rod Stewart and Ehon John dream of becoming another Bing Cro-b^Bob Hope team in a movie based on the Road to... films of the 40s and 50s. They both say a good director is more important than a good script. Explains Rod: Thats because neither one of us can act yet. The Dorothy Lamour slot will probably be filled by Stewarts wife. AlanaSpace Hunter, the new sci-fi flick, has five times nwre stunt peo-screen
technicians and special-effects staffers than cast ^ members. Janlne Turner (Laura Templeton) and John Stamo* (Blackie Parrish), who re
cently traded kisses on ^
their soap, GenercJ
Hospital, are continuing their romance offscreen. More suds news: Robert GuOlainne of TVs Benson, has acquired the rights to the Soap series and would like to assemble the TV cast for a film version.... If a mans home is his castle, what do you do when uninvited guests cross the moat? That was the recent dilemma of 19-year-old heartthrob Matt DfUon, wholl next be seen in Rumblefsh. During the dead of winter, two young girls drove over 100 miles from southern New Jersey to his parents home in. Mamaroneck. N.Y. As they waited in the car, did Dillon hide, call the police? 1 couldnt stand to see them out there in the cold. he told FAMiiy Weekiys Eliot Kaplan, so I invited them in for hot chocolate and marshmallows. Anita Summer
WASHINGTON - Mary Martin, who in the 1950s im-nnortalized the role of Peter Pan, confides that her fondest wish is to see son. Larry Hagman, play the sinister Captain Hook someday. In town recently, Martin said, I think he would make a perfect Captain Hook because he is so funny and because Ldiry is also one of the biMest villains on the screen. If I have to get into my dying wishes, I want him to play Captain Hook. I will be watching, from where I dont know, but Ill be watching.. . . A recent survey finds that Roman Catholics have the highest representation in the current Congress, with a total of 141 seats.
Martin
my son, Caplam Hook.
A
tions at his beach house in Charleston, S.C.; and Reubin Aakew often summers in New Hampshire. That leaves Alan Cranaton. His staff wont admit he vacations at all exc^ for an occasional day or two in Carmel. Calif.
Kathleen Maxa and Jane Ottenberg
Methodists are second with 73 and Episcopalians are third with 62. Only four of 535 Congressmen daimed no religious affiliation, according to Albert J. Menendez, who conducted the survey for Americans United for Separation of Church and State. They are Harold Washington (D-Ill ), now Mayor of Chicago; Robert Kaalen-meier (D-Wisc.); BUI Frenad (R-Minn.); and Esteban Torrea (D-Calif.)... The leading Democratic contenders for President will probably spend this summer in motel rooms far from the b&ach, intent on campaigning, not sunning. But as election year approaches. one begins to wonder already where the Gettysr bui^s, Hyannis Ports and ^ Gementes of tomorrow could be. Walter Mndale spends summers fishing in northern Minnesota; Gary Hart goes hiking and horseback riding in Durango, Colo.; John Glenn owns a place in Vail, Colo., Ernest HoUings vacaMMLO THOMAS
What do you do to unwind? -EM., Flint, Mich.
1 feel serene when I do needlepoint it keeps my hands busy and takes my mind off everything else. Its a time to ruminate. Problems should be thrashed out in a peaceful mood, not in an agitated one. 1 sew by the pool, at the beach, and on planes and trains. And when 1 get involved with the design, I cant wait to finish it.RKHAM HARMS
slar of the lounng company of Camelol
b there any actress youd especially love to vvork with? -M.a, Fayetteville, N.C
With one exception, there is not an actress in the world I want lo play with. There are no actresses, just women who like lo act. Theyre all pains. Their priorities are wrong; they worry about their hair or which side of their face looks best. The exception, you ask? Bo Derek. I enjoyed working with her in Tarzan as a producer, an actress, a human being. In short, I enjoy being around her.
1883 FAMILY WEEKLY. All rights rssefvsri.
TkeWiftEwaylift
You taste it on your first draw. You taste it with every puff you take. Extra taste.
Thats what you get with MERIT.
The cigartte that delivers the taste of leading brands having up to twice the tar.
Theres nothing halfway about it. And
you can taste it
Nothing halfway
MERIT
C Hiilip Mi'rns Inc l'W.1
8 mg "tar," 0 Brfig nicotine av perciqarette, FTC Report Mar 83
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health,
The Funniest Man In America Is Richard Pryor.YES!By Robert Goldstein
The man behind the wheel of the vellow Rolls-Royce stops at an intersection. looks down the road to the r^, then to the left and turns to his pas-senijer. Where am I taking you?" he asks. It begins with an I and ends with a t. ' he hints. The passenger, a newcomer to this part of the San Fernando Valiev, doesnt get it. After a moment. the driver sings out in operatic falsetto. We re l-oooost.
Richard Prvor lost? Hardly. Though
his career and life temporarily detoured three years ago when he personally became the most famous fire to hit Hollvwood since the Bel-Air blaze of 1%1. ^or has since taken his millions of fans for a nde that has been simply exhilarating. His last five films. Stir Crazy. Bustin Loose. Some Kind of Hero, fddiard Pryor Live on the Sunset Strip and The Toy. have pulled in over $250 million at the box office and have gained critical kudos well, at least for Prvor himself.
More than back on track, hes in a groove. In a word, hot hotter than the hottest summer sidewalk in Peoria. 111., his original schtomping ground, hotter than... well, lets have some big, round numbers do the talking. How about $40 million? In May Pryor signed a five^ear. $40 million deal with Columbia Pictures, under which his Richard Pryor Company (whose president is pai and former football great Jim Brown) will produce four moderately budgeted films with Pryor having artistic control from start to finish. Pryor will also star in at least three more films for the studio over the next five years. Only a handful of Holly
wood stars can claim any such arrangement.
But then again. Pryors the closest thing to a guaranteed Jackpot in the crap shoot of movie making these days. As Billy Wilder recently described the way todays movie executives try to come up with successful films, They approach it very scientifically computer projections, marketing research, audience profiles and they always come up with the same answer; Get Richard Pryor.
Or as cmic Eddie Murphy, pretty hot himself these days, puts it simply. I call him Yoda. He's the King.
At 42. Pryor is enjoying much more than wealth and adulation. He's enjoying himself, in part because of his new attitude toward his work. He says. "Before I burned up. 1 had a lot more fun making movies. Now its more of a profession. 1 made the right choice before it was just what 1 was doing. Three years ago it became a career, being accepted and all.. Now 1 like it. When a movie is successful you feel so up because you ve connected. You don t hit much better than this.
This summer the hitting streak con
tinues with the recently released Superman HI, Pryors 31st movie, and the first in which he has to be carried a bit. \^en it's Superman doing the carrv-ing, the professional ego is unharmed, but the stomach gets a bit queasy. As Gus Gorman, an unernployed kitchen technician (i.e.. dishwasher) turned villainous computer mastermind. Pryor is whisked away by the Man of Steel. In rehearsal he was wired for flight only 20 feet above the floor If you fell, there were these safety mats plop!"
At home in Hawaii: Just being an ordinary person, it's kinda nke.
4 Family Weekly july 24 iws
for Superman III. Creating a fantasy with definite elements of reality, Lester and writers David and Leslie Newman quickly realized how perfectly Pryor could fit and shape the role of the computer genius<rook. (They thought Pryor so important to the film that he received $4 million to Reeves reported $3 million.) Recalls Lester from his London office; Richard is compulsively watchable and believable even at the times he is the most fantastic. 1 thought it would be a treat to work with him, and it was. Hes a great, great actor when hes on the screen you look at him.
Six weeks in a bum center le Pryor a changed maw 7 knew something was coming, and I didn't want to face it my saivaon."
But during the shooting both he and Superman (Christopher Reeve) dangled 60 feet in the air off the end of a cr^e over concrete. Man, Im scared, he trembled to Reeve. Dont worry. Ive got you, said Reeve. Says Pryor: This Q)leep-bleep] really thinks he can fly.
Pryor gladly put up with his few airborne scenes to get into the movie. A great admirer of the first Superman film, hes seen it at least 10 times and even used the theme music while shooting Some Kind of Hero to pump me up when I had something to do. He asked his Hero co-star and friend Margot (Lois Lane) Kidder to help him land a role in a sequel. Actually, 1 bugged her to [bleeping] death, says Pryor.
He also publicly let the producers know how much he enjoyed the Superman movie when he gave Johnny Carson and viewers his own fractured version of the Superman myth. 1 love that dude, said Pryor. Heres this guy who comes to earth and is so different, [bleep], thats gotta kill you.
The producers took notice, as did director Richard Lester, who shortly thereafter fashioned a story and script
At times thats just because he is there. Movie making takes a lot of work, a lot of energy, muses Pryor, and being able to fight for more time on camera than anyone else.
More often than not, when you look, you laugh deep belly, yeah-that s-right laughs. He may have evolved from the blackest comedian of them all to the funniest man in America," but the laughs, whether he is in a 100-seat nightclub or a $40 million movie, seem pretty much the same. Those involuntary vocal spasms that doctors say do wonders for our biochemical wellbeing: Take in one Richard Pryor movie and call me in the morning.
Or listen to a couple of records. A decade ago, when Pryors acting career starting surging forward with a masterful performance as Diana Rosss junked-up piano player in Lady Sings the Blues, his scathing, raunchy, beautifully black humor flowered in his albums, five of which won Grammys. That Nigger's Crazy (sold with an X-rated sticker on the jacket). Is It Something I Said? (with a picture of Richard being burned at the stake by a white-hooded rnob). Bicentennial Nigger (happy iMirthday white America), Reverend Du Rite and Uve on Sunset Strip all went gold faster than Pryor could say nigger, which he did more often than Ronald Reagan utters Well. ^ ^
In Pryors reiteration, though, there was truth, not equivocation. Among his strutting, jiving characters: Black Bertha, a 300-pound woman with a 280-pound rear end; Oilwell, a hulk of a man who measured his masculinity by how many cops he could knock out; Mudbone, who created his life to fit the moment and viewed lying as a religious experience. These were the blacks for whom the civil rights move
ment was some honky newspaper headlines: Cussing, boasting, pulling legs and knives got them through their lives of noisy desperation.
From certain quarters, black and white, Pryor was criticized for his characters, but as he said then. "1 love those people. They are real and have a need to be somebody. They want recognition like we all do. They may be pathetic and laughable to some people, but what people laugh about is their own pretensions and needs.
Now, five years since he last toured America with his crazy pals, Pryor is considering another tour. As he awaited the release of Superman III in Los Angeles. Pryor spent two months trying out new material at The Comedy Store on Sunset Boulevard. Perhaps not the pure Peorian flake of the 70's, Pryor still gets hilariously high without any help from Jiis old character friends (or, for that matter, his old pals booze and dope). Less angry and scatty. Pryors comedy nonetheless remains happily wicked and funky On herpes: Ninety percent of women will tell you. We re driving along and Oh Richard. I have to tell you. 1 have herpes.' Scre-e-ech. Oh my God. 1 have to have an operation tonight. Ill drop you off and
On so<alled recreational drug users: "You say. Oh. I just do it on the weekend. Bull. The weekend lasts till Wednesday, and then vou go into the office and tell vour boss, [Bleep] you. [bleep]. I've got a new boss - my pipe
On his new dog. Bum: He just showed up at the door one day (wide eyes, arms spread open): Im here to stav. 1 hear youve got a couple of bucks ... He wont go past the gate. A ball will go in the street and hell run up to the gate and screech. I'm not going out there; its tough out there. If you want vour ball, get it vour [bleeping] self.'
The unadvertised nightly performances elicited standing ovations of welcome I get nervous when people go. Yeeha! 1 know what comes after that... Lets get a couple of black boys and hang em up and constant personal awareness of the testing involved. Says Richard of his new
stand-up gig: It does get to you. Its like I've never been onstage. I keep forgetting how hard it is. It s painful and hard.
One need only look back three years in the life of Richard Pryor to find the fullest meaning of painful and hard." Following an admitted three-day cocaine binge at his home in suburban Northridge, Calif., a freak accident involving a butane lighter and some 151-proof rum charred Pryor with third-degree bums over his upper body. Six excruciating weeks in a nearby bum center left Pryor a chastened and changed man. (Rastic surgerv repaired much of the damage, but scars remain over a good deal of his body .) "1 knew something was coming and 1 didnt want to face it my salvation, he remembers. 1 wasn t scared in the hospital. 1 was relieved, released, 1 thought Id never do anything again, except maybe walk. 1 was thankful to God 1 was still in the hospital
The accident and aftermath, including remarkable personal courage and a worldwide outpouring of support (some 25,000 letters), "gave me a whole different insight into myself and
Pryor with daughter: "I don't let them victimize me the way they used to._
.This [bleep] really thinks he can fly.
about other people, says Pryor. It changed my whole way of thinking. Sometimes you get to thinking you did it all yourself. To have something happen to push you down, you realize all along youre in Gods hands. If it was up to me. I wouldnt be here
Pryor further began appreciating that people actually can like each other and themselves, that being a regular guy neednt be suffocatingly boring. 1 thought maybe not being so insane would make me less interesting," says Pryor. Just being an ordinary person, its kinda nice. Its nice waking up in the morning and knowing where you are. Being grateful is a nice feeling For most of his life nice wasnt what Pryor felt. And grateful was even lower on his list. As a boy it wasnt play in Peoria. Raised by his grandma and mother in a family-owned brothel, Pryor was kicked out of Catholic school after his home life came to light. Failing to escape the towns street thugs and petty crime through the Army (already
Family Weekly july 24 i9H3 5
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RKNARD PRYOR
an angr>' young man. Prv'or couldn't tolerate taking orders from people he felt were his mental inferiors). Pr\'or took to show business, women and drugs with relatively equal shares of volatile energv Having to mellow his gritt\' street-corner comedy for tele\ i-sion and Las Vegas audiences while tr>-ing to find broader acceptance for his darkest humor brought major conflicts and violent outbursts. As did four marriages and divorces Self-respect was opt of the question I did ever\1hing I could to destroy myself. " says Richard. "The more successful 1 became the more [drinking and drugs] I'd do. A lot of celebrities really think they're dirt. When they are treated any other way with acceptance thev don't believe it. To sit in my home, being normal, going through feelings about myself I couldn t do it. the minute something uncomfortable came up. out came the dru8>
No more. When the National Enquirer ran the absurd story^ that Pryor took cocaine while in the hospital. Pryor was outraged "1 could have gone down the toilet with that. They pushed the wrong button ' and filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit that is still in litigatioi.
In fact. Pr\'or did return to using drugs, but not until many months after his recovery. Now clean again. Pryor feels good enough about his current abstinence to joke to The Comedy Store crowd. "I haven't had drugs in five months and [twitching his t^y] the stuff is starting to wear off. But I ve got enough residue to last me three months.' Off the stage. Pryor is confident that the battle is being won. "Every time 1 .say no, it just makes me feel better.' he says. W ith the regular help of good friends who are also recovering alcoholics and drug addicts. Pryor s resolve to stay clean is apparently growing. "Any privilege I had for drinking and drugging 1 abused. Talk about JekvH and Hvde. 1 could
become some beast."
The new unbeastly Richard can claim some peace at last. He says he's finally a happy bachelor, his shorl-lived marriage to Jennifer Lee ending last year. "Getting married is like a monster movie.' he savs. The monster is in the basement, waiting to get out. I discovered you can live with a broken heart and an analyst." And he says he feels surer in his role as father to four children (three girls, one boy, ages 14 to 26) from four different mothers. "Sometimes we don't like each other now. That's revolutionary for us. I used to get my face kicked in by them. But they re people now, they re more grown up. I don't let them victimize me the way they used to"
Whether he's cooling out at his one-bedroom retreat in Maui or taking care of business from his three and a half acre spread in L.A.. Piyor is indeed more at ease with himseif thanks in part to twice-weekly therapy sessions. The surprises of ongoing self-discover> leave him "feeling like a kid
Still, the realities of an inequitable world continue to arouse him. Somalia and Ethiopia need food, not guns, he asserts; inner cities need much more than his own generous giving of spirit, time and money to youth-oriented aid programs: ".A lot of people have to be concerned: were talking urban renewal '
But what's within Pryor s control his skyrocketing career he's controlling more than ever. His next movie, the first under his new deal with Columbia, is one he's wanted to do for a long time a portrait of jazz-legend Charlie Parker. Pryor promises his company will tr\- to involve more blacks and other minorities in its film projects, and truly helping increase the access of minorities to the indu.str>' would be a remarkable advance in deplorably restrictive Holluvood.
But Richard Pryor is used to forging new paths. As George Orwell wrote. '"Ever\- ioke is a tinv revolution" RV
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EVER CHEAT THE GOVERNMENT? FEEL GUILTY ABOUT IT, STILL?
THESE PEOPLE FESSED
UP.. .NO KIDONGBy Kathleen Maxa
"This check for $1,300 is to make restitution for took, leave days and other things I stole while 1 was in the Navy from 62 to '67," writes one American.
"Enclosed is a check for $100 to help pay o/f the naboncd debt, states another.
"The check of $35,000 is a gift for the U.S.A. bng live, writes a 92-year-old Russian immigrant. "With me it's not what the country will do for me, it is what I can do for the country.
Every day at the U.S. Treasury De^ment, letters and tnoney arrive from guilt-ridden Americans who want the Government to forgive their sins, concerrred Americans who want to help reduce the national debt and generous Americans who simply want to give more than their taxes to Uncle Sam.
Some of the letters are real unusual," says Jean Whisonant, who catalogues them all, including those above, from her cramped cubicle in the Treasury Department annex.
The cash, checks and money orders are deposited in one of four special gift accounts created by Congress and
variously known as the Conscience Fund, General Qfts Fund, National Defense Fund and Public Debt Fund.
The practice of giving money back to the Federal Government is nearly as old as the republic itself. In 1811 an anonymous ^nor who claimed to have defrauded the Government sent $5 to the Treasury Department, prompting Congress to establish the so-called Conscience Fund.
The Conscience Fund currently totals over $4.5 million. Donations are almost always anonymous, usually made in small amounts (although the largest recorded gift was for $139,(X)0) and are often accompanied by confessions about how the donor ^ some time defrauded the Government in some way using a postage stamp twice, failing to pay duty on articles brought into the country, stealing (jov-emment property or evading taxes.
When I first started 1 just .couldnt believe there were that many people
KMBenMaxasa Wahin^onasedluierwhose work ofipem in mjmemus ntond magfones.
out there who would be bothered," says Whisonant, who has been recording deposits and filing the accompanying letters sitKe 1978. Most of [the contributors] are either bom-ag^n Christians or feel the I.R.S. breathing down their necks. Usually the ones who are the most bothered are the ones who are guilty of having cheated the Government of the smallest atTK>unts. You dont hear from the ones who can afford Swiss bank accounts or who have defrauded the Government of millions in taxes.
One man. for example, wrote. This afternoon I found the enclosed dime. 1 am unable to determine who the owner is.
The laigest lump sums received by the Treasury are usually put into The General Gifts Fund, which totals about $51 million. These gifts carry no stipulation as to how the money is to be used. Typically, donors leave the balance of their estates not awarded to their families. A veteran gave all his insurance annuities, which totaled $10,000, because, he said, the Government has done more for me than my family has."
Few, says Whisonant, are looking for recognition.' When a Treasury investigator tracked down the Russian immigrant who had sent the $35,000 check to thank him, the donor dedined. Why are you wasting your time and postage?" replied the old man, who lived nwdestly in a poor section of his town.
Not all the gifts are cash. The Gen
eral Services Adminstration routinely holds public sales for donated secun-ties and other property, such as the 1959 Cadillac and the barbershop 1^ in a will by one man and the $1,500 worth of jewelry willed by another because, he said, he didnt want his family burying it with him.
The National Defense Fund, which currently has about $51.000 in its coffers, was started in 1973 when a retired Army officer insisted such a fund be established so he could donate his pension check to defense spending.
The donations to all the funds are generally tax deductible. All are fun-
Not aU the gis are
cash. One man hit the Government his 1959 and his barbershop
neled originally through the Treasury Department. Monies from the Conscience and General Gift Funds then go into the Treasury Departments general fund; National Defense Fund donations go to the Defense Department; and Public Debt Fund donations go to the Bureau of the Public Debt.
These days the Public Debt is probably the most widely known of the four funds. Prompted by the political debate over what to do about the snowbadling $1.2 trillion national debt, a surprising number of Americans are voluntarily contributing money to help reduce the deficit. The fund currently totals $7 million. The inaease of inquiries from citizens on how to donate money to the Government has led the I.R.S. for the first time to include instructions on how to make voluntary contributions
to reduce the public debt" with the 1983 income-tax forms.
Margaret Wick, a 70-year-old retiree from Zapata, Tex., contributed $200 toward paying off the debt because, she says, It worries me. Thats no way to run a business and the Government is a business."
Kay Fishbum, a 42-year-old nurse from New Berlin, Wise., donated $1,000 and has spent the past year and her own money mailing some 13.000 invitations to fellow Americans urging them to contribute. She also has sent letters to 800 newspapers around the country, asking them to publish her plea.
A self-described political independent, Fishbum says she has no fundraising wal for her letter-writing campaign. 1 know what I'm willing to do, and I know theres a great deal of cynicism about this. she says. Some of the people who have written to me and want to hdp are from extremely modest means. Similarly, some very affluent people have contributed $10.
So far this year, says I.R.S. spokesman Rod Young, 3,313 Americans have contributed to the cause with checks totaling $276,557. Although one donor forwarded $25,000, most are $10 or less. Last year the account drew a total of $901,136 in donations, a sharp increase over the previous year s $290,107. which is partially explained by a sizable gift from an estate.
Although the l.R.S.s recognition of the Public Debt Fund and Fishburn s efforts are new this year, the fund itself was crated in 1961 after Sarah V. Clayton, an oil-rich Texas woman, died and left the interest on her blue-chip stocks to Uncle Sam. stipulating in her will that the profits be used to help reduce the national debt. About $90,000 arrives each year from the executor of Qaytons estate, making her the most generous regular donor to the Government. Wl
AN riAUAN MASTER CHEF SHARES HIS REQPES
By Marilyn Hansen
Giuliano Bugialli's Classic Techniques of Italian Cooking is a veritable encyclo-p^ia of Italian cookery. Giuliano Bugialli is an Italian scholar trained in languages, but his culinary talents led him first to teach cooking as a sideline and then to writing his first book,
The Fine Art of ltdian Cooking. in 1977. He now devotes his entire time to lood.
In this new book Bugialli gives historical background with each recipe and helpful notes on the traditional preparation and variations.
It's filled with a treasury of black and white step^-step technique photos and is very well indexed, with a gk)ssary
Giuliano Bugialli
of Italian terms, a well-organized appendix with a list of recipes that is divided into courses, basic ingredients, breads, pizzas. sauces, antipasti and more.
The book has just won in the International category in the prestigious 17th annual Tastemaker competition. The Tastemaker, the nations only awards prc^am honoring cookbooks, is sponsored by the R.T. French Company, a Rochester, N.Y.-based food company.
We present two recipes from Giuliano Bugialli's Classic Techniques of Italian Cooking. Copyright 1982 by Giuliano Bugialli, published by Simon and Schuster, reprinted with permission of the publisher.
POLLO ALMOMUTTO
Chicken Wropped in Prosciutto
I chicken (iIkmI 2 Bm.)
3 tabieapooM sweet In 5 large sage leaves, fresh or preserved
In salt
1 teaspoon rosi^ry leaves, fresh, preserved in saKor ihrled and Mancfaed I teaspoon dried nijoram 1 teaspoon saK orto taste V, teaspoon freshly ptnnto Mack pepper AbonI 1 tablespoon oHve oil 8 sikes pruaclntto (abont Vt Hi.)
1. Cut the chicken into 8 pieces. Melt the buner in a small saucepan over a pot of boiling water. Finely chop the sage, rosemary and marjoram together on a board. Put the chopped ingredients into a small bowl. Add the melted butter and the salt and pepper to the chopped ingredients. Mix very well.
2. Lay a large sheet of aluminum foil on the table and brush the shiny side with the oil. Use a pastry brush to coat each piece of chic|ien with the hert>butter mixture.
3. Wrap each chicken piece in a slice of prosciutto. Place the chicken pieces on the aluminum foil, fitting the whole chicken back together again. Secure the shape by wrapping the chicken the way you make a package.
4. Place the package in a terra-cotta casserole and cover it with its lid. Place the casserole in a cold oven and turn the oven temperature to 450. Bake for 1 hour and 45 minutes without opening the casserole. Remove the casserole from the oven and let stand for 5 minutes, then remove the lid.
5. Use a scissors to cut from the center of the foil outward in all four directions, making a cross. Then cik each foil quarter in hall. Fold back each of the foil pieces from the center to the side of the casserole, making a flower shape. Serve immedi^ely.
Makes 4 servings
MiLANZANI MMINI
Stuffed Eggplant Puglia Style
6 thin eggptants, about 8 inchea long CoarM-grained wh
3 tikes white bread, cnista reawved I cup cold milk
6 oz. Mack olivet in brine, drained and pitted
4 taUeapoona capera in wine vinegar, drained
10 apriga HaUan pmlcy. leavea only 4 taMeapoona grated Pecorfaio or Ricotta aalala 3 taMeapoona unaeaaoned bread cnuabt W cup oHve oil
SaH and freahly ground Hack pepper
1. Prepare the eggplants to be stuffed by slicing off inch along the length. Scoop out and save the pulp.
2. Bring a large pot of cold water to a boil. Add coarse-grained salt to taste, then add the hollowed-out eggilants and their pulp. Boil for 1 minute, then transfer them to a bowl of cold water. Let stand for 1 minute, then place on paper towels and pal dry.
3. Finely chop the olives, capers, parsley and eg}lant pulp on a boaid. Soiak the bread in the milk and squeeze the milk out after 10 minutes. Place the chopped ingredients and the squeezed bread in a small bowl. Add salt and pepper to taste.
4. Heat 'A cup of the oil in a small saucepan. When the oil is hot. add the contents of the bowl. Saut for about 10 minutes to amalgamate all the ingredients. TVansfer the stuffing to a crockery bowl and let stand until cool (about 30 minutes). Preheat the oven to 375
5. Add the cheese to the stuffing and mix well. Stuff each eggplant with the cooled stuffing and sprinkle over a little bread crumbs. Pour the remaining oil into a 13 /4 X 8V4-inch baking dish and arrange the stuffed eggplant in it. Place the dish in the oven and bake for about 35 minutes. Remove from the oven, transfer the eggplants to a serving dish and serve immediately. Makes 6 servings
Family Weekly * 241983 9
'QEook
DOES INTUITION MAKE
MORE aUSE THAN LOQC?By John E. Gibson
TRUE OR FALSE?
1. A self-confident person is less likely to get lost in an unfamiliar area than someone who lacks faith in himself.
2. Someone with a good sense of humor tends to be emotionally mature. S. Right-handers tend to be nwre open about their sexual feelings than lefthanders.
4. A hunch can be more influential in good decision making than intense rational thought.
5. People attempt suicide primarily because theyre tired of living.
6. Kids who grow up in the country have better personality adjustments than citv kids.
ANSWERS
1. True. A University of California study showed that a person who has a good sense of direction, seldom gets lost or confused in an unfamiliar city or on unmarked country roads, is likely to have an outgoing personality and be ambitious, self-assured and independent. The study also indicated that a sense of direction is more important to men than women. Men tend to have lower self-esteem if they dont have that "inner compass '
2. True. Dr. Martin Grotjahn, professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University of Southern California, concluded from a study of humor that someone with a well-developed sense of humor is emotionally mature, sees both the positive and negative aspects of his character and cheerfully accepts his frailties.
3. False. Atiording to a team of behavioral scientists at Mount Union College (Ohio), left-handers are less inhibited about expressing sexual feelings and emotions than right-handers Their study found that this applies more to men than women
4. True University of Indiana researchers studied intuition and decision making using more than 100 business students. They determined which students were more intuitive and then found that those with a high level of intuition make better managerial decisions than people with little intuition.
5. False The Department of Health and Security of Britain determined that many people attempt suicide with a drug overdose to find relief from a terrible state of mind or from situations in which thev feel powerless to cope or to win back former mate or lover (this is particularly true of young people). ,
S. False Children from rural areas have personalities that arent as well-adjusted as those of children livir^ in metropolitan areas because, as University of Ohio researchers concluded, the rural setting doesnt provicie "environ mental advantages that an urban en vironment does
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Prescription Drugs Side Effects Reveaied
(Peachtree City, GA)
FC&A, a Peachtree City, GA, book publisher, announced today the release of a new book for the general public. Prescription Drugs Effects and Side Effects. It reveals the little-known side effects of over 200 of the most often prescribed drugs side effects which are known to few people besides doctors.
The Good Effects of Drugs You take drugs prescribed by your doctor for their good effects like relieving pain, fighting infection, birth control, aiding sleep, calming down, fighting coughs, colds or allergies, or lowenng heartbeat and blood pressure.
Do You Have Any Of These Dangerous Side Effects? Prescription drugs can cause diarrhea, dizziness, dry mouth, sleepiness, depression, headache, insomnia, upset stomach, blurred vision, cramps, rashes, constipation. te\er. stuffy nose, short breath, high blood press'ure. fear, nnging sounds. Also, poor appetite, balance, sex or bean function.
Do You Know The Answers To These Questions About Prescription Drugs?
When your busy doctor gives you a prescription, what do you. or even your doctor, know about if. What's it for Will you be allergic to it? What are its side effects and dangers? Will it affect other medicine youre taking?
Its up to YOl to keep yoursell informed by reading this book. For example, on page 3 voull learn that a drug you take for upset stomach can cause nausea the very thing its supposed to prevent plus convulsions or heart attack! _
BENADRVI
TAt.AMIT
Wi ll M
DARVON
TETRA-( XI.INE
t INDERAI
Do you know the intended good effects and bad side effects of over 200 prescription drugs?
Latest Facts On Each Drug
Two outstanding pharmacists have helped add newlv discovered side effects to the 198.3 edition, the book descnbes more than 200 of the most-often-used drugs. Facts are given in easy-to-understand words instead of hard-to-understand medical terms.
Easy To Read
Drugs are listed in alphabetical order for quick, dictionarv-style finding. I he book lists brand names, money-saving genenc names, good effects, side effects, warnings and interactions with other drugs.
It tells how to save money by using genenc drugs instead of expensive brand names It also explains drug categories. (For example; a drug may be called an a^lgesic" analgesic means "pain reliever ")
! How To Help \ our Doctor
' fell your dcKtor if you have any possible side effects given in this book. It he thinks best, he mav lower vour dose, stop your medicine or switch to a different drug not having such side effects.
A Remarkable Guarantee I Order this .30.000-word, easy-to-I understand book, edited by two i pharmacists. Simply cut out and mail the i coupon today. I heres a no-time-limil guar-! antee of full satisfaction or your money back. __
Partial List Of Drugs In Book
Are you taking any drugs on this list?
Achromvcin Buiisol EES*
Aaifed Sodium* Elavil*
Actifed-C Catapres* Empinn
Expectorant* Chlor- Codeine*
Aldactazide*
Aldactone*
Aldomet*
Aldoril*
AmoxKillin
Amoxil*
Ampicillin
Anuvert*
Apresoline*
Aurax*
Ativan*
Alromid-S*
Bactnm*
Benadryl*
Bendectin*
Bentyl*
Benylin*
Buiazoladin*
Tnmelon* E-Mycin* Combid* Enduron* Compazine* Equagesic* Cortisponn* Ervlhrocm
llovone*
Inderal*
Indocin*
lonamin'
Isordil*
Keflex*
Kenalog*
KweU*
Coumadin*
Dalmane*
Darvocei*
Darvon*
Demulen*
Diabincse*
Digoxin
D^tin*
Dimeune*
Dimeupp*
DiunI*
Donnaial*
Drixoral*
I^ide*
Eryihromycin Lanoxin* Esidnx*
Fiorinal*
Fionnal Codeine*
Flagyl*
Gantrisin*
Haldol*
Hydergine* Hydrochlorothiazide*
Urotid*
Usix*
Librax*
Librium*
Lidex*
Lomotil*
Lo Ovral*
Maaodanti
Medrol*
MellarU*
HydroDiunl* Meprobamate Hydropres* Minoan* Hygroion* Mohisut-7*
Motrin*
Persantine*
Sumycin*
Mycolog*
Phenaphen
Synalgos-DC*
Naldecon*
Codeine*
Synthroid*
Naprosyn*
thencrgan
Tagamet*
Neosponn*
CiHlcinc
Talwin*
Nitrobid*
Phenobarbiul
Tenuate*
Nitroglycenn
Poly-Vi-Flor*
Tetracycline
Nitrostat*
Prednisone
Thorazine*
Norgesic
Premarin*
Thyroid
Forte*
Provera*
Tipn*
Nonnyl*
Pyndium*
Tofraiul*
Orinase*
Quibron*
Tolinase
Omade*
Quinidine
Tranxene*
Ortho-Novum*
sulfate
Tnavtl*
Ovral*
Regroion*
Tuss-Omade*
Ovulen 21*
Saluiensin*
Tylenol
Parafon Forte* Septra*
Codeine*
Pavabid*
Ser-Ap-Es
Valium*
Penicillin*
Serax*
V-Cillin K*
Pen-Vee-K*
Sincquan*
Vibramycin*
Percodan*
Sorbitrate*
Vistanl*
Penactin*
Stelazine*
Zylopnm*
-----------CUT AND MAIL TODAYli-
I nt enclose S3 + (71 MAIL TO: FC&A !! enclose Box 2528, Dept. PF^7
enclose S3. + $1.00 shipping and handling. Send me Prescription Drugs Effects and Side Effects.
I Peachtree Chy, Ga. 30269
Name.
For rainy or cold days, a reversible coat for the pet. Easy to sew Craft 379 has pattern pieces, full directions.
-Zip.
AdvriiMinnt
NEEDLEWORK
Handy Helpers
Cover*up Apron with charming Sunbonnet pocket for kitchen duty Craft 067 has pattern for 38 40 42 inclusive; full directions
Scrap Magic Hot Pads.
Calico Grapes from pop bottle caps; Crochet Circles from plastic holders. Craft 489 has full directions
Filet Puppy will protect your favorite chair Craft 253 has crochet directions, filet graph
Pansies add color to a handy cobbler apron. Easy to em broider. Craft 213-B has pat tern for 14-16-18 inclusive, transfer; color chart
Colorful Clown hideaway for pajamas or laundry Craft 222-B has pattern pieces; face transfer; directions.
Crochet Pineapple Motifs
for tabletop or chair protec Vj tion. Craft 527 has full direc *' tions.
Patterns shown here are available from this address on/y
Send $2.50 plus 50C for postage and handling for each pattern, (four patterns for $10.00).
Family Weekly Magazine P.O. Box 438, Dept. A-225 Midtown StatkNi. New York. N.Y 10018
Include name, address, zip code and craft number (Neve York State residents add sales tax.)
^^VHEN BABY CRIES ^ OUTTOBE SOOTHED
By Nonman Lobsenz
New parents are often at a loss when they have an irritable or constandy dying b^. Moreovei; if the infant senses tension and anxiety in his parents he will become even more "ftsy." What many such parents fail to realize, s^ Karen K. Schapei; formerly of the education department at Western Michigan University, is that there are several research-proven ways to break this vicious cyde.
Vigorous u{>an(klown movements, for example, that recreate the movements that the fetus expdienced in the womb as the mother moved about usually stop a babys crying. In one test, rhythmic rocking soothed infants within 15 seconds.
Warmth and tactile stimulation are comforti^ to a fusty infant because before bii^ the baby was held snu^ in the wond). Fretful infants are often helped if they are put to sleep in a small space, such as a car bed, rather than a la^ crib. In addition, stroking, patting or massaging a baby seems to help him or her to sleep longer Continuous, monotonous noises similar to intrauterine sounds comfort an infant the udrring of a fan. the humming of a vaporizer; the ticking of a clock.
Schaper cautions that each baby is difierent and will therefore respond to different types of stimulation. Moreover, she says, excessive soothing may produce negative results. Babies who are constantly lulled to sle^ may miss valuable learning experiences.
THE
MDDLE-BORN
MUDDLE
Most studies of the effect birth order has on a youn^ers personality have focused on oldest and youngest children. But researchers recently surveyed more than 2,000 middle-bom teeiHige txtys. Th^ found that bdng bom in the middle tends to lower a youngsters selfesteem.
Prof. ieannie S. Kidwell of the child apd family studies department at the University of Tennessees Knoxville campus ex^ns her finding by the lack of uniqueness middle4x>ms suf
fer Compared to oldest and youngest children, she says, male middlehom adolescents feel cheated of parental attention and support" and feel pushed around by fainily rules and regulations.
Middle^x)ms feel better about themselves and their pi^nts, however if their siblings are either one year or three or more years apart in age; being separated from a sibling tty two years decreases selfesteem. Similarly, a male mkklle4)om has higher selfesteem if his siblings are all ^rls, since he then retains his uniqueness in the family.
Kidwell cautions that birth order is only a minor cause of lowered selfesteem and that no one is a victim of his or her birtiK)rder status. Parents can help middle4x)ms offset their nonunique position by ^nding more time with them, expressing more affection and finding ways to develop the special qualities and skills of these children.
nGHTINGFOR A BETTEIR RELARONSHIP
We always hurt the ones we love, the song says, and new research indicates that the l)nric has a good bit of truth in it it also shows that fighting with those we love may not be all bad. Sodolc^ Richard Alford of Earlham Coll^ (Richmond. Ind.) asked nearly 500 men and women to rate the way they behave during argume^ with friends, family, neighbors, co-workers. He found that the more intimate the relationship, the more intense a conflict or d^te is lik^ to be. But while most people tend to aigue more vehemently with family and close friends, they tend to avoid the more extrerh forms of conflict such as screaming, shoving or hitting and making insulting personal references.
Alford also found that the older a person gets, the more moderate his or her style of arguing becomes. Older persons are lik^ to use extremes only with work superiors and co-workers of the opposite sex.
Why, asks Alford, do people argue more freely with intimates? For one thiite, he suggests, conflicts between bmty members and close friends may be more frequent, important and involving. Secondly, ho!^ feelings Idt over from other; nonintimate relationships may be vented in disputes with kith and kin. Thirdly, people generally give a freer rein to their feelings with intimates.
But the good news, says Alford, is that less restrained nxxles of disputing may make possible greater d^elop-
ment in a relationship Intimacy
may imply a certain right to air grievances and express hostility. iW
12 Family Weekly july 24 i93
Fainting the town
KeD & YELLQ; & BLUE By Kuth Rejnis
When Ronald Reagan was running for President, the news media gave us a glimpse of the house he spent his boyhood in: an all-Aifierican, white clapboard model right out of Main Street. Reagan, though, isn't the only one who has left that kind of white house behind. Any Sunday driver will tell you that more and more houses are sporting color these days -and lots of it, in interesting, sometimes bold combinations.
Ruth Rqnts a a freelance urUer speaahztnn in real estate and consumer lopKS
The once-white ranch down the road is, now a deep burgundy with cream trim. That stately Victorian wears a new coat of federal blue with shutters in deep pumpkin. Schoolhouses, stores, churches all are bursting with color, frequently two or three different shades on each structure.
People are more aware of color around them and in their lives than they ever have been, explains Leatrice Eiseman, a Hollywood-based color and image consultant considered to be a pioneer in the field. In the high4ech age we live in. there s a grow' mg concern about being cloned,' about looking too much like your next-door neighbor. Color is an expression of vourself. It's vour own statement
about your personality, your family and your house."
Paint companies are delighted to respond to that growing interest. White is still our best seller, but the interest in color is so great weve geared speciid merchandising around exterior colors, reports Kenneth Charbonneau. color and merchandising manager of the Benjamin Mcwre & Co. in New Jersey.
According to Eiseman, who is the author of Alive With Color (Acropolis Books), homeowners shouldnt wop7 too much about the right mix. Garish combinations like mustard and purple aside, most shades will work nicely together. A homeowner should go ahead with what feels good for him, Eiseman advises. People are too concerned with what everybody else is going to say instead of thinking in terms of what pleases them.
Geography often determines color selections. In the South, light colors that reflect the heat sell best. Barn red is popular in the Eastern states, but not a great seller in the West. And an artists palette of Newport blues, Lynchburg greens. Colonial yellows and varieties of those shades and others are cropping up everywhere around the country, regardless of climate.
All of this recent interest seems to have grown from the fad for psyche delic colors in the late 1960s and from the restoration of old and historic
buildings that gained steam around the same time. However, the use of color on exteriors occurred on and off throughout American history.
Still, it isnt always easy to reach for that $25 gallon can of Abie's Irish Rose when your house has always been a safe and nonattention-getting white. Dr. Fredrick Koenig, a sociologist with Tulane University, concedes that it takes a certain amount of gumption to go with color, but the more venture some want to break out of the mold. Color is not always well received, however. For example, some residents of the postcard-pretty, 18th<entury town of Litchfield, Conn. almost exclusively a pristine white were incensed when the Methodists there turned their church into shades of dark and light gold, with blue window sashes and a tricolored roof of gold and two shades of brown. But these detractors mav be mellowing. Says First Selectman (Mayor) Theodore P. Litwin; "Its a very handsome addition to the community
You dont have to reach for the color chart to be in vogue. White is, after all, still the best-selling paint color. Also, many color savants say in general farmhouses look better in white, pale yellow or ivory the so<alled earth tones and so do homes in such architectural sK'les as Greek Revival and Georgian. FW
CWSC xymnntsorvine
RIOIIBb
Raid Flea Killer kills household fleos dead on contact. In cortaets* upholsterv. around your hoceepef s hcxne. So when fleas corne in, oonlgetmod. Get Raid.
RaMflMlClllar
hfiWRf
Heres how to stop foot pain...instantly!
THERES REALLY NO MYSTERY ABOUT WHAT CAUSES FOOT PROBLEMS
Very simply stated, when youre bom, each of your feet has 26 different bones held in balance and position by tendons, muscles and ligaments.
Once something happens to destroy this balance, (no matter what your age) its irreversible unless you do something about them.
THERES REALLY NO MYSTERY ABOUT
RNDINGREUEF . . j
Right now, over 3,000,000 pwple are eiyoying ble^ relief they never thought possible ... thanks to flexible Featherspring* Foot Supports.
How do Feathersprings bring relief? Well, unlike^costly special shoes, mass-produced arch preserves, or IMme Store gimmickshand-formed flexible Jeathersprin^ actually restore and maintain 85% of the youthful, elastic
support your feet had. .. o
No matter how long youve had foot problemsbe it 3 months or 30 yearsthe instant you slip a pair of Feathersprings in youf shoes (one pair is all youll ever need) youll be able to stand all day, walk, dance, even jog or run in total comfort.
THERES REALLY NO RISK INVOLVED IN RNDING OUT WHETHER FEATHERSPRINGS CAN REUEVE
YOUR FOOT PROBLEMS
Were so certain that Featherspring Foot Supports will end your foot problems that if not completely satisfled... well refund your money in full ... with no questions asked
Write us for full informatioii, theres no obli^tion and no salesman will call. Just fill out and mail this coupon.
muov
RUEF
MafetdM.., . talaolyawlMl
What people say about Feathersprings: ^
FEATHERSPRINGS UNIQUE, 3-POINT
FLEXIBLE SUSPENSION SYSTEM:
Structurally realigns your feet restoring their balance.
Allows your feet to flex normally in all types of shoes.
Provides continuous, moving support.
Acts as a shock absorbing and pain easing system.
"Reeeivtd my wife$ Feath-tnpringa two day ago. They are euper-neither of lu con believe the reeulU. She hat had terrible /M for yean; already no pain. Ineidentally, her tore, knee it muck better ...At a retired phytician, thie retuU Dr. C.O.C/Tucwd, Ariioiu it amaiing.'
"/ walk around with a tmileon my^insteadof
Mn. LT.W. MahetU,OH
paui in my j
I am to happy I read about Feaihertpringt and antwered the ad."
Mrs. H.R. RockHiU.SC
7.. At the preeent time I ttill wear the Feath-enjtringt and indeed they perform well after teven yean of ute."
-G.M.G. Dallas, Texas
"WisA I had believed your ad five yean ago." Mrs. W.C., Fayettoville. N.C.
fsssd by prafsssisaQi moMi.
19S3 fsalbsrsMiaa llsniatiswal Corp. m N. 3h Sinot, SwMls, Wothinahm 9S103
I FEATHERSPRING INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION I 712 N. 34th Street, Dept FWB313 Seettle, Washington 98103 |
I YES! 1 want to leam more about Flexible Featherspring Foot Sup- I I ports. Please send me your free brochure. I will watch for the large I PINK enveloM. I understand that there is no obligation and that no | I salesman will call. |
^ Print Name I
I Address |
I ci^
.1____
State
When in Seattle viatt the Featherspring txjMing.
Zip
onBMO,
CUflEUD
It seems that a virulent organizational strain is sweeping the nation. In the phone book of any large urban area, one will find at least 35 entries that begin with Center for." Apparently there are no restrictions on what constitutes a valid reason for forming a center. All it takes is a group of people who feel the need to. uh. centralize.
In Washington. D.C.. alone there are 70 Centers for. 23 National Centers for and even a few American Centers for. It s enough to send one to the Center for Concern, located, of course, in D C.
In St. Louis you can join the Center for Transformation Living and Reformation Research; in Miami you can chat with the folks at the Center for Dialogue. In Los Angeles you know youre not gettii^ older, youre getting better when you attend the Center for
ifti
t^
^Hor
Maturing and Evolving. When in Boston, why not spend some time at the Center for Body-Oriented Therapy, after youve dropped your child off at the Center for the Performing Pre-Schooler^
P.S. There is no Center for the Study of Centers yet
'OJCE TWO TROUT NOVA SCOTU AND CALL ME IN THE MORNING"
ifting the lid off a hospi-.tal dinner may truly be me of life's illness-inducing moments, but in Houston these days, local residents are lining up outside Chez Eddy, a new gourmet restaurant located in the Houston Medical Center.
The restaurant features healthful gourmet dining, and a year of recipe research has produced French cuisine low in sodium, cholesterol and calories. The menu was designed so any of the center s patients including those with heart problems and diet restrictions could dine there, as well as visitors, doctors and staff. As soon as word got around, however, outsiders began streaming in.
Chez Eddy's specialties include trout Nova Scotia, fresh snapper Pig-noli, pate du chef and clams casino. Quite a departure from standard hospital gruel. Your medical insurance won't pick up the check, though, which averages yV^ $14 for lunch and $25 for dinner, including wine.
STOCKS AND BONDS AND ROCK-AND-ROLL
rou might call them the 80s version of the Monkees. They're the MBA's, the worlds first probusiness rock-and-roll band.
The boys work like members of the Salomon Brothers and work out like members of the Islev Brothers. proclaim the liner notes of their first album. Bom to Run Things, which has sold over 20.000 copies bv mail order. Featured is the best of Wall Street rock, with songs like "Take This Pink Slip and Beat It. Good Old Boys Raising Keynes and Bessy" (a love song to Bethlehem Steel).
Jhe band members are identified as Franklin Mint. Manny Hanover, T. Bill Raitt and Holden Gaines (to protect them from embarrassing their employers). We met as undergraduates at Stanford, guitarist Gaines told us. We realized that the two things we had in common business and music are the stuff of which destiny is made.
The problem with todays music, he says, is that most bands sing about life when the chips are down, but the MBAs sing about life when the chips are blue.
When it comes down to it. though, does any MBA have the soul necessary to create great music? 1 think MBA's have a lot of soul. Gaines contends, and if MBAs don t have soul, they can buy soul, which is a great advantage."
It could transform John McEnroe into Johnny Angel. A chemical engineer and senior tennis ace is now completing work on an electronic system that can eliminate erroneous line calls.
Henry Von Kohorn of Greenwich. Conn., first de signed an out ball indicator, featuring electrical lines on the ground outside the court. When an electrically-conduc-tive tennis ball falls on those lines, a bell, buzzer or light tells officials whether the ball landed in or out. Then last April Von Kohorn received a patent for such a conductive tennis ball. The ball has black spots of graphite, which actually give it better visibility than a plain white or yellow 1^1 and would make it easier to follow on TV as well.
But such a system would clearly deprive Mr. McEnroe and other whiners of much of their pleasure. No more debating (ad nauseum) the games finer points with the linesman. No more tournament temper theatrics.
So what could Johnny do for fun? Go home and kick the dog:*
ASHADY
snuAnoN
Things were bad enough a few years ago when we learned that disco music makes pigs deaf. Then came Pac-Man Palsy and Space Invaders Wrist. Now: the Sunglass Syndrome.
Dr. Grant R. Gwinup of the University of Arizona College of Medicine recently treated three young women for facial and dental numbness, which he diagnosed as directly related to the large sunglasses they wore every day. Apparently, the sunglasses placed pressure on nerve endings around the eyes, cheeks and bridge of the nose.
BIRTHDAYS
(All Leo) Sunday Lynda Carter 32; Ruth Buzzi 47. Monday Jack Gilford 76. Tuesday Jason Robards 61; Mick Ja^r 40; Stanley Kubrick 55. Wednesday Norman Lear 61; Peggy Reming 35. Thursday Bill Bradley 40; Rudy Vallee 82; Jackie Onassis 54; Sally Struthers 35. Friday William Powell 91. Saturday Paul Anka 42; Peter Bogdanovich 44.
iKWESSESai'S
hiniily Meekly
Patrick M Linskey
VlM PimMmM Md M Mrador
Gerald Wroe
VIM Prnmmrnt OmL Moi:
Jonathan Thompson
Arthuf^oper CfMifntM Em
V.P Mfg & Dir of operations. R cna-a M.nen Prod Oir. Cm e oa a g ^ Ca-roii Southern Mgr., her,ne:n j
V P..ASSOC Ad Dir. Joe F-aze- "tn tnd"ol^es V P MMke.mg Dir. Stanley Rosen,e Marketing Mgr Ken, D Aiessand-o Promotion Dir..
Sherry Detroit Mgr , tar-'ence M Ca] ' ' Scnoenieid Merchandising Mgr., Donna Gent.ie Spec Events Mgr., Lydia Janow
Patricia Kyle Creative Dir. Rooe-l Ba-ine sis k g . , , rn.,ct,an iuoaDer Ral Mors JamesG Baher Rooert H Mamolt RonSeivaggio JosephC Wise Transpor
E f S . .?1, to.. S.r. V P .P... >..pP..PP..vC.Pl.PI'...-E.,,n.
k Morton Fram. tation Mgr, jnh McCann Distribution Mgr. k y s___________
15 Family Weekly JULY 24 i<3
WHITE
PWVCUE
It
AKfVfm IKM St
TWAStW
47H Pub $14 95 WSbed?9 95 l Pub ed $16 95 Mn Pub ed $19 95 H Pub id $16 95 Wl PubJd.$9 95 HB Pub ed $14 95
V
2S43DiMHflilt: ffnTMMMHMv itmmmmfWi
UtsNnVMVWiar OraMMTm illM;HtlrtlSaMi4
^ C. asr-au
pub ed $24 85 Comb pub ed $31 85
IMnii; $bin'il wiK Comb Rn; HiifM li Mm tMCliiri. Spec ed pub ed $26 85
TMCEANY
wtth membership
and get Double Exposure FREE plus FREE Fantasy Board Game
[M MMM Mi ir iMIMti My M (anilM H MM
TMt 1 nnUcnlMUi ILHI
til 1HIIvMCiMMM|.lOlMMllMCCMnMaMM.IK
Mri^MMIMi
IlmwilttobMtSFInoroutolMtwoeW!
Please accept me as a member ol the Science Fcbon I Book Club. Send me the 5 books numbered in the I boxes below plus my tree book and fantasy board
I I I I I I I I I I I
I
boxes bekMv plus my trae book and tantasy ooaraa^MBHiBE^ oame and blH me just $1 (plus shipping and handling). I agree to the CIU) ^ aa described to th ad. wiN take 4 mote books at regular low Club pnces during the coming year, and may resign any time fteieaitor. The
FREE book and Castle dame will be mine to keep whether or not I remain a member. SFBC oNers serious works for mature readers.
FhCE
1
2.
3.
4.
s.
BOOK
#5637
Mr
Ms.
pnri)
Addn
-Apt..
Ciy.
It under t8. parent must Sign..
.Staw
-2p-
The Science Fiction Book Club otters complete hardbound editene somefxnes alterad to size to M special presses and saueiweyy mote. Members accepted in US A and Canada only. Offer skghdy diflerent m
rjoarta 26-saae
Wiitt:PlaiNlslEiHa: CdyallllMisai.Comb
pub (d $25 85
How the Science Fiction Book Club" works: Mxi'll recews your choice ol any 5 books on this page lor only $1 (plus ahipptog and handling) and a free copy of OouMe Exposure and toe liee Castle Game after your ap-pkcakon tor membership IS accepted We leaarve the nghi 10 eject any application. Howewsr. once acosptad as a member, you may examine the books in your homo and. it not complelely sabsfied. return them within 10 days tt Ckib expense. Mbur membership will be canceHed and you H owe nothing The FREE book and fantasy board game will be yours to keep whether or not you remain a member About every 4 weeks (14 times a year), we ll send you the Clubs buUetin. Things to Come, describing the 2 coming Selections and a variety of Altemele chores. In addibon. up to 4 bmes a year you may lecewe oilers ol special Selections, always at tow Club prices H you want top 2 Selections, you need do nothing: ihaly N be shipped automatically If )Ou don't want a Selocbon. prefer 1 AMemate. or no book at all. just fill out toe convaniani tonn always prtwidod and return it to us by toe date specified We allow you at leaat 10 days tor making your decMion H you do not receive the form in time to respond witoin 10 days and lecaive an unwanted Saieciion. you may letum it at our
fMltakar
asesli.2velt.(tomb
pub ed $32 30
Maglctosllaay
Maalcioas:
liri Darcy
I. Spec ed
As a member you need taka only 4 Selections or ANer-natas dunng toe coming year Hbu may resign any time toeieafier or continue to enjoy Ckjb benefits tor as long as you wish One of the 2 Selections each month Is only S3 96 Other Selsctions are higher, but alweys much lass than hardcover pubhshsrs editns-Hjp to 65% off A shipping and handkng charge is added to all sfvprnants Send no money now but do mad the coupon today!
I ad $17 95
VOCTR
THE DAILY REFLECTOR
^ CfonsMCs
9 XE WS FEATURES
GREENVILLE, NC
PEANUTS @
SLNDAN ILL'i :4 I4l
WHAT'S W:?0N6 WITH THAT? ANVWAV, WE'RE 60IN6'by Charles Schulz
LINUS! i'm All reapv!
ISN'T THIS ESCITINS?
7
JUST THINk..you ANPI 60INE TO THE M0VIE5...i5/e^
ir
WHOOPS!
I JUST
REMEMSEREP
S0METHIN6...
HERE, WU TAKE THIS MONE^ FOR THE TICKET...ANP HERE'S SOME MORE FOR THE POPCORN. HAVE A NICE TIME...
r
WELL, HOW WAS VOUR RRSTPATE?
Rr
V';'...........
^ ILL LET VOU
KNOW AS SOON AS
HE SETS BACK
AWDV CAPP
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'Tt-
by
BEETLE BAILEY
by Mort Walker
. Jl
CAN YOU TRUST YOUR lYIST TlMf ar* at Im ancM in drawliif RalaMt hatwMN laa ani kanaM awkkly can VM Nni Mamt ClMck anawara wNR
all tfHfar
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^uni^rWhirl^
by Hal Kaufman
ROLECALLl"$amabodyancasaM1liata itssuparior.thata _rafardadamaflaaihaqual,andthata
lookad up toa manas
lookad down an Nm as its inferior." C MacKeniy. Pill Manka from among: Cat, mousa, dog, horse, iackaaa.
>PiO |*tM Ul ptp iPM It) put MJOM 60Q
Sum Fun! I am thinking of a number that is twice as large as a number that is four more than one-third of the number I have in mind. What number?
JtQI A|otW| Sf JtQujnu U1
Eee-ey Termal Insert the letter E in appropriato places: LLNXPNDSXCSSNR6YXRCISINGVRYVN-INO. Clue: the Hrat word is ILLEN. Take it from
there.
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VERSE-RIDDLE TESTS WITS Drop a letter in each instance and rearrange those lett, etc., to solve this riddle: Take a letter from UPSET, and a useful fat you'll get. Take a letter from CANOE, a pine tree product will ensue. Take a letter from a SONNET, get a rock, and sit upon it. Take a letter from ALOFT, and get what idlers do beat oft. Take a letter from a SLUMP, and you will have a (uicy lump. The letters you've omitted form what every dog does when ifs warm. What's that?
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It'S the Berries! What berry is a senior citizen? The eidor-berry. What berry loads the cheers? The rahaberry.
BREEE.Y POINTI What can you draw to complete the dot h picture above? To find out, add lines frdm 1 le 2, 3, etc.
NET RESULT! Simpiyappiy the following colors neatly to enhance this familiar tennis court scene: 1Red. 2Lt. blue. 3Yellow. 4Lt. brown. SPlash tones. ~Ok. blue. 7Lt. green.
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SHOEby JeN MacNelly
FLASH GORDONby Dan Barry
THB SABM PfZOFHSTS AP TOU? OF A / KMfGHT MfQHTY AS A &ANT, \fifte6 AS . A'AA5T&^', WOULP ONEOAY PRNB OFP THE GIANTS FORE\/Efi... ANR
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Braat parker and
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AND THePe* $icpoo IN A BRlEPCASe IN oesk
ev TNf \MAX0O89L WHAT OO VOU KIIP LOCKED IN THlEOrrWER BfftmABS?
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OH.THBRS'S NOTHINO IN THAT EXCEPT YESTBQDAV^ LUNCH A BALONSV SANDWICH
WAITtL BLONDE RND8 OUT I SPENT THE WHOLE NIOKT OUAPDINC A SAUONEV SANDWCH '
Our Storj: OSBERN PROTESTS HIS INNOCENCE BUT ARN SILENCES HIM.
P/LLAGE iOU FLAUNT JE\HELRy. mP NARfARE FOU SHOW NO FEAR, TOU STINK OF TREASON. "A TRIAL HAS BEEN CONYENEP AMP THE VILLA6ERS CONRPENT NOW OF ms PROTECTION, LEVEL CHARGES FREELY. SOON OSBERN CONFESSES TO HELPING THE SAXONS IN RETURN FDR PROMISES OF MONEY ANP POWER.
*/7 ms 7NA7 OR MY l/FE," HE EXPLAINS. *f7 tS YOUR LfFE fN ANY CASE," ARN REPLIES, COLPLY PRONOUNCING A SENTENCE OF DEATH.
ARN SPEEDS A MESSENGK 10 CAMELOT, FOR ALL DEATH SENTENCES MUST BE CONFIRMED BY THE WNG. HE PLEADS ALSO FDR SOLDIERS TO PROTECT THE TOWN. MEANWHILE ARN TRAINS THE FEW ABLE-BODIED MEN HE HAS. ONE LAD NAMED NINIAN SHOWS PROMISE ANP ARN APPOINTS HIM BAILIFF.
WITH NINIAN ONE VPN ARN EXPLORES ARTHUR^S VAST DOMAIN AT ORR, TAKING CARE TO AVOID THE PLUNDERING SAXONS. HE LEARNS FROM NINIAN THAT THE SAXONS HAVE OCCUPIED CASTLE ORR, WHENCE THEY LAUNCH THEIR BLOODY ATTACKS. VMD eUfLT THE CASYLE?'A?H\ ASKS. tMS IT BRITONS OR ROMANS?
^TNAS BRTONS, SIR,* SAYS NINIAN, AND ARN SMILES FOR NOW HE KNOWS A WAY INSIDE. A SUDDEN ROCKFALL DISPELS HIS GOOD HUMOR.
we HAVE TRome, NmANj* tm sa/s worriedly. *that rocksl/pe
CANE POWN BOTH SIPES OF THE 60RSE AT THE SAME INSTANT. I FEAR THAT NATURE IS NOTOUR FOE.* THE fATH IS BLOCKED, SO ARN ANP NINIAN CAN DO NOUGHT BUT RETREAT. BUT THE TRAP HAS BEEN WELL SET. NIMBLY DOWN THE HILLSIDE COMES A MOUNTED TROOP OF ROBBERS.
2424 1983 King Features Syndicate, Inc. World rights reserved. WEEK JlflUTI^O S
PONYTAIL
byJLe^.Holley
ALUTHE -nMES I HAP TO LOAN XXI MONEY TO TAKE mOlXTl
THAT you Hevei? PAlP ^ACK .
ALU THE TIMES VOUR POWN AND You COUUPNT TAKE-
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Vouknow
SOMETHING,
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WHAT PIP I EVER SEE