Daily Reflector, July 31, 1983


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





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CLOUDY

,Paniy cloudy through Monday. High temperatures both days near 90. Low Sunday night near 70.JEWELER

Floyd Fibblnson has repaired watches for more than three decades. A pictoriai essay on his business Is on D-1.PIRATE KICKERS

East Carolinas specialty teams are highlighted in this weeks segment on Pirate football. <Ps^eB-1)Todo/s Reading

Abby.......

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Classified.

D-7-11

Arts.........

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Crossword...

.....9-14

Bridge......

..... D-2

Editorial.....

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Building....

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Enterment..

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Business....

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Opinion......

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 163

GREENVILLE, N.C.

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1983

132 PAGES11 SECTIONS PRICE 50 CENTSIncentives Needed To Keep Teachers Satisfied

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer Losing teachers is a crime and a sin, but that is what will continue to h^n unless teachers are given a better reason to stay in school systems, Greenville Schod Superintendent DelmaBlinsonsays.

Over past years and particularly during tte last few months, teachers cries for more support have been getting louder and louder around the countiy, including Greenville and Pitt CiHinty. Solutions have been proposed and tested but the majority have fallen flat, leaving teachers, ad-

ministrafN^ and legislators With the same problems.

Howevw, sfveral solutions to alleviate teacher dissatisfac

tion and modernize the public school systems are now under consideration by a state House task-force that will recommend a model-teacher incentive plan at the end of Sqitember.

Programs under consideration include a revised merit pay plan, still based on evaluation of teacher performance, and

two other systems currently being tested - a differential pay scale in the Chartotte-Meckenburg school system based on various levels of employment with teachers receiving salaries depending on education and experience, and the Second Mile Plan, a program currratly being tested in the Houston Independent Sdiool District in Texas that rewards teachers for going that second-mile in school work and in after school work.

Local (pinion on merit pay and other teacher incentive plans is not so divided as one might expect. Of three ^esmen contacted, both the Pitt County and Greenville superintendents and District 15 North Carolina Association of Educators director Annette McRae suggested that more research needs to be done before an incentive plan is implemented in the school systems.

Greenvilles Blinson said he believes more research needs to be done to come up with a sound method for modernizing payment within the school system, but that he also feels the differential staffing concept bears some looking into.

I support the idea that we need to have differentiation within the teaching profession as it stands. Right now, there is no incentive for a teacher who has topped out on the salary schedule after only nine years, he said.

These teachers become frustrated and the only way to change the situation is to leave. In my opinion, it is a crime and a sin that the only way a teacher can advance is to get out of the classroom.

Blinson said one of the reasons he favors the differential pay system is because it offers teachers a chance to grow and work for different levels if they choose to do so. In this system we might have four levels of teachers with those on the first level having masters degrees or specializations that they can pass on to other staff members. The second level might include those who have experience and have demonstrated that they have done exceptional jobs as teachers and have aspirations and the ability to teach other teachers, he said.

The third level might be composed of those who dont want

to instruct teachers, who want to teach youngsters and yoimgsters only. And the fourth level might be those who are giving teaching a shot, but are not really sure if they want to make it thier profession at that time.

The distinction between the differential system and merit pay, according to Dr. Blinson, is that with merit pay, different salaries are being paid to people with the same jobs but with different levels of comeptence. In the differential pay system, the job differences are clearly outlined and involve less subjective rating.

Blinson cautioned teachers, administrators and others not to be so judgmental about the programs and not to look for the perfect solution.

You dont scrap a democracy because of the Watergates. What you do is work to make the system to work better. Any system has this problem, that problem, what needs to be done is come up with workable alternatives instead of looking only at the problems, he said.

(Please turn to A-2)

Divers To Study Monitor

Scientists plan to dive to the wreck of the USS Monitor in August to photograph and videotape details of the historic ironclad 210 feet deep on the AtlanUc Ocean floor. They will also attempt to lcatcs' and recover the Mhaitors anchor and (kber artifacts. Information thus gained may lead to an attempt in 19K to recover the revolving turret from the famous Cheesebox on a Raft, which fought in naval history's first clash of ironclad ships in 1862.

A five-day scientific expedition to the Monitors watery grave 16 miles off Cape Halteras will begin Aug. 21. It will be the first on-site investigation of the wreck in four years. .

Announcement of the trip was made in Washington 1^ the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and in Greenville by officials of the Maritime History and Underwater Research program at East Carolina University.

Dr. John C. Byrne, NOAA administrator, said scientists plan to recover artifacts while developing information leading to future recovery of the turret.

Previous investigations have indicated that the removal of the turret and construction of a system oi su^rt for the submei^ hiul are feable, Byrne said. Raising of the turret will be difficult because of the stresses involved, he said, but its recovery, conservation and di^lay are important for on-site research. "nie recovery of the turret, said Byrne, will provide an q)p(^unity to return the most unusual feature of the warship to the American public.

Gordon P. Watts Jr., ECU underwater archaeologist (PlesaetumtoA-2)

Women Peace Campers Tangle With Veterans, Townspeople In N.Y.

DEMOUSHKD CAR - Wallace Earl Allen, 26, of Hamilton was killed Mday ni^t udio) the car be was Mviiig apparenUy eraesed the center line and struck a tractor-trailer rig the ffi^way Patrol said. Investigators said the truck was driven by My Ray Lassister Jr. of Route 2, Edenton. The

impact of the crash ripped open the side of the Allen vehicle, throwing him out. The truck was headed north on N.C. 125 about a mile south of Hamilton. The accident occurred about 8:50 p.m. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forr^)

Pitt Legislators Express Concern Over Length Of 1983 Assembly

BySTUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer Rq). Ed Warren and Sen. Vernon White said last week that, as usual, the $12.6 bUlion budget for 1983-1985 was the major item fac^ by lawmakers during the last session of the General Assembly.

But they also said the session was too long and expressed concern over the budget process.

I feel like we accomplished many things, Warren said, including the budget, the driving while impaired legiriation and other things ... more funding for mental health programs, salary increases for all state employees.

But he said the revouie picture made the session rough, miK;h longer than I liked. 1 hope in the future we can do something about shortening the sessions.

White called the session very unusual.

We didnt have that close working relationship weve had in the past.

My observatiiHi is that the power and leadership is being concentrated in a very few hands in the House and Senate. I have my doubts that this will be good for the state, White said. Practically all of the budgetary decisions are being made by a very few people. Ever^^hing that goes into the budget is cons re > and passed on by a handful of lea s >. the Senate and House. The ave e Apprt^riations (Committee) men.b : has very little input.

While they supported 5 percent pay hikes for state employees and teachers, Warren said Pitts legislators opposed pay bikes for members of the General Assembly.

The lawmakers said the community college system received additional funds fw operations as well as $28 million to replace obsolete equipment.

On the local level, Warren said, we didnt get the money this year, but hope to get $500,000 for facilities at Pitt Community College next year.

Warren noted that Greene County will share in $139,000 allocated to Lenoir (immunity College because the Kinston schod operates a satellite in Snow Hill.

He said that Greene County will also benefit from $134,000 allocated for train-ng and education programs at the new prison at Maury.

It was a di^ipointment that we were unable to pass the hazardous waste bill, White said. The Senate and House were unable to agree. This might result in the governor having to call a special session before we go back next June, but I hope this is not the case.

According to White, There were very few important bills this time, although he said the Legislature did appropriate (Please turn to A-2)

WATERLOO, N.Y. (AP) -A shoving match broke out Saturday when about 300 townspeople blocked several hundred demonstrators who were marching toward a womens peace camp at the Seneca Army Depot, authorities and witnesses said.

No injuries were reported.

Authorities charged 53 women peace campers with disorderly conduct, but none of the people who blockaded the road were arrested except for one man who walked toward the women marchers with a .22-caliber rifle over his shoulder, said Seneca County Sheriff Kenneth Greer.

The women, whose numbers were estimated between 200 and 500, had received a permit from the Seneca County Sheriffs Department to make a 15-mile march to the camp from Seneca Falls.

The women are part of the Womens Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice, a summer-long camp designed to protest nuclear weapons. The protesters say the depot is a weapons arsenal.

The shoving broke out after about 300 townspeople and Vietnam veterans massed on the New York 96 bridge over the Seneca Canal to prevent the women from crossing, witnesses and a sheriffs dispatcher said.

Greer asked the women to turn back, regroup at the sheriffs department and find a different route to the camp. But instead, the women sat on the road waiting for the crowd to disperse, witnesses said.

Greer later said the deputies arrested the women

because they had blocked traffic. Chief Deputy Dale Arcangeli said the counterprotesters dispersed after the women were arrested. He said he could not explain why the women were arrested but

the counter-protesters were not.

The womens camp was inspired by the two-year vigil of British women at the Greenham Common U.S. Air Base near London,

Leak Worsens At CP&L Plant

SOUTHPORT, N.C. (UPI) A worsening leak of slightly radioactive water from Carolina Power & Li^t Co.s Brunswick Unit 2 nuclear reactor Saturday caused company officials to reduce power at the plant to allow inflection and repair of the jeak, a fiokesman said.

Earlier this month, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission ordered CP&L to close the Brunswick 2 reactor down so officials could inspect cooling p^ in the reactor vessel for cracks. The order, which affected four other reactors, was postponed pending an Aug. 4 hearing.

CP&L spokesman Wayne Ennis said Saturday officials were not certain of the source of the leak.

We are bringing the power down to idenfy the problem, It will be later on tonight before we will be able to

he said. It will be later on tonight ___________

get personnel into containment. We dont know what system the eak fo coming from within the containment structure and we really wont know before we get in there.

Water had been leaking from the vessel for some time, Ennis said, but passed a rate of five gallons per minute over an eight hour period Saturday afteriKxm. He said according to plant specifications, a leak of that magnitude required an unusual event - the lowest level of NRC notification - be declared.

We had been monitoring the leakage for some time, Ennis said. There is no danger to the public or to the plants employees.

He said there was no release of the slightly contaminated water outside the plant and all water released was being contained within the plant for processing.

If the problem were quickly identified and repaired, the plant could be returned to full power Simday, Ennis said.

If repairs take longer, we mi^t have to bring the unit to full shutdown and it could be the first of the week before the unit returns to full power, he said.

Its not an emergency situation. Weve not had to activate any emergency equipment and theies no problem with the reactor itself.

Ennis did not anticipate the partial shutdown would cai^ any problems for CP&Ls customers.

Printed Word Still Holds Note Of Value

ByJANEWELBORN ReflectorStaff Writer

With all the visual aids available to the public in the 1980s, books have not been put on a shelf. The printed word is still holding its own in importance.

According to the current annual report of Sheppard Manorial Library in Greenville, ^ there was an 8 percent increase in circulation in 1982-83. WUlie Nelms, director of the library, said, Circulatkm is at the second hi^t point 1 could find in the past 30 years.

The report shows that 268,900 books were checked out from Sbqipard Memorial last tear. We can (Mdy assume that the people are L jeadiig at the levd they are borrowing, flrims commented.

! From July 1982 until June 1983, there was a Y nur percent increase in the use of the library, Nrims stated. The fipires show that ^,502 people visited the library.

Use has been increasing at all the Ubrrys Ihcilities - main desk, bookmobile, diildrens East Branch, Carver Brandi, Nelms

The librarys programs try to introduce children to reading and borrowing books ... 31,738 people attended library sponsored programs this year; the figure last year was 29,799, Nelms said.

Interest in reading continues to increase, Nelms said. I dont believe television and movies are the enemies of books. For example, after The Thombirds mini-series was on television, people came in to check out the book, he said.

Many times the book is more satisfying than the visual interpretation, Nelms continued, because the reader can use imagination and create his own appearance of the characters and events rather than the producers view.

Demand for new books remains hi0i. More books are being printed now than ever before, Nelms ?aid. According to the New York Times Book Review, in excess of 40,000 English titles will be printed this year.

People in Greenville rpad the books on the best seller list, Nelms said. Those books are (Please turn to A-2)

te Gieenvttte book stern popular hardbacks include: FictioD

*The Cbfldrais Return of the Jedi, sparked by the populaitty of the movie.

The Nmae of the Rooe by Umberto Eco, a recently translidedbeet-oeHer In Eurooe.

Voiceof the Heart" by Barbara Taylor Bradford. TheSununer of Katya by Trevaaian. ChrlitiiiebyStephenKing. ,

Non4ktfon

In Search of Exotfleaee by Thomaa Peters and Robert WatenaaaJr.

MeatKBdi by John Naisbitt.

The UM Uoa, William Manchester's book about WiaitoaChurchiB. ^

Cunrent paperback favorites are;

Fiction

The Case of Lucy Bending by Lawrence Sanders.

The Man horn St. Petanburg by Ken FoUett.

Master of theGame^by Sidney wldoa.

'nieParsifallfQite^'Iw Robert Ludlum. ~    '    byJUke^

TIte Color Pinde*by Alice WaHter, winner M thfo M Pulitzer Prise for fib    ?

il;.

........    ..J





Obituaries

FARMVILLE - Mr. William TtxHnas Hobgood, 78, of 100 Piiftcrest Dr. died at his home Friday. Tte funeral service will be conducted Sunday at 3;30 p.m. from the Church Street Chapd of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Lee Parker. Burial will be in Crestlawn Memorial Gardens near Farmville.

Mr. Hobgood, a life-long resident of Farmville, was retired from the transportation department of A.C. Monk and Co. He was a member of the First Christian Church of Farmville.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Nina Bryan Hobg^ of the home; a son, William Edward Hobgood of the home; two sisters, Mrs. B.R. Moore and Mrs. Raymond Nelson, both of Farmville, and a brother, John 0. Hobgood of WUson.

Kilpatrick

Mrs. Annie Carraway Kilpatrick died Friday moniing at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. at Little Creek Desciples Church.

Mrs. Kilpatrick lived all of her life in Pitt County.

Surviving are a foster daughter, Mrs. Jessie Mae Pratt of the home; two stepsons, Gifton Kilpatrick 0/ Baltimore and Ginton Kilpatrick of Washington, D.C.,'and two stepdaughters, Mrs. Lucinda Daniels of Greenville and Mrs. Leola

May

FARMVILLE - Mr. Walter Russell May, 42, of 131 Baker Blvd. d^ at his home Saturday morning. He was the husband of Mrs. Mary Suggs May of the home. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Mitchdls Fimeral Home in Winterville.

Greenville Woman Finds Family After 37 Years

pened family

Maye

VANCEBORO - Mr. Sun

Thomas (Tommie) Maye of the Epworth community of Craven County, Route 2, Vanceboro, died Saturday. He was the husband of Louisa Chapman Maye of the home. Funeral arrangments are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home inAyden.

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)-A nev^pa; story about an Indiana misskmary has led a North Carolina woman to a reunion with the family she lost 37 years ago.

You hear of these things happening, but you never think it could ham)en to you, P^ Jeanann Bragg of Greenville, N.C., said after meeting her family Thursdy in Indianap(riis and Crawfordsville.

Two weeks ago

in

Gremille, Mrs. Bragg saw a ^ory aboid a Richmond, Ind., missionary named Abney.

I saw that name Abney. I knew that was my name before I was adopted, and I was s^rised to see someone with that name still in Indiana. I felt like God was impres^ upon me to find something out about my fam-fly.

She called an informatkm who gave her three

names and tdqihone numbers of Abneys in the CrawfMdsvillearea.

The first two, there wasnt anyone home, she said, (h) the third call, I reached Cho^ Abney, but she didnt know anything about the family.

(3)^1 Abn^ took Mrs. Braggs telepime munber and volunteered to call around until she found a relative.

One person she called was

Barbara Abney Ta^, who said she was surprised to hear of her sister after so many years.

mother more sistm were

Id (rften wondoed about her, Mrs. Tayior said. I was reaUy tickled about it.

Mrs. Bragg, 39, hugged her

two newly found sisters and a brother Thursday after she

stepped

bima^i

from a plane at ianapolis International. Airport. They went to Crawfmxisville where BIrs.

Ld

waiting.

Mrs. Bragg says she recalled little ahout the familys sqiaratkm.

Mrs. Bragg, who is married and has three children, was taken from her biological family by Montgomery County welfare workers when die was 2.

I was always curious and interested about what bap-

to the rest of my !amily, but there was no way to get in touch, Mrs. B said. I thought all ad been

Bragg

111 the

children had been put in various hmnes and adapted like I was.

Mrs. Taylor, 51, also was ranmd from the home and sent to live with foster parents when she was 14. She said finding her sista* gives me a happy feding, bm a very emotional one, too.

Legislature...

Moore

GRIFTON - Mr. Gordon ONeal Moore, 59, died Friday. The funeral service will be held Sunday at 3;30 p.m. at Farmer Funeral Chapd in Ayden. Burial will fdlow in the Rainbow Church Cememtery in Snow Hill.

Surviving are a daughter. Miss Connie Moore of Wilson; three brothers, N.E. (Doc) Moore of Greenville, Kirby W. Moore of Grifton and James R. Mowe of Hookerton, and two sisters, Mrs. Bettie Mooring of Maury and Mrs. Julia Phillips of Snow Hill.

(Continued from A-1) funds to match all federal funds coming down because of the 5 cents gas tax. By doing so, be continued, we insured dw four-laning of U.S. 264 between Wilson and Greenville.

East Carolina University fared very well Warren said, with the qiproval of funds for the continued devd^ment of the medical scbod, and the public schools received $7.7 million in additional funding.

Both men also cited the local option

half-cent sales tax made available to cities to fund water and sewer projects, counties as a good mea^.    Both lawmakers mq)ect next ymrs

According to White,~over the years, stKHt session, in June, will deal with the General Assembly has mandated public school needs, and If the economy tt)at county governments provide a lot improves sufficiently, adless other of services, and not passed on mcmey to state pn^rams. fund the mandated programs.    If we dont go back in special

We had to do something, so we passed session, White sai^ a hazardoiK waste

Raymond Massey Dies At Age 86

the optional half-cent sales tax which    bill will also be considaed.

will enable counties to pay as they go. Rep. Walter Jones Jr. was    out    of the

without bond issues, for such things as    county last week and his office    said    be

school capital outlay needs and allow    could not be coidacted.

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) - Raymond Massey, a gaunt-faced, courUy actor who brought Abraham Lincoln to life on screen and later woo over TV audiences as no-nonsse Dr. Gillemie onDr.Kdare,hasdi^at the age of 86.

The Canadian-born actor,

Roundtree of Ayden.

The family will receive friends Monday from 7-8 p.m. at Flanagans Funeral Home. At other times, the family will be at the home, 622 Ford St.

Roebuck

FARMVHiLE Survivors of Mr. Elmer Louis Roebuck, 67, who died Thursday and was buried Saturday in graveside services In Crestlawn Memorial Gardens, is also survived by a sister, Virginia Ruth Perkins of Stokes.

Fire Reported At Local Home

Greenville firemen re-^xmded to a fire Staurday night at 807C West 14tb Street.

Firemen found fire in a second stroy bedroom of the apaqrtment. The occiqiant of the dwelling, Kay Blount, said she was downstairs when her son said he smelled smoke. Ms. Blount said she went to the bedroom and found the comer of the bed on fire. She said she tried to extinguish the blaze, but could not.

Teachers...

Books...

(Continued frmA-l) the most in demand and there is a waiting list for them.

A popular book in Greenville is Christine by Stephen King, Nelms said. Also in demand are volumes on Gandhi, because the movie sparked interest in the man, and such currmit medical problems as anorexia nervosa.

Not only do people borrow books from the library, they also purdiase books to take home and keep.

Anna Daughtry at Central Books and News said people in Greenville hesitate to buy a hardcover book - they wait for the paperback version to be printed. She noted that a hardback book now costs around $16, while a psqperback can be purchased for about $3.50.

Ms. Daughtry said there seem to be three categories (d readers in Gremville; those who like science fiction, those who like romance and those who like gmeral fiction. She said Central Bodu and News sells an equal amount of all those types of books.

Kathy Emory, assistant manager at Waldenbooks, said the Truly Tasteless Jokes series is popular in Greenville, as are books by author Danielle Steele.

Because it is summer. Bis. Emory said The Road Atlas is a good seller at Wadenboi^.

I am hopeful for the future of the printed word, Nelms said. I think the book will survive, because it is a natural ally with all other purveyors of information (such as television, radio and movies).

I dont think people are going to want to sit down and read a video screen, Nelms

asserted. Unless the quality of video increases beyond the current state of the art, I dont think it will replace books.

There will always be a place for libraries to provide for people, the director contended.

Ruth Katz, director of Joyner Library on the East Carolina University campus, agreed that the printed book will survive.

Fiction and non-fiction will always be with us in essentially the same format that we have now, Bis. Katz said.

She said some of the larger libraries probably will store books, research materials and jounials on video di.sks to be printed on request, but that libraries will always have substantial book coltections.

The director said the E(^ library makes about ^,000 circulation transactions a year, and that amount is increasing at about three to four percent a year.

Sometime in the future, Katz said.

planning curricula and in many instances discipline subverted by the administrators, she said.

The N(^ feels it would be be across-(be4)oard salary increase to and do the research necessary to devdop objective and valid evaluation systems for teachers, she said

better to give an

In instances where merit pay has been tried, even in our own Martin County, there has been no demonstrable increase in the quality of instruction. But in the schools that have experimented with merit pay, there have been some distinct disadvantages - dissentkm between teachers and administration, weakening of teacher motivation, discrimination by race and sex, weakening of parental sigiport for

schools, and the NCAE believes merit pay systems idmiibr to those tried in the past will increase tte teacher shortage

rather than encourage them to stay in.

Bfrs. MacRae said these concluskM^ are bas^ on a National Educational Association report that cites studies done at universiUes and by individuals from 1962 to 1982 on theproUem of merit pay.

Pitt County school Superintendent Eddie West said he will

reserve jud^nent on merit pay and diffemtial pay until he is satisfied that enough studies have been done.

p^vi*    U

nf fK/v iwwvti..uofco AM... *k _____ inaiviauais    u

of the books on disks. After those copies are sold, you may send in an ortfor for a copy which will be printed just for you off the vi^ disk. Hien the publishing Iioum wont have to print a large number of copies that dont sell.

Even though computers and video disks seem to be the wave of the future, librarians believe the public will always have a need fw printed books.

N^ quoted a story attributed to science fiction writer Isaac Asimov in answer to a question about the future of the printed word. He said Asimov suggested ttmt for information, people need something portable, that has its own power source, is lightweight, does not cost too much, and can be used whenever you want to - books fit that description

invidved to both have ownership and understanding of the concept in issue as it relates to its impact on the organization. Just as any business prototypes and field tests a product befwe it is maiteted, in like manner any idea that affects boys and girls and individuals who teach them should in turn be fidd tested so as to have an understanding of the cause-effect relationship from implementation of the idea, he said.

We (kmt need any of this across-the-board business of just beginning this or that program. A business doesnt introduce a new toothpaste across the board. If it did, the company would go bankngit.

The

GOP MEETING

Pitt County Re Party will meet lay at 8 p.m. In tlw basement of Planters Na

tional Bank, Third and Washington streets. For more information, caU Sallie Keel at 756-7909.

Divers,,,

(Continued from A-l) and a member of the team which found the wreck in 1973, said that during an extended on-site inve^ga-tion next year, it is planned for divers to enter the turret for the first time.

Watts and Dr. William N. Still, ECU maritime historian, are coKlirectors of the ECU program and will lead the team of on-slte investigators. The exp^tion will be based in the villge of Hatteras.

Closed-circuit colw video television systems and 35mm cameras will be used to study means of access to the turret through its base and also to examine nqitures in the Monitors deck.

Archaeologists and engineers will study sea-bottom sediments to determine the present associa-tkm betweo) the turret and hull structure. Watts said. He described the 1983 expedition as the first phase the turret recovery operation. Location and possible recovery of the Monitors unique anchor will provide the first largeobject cmi-servation problem, be said.

The anchor, believed to be some distance from the

rate from the submers-ile research vessel Jobns()-Sea Link provided and (grated by Harbor Branch Foundation Inc. of Fort Pierce, Fla. The submersible will descend to the ocean floor and scientists will leave it through air locks to explore the area around tlw wreck.

related research publication.

The wreck of the Monitor was designated as the nations first National Bfari-time Sanctuary by the U.S. Commerce Department in 1975.

In addition to the anchor, they hope to recover a 10-foot section of the anchor chain. Watts said.

NOAA awarded a $10,000 grant to the ECU Maritime History and Underwater Research Program in 1982 for planning the Monitor investigations. Another NOAA grant funds the USS Monitor National Marine Sanctuary Archival Collection at ECU and publication of Cheesebox, a Monitor-

Monitor engaged the Confederate ironclad CSS Virginia, also known as the Merrimack, on March 1862 at Hampton Roads, Va., in one of the most cdetsrated and historically significant battles in American naval history. The Monitor was being towed to Beaufort to join the blockade the Confederacy when it foundered in a storm and sank on Dec. 31, 1862. Sixteen of its officm^ and men were lost.

Its exact whereabouts on the ocean floor remained

unknown for 111 years.

wreckage, is to be located by divers and scientists who wiU

Card of Thanks

The family of Mrs. Josephine Pettiway wishes to express sincere af;d heartfelt thanks tor prayers, condolences and any other act of kindness extended them during the illness and death of their loved one. May God bless each of you.

Special thanks to the Staff of Pitt Memorial ^Hospital, C^adium Plant, Union Carbide, UNX, iChemicals, Grady White Boats and TRW.

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Accidents Reported

who appeared in more than 70 movies and 80 stage productions, died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center at 8:30

E Friday. He had been italized for 3V& weeks 9lng oNnplications of pneumonia, his son GeoHrey said Saturday.

Massey, once described as the man vriio took Abraham Linctdn off the peimy and made him a living image fw etired oom acti

millions, retired

(Continued from A-l)

Mrs. MacRae said that a number of teachers she has discussed the problem with, in North Carolina and elsewhm, say they are not adverse to some form of reward for ^ performance if their own princfoals do not make the decisions. This response indicated pretty generally a distrust of the merit pay programs that have been proposed because of their subjectivity, she said.

In addition to teacher dissatisfaction with currently proposed merit rating systems, she said the NCAE is also concerned with the current administrative structure of schools.

If there is to be any improvement in instruction, the first step diould be to start at the top witii the decision makers because teadima today have very little control over what goes on in the classroom except over their own behavkur. They cannot dioose textbooks, have no contnd ovm- beating and coiriing, grf little chance to become involved with ling curricula

Greenville police investigated two traffic accidents with damages totaling more than $4,000 this weekend.

Debra Hardee Adams of Wintervilfo and Retha Blay Forbes of Route 2, Greenville, were taken to Pitt County Memorial Hospital with injuries following an accident on Evans Street Friday. Estimated damage to the Adams car was $1,500 and ^500 to the Forbes car. Roy Skinner Warren ot Stokes was diarged with careless and reckless driving and a stop sign violation Friday after his vehicle and a car driven by William Todd Meadows of Ayden collided on Memorial Drive. Pdice estimated damage to the Medows vehicle at $8,000 and $900 for the Warren car.

Vdiicles driven 1^ Edith Fomes Worthh^gton of 303 Lewis St. and Lee William Waszak of Fayettenam col

lided Friday on North Gredne Street at 11;% a.m. Damages to the Worthington vehicle were estimated at $200 and $900 to the Waszak car.

Approximately $500 in j>ro^y damage resulted rom a collision on U.S. 264 Bypass Saturday invidving cars driven by Harry Piglard Woods (tf Richmond, Va., and Thenia Gorham Graham of 1011 W. Fourth St.

arling

more than a decade ago and lived in Beverly Hills. He had

just completed filming an

autobfogrpbkal televisioo program to be shown

Canada.

Among his most noted films were The Prisoner of Zenda, with David Niven, who also died Friday, Arsenic and Old Lace, East of Eden, Dangerously TIiot Live, Seven Angry Men^ and The Naked and the Dead.

MASONIC NOnCE There will be a regular (XHnmunication of Greenville Lodge No. 284 AF&AM Monday at 7:30 p.m.

Card of Thanks

ANNIVERSARY The St. John Baptist Church, Stokes, celebrate the anniversary o Lizzie Mae Uttle Sunday at 5 p.m. The Rev. R(^ Hooks and the Ha^ Clu^ senior choir will perform the service.

We would like to thank all our friends and neighbors in the community for the food or gifts w received at the time of the loss of our mother, Mary R. Fleming.

The Fleming Family

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Chtldnm Program Starting

The Gmnville Recreatioii and Parki Department'i lurnmer playaround program wUI officially cloae Friday.

A new ^ion of iporU and gamei for chUdren wUl be held Monday Uirough Aug. 12. Boya and girls will meet Monday through Friday from 3:30*5 p.m. at Jaycee Park to learn the basics of sports and games including soccer, baseball, track, basketball, putt-putt and pedal-boating.

for the session Is M and the class size Is limited to 12 the Jaycee Park Asmlnlstratlve BuUdlng,2000^arUne.

Pool Ineludod In Publication

Henry A. Peel of Wllllamston has been selected for Inclusion In the 1883 edition of "Outstanding Young Men In America."

The program recognizes the achievements and abilities of men between the ages of 21 and 36. These men are hoiwred for their outstanding civic and professional contributions to their communities, their states and their nation.

Studont Attondi Man Hill Program

Glenye Cain, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. uarles Cain of Greenville and a student at E.B. Aycock Junior Hl^ School, recently attended the Summer Scholastic and Arts program at Mars HUl College.

The three-week long summer program was attended by 84 students In the ninth, 10th and llth grades. The students were Involved In learning experiences designed to give them exposure to their major areas of Interest, such as microbiology, computers and writing.

Principal Attondi Imtltuto

Gene Lewis, principal of GreenvUle Christian Academy, U OM of over 300 administrators throughout the world v^o att^ed the I3th annual National Institute of Christian

wSa Ukellf*^ *******    Seminary In

Toachor Complotoi Imtltuto

Arlene Muiphy of Greenville recently completed a Uvo-week Institute for eighth grade teachers on North Carolina history sponsored 1^ the North Carolina Humanities Council.

The insltltute, held at Wake Forest University, wu attended by 42 teachers from across the state.

Solicitation Roquoit Approvod

Police Chief Glenn cannon has announced approval of a request by the Guiding Light Temple of Faith to conduct a dopr-to-door solicitation, as well as a bake sale and hog dog sale, from Aug. 6 until Sept. 30 to raise money for the building fund.

Foitlval Quoon To Bo At Loaf Oponing

Sandra Sue Hoggard, the 1983 Southern Flue-oired Tobacco Festival Queen, will assist with opening ceremonies of the Eastern Tobacco Belt in Greenville Wednesday.

Hoggard Is a native of Windsor and is a Junior at Elon College. ^ wu crowned last November during the week^ong Tobacco Festival.In The Area

United Way Sets Goal At $585,080

\

Sandra Sua Hoggard

Rovlval Plannod In Aydon

A Holy Ghost revival will be neld Monday through Friday at Ayden Deliverance Center, on Second Street, at 8 p.m. each night. The evangelist will be the Rev. A.J. Qark.

Swim Day Plannod At Pool

The Greenville Recreation and Parks department will have a Super Summer Swim Day at the city pool Friday from 10 a.m. until 12 noon.

Some of the actlvltlu scheduled are diving for pennlu, racu and relays, greased watermelon race and water basketball. Children of all agu may participate and there Is no admlMlon charge. For more Information call 752-4137, ext.

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Pitt County United Way has set Its goal for the 1963 fund-raising campaign at $585,080 - over $70,000 above the amount raised during the 1982 campaign, according to Reid Hooper, pruldent of the organization.

The organization's directors recently approved the goal and two additional programs - Hospice and Home Delivered Meals for the Elderly - for United Wav membership.

Hospice provldu direct servlcu to advanced cancer patients and their families in addition to providing coordination and referral to existing resourcM.

Home Delivered Meals Is provided through the Pitt County Council on Aftog and repreuntativM of the organization uy United Way funding will enable the agency to expand Its prorgam to serve more of the homebound elderly u well as areas of the county not currently being served.

Bob Griffin, general chairman for the 1983 United Way Campaign, called this year's goal "the most ambitious goal United Way hu ever undertaken."

"Too often the urvlces provided through United Wav agenclu are taken for granted," uld Griffin. "Thousands of us are touched by theu agencies. To not

achieve our goal Is unthinkable. ... I know the community will respond to continue to meet the needs of our citizens."

John Williams, chairman of the Allocations Committee, noted that 30 volunteers spent many hours meeting with agency representatives carefully reviewing prorgam and financial needs. "This is a no-frill, hold-the-llne budget and represenU the minimum needed to provide the essential services," Williams said.

Last year the United Way goal was $480,020 and $515,304 was raised.

SELMA W. ROGERS

Oroonvlllo Woman Nomlnatod Mrs. James S. Flcklen Jr. of GreenvUle has been nominated by the University of North Carolina Board of Governors as a trustee for the North Carolina School of the Arts In Winston-Salem.

Mrs. Flcklen, a native of Winston-Salem, has served on the advisory councU of teh North Carolina Art Society, as a director of the N.C. Art Society, as director of the N.C. School of Dance and u president of the East Carolina Art Society.

The board, meeting In Chapel HUl Friday, also nominated David S. Brody of Kinston to be a trustee of Pitt County Memorial Hosp tal.

Chlldron't Homo Rocolvot Grant

The Childrens Home Society of North Carolina has received a $125,000 grant from the Duke Endowment to support the agency's adoption program for chUdren with special needs.

The Children's Home Society Is North Carolinas only statewide, private non-sectarian adoption agency. It serves the entire state throurt eight district offices located In GrrenvUle, ^evUle, Charlotte, FayettevUle, Greensboro, JacksonvUle, Raleigh and Wilmington.

Last year. The Childrens Home Society placed 183 chUdren statewide.

A Review

MONDAY

12 Noon - Qraonvlllo Noon Rotary Club maaU at RoUty BIdg.

12:30 p.m. - KIwanli of OraanvUla-Unlvaralty Club moata at Holiday Inn 5:30 p.m. - OraanvUla TOPS Club maata at PlanUra Bank 6; 30 p.m. - Rotary Club maata 6:30 p.m. - Hoat Liona Club maata at Toma Raataurant 6:30 p.m. - Optimlat aub maata atThrNSteara 7:30 p.m. - Swaat Adallnaa, Eutam Chaptar maata at Tha Mamorial Baptlat Church 7:30 p.m. - Wooaman of Uia World. SImpaon Lodga mwU at community Dldg.

7:30 p.m. - Oroonvlllo Barbar Shop Cfionia moau at Jaycoa Park BIdg.

8:00 p.m. - Lodga No. 666 Loyal OrdarofthaMooao

TUESDAY

7:00 a.m. - OiwanvUlo Braakfut Liona Club maata at ThrN Stwra 10:00 a.m. - KIwanIa Ooldan K Club moata at Maaonic Hall

'Mosquito Coast' Offers Good Summer Reading

7:00 p.m. - Family Support Iroup at FamUy Practica Cantar 7:30 p.m. - Tar RIvar CIvllan

Club maata at FIrat Proabytarlan Church

7:30 p.m. - OraanvUla Choral Soclaty rahaarul at Immanual B^tlat Church

Ptul Theroux. "The Mosquito Coist," Avon Books, mpuis.gS.gS,

"The Mosquito Coast" is a summer novel of the first order. It has a plot that moves quickly, characters who are easy to like and hate, a theme relevant to contemprary America, and ust a dash of serious Ideas. It Is not a great book; the energy generated In the first half dissipates before the finish and the conclusion Is too easy, but Paul Theroux has written a novel perfect for the last weeks of summer at the beach or by the pool.

"The Mosquito Coast" Is about the American Dream gone sour, a cross between ^Walden" and "Swiss Family Robinson" written as a tragicomedy. It is the story of Charlie Coxs father, a New England Inventor who

I B m - TnuohlAva luPMit.    eiigWlU    UiVCnwr WHO

rf joup^ Paui'i jjijHMiIw Of haodern ^erican

- p.m. - Vcmon Howard Succeu without StrMt group at llO N. WarrwSt.

8:00 p.m. - Narcotics Anony* moua maaU at Jarvla Memorial United Methodist Church 8:00 p.m. - Pitt Co. Alcoholics Anonyrooui at AA BIdg., FarmvUle hwy.

WEDNESDAY 0:30 a.m. - Duplicate bridge at Plantara Bank 1:30 p.ffl. - Duplicate bridge at Plantara Bank 6:30 p.m. - KIwanli Club maata 6;30 p.m. - REAL Crtali In-tarvantton maata 7:30 p.m. - WlntervUla Jayeaas meat

6:00 p.m. - Pitt County Al-Anon Group meeti at AA BIdg. on FarmvUle hwy.

8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Ala-Tean Group meeti at AA BIdg., FarmvUle hwy.    *

Let Sheppard Memorial Ubrsry help you with your informstion needs. Call 752-4177 for more information.

life and moves his family to the Jungles of Honduras In search of the kind of freedom and opportunity once imagined to exist on the American frontier. It Is also the story of madness and manomanla.

Charlies father believes in the old virtues; the family, self-reliance, Ind^ndence. He sees tte America around him grow^g soft and de

cadent on processed food. Inferior Imported goods, wasteful consumption, and the penult of pleasure. To Charlies father, America has become a .moral and spiritual jungle, a clvUlzatlon on the edge of extinction, so he moves his family to the Honduran Jungles where he plans to build a small, self-sufficient paradise.

For a time he succeeds, clearing the land and building a small planUtlon with his own hands. He even perfects his latest Invention, a non-electric Icemaker, and like an emissary of civilization he plans to bring Ice to natives. But the wilderness Is not paradise, and even Yankee Ingenuity cannot save the famllv from the doom about to oescend upon them.    ,

What follows Is a Journey straight out of Jos^h Conrads "Heart of Darkness." After the plantation Is destroyed by bandits, Charlies father leads his family deeper Into the Jungle is search of innocence, but all he discovers Is madness and finally death. The rot he saw In America was not local; It Is part of the human condition.

Theroux Is a talented

writer, and he weaves satire and comedy into his parable of modern life with such skill that laughter and terror exist slde-by-slde. "The Mosquito Coast*^* Is full of exotic characters and places, and It Is Just close enough to reality to make you think it Just could be true.

JIMHOLTE

*f    ^ojMonfUM

Selma W. Rogers of-

Greenville was appointed by the director of Selective Service to serve as a member of the standby Selective Service Appeal Board for the Eastern District of North Carolina.

Mrs. Rogers Is a retired civil servant.

Although there is no present authority to classify or Induct men Into the mUltary, the selection and training of standby Local and Appeal Board members give the Selective Service System increased capability to meet mobilization requirements In the event of a national emergency.

Paronti Without Partnon To Moot

GreenvUle Chapter No. 1058 of ParenU Without Partners Inc. wUl meet Monday at 8 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church, corner of Elm and 14th streeU. An orientation meeting wUl be held at 7:30 p.m. to acquaint newcomers with the organization.

Parents Without Partners Is an International volunteer organization of single parenU, the widowed, divorced, separated or never married, who are bringing up their children alone. Including those parents without custody.

For more Information, caU Geri Cooke, 753-5577, or Shirley Poole, 757-3510 between 4-8 p.m.

Jonos Goti Now Duty Pott

Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N^C., chairman of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Coipmittee, hu also became chairman of the panels subcommittee formerly huded by censured Rep. Gerry Studds, D-Mau.

Houm Democratic caucus rules prevent censured congressmen from holding committee or subcommittee chairmanships. UntU Studds was censured July 20 for having sex in 1973 with a male teen-age page, he headed the Coast Guard and Navigation subcommittee of the merchant marine panel.

Briloy Namod To Co-Op't Board

Dennis C. Briley of Husell hu been appointed to the burd of directors of the Edgeoomtw-Msrtin County Electric Membership Corp. to serve the unexplred term of retired dlrwtor Rusull L. Eason. Briley^s appointment wu confirmed by unanimous vote at the July mutini of the bflard.

Dial-A-Prayer

752-1362

Formtr Washington OffIcor Chargad

WASHWGTON, N.C.TaP) - A former Washlnpon police off cer has been charged with breaking and entering the office of the departments chief of detectives. Police Chief Johnny R. Rose Mid.

James L. Ellis, 23, was arrested Thursday night and fired from the department. Rose uld. He was placed In Beaufort County Jail under $10,000 bond.

Ellis was suspended without pay this month after he was charged with the theft of gold coins and about $6.000 from a safe In a dentists office. That case is still pending. The detectives office contained the Investigation fUe on the earlier theft case. Rose Mid.

ettoUnt $t man k^gnanviHa

We Will Be Closed Tuesday Night From 5:00 P.M. Until 6:00 P.M, To Get Ready For Our Dollar Day Sale

Tha Sal# Starts Tuaaday Night At 6:00 P.M. So Bs Thara Whan Tha Doors Opan. All Kama Advartlsad Will Qo On Sala Tuaaday Night And Will Continua On Sals Wadnaaday Aa Long Aa Supply Laata.

grttnvilk

FREE Monogramming for the Entire Family During Our Terrific Month-Long Anniversary Sale!

Make an outstanding Initial Impreaalon, personally, of course, by giving your purchases an Identity of their owni Were offering you free monogramming on any regular-priced Item and terrific, low prices on monogramming for reduced Items. Nowa your chance to add that extra-apeclal touch to your shirts, blouses, sweaters, bed and bath linens, neckties and so much morel The limits are your Imaginationwell do the rest for you. Come by and Join the fun....In celebration of our 4th Mall Anniversary Salel

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Shop Monday Through Saturday 10a.m. Until0p.m.-Phona ne-B--L-K(n^)





Sunday

Even Now, The '84 Race Is Sticky

Opinion

Failure To Buy Pinpoints Need For Cooperation

Pitt County, whose board of commissioners recently agreed to pay $300,000 for 42,975 square feet of land a half block away from the courthouse, apparently could have had an entire block nearby some 15 years ago for $68,607.

Evidently differences of opinion over the price between the county commissioners of that time and city officials resulted in the opportunity being passed up^^

The golden opportunity came along because the city was clearing property through urban renewal at that time. It is not easy to recall, but the north half of the present courthouse block was occupied by the armory, office buildings, a church and housings. The block to the north was occupied by various structures.

Records show that the county purchased the north half of the courthouse block, and we can be thankful that deal did not fall throu^ due to the bickering.

It is also known that the full block between Second and First was considered for sale to the county. Some of the officials involved in the negotiations are now deceased but it is known the sale was never made and the property was subsequently sold to private interests and has since been developed.

It is, of course, water over the dam now, and the county officials look no worse than private interests which didnt purchase land they needed years ago only to find it much more costly now.

There are lessons to be learned, however. It should have been obvious even then that the courthouse would stay where it is and court-related activities would need ever more space. An adjacent block would have been ideal.

We suspect stubbornness on the part of both parties may have had a lot to do with ending the negotiations for this particular parcel of property. We hope all public officials will look at future needs more closely from now on. We also hope city and county officials are now cooperating more closely on mutual problems.

Unreported Funds Must Not Fade

Congress has repealed a plan to require withholding of income taxes from interest and dividends, and shrewdly attached it to the Caribbean Basin Initiative which the administration wants, thus making a veto difficult.

The action on withholding is probably just as well. The measure was unpopular with savers and investors who sent letters to Washington expressing their displeasure. It was also unpopular with financial institutions which had to do the paperwork to make the system work.

So the withholding of taxes on interest and dividends is dead before it ever goes in effect. The concern, however, that brought about the plan initially is still with us; that is the apparent large amount of money paid in interest and dividends which is never reported to the Internal Revenue Service by those who invest.

Not reporting income is illegal and it places a heavier burden on honest taxpayers. Surely there must be some way to determine unreported interest and dividend income so that the taxes due on these unreported billions will be paid. The problem should not be ignored.

The Doily Reflector

INCORPORATED

209 CotanctM StrMt, OrMnvUI*. N.C. 27134

EataWishad 1912 PubliarMd Monday Through Friday Aftornoon and Sunday Morning OAVtO JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD - DAVID J. WHICHARD Pubiiahora Socond Claaa Poatago Paid at Oroonvlllo, N.C.

(U8PS145-4M)

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(Prievt mehid* tu Kara appaMai*)

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Elaawhara id North Carolina $4.39 Par Month Outsida North Carolina i $5.50 Par Month

MEMBER OF

ASSOCIATED mess Tha Aaaodatad Praaa la ai-cluaNaly antHtad to uaa for puhicatlon aM nawa diapat-chaa crodNod to It or not othorwlao crodNod to thia papar and aloe tho loeal nowo pubNahod horoin. All righta of publleallona of apodal diopatchoa hero aro aioo roaorvod.

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Wong

Bingo

RALEIGH, N.C. (UPl) - Legislative supporters of strict bingo laws used a back-Kkxx' play to tou^ien the law during the last day of this years session of the General Assembly.

A provision restricting the lease fees charged duffities to rit bingo halls was slipped into a $9 million package of special spending bills and enacted into law during the final day of the General AssemUys session.

Lawmakers had already spent dx months deimting the issue and approved a Ungo measure tai the dos^ days, but the sponsors were dissatisfied because it contained a major locale allowing professional bingo operations to coikinue.

The ink on the biU was barely (by when they put together a rewrite toughoiing the law evm further and tacked it odo the spending package, where escaped notice.

I think its wonderful, said Melinda Cofiin, an SBI ag^ whose duties include monitoring bingo operations. I think its the neatest thing since sliced bread.

Ms. Coffin said she knew nothing of the provisions until she ^ted a pairing mention in news accounts last^ weekend about the closing hours of the legislative session.

I choked on my cofiee, she said, md spent^a futile weekend trying to find out what the last-minute changes woe before finally obtaining them Monday.

She bad a one^lay head start on Ed Hedgepeth, a Raleigh resident who operates bii^ halls in five cities but didn't learn the details until Tuesday.

I think it puts us out of business, he said.The supposed professional bingo i^rator is out of business as of Oct. Kthe effective date of the new law).

He<^epeth took the action philosopbically. He estimated he lost $40,000 fnn his bingo games during the fiscal year ending July 1 while helping about 12 charities raise $60,000 to $70,000.

I guess Im laughing. They got me out (rf it, he said.

*i think its dirty pod to slip legislation through as part d an unrdated proposal, said Hedgepeth, who operates two bingo balls in Jacksonville and one each in.Wenddl, Lagrange, Durham and Winston-Salem.

But the two lawmakers who oigbieered the move shrugged off his complaint.

He who laughs last laughs best, said Sen. Craig Lawing, D-Mecklenburg, who proposed the revisions and .gd legislative budget leaders to include them in the special spending bill, an omnibus measure primarily funding pork-barrel projects of legislators.

ows ocMAior nfsc txtA.7

R^. Bruce Ethrid^, D-Onslow, said, the prdessional folks are crying the Uues now, so evidently we must have done some good.

If Craig (Lawing) hadnt gotten invdved, we wouldnt have gdten a bill, be said.

As a freshman l^ator, Ethridge was invdved in the passage of 1979 legidatkm allowing only charities to play bingo. But tte law also permitted diarities to rent dngo balls.

Alvin

Taylor

Sunday Morning Notes

An article in Wall Street Journal recently told of a computer foul-up in the Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner and Smith brokerage firm which placed a decimal in the wrong place. The result was lots of statements going out to clients showing an account value far above what it should be.

Greenville Utilities Assistant Director Malcolm Green said his statement for some stock that he and his dau^ter jointly own was among those with the error.

He noted that he and his daughter Karen had purchased some stock on a 50-50 basis. They bought 710 shares at about $1.20 a share. The stock had worked up to $1.35 a share. The monthly statement came in, and it was one of those in which the decimal

had been lost. Thus the stock showed up at a price of $135 a share and the total worth was $95,850, when it should have been $958.50.

My daughter had been fussing because it hadnt done all that much, Green chuckled. I took it home and asked her, *What do you think of the stock market now?.

Green said the financial bonanza would have come at a perfect time if he could have ca^ed in on it, since Karen will be leaving for Peace College in a few weeks.

Sadly Green reported the error to to brokerage firm and a bill came from Peace College a week later. 'That brought me back to reality, Green chuckled.

Karen, by the way, turned 18

last Monday. Since she was technically 18 at midnight Sunday and there were still two hours of beer sales left in the Monday morning hours, she jokingly asked her father if she could go out at midnight, if she promised to ride a taxi home.

Her father reminded her the legal age for purchasing beer would go to 19 soon. So maybe those who turn 18 in the meantime had just as well not get used to buying it.

That, by the way, could happen every year for those who turn 18 now, since there is pressure to raise the legal age still further. Those who become 18 this year might get only a few months each year to buy beer until the age limit is finally settled down.

Ethridge failed in efforts to eliminate the practice during the l%l session, but introduced a new proposal this year. After months of discussion, the House approved a measure allowing the leasing to continue, but limiting the cost of rentals to fair market value of the property.

When the bill reached the Senate, Lawing came id with a substitute proposal that would have bamed the rentkii of bingo halls and required eligible charities to play only on their own property. The measure was later amended to allow charities to play on rented pn^rty also used by the organizations for other purposes.    >

A conference committee woited out a compromise between the two versions, agreeing to continue rental bingo halls, bik accidentally left out limitations on the amount of lease payments.    '    \

By the time the oversi^t was ^ted, it was too late to introduce a new bUl and get it passed, so Lawing had a special provision prepared and inserted in the spending bi9.

It ^ifi^ Uie maximum rent that can be charged for a bingo hall is 1% percent of the assessed propoty tax value of a building and not more than two acres of land. It also bans

subleasing of property, the use of tents as bingo halls and requires facilities to have approved plumbing.

I fi^ired that would tinten it iqi just a little bit, be said. All I was trying to do was get it like the Legislature meant it tobe.

Hedgepeth said the IV4 percent limitation makes R impossible for him to ^rate at a (uofit. He sakl his mortgage payments for his Wendell facilRy are about $1,665 a miMith, but the law will restrict his rental fee to $1,222.

Some of bis other facilities are rented and suUeased to charities, he said, and he has been discussing assigning them the leases and selling them his equipment.

Ill be out, he said.    i

Rowland Evons and Robert Novak

Kirkpatrick Played Key Role

WASHINGTON - A key behind-the-scenes role in President Reagans choice of Henry Kissin^r to frame a Central American piRicy is the administration official on whom conservatives had counted to fight the choice: Jeane Kirlqiatrick, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

When conservative RepiRilican senators first heard that Reagan was pondering the man they love to hate as chairman of his new commission on Latin American policy, they phoned Kirkpatrick. They figured she, a neo<nservative who

has led the administrations charge south of the border, would surely put Reagan straight and kill the Kissinger scheme. Instead, she arg^ strongly that the former secretaiy of state was just right for the iob.

Kirkpatricks theory: Although both liberals and c(servatives have it in for Kissinger, he will be able to focus more public attention on the proUem than anyone else. That also was the view of national security adviser William P. Clark, aniRher conservatives who helped sell the idea to Reagan.

Former Democratic national chairman Robert S. Strausss usually impeccable political timing misfired when he accepted member-shh) on the Kissinger Commission a day aft^ announcing formation of the Natkmal House Democratic Caucus, generating a rumble of private protest from party politicians.

The new caucus, beaded by Strauss and Rep. Gillis Long of Louisiana, was hi itself criticized as a challenge to National Chairman Charles T. Manatt. But even Strausss allies believe he undercut its chances for success by agree

ing to serve on a Reagan commission, a decision widely criticized by Democrats -especially allies of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy.

Nevertheless, President Reagan may end with mere than he bargained for in the opinion of Democratic insiders. Strauss would like to be secreta^ of state if a Democrat is elected president next year, and is not about to ruin bis chances by appearing as a rubberstamp for Reag^ administration foreign picy.

Lewis stuck at bis Manhattan desk running the troubled Warner-Amex Corp., White House political operative Ed Rollins shuttled to New Y<t July 22 in the test run of a weekly campaign shuttle.

With Reagan re-election campaign manager Drew

Lewis, Reagans former transportation secretary, will shuttle down to Washingtim next week to continue 1984 election planning with Rollins and other Washington-based operatives. Weekly trips between WashingUm and New York will cmtinue until next ^ring when Lewis is to take charge full-time in the capital.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson made clear privatdy at the recent Democratic National Committee meeting in Detroit that the pos^ ruin of Walter Mondales presidential candidacy would not dissuade him from running for the Democratic presidential nomination.

R^. Mickey Leland of Texas, chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, confronted Jackson at a poolside party in DetnRt and asked him if he had considered that a black running for president mi^t ruin a good liberal. Mndale.Jamas J. Kllpotrick

I

A Letter To A New Teen-Ager

EDITORS NOTE: Mr. Kilpatricks cdumn today takes the form of his annual birthday l^r to his oldest granddaughter.

SCRABBLE, Va.

Heather, my dear love -

We drove iiRo Washington the other day, just you and I, to cdebrate your birthday with lunch at Jacquelines. On the way in I asked you about being 13. How about it? After a pause for reflection you said, very soberly, I think Id rather say 12.

It doesnt work that way of course, and as of today youre a teen-ager. A scary proposition? Sure. But we had such a wonderful day, in which you talked practkaUy non-stop for eight hours, that I have not the slightest reservations about your passage from big girl to young lady.

Lets see. In the pk year youve grown three inches past five feet; you have redistributed your weight quite nicely. You have the same bridge of freckles on your nose, the same chicory blue eyes, and the same big grin with that Sis^ Spacek mouth of yours. Youve moved up to senior in the Girl

electric pottery wheel. She made 23 ashtrays, five big bowls and eight bud vases, and when her mother came to pick her up, her mother said, No way! Her mother said she could live with one of each, but the rest of the junk had to go. So everybody in Harrisburg ^ ashtrays for Christmas.

You had taken 10,000 siuqisfaots, but only one turned out: it was a boy I couldnt stand. I mean he was really a twerp. You had tried ardmry. I mean I was reaUy no good. You shoot 2,000 arrows and hit that dumb bale only once, youre no

Scouts; youre in your last year in the Childrens Choir at Trinity; you finished the seventh grade with a so-so B average. Its been an unsettling year: In March you moved into the new house, with Its wall of windows looking to the mountains, and in June your grandmotho' Stone died. You acquired two new cousins. Lots (rf changes.

We talked about summer camp, and you got into the giggtes 4d)out a girl named Suuuuie Something wto monopolized the

Mostly we talked aboiR books - books and food. Youre an insatiaUe reader, possiUy because your mother and father limR you strictly to no more than two hours of tdevislon a wedi. The week of your 13tb birthday you were deep into Hound of tiie Baskervilles. Youve read every collie story by Albert Payson Terluine you can lay your bands on. What else? Treasure Idand, which you liked, and Lord of the Flies, which you didnt get much out of. Too many things never were exj^ained. You bad liked Little Women, except that its too heavy to read in bed.

As for food, I asked what your favorite meal would be. This took concentrated thought. Much furrowing of the forehead. Then you inquired reasonaUy if I meant favorite meal on a Girl Scout campKiut, or favmrite meal in a flossy restaurant. You settled for venison chops in the woods and lasagna, if tbev hl it, at the flossy restaurant, or maybe beef stroganoff with

a big glass of milk.

I bad to stop by the Supreme Court to pick up an ophiion, so we walked iq> and took a look at the courtroom. I cant say this really grabbed you. Im-press-ive, you said, but you really mainly being polite. Then we had our lunch at Jacqiielines, where we got straight on using the forks from the far left and the knives from the far right. You wrne too shy to praiRice your French on the waiter, but you giR a gile out of Les Poissons on the menu. Poisons, bunb?

After I taped my tdevisk show, we drove back hmne. You si^ part of the way, and we talked some more about the ei^th grade coming iq>, and about the cballoages you face in transferring to a new diooi in SejRember. You didnt seem the least bit afraid. Itll be neat, you said. You say neat a gooddeal.

When we got back to the farm R was still 92 in the shade and there still was time for a swim before dimim'. You practiced diving, trying to keep your feet together, and about half the time you made it. 1 watched you coming to the surface after a dive, water streaming off your blond hair onto the good iRanes of your face, and suddenly I was struck by a really lunpy wave of hnrve and by a sudden sense of resmnUance also. 1 wondm^ what Bo Derek looked like on her l3tfa birthday. A lot like Heather, I would guess.

Grandfather

Copyright 1963 Universal Press Syndicate





Woltr

Mort

WASHINGTON (AP) President Reagans keynote message came from a young lady who asked not to te identified.

Despite his distaste for anonymwis sources, the president read part of his letter from Gretchen, 13, full name and address withheld by request.

Dont you wish sometimes you could just stamp your feet and shout at the press or senators to be quiet, sit down and listen to what youre saying? she asked him.

Reagan said yes, be sometimes does, particularly as be tries to explain administration policy in Central America. But Reagans style is not so contentious as that, and he has shown it to advantage in dealing with questions that sometimes verge on challenges to that policy.

At his news conference Tuesday night, Reagan said the American people should be aware of the threat to peace if

President Isnt Always Text Of Clarity

those who are exporting the revolution to Central America should succeed. He said the exporters are Moscow and Havana.

He said Americans who have beai informed and understand his pdky support it. Now, if we all get together and explain whats happening down there, perhaps thatll resolve the situation in that regard, he told the reporters at his press conference.

Its nothing unusual ior Reagan, or any other president, to suggest that his message is clear, but that the messengers are confused. At nationally televised news conferences, that suggestion is dramatized as one man tries to deal with a roomful of competing, sometimes contentious, and often repetitive questioners.

But the administrations own statements on Central

America, and ^ifically on military training exercises there, have not been a text of clarity and consistency. While the president said that the coming maneuvers are nothing out of the ordinary, top officials of the administration have been saying that they are intended to send a message by displaying U.S. military might.

Reagan has complained repeatedly about unnamed individuals that are quoted as administration sources, saying at one point that he will take away their White House passes if he finds out who they are. That shouldnt be difficult. Some of the administration officials who have spoken about military operations in Central America have done so at organized, authorized briefings, at the Pentagon and elsewhere.

Indeed, even as Reagan said the coming military.exercises

Tbe Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Sunday. July 31, H83-A-S

are routine and limited in purpose, he noted that they will serve a policy aim.

Yes, we want to underscore once and for all that the United States, along with our friends, seriously exposes the use of force by one neighbor against another in Central America, the president said, but we are not seeking a larger presence in that region and U.S. forces have not been requested there.

Reagan wants the American people to know that his administration plans no intervention, no war, nothing comparable to Vietnam. But as he offers those reassurances at home, he wants it known in Nicaragua, Cuba and the Soviet Union that the United States will not stand by for communist takeovers in Central America.

Thats two messages in one package, which may account for some of the confusion of which Reagan complained.

Maxwell Glon    J

ond Cody Shearer iwlOlOOy

WASHINGTON - When ri^t-wingers encounter real-worid pmpiexities, their paranoia sometimes takes on a fitful, even incredible, dimension. If's called "Jane Fonda Syndrome. Washingtons latest case of this malady, first ^gnosed during the Vietnam War, focuses on Bianca Jagger. For years now, the divorced wife of that famous Rolling Stone has championed the cause of poor people in Central America, including those in her native Nicaragua. In the eyes of Reaganite Washington, however, her advocacy has made Bianca a threat to national security - a scapegoat, like Jane Fonda, for Americas latest misguided cwiflic^t.

Bianca, 33 years old (she says) and a Nicaraguan citizen, stands accused of lobbying Cong^ on behalf of the San-dinistas and using her glamour-girl statue tofwnent trouble for Reagan policies both here and there. William Safire of 'Hie New York Times was particularly incensed that a Massachusetts c(^lege, albeit small, wiMild give her an honorary degree. Another pair of administration supporters, columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Noval, declaim last week that Biancas July 5 meeting with two staffers had confirmed the leftward shift of a once-bipartisan House Intelligence Coihmittee.

Reached by phone at the Managua Intercontinental Hotel last Monday morning (July 25), Jagger conceded that, yes, shed called on the Intelligence Committee staffers (bearing evidence, she said, of Honduran military action against a Nicaraguan town only days before). In fact, she admitted, Ive been visiting Congress for about three years, as many whove seen her at past hearings can attest.

Jagger, however, pooh-poohed the notion that she supports, let alone lobbies on behalf of, the Sandinistas. As proof, she cited her published criticisms of Nicaraguas political and press reactions and added that her family has fled the country withto the last three months.

I sometimes have difficulty making myself understood (in the U.S.), Jagger said, because what I am trying to do is not to advocate that the Sandinistas have such a great government, hut that the Reagan administrations actions in Central perica are not the most mature way of looking at the situation ..i. Im trying to advocate negotiations. Otherwise, were going to have major bloodshed....

I speak as a Nicaraguan, she added, insisting that interests are non-partisan.    ^

As for her relations with members of Congress and their staffs, Jagger hardly sees herself as some Sandinista siren. I think that access to (Congress) doesnt come ovemi^t -especially (to) members of the Intelligence Committee, she said, adding, I dont... see liberals of the House because 1 feel they are convinced. I dont have to convince them.

Indeed, a former Intelligence Committee staffer contended that dagger had met with panel staff only once before her rendezvous on July 5. Added a western Hemisphere Subcom-mittr staffer: (Jaggers) role has been extremely minor. The only effect is that shes one other person one of many who had been to refugee camps and had a story to tell.... Nobody on the subcommittee has talked to her in months. Therein lies dubious evidence of a Jagger Juggernaut. So why all the indignation over the energetic, educational efforts of a woman who has witnessed the pli^t of innocent civilians?

Conservative envy, for one. As William Safire asked, Where are their counterparts? referring to both Jagger and Lisa Fitz^rald, an outspoken American nun who has spent much of the last two years helping war-ravaged civilians near Nicaraguas border with Honduras. Thou^ Safire wrongly asserts "the glamorous female cdebrity-as-activist has always been a property of the left (what about Anita Bryant, are Booth Luce and Shirley Temple Black?), he rightly cites a dearth of conservative female celebrities speaking out on Central American matters.

More importantly, however, anti-Jagger hysteria reflects the same paranoia thiit prompts the White House to send at least six warships on ambiguous patrol off Nicaraguas coast, to seek a reportedly major expansion in CIA-managed guerrilla activities against Nicara^a, and to maintain plans for a joint U.S.-Honduran military exercise involving 5,000 American troops - all of this, of course, in the face of what the State Department called a positive diplomatic proposal last week by Sandinista Junta Coordinator Daniel Ortega Saavadra.

Dianca Jagger simply has a perspective to share, one rooted in firsthand experience in a region that most Americans dare not-visit. If Henry Kissinger, who makes no mention of El Salvador, Nicara^a or Central America in his memoirs, can chair a presidential commission on the region, then Jagger deserves at least to speak.

Copyright 1983 Field Enterprises, Inc.

George

Gallup

Poll

Norman

Sandler

Government By Commission

WASHINGTON (UPI) -The public confidence President Reagan has sought for naming blue ribbon commissions to attack such thorny issues as Social Security reform and turmoil in Central America may be misplaced.

In cloaking them in expressions of concern and a purported quest for political cooperation, Reagan may have belied a more disturt^ ing impetus for his actions; the failures and shortcomings of his own domestic and foreign Dolicies. _____

The White House view is that the presidential troubleshooters and panels of experts Reagan has named In recent months reflect his determination to overcome pressing national and global problems, without partisan bickering.

But an equally credible argument is that the tendency to utilize mechanisms outside the political mainstreanl, often intended to insulate Reagan from controversy, is anything but a demonstration of presidential leadership.

After all, this is a president who for most of his first two years in office bludgeoned the Democratic opposition in Congress with victory after victory on matters ranging from the budget to arms policy.

Today, the budget fight once dominated by Reagan is at a stalemate. On other critical issues, Reagan has relied on others to deflect

Paul

O'Connor

Stop And Look

RALEIGH - If youre in an automobile accident, youd better stop to make sure no one was hurt and that you didnt cause any property damage. The states hit-and-run law, which had been terribly confusing, has been clarified and stiffened. Leave the scene of an accident now, and youll face hit-and-run charges in addition to any charges related to the accident.

llie state Supreme Court recently ruled that the old statute was vague and confusing and its decision left the state pretty much without a hit-and-run law. It took the General Assembly much of the 1963 session to clarify the statute as legislators sought to make a distinction between people who leave tbe scene of an accident knowing theyve hurt someone and those who leave not knowing someone else was injured.

Every time Rep. Parks Helms, D-Mecklenburg, wrote the bill so as to make that distinction, however, one of the lawyers on the committee would point out some loophole.

In the end, they got tbe language in the bill that all the lawyers on the committee thought would do the job. It passed tbe House and then Senate lawyers found another loophole.

What does the new law boil down to for drivers? It means STOP if youre in an accident and wait for tbe police to arrive if theres any question that someone may have been hurt or some property damaged. If you

know someone was hurt and you still leave -or if you should have known - you can be charged with a five-year felony. Itll be a misdemeanor if you leave knowing theres been property damage. One loophole : If you hurt someone but can prove that you didnt realize it, youre only liable for a misdemeanor.

One major excq)tion to this law, of course, is if you leave the scene to get help. Rural legislators argued that it didnt make much sense to have two people staying at the scene of an accident until help happened acns the accident. Tbe two might bleed to death.

Talk about hysterical parents. About a week before adjournment, a sleepy-eyed Sen. Bill Redman, R-Iredell, was sitting in the cafeteria one morning. Youre lucky to have a son, Redman said as he launched into his tale of woe. It seems Redman was up all night, calling almost everyone he knew, looking for his 19-year old daughter, a college student. Her roommate reported that shed never come in. Redman was talking about getting a shotgun and a preacher.

A couple of days later, when asked if hed found his daughter, Redman sheepishly replied that he had. Where was she? At grandmas bouse.

criticism of his policies and reposition where necessary without appearing to have done so.

Reagan has yet to convene a bipartisan commission on the budget. But in other areas, he has reached beyond the decision-making process when bis own leadership has failed.

Unable to sell Congress on the MX missile, Reagan created a bipartisan Commission on Strategic Forces. Months later, the commission repudiated his concept of a window of vulnerability and his view of how to redress an imbalance in nuclear force structures.

Only by embracing the commissions overall reoort.

which was carefully prepared to not totally undercut his position, could Reagan use the findings to help push the MX, which still faces opposition in Congress.

On Central America, Reagan was forced not only to name another bipartisan commission, but also to appoint a special envoy to the region in an effort to persuade Congress that he would not prefer to go to war to stop communist insurgency.

His policy bogged down over opposition to $110 million in additional military aid to El Salvador - a relatively modest sum if one accepts Reagans view that Central America is the site of

a pivotal clash of ideologies and the first real communist aggression on the American mainland.

The precedent for the special envoy was the Middle East. But even in that troubled area, Reagans efforts have neither deterred agression nor achieved significant breakUiroughs. Envoy PhUip Habib was replaced in part because the Syrians, key players in Lebanon, would not talk to him.

In his most recent newsletter to constituents in Illinois, House Republican leader Robert Michel said, The fact that we have to defer to special commissions to make decisions for us is a poor reflection on the governmental process.

PRINCETON, N.J. - Despite strong health warnings on cigarette packages and a stiff new federal cigarette tax, the incidence of cigarette smoking in the United States has not declined during the last two years.

In the latest Gallup audit, 38 percent of survey respondents report having smoked cigarettes during the week prior to being interviewed. This is statistically unchanged from the 35 percent recorded in 1981. However, the proportion of smokers in the adult population has declined since the Surgeon Generals historic 1964 report linking smoking and serious health hazards such as cancer and heart disease.

As in past Gallup surveys, more men (40 percent) than women (36 percent) are smokers. Another important demographic determinant is education. A substantially smaller proportion of persons who attended college are smokers (30 percent) than are those whose education ended at the high school (43 percent) or grade school (35 percent) levels.

A related factor is occupation. Only 29 percent of survey respondents from households in which the chief wage earner is employed in business or the professions are smokers, compared to 46 percent in homes headed by workers in other white-collar occupations and 48 percent in blue-collar households. A large difference is found in the percentage of cigarette smokers from homes headed by skilled workers (40 percent) vs. unskilled workers (54 percent).

In the current survey, the incidence of cigarette smoking drops sharply as age increases, from 44 percent of persons 18 to 29 years old, to 42 percent of 30-49-year-olds, to 36 percent of those ages 50 to 64, to 20 percent of persons 65 and older.

Cigarette smoking is influenced to only a minor degree by race, family income or geographic region, the survey found.

Here is the question asked and the trend;

Have you, yourself, smoked any cigarettes in the past week?

Cigarette Smoking Audit

(Percent smokers)

Latest (April 15-18) ................... 33%

1981.... ..........................................;:;;;:;;35%

1978 ....................................................36%

1977 ......................................................38%

1974 .......................................................40%

1973.....................................................40%

1972.... .................................................43%

1971 .....................................................42%

1969 ......................................................40%

1958.....................................................45%

1957 ...............   42%

1954.........  45%

1949..............................  41%

1944 ..................................................... 42%

The latest results are based on in-person interviews with 1,509 adults, 18 and over, conducted in over 300 scientifically selected localities across the nation during the period April 15-18.    ^

(c) 1983, Los Angeles Times Syndicate

Chet

urrier_

Budget Is Smaller, But Not Enough

NEW YORK (AP) - It might seem like good news when the government declares, as it did this week, that the federal budget deficit this year is going to be smaller than expected.

But it isnt good news when the people in charge of balancing the national checkbMk say the gap will still be more than $200 billion - almost twice last years record.

There is much confusion and argument over the deficit and its significance. But almost everyone agrees that no entity - even an entity that can print its own money and has an almost unlimited credit line - can go on forever spending more than it takes in.

The federal government has done it every year since 1969. Even with an improved economy increasing government revenues, it is expected to keep on doing it In the foreseeable future.

Some analysts contend the private economy may become so prosperous in the years ahead that the extra tax payments it produces will narrow or even eliminate the deficit. But other authorities, including Chairman Paul Volcker of the Federal Reserve, say that is wishful thinking.

The problem looks e^ially intractable when you consider that it has worsened dramatically during the administration of President Reagan, a

strong advocate of cutting government spending.

According to the Tax Foundation, a research organization, spending by federal, state and local governments in this country rose about 8 percent a year, on average, during the 1950s and 60s. In the 1970s, it accelerated to 11.2 percent. So far in the 80s, with all the talk about spending cutbacks, it has slowed only slightly, to a 10.7 percent rate.

Many critics have assailed Congress for its inability, and seeming unwillingness, to take the necessary tou^ steps to get the deficit down. But if a large majority of the public could agree on what measures should be enacted, it is likely that those measures would swiftly become law.

Indeed, when Congress did make a move in that direction, voting to require the withholding of 10 percent of dividends and interest, a storm of protest erupted. The withholding plan has been postponed, with outright repeal imminent.

Surveying this messy scene, some observers have concluded that the growth.of government spending simply cannot be significantly reduced, by anyone. Expanded government looks to be permanent, argues Barry Rogstad, chief economist of Coopers & Lybrand, a large accounting and consulting firm.

Since there is no likelihood of lasting, significant

cuts in federal spending, Rogstad declares, the only question remaining to be debated is how the nation will pay for that spending.

At present, of course, much of it is financed with money borrowed by the government in the form of Treasury bonds, bills and notes. This kind of borrowing, though not labeled as a tax, nevertheless functions as one by draining money away from other, private uses.

It stands to reason that the governments heavy demand for credit pushes Interest rates much higher than they otherwise would be. And since the government itself must pay so much interest, high rates a^ravate the deficit.

In these circumstances, Rogstad says pressure is mounting for new sweeping changes In the nations tax structure after the 1984 elections. It may, he speculates, take the form of a flat-rate tax, several variations of which have been proposed. It may take the form of a tax on consumption - money spent - rather than on income - money earned.

Rogstad observes, In some sectors of the business and financial community, there is a perception that you just absolutely have to raise taxes - as opposed to borrowing - in order to bringdown the deficit.

Noel Yancey

If it had not been so deadly serious, some of the efforts by law enforcement officers to enforce the prohibition laws would have reminded you of the ludicrous antics of that zany group of movie policemen called the Keystone Kops.

Consider for a moment some of the headlines that titillated newspaper readers in North Carolina during the few weeks of 1925; Chief of Police and Four Others C^turedinRaid.

'That headline was over an article which told of the arrest in Northampton County of the La Crosse, Va chief of police and four accomplices alleged to have beoi members of a ring that delivered 5,000 gallons of illicit liquor a week from Virginia into North Candna.

Police Werent Immune To Charges

The story went on to relate how La Crosse Police Chief John B. Gdrdon and his accomplices were lured by undercover agents into delivering 236 g^ons of booze at a lonely churchyard 25 miles northwest of Jackson.

Or consider a headline a few days later which proclaimed; Prohibition Agent Freed of Murder (Charge) in Federal Court.

The article that followed related that a federal jury in Ralei^ had aquitted W.E. Woodfin, a federal prohibition agent who had been accused of killing Grover Bradley, a prominent and wealthy citizen of Northampton County, on Dec.2,1923. The article also stated that Jesse Bradley, brother of the slain man, was serving a sentence in the

federal prison in Atlanta for operating the largest still ever seen in North Carolina up to that time. Another brother, John B. Bradley, had been a fugitive from justice for two years, but gave himself up in order to testify against Woodfin.

A news story from Asheville a short time later told in breathless prose of a foray by U.S. deputy marshalls and prohibition agents into the mountains of Haywood County near the Tennessee line where they broke up six large distilleries and arrested 18 persons. After risking their lives in a desperate night time gun battle with blockaders ... undergoing great physical hardships, walking long distances, going without sleep for three nights

and four days, but achieving their purpose in making one of the largest and most successful raids in the history of western North Carolina, U.S. deputy marshals and federal prohibition agents returned to Asheville..., the article related.

It said the gunbattle erupted when two mountaineers, mounted on mules, charged the officers in an attempt to free the prisoners they had captured in the Brown Hicks settlement in Haywood County. The attack came before daylight as the officers and their prisoners were walking along a narrow mountain path.

Although several shots were fired on both sides, there were no casualties except the mule one of the men was riding which was

killed, the dispatch stated. Tha attackers, after the exchange of shots in the dark, made a temporary escape while the four officers continued to Waynesville where they telephoned to Asheville for additional officers. After the officers from Asheville arrived, the posse went back into the

settlement and arrested the two men accused of making the attack.

But the most exciting headline came on the morning of June 2, 1925; Smithfield Lawyer Slain by Plainclothes Captain.

The article went on to say that Raleigh Detective Captain Jesse Wayatt had mistaken the car in which attorney Stephen S. Holt was riding for a rum runner.





Reagan Renews Pledge To 'Head Off' Deadbeats

Mississippi Eiection Set

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Former Lt. Gov. Evelyn Gandy will test her new image against four Democratic primary rivals Tuesday in a second bid to become Mississippis first woman governor.

Miss Gandy, 62, a veteran state official who lost a runoff to Gov, William Winter four years ago, adopted a more aggressive approach for this race, underscoring a shift from her gracious Southern lady image by talking about tough-.,nesS" and her 35 years of government experience.

However, she has sought to retain her traditional appeal by expressing concern for the elderly, disabled and disadvantaged.

Her opponents are Attorney General Bill Allain, who has run a consumer-oriented campaign; millionaire farmer-businessman Mike Sturdivant of Glendora, who has stressed education and economic development: state Rep. Lonnie Johnson of Pearl, who ran an anti-tax campai^; and farmer Billy M. Davis of Laurel, who has talked mostly of national economics.

Unless one candidate gets a majority in the primary, the two tc^ vote-getters will enter a runoff on Aug. 23. TTie winner will meet Leon Bramlett, a Clarksdale farmer-businessman who is unopposed for the Republican nomination, in the November general election.

Secretary of State Ed Pittmans office forecast a turnout of 690,000, which would be less than half the estimated 1.5 millkm registered statewide. It would compare with the 737,131 who voted in the primary four years ago.

V(^ers also cast ballots on state and county races from governor to constable, excq>t in about a dozen counties where contests for supervisor and constable were postponed by federal judges because redistricting plans were not approved in time.

Polls showed Miss Gandy, a lawyer, as front-runner, with Allain second and Sturdivant close to him.

The major candidates all supported industrialization efforts and education improvements - such as public kindergartens authorized by the 1982 Legislature - and expressed concern about utility rates.

Miss Gandy was involved in a brief race-related uproar. An anonymously distributed handbill included a 1963 quotation from her saying ^ believed in racial segregation. She responded that her defense of segrega-tkm was wrong and the statement did not represent her current thinking or philosophy.

Miss Gandy, a native of Hattiesburg, has served as state representative, treasurer and insurance commissioner in addition to holding the lieutenant governors office in 1976^.

Allain, 55, a Natchez native now holding bis first public office, has called the primary a referendum on his lights against utility rate increases and legislators serving on boards in the executive branch of government.

Sturdivant, 55, said his business success - he reported taxable income of $1.7 million last year - has helped him because backers see it as proof of his ability to provide jobs. He is making his first political bid.

Johnson, 35, a two-term legislator from Pearl, has campai^ed as "the taxpayers friend" and said he opposes a 1982 education improvement program because some $100 million in new taxes are needed to finance it.

Davis, 45, is a former teacher and inactive lawyer who describes himself as a broke farmer from Laurel.

_ WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, "citing horror stories of govenmmnt waste reminiscent of his presidential campaign, pied^ once again Saturday to leash the growing administrative nMmster" M fed^^al bureaucr^.

Reagan said in his weekly radio $dress be would call top aides together in the next week to begin actM on Reform 88, a m-yur program to halt bureaucratic and defense boondoggles. The effmt was announced last year.

Reagan said the administration has ok one in five government p(k>licatk)ns, or 73 million copies of vital repcHls as A Moment in the Life of a Lizard and Growing Ornamental Bamboo.

Reagan^ speaking from the Camp David, Md., presidnitial retreat, expressed outrage at food -stamp scams - a Maryland state lef^ator was

convicted Friday of launderng $70,000 in food stamps through his own grocery store - and at an unidentified person who defaulted on all 10 loais be received from the Housing and Urban Development department.

Deacfoeats like that will be beaded oH at the pass, Riegan said.

In a defense of criticism that the Pentagon has been immime from administration waste-hunters, Reaf^ refmed to its mqxnditure of $916 for a plastic cap. He said Defense Secretary

Our gpv^mnent has over 2.8 million civilian and 2 million active military personnel in ova* 22,000 buildings, lig 19,000 computers, 330

differing financial systems and 200 payroll

an effort to

Weinberger is cracki^ down, seeing to it

lyees will be fired and irresponsi-

ne^igent ^foyees

blejgovernment contractors are taken to court. Those horrw stories youve bem seeing... are the results of our own invesgatfons, Reagan said.

systems, and theres never been _

manage this growing administrative moisler, Reagan said.

Sen. Dennis DeCcmcini, D-Ar., in the Dono-cratk re^xmse, welcomed Reagans initiative, but diided the president fen* fading to act sooner on his 1980 campaign promise to riieck such waste.

When Presidoit Reagan ran tor office, he promised to end d^cit spending, also, said DeConcini. But the deficit for this year alone wUl

be greater than all the deficits of the Carter years

comtHned.

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chloride

Explodes In Tanker

BATON ROUGE, U. (AP) - About 1,500 people were evacuated before dawn Saturday when a railroad tank car being filled with vinyl chloride expfoded and set another on fire, seriously burning two moi.

The 4 a.m. blaze at the Formosa Plastics plant "could be sea all over Baton Rouge, said state police Lt. Ronnie Jones.

Black billowing clouds running for miles to the west and southwest prompted the evacuations about 5:30 a.m. in West Baton Rouge

Parish, across the Mississ^fM River, he said. People were allowed to return borne at 8:30a.m.

The poisonous snK)ke cloud also prmnpted the Coast Guard to close a 5-mile stretch of the Mississ^pi at Baton Rouge until about 10 a.m.

The injured men had loaded vinyl chkide onto five of six railroad tank cars in the loading area next to the plants production section when the exiriosioo occurred, Jones said.

Apparently a valve ngh

tured, causing a fire and an explosion," said Louis Tritico (rf the East Baton Rouge Parish ShmfFs Office.

Firefighters allowed the chemical to bum and t^ 8 a.m. one tank car had burned out. The other continued to bum, but pdke said it didnt odanger anyone outside the imme&tearea.

Firefighters sprayed water on three chlorine tanks next to the burning tank cars to leep them axA, Jones said.

"If there was anything we didnt want at that time it

was a dilorine leak, he said.

TTie two burned men, identified as J.W. Chaevert of Livonia and O P. Lateff, 51, of Baton Rou^, were taken to Baton Rouge General Hospital. Cbenevert was in critical condition and Lateff was in stable condition, nursing supervisor Sharon Black said.

Jones said second- and third-degree bums covered 80 percent of Cheneverts body and Lateff had second-degree bums on his legs, arms, head and back

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N C.-Sunday, July 31,1983-A-7

Attorneys See Problems In Their Growing Ranks

ATLANTA (AP) - The number of lawyers in America may hit 1 million by the mid-1990s, a statistic that led some lawyers attending the American Bar Associa-^ tions national convention to wonder aloud Saturday about their professions future health.

We are perhaps reaching a point where the numbers are becoming more than we can handle, said Gary Huckaby, a Huntsville, Ala', lawyer and ABA official.

The explosion in numbers the past two decades has been dramatic. As traced in a statistical study submitted

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by Barbara Curran of the American Bar Foundation in Chicago, the number of U.S. lawyers has increased from

250.000 in 1960 to about

622.000 today.

By the close of 1987, there will be 750,000 licensed lawyers, Ms. Curran said. And if law school admissions and the mortality rate among lawyers remain constant, she said, We may expect that the legal profession will reach the 1 million mark by the mid-1990s.

In 1970, one of every 572 people in the country was a lawyer. Now, one of every 375 Americans is a lawyer, Ms. Curran said. In the nations capital city, one of every 65 residents is a lawyer in private practice.

Several years ago. Chief Justice Warren Burger warned about hordes of lawyers descending upon society, hungry for work.

Burger, the nations top-ranked judge, took another jab at lawyers this week. Speaking at the University of Notre Dames London Law Center, he said too many American lawyers do not try to resolve conflicts but act more like warriors eager to do battle than healers seeking peace.

Commenting on that theme. University of Wisconsin law professor Ted Finman said Saturday that the increasing numbers may bring to bear on lawyers more pressure to create a demand for their services. That makes it more important for lawyers to concern themselves with the public good, Finman said. Lawyers of the future may have to be more concerned about the virtue of what their clients want them to do ... consider the ethics, morality and social good of such acts.

The lawyer glut is the topic of numerous programs being attended by some

10.000 ABA conventioneers. ABA President Morris

Harrell, a Dallas lawyer, said that while his 280,000-member organization was studying the ramifications of such growth, he was not unduly concerned. The market place will take care of the situation, he said.

Firm Agrees To Hire More Minorities

ATLANTA (AP) - The president of Southland Corp. signed a trade agreement Saturday with black and Hispanic groups, pledging a five-year commitment to raise the level of minority participation in the corporation to 23 percent.

One of the signers, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, president of Operation PUSH, called it a $600 million commitment by Southland to the black and Hispanic communities of the United States.

Announcement of the agreement came as Jacksons Chicago-based People United to Serve Humanity concluded its 12th annual convention, a week-long affair dominated by talk of Jacksons possible bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Calling the trade agreement with Southland historic, Jackson said delegates to the PUSH convention resolved to expand their efforts to achieve similar agreements with other corporations who do substantial business in the black and Hispanic communities.

The company operates the 7-Eleven convenience store chain nationwide.

The agreement also was signed by John P. Thompson, chairman of Southland; Mario Obledo, president of the League of United Latin American Citizens; and Tony Bonilla, chairman of the National Hispanic Leadership Conference.

Bonilla said the agreement is the first major initiative undertaken by the Hispanic community to become partners with corporate America.

Corporate America has always been willing to give us contributions that have had the effect of neutralizing the Hispanic community, he said. With this trade agreement, we at least will have a chance to get into business and expand our business development.

We had rather have that kind of reciprocity than charity. Thats' the bottom line of this agreement.





Salvador Postpones National Election Til 1984

By ARTHUR ALLEN Associated Press Writer

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) - El Salvadors nationwide elections have been postponed until 1984 despite U.S. pressure for a vote this year.

President Alvaro Magana told reporters Friday night that he was dis^ipointed in the postponement of the elections. But he said the Constituent Assembly will not finish a constitutional draft until October, four miMitbs behind schedule.

The constitution and an electoral law must be adopted before an electkm can be called, Magana said. A presidential aide, Luis Lagos, said the elections may be held in February.

The delay was announced as President Reagans special envoy in Central America, Richard SUme, sought a me^g with Salvadoran leftists to ask that they take part in the election process.

The Rea^ administratirm believes early elections will help sUbilize this nation of 4.5 million, tom by a 3^-year-old civil war between the U.S.-backed government and a coalition of leftist rebels.

Members of the Central Elections Council blame the delay on U.S. congressional hearings that were blocking a $3.4 million appropriation to fmance the balloting.

The hearings, scheduled this week in

Washington, were sought by congressional Democrats who que^ioned the finding, which would pay for computers and otho- sophikated ejection equipment.

But Washing^ congresskMial sources said Friday the hearings are expected to be brief and approval is expected in August, in time for elections at the end (4 the year.

Salvadoran politicians, expressing some resentment at being pressured to set eariy electkM^, also have been ssking an elaborate revision of the nations electoral rolls. The outdated have not been updated in 10 years and the government seeks a new registration of voters.

Leftist parties refused to take part in Mardi 1982 elections, saying the safety of their candidates could not be guaranteed. So far, they have rebuffed overtures that they participate in the new round of balloting.

Magana took office as caretaker presidoit after the 1982 elections, under an agreement among the nations political parties. The agreement call] for a caretaker government while a new coistitu-tion was written.

But the government has fallen behind in a projected June 1983 deadline for completing the constitution. The parties have set a March deadline for the new elections.

The interim president has pledged to return to private life as soon as new elections are held.

j a papal visit in Mardi; he told Pope John Paul II the etections would be bdd befme the end of 1963.

Meanwhile, a court in Sonsonate, 42 mites west of the capital, ordo^ the release of Fomin Garcia, a 52-year-old Indian leader who was arrested afto be said he witnessed an army massacre of 18 peasants Feb. 22 at the Las Hojas farming cooperative.

Magana Urid repmters be had takoi a special intere^ in the case and that ^ will remove the commander (rf Sonsonate province from bis post because (tf bis role in the case.

Thank God Im free, Garcia said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.

The OMnmander, Col. Elmer Gonzalez, has denied his forces did anythii^ wrong. Witnesses say abcMit 60 soldiers seized the 18 men frmn their beds at the cooperative, tied their hands behind their backs and shot thon to death.

Garcia, 52, whose son Edgardo was one of the victims, says be witnessed the killings. He and other survivors had been petitioning authorities for an investigation, but he was arrested June 25 on a murder charge.

Indian leaders said the cb^ against Garcia was invented to halt inquiries into military wrongdoing in the case.

Bitter Fight Expected Over CiA Funding

By ROBERT PARRY Associated Press Writo WASHINGTON (AP) -House Democrats, having won a vote against CIA backing for rightist Nicaraguan rebels, are now taking aim at the money needed to pay for that covert support after Oct. 1.

House Intelligence Committee Democrats have discussed not only diminating the $19 million specifically earmarked for the aid but drastically reducing the CIA directors secret contingency fund that has been drawn on heavily to pay for the Nicaragua program, congressional sources said.

Maneuvering in Congress over the (JlAs classified budget began in earnest after the House voted 228-195 Thursday to stop an estimated $30 million in covert U.S. aid to the 10,000 contras - or counterrevolutionaries fighting the leftist Nicaraguan government.

'Die bill now goes to the , Republican-controlled Senate

where it is given little chance of passage. But even if the Senate rejects the bill, the $30 million only carries the program until the start of the next fiscal year, Oct. 1.

Both supporters and opponents of the bill a^ that the House vote will stiffen Democratic determinatkm to fight President Reagans efforts to obtain new funding for the covert action - a key part of his Central America policy-after Oct. 1.

Thats exactly where the battle will be, said Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn., an opponent of the covert action on the Senate Intelligence Committee.

One State Department official, who ^e on condition he not be identified, said be (teubted me te^tive battle would end iqi in any serious erosion of the administrations flexibility, but added that the House vote was an expression of the House will that could cause complications.

, TIk official said an eventual conference between the

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House and Senate on their differences might lead to a compromise that would cut off the CIA aid if Nicaragua is found to have baited support for leftist guerrillas in El Salvador - language similar to that unsuccosfuUy Thursday by House ublicans and some conservative Democrats.

But the official said be doubted Congress would actually fool with the financial mechanisms for the intelligence agencies because that could damage the presidents ability to respond to foreign crises.

. Without ai^roval by the House and Senate, the administration will be without authorization to pay for the Nicaraguan covert action after Oct. 1, the start of the federal govmmments new fiscal year. That means action must be taka by then or the program will die.

In an intmview, Duro-berger said the CIA exceeded this years budget for the covert action in March or April - only halfway throu^ the current fisc^ year and has been funding it since then out of the contingency fund.

The size of that cont-in^ncy fund is a closely held secret, and one congressional official, who spoke only on condition he not be identified, said that even if Congress eliminates all money earmarked for the Nicaragi^ covot action, the administration could get around such an action by using the contingocy fund.

Another source said House Intelligence Committee Democrats have discussed ireventing such a possibility )y reducing the fund to about $2 million and requiring the

administration to obtain specific approval for other expaditures.

Such moves, however, would be unprecedented challenges to the presidents current wide discretion over intelligence activities.

The battle over the funding will be fought out in a little understood and normally highly secret budget process for U.S. intelligence activities.

Under U.S. law, a president can order a covert action an attmnpt to secretly influence the pities of another nation - simply by making a finding that the effort is in the interests of national security.

Acccnding to sources familiar with the process, a new pro^am is paid out of the contingocy fund until the start of the next fiscal year wha it is then included in the CIAs budget as a separate line item.

At that time, the House and Senate Intelligence Committees can reduce, increase or eliminate fundteg for a ^ific covert action. But the administration can circumvent any restrictions by again returning to the contingency fund, the sources said.

Like other spending bills, the intelligence budget must be approved by the full House and Senate. However, the total amount spoA on

intelligence activities is not made public.

In May, the Senate Intelligence Committee approved legislation 13-2 to allow the covert action to continue through Sept. 30, but then require Reagan to redefine the CIA program in a way acceptable to the committee before it would

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release additional funds. That bill, however, has yet to be scheduled for a Soate floor vote.

Administration officials have defended the Nicaraguan covert action as a way to block the flow of weapons to leftist guerrillas in El Salvador and force the Sandinista government in Managua to moderate its policies.

But critics argue that the contras have intercepted no weapons shipments going to El Salvador and cmtend that the true purpose of the CIA covert action is to overthrow the Sandinista government, a char^ that the administration staunchly denies.

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1 ne uaily Reflector. Greenvilte. N.C.-Sunday. July 31, IW-A 9

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Car Plows Into Line Of Elderly

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -A car driven by an alk^y dnmken driver plowed into a line of elderly and handicapped people waiting to receive surplus food Saturday, killing a wnnan and injuring seven otbn^ police said.

continued movii^ and struck several more people before

The accident occurred at the Fifth Street Baptist Church, where peo(^ had gathered fw distribution of government surplus food.

P(rfice said a motorist, approximately three caiiengths from the line, began gunning his motor and the car unexpectedly moved forward. The vehicle struck another car, which jumped the sidewalk and pinned three peopte against the side of the church, police reported.

They said the first vehicle

mergency medical technicians treated 13 (rf the injiHied at the scene and six others were hospitalized.

Police identified the driver as Lawrence T. Briggs, 48, and said he was charged with driving on a revoked operators license, failing to have insurance and puWc intox-icatkm.

The name of the dead woman was withheld pending notification of next <A kin.

Capt. Brad Learn, operations supervisor for Louisvilles Emergency Medical Services, sakl one person was treated at the scene and six were takoi to hospitals. Humana Hospital University said it had four pe(^le who were admitted in serious but staUe condition.

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MUSIC TO END - Dave Stamhier practices his saxapbooe prior to a free concert for tourists watting in line for a tour of the White House. The free concerts, started by the National Park Service in 1976 to rdkve Uie tedium M kng watts by

tourists, will come to an end because Commerce Secretary Malcfdm Baldridge has comittained that the sounds drift into his ofOce and d&iqtt high level meetings. The Commerce Department is shown in the background. (APLasophoto)

Marine's T-Shirt Irks Cubans

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Cuban government has complained to American officials over a Marine guard at the U.S. dipkunatic office in Havana who was seen wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with Cifoa si, Fidel no, the State Department said Saturday.

Press officer Sue Pittman said the guard, Cpl. John

Baerwald of Baltimore, is going to be leaving Cuba tomorrow, but it is at the end of his normal tour of duty. She said the normal tour for Marine guards at the Havana post was about six months.

Ms. Pittman said Baerwald had bera wearing a T-shirt with Cuba si, Fidd no on it. She said he was seen, apparently by local

residents, as'be was taking out garbage from the Marine house - the guard am-tingents quarters adjacent to the U.S. intmests section of the Swiss embassy in Havana.

Describing the reaction of Cuban authorities, Ms. Pit

tman said: They raised the issue with us, but I dont

know that it was actually a

Handwriting On The Wall

MIAMI (UPI) - When Joanne Moschetto got her phone bill for last month it totaled 381 pages and the charges amounted to $18,000.

The problem, say phone company investigators, is that Miss Moschettos name and telephone credit card number had been scribbled on the walls of at least one phone booth - and possibly others - tempting hundreds of long distance callers to contact friends all over the world.

And the mess is not over yet. Southern Bell has warned Miss Moschetto that this months bill will run 450 pages and total $29,000. That adds up to $47,000 worth of fraud, and the equivalant of 1,780 hours of constant primetime jabbering between Miami and New York.

'The calls actually billed ( Miss Moschettos account reach out much further, however, ranging from California to Haiti to Italy.

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protest. ... Protest would be too strong a word for It.

She said Cubas retpiest that the Marine be sent home bad been lodged with the U.S. office in Havana,,

beaded by political officer J(ttm Ferch. ^ said she did

through my bills to find my own calls, Miss Moschetto said. She says sbe made only about $50 dollars wortb last month, and that is all she will be required to pay.

Miss Moschettos - and the phone companys - problems began in June, when she changed her telqfbone number. It took three weeks and as many phone calls to get a new credit card in tbe mail.

The phone (xunpany officials later said they had records of sending three cards to Miss Moschetto. ^ got only one, however, and at least one of tbe others must have fallen into dishonest hands.

Shortly after she finally got her card, tbe phone company called to say that a huge bill was on its way. Miss Moschetto said she thought it was a joke, but that was before her roommate got another phone call - this time from a female stran^r in a nearby pbrnie booth.

not know when tbe rec^ was filed or wben tbe incident occurred.

Asked if the United States would have complied with Cubas request if Baerwald had not been scheduled to leave Sunday, Ms. Pittman said: That I cant answer for you. I would be speculat

ing.

Ms.

i. Pittman did not give for Baerwald.

United States and Cuba have not had formal diplomatic relations sine 1960. Rdatkms betweoi the two governments are handled by sections of tbe embassies of other countries, which in fact are staffed by nationals of tbe United States and Cuba.

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Latin American Minsters Fail In Peace Effort

PANAMA CITY, Panama (AP) - Foreign ministers from nine Latin American nMioos ended a three^y meeting Saturday with no immediate breakthrough in tbeir efforts to find a peaceful solution to Central Americas ronflicts.

They said there would be additkmal meetings next month to work toward a preliminary agreement, but did not say where or when the meetings would be held.

A coochiding statement by the Panamanian Foreign

Ministry said the meeting advanced in the process of Q^otiations regaitling the contniction of a stable and durable peace in all the

region.

Fore

'oreign Minister Juan* Jose Amado of Panama railed the meeting positive, but said no concrete iroposals could result lecause the ministers firk had to consult with their governments.

He said the meeting was a work of research and laid the groundwork for a

possible document of intoi-tkm that might precede any final peaceful agreement to the differwit crises of the Centra] American mthmus. He described Central America as of great concern, and said the regional peacemakers fed we must speed up our activities to find solutkms, before the military situatkm, before the crisis comes to the position where there will be no point of return.

Richard Stone, President Reagans special envoy for

CeiRral America, has held out the possMity be might travd to Nicaragua for talks with that coimtiys left-wing Sandinista government before returning to Washington. He was in Bonita, Colombia, on Saturday meeting with Latin Amerfoan leaders.

The latest foreign ministers talks here in Panama wm% arranged by Colombia, Mexico, Panama and Vmie^la, which form the peace-seeking Contadora groi^. The foreign ministers

of those countries met with their counterparts from Costa Rica, El Salvada, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.

A buret of diplomatic activity in the past two w.ks had raised hopes the Contadora group - named after the Panamanian island where they first met in Janu^ -might speed up its bid for peace.

During the weekend of July 16, the presidents of the four Contadora countries held their first summit, in

Cancn, Mexico, citing an increasing risk of war between Nicaragua and Honduras. ^

The statement released here said the foreign ministers siq>port the Contadora groups Declaration of Cancn, which calls for an end to the arms buUdi^ in Central America.

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Sn* Lanka Acts Against Opposition Party

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) - Sri La^s government moved to stamp out the opposition party of the minority Tamil population Saturday following a week of ethnic violence that left more than 100 deadmost (rf them Tamils.

It also banned three small left-wing parties - the Communist Party of Sri Lanka, the Peoples Rights Front and the New Equal Society Party. The Communist Party holds one seat

in Parliament, and the other two parties ixe.

The government radio ani^ounced all three parties were outlawed immediately. It r^KHTted later that the curfew had been extended untU 5 a.m. Monday.

A constitutional amendment proposed by the government also bans parties or organizations that advocate a separate state within the territory of Sri Lanka, an island nation off India. The dominant population is the

Sinhalese.

The Tamil United Liberation Front, the main opposition party, advocates a separate Tamil state. Once the amendment becomes law, the 16 members of the Tamil United Liberatkm Front will lose their seats. The government party holds an overwhelming majority.

The amendment goes before the Stmreme Court for review Monday, and before Parliamoit Thursday. It is expected to pass.

Under the measure, indi-viduals who preach separatism would be subject to loss of all property and suspension of tbeir civil ri^ts for as long as seven years.

The amendment, which requires a two-thirds approval of the 168-member Parliament to become law, f(rilows closely what President Junius Jayewardene said the government

Elanned. Jayewardenes nited National Party holds

a five-sixths majority in the legislature, ensuring the amendments passage.

Jayewardene said in a speech Thursday night that tough measures were the only way to appease the natural desire and request of the Sinhalese people to prevent the country from being divided, and to see that those who speak for division cannot do so legally.

About 70 percent of this nation of 15 million people are Sinhalese.

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Early

Leaf Sales Show Low Demand By Buyers

VALDOSTA. Gi. (AP) -The Fedenl<State Mutet Newi Service reported Uuit demind wu down from lait

year'i opening lelei in the first two days of the Georgia and Florida flue-cured

tobacco markets.

"There were no real sur prises, Just disappoint-ments," C^rgla Agriculture Commissioner Tommy Irvin said.

"Everything we've heard is true. Tobacco companies are re-evaluating their needs. Cigarette consumption is down, world demand is down," he said in a telephone interview from his Atlanta office.

"The companies are readjusting them inventories. There's tobacco out there that there's no home for.

The average price on tobacco sold Wednesday and Thursday was 1140.56 per hundred pounds, on 10.3 million pounds. Last year, 11.2 million Munds sold at an avera^ of 1151.99 during the first two days..

Significantly different from lut year wu the amount of tobacco aold to the federal Stablliutlon Corp. to support prlcu. If buyers are unwilling to pay a set price for a particular grade of tobacco, the corporation buys it at that price, which

days this year, 37.4 percent went to the corporatloo, and that figure would have been higher if warehousemen had not been buying, Irvln said. Last year, the figure wu only 16.2 percent.

Irvln said some tobacco hu been in Stablllutloo Con. warehousn since 1977 and Interest costs could ut up whatever wu paid for the tobacco. He uid farmers must pay for handling, re-pnceulng, trauportatlon and storage of that tobacco, u well u interest on the money used to buy It. The farmers must also pay 14 cents per hundred pounds of tobacco sold to fund the

conoratlon. The

market may get later In the wason as higher gradu beconm available, becauu the early )art of the market usually MS only the lower gradu offered for sale, he said.

"Mid-stock tobacco should get the prlcu up and the oemand up by about the third week, be uld.

Georgia farmers sold 6,411,266 pounds at an

Corps Plans To Reopen N.C. Inlet

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The U.S. Army Corps of Englnwrs will uu a'

dredge this fall to reopen i Oregon Inlet to commercial fishbig veuels, uid U.S. Sen. JesM Helms, R-N.C., and Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C.

The channel hu become so shallow this year that the fishing flut hu been unable to UM it. The corps had been using a sldecasier dredge, which pumps sand off the bottom ana cuts it aside. The hopper dredge pumps the sand into the vessel.

wMch dumps it elsewlmv.

Helms and Jonu uld the corps will open bids Aug. 36

to contractors for the ddg-ing, which Is to start in mid-September, the News

and Oburver of Raleigh reported Saturday.

The hew dredge Is to keep the channel at its authorised depth of 14 feet. The Coast Guaril's latest notice to mar Iners on the Inlet's condition ui(f there wu 714 feet of water in most of the channel, with shoaling up to 5 feet In someplacu.

Jonu uid be hoped the channel could be opmed and marked with navigational aidu lir thne for toe fall

iingsei

using the hopper dredge wu long overdue.

But Helms called the announcement "yet another indication of the corps committmut to do whatever is necessary to kesp the channel at Oregon Inlet opn for the incoming fishing season."

The City

an ordinance prohibiting trucks from traveling on certain streets or paru of itreets In the city. For more Information, call the City Engineering Departmut at 752^37.

average of 1143.56 per hundred pounds Wednesday and Thursday, compared with 9,6^075 pounds at 1152 per hundred during the first two days of lut year's markets. Florida sales totaled 1,933,006 pounds at 1127.50 this week, compared with 1,527,294 pounds at 1151.93 lut year.

Georgia grows 11 percent to 12 percent of the flue-cured tobacco in the United Statu. North Carolina Is the

r, and South Ca^ olina and Florida are the other flue-cured statu.

Average per-hundred

Sricu for selected gradu Wednesday and Thursday, and chanu from last year, were; x4f, $173, down 12; x3km, 1170, down 12; x4km 3162, down $3; x4A, 1152, down 12; p31,1149, do^ $2; p41,1133, dm 19; p3f, 9145, down 15; p4f, $134, down 37; p4g, 3125. down 313; and nlpo, 3110, down 316.

Duke Study Cites Drain On Talent

DURHAM, N.C. (UPI) - Afflrmattve actkm programs are expanding career opportunltlu for womn and blacki, but

Salu are crutlng a generation of teachers who are

tly below their predeceuors intelleetually, says a Duke   * * ^

The and

I study alK says the second-rank corps of etementary secondary tea^ Is linked to the low pay that

discouragu many bright, would-be teachers The loag-term ImpUci

tucher talent, educational ps;

Page, who Educational Reua nation counted on women teachers. Theu wonwn

atlon Is "the nation la In trouble on uys Dr. Ellis E Page, profenor of andreaearchatDuke. served n president of the America Auociation, said that In the pait the to provide mut of its ablest tuching u a rupectable

Page said the reuarth at Duke, ^ a lophlitleatid inathenutleal tecbnlqu called path aaim teeuud Ml seniors acrou the nation who mteiM to beoome teachers and 10,411 seniors wboplanned other occupatlou.

One of the major flndings wu that high school wMn wanting to teach ranked below tbelr clissmatu In intelleetu-al ability, Page said. But that wu not true for men. The mu were fewer in number, the study said, but more qiMdlflsd. Tbs stucfy alu showed that 75 perout of the studentf hoping to tuch were white womm.    .

Page said the high school womu earned be^ |radu "than tbelr abUlty m^t predict but only beuuu the women worked bard for tnem.

"The jradu were still sonMwhat lower than average,

In Teachers

affirmative action, while crutlng opportunltlu nr womu

age said at one time a quarter of the nation's collegs students intended to teach, but that figure today wu about 6

and mtnoritlu, may drain off some tuching tatent to profeulons with higher rewards.

The Duke study, published In the July Issue of Educational Reuarcher, used data from High School and Beyond, a national long-term study of 1900 high school seniors and

I    IB    AMA    A    ^    ^    _

tol

or

sophomoru. HSB Involved 58,270 studmts In 1,015 schools.

percent

Overall, he said, the problem with ai minds to teachlngis the iMk of pay govemmut.

"We can only wonder how many potentially good tuchers are deterred from the profenlon simply buauu Uiey desire more than the relaUvely low wagn of a tuchu, Page uld.

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Governors Say Recovery Only Trickling To States

governors - most The microelectronics Typical of the other gov- of the problems associated of Kansas, also a Democrat, economies, which depend far as strength and dur

Ar I^MIUCbI Wrlttf nr fh^m PonfAiteli    inHncfmr    urill    Ka    cIaw    t/\    navf    I?    urifli    M__ttTK/vawk : miiaK    I.____:i.. :   J 1 __________ J

rDONMcLEOD 'Political Writer PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - Gov. Jim Hunt says North Carolinas ectHiomic recovery may not bring the state to pre-recession levels for several more mtmths.

Many of the re^ of the nations governors say the economic recovery, which recent federal government figuTK indicate is under way, is only trickling down to their states.

This is the main finding in a survey of governors on the eve of their annual convention that opens here on Sunday.

Thirty governors - most of them cautiously optimistic about the future - responded to the survey.

Because of the mixed and qualified nature of the responses, it was difficult to quantify them, but 23 saw a limited economic revival, if any, in their states. Seven appwred convinced of a lasting recovery.

We feel like it will last, Hunt said. We might have a few months where it dips down, but it will last."

Hunt, a Democrat, said North Carolina was in the midst of a gradual yet steady and enduring recovery.

The microelectronics industry will be slow to recover, they are not on the verge of a majw exp^ion, he said. Also housing and autos, although they pre showing signs of recovery also.

Hunt said workers who were laid off and who will not be rehired and those who are in need of retraining will be a big challenge.

Asked whether services will be restored in the recovery, Hunt said North Carolina was tH)t forced into drastic service cuts but had only a hiring freeze and a merit pay freeze.

Typical of the other governors was Gov. Joseph E. Brennan of Maine, a Democrat, who said, I think were doing a little better, but weve got a long way to go. The recovery is just beginning, said R^ublican Gov. Kit Bond of Missouri. But we are optimistic that it will proceed at a moderate pace.

Democratic Gov. Ted Schwinden of Montana said, The recovery appears to be for real ... However, agriculture is in trouble. Things are getting better, but slowly.

We continue to face some

of the problems associated with the recession, said Republican Thomas H. Kean of New Jersey. But progress toward recovery is apparently fairly steady. People are still very cautious, said Republican Gov. Terry Branstad of Iowa. But there are a lot of very positive indicators. Gov. Richard Lamm of Colorado, a Democrat, summarized the feeling of many skeptics. We have not yet seen the growth necessary to call this a recovery. The recovery, if it exists at all, is very slow right now, said Gov. John Carlin

of Kansas, also a Democrat. There is much discussion of a recovery in Kansas and across the nation. However, at this point it seems to be more talk than reality.

My assessment is its fragile, said Democratic Gov. Richard Bryan of Nevada. It does appear to be continuing, but a substantial increase in the interest rates could choke off the recovery.

The 1981-82 recession sent unemployment rates to their highest levels since the Great Depression. The joblessness, which remained at 10 percent in June, hit hard at state

economies, which depend heavily on income and sales taxes.

The AP survey found definite signs that the national upsurge is reaching most states, with revenue from these taxes increasing as employment improves from the high of 10.8 percent in December.

But virtually every governor qualified his answer when asked about the recovery.

We see some indications of modest recovery, said Gov. Charles Robb of Virginia, Democrat. But the signals are clearly mixed as

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far as strength and duration are concerned.

There is some evidence that we may be in the initial phase of a recovery, but we are still facing severe problems associated with the recession, said Democratic Gov. William Winter of Mississippi.

There are still severe economic 'problems in our state - revenue collections are down, unemployment remains high (13.6 percent), Winter said. "Full recovery is still far down the line.

Gov. Anthony Earl of Wisconsin, Democrat, says his state may reach full recovery in another six years.

The economic appraisals in general were not partisan but reflected local conditions. The brightest picture was painted by Democratic Gov. Joe Frank Harris of Georgia, who reported steady improvement in state revenues, employment and the health of business and industry in the state.

Recovery has definitely reached the state, said Gov. Robert D. Orr of Indiana, a Republican. Although unemployment in his state is 0.2 percent above the national average, Orr said, Economic activity both bn the production and retail sides has clearly picked up.

Minnesota was reeling from recession woes a year ago, but Democratic Gov. Rudy Perpich said recovery now is well on its way here,

We have some problems, said Perpich, naming agriculture and taconite mining as the trouble spots. The rest of it is turning around. By next year this time well be in great shape.

But Gov. James Blanchard, a Democrat from Michigan, said, While our state has experienced some recovery in the form of increased auto sales and other similar signs, I wouldnt call it a firm recovery,

The principle problem, he said, is that we still have over 600,000 people unemployed.

Yes the recovery has reached New York, and we are facing recession problems, said Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo. Cutbacks in public sector jobs, and the skilled and semiskilled permanent job losses that were accelerated by the recession have left a material number of long-term unemployed in New York for whom the recovery is but government public relations.

Democrat Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas reported improvements in construction, auto sales, manufacturing and service industries but a depression in agriculture, a problem in every state where farming is a major industry.

Clinton said he has several counties with unemployment rates above 20 percent and terrible farm problems which have been aggravated by the high interest rates policies.

Several other governors also complained of interest rates or expressed fear they might rise again and stall the recovery. Governors also spoke warily of federal budget deficits.

Law Officials To Be Trained On New Law

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State court officials have scheduled eight training sessions on the new Safe Roads Act to familiarize policemen, judges and district attorneys with the anti-drunken driving measure.

Franklin E. Freeman, director of the Administrative Office of the Courts, said the training sessions will take place at eight different locations across the state in September.

The law, enacted by the 1983 General Assembly, becomes effective Oct. 1. Those who must understand it include 1,137 state highway patrolmen, 200 supeior and district court judges, 35 district attorneys and their 200 assistants, 100 clerks of court and their assistants, 604 magistrates and countless sheriffs, deputies, policemen, public defenders and defense attorneys.

Freeman said the training process will continue after the law goes into effect as we refine enforcement procedure and court actions based on experience.





Adopt-A-Pet    Employee    Groups    Plan    AAerger    Discussion

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Directors of the North Caro-lina State Employees Associatioo and the North Carolina State Government Employees Association plan to meet next month to finish a year-long study on merging the two groups.

The directors will meet Aug. 17 in Durham to discuss ending their 36-year rivalry. The proposal will be offered to members of the two associations during their annual conventions in September and is expected to

The Adopt-a-Pet of the Week is a spayed female part-Eskimo spitz that has had heartworm treatment.

355-2772.

Also being sought homes by the Pitt County Humane Society are the following:

*A female spayed Irish setter, house-trained and has shots; a female 6-month-old black and brown mixed German shepherd, has shots; a ^yed female mixed-Doberman named Suzy, small build, has shots; a ^ayd female brown and black mixed breed, medium-sized dog, has shots; a spayed female yeUow dog, house-trained, with shots; a gray tabby neutered male cat named Sylvester, has all shots. Humane Society. 756-1268.

Three 6-week-old German shepherd-coUie piqipies. 752-4877.

Nine 6-week-old bunnies. 756-9624.

A 4-month-old part-Labrador retriever puppy, wormed and with all shots. 355-2711 or 756-6774.

Five 9-week-old puppies that are one-quarter walker hound - have had first shots. 746-3693.

Three 6-week-old gray tabby kittens, litter-trained. 756-6830.

A 6-year-old AKC-registered male Irish setter with all shots. 756-2045.

Three 7-week-old female kittens - one silver tabby, one white, one gray and three 7-week-old brown and white hunting puppies. Humane Society. 7564702.

Found in D.H. Conley School area - a Siberian huskey. Call and describe. 756-9477.

Six 7-week-old collie^xicker spaniel puppies. 753-2237.

An 11-week-old female golden retriever. 752-0988.

A 8-week-old white kitten. 752-3587.

A 3-month-old male gray kitten. 756-0262.

A 3-year-old male bassett hound, has all shots; a 6-month female long-haired cat; found a llaso apso. Call and describe. Humane Society. 752-9922.

A 2-year-old male St. Bemard-Samoyed, not for small chUdren. 758-1956.

A 10-weekold female gray and white kitten with all shots. 752-6962.

Five 9-weekold kittens - three black and white, one buff and one gray . 752-0370.

Found - German ^epherd. Call and describe. Humane Society. 7564813.

Two 12-weekold kittens - one calico, one white. 756-6585.

Two 6-weekold orange calico kittens. 756-3615.

Five 9-weekold kittens - two white with gray tabby spots, two calico, and one black with white socks. 746-6048.

Two calico 12-weekold kittens and one buff-colored 8-weekoId kitten, 752-6501.

Lost in Arlington Boulevard area - a clipped male llaso apso. 756^3 or 752^5093.

Found in ECU area - a black female cat, 756-1268.

To place an animal for free adoption through this column, published free of charge each Sunday, call Elizabeth Savage, 7564867; Bobbie Parsons, 756-1268; Janet Uhlman, 756-3251; Barbara Haddock, 752-9922; or Carol Tyer, 752-6166.

Plan Requires Doctor Reports In AIDS Cases

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The North Candina Health Services Division has pro-po^ that doctors be required to r^rt diagnosed cases of acquired immune deficiency syndrome to local health officials.

AIDS de^ys the bodys ability to fight off diseases. It has primarily affected homosexual and bisexual males, intravenous drug users, Haitian immigrants and hemophiliacs. Curratly, rolling the disease is voluntary.

The division received no of^ition to a proposal at a public hearing Friday, clearing the way for adoption at its quarterly meeting Aug. 10. If passed, the requirement would take effect Jan.

1.

There are a number of reasons for reporting, said Dr. J.N. MacCormack, director of communicable disease control for the division. It can help us better define the risk factors.

Failure to report AIDS also has hampered research on the mystery killer, said Dr. Richard Selik, who logs cases at the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control.

The first known case was diagnosed in 1979 but was not reported until July 1982. The 1,800 diagnosed cases nationwide may be half the actual cases, medical experts suspect. The number is doubling every six months, with an average of six new cases reported daily.

So far, 17 states, including South Carolina, have requirements to report diagnosed AIDS cases, said CDC spokesman Robert Alden.

Twenty others, including North Carolina, have similar requirements pending in their state health dqiart-ments or commissions, he said.

pass, officials of both groups say.

The merger would establish the State Employees of North Carolina Inc. to r^resent the 41,000 members of the two groups.

Officials say a oxntHned association would establish a more unified lobbying staff that would allow the association to be more dfi-cient in working for ^te employees issues in the General Assembly.

I think if we can get these two organizations together, we can field one of the strongest lobbying teams in the state, said NCSEA president Ivan R. Hin of Ayden.

We feel like were basically after the same thing, said NG^EA president Mack Jarvis. If youve got 41,000 members, youre going to have the clout. N&GEA was founded in 1947 to r^resent prison and roads workers in the state Department of Highways, which lator split into the Department of Transportation and the D^art-ment of Correction.

NCSEA had begun a year eariier, and represoited all state woikers except those in the Department of Hi^ways.

Today, NCSEA has 28,000 members and NCSGEA has

Tuition Raised At UNC Schools

13,000 members.

There are 108,000 state employees, inclucUng public school teachers and professors at state universities and community colleges. Neither association represents teachers or pnrfesso^ ,who have thdr own associa-tkms.

If the merger is approved, SENC would be second b size only to Californias 100,000-member state workers association.

Jarvis said support for the merger gained strength during the 1983 session of the General Assembly, which ended last week, vriioi lobbyists for the two groups joined to push for a state employee pay raise. Lawmdkers gave state workers a 5 percent raise.

I think, m a lot of cases, the legislators feel we are playmg both ends against the HiU said. Our

ize that to conUnue opo'atbg separately is not b the best intm^M the state.

And we need to do that to cut down on the strab imposed on both (rf our lobbyists, be said. Last wed[ was proof of that.

Executive directors of both groims, Emmett W. Burdra of NCSEA and J. Arch Laney (rf NCSGEA, were hospitalized with heart ailments last weekend.

Burdo) and Laney traditionally have worked together, in buttonholing

lawmakers to ^ ^te worker issues. Hul sak

said they often found themselves b the same committee sessions when they could have mlit up to cover more of the Legislature.

Help keep Greoiville clean! CaO the Right-Of-Way Office at 7524137 for more information.

BLUEBERRIES

Carl Crawford Farm

75M815    756-3682

LMvkig OrMiwiNa WMt On 284, First Uft Past Uttlss Nurssry. Sign On Right.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) Students on all <*amptises ctf the Umversity of North Carolina system will pay at least 10 percent more for tuition this fall.

The UNC Board of Governors Friday raised toitbn 10 percent for in-state students and 26 percent for most out-of-state undergraduate studmts. Specialized areas such as the schools of pharmacy, nursing, n^ine, dmtistry and public health had similar increases.

The board also authorized a new fee schedule for all campuses effective this fall. The application fee for each campus will be 115.

As the board was considering its fbal 1983-84 budget, board

member Walter R. Da\^ asked whether the university could

He said that while he had no criticism of the current bud^, be believed that the board sometimes takes the position of rubber slampbg financial matters. Davis said he would like to see the board have more freedom b decidbg the direction of the university.

He advocad constitutbnal status for the university, thereby eliminating the process of receiving legjsbtive approval for its budget.

UNC president William Friday said he backed Davis desire to see the university strive for autonomy.

The mission of this university, historically and today, has been towards ^ter autonomy,^Friday said.

Oaths of office were administered to state Siqireme Court Justice Henry Frye to news and rejected members of the board.

Three new board members elected by the recent General Assembly are J. Earl Danieley, Mrs. Stanley Fox and Samuel Poole. Reflected to the board were Irwb Belk, Wayne A. Corp^ibg, John R. Jordan Jr., J. Aaron Prevost and Louis Randolph . The tmms of the members are through 1991.

people are begbnbg to real-

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'Long-Shot' Landrum Leads Canadian

(See Sans, Page B-5) OAKVILLE, Ontario (AP) - Ralph Landrum, a rookie, re-established himself as the third-roimd leader in the Canadian Open, but said he knows full well he is not supposed to win this national championship.

I know Im a kmg shot, not si^wsed to win the golf tournament, said the 25-year-old Landrum after his comeback round of 4-under-par 67 had given him a one-shot lead after 54 holes.

But that does two things for you. It gets the crowd behind y<Ni. They like a long shot. I never had anybody cheering for me like they did (Hit there today.

And sometimes, when somebody tells you that you arent supposed to do something, that you arent capable of doing something, well, it kind of spurs you on.

Landrum, playing in his first touma-moit as a full-fledged member of the tour, scattered seven birdies across his card and came from four strokes back to gain the lead at 207, six shots under on the 7,060-yard Glen Abbey Golf course.

A dozen others - most of them veterans and including Jack Nicklaus -

Stephenson Is Two Up

TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Jan Stephenson lost her temper but kept the lead once she had it Saturday in the third round of the 31st U.S. Womens Open golf championship.

I did some stupid things like 3-putting the 15th green and it made me mad, Stephenson said after she scrambled to an even par 71 over steamy Cedar Ridge Country Club.

Her 54-hole total of 3-over-par 216 gave her a 2-shot lead going into the final round.

1 got upset and I let my temper get away from me, she said. It was hot and I was trying to keep cool and concentrate. But the two times 13-putted really made me mad.

St^enson said she finally regained her composure before she blew the slim lead she had built.

I kept telling myself you have to have patience no matter what hai^ns, she said. Patience is not one of my attributes.

Asked if she felt secure going into the final round, Stephenson lauded, Secure is not in my vocabulary. Not on this course, which is so treacherous. Stephenson made her two 3-putts when she boIcDy tried to make birdie.

I got greedy and it cost me twice, shesid.

St^henson, the 1982 Ladies Professional Golf Association Classic champion who has never captured the (^n, led by (wo shots over Debbie Meisterlin and Patty Sheehan, who were at 218.

Sheehan, the current LGPA champion who led by three strokes when play be^n, blew to a 5-over par 76 while Meisterlin posted a 2-over 73.

I knocked it in the water once and (Please llim To Page B-5)

were within four strokes going into Sundays final rotmd. But Landrum, a club pro from Florence, Ky., was un-daunt^.

I know my swing iat going to fall apart ovemi^t. Maybe if 1 can make some putts, I can scare somebody, be said.

Im going to try to win.

I dont know if 1 can, but ru try.

If somebody beats me, be beats me. If they dont, thats a whole bunch better.

Tom Purtzer, an experienced player with one tour title and four consecutive

as a $100,000 winner, was one shot afteraTO.

Defending (diampion Bruce Lietzke, a two-time winner on this course, and John Cook were another stroke behind at 209. Lietzke had a 70 that included 17 c(M)secutive pars and a birdie on the 18th bole. Co( also had a 70.

Fuzzy Zodler, the sec<d-round leader, struggled to an erratic 74 and dropped back to 210, three off the pace. He was tied with Johnny Miller, ^ank Conner and two Australian natives now living in the United States, Greg Norman and

David Graham. Graham made an eagle-3 on the 18th bole for a 71. Norman shot 70, while Conner and Miller each had a 67 in the muggy weather.

Jack Nicklaus, who has won almost everything the game can offer but has yet to take this national title, dropped an 18-20 f(xA eagle putt on the 18th hole for a 70 that left him at 211.

Landrum, who made several unsuccessful attempts at the PGA Tour school, tied for eighth in the U.S. Open and was fifth last week in the Anheuser-Busch Classic in Williamsburg, Va., in which he

won $13,300. That gave him more than $31,000 for the year and entitted him to his playing rights.

His first round as a card-parrying member of the tour was a 65, which gave him a share of the llMiole lead here. But he blew 10 shots higher in the second round, then came back again with an effort that included six 3s on the front side, and a double bogey that failed to discourage him.

He bogeyed the first hole from a bunker, but got the shot back making a 15-foot putt on the second. He hit a 5-iron

to within eight feet and made the ptdt on he fourth, 2-pidted for birdie-4 on the next and lashed a second shot thnwgh tree limbs to within a foot of the bole on the fifth.

When its going good, it goes good, he said.

He also birdied the eighth, hitting a

5-iron shot to within four feet of the flag.

Landrum. ma(k double bogey on the nth, where be caught the lip of a trap and took four to reach the green, but responded with birdies on the 13th and 15th.

Bucs Get Kick From Specialists

WOODY PEELE SpcHts Editor

East Carolina football fans got a big kick out of freshman Jeff Heath last season when the curly-haired freshman from Virginia Beach, Va., booted his way into the record books.

And c(Hne this season, even better things are looked for from the 6-0,

190-pound sophomore who handles the kickoffs, placements and field goals for the Pirates.

Theres no question that Jeff is one of the best kickers in the C(Hmtry, former bead ECU football coach Jack Boone said. Bo(Hie, now a volunteer coach on the Ed Emory staff, handles the kickers and snappers for the Pirates.

Hes a good kid to work with. Hes dedicated and I look for him to improve.

Improvement would definitely push Heath into the national forefront among kickers. Just see what he did last year:

Heath was tied for I2th among field goals made per game with a total of 16 (a new school record).

Heath was the freshman for field goals made per game with 1.4 and total field goals.

Heath was tied for 35th nationally in scoring with 6.8 points per game, kicking 16 of 23 field goals for 69.6 percent, and a perfect 27 for 27 in extra points. His 75 points led the Pirates in scoring.

A 59-yard field goal against Texas-Arlington shattered the old schocri record by nine yards, and his four field goals in the game (4-4) also was a new school record.

His average field goal distance against UT-A of 49.5 broke the NCAA record by five yards and the four of 58, 53, 42, and 45 yards tied the NCAA record for most in one game over 40 yards.

The 58;warder was just a yard short of the frenan NCAA record and seven off the overall NCAA record. Emory denied him a chance at a 69-yarder against UT-A, not wanting to run up the score.

Quite a listing for someone just a freshman!

(Chuck) Bushbeck was a good kicker, Boone said, but Jeff has better work patterns. Hes strong aiKl can hit it. Ive seen him kick 52-yarders against the wind in practice, and I think its quite possible that he could kick for an NCAA record on a favorable night.

Since the Pirates are limited as to how many can make a road trip, Boone tries to work with players at other positions as backups in case they are needed. Those most likely to sub for Heath would be David Thomas, a 6-0, 200i)ound junior defensive end, or Stuart Ramirez, a 6^,. 190-pound junior split end. Boone is also working with walkons Mike Sutphin, a 6-1,150-pound freshman and Joe Ledford, a 5-7, 140-pound sophomore. Kevin King, a 6-0, 200-pound freshman is another possibility.

But while the placement and kickoff game is solid, the punting game is still somewhat of a question mark. There, two candidates are likely to battle for the job: Jeff Bolch, a 5-11, 181-pound junior, and John Williams, a 6-1,

191-pound senior.

Both of them saw duty last year. Bolch punting 24 times - exactly half the time, for a 37.6 average. Williams kicked 15 times for a 35.2 average -with one blocked. Bolch had a long )unt of 69 yards, while Williams ongest was 47 yards.

Williams looked real good in spring practice, Boone said. His only problem is that hes not as consistant as I would like. He gets the ball high and you can get down under it. I look for him to help us, but I dont get to spend as much time with him as I would like since hes also a quarterback.

Bolch is more consistant but hes been hampered by ankle injuries the last two years, B()one said.

Im satisfied that we will have a good game between them. Neither one of them has shown up to his potential yet. I dont think theyll get many runbacks of Johns kicks.

Backups include Paul Gaskill, a 6-1, 185-pound sophomore, Qiarlie Har-riman, a 6^), 170-pound freshman, and

Rodger Decker, a 6-0, 185-pound freshman.

I dont know if we have any freshman punters coming in, but I would think it would be tough for them

to break into the starting lineiq), Boone said.

While the spotlight is usually on the riian doing the kicking, there are two

important men who must do their job to perfection or its all lost - the snapper on both kicks and punts and the holder on kicks.

Boone said that quarterback Kevin Ingram is most likely to be handing the ilacement of the ball on the tee on icks, and that Bolch could back him

Kicker Jeff Heath boots one of his 16 field goals last season.

Its very important. If you dont get the ball down, you cant kick it. We put a lot of emphasis on getting the ball down correctly.

For several years, the Pirates have had Whitley Wilkerson handling the snapping duties - and he never had a bad snap in his career.

But Wilkerson is gone now and the Pirates are seeking a successor to him.

This position is often overlooked, Boone said, but its critical. Right now this is my number one concern. If you cant get the ball back there, you cant kick it.

Currently, Kevin Samuel, a 5-11, 195-pound sophomore, is the leading candidate for the job. He has a lot of potential, and he works at it. There are a few things he needs to improve on, however, Boone said. And hes the only one thats had experience at snapping, and even he hasnt snapped in a varsity game before.

Rob Prevette, 5-11, 189, freshman, has show promise, while Stuart Ward,

6-2, 230, sophomore, looked outstanding in the short time he worked there in the spring. He has the asset in that he could also play center.

Others include Brooks Thomas, a 5-11, 220-pound sophomore; Robert Lilley, a 6-1,191-pound sophomore, and Greg Thomas, a 6-1, 220-pound freshman. Greg is a one-handed snapper, and that drives Ed crazy, but he took could be a re^ar center.

These people could put us back into a ball game, Boone said, or get us out of a hole with good punting. Its like a third team. Ed puts a lot of emphasis on the kicking game, and its worth every bit of it.

It only takes one long punt to get you out of trouble, or one long field goal to get you ^ing, and we have the potential to get either of those.Jurgy, Four Others Go Into Grid Hall

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Longtime coaching great Sid Gillman and former players Sonny Jurgensen, Bobby Mitchell, Bobby Bell and Paul Warfield comprised the Class of 83 inducted Saturday into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Gillman called it his greatest thrill, while Jurgensen was called the games greatest quarterback. Mitchdl was overcome by emotion, and Bell said he would treasure the moment forever. Warfield said it was a humbling experience.

I have been blessed to have the stamina to coach 50 years, said Gillman, 71, who had 123 winners and gmded six teams in the AFL and National Football League championship games.

This has been fun for over the last 50 years, but now this. This is the greatest thrill, the greatest honor any football person could achieve. he said.

Joe Madro, assistant coach of the Los Angeles Raiders and Gillmans presenter, caUed Gillman the catalyst that gave the old American Football League class and credibility.

Peitaps he is the finest passing coach ever, Madro said of Gillman, the only one of 119 enshrinees whose career bridged the AFL, NFL and the new United States Football League. Gillman was named genera! manager of the Oklahoma Outlaws, which enters the USFL next season as an expansion team.

Mitchell, 48, former running back and wide receiver for the Geveland Browns and Washington Redskins, was overcome by emotion as he gave his acceptance speech.

As you go through life and in this game, you go no where without family, said Mitchell, barely able to finish his

sentence.

He paused for several seconds before regaining his composure in the ceremonies on the shrines front steps, watched by several thousand fans in 9Negree weather.

Mitchell especially praised his wife, saying, I had the glory. She had the strength. Shes been a great partner.

Washington Redskins owner Edward Bennett Williams, who presented both Mitchell and Jurgensen, said of Mitchell, He combined all of the skills like no one ever has.

Mitchell scored 91 career touchdowns and still ranks third in all-time NFL yardage with 14,078 all-purpose yards.

Williams called Jurgensen the greatest NFL quarterback of all time.

Jurgensen still holds the NFL record, with five seasons of 3,000 or more yards. He also threw for 255 touchdowns and had 25 games of 300 passing    rds    in his 18-year pro career. The-

first seven were ^nt w*' 'p    'adelphia Eagles and the last

11 with the Redskins.

The quarterbacks get !i he credit for victories and the blame for losses," said Jurgei.en, 49.The blame may be in the right place, but teams win, individuals dont.

Jurgensen said he felt fortunate to have had the opportunity to play pro football.

Remember, i went to Duke (University), he said. We threw me bail only 53 times my senior season.

Bell, 43, said of his induction: It will be forever treasured. There are so many friends, coaches, teammates, sports writers and other who left imprints. I want all of them to share in this unforgettable experience, he said.

Hank Stram, Bells former coach at Kansas City, called the first Chiefs player to reach the Hall probably the most versatile player Ive been associated with. Without a doubt, he was the greatest outside linebacker ever to play the game.

Warfield, 40, who grew up near Canton, said, It certainly is a humbling feeling, knowing youre a permanent part of professional football. Its an awesome thou^t.

Warfield is the only 1983 inductee elected in his first year of eligibility, five years after retirement. The wide receiver played for the Cleveland Browns, Miami Dolphins and Memphis Southmen of the World Football League.

He was presented by Gene Slaughter, his Warren, Ohio, high school coach who is now an athletic director and coach at Capital University.

He was the greatest athlete I ever have seen, Slaughter said.

Steelers Intercept Saints

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Reserve quarterback Cliff Stoudt threw for two touchdowns and the Pittsburgh Steelers intercepted five passes Saturday in a 27-14 opening National Football League exhibition victory over the New Orleans Saints.

The Steelers, rolling to their sixth straight exhibition triumph over the last three seasons, were in control all the way after scoring 17 points in the opening quarter.

Before the nationally televised game, Sid Gillman, Bobby Mitchell, Bobby Bell, Paul Warfield and Sonny Jurgensen were inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Stoudt, a seven-year veteran from Youngstown State University, filled in for injured regular Terry Bradshaw, who still is recovering from surgery on his

Stretched Out

Pittsburgh Steeler running back Henry Odum stretches for a little extra yardage as he is brought down by New Orleans Saints defender Rodney Lewis (29) in the second quarter of the

rigit elbow in March. The

annual Hall of Fame game Saturday in Canton, Ohio. Odums stretch wasnt enough as he was thrown for a four-yard loss forcing Pittsburgh to punt. (APLaserphoto)

iie seldom-used Stoudt responded with the longest touchdown pass play of his pro career, a 69-yard bomb to wide receiver Greg Hawthorne.

He also connected with rookie Gregg Garrity on an 18-yard play for another opening-quarter touchdown. Gary

Anderson had opened the Pittsburgh scoring with a 34-yard field goal in the first six minutes:

Stoudt connected on ei^t of 14 passes for 174 yards.

Quarterback Kenny Stabler apppeared only briefly for New Orleans, play ng the first three series. The left-handed veteran threw nine times, completing six of those passes for 59 yards.

The Steelers secondary feasted on his replacement, Dave Wilson. They intercepted the second-year player from Illinois four straight times and picked one of Guido Merkens throws off.

New Orleans scored twice in the last quarter. Jimmy Rogers plunged 1 yard with 13:10 remaining to cap a 78-yard Saints surge, and Merkens*hooked up

NewOrleans  ..........0 0 0 1414

Pittsburjb  .........17 0 3 7-27

PittFG Anderson 34 PiU-HawUrame 69 pass from Stoudt (Anderson kick)

PittGarrity 18 pass from Stoudt (Anderson kick)

PittFG Anderson 20 NO-J. Rogers 1 run (Andersen kick) Pitt-Makme 1 run (Anderson kick) NO-Dumas 38 pass from Merkens (Andersen kick)

A-23,909

with Marvin Dumas on a 38-yard scoring strike with 1:18 to play.

Quarterback Mark Malone wrapped up the Pittsburgh scoring with a 1-yard keeper with 2:10 left.

First downs^ Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Sacks by Passes Punts

Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Time of Possession

NO    Pitt

18    20

24-73    48-134

234    196

45    91

3    3

19-34-5    12-19-0

3-46    3^4

1-1    1-0

7-38    7-55

5:17    33:43

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS RUSHING-New Orleans, J. Rogers 9-22, Austin 3-21, G. Rogers 5-10, T. Taylor 1-8, W. Wilson 3-6, Merkens 1-4. Pittsburgh, Winters

8-35, T. Harris 12-33, Stoudt 2-27, Odom 11-25, Pollard 5-24, Abercrombie 3-5, F. Harris 3-3, Malone 4-2.

PASSING-New Orleans, D. Wilson

9-154-146, Merkens 4-10-1-73, Stabler 6-0-S6. Pittsburg, Stoudt 8-14-0-174, Malone 4-5-0-46.

RECEIVING-New Orleans, Austin 4-44, Brenner 3-39, Goodlow 3-37, J. Rogers 2-29,

Dumas 1-38, Hardy 1-35, Young 1-4, Galan 1-12, W. Wilson 1-8, Tyler 1-7, Groth 1-5. Pittsburgh. Hawthorne 2-78, Sweeney 2-32, Skansi 2-23, Winters 1-29, Garrity 1-17, Dunaway 1-15, Cunningham 1-12, T. Harris 1-8, Odom 1-6.

FIELD GOALS MISSED-New Orleans, Andersen 45. Pittsburgh, Anderson 30.





B-2-Tke Daily BeOedar, (^enviUe, N.C

Track Trouble

The wrecked race car of Jim Hurlbert sits on the track with the rear portion of hte vehicle tom off after an accident during the ARCA 200 race Saturday at the Alabama

International Motor Speedway. Hurlbert was not seriously injured. The car passing in the background is driven by Red Farmer. (AP Laserpboto)

Davey Allison Finishes First in ARCA 200 Race

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) -Drivers from Hueytown, Ala., dominated the ARCA 200 stock car race Saturday with Davey Allison taking first place and Red Farmer second.

Allison, who won his second consecutive ARCA event at the Alabama International Motor Speeway, is the 22-year-old son of Bobby Allison, the unofficial leader of the Alabama Gang of stock car drivers.

Allison, driving a Pontiac, averaged 142.50 miles per

hour in the 200-mile race for late-model stock cars. He collected $5,200 after he wound up several car lengUis in front of Farmer and third-place finisher Duane Pierson, of Villa Park, m.

The ARCA 200 is a preliminary to the Talladega 500 Grand National race Sunday. Bobby Allison is starting 24th in the 40-car field and he said, We sure would like to make this an Allison doubleheader. Well be trying.

The ARCA 200 had eight

to

Sampson Tabbed Top ACC Athlete

By TOM TREMAN Jr. have a much better chance AP Sports Writer take advantage of his counter, PINEHURST, N.C. - Uni- which is his quickness. versity of Vii^ia basketball In four seasons, the center Ralph Sampson, one of Sampson-led Cavaliers won or the most dominating players shared the ACC regular-in the modem era, was named season championship. They the recipient Saturday of the racked up a 112-23 record, Anthony J. McKevlin Award including a National Invitation as Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament crown, as well as athlete of the year.    an NCAA East Regional title.

Despite being named na- As for career statistics, tional player of the year three Sampson is Virginias third times in his career, it was the leading scorer with ^ 2,228 first time the Harrisonburg, points, five point behind Buzzy Va., native had captured the Wilkinson and slightly less conferences athlete of the than 100 points behind all-time year honor.    leader Jeff Lamp. Sampson is

Previous winners during the leader in rebounds with Sampsons career were North 1,511, games played at 132, most field goals with 899 and best field goal percentage at .568.

He holds season records for most games with 34 and most rebounds with 386. Sampson is best in blocked shots with 157 and field goal percentage at .604.

Sampson is the first player since Houstons Elvin Hayes to score more than 2,000 points and grab more than 1,500 rebounds.

At University Hall, Sampson and his teammates took 34 consecutive home victories and compiled a 50-2 mark in Charlottesville.

He is the fifth Cavalier athlete to have his jersey retired. The others are Lamp,, Wilkinson, Barry Parkhill and Wally Walker.

Sampson is the third Virginia athlete to capture the McKevlin Award. The others were Frank Quayle for football in 1969 and Barry Parkhill for basketball in 1972.

lead changes among six drivers, but the younger Allison went out front on the 34th lap and stayed there for the remainder of the 76-lap race.

Davey Allison called the contest much closer than his previous win at Talladega in May.

1 had to worry about Red Farmer. You can nevar count him out, Allison said.

I just tried to stay out of trouble all day, but I did have a couple of dose calls in the back stretch, he said. My dad helped me out by keying my attention up.

The car handled wdl all day. It drafted well and it ran out front well, be said.

Billie Harvey of R(ne, Ga., finished fourth and Bob Brevak, of Ashland, Wis., took fifth.

Rounding out the top 10 were Baughn Brune, of Houston, Texas; Stuart Huffman, of Newton, N.C.; Slick Johnson, of Florence, S.C.; Bill Venturini, of Chicago; and Bob Dotter, of Chicago.

Here are Ibe final results of Saturday's ARCA 200 late model stock car race at (lie Alabama International Motor Speedway.

1. Davm Alliaon. Pontiac. 761^ lO.SO.

2. RedFarmerBulck,71 laps.

3. Duane Pierson, Buick, 76 W

4. BUIIe Harvey. OMsmoblle^lapa.

5. Bob Brevak. OMamobile. 7S laps.

6. Bauchn Brune, BuIck, 74 laps.

7. Stuart Huffmak PnUac.W^ia.

8. Slick JoiimoaTBuick. 74 law.

Carolinas James Worthy, who captured the award in 1982, and North Carolina State distance runner Julie Shea, who won the award the two previous years.

The award was presented during the opening day of the ACC football coaches meeting at Foxfire Village. It is the first time an athlete has formally received the honor given by the Atlantic Coast Sportswriters Association.

Sampson received 51 votes of the 118 ballots cast. North Carolina swimmer Sue Walsh was second with 24, while Clemsons two-^rt performer Mike Eppley was third with 13. N.C. State distance 'runner Betty Springs was fourth with 12.

Sampson was not on hand to receive the award. Cavalier coach Terry Holland said the 7-foot-4 Sampson was at home with his parents and also was looking for an agent to represent him in contract negotiations with the Houston Rockets of the National Basketball Association.

I think the one thing Ralph Sampson has stood for in college basketball is that of a true student athjete, Holland said. I think hes done a great job in representing our conference.

Sampson resisted tempting offers to cut short his full four years of schooling for a career in the NBA and Holland paid him a compliment for staying at Virginia.

I dont think any athlete has ever performed under quite the spotlight that he has for so many years and performed as admirably in so many different areas, Holland said.

As for his professional career, Holland said Sampson will have to work on iq^r-body strength despite weiring 230 pounds.

1 think in the pros hell

9. Bill Venturtnl, Poatiac, 73 U,

10. Bob Dottea, Oldanobiie.

11. Mark GUwoa. Poollac. 71 la|w.

12. BIU Scott, Buick, 71 laps.

13. Howard Roae, Pontiac, 69 Iw.

14. L.T Wechtd, Oldsmoblle, fflapa.

15. Lm Raymond, Buick. 64 um.

16. Jim Blesad, (^rolet, 641^.

17. Dale Flachlein. Dode. 63 laps.

18 Ferrell Harris. OMsmobilertl laps.

19 Tracy Reer* "    ------

20. Scott Stova

21. David Com _    _

22. Luther Burton, Otdsmoblle, 391^.

23. Richard Hanmton, Ford, 39 lifw.

24. Frank BlrTfflds, 34'

25. Kirk Bijant, Buick. I. ^

26. Wayne iWsan. Buick, t laps

f Reed, Bukk, SO laps.

Stovaii. OMsmobile, 42 laps.

I Conway, CHdsmobue, 40lj^.

27 Mark Stahl. Ford, 32 lm.

28 Rkk Roland, Pontiac.ITlaps.

29 Jim Hurlbert. Buick, 23 l^is.

30 Bobby Jacks. Olds. IS la^ 31. J^purchUI. Buick, maps.

32 Mike Potter. Pontiac. 12 Iws

33 JackCornetLOtdsmobUeTlii 34. Marvin Smith,

Marvin Smith, OMl 0 laps. 35. PhU BarkdoU, Buick, 01m 36 Don Satterfield. Buick, Ohps.

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Davs' 'Dream Game' Blanks Dodgers

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rookie left-hinder Mirk Diviipttched hli drum gime Siturdiy, blinking the Loi Angelei Dodgen 8-0 on leven hlti for hli fuit mijor-leigue me end flnt vic-

'UiOiint.

]uit teemed like It wu meint to be my diy, Mid the S-yeirold Divii, who becime the flnt Glint

Sto ibut out the lince Ed Hillckl did .18.m "When I thought of pliytng mijor leisue biiebill, I ilwiyi envulooed being on the ulinti end going out to pitch igilnit the Dodgen," Mid Divli, who grew up In neuty Livermore. "It wu ]uit I thrill to pitch igilnit guyi you ilwiyi uied to witch/

Divli, 1-3, wu itiked to i 7-0 iMd ifter thru Inningi, Bob Brenlv'i three-run homer highlighted i fouMiin third Inning u the Olinti bombed itirter Jerry Reuu, 8-10, the flnt of four Dodger pltchen. Divti helped himielf with two ilnglei ind icored in elgbth-lnning run on Chill

Ing n Divii'RBI tingle, iin'rii

"Thli wun't my beet ituff, but 1 thouAt we hid iwetome defenM tcdiy," uld Divlt the pitcher. *'i pitched well enough to win before. Theyn going to hive clou gimu. YOU win ume end you lou ume. I h'ippen to be on the ihort end of the itick i lot of tlmu."

"He'i certilnly itirting to piy ume dlvldendt," Mid Glint Miniger Frink Robtnun, who kept Divli In the rotitlon duplte ume eirly pitching problemi. "The miln thing It we icored nmi for him eirly, end we hiven't bun doing thit."

Dodger Miniger Tom Liurdi, whou club hu loit thru in I row ind lix of eight to the Glinti thli uuon, Mid

Lota Throw

Bttl Madlock of tbg Pittsburgh Piratas slides home u New York Mats catcher Ron Hodges awaits the throw from rightfielder Darryl

Strawberry

fifth Inning of

motlvite ui, but we hive to get the job done."

The IntenM rlvilry between the teimi hu recently twitched In fivor of the Giinti, who hive won 12 of the lut 16 mwttngi over the put two yeiri.

The Glinti jumped on ReuM for thru nuu In the flnt. Jeff Leonird drove in one with i tingle ind Joel Youngbloodi double drove In two more to mike It sm.

Chill Divli led off the . ...    .    I bunt

I itorm right ww. we ve^^t m infield hit. Youngblood drove In hit third run of the me with I tingle to left, end >n Brenly cruhed in 0-2 Itch over the left-field fence

bOe ANOIJ

to juit get going In the right direction. If you were ilttmg In thit chilr, thit'i ill you could uy.",

"Tommy cin only do u much," Mid Dodger first buemin Mike Mirinill. "He cm yell ill he winti ind try to

for hli ilxth homer of the yeir to mike It 7-0.

Chill Divli drove the flnil run In the eighth with i tingle.

Richards Sefs Meet pitched Into the u9rd ind give

up tlx mmed runt In two offlclillnnlnp.

/-

Pole Vault Mark

Saturdays game. Madlock scored on a bit by Jason Thompson, and the Pirates went on to score five unearned runs In the inning. (AP Laserphoto)

IAN nuN Pittsburgh.........6

New York.........3

NEW YORK (AP) - The Plttiburgh Piritu miy hive cipltillxed on i three-run fielding error by Dirryl Striwberry to overtike the New York Meti 6-3 Siturdiy but It fir u Chuck Tinner wu conemed, pitching won thegime.

Piritu itirter Rick Rhoden MO-1 luffered throu^ i ihiky flnt f}*-' Inning In which he give up I three runt on only two hlti. rrwi'; But Rhoden, who wu forced 'in u 10 to to>ve the gime In the fifth Inning ifter getting hit In the 9 I left knee by i line drive tingle i I by Mookle 'WUion, combined * with Rod Scui^, 4-7, end Minny Sirmlento'i third uve, to bold the Meti to one hit the rut of the contest.

"Thit error wu the flnt breik we've gotten in our hot itreik," Mid Tanner, whoM club li now 20-5 lince the All-Stir breik. The Buci hive won 14 of their lut 15 roid contuti.

"Pitching, power ind de

fense hive done thit for ut," continued the Piritu minii er, whou turn wu In fi! plsce in the Nitionil League Eut, 8>i4 garnet out on June 10.

"Rick wu in control until he it hurt. Scurry did what he ad to do and Sarmiento got thou lut nine outt. What more could I aik for? You have to have good pitching above everything elu to win.*^ The Meta were held to juit thru hits In a game delayed 1 hour, Hmlnutubyrain.

Ed Lynch, 7-5, the lour, left the game after Strawberry'i error that enabled the Plratu to take a 5-3 lead.

Mike Easier reached flnt on Brian GUu' fielding error with one out. Tony Pena tingled to left md Dale Berra tingled to deep short to load the baui. Rhoden tingled to left, scoring Euler and Berra before Marvell Wynne followed with a tingle to right field reloading the baiu.

After Johnny Ray fouled out, Strawbei BUI Madlock'i Ing Berra, Rhoden and Wynne to More. Carlos Diaz replaced Lynch and yielded a tln^e by Jaion Thompson that icored Madlock witn the final run of the Inning.

New York jumped to a 3^) lead In the flnt Inning. WUion tingled to center, Huble Brooki walked, Keith Hemandu lignled to right to More WUion and Hemmdu stole second and Penai throw

went into left field. That allowed Brooki to icore and Hemandu to go to third. Strawberry's lacrlflce fly Mored Hemandu.

Chicago...........4

Phlladtlphia 3

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -> Ron Cey'i one-out double In the top of the ninth icored BUI Buckner with the winning run u the Chicago Cubt nipped the PhUadelphii PhUllu 4-3 in the flnt game of a twi-nlght doubleheider.

BUI Campbell ngittered hit third win againit tlx lotus. Lu Smith pitched-out of a baui loaded jam In the ninth to earn hit isth uve. WUlle Hernandez, 4-4, the fifth PhUadelphia pitcher wat the lour.

Hernandez retired Ryne Sandberg to open the ninth but Buckner then grouned a tingle to right field, hU third hit of the evening. Cey then cracked 13-2 pitch down the left field line for hit lixth game-

ng

The Cubt icored two nmi In the flnt inning, knocking out Philllei starter Marty Byitrom. Mel HaU opened w th a walk, itole ucond and went to third on Sandberg's Infield hit to second. HaU then Mored u Ju Morgan thnw wide to flnt.

Smdberg stole ucond, went to third on catcher Ozzle VlrgU'i bad throw and icored on Buckner'i RBI tingle.

The Cubt made It 3^ In the of the fourth when HaU tingled home Jay Johnstone, who doubled.

The PhUllu cloud to 3-2 In the bottom of the inning. Morgan and Mike Schmiot walked but Ju Lefebvre hit Into a double play. Von Hayu then grounded a tingle off Cubt itarter Chuck Ralney'i

gove at Morgm icored. After ayu stole second, VlrgU lined m RBI double to left.

The PhUllu tied it In the fifth. Greg Grou opened with a tingle and moved to third on

Pete Roui hit to right field. Craig Leffertt rellevM Rainey and Mike Schmidt tingled to right, scoring Grou.

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Sava Up To *400** OnALLIS-CHALMERS UWN MOWERS

MmemiDrjiwiii

DURHAM. N.C. (AP) -Brandon Rlchirdi, mn of two-time Olympic champion Bob RIchirdi, set a new mut record Saturday to win the Intermediate meni pole vault In the National Junior Olympic Track and Field Chimplonihlpi.

Rlchirdi of Waco, Tuu, hidijumpofl8fut,81nchu, improving the previous mut mirk of 15-1V4 ut in 1982 by Prestoo Schmidt of Iowa.

Rlchirdi uld he wants to follow In the footitepi of hit father, a nine-time American champion who won the two Olympic gold medili In the pole vault m 1952 and 1958.

The elder Richards stUl competu In the pole vault and other events In mister's (over 40) track muts. Mid his son.

"Hes learning how to jump with I flbergliH pole," uld Brandon Richards.

Junior Olympic events were Mheduled through Sunday at Duke University's WiUice Wade Stadium with com^-

Rote Physicoli

Physlcili for itudenti planning to try out for fall sports It Rou High School wUl be given tonl^t at 6:30 at the high Mhoolgymnulum.

tion among intermediate and young men and women.

In other events Saturday, Rick Nojl of SeatUe ut a new meet record In the Intermediate mens high jump with a leap of 6-10^. Nojls jump bettered the previous record of 6-9^ set In 1982 by Mark TrujUlo of Nevada.

Lynn Jimu of Navasota, Texas, also Nt a meet ruord In the Intermediate men's long jump with a leap of 74-1, surpaulng the previous record of ^10^ Mt by Andre Love of Illinois In 1982.

The Munchln Track Club of Orange Park, Fla., set a new meet record in the young womens 800-meter relay In a time of 9:03.42, beating the old record of 9:25.00 ut by the Royal Knights in 1982.

New meet records were set In the young men's and young women's 3,000-meter walks. Meg Mangan of Pittsburg won the womens race with a time of 16:01.11, eclipsing the mark of 16:33.72 set by Aulson Cole of Missouri In 1982. Tony Engelhadt of Seattle set a record of 13:57.24 In the men's division to break the old mark of 14:36.76 Nt In 1981 by New York's Edward KiMh.

Carla McLaughlin of Durham ran 12.02 to win her heat of the 100 meters and 24.75 to capture her hut of the 200 to advance to the finals.

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Brett, Reunited With Bat, Goes 0-3

DETROIT (AP) ^ Kansas City sluggw George Brett got his famous pine-tar bat back Saturday, but it didnt do him much good.

He went O-for-3 as the Detroit Tigers beat the Royals 4-1

It felt good to have it, said Brett, who fouled out to the catcher, hit a pair of routine flys to right fteld and drew an intentkmal walk. Ill continue to use it until I break it. Then, Ill decide what to do with it. I know the Hall of Fame wants it, but I just havent had time to decide.

The bat, centerpiece of one of baseballs liveliest controversies, was delivered to Tiger Stadium about two hours before the start of of the 2:15 p.m. EDT game, according to Nancy Beliger, a__

service agent at Emery Air Freights Detroit-area office,

The bat was shipped to Detroit in a cardboard tube Friday, after spending the week in the New York City office of the American Teague.

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It got a little special han-(fling and some tender loving care, Beliger said.    *

The bat, an ordinary-looking Louisville Slugger, is the one

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Brett used to hit the controversial two-nm home nm at Yankee Stadium last Sunday - and then was called out because the bat had too much pine tar on it.

The Royals protested and American League President Lee MacPbad reinstated the homer even thou^ the bat bad too much pine tar on it. Baseball rules say the coating cannot exceed 18 inches.

The ruling turned a 4-3 Yankee victory into a suspended contest with the Royals leading 5^ in the ninth ining.

Toronto...........6

Clovolond.........S

TORONTO (AP) - Pinch-hitter Ernie Whitt sin^ ig) the middle with the bases loaded in the to give the Toronto Blue Jays a 6-5 victory over the Clevdand Indians

To The Ground

Milwaukees Jim Gantner hits the dirt to avoid a John Tudor pitch while catcher Rich Gedman hols

the ball during second inning action at Fenway Park in Boston Saturday. Boston defeated the Brewers 10-5. (AP Laserphoto)

Australia II Qualifies For Semis; Letter Says Measurements False

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Australia II became the first Americas Cup yacht to qualify for the August challenger semifinals when it sailed to victory Saturday by three minutes, 50 seconds over Australian yacht Challenge 12.

The victory, which gave Alan Bonds boat 15.88 points in the complicated foreign standings, made it impossible for Challenge 12 to pass Australia II. Challenge 12, fourth in the standings at 9.60, could finish with no more than 15.60 should it win its last six races.

Australia II, now 32-3 for the summer, would finish no lower than the cutoff qusdi-fying position of fourth with its current point total even if if were to lose its last seven.

But the boats eligibility to compete as 12-meter yacht, a formula that combines sail area, displacement, draft and other factors, was challenged Saturday by the New Ywk Yacht Club, holder of the Cup. A three-page letter from Robert W. McCullough, chairman of the Americas Cup Committee, to measurer Mark Vinbury, contends the boat was measured Incorrectly.

A copy obtained by The Associated Press says the keel should have been measured at a 90-degree angle to the hull

and friHn the bull at about 80 degrees to the far edges (rf fins, which protrude from the toe of the keel. Thus, the letter contends that the boat has an overdraft (rf 67 millimeters, which under the measuring formula actually computes to 12.476 meters.

Australia Ils designer Ben Lexcen said the y^t was measured twice in Australia and once in the United States by the Internationa] Ya(t Racing Union. He said the letter was an attempt by American intoests to halt the boats progress, and tmmed it sour grapes.

J(rfm Bertrand skippered Australia 11 to a 29'SecoQd advantage at the start, stretched it 1:08 at the first weather mark and steadily drew away in southwesterly winds of 16-19 knots on the 24.3-mile triangular course in Rhode Island Sound. Challenge 12, with John Savage at the helm, fell to 23-13.

Azzurra of Italy moved from fifth place to second in the standings with a 1:23 victory over Canada 1 in the only other race of the day. France 3, all but eliminated from contention, won by forfeit when the Aussie yacht Advance was unable to race because it could not replace a broken mast in time for Sat

urdays competition.

The Italian entry, with Cino Ricci at the helm, overcame to a nine-second Canadian lead to go ahead by 20 after the second reach. Azzurra made it 41 after the second weather leg and led by 40 after the downwind nm.

Azzurra, 19-16, now has 10.20 points. Canada 1, 17-18, is third with 9.72. Azzurra displayed a protest flag during the race, but withdrew it after the victory.

France 3, 8-27, could stave off diminatkm only by winn-its last sevm races pro-' two of three boats -Canada 1, Challenge 12, or idle Victory 83 of Britain - oc-ctq>ying the third through fifth |X)sitions in the sevm-boat iekl, lost the rest of theirs. Victory 83, 21-14, is fourth with at 9.44

The victory boosted France 3s total to 3.12. Only Advance, 2-33 for 0.80, has officially been eliminated.

In Sundays races, Canada 1 battles Victory 83, Advance sails against Azzurra and France 3 meets Australia II. Challenge 12 has the day off.

Prospective American defenders Liberty, Defender and Courageous, have completed the July observation trials. They resume sailing Aug. 16.

Liberty stands 20-10 for the summer, followed by Defender at 13-12 and Courageous at 8-19. There are no points awarded for the American boats, whose advancement toward a September showdown with a foreign challenger is determined solely by the New York Yacht Qubs sdection conunittee.

Sabffday.

Reliever Bud Anderson, b-2, the fourth Cleveland pitcher, walked Damaso Garcia to start (be 13th. Lloyd Moseby laid down a sacrifice txmt but Andoson threw the ball past first base with Garcia advancing to third and Moseby to seomd on the error. Anderson struck out Ranee MuUiniks and intentiooally walked Qiff J(rfinson to load the bases before Whitts hit.

Toronto reliever Joey McLau^ilin, 4-2, came (m in the 11th with one ( and (e out and allowed only one hit to earn the win.

Dan Spillnv came on at the start of the ninth to relieve Neal Heaton with the Indiai ahead 5-3 But with one (xft, Sflto* walked Garcia and consecutive singles by Lloyd Moseby, pinch^iitter Jorge Orta and Johnson tied the score. Jamie Easterly came on and pitched Clevdand out of a bases-loaded oneeut jam.

Heaton went eight innings, walking two and stri^ out six white dvingup 11 hits.

The Inmans took a 1-0 lead off starter Dave Stieb in the top of the first when a sacrifice fly by Broderick Perkins scored Hargrove, led off with a double.

The Jays tied the game in their half of the first when Perkins dro[^ Barry Bon-nell's two-out fly to right, allowing Garth lorg, who had doubled, to score.

Geveland exploded for four off Stieb in the second on a sin^e by Julk) Franco, a double by Ron Hassey, singes by Mike Hargrove, Toby Harrah and Perkins and an error by Moseby.

Toronto got one run back in the bottom of the inning when Alfredo Griffins single scored Jesse Barfield. A run-scoring double by Barfidd in the sixth made it 5-3.

CLEVELAND TORONTO

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two-nm double and a soto homer as the Boston Red Sox overcame a 3^ deficit and unded the Milwaukee rewm^ 10-5 Saturday. Yastrzmnskis fifth innii

Mast snapped a 3-3 tie made him the 17th major-teague player to hit 450 careo* home runs. It also was the 43-year-old veterans 47th bomm* afta* his 40th birthday, breaking a tie with Stan Musial for the major-teague rec(Ntl.

Paul Molitor smashed the first pitch by John Tudfu', 90, for his 10th iMMDe run (rf the year and the Brewers added two runs in the third on a sinde by Molit(V, a angle and sto^ base by Charlie Mo(MPe and a two-run double by Ted Simmons.

The Red Sox cut the lead to 3-2 in the third against Don Sutton, 7-7. Wade Boggs doubled and Jim Rice was bit by a pitch. Tony Armas then grounded to tMrd baseman Molitor, stepped on the bag for a force out M threw

wildly to first, altowing Rke to reach third and Armas second. Evans then doirf^ both runners home.

Dave SUqrfetons douMe and Jerry Remys run scortog sii^e tied the game m the fourth before the Red Sox went abeiKi for good in the

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next inning when Yastrzemski foUowed Armas douMe and Evans single with his iKMner of the season just inside toe ri^t-field foid pole.

Milwaukee rallied for two nms in the seventh on nngfas by Molitor, Moore, CecU Co(^ and Simmons to make toe score 6-5.

But Boston iced the game in toe seventh when Evans ted off with his 20th homer and Hoffman hammered his second home nm after a sin^ Yastrzemski and a double Rteh Gedman.

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Lloyd, Shrver Post Victories

Australia's Keel Questioned

SYDNEY, Australia (AP)-Chris Evert Lloyd aod Pam Sbriver scored singles victories Saturday night to gain the final of the (250,000 McDonalds womois indoor tpnnis tournament, a round-robinevoit.

Lloyd beat Australias Wendy Turnbull M, 6-4 and 9u1ver defeated Britains Sue Barker 6-1, 6-1 in the third round and will play Sunday for tbe $100,000 first prize.

In other matches, Andrea Jaegff downed Leslie Allen 7-5, 64) and West Germanys Sylvia Hanika forfeited to Lisa Bonder afta* trailing 7-6 in tbe ; becauaeof an infected

er and TumbuU will tfor

a 4-1 advan-ta^ over Lloyd in the first se^ but tbeiAmerican, playing her consisnt baseline game, bounced back to win tbe first set. I

had my chances, but batically j let her off the iKx*, saM TundKill. 1 tried different tactics playing her toni^t ami attempted to move Chris around. At least 1 will know how to play Chris the next time we meet in a tournament.

Jaegei, third-ranked in the world, and Allen matched service in the first set before Jaeger' finally broke Allens serve if tbe llth game to lead 6-5. I Jae^r then held service in the final game and won the firsts^, in 30 minutes.

I Mias determined 1 wasnt going m go out there and have anptter match like last ni^ts, said Ja^er, referring ;to her earlier loss to 'Shniler. Although 1 was tiredj 1 kept talking to myself in a])id to get my concentration goii^, but even if 1 hadnt Mvinning 1 would still hav^enjoyed myself.

had big problems cially in the service dent tonight, said Allen.

It was the first victory in the tourney for the 17-year-old Bonder, of Ann Arbor, Mich.

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -The legitimacy of Australia II, which has been drubbing prospective Americas Cun

C

r\

Whtn you play someone like Jaeter, you have to work very ham and I was just a little too

IfeniU, who scored a major

tad two teeu/ removed shprtly before leaving West Gprmaiy for here.

Conpdion Open

ItlrdHonnd icon SaUinUv in the M2S.OOO Canadian Open Goir Cham-pionhipon the 7J0-yard. par-71 Glen AbOey Dotf Club cmrse (a-denotes ama-teiv);

Ralph Undrum ToaPudzer JotaCoik BnioeLetzke Frank CMuer Johmy Miller

Missing Her Par

Jan Stephenson reacts after missing a putt for par on the 15th green at Cedar Ridge Country Club in Tulsa, Okla., during the third round of the U.S. Womens Open Saturday. Stephenson shot an even par round of 71 to take the lead in the tournament after 54 holes. (AP Laserphoto)

Stephenson...

us play had been suspended, Bradley said. It broke my concentration. Then I missed my putt for bogey and I bogeyed the final hole.

5-7V7-207

71-66-70- 208 66-71-70-20

72-67 70-209

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Mark I

7066-74-210

72-7366-211

72-7168-211

7368-70-211

7071-70-211

736068-212

69-72-71-212

66-74-72-212

68-71-73-212

737266-213

71-72-70-213

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J.C.Snea Pal McGowan EdSneed Bob Shearer Gary Player I Jim^elford f Jim Simona DeWittV^ver MarkCakaveccW Andy Bean T Dave Stockton KermitZarley BUI Sander    (

Bob Boyd Gary Halit

(Continued From PageB-1) that will kill you every time, she said.

Meisterlin, who has never won an LPGA event, double-bogeyed the 16th hole but birdied the 17th and made a saving par putt on the final green to tie Sheehan.

Im happy Im still in contention and Ive still got a chance, Meisterlin said.

Temperatures aroumi 100 degrees, 63 percent humdity and a late afternoon thundershower that delayed play 10 minutes turned the course into a stamina-sapping sauna.

Stephenson, a 32-year-old Australian who now lives in Fort Worth, Texas, went out in even par 36 then matched par n^i-67^210 35 on the homecoming nine.

She knocked in a 20-foot birdie putt on the 14th hole but gave it back to par with a 3-putt 15th green. It was her second 3-putt of the day.

Stephenson bunkered her tee shot on the rugged 400-yard par 4 No. 17, drilled her ra-^^23 second shot wide of the green 7L73=2l3 and wedged to within 15-feet.

She then slipped the dovnihill Itm-Iu putt into the side of the hole for a saving par on perhaps 7^7569-214 the toughest hole on the course.

7363^214 Pat Bradley, the 1981 Open champion, shot a record-tying 72 7469-215 5-under-par 31 on the front n*ne, which included an ace, 7jwi-2i5 but she found grief on the 72 7373-215 homecomig nine.

^7^216 Bradley knocked a 5-iron in the hole on the 145-yard par 3 7372 71-216 No. 6 as she tied Judy Bell s 7374-n-26 tl-S. Open nine-hole record. Bell set the record in 1964 at San Diego.

^Ti^-!!? However, Bradley stumbled 737372-2n    ^ 5-ovcr-par 40 on the

7371-73-217 back nine, including a 3-puii

737371-218 tfom 15 fcct on the fial gTcen. Her even par round of 71 put

7370-73-218 her at 6-over 219 along with Lauren Howe, who had a

To-Ti-TT^aS 5-over-par 76.

737372-219    Bradley was upset by some-

7I-73M-29    ia the ABC tower who

73;^75ji9 shouted play has been sus-

737373-220 pended just as die tried to make a 5-footer for par on the

Ti^T^TsI l^Hi green.

737375-222 lie slren had sounded for suspension of play but we 737378=^    ^    aat    the    hole.

737160-226 We didn't need anyone telling

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challengers all summer, was questioned Saturday by tbe New York Yacht Qub, holder ofthecim.

The boats eligibility to compete as l2-m^r ya^t, a fbrmida that combines, sail area, displacemoit, draft and other factors, was the subject of a private letter from Robert W. McCullough, chairman of tbe Americas Cup Committee, to measurer Mark Vin-bury.

The Associated Press obtained a copy of the three-page letter in Mvhich McCullough contends the boat was measured incorrectly. It says the keel should have been measured at a 90-degree an^e to the bull and from tbe hull at about 80 degrees to the far

edges of fins which protrude from the toe of the keel.

Thus, the letter contends that the boat has an overdraft of 67 milimeters, which under tbe measuring formula actually computes to 12.476 meters.

Australia IIs designer, Ben Lexcen, said the yacht was measured ttvice )n Australia and once in the United States by the International Yacht Racing Union. He said tbe letter was an attempt by American interests to halt tbe boats progress, and termed it sour grapes.

McCullough could not be reached for comment, and other offcials declined ctmi-ment other than to admit the existence of tbe letter.

They do this every Americas Cup, said Lexcen. And they wouldnt be doling it if we werent beating everybody.

Thm years ago a challenge was raised concerning tbe legitimacy of a bending mast Lexcen designed for Australia, Mvhich won one of four races for syndicate chief Alan Boim] in the Cup finals against American winner Freedom. The boat passed the test then, and Lexcen says it will now despite the NYYCs effort.

The letter says measurers did not take into consideration Rule 27 of the Rating Rules and Measurement Instructions which covers any peculiarity of design. McCullough

also added that Rule 6 would call for another measurement to cover "movable appen-da^.

There can be no question but what Australia IIs keel appendages are a peculiarity, McCullough wrote. Finally, conclusive proof of the peculiarity is afforded by the fact that the owners of Australia II have gone to unusual, albeit questionable lengths to maintain complete secrecy as to the exact character and dimensions of the appendages (fins).

If they thought it was peculiar they should have brought it up before, said Lexcen, who insisted that the boat, with a 32-3 record and far ahead in the foreign stan

dings, will be acceptable if it is remeasured.

The keel has been the subject of controversy all summer. Last weekend a Canadian boat driver was apprehended swimming with an underwater camera near the hidden keel.

A source in the Australian camp said he had expected some sort of challenge from the Americans. Bond himself said in an article published earlier this year that the Committee always keeps changing the bloody rules.

There were 110 balks by American League pitchers in 1982. It was a major league record.

invHeJ h aitenJ

Third-round scores Saturday in the 31st U S. Women's Open Championship at the e^yard, par 71 Cedar Ridge Country Club Course (a-denotes amateur i Jan Stephenson    72-7371 -216

DebbleMeisterl n    72-7373-218

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B^Tbe DaUy Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July SI. 1983Four Receive Baseball's Highest Honor

COOPERSTOWN, N Y, (AP) - Twice before, Brooks Robinson has been here.

I played in two Hall of Fame games, he recalled, but we just flew in and flew out both times

This weekend, the man many consider the greatest third baseman of all time returns to this baseball shrine, this time to stay.

Robinson will receive the highest tribute to his 23-year

career with the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday when he, along with Juan Marichal, Walter Alston and George Kell, is inducted into the Hall of Fame.

Its really hard to com

prehend, Robinson said. Im just going to let it all sink in.

Ive talked to some players who have bera through it before, and they all say its an unbelievable feeling. Being

End Of A String

San Diego Padre Steve Garvey is tagged out at home plate by Atlanta Brave pitcher Pasqual Perez while ti^ng to score ona wild pitch in the first inning of their game Friday night in San Diego. Garvey jammed his left hand on Perez' foot

and was forced to leave the game to seek treatment for a dislocated thumb. He missed the second game of the doubleheader, ending his National League record streak of 1,207 consecutive games played. (AP Laserphoto)

No Letdown For Pirates

By The Associated Press The streak is over for Steve Garvey. The Pittsburgh Pirates, however, show no signs of letdown.

Garveys National League record consecutive game-playing streak came to an end Friday night when the San Diego first baseman dislocated a thumb in a first-inning slide in the Padres 2-1 loss to Atlanta in the opener of a doublebeader. The Padres won the nightcap, 6-5 in 12 innings.

Once 1 slid and was tagged, I felt the thumb go numb, Garvey said after he was treated at the Scripps Clinic In San Diego. I knew there was something wrong Garvey, whose 1,207 straight games ranked third on the all-time consecutive game-playing list behind Lou Gehrig with 2,130 and Everett Scott with 1,307, said, The injury

Net Event In Farmville

FARMVILLE - The Farmville Recreation Department will ^nsor the 1983 Farmville Tobacco Days Tennis Tournament August 8-13.

Carroll Griffin is coordinator for the tournament.

The deadline for entries is August 4 at 5 p.m. Events will be held in girls singles, ages 15-17; womens, 18 and over singles; womens doubles; boys singles, ages 15-17; mens 18 to 39 singes; mens 40 and over singles; mens doubles; and mixed doubles.

Entry fees are $3 per person per event for those living inside the Farmville city limits, and $4 for those living outside. Each participant or team (doubles) will also provide a new can of balls.

For further information contact Griffin at 753-4741 be-tween9a.m.and5p.m.

was a disappointment. Meanwhile, the Pirates continued as the majors hottest team by beating the New York Mets 2-1 for their 19th victory in 24 games since the All-Star break.

In other NL action, it was Philadelphia 3, Chicago 2; Houston 4, Cincinnati 1, Montreal 7, St. Louis 2 and San Francisco 5, Los Angeles 2.

Garvey will reportedly be lost to the Padres for three weeks.

Alan Wiggins was on first base via a forceout grounder when Garvey moved the runner to second base with an infield single.

One out later, Ruppert Jones singled in Wig^ with Garvey going to third. Pasqual Perez then uncorked a pitch that got past catcher Bruce Benedict and Garvey broke for the plate. He was out easily as he made a feet-first slide to try to beat the throw from Benedict to Perez, who was covering the plate.

Jerry Royster doubled home the tie-breaking run with two outs in the ei^th inning for the Braves.

The Padres won the second game when Kurt Bevacqua, who replace Garvey, singled home a run in the 12th.

Pirates 2, Mets 1 In New York, Tony Penas two-out homer in the seventh inning and the combined ,four-hit pitching of John Candelaria and Cecilio Guante led Pittsburgh over the Mets. Pena broke a 1-1 tie with his two-out homer, his fifth of the season.

Candelaria, 10-6, and 7-0 in his last 11 appearances, recorded seven strikeouts and no walks, before getting relief help in the seventh from Guante, who recorded his fourth save.

Tom Seaver, 6-11, suffered his fifth defeat in his last seven starts despite allowing only four hits in eight innings. He struck out four and walked two.

Phillies 3, Cubs 2 In Philadelphia, Bo Diazs run-scoring single with one out in the ninth boosted Philadelphia over Chicago.

Mike Schmidt led off the ninth with a single off Cubs reliever Lee Smith, 4-6, and moved to second on Joe Lefebvres sacrifice. Garry Maddox was intentionally walked and then Diaz hit a 2-2 pitch into left field to score Schmidt.

A1 Holland, 54), the third Philadelphia pitcher, earned the victory.

Chicago starter Dickie Noles carried a two-hitter into the eighth before the Philip tied it 2-2 on Pete Rose sacrifice fly.

Astros 4, Reds 1 In Houston, Mike Madden and Dave SmiUi combined on a six-hitter and Ray Knight clubbed a solo home run as the Astros ended Cincinnati pitcher Joe Prices five-game winning streak.

Madden, 4-0, appearing in his first game since being recalled from the minors on Wednesday, shut out the Reds until the seventh inning when Dan Driessen doubled, took third on Nick Esaskys sin^e and scored as Ron Oester hit into a double play.

Price, 10-6, fell behind 1-0 in the first inning on an RBI single by Phil Gamer, then gave up two more Astros runs in the fourth on Knights home run and Kevin Bass RBI single.

E]q)os 7, Cardinals 2 In Montreal, Bi^ Smith scattered eight hits in his first start of the season and Andre Dawson drove in two runs with a solo home run and a single to help Montreal defeat St. Louis, snapping the Cardinals six-game winning streak.

Smith, 2-4, who is normally used as a reliever, made his first start since S^t. 19,1982, walking two batters and striking out four. He gave up an RBI single to Ozzie Smith in the seventh and a homer to Andy Van Slyke in the ninth.

NeU Allen, 7-9, the St. Louis starter, retired the first 11 batters he faced and extended his scoreless string to 21 2-3 innings snapped by Dawsons 23rd homer with two out in the fourth. Allen had retired the first 11 batters before the homer.

The Expos sent 10 men to bat and chased Allen with a fiverun fifth capped by A1 Olivrs two-run single.

Giants5,Dod^2

In San Francisco, Bob Brenlys pinch-hit RBI single keyed a four-run seventh inning, leading the Giants over error-plagued Los Angeles.

Winner Mike Krukow, 6-6, gave up four hits and struck out nine in 8 2-3 innings for his first victory since June 24. Reliever Greg Minton recorded the last oiit.

The Dodgers contributed two errors to the Giants rally in the seventh, making a loser out of Alejandro Pena, 8-5.

BALANCED DIET BEST COLORADO SPRINGS (AP) - There are many misconceptions about nutrition and diet for athletes, according to Ann Grandjean, a nutrition consultant to the U.S. Olympic Committee Sports Medicine Division.

"Athletes, especially in power ^rts like wrekling and weightlifting, often believe that large amounts of protein will increase muscle size and strength, Ms. Grandjean said.

inducted into the Hall of Fame is, well, it means immortality.

Robinson, who won 16 consecutive Gidd Gloves, became only the 14th player among the 184 peq)le in the Hall to be inducted on the first ballot, not including the original five elected in 1936. He was named on 344 of the 374 ballots cast by the Baseball Writers Association of America voters last January.

Few of his fans ever doubted his place in Cooperstown, and several years a^, top officials of the Orioles, feeling that his election was almost certain, asked that the team be scheduled to play in the 1983 Hall of Fame game to honor Robinson.

On Monday, the Orioles will play the St. Louis Cardinals in the annual exhibition game at cozy Doubleday Field.

Robinson hit .267 with 268 home runs and 1,357 runs batted in during bis career that lasted from 1955 to 1977,

S. Hill-Hamlet Open Series

SNOW HILL - Snow Hill American Legion Post 13 will travel to Hamlet Monday and Tuesday for the first games of the eastern finals of the state baseball tournament.

The two team^ will meet in Snow Hill for games three, four and five, with the final two games of the best-of-seven series in Hamlet if necessary.

Snow Hill Coach James Fulghum will start either Bobby Carraway, 4-3, or William Davis, 4-0, on the mound Monday.

Snow Hill defeated Gamer, four games to two to advance to the eastern finals the next-to-the-last series in the state championship - while Hamlet took a similar 4-2 win overWhiteville.

all vrith Baltimore.

He was the American Leagues Most Valuable Player in 1964, and played in 18 All-Star Games, yet his most shining moment came in the 1970 W(ld Series whm the Orioles overpowered the Cincinnati Reds.

Robinson dazzled the baseball world with incredible fielding plays and hit .429, earning Series MVP honors.

You know, a lot of people forget that I made an error on the first ball I bandied in that series, the 46-year-old from Little Rock, Ark., said. At no time in my career did I ever have five straight games like that.

Robinson, now a television announcer with the Orioles, played second base, shortstop and third base in his early years with Baltimore.

I always bad that sense of timing, he said. Its nothing that you can say youre going to ^ out and leam. Its something youre bom with. ''The high-kicking Marichal appeared to be a natural on the mound. Surprisin^y, he didnt start out there.

He was a shortsU^ as a boy and didnt begin pitching until he switched over while serving his one year in the Dominican Republic Air Force. Marichal wrat on to a 243-142 record with a 2.89 earned run average in his 16-year career, all but the last two seasons with the San Francisco Giants.

He pitched a no-bitter against Houston in 1963 and won more than 20 ^es in six seasons, yet he missed being elected to the Hall by the BBWAA on his first two tries.

Some voters publicly said it was a 1965 incident in which Marichal hit Los Angeles Dodgers catcher John Roseboro over the bead with a bat during a game that blocked his election.

I dont think that kept me

Feed A Pirate Program Set

out of the Hall of Fame the ing to earn his reputation first two times, Marichal Kell, 60, was selated by tte said. He and Roseboro now Commit^ on Veterans m consider each other friends. March in his first year of Marichal, 44, who also pit- eligibility of the repechage ched for the Boston Red Sox - or second chance pro-and Dodgers, is director of cedure. scouting for the Oakland As When the phone rang, I in Latin Anwrica.    just knew I was in, said Kell,

KeU batted .306 during a now a Rgers broadcaster. I 15-year career, primarily irith have been in such a the Detroit Tigers. He also dreamworld since then Im played with the Philadelphia sure that once I get oi the Athletics, Boston Red Sox, grou^, itwillhitme. (3iica) White Sox and the KeU, who ^so rum an Orioles    automobile dealership in his

Ironically, Kell, a third hometown of Swifton, baseman, closed out his said he never thou^t about career in 1957 with Baltimore, the IM of Fame while he was

where Robinson was beginn- playing.    

Even now, when I thmk of being there with Babe Ruth and the rest. Im in awe, he said. It immortalizes you. When my grandhclldren go in 25 or 50 years, IU be in there. Hiis puts you next to The annual Feed A Pirate people you dont belong next program, sponsored by the to.

Pitt Omty Pirate Club, is set Alston, also selected by the for lliui^ay, August 11, veterans committee, managed staring at 5:30 p.m.    the Brooklyn and Los Angeles

Families in the Greenville Dodgers for 23 seasons, community are asked to invite His teams won seven pen-from two to four players into nants and four World Series, tbrir homes for diraier and and went 3,653-2,040. feUowship. A program sched- He played in one major uled at Mendenhall Student game - as a third baseman Crater to kick off Uie evening for the Cardinals in 1936. He wUl feature head coach Ed struck out in his only at-bat. Emory, chanoeUor Dr. John Alston, 71, suffered a heart Howell, and athletic director attack in Api^ and h^ been Dr. Ken Karr. A magic show confined to his home n Dar-wUI provide entertainment. rtown, Ohio. His award wUl be Randy Doub, vice-president accepted by two frand-of the Pitt Ck)unty Pirate Club, children, said that last year, requests Also to be honored A Sun-for players exceeded the days ceremonies, whidi wiU number available, and inter- televised live by ESFN, is ested families are urged to Jack Brickhouse, who wiU sign up early to help welcome receive the Ford C. Yick back tte players to the area. Award for broadcasting.

Those desiring to participate in the program who have not already restored by do so by contacting Doub or Margaret Deaton at 758-6200, giving name, address and the number of players you desire to host.

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North Staters Win District

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scoring Hale, and s single by Nelson Galloway brou^t in Moore and Turcotte, pushing Greenville into a 10-6 lead.

Southern rallied for two in the fifth to pull within two, but the North Staters added an insurance run in the bottom of the frame to close out the scoring.

Galloway and Gatlin each had two hits to lead Greenville, while Boyd and John Jones had a pair each for New Bern.

~    ball, and Tim Moore reached

-    on a fielders choice, scoring

11 (^Inrk. Moore stole second and North State 11

Southern.........  e    ujg bases. Jamie Brewington

TARBORO    - Greenville s    reached on a fielders choice.

North State All-Stars captured the District 4 Little League title Friday in Tarboro with an 11-8 win over Southern of New Bern.

The victory boosts the Greenville team into the state Little League tournament, to be played starting Wednesday at Rutherfordton. Greenville will meet the winner of the District 7 championship in the opening game of the tournament, Wednesday at 3p.m.

The North Staters grabbed the initial lead in the first inning, getting two runs. They followed that up with two more in the second. Southern got on the scoreboard in the third, rallying for five runs to. move into a 5-4 lead. David Boyd cracked a two-run homer to highlight the rally.

Southern picked up a sixth run in the top of the fourth before Greenville put on a rally of its own to take the lead for good, scoring six times.

Paul Powers qjened the fourth with a walk and Walter Gatlin smashed a two-run homer, tying the score. Heath Clark reached on a fielders choice and Jamie Hile also was safe ra a fielders choice.

Both moved iq> on a passed

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Birds' Altobelli Knows His Rule Book

By Tlie Associated Press Rules, rules, rules.

With the airwaves still buzzing from AL President Lee MacPhails decision to let stand the "pine tar-nished home run of Kansas Citys George Brett against the New York Yankees last Sunday, the rulebook again came to the forefront Friday, this time in Baltimore.

This time no ruling will be needed from the presidents office. Texas Manager Doug Rader just didnt know the rule and Baltimore Manager Joe Altobelli did. Thats wliy Altobeliis Orioles went home with an 8-6 victory.

In other AL games Friday, Toronto beat Cleveland 4-2, Milwaukee trounced Boston 11-5, Qiicago pounded Neork

7-2, Minnesota edged Seattle 4-3 and Oakland got past California 5-2.

Detroit led Kansas City 10-1 when their game was suspended after eight innings because of the leagues local curfew rule.

Heres the scene in Baltimore: The Rangers were leading 6-5 in the bottom of ighth. Pinch-bitter A1 Bumbry

led off for the Orioles with a single off Dave Schmidt, 2-2. After one out Dan Ford singled, sending Bumbry to third. Cal Ripken Jr. was about to enter the batters box when Rader left the Texas dugout to talk to Schmidt.

Schmidt missed on two the first two pitches to Ripken and Rader again left the dugout, this time summoning Victor

Mast Splinters

Matt Coleman, crewman on Adavnce, works in the water to free the mast after it splintered Friday during competition off Newport, R.I., in 20-25 knot winds. At left on board is skipper Iain Murray,

sitting with syndicate head Syd Fischer. The incident may finish Advances chances in the Americas Cup challenger series. (AP Laserpboto)

Australia II Continues To Puli Away From Cup Competition

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - On a day when masts, spreaders and bilge pumps were breaking and controversy was raging along the docks, the one constant of this summers Americas Cup competition - Australia II - continued to sail away from the pack.

The Royal Perth Yacht Clubs 12-meter boat, the odds-on favorite to challenge an American defender for sailing most coveted prize, ran its record to 31-3 with a victory Friday over Azzurra of Italy, which was forced to slow and then retire with a broken bilge pump.

Meanwhile, Aussie yacht Advance broke its mast shortly after the start of its race with British challenger Victory 83, and France 3 never got under way because it broke a spreader before it was to meet a third Australian entry. Challenge 12.

The former may lead to the withdrawal of Advance, which may not be able to replace the mast in time for Saturdays race against France 3, and the latter will result in a protest. The French asked for a three-hour delay to fix the spreader, but the request was denied by the challengers race committee.

When it rains, it pours, skipper Iain Murray of Advance said as he looked at the twisted aluminum mess that once served as a mast. Advance is 2-32 for the summer and last in the complicated foreign standings with 0.80 points. ^

But before they depart, officials of the syndicate that owns Advam:e say they will also protest a loss Thursday to

Challenge 12. The race committee gave Challenge 12 two hours to fix a spreader, and the Royal Victorian Yacht Club entry was able to beat Advance.

Murray said the 18-knot southwesterly winds that blew consistently on Rhode Island Sound probably were not to blame.

Gianfranco Alberini, who heads the Italian syndicate, said the pump broke eariy in the race and slowed the boat to the point where it was no longer competitive.

Australia II, with John Bertrand at the helm, was ahead of Cino Riccis Azzurra by two minutes, 26 seconds when the Italian boat retired after the downwind run.

Challenge 12 moved into second place behind idle Canada 1 while Victory 83 took over fourth place. The top four yachts in the seven-boat foreign field will advance to the semifinals when the current round-robin series ends Aug. 6.

The loss dropped Azzurra, one of only three boats to have beaten Australia II this summer, into fifth place.

The victory gave Australia 1114.88 points.

Canada 1, 17-17 for 9.72, leads Challenge 12, 23-12, 8.60; Victory 83, 21-14, 9.44, and Azzurra, 18-16, 9.20, in the battle for the other three semifinal positions. France 3, now 7-27, has 2.12 points.

Prospective American defenders are off until Aug. 16. Liberty, 20-10, leads there followed by Defender, 13-12, and Courageous, 8-19. There is no point system for the Americans, with the defender being selected by the New York Yacht Club.

Millions Spent In Quest

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - As the cutdown fast approaches in the Americas Cup, two questions are most rdevant in forecasting whether sports longest winning streak will continue.

Will Liberty, the 12-meter chosen by skipper Dennis Ck)nner over his 1980 Cup winner Freedom, or skipper Tom BlackaUers Defender carry the colors for the Americans?

Can Australia II, holding the ^uivalent of a 10-game lead in baseball among the foreign challengers, beat either American boat?

Gary Jobson, the tactician for Defender, says the answer to Question No. 2 will be the same no matter what the answer to No. I.

^Australia II will win among the foreigners, said JobsOT, "but either Liberty or Defender will beat her.

A total of nine syndicates from six nations have budgeted from $2 millton to $8 million apiece this summer in the chase for the cup, which is worth an estimated 1200,000. There is no prize money.

Liberty and Defender are among three U.S. boats seeking the ri^t to defoid the "Auld Mug - the sUver chalice that has rested with the New York Yacht Club since the yacht America beat a fleet of British boats in a race around the Isle of Wight in 1851.

The third entry from the United States is Courageous, the cup winner in 1974 and 1977, but she has been no match for the other two Aroer-

icans on Rhode Island Sound. Through the end of defender trials earlier this month. Liberty was 20-10, Defender 13-12 and Courageous 8-19.

Those numbers really dont mean much, since the yacht clubs selection committee will decide who defends when the finals begin Sept. 13. Still, Jobson said, the choice appears to be between Defender and Liberty.

If they took Courageous, I would have to think the foreigners would be happy because that would mean we havent been able to build a better boat than one that won the Cup nine years ago, said Jobson, who with Blackaller put together the Defender-Courageous syndicate.

With one of his boats virtually out, then, its no surprise that Jobson picks Defender. Conner feels differently.

At this point, it looks like were the obvious choice, said Conner, whose boat holds an 7-6 edge against Defender, with the final defense trials set to start Aug. 16.

Conner said only "some small things will be done to get Liberty ready for the August trials. "We are not going to cut our boat in half, he said. Its kind of sUIy to do something like that now.

Defender is unders major hull and keel tions aimed at trimming the width of the beam in an effort to gain speed in the heavier seas of S^tember, and Jobson said Conners optimism is very premature. The bottmn line wUI not be the crews w the boats. It will come down to

who is a better sailor, Blackaller or Conner.

It would take a series of incredible upsets to keep Australian millionaire Alan Bond, owner of Australia II, from sending a boat to the finals for the fourth strai^t time. He already is on record as saying the Cup will be in his hands by late Sq)tember.

Youll love it in PerUi, he says in obvious reference to the location of the 1986 competition.

But at least one foreign skipper says he will not succeed.

"If we can beat them, there is no way they can beat the Americans, said Cino Ricci, skipper of the Italian boat Azzurra. Azzurra, Britains Victory 83 and Australian entry Challenge 12 all have beaten Australia II.

The three foreign boats with the lowest totals under a complex point system will be eliminated next Saturday, and France 3 and a third Aussie boat. Advance, are all but assured of being cut. The seventh foreign boat is Canada 1.

Despite its 30-3 record of late last week, Australia II is not without problems. The major concern is the physical condition of skipper John Bertrand, who has been bothered by a pinched nerve in his neck.

Its not 100 percent yet, but its nothing to keep him off the water, said Warren Jones, manager of Bonds Royal Perth Yacht Club entry. The doctor said it might be three months before its well.

Bertrand missed a few days of sailing last month, but Australia II continued to roll under Jim Hardy, who sk^ pered some of Bonds entries in the past.

The boat itself, a Ben Lex-cen design, has been the center of attention all summer because it reportedly has fins protruding from its keel. The keel is wra[q)ed in a shroud whenever its out of the water, and has been the subject of jokes and pranks throughout the summer.

The most notable led to the arrest last Saturday of a boat driver from the Canadian entry. He was captured swimming near Australia Hs dock with an underwater camera.

The incident was conceived as a minor joke, said G. Douglas Keary, operations manager for Canada 1.

Trespassing charges were dn^)ped in exchange for the film in the camera, but the story didnt end there. The Australians say a second diver got away.

The hull may or may not be of genuine concern to the foreigners. Jobson said doubts there actually are fins on the boat.

First of all, its nothing new. Its been tried before and no one ever won the Cup with it. Also, you have to remember, theres a lot of intrigue in this thing and an awful lot of sandbagging going on down here.

Cruz from the bullpen. Schmidt headed, as do most pitchers removed from the game, for the clubhouse and Altobelli headed for the closest umpire.

I knew the rule, said Altobelli referring to the one that says a manager may not make two trips to the mound while the same hitter is at bat.

Apparently Altobelli did know the rule, because after appealing to home plate umpire Jim McKeon and crew chief Marty Springstead, who was at first, Rader was summoned from the dugout and told to bring Schmidt back into the game. He did and Schmidt walked Ripken to load the bases.

Re-enter Cruz and enter Eddie Murray, who cracks a two-run single that gives the Orioles a 7-6 lead and their fifth victory in their last six games.

Quipped Altobelli; All 1 can say is when youre hot, youre hot.

Hot is the way to describe Mwray who now has 19 runs batted'in in his last 20 games and is batting .320 ( 22-for-75) in that span.

Blue Jays 4, Indians 2

Jim Clancy scattered six hits for his 11th victory as the Blue Jays stroked a club-record four triples. Clancy struck out five and walked four in picking up his fourth consecutive complete game.

Three of the triples led to runs as Dave Collins drove in Ernie Whitt with one in the second and scored himself on an error by Gorman Thomas. Lloyd Moseby tripled in the third and scored on a sacrifice fly by Willie Upshaw and Jorge Orta scored on a sacrifice fly by Whitt after his three-base hit in the sixth.

Thomas hit his 15th homer of the season for the Indians.

Brewers 11, Red Sox 5

Cecil Cooper drove in four runs and Bob McClure picked up his seventh straight victory. Two of Coopers RBIs came on his 24th homer of the season in the fifth, which was followed by Ben Oglivies 11th that chased starter Dennis Eckersley.

McClure, 8-7, allowed five runs and 10 hits in six innings. The Red Sox briefly threatened in the seventh when they scored four runs on an RBI-

single by Jim Rice, a two-run single by Tony Armas and a bases-loaded walk to Carl Yastnemski.

White Sox 7, Yankees 2 Jerry Koosman, 8-2. picked up his 199th career victory as he allowed five hits over eight innings. Carlton Fisk continued his hot hitting as he blasted his 19th homer of the season off Ron Guidry, 12-6.

The White Sox added three runs in the eighth to break open the close game. Both Yankees runs came on solo homers, Jerrv Mumphreys seventh, and Dave Winfields 17th.

Twins 4, Mariners 3

Mickey Hatcher and John Castino slugged consecutive homers with two out in the eighth. Gary Ward had three hits and two RBIs for the Twins as Bobby Castillo upped his record to 7-8 and Ron Davis picked up his 19th save.

Bill Caudill, 2-7, gave up the two homers, the only hits he allowed on the night.

As5, Angels 2 Tim Conroy threw six innings of three-hit ball before departing because of a blister.

Rickey Henderson had a run-scoring single in the fourth and figured in the As final run when he walked, stole two bases, his 63rd and 64th of the season, and scored on an overthrow by Bob Boone.

Bobby Grich and Ellis Valentine drove in the Angels runs with a double and sacrifice fly, respectively.

Tigers 10, Royals 1

Lance Parrish hit a grand slam and Chet Lemon added a three-run shot as the Tigers took a huge lead before the curfew was invoked. Jack Morris allowed three hits over the eight innings, including Pat Sheridans fourth homer of the year.

The game was delayed three hours, two minutes by rain during the third inning and was scheduled to be completed after todays nationally-televised afternoon game.

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Brett More Careful With Pine Tar NoW

By The Associated Press With the controversial Pine Tar Incident behind him, George Brett will be particularly careful about his bats from now on.

Now, I draw a line exactly 18 inches with a felt pen and every time Im in the on-deck circle, 1 make sure theres nothing above that 18-inch

mark, the Kansas City third baseman said Friday.

Bretts comments came in the aftermath of a favorable ruling by American League President Lee MacPhail that gave him back a home run from last Sundays game with the New York Yankees. Umpires had disallowed the blast, which gave the Royals a 5-4

lead, because of too much pine tar.

It was the first time in MacPhails 10 years as AL president that he has overruled his umpires and upheld a protest.

I was very surprised, Brett said. I found out that in Lee MacPhails 10-year history hes never upheld a protest

before and 1 didnt expect him to do it in this one.

By no means did I think that we were wrong in our protest and by no means do 1 think that I cheated - or used an illegal bat. So, I was very excited when he decided to allow the home run.

Brett said he felt no animosity toward either Yankee

No Hard Feelings    inning    of Friday nights game in Detroit. Tigers

Kansas Citys George Brett (left) jokes with home catcher John Wockenfuss is in the middle. (AP plate umpire Tim McClelland during the first Laserphoto)

Arizona Basketball Program Under Investigation By NCAA

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - University of Arizona Athletic Director Cedric Dempsey says he wont speculate on possible new NCAA sanctions because (rf alleged infractions in the Wildcats basketball program.

But clearly, once again, after only months, Arizona is in Uie position of waiting to see whether another shoe will drop.

On Friday, Dempsey made public that former Coach Ben Lindsey, whom he fired in March, had leveled five allegations of infractions committed by two of his assistant coaches and by several unnamed players.

Dempsey said the university investigated, forwarded its results to the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the Pacific-10 Conference and disciplined Ricky Byrdsong, the assistant still on the coaching staff, as well as his wife Sherialyn, an assistant womens basketball coach.

In April, the NCAA imposed sanctions on Arizonas football irogram for three years because of numerous infractions letween 1971 and 1980.

Dempsey said Lindsey made his allegations in a June 20 letter to university Vice President Gary Munsinger, after which an investigation was launched immediately upon notifying the NCAA and conference officials.

He said the only allegation that could be substantiated was one that player Morgan Taylor was illegally furnished a plane ticket to campus last fall. The ticket was purchased by Mrs. Byrdsong, at her husbands request, a report by university attorney James L. Richmond said.

Telephone calls to Lindsey at his Phoenix home were returned Friday night.

Dempsey said he hoped that the universitys efforts to investigate and remedy any problems would prevent further NCAA sanctions.

He said Byrdsongs $25,002 salary will be cut in half for the coming year, and the Byrdsongs will be have to pass a written test of NCAA rules and regulations and will be given official letters of reprimand.

They would be dismissed if involved in any further action contradictory to the institutional, conference or NCAA rules, regulations and policy, the university said.

Yarborough Sits On Talladega Pole

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) - him 22nd.

Dempsey fired Lindsey last spring after the Wildcats compiled a 4-24 record, worst in the universitys hlstiny. Asked if he knew why Lindsey had written the letter, Dempsey relied, His (Lindseys) motives I couldnt comment on.

Lindsey was given severance pay of about $50,000 after being fired, 50 weeks after being hired, and subsequently filed a $1.3 million suit against the Arizona Board of Regents. In the suit, Lindsey alleged that his professional career had been damaged because he was let go so soon after having been given verbal assurances by the previous administration that he would have four years to estab ish a winning program.

He said his own investigation found some discr^ancies in the stories of the parties involved and that at his recommendation. President Henry Koffler appointed Richmond, a former Arizona Court of Appeals judge, to investigate.

Spruce Pine Ready To Host Professional Hockey Team

SPRUCE PINE, N.C. (AP) - The Pinebridge Coliseum in Spruce Pine has an ice skating rink and room for 5,000 seats. This week, it added Uk missing link - a minor league hockey team.

At a meeting of the Atlantic Coast Hockey League that concluded Thursday in Pittsburgh, Pinebridge was awarded a franchise in the seven-team circuit, which also includes Winston-Salem, Birmingham, Ala., Nashville, Tenn., Salem, Va., Utica, N.Y., and Erie, Pa.

Though the two-month-old

coliseum doesnt contain any seating at the moment, about 5,000 seats are being built in Spruce Pine for future installation. The tcriiseum is part of the Pinebridge Complex, a multi-million dollar recreation and tourism development begun 15 months a^ by Robert Bailey and Alvin Barrier, both natives of Spruce Pine, a town of less than 3,000.

The team, as yet unnamed, will play a 72-game schedule beginning Oct. 15. A general manager-coach is expected to be named soon.

When the 40 cars line up for Sundays Talladega 500 NASCAR Grand National stock car race. Cale Yarborough will be sitting at the pole after qualifying with a record-breaking 201.744 mph.

Joe Ruttman came close to breaking the 200 mph barrier when he led the second round of qualifiers Friday to grab the 21st position with a 199.525

Time trials for the ARCA 200 Talladega Super Car Series race were also completed Friday. The race was held Saturday.

Sundays 500, the 15th annual Winston Cup at the Alabama International Motor Speedway, begins at 12:15 p.m.

Here are the top qualiiiers for Sundays Talladega 500 NASCAR Grand

luttman said that when his team arrived, he felt his Chevrolet could run 200 m|]h. Right now. Im sure we co^d have, he said. After the last practice session yesterday, we bad to pull the motor out. We werent able to qualify. This is a totally different motor now, our race motor.

Were confident about Sunday.

Ruttman was one of the few frontninners to take a qualifying run Friday as Harry (jant and Bobby Allison stood on their Thursday spe^. Gants 195.090 was good enough for 23rd and Allisons 198.848 put him in the 24th spot.

Finishing behind Ruttman on Friday was Sterling Marlin, whose 195.190 placed

Natioiuil stock car race:

I Cale Yartwrough. Chevrolet. 201.744 mph

2. Bill Elliott. Ford, 199.675.

3. Benny Parsons. Chevrolet. 199 591

4. Dale Earnhardt. Ford, 199 309

5. Richard Brooks. Ford, 199.230.

6 Buddy Baker. Ford. 199164

7. Terre Labonte, Chevrolet. 199.073 S. Mark Martin, Oldsmobile, 196.726.

9 Geoff Bodine, Pontiac, 196.676

10 Darrell Wait^. Chevrolet. 198.322

II Lake Speed, Chevrolet. 196.896.

12 Richard PetU. Pontiac. 196.737

13. Kyle Petty, rtiiUac, 196.725.

14. NeU BonneU. Chevrolet, 196.624.

15. David Pearson. Chevrolet, 196.443

16. Grant Adcox. Chevrolet, 196.441

17. Ricky Rudd. Chevrolet. 196.350.

18. Tim Richmond, Pontiac, 196.145 19 Ron Bouchard. Buick, 195.429.

20. Jody Ridley. Buick. 196 401

21 Joe Ruttman, Chevrolet, 199.525

22 Sterling Marlin. Chevrolet. 195.190

23. Harry Gant. Buick, 195.09.

24. Bobby Allison. BUick, 194.848 26. Buddy Arrington, Ood. 194.480 26. Trevor Boys, Chevrol^ 193.834.

27 Bobby WawakJ%evrolet. 193 732.

28 Cecil Gordon, Chry^, 192.928

29 Ken Ra^. Otevroiel, 192.874.

30. Billie Huvey, Buick. 192 378 31 Bobby Hillln Jr.. Buick. 192.316

32. Morgan Sb^erd, Buick, I92.254

33. Al EmDre. Oievrolet J92.206.

34. Tominy Gale, Honda Ford, 191.877,

35 Mike Potter, Otdsmobile, 191 554

36 Dave Marcls, Transmissions Unlimlt-ed.l9l.l80.

37. Ronnie Thomas, Pontiac. 190.457

38. J D McOuffleTlmtiac. 190.200 38. Richard SkiUcA Pontiac, 181.706.

40 Travis TUIoTawvroiet. 181.156.

Manager Billy Martin, who asked the umpires to measure the pine tar on the bat, nor umpire Tim McClelland, who made the call.

I wouldnt say it was fun, but it did add a little diversion, Brett said. It kind of added a little ^ice. Baseball can ^t - I dont want to say boring - but you can get very much into the same routine.

Brett said he felt vindicated by the decision.

I was very happy to see Lee come out and say I was not a cheater, because thats what 1 was worried about more than anything, Brett said in a news conference prior to the Royals game with the Detroit Tigers. I was concerned that pecle around the country would see this and think that Ive been doing it for 10 years now. Well, it was an oversight and the pine tar just crept up on the bat. I was totally unaware of it. Meanwhile, in Chicago, Yankees Manager Billy Martin assailed MacPhail.

K, dont agree with Lee MacPhaUs ruling at all, Martin said. I think Lee MacPhail made a mistake. (Crew chief) Joe Brinkman and the umpires were 100 percait right.

The rules were made by a committee, and we all should abide by them, including Lee MacPhail, an angry Martm said.

Martin said be heard the news on the radio Thursday night. Martin then made reference to MacPhails remarks that, while technically defensible, the umpires ruling had not been in accord with the intent or spirit of the rule.

There are all kinds of technicalities you can win a game on, but not all are spiritual, like this one, Martin said. I thought spiritual had something to do with pastors, and that sort. Martin agreed with Brinkman, who had said the umpires merely were going by the letter of the law to call Brett out.

Joe Brinkman was 100 percent right, even if the call was against me, because

thats what the rules say. They didnt do enough homework on this decision, Martin said.

Yankees owner George Steinbrenner is not particularly thrilled about the decision, either.

Id rather forfeit than play on an off-day, Steinbrenner said. Lee has made enough of a mess of this already. Im not going to let him take away my teams off-day in Uk middle of a pennant race.

MacPhail said he had hoped the game between the Royals and Yankees could be resumed on Aug. 18, an open date for each club. If not, he said, they could resume it on Monday, Oct. 3, the day after the re^ar season ends, if the game still has bearing on first place in either division.

The Yankees also believe that Brett, who argued the call vehemently, and Gaylord Perry, the Royals pitcher who tried to bide the questionable bat in the Royals dugout.

should have been ejected.

We want to know why these guys werent thrown out, ^ at least, Yankees pubUcist _ Ken Nigro said. We had heard that they were thrown ; out. I imagine, of coui^, that, we would appeal this very forcefuUy.

After reading his statement; Thursday, MacPhail was asked about any possible ejections and said the league would have to consider the, matter. It had not as of Friday.

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New York Yankees Manager Billy Martin talks to reporters before the start of Friday nights game in Chicago. Martin assailed American League President Lee MacPhail, saying his decision in the George Brett-bat tar controversy was a mistake. I thought they would go by the rules, Martin said. (AP Laserphoto)

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Williams Tops 5,000 Meter Mark In Junior Olympic Track Meet

DURHAM (AP) - Musa Williams of Durham broke a meet record in the intermediate mens 5,000-nwter run, and Robert Sutton of Greenville, S C., set another record Friday in the National Junior Olympic Track and Field Championships.

Williams, 16, turned in a record time of 15 minutes, 14.4 seconds, breaking the old mark of 15:17.61 set in 1981 by Jeff Cannada of Arizona.

Sutton set a meet record in ie young mens 5,000-meter run with a time of 14:57.5 to break the previous record of 15:04.56 set by Keith Hanson of Wisconsin in 1982.

In the young womens intermediate division, Kim McClure of Salem, Ore., also set a new meet record in the

3.000-meter race walk with a time of 15:51.41. That broke the previous mark of 16:08.84 set in 1981 by Jamie Melfi of Ohio.

Also in the yoimg mens division. Orla Kastberg of Granville, N.Y, won the

2.000-meter steeplechase with a time of 5:53.71, while Mike Sergeant of Fenton, Mich., took a victory in the shot put with a toss of 59 feet, 3 inches. Karl Gates of Olympia, Wash., won the mens javelin throw with a toss of 194 feet, 1 inch.

Niki Nye of Roy, Utah, celebrated her 18th birthday with a personal-best toss of 153 feet, 7 inches, to win the young womens avdiin throw, while Karol Dorset! of St. Petersburg, Fla., won the young womens 3,000-meter run with a time of 9:54.1. Another was Teena Brooks of Richmond, Va., in the womens shot put with a toss of 42 feet, 8>/4 inches.

Other winners in the mens Intermediate division included Glen Schneider of Ft. Wayne, Ind., in the mens discus throw with a toss of 163 feet, and Curtis Bliss of Nova Scotia, N.Y., in the mens 2,000-meter steeplechase with a time of 6:18.30. Martin Weight of Phoraix, Ariz., won the mens

3.000-meter walk with a time of 14:44.0.

In the womens intermediate division, Michelle Sica of

Forest Park, Ohio, won the 3,000-meter run with a time of 10:09.78. Stacey Horn of Rancho G<Mtk)va, Calif., won the disciK throw with a toss of 132 feet, 7 inches.

Also Friday, Carla McLaughlin of Durham, the defending champion in the 100-meter dash, won her heat of the 100 trials in 12.02 seconds and her 200 heat in 24.53 for the fastest qualifying time in both events.

The championships continue through Saturday at Duke. Universitys Wallace Wade Stadium.

131-0.

3. Tina Jakiibeik. Tucam. Am.. 122-10

4 Jane Woodhead. Lewiftown. Maine. 114-4

5 Lea Bush. Elma. Wash.. 1134

6. Jenny Johnson. Bataria. Ul.. lOO-l.

Yooiltai'iStotPut

1 Mike Semant. Penton. Mich., SO-3.

2 Randy Owipbell. RusseUvUle. Ark.,

5S-I':

3 Tim Good. OaudviUe. Va.. 5M^.i

4 Richard OaUing. Staien Island. N Y..

554.

5. Sam Boxley. Memphis. Tenn., 55-0.

6. Guy Broom. Galveston. Texas, 53-Il'j

The loilowina are results of the National Junior (%mpic Track and Field Championships Friday at Duke Universitys V^llace Wade Stadium:

iDlenMdlate Mn'i ^ Meten

I Musa WUIiams, Durham. N.C.. 15; 14.4, new record: old record. 15:17.61, Jeff Cannada. Arizona.

2. Bob Thompeon, Rochester, Minn., 15:14,7.

3. Brett Roby, Decatur, 111., 15:23.0.

4 Calvin Sloane. Ointon. N.J . I5 2S.S

5 JohnEiwall, Houston. 15:45.1.

6 Jay BirindeUi. Richmond. 15:49 5.

Va.,

Young Mea'sS,MMelcn ^

1. Robert Sutton. Greenville. S.C, 14:57.5, new record: old record. 15:04.5 6, Keith Hanson. Wisconsin

2. John Erickson. Greensboro, N.C., 15:01 3

3. Tony Seras, Houston. 15:33.2.

4 Charles Cole, Chaptico. Md.. 15:34 2.

5 David Hanediak, Chicapee, Mass., 15:37.1

6. Brian Jacobson, Tacoma, Wash.,

15:39.9.

Young WoHMn'iS,N0Meter Run

1. KaroTDorsetl. St. Petersburg. Fla., 9:54.1.

2. Leslie Wrixon, Glastonburg, Conn., 10:04.0.

3. Mkhlle Skyles, Namps, Idaho. 10:055

4. HeikeTheim, Phoenix, Ariz., 10:05.9.

5. Coleen Gallagher. Lake Erie, Ohio. 10:15.5

6. Lisa Winter. Washington Grove. Md., 10:24.6.

Intermediate Womens 3,0N Maten

1. Michelle Ska. Foteri Park. Ohio. 10:09.78.

2. Cathy Wall, Molalla, Ore.. 10; 10 65

3. Kalhy Welsh. Kettering. Ohio. 10:12.66.

4 Molly Kapalin. Green Bay. Wise, 10:34.10

5. Tina GoodykoonU, Danville. Calil., 10:34 19.

6. Michelle Crow, Cohanbia. S.C, 10:37 5.

Young Women's Shot Put

1. Teena Brooks, Rkhmond, Va., 42-6'^

2. Dawn Dettart, Loveland. Ohio. 4(MPj.

3. Ann Marie Simmons, Somerset, Mass.. 394.

4. Kris Larson, Olympia. Wash.. 384

5. Dawn Stedham. Centralia. Wash. 37 10.

6 Dana Slone. Winthrop. Wash.. 37-5>4

Youm Mens Javelin

I KartGatnTtMympU. Wash . 194-1.

2. Mike Wadrdrop. Vernon. Conn . 1934.

3. Don Silk. Mt Pleasant. Pa.. 1850

4 John Weeks. Yamhill. Ore. 182-8

5 Greg^Gellound. Matawan. N.J., 177-3

6. Don Stilfler. Tyron. Pa . 1752.

Intermedale Women's Discus

I Stacey Horn. Rancho Cordova. Calif ., 132-7

2. Debbie Rutkowski. Oaklawn. III.,

Young Womens Javelin

I Niki NyeHtoy. Utah, 1557.

2. Dawn Stediam. Centralia. Wash., 148-3

3. Debbie Gark. Woodstock. Conn.. 146-4

4. Maureen McElyer, Decatur, III.. 1390.

5. Carolyn kCouMer, Phoenix. Ariz. 134-1.

6. Holly Maloney. Bdte. Mont., 1340.

Intermedale Mens Discus

1 Glen Schneider, Ft. Wayne. Ind.. 1630.

2. John Symiszewski. Alexandria, Va., 158*2

3. Hiawatha Berry, Winder. Ga.. ISIO.

4 David Scott. Alexandria, Va.. 149-9

. 5 Ken Mahwg, Corvallis, Ore.. 1490 6 Rkk Carrier. Malallo. Ore.. 1455

Young Womens Discus

1. Dawn Dehart, Loveland. Ohio, 1359.

2 Kris Larson. Olympia. Wash.. 1351

3. Colleen Connolly, hubbard. Ohio.

129-5.

4 Carolyn Coulter. Phoenix. Ariz.. 1200.

5 Linda Tun, Annandale. Va.. 1056 6. Beth Smiley. Wayland. Mass., 1051

Intermedale Womens Shot Put 1 Debbie Rutkowski. Oak Uwn. III..

39-3-m.

2. Cathy Fritsche. Ealman, Wise., 354.

3 Brenda Schumaker, Farmer City, 111,3814

4. Carmen Safrit, Charlotte, N.C., 354.

5. Mia Bonds. AtlanU,Ga , 37-5^4.    ^

6. Stephanie McGill. Durham, N.C., 37-34

Intermedale Mens Javello Throw

1.    Craig Johnson.    Beaverton,    Ore.,

1772

2. Lawrence Balkas. Coventry. R I., 1679

3 Mark Inge. 16510

4 Danny McGrath, Union, NJ, 161-6

5    Daniel Blackshear. Mobile.    Ala    ,

152-8

6 Robert Silk. Leetsdale. Pa.. 151 5

Young Mens 2,005Meler Steeplecliase

I    Orla Kastberg.    Granville,    N Y    ,

5:53 71. meet record; new event.

2.    Mkhael Lynes, Camas. Wash    ,

6:12 97

3 Terry Trainer, Eugene. Ore , 6 14 69

4 John Erickson. Greensboro, N C , 6:20 14

5. Don Livin^one. Houston. 6:21.88

6 Othena Redfield. Greenville. Miss.

6:23,55

Intermediate Men's 2,005Meter Steeplechase

Txurtis Bliss, Scotia. NY, 6:18 30, meet record: new event

2. Van Havenstrite, Claremore, Okla., 6-25 69

3. Lewis Peterson. Sparks. Nev., 6:27.57

4. Oliver Byers, Provo, Utah, 6 29 59

5 MikeKir, Lindon, Utah, 6 29.63.

6. Mike Thurnberr, Cheektawa. N Y.. 6:33 25

Intermediate Mens 3.005Meter Walk

1. Martin Weight. Phoenix, Ariz , 14:44.01

2. Curt Clausen. Stevens Point, Wise., 15:08.80

3. Dan Costello, Marion. Iowa. 16 :21.99

4. Rodney Brower, Sandhills. N.C , 16:53 50

5. John McElroy. Burlington. NC. 17:09 61

6. Terry Lee Barton, McAlister. Okla 17:176

Intennedtate Womens 3,0(-Meter Walk I Kim McClure, Aumsville, Ore. 15:51 41, new record; old record. 16 (8 84 Jamie Melfi. Ohio. 1981

2. Tyra Karlsson, Seattle, 15 59.%

3. Katie Warren, Miami. 16:2172

4. Erica Benson. Dayton. Ohio, 16 5322

5. Pam Haley, Springfield. Ohio 17:22 60

6. Kathy Rardin, Ft Lauderdale. Ha 17:23 03

OUTDOORS

With

Joe Albea

Woody

Pecle

: Chips and putts from area golf courses:

::    Brook    Valley    Country    aub

Three Brook Valley youths captured the top Ihree places in the 11 and under age group of the 'New Bern Junior Boys Invitational tournament last week. Lee Watson finished in first place with 5a 159, beating out Teague Tripp, who also had a :159. They settled the tie on the first hole of a ^>layoff. Rob Thomas finished third in the division ;>ith a 160. It marked the second straight year Uhat Brook Valley youths had dominated the 'tournament.

C Mike Kinaszczuk eagled the ninth hole at Brook Galley while playing with Ken Mitchell, M. Stoll [and Tom Tholman. Kinaszczuk used a three-~wood and a nine iron for the shot.

Dr. Bill Mister shot his best round ever, a ;39-3978. Harry Powlik had his best ever, a 36 for nine holes, while playing with Cedric ,Winchell. Carter McKaughan shot 36-3773,

" including a three-putt on 18, for his best round.

^ A Jack and Jill Tournament will be held Wednesday at the club, followed by a covered *dish supper. Deadline for signups is Tuesday -evening.

"    Indian Trails Country Gub

: The team of Paul Ricciarelli, Ed Mewborn, '^Jim Eubanks, J.T. Price and A1 Bremer ; captured first place in a mens stag night "superball tournament at Indian Trails Country ^Gub recently. They finished with a record-setting 29. Second place went to the team of John ' Moseley, Russ Connour, Randy Wilson, Garland I Creech and Butch Potter, who had a 30.

Cecil Lilley recently tied the course record ; with a 68 fron the white tee markers. Warrem Agiee earlier set the mark this summer.

Ayden Golf and Country Gub

* The annual Member-Guest Tournament will be ' held on August 6-7 at the Ayden Golf and Country

* Gub. The deadline for siiups will be Wednes- day, August 3.

Greenville Country Gub

* The annual W.S. Moye Memorial Golf Tournament will be held August 27-28 at the Greenville Country Club. Players may make up

m their own four-man teams, and players from all r five of the countys clubs are invited to attend. A p limit of 18 strokes handicap per person is

* imposed, and players must present a current > handicap card before teeing off.

* The tournament is limited to the first 25 teams I to enter. A 9 a.m. shotgun start will be observed

* both days.

- Further details, entry fee, and entry blanks - can be obtained by contacting the pro shop.

i '

Dove Seasm Set - The upcoming hunting seasons for dove and several other web-less migratory game birds were set by the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission at a meeting in Raleigh on July 18.

The dove season for 1983 will be split, running from Sept, 3 through Oct. 8 and from December 12 through January 14. During the first half of the dove season, hunting will be allowed from noon until sunset. During the late season, dove hunting will be allowed from a half an hour before sunrise until sunset. The hunting seasons for rails and gallinules will run from Sept. 19 through Nov. %, the season for Woodcock will run from Nov. 11 through Jan. 14 and the season for common snipe will run from Nov. 11 through Feb 25. All of these birds may be hunted from a half an hour before sunrise until sunset.

The Wildlife Commission also considered a proposal which would allow hunters to take big game, which includes deer, black bear and wild boar with handgum. Only handguns with a minumum barrel length of six inches or longer could be used and the guns would have to be capable of firing and loaded with .357 ammunition or larger. In addition, handgun hunters could use the following cartridges; 30/30 Winchester, .35 Remington, .30 Herrett, and 7mm TCU, and 7mm BR. These prq)osals are to be the subject of a public meeting on Tuesday, August 9 at 10 a.m. in the third floor Wildlife Conference room in the Archdale Building in Raleigh. Interested sportsmen are urged to attend.

A schedule of public meetings was also adopted concerning the upcoming waterfowl hunting seasons.

Interested sportsmen should attend these waterfowl meetings and give the proposals careful consideration. Public input plays a vital role in establishing regulations.

All meetings in eastern North Carolina begin at 7; 30 p.m. and the schedule is as follows; I

Pasquotank County Courthouse in Elizabeth City on Monday August 22

Craven County Courthouse in New Bern Tuesday August 23.

Adopt A River Through Stream Watdi - How can North Carolinians help protect the water (j^ality of the 40,000 plus miles of streams and rivers which lace the sfete? One way is to participate in Stream Watch, a novel program sponsored by the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development which encourages environmental organizations, sportsmens clubs, civic ^ps, schools and other groups to adopt a stream in their area.

The Stream Watch program is designed to make citizens aware of the importance of water quality, said Meg Kerr, Stream Watch Coordinator for the N.C. Division of Environmental

Management. Organizations in the Stream Watch program must first file for adoption of a particular stream, river or lake in their area. Next, the group undertakes projects which are designed to promote citizen awareness of the waterway, and in some cases to improve water quality. Examples of these projects include river clean-ups, publications or slide shows which detail the recreational potential or environmental problems facing the waterway, improvement and expansion of recreational facilities along the waterway, and a host of others. Many people dont realize that there are some beautiful streams right in their backyards, even in urban areas, and one of the best ways to protect these areas is to have concerned people enjoying them.

Organizations which participate in the Stream Watch program are eligible for grants to help fund their projects. These funds come from a $30,000 grant which was provided to the program by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation.

Were trying to distribute small grants of up to $1,000 to as many Stream#* Watch groups as possible, Kerr said. This will make the money go farther and will get the maximum number of people involved in the program. To date, there are over 30 ^oups throughout the state involved in Stream Watch The deadline for Stream Watch grants is Sept. 28.

Organizations interested in adopting a stream should contact the N.C; Division of Environmental Management, Stream Watch Coordinator, P.O. Box 27687, Raleigh, N.C. 27611.

Natural Cure For Ticks -Ticks are a chronic summer problem for dogs and cats. The usual treatment involves dipping the animal in a chemical insecticide each week. However, if you prefer a more natural approach, try this organic preventative.

The preventative is simply a mixture of brewers yeast and garlic which is mixed into your pets food each day. Use two tablespoons of the mix for medium to large dogs and less for smaller dogs and cats. Brewers yeast and garlic mixtures may be purchased at most health food stores. Cheese flavored yeast is also available.

Fees Change For Transfer Of Boat Registration -Boaters who purchase a motorboat that was previously owned and registered in North Carolina are now required to pay the full fee to transfer the boat registration to their name. This fee is $5.50 for one year and $13 for three years. A new owner may operate a boat on the previous owners valid registration for 30' days to allow sufficient time for the transfer.

Transfers of registration are handled through the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, Motorboat Registration Section, 512 N. Salisbury St., Raleigh, N.C. 27611.

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Thumb Injury Has Garvey Sidelined

SAN DIEGO (AP) - For seven and a half years, Steve Garvey didnt miss a baseball game, playing throu^ such ailmeiits as migraines, back problems and stitches in his chin.

But the holder of the National League consecutive-game mark saw his streak come to an end at 1,207 games when he suffered a dislocated thumb in the First game of a double header.

ive been dodging the proverbial bullet for a long time, said Garvey. The 34-year-old veteran first baseman for the San Diego Padres sustained the injury Friday night in the first inning while attempting to score from third base on an errant throw by Pascual Perez of the Atlanta Braves.

As I was sliding into the plate, my thumb hit something, said Garvey, who was tagged out after catcher Bruce Benedict tossed the ball back to Perez, who was covering at the plate. "I dont know if it was the ground or Perez foot, but I could feel the pain.

I knew 1 had to leave the game, said Garvey. When I put ice on it, my thumb fell out of place. There was no support.

Garvey was taken to Scripps Clinic in La JoUa, where X-rays revealed the dislocation in the jmnt of his left thumb. Dr. Paul Hirshman, an orthopedic surgeon at the dink, placed the thumb in an elbow-length cast and said Garvey would be sidelined for at least three wedcs.

If the ligament damage is sufficiently severe, there is a possiblity of airgery, Hir^an said.

Hirshman described the injury as, signifkant, but were optimistk about the long-term progno^.

San Diego Manager Dkk Williams said, It's a shame his streak is ^ing to be storied. When Dkk Dent (Padres trainer) said he thought it was a dislocatioo, I thought it would be bad.

Utilityman Kurt Bevacqua, a close friead of Garveys who was brought in the game as his replaconent, said he knew when he saw Garvey doubled over in the runway that the streak had come to an end.

Whoi 1 passed him in the runway, he was squatting and I ^couldnt see the extent of the injury, Bevacqua said. 1 didnt have to ask (how bad it was). 1 knew it was bad enough for his streak to be over with. There was disappointment on

his face.

Garvey, who ranked third on the aU-time consecutive game-playiog list b^ind Lou Gehrig with 2,130 and Ev^ett ScoU with 1,307, said the iiqury left him personally depressed.

The injury was a disappointment, said Garvey. Im disappmnted that I cant h^ my team at a time thats very important. Baseball is a team sport. Its a very hollow feeling to know that 1 cant contribute. Its as low as 1 felt in many, many years.

After starring for the Los Angeles Dodgers for 12 years.

Garvey became a free agent and signed a five-year, 16.6 million contract with San Dkgo la^ December.

He broke the previous NL record of 1,117 games held tqr Billy WiHiams of the Chkago Cute on April 16 m his first return to Dodger Stadium as a Padre. The last time Garvey missed a game was Sept. 2,1975, when the Doi^ns met the San Francisco Giants.

We were both the same, played hard and every day, said Williams, now a coach with the Oakland As. We were fajcky. I bad mixed ^notions (about Williams streak ending). It seemed like a big thing.

Gehrig's Consecutive Game Mark Remains Untouched After Injury

By The Associated Press Steve Garvey played all but 100 games of his National League record consecutive game streak with the Los Angeles Dodgers. So, naturally, his ex-teammates were as dismayed by the end of that streak as his new ones.

1 was sorry to hear that, said Manager Tommy Lasorda, whose Dodgers were in San Francisco when the news came Friday night that Garveys skein had ended at 1,207 because of a dislocated left thumb.

Its a shame, too bad, Lasorda added. But 1 didnt think he had a chance at (Gehrigs) record.

Ive never seen him slide like that, said Oakland As Coach Billy Williams, whose NL record of 1,117 was broken by Garvey in April. We were both the same, played hard and every day. We were lucky.

1 had mixed emotions

(about Williams streak ending). It seemed like a big thing. But after a couple of days, it was all over. You feel pretty good. Its like a big load off your shoulders.

You hate to see a guy get hurt and ruin a streak, added Dodger catcher Steve Yeager. But it happens, and sometimes it happens in strange ways. The important thing is, when he gets back, hell do well.

As long as he was healthy, he was doing the job day in, day out, said Los Angles shortstop Bill Russell. What more can you ask? I hate to see a streak like his come to an end. He did a lot during that streak.

Kurt Bevacqua, Garveys current teammate, saw him doubled over in a runway at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium during the first game of the Padres doubleheader with the Atlanta Braves. Bevacqua knew right away

that the veteran first baseman had suffered a painful injury.

Garvey, 34, was taken to Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, where X-rays revealed the dislocation. Dr. Paul Hir^man of Scripps said Garvey would be sidelined for at least three weeks.

When I passed him in the runway, he was squatting and I couldnt see the extent of the injury, said Bevacqua, who replaced Garvey at first base after the injury occurred in the first inning of the twinbill.

I didnt have to ask him (how bad it was). 1 knew it was bad oiou^ for his streak to be over with. There was disappointment on his face.

Garvey, who signed with the Padres as a free agent last December after 12 years with the Dodgers, sustained the injury while attempting to score from third base on a wild pitch. He was tagged out by Braves pitcher Pascual Perez, who was covering at

plate.

San Diego Manager Dick Williams said the first thing he thought about when Garvey was injured was that his streak would end.

Its a shame its going to be stopped, be said. Whoi Dick Dent (the Padres trainer) said be thought it was a dislocation, I tbou0it it would be bad.

Vikes Report On Monday

HOLLYWOOD - D.H. Conleys football practice will get underway Monday at 7:30 p.m. with a meeting in the schools fidd house, according to the coaching staff.

All players are requested to report at this time.

Final physicals will be offered to those who have not yet had them from 7 to 7:30 p.m. at a charge of $5.

Dislocated Hopes    thumb in a collision at home plate with Atlanta

San Diegos Steve Garvey has his cast signed pitcher Pasqual Perez Friday in San Die^. Friday night by teammates Dave Dravecky (left) Garveys consecutive game streak ended at 1,207 and Sid Mon^ after he suffered a dislocated games as a result of the injury. (APLaserphoto)

TANK MCNAMARA

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

3

SCOREBOARD

SummrStondinfis

Adult League Basketball

Sizzlers....................6    1

BT. Express..............6    1

OverhilGang.............5    2

Franchise  ..........4    2

Omega...................3    3

Soul Train.................2    5

Running Rebels............2    5

Thriller...................1    5

Alumni....................1    6

Lakers....................0    6

San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati

TbundayiGaiM

;3-IO. MonlrealM

495 12 485 13 441 17'3

Madlock. Pitlsburgli, 333; Knight. Houston. 332: LoSmiOi. StLouis, .332

St Louis 3-10.

Pittst)ur^6.NewYorfc2 Philadelphia 6. Houston 5 Only games scheduled

Fridays Games Montreal 7. St. Louis 2 PittstNirgh 2, New York 1 PhUadelphia3.Chicago2 Houston 4. Cincinnatit San Francisco 5. Los Angeles 2 Atlanta 2-5, San Diego 1-6, 2nd game 12 innings

RUNS-Murphy, Atlanta, 90; Garvey, San Diego, 76, Raines. Montreal. 74: Evans. San Francisco. 71; Dawson.

Francisco, 32. SSax, Los Angeles, 32; Moreno, Houston, 21.

PITCHING 19 decisions I-Falcone, Atlanta. 8-1. 889, 3.06; PPerez, Atlanta,

Montreal. 64.

12-2. 857. 2 79. Montelusco. San Diego.

-    I    .

RBI Dawson. Montreal. 80: Murphy.

Niis, 66:

Saturdays Games

zh (Rhoden

84) at New York

Bflseboll Standings

Baltimore

Detroit

New York

Toronto

Milwaukee

Boston

Cleveland

Chicago Kansas City Texas California Oakland Minnesota Seattle

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet.

57    40

56    41

55    41

56    42

54    43

50    49

40    59    ,    404    18

WEST DIVISION

OB

588 -577    1

573

571    1',

557    3

505    8

525 -500 2'3 490    34

480 44 .451    74

422 104 373 154

52    47

46    46

49    51

48    52

46    56

43    59

38    64

Thursdays Gam Detroit 6. SeatUel Only game scheduled

Friday's Gamsa Toronto 4. Cleveland 2 Milwaukee II, Boston 5 Baltimore 8, Texas 6 Minnesota 4. Seattle 3 Chicago 7. New York 2 Uakland5.L'alilomia2 Detroit to. Kansas City I. suspended after 8 innings, curfew

Saturdays Games Cleveland i Heaton 5-4) at Toronto iStieb 11-91 Kansas City (Black 4-41 at Detroit

Pittsburi (Lvnch 7-4 Ls Angeles iReuss 6-9) at San Francisco (Davis 0-31 Chicago (Rainey 108 and Trout 881 at Philadelphia (Bystrom 38 and Hudson 4-3),2, (Ln)

St Louis (LaPoint 88) at Montreal (Lea7-7), (n)

Cincinnati (Soto 118) at Houston (Ryan 98). (n)

Atlanta (Niekro 58) at San Diego (Dravecky 12-7), (n)

Simdsys Games Pittsburgh at New York, 2 St Louis at Montreal Chicago at Philadelphia Atlania at San Diego Los Angeles at San Francisco Cincinnati at Houston, ini Mondaysdamaa Chicago at Philadelphia, i n)

Houston at San Die^. (n)

Cincinnati at Los Angeles. (n i Atlanta at San Francisco. (n i Only games scheduled

Atlanta. 70. Hendrick. StLouis, Schmidt. Philadelphia, 66; Chambliss. Atlanta, 63; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 63.

HITS Dawson. Montreal, 128; Oliver. Montreal. 127, Tbon, Houston. 122; RRamirez, Atlanta. IIS; Garvey. San Diew, 114; Hendrick. StLouis. 114.

DOUBLES Buckner. Chicago. 27; Oliver. Montreal. 26, Knight. Houston. 25. Hendrick. StLouis. 24; JRay. Pit tsburgh. 24; Wallach. Montreal. 24.

TRIPLES-Moreno, Houston. II, Butler. Atlanta. 9. Raines, Montreal, 7. Dawson, Montreal. 6; 9 are tied with S.

HOME RUNS-Dawson. Montreal. 23;

8 2. 800, 3.74. Rogers. Montreal.

.722. 2.95; McMurtry. Atlanta, 12-5. TOC. 3 11

STRlKEOUlSCarltoh, Philadelphia.

WUlSms,

163; Soto, Cincinnati, 156; McWiUu.,. Pittsburgh, 135; Candelaria. Pittsburg, 107; Valenzuela. Los Angeles. 104.

SAVES-Bedrosian, Atlanta, IS; Reardon, Montreal, 15; LeSmith, Chicago. 14; Lavelle, San Francisco, 12; Minton. San Francisco. II; Sutter, StLouis, II: Tekulve. Pittsburgh. II.

N.C. Scoreboflrij

By The Aaaodated Preaa

Schmidt. Philadelphia. 23. Evans. San ), 21, Huri

Francisco,

Guerrero, Los Angeles, 1 AS&^

AUanU, 21;

CaroUna League

ton-5alem2

STOLEN BASES-Raines. Montreal. 43; Wilson. New York. 35 LeMaster. San

Hagerstown 5. Winston_______

South AtUBticLeaiiie

Asheville 5, Greensboro 4 Greenwood 6. Gastonia I

leoguB Uoders

ByTheAiioclaiodPreei AMERICAN LEAGUE

ity

(Berenguer4-2)

Kansas City at Detroit, completkm of

Milwaukee (Sutton 78) at Boston (Tudor 881 Texas (Smithson 6-91 at Baltimore (McGregor 128), (ni New York iRawley 98) at Chicago (Dotson 1081, (ni Seattle (Abbott 3-3) at MinnesoU (Viola

.'i ll, ini

Oakland (McCatty 3-5 and Codinoli 7-7) at California (Kison 8-5 and John 8-7), 2. It ni

Sunday'sGamaa

Kansas City at Detroit. 2 Cleveland at Toronto Texas at Baltimore Milwaukee at Boston New York at Chicago Seattle at Minnesota Oakland a( California

Moudays Gamas Cleveland a( Toronto Milwaukee at Boston California at Minnesota, 2, itni Kansas City at Detroit, i n t New York at Chicago, (ni Oakland at Seattle, (n)

Only games scheduled

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Atlanta

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BAITING 1245 at batsi-Boggs. Boston, .374; Carew. California. ,3TO, Brett, Kansas City, 352; McRae. Kansas City, 324; Aikens. Kansas City. 320 RUNS-Ripken. Baltimore. 69; Yount. Milwaukee, 68; EMurray, Baltimore, 68: RHenderson. Oakland. 68; Upshaw. Torofitq,67.

RBI-Cooper, Milwaukee, 87; Rke, Boston, eff, EMurray, Baltimore. 67; LNParrish, Detroit, ef. Ward. MinnesoU. 67

HITS-Boggs. Boston. 137; Whitaker. Detroit. IS, Cooper. Milwaukee. 119: Ward, Minnesota, 119: McRae. Kansas City, 116; Ripken. Baltimore. 116.

DOUBLES-Boggs, Boston. 31; McRae, Kansas City, 31; Hrbek. Minnesota, 30; LNParrisfi, Detroit. 30; Ripken. Baltimore 28.

TRIPLES-Winfield, New York, 8; Grif fin. Toronto, 7; Herndon. Detroit, 7; 6 are tied with 6 HOME RUNS-Cooper, Milwaukee. 24; Kittle, Chicago, 23; Rice, Boston. 23; Armas. Boston. 22: Brett. Kansas City, 20, EMurray. Baltimore. 20 STOLEN BASES RHenderson. Oakland. 64. RUw. Chicago. 48; JCruz. Chicago, 45 WWilaon. Kansas City, 43; Sample, Texas. 31 PITCHING 19 deciskmsi-Koosman, Chicago, 8-2, 800. 4 40; RighettI, New YoriUl-3, .716. 3.24; Haas,Milwaukee. 7-2, 778, 3.95; McGregor. Baltimore, 128, .750. 3.11: Slaton. Milwaukee. 9-3. 750. 4 04 Splittorff. Kansas Citv, 9-3, 750, 400

STRIKEOUTS Morris, Detroit, 133; Stieb, Toronto 122 Righetti Now York, III. Illvlevpi; ('Imeliind Mil duldiffp Cleveland.lUl

..IUIW

Machine Time

AUGUST SPECIAL

SAVES Ouisenberry, Kansas City. 25;' RDavis. Minnesota. 19, Stanley. Boston.

19: Caudill. Seattle. 18; Lopez. Detroit. 14

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING 1245 al baUI Easier, Pit Ubur^, .339; Hendrick. StLouis. 334;

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JOINED STAFF

D.G. Nkfaols Real Estate Agency Inc. aonounced that Katherme Q. Vnsoo has joined the finns staff m real estate sales.

An Oxford n^ive, Mrs. Vinson has resided m GreenvlUe for six years. She vas previously employed by Peoples Bank & Trust Co. as a maiketmg representative.

She is married to the Rev. E. T. Vinson and they have two sons.

BANKING GRADUATES

Two Greenville bankers woe amoi^ 99 mid-management students and 43 in advanced managMnpnt who graduated from the N.C. School of Bankings 47th amwal session recently.

Bobby Glem Brannon and James Richard Jones II, both associated with Wachovia Bank & Trust Co., finished requirements for advanced management and mid-mana^ment OI certificate respectively.

The state bankers assodatioo has sponsored the school in cooperation with the University of North ramiina at Chapel Hill every year since 1937.

NEW VP NAMED Burney S. Warren HI, pres-ideitf of First Federal Savings

and Loan Assodatioo of Pitt County, announced that Frai^ M. Lawrence has joined the firm as vice president-

mortga^ loan production and new bu^iess deveiopmei^.

Lawrence was fwmrly vice presidat and Greenville city

executive for First American Federal Savings k Loan (formoly East Federal).

Lawrence attended the University (rf South Carolina, majoring in hanking finance, and is a grarhiate of the National Institide of Financial Education for Savings and Loans. A member oi First Presbyterian Church, Lawrence is married to the former Eaiiene Sutton of

Kiostoo and they have one dai^ter, Alison.

FRANK LAWRENCE

ATTENDED ACnvrriES Jdinnie Lee Buck of Route 1, Grimesland, was one of over

2,000 indepei^ Stanley dealers and sales management mnel mvited to Stanley Home Products Divisions annual

personneli

activities at the companys Westfield, Mass., home offices.

Buck, who has been associated with the company for ei^t years, attended varkxe functions, including banquets and seminars.

The divisions parent company, Stanhome Inc., manufactures home and personal care products sold by independent dealers.

DECLARED DIVIDEND The board of directors of Vermmit American Corp. declared a regular quartoly dividend of nine cents per share on the companys Gass A and Gass B common stock, payaMe Aug. 26 to shareholders of record Aug. 5.

The company, which has a plant ha%, manufactures cutting tools, power tool accessories, and hand tools for consumer and industry.

BOARD APPOINTEE Nila L. Bland of Greenville has bei named to the board of directors (rf the North Carolina division of Profesional Secretaries Intmnational for 1983^.

She will serve as Future Secretaries Association director for the division. Hiere are 19 FSA chapters in the divisions local high schods, technical institutes, community colleges, and universities.

Miss Bland, a member of PSI since 1973, is executive secretary to Max R. Joyner. CLU, regional agency manager of Jefferson Standard Ufe Insui ance Co., Greenville.

AGENTSSdlOOL Billy M. Edwards of Greenville, who represents Home Security Life Insurance Co. in the Rocky Mount district office, recently attended the companys new agents school in Durham.

Home Security has 259 employees in the home office and 550 agents in the field, throughout North Carolina, South Carolina, and a small section of Georgia. The company has $3.3 billion of life insurance in finte.

ART DIRECTOR Terrydale Printing of Greenville announced the association of Karen Podeszwa as the companys new art director.

Ms. Podeszwa completed her undergraduate work at East Carolina University with a concentration in commercial art. The firm said she has heen involved with art through the printed media for five years.

TRWFIGURES    .

TRW Inc. reported that sales for the quarter ended June 30 rose to $1.41 billion, up 4 percent over 1962s second period total of $1.36 billion. Earnings before taxes were $99.1 million, down 8 percent from the $107.4 million recorded a year earlier.

For the first half, TRW sales totaled $2.79 billion, up 4 percent from the $2.68 billion recorded in last year's first six months. Net eamingi amounted to $93.8 million, down 11 percent from $l(6i million for the 1982 period.

TRW operates a plant in Greenville.

RESULTS IMPROVED Fieldcrest Mills Inc. reported second quarter sales and earnings tqi over the same period last year.

Sales were $127,591,000, an increase of 12 percent over last years second quarter. Net earnings for the 1983 period were $1,501,000 compared to a loss last year of $709,000, according to Francis X. Larkin, president and chief executive officer.

Fieldcrest, headquartered ta Eden, has facilities in Greenville.

INCREASES NOTED Hampton Industries Inc. reported that sales for the quarter ended June 25 increased 13.5 pen^t to $25,814,000 from $22,742JM) last year. Earnings for the period were $274,000 asBusiness Notes

COMPLETED COURSE WiHwr H. Potter, PBX instailer repairer for Carolina Tefophoee and Telegraph Co. in Greenville, recently completed a thieeday course conducted Iqr the company at its Rocky Mount trmnhig center.

CTAT said it condurts year-roimd traming schools to train new employees and to introduce new technological devel-o|oents in telecommomcatioiis to other onployees

compared to $250,000 in 19C2.

For the 26 weeks ended June 25, sales were $4M73,0I0 as compared to $45,942,0tt in 1912, an aerease of 5 J percent Earnings totaled $571,000, qp from $516,000 a year artier.

Prepte Inc. of Greenvflle is a divisioo of Hampton IncKi^ries.

BUSINESS MANAGER John Adams, who received his masters de^ from East Carolina University, has joined the staff of Central Carolina [^tsun in Saitfwd as business managn*

Formerly employed by Stewart/dds Datsun in Fayetteville, Adams is a nMive of Fayetteville.

Interest checks totaling $859.866 went to 10,145 owners of FCX debentures. Dividends of $251,400 went to 27,465 prrierred stockholders Gross volume of the fanner-owned cooperative in the fiscal year ended June 30 was in excess of $500 millioQ.

PLANTERSDIVIDEND The board of directors of the Planters Corp. dedared a quarterly cash dividend of 19 cents per share payable Sept IS to stockboidns of record on Aug. 31.

After restatement for the 100 percent dividend itistrihuted tosbarefaoldresonApra29, 1983, the cash dividend represents a 11.8 patient increase ow the 17 cents per share (tividend for the third quarter of 1982.

STOCK OFFERING

The Black and Deck Maoufacturing Co. aonounced that it has filed a registratioo stateinent with the Securities and Exchange Commisoa for a puUk offering of 4,000,000 shares of common stock.

The offering will be made throu^i a worldwide syndicate of underwriters.

Proceeds of the sale of common stock will be used to reduce debt and for general corporate purposes, the company said.

STOCK SPLIT

The board of directors of Coon Homes Corp. declared a three for two stock split to be dfected in the form of a dividend, payable Aug. 31 to stockholders of record Aug. 10. Fractional Glares will be paid in cash.

NET INCOME UP First Citizens Corp., the bank holding company (rf First GtiKns Bank, reported income before securities transactions of $5,891,173 for the quarter ending June 30. up 26.7 percem from the $1648,370 earned during the same period in 1962.

Net income was $5,642,308 for the second quarter, compared to $4,422,117 for the second quarter of 1982.

Income bdore securities transactions for the six months ending June 30 totaled $11.552,173, compared to 8,237,118 for the same period in 1982, an increase of 25.1 percot. Net income for the first six months of 1983 totaled $12,584,523, compared to $7,694,768 in 1982

NCNB DIVIDEND The board directors of NCNB Corp. dedared a quarterly dividend of $25 a share, payable Sept 23 to sharefaolds of record Sept. 2.

REGULAR DIVn^ND CONNA GNrporation directors declared a regidar quarterly cash dividend of 12 cents p share, payable Ai^. 15 to shareholders of record Aug. 5.

CONNA is a bokhng company whose primary subsidiaries operate neaily 300 retail gasoline outlets and operate or franchise about 440 Convenient Food Mart and otb stores in a 12-state area.

INCOME ROSE The Planters Corp. reported an increase in net incmne of 13.5 percent to $1,244,000 for the second quarter eneded June 30, from $1,096,000 in 1982.

At June 30, total assest eipialed $477,093,000, up 15.3 percent from June 30, 1982. Deposits increased 172 percent to $420,532,000, and loans increased 8.9 percent to C8617,000. Shareholders equite increased 12.3 percent to $33,611 000 from $29,930,000.

For the fii^ six months of 1963, net income incrpased 117 percent to $2,376,000 fro, $2,128,000 for the same period in 1982.

DEPARTMENT HEAD Michael Lainhart has been promoted to section bead of the department of radiation protection at the Burroughs Wdlcome ^arch facilities at Research Triangle Park.

He received a bacbeior's degree in envlroamental health from East Cardina University and joined the company in 1980. A former resident of Winterville, he now lives in Raleigh.

DIVIDENDS MAILED Annual divideod and intest checks totaling more than $1 millioa have been mailed to ddienture owners and preferred stockholders of FCX Inc. Returns were made to investors of record as of July 1.

HIGHERSALES Vernwnt American Corp. reported higher than anticipated sales and earning for the fiscal quarter ended June 10.

Sales in the quarter were $46,215.000 compared with $42,726,000 last year. Net iiKome was $2,285,000.

In the six months ended June 20, sales were 83,045,000 compared with $92,063,000 last year.

Northwest Faces Economic Brownout

By DOUG ES^

AssodMed Press Writer

SEATTLE (AP) - When the Washington Public Power Simply System slid over the brink last week, unable to make paymits on bonds sold to build two nuclear power plants. Chemical Bank in New York - the bomfliolder trustee - called it an incident of default.

Some incident. It was the biggest default in municipal bond history.

The two power plants swallowed 8.25 billioo in bonds. With interest over 30 years, the debt comes to 8 billion.

This week, bondbdds, economists and government dficials are checking the damage.

One analysis predicts what might be termed an economic brownout" for the Pacific

NOTtbwest. Others say the damage can be overcome. Larger coinpanies say they can C0V tbe losses. Individual bondholders are bitter.

Lawsuits will keep WPPSS, a consortium of Washington public utilities that started building the {riads fw 8 Northwest power siqipliers, in courts for years. Other effects are likdy to be higher interest rates or financmg troubles with other municipal projects.

All this was predicted in March in a study by tbe Chicago consulting firm of Knight-Bonniwell. The study, ordered by Washing Gov. John Spellman, surveyed investors, underwriters, bond-rating agencies and government officials.

The economy and in particular the state of

Pentagon Says Soviets Face Lagging Economy

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Soviet Union will have to improve its lagging economy if it hopes to maintain its position as a military superpower in the 1990s and beyond, a Pentagon intelligence official has Urid Congress.

The slowing of economic growth because of low productivity, among other reasons, endangers the long-term objective of maintaining a military force capable of providing a base for Soviet international legitimacy," said Maj. Gen. Schuyler Bissell, deputy director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.

Bissells testimony, which

was given to a dosed bearing of a Joint Economic subcommittee on June 23, was released to r^rters Saturday by Sen. William Prox-mire, D-Wis., the panels vice chairman.

Unless tbe Soviets are aNe to improve tbe economic sy^m, their ability to sustain growth in the defense sector will be undermined, particularly in the long run, the Air Force officer said.

Since coming to power last November upon the death of Leonid Brezhnev, Communist Party leader Yuri Andropov appears to have fostered a new willingness to acknowledge tbe nature of the economic proUems and

to discuss a rai^ of p^ibie changes" included limited decentralization, Bissell testified.

Some actions taken since last November, albeit relatively minor, appear to be having positive results, he continued.

One thing unlikely to be changed, Bissell added, is tbe first call that military spending has on the economy. Soviet defense spending, which includes civilian space activities and internal security, consumed 14 percent to 16 percent of the nations gross national product in 1981 - more than twice the U.S.level.

Washington will be severely hampered, but it is difficult to quantify to what extent, the report said. There will be a negative ripple effect on employment, probably huge, e.g., 20,000 lost jobs.

Tbe re^ said tbat agriculture and tbe construction, newsprint, timber, pulp, paper, chemical and aluminum industries would be affected.

Utility rates will probably rise; two mothballed nuclear plants, projects 1 and 3, may never be restarted; business will be unv^ing to locate or expand in tbe Northwest, the rq)ort stated.

1 think everything in tbat report was accurate; if anything, conservative, Gary Petersen, spokesman for WPPSS in Richland, said last week.

He said WPPSS would have to pay much more when it tried to sell bonds or borrow money in three to five years to resume work on nuclear plant 1 and 3.

They will cost a premium, he said. Petersen also said be bad received many calls from angry bondbidders.

- There are individuals who are very emotional - in tears and angry. Others are just questioning, Are my bonds any good? Others say, Name me the person 1 can sue. Whose fault is this?

Petersen said he personally felt that tbe bonds would be paid in 40-50 years. But the official position is bleak.

We have no income. The state Supreme Court has said the utilities (kmt have to pay, Petersen said. We have no other way of attaining money.

The two abandoned nuclear plants - No. 4 on tbe Hanford nuclear reservation in eastern Washington, about 25 percent complete, and No. 5 at Satsop near tbe coast in western Washington, about 16 percent complete - will never produce a watt of electricity. Construction was terminated in January 1982 because of financing problems and doubts whether their power would be needed.

WPPSS bonds for projects 4 and 5 were trading at 15 or 20 cents on the dollar last week, said Steve Hueglin, executive vice president of Gabriele, Hueglin & Cashman Inc., a securities firm in New York.

If the bonds still bad an A-l rating, a $5,000 bond would have been worth 8,000 to 8,000. Such a bond sold for about $900 Wednesday, Hueglin said.

The default itself was anti-climactic, Hueglin said. People have had so long to get used to it. People still dont believe this is tbe end.

Washington state is not responsible for tbe WPPSS default, but state Treasurer Robert OBrien said the default would likely raise interest rates one-half to threeH)uarters of a point.

OBrien and Spellman will lead a delegatioo of legislators to Wall Street Thursday. 'To relieve a cash flow problem. OBrien said, the state is going to the market for $150 million worth of 25-year general obligation bonds and $200 million in 12-month notes.

. All of this is to emphasize that WPPSS is not the state of Washington, he said. The underwriters understand the difference. That isnt the problem. They have to go out and sdl (bonds) to the school teacher in Tallahassee, the fireman in Alaska Ums average small investor.

Weve got to ^t to them and explain its two entirely different entities. The state has never defaulted and never will.

The governors of Washington and Oregon have appointed a panel to help control tbe WPPSS damage. But while the panel may make suggestions to limit the impact on other borrowers and the Northwest economy, it is doubtful it can help the individuals who used their savings to buy WPPSS bonds.

About half the bonds are held by individuals, according to a report by tbe A.M. Best Co. of Oldwick, N.J. The insurance industry owns about a quarter. Banks and others own the rest.

One investor who saw his gilt-edged bonds turn guUt-ed^ is Paul Bonseigneur, a 58-year-oId retiree who bought 15 bonds. Their diminished value is one reason hes going back to work as a computer consultant.

Bonseigneur said he was disgusted and described himself as a victim of his brokers overselling. Hes also through buying bonds.

I probably wouldnt buy any more, not municipals, he said.lELL^A'PHONE COMPANY WHATS ON YOUR MIND.

During Carolina Telephone's Customer Information Day

Carolina Telephones Division Maiic^ment Team will be on hand to answer your questions, listen to your concerns, and discuss with you some of the issues fedng the telephone industry. And wed like to hear your ideas, too. Talk to us! If youre unable to visit, but would still like to talk, call us at our special Customer Information Day number: Cxrllea - lil>0009 Friday, August 5 ' 11 AM *tU 7 PM' Willis BuUding' 1st and Reade' Greenville.

United

Telephone

.System

Carolina lelephone

!





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Interest Rates Prompt Sharp Fall For Metals

By KEITH E. LEKSffTY APBosiDes Writer

Precioiis metals futures

IRices were sfaan^ lower in Friday on the

heavy tnaling Conainodity Exchange in New York.

Sharply higher interest rates iRompted a rotmd of sdUng traders who had accumulated positions to buy metals earlier in the week when metals prices showed unusual stren^ despite rising interest rates, said Howard Levine, a metals analyst in White Plains, N.Y., with ACLI International.

Hie strength earlier in the week led many speculators to believe that gold prices in particular were ready to climb, Levine said, and the break in prices Friday forced them to sell their holdings.

May

Jul

I(.W

xjn

2.174

1.475

ir

CHICAGO lAP) - The rMfe of com-nottty futures tlus past week on Ok Ckicafo Board of Trade was;

Wk. Wk . Open uw am oetaiSS

S,tM ku mIMmb; dritan biiM

Sep    3.73    2.M    3.73^4    4 07

Dec    3JI    3.7SS    3.30*4    4.I7S

Mar    3.39    3.M    iM    +.46*1

3.90*4 3.MS 3.31    + 4**4

3.13    3.70    3 79*4 + OO+4

Fri. to Tburs. sales C.076.

Total open interest S6.377

CORN

,000 bn bUohb; dolus per buM

3.2S4 3.14*4 3.20'4 -.05*4 21.413 3.31    3.1*4 3JS*4 -.04*4 .474

1404 3.23 3.35*4 -.05 1454 3.314 14 - 044 147*4 3.324 144*4 -.034 131    3. 3.2*    -094

119    3 06 1 -.12

Fri to Thurs sales 310.617.

Total open interest 157.K1.

OATS

. kn BlniiBam; dalan per boMiel

-    167*4 1(1    1 *44 - 03*4    4.454

1.10*4 1 71*4 1.71*4 - 034 1.91    1.K    1.90 -II

1*4 I.4 1974 + 01 0 *0    8.00 I.M

2.00 14 1 +004 Fri. to Tkurs sales 7,541 ToUl open interest 10.062

Dec

Mar

May

Jut

Dec

27.071

6,379

5.331

570

1.623

ir

Dk

Mar

May

Jun

Jiil

4.6K

617

221

SOYBEANS

6,000 bn klmani; dolars per boOhal

Aim 7 22 6.83 6.4 - 09    12.4

7.30    6.92    7 4    -

7.49*4    7    7.26    - 10

7.62    7.21    7.39*4    -.10*4

7.M4    7.52*4    - 13*4

7.4*4    7.61    -.154

7 514    7.664    - 15

7 44    7.56    - 14

710    7 .15    - 25

6.71    691    -19

Fri. to Tburs sales 361.845 Total open interest 112.355

SOYBEAN (NL

Sep

Nov

Jan

Mar

May

Jul

Aug

Nov

7.75 7.83 7

7.76 7.40 710

11.478

70 JM 10.9 3.818 1.120 1 "93 549 270 351

1.000 I; ddan p MO Ms.

24 20 22 a 23.32

Aug

3

Dec

Jan

Mar

May

Jul

Aug

+ .39

+ .21 + .17

+ 15 -.05 -.17

24.35 S 2S 23

24.50 a.46 a.52 24 a oo a n 24.95 a.io 24.03 K 20 a 46 24 20 a.s ail 24. a.40 24.10 24.45 40 a.TD a.9S Sep 24.40 a.l5 a.74 Fri. to Tburs sates 91.469.

Total opmjnterest 54.458 soybean MAL IM taoi; dolan per ton

207.00 lllOO 197.50 -5

200.00 195.00 1. -6.

210.00 197.M !. -6.50 216.50 2.W 207. -5.10 2.00 306 210. -5.00 2a.M 2U. 214.00 -5.50

25.00 211 00 216. -I. 225 00 215.N 219.50 -9 00 2a.00 213.50 7.00 -11 50

6.SH

I.SU

(.745

+ a 23,014 + .21 6,5a

1.7

605

272

l

252

Aug

Dec

Jan

Mar

May

Jut

Aug

S 2M.50 210. 216.00 Fri. to TWs. sales ,

171.

8.9

9,460

5.894

17,783

6.111

2,027

368

677

341

207

Total open interest 51.837

Gold settled $12J0 to $12.90 lower with the coidract for deliv^ in Augu^ at $412.80 a troy ounce; silva- settled 42.3 cents to SO cents lower with Augu^ at $11JIS a troy oimce.

Grain and soybean ftdures prices woe mostly lower on the Chicago Board of Trle.

A broad sdloff throu^iout commodity futures markets contributed to the pressure, as did the forecast for a di^it increase in rainfall over the weekend and showers in northern Iowa and central Illinois Thursday night, said Dale Gustafson, a grain analyst in Chicago with Drex-el Burnham Lambert, Inc.

The selloff in other markets put psychological pressure on the grains, while the rain eased concern about weather related damage, Gustafson said.

In addition, be said, soybean prices were under pressure from disappointoMnt that the five-year grain trade agreement between the Soviet Un-oin and the United States failed to include a provision for a minimum soybean purchase. Guasn said. The agreement gives the Soviets the option to buy 500,000 tons of solans.

Prices recovered late in the session, although still finishing with losses from Thursday, primarily on buying by traders who were willing to speculate that prices might increase when trading resumes on Monday, Gustafson said.

Wheat settled 3% cents lower to 1^ cents higher with the contract for delivery in September at $3.72=V4 a bushel; com was Vk cents to 6V4 cents lower with September at $3.20^4 a bushel; oats were =V4 cent to 3 cents lower with Sqitember at $1.64^4 a bushel; and soybeans were 9 cents to 14=V4 cents lower with August at$6.98>^abushel.

Livestock and meat prices were mostly lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

Live cattle for delivery in August were higher while the later delivery months were lower. Bob Holbert, a livestock analyst in Chicago with ContiCommodity Services, Inc., said strength came on ideas that retailers are featuring more specials on bed and analysts expect beef prices to increase next week.

Hogs fell for the first time and sources said traders were selling codracts to take profits after the runup. Holbert noted that cooler tempo-a-tures could prompt additional marketing of bogs as well.

Frozen pork bellies for delivery in August were sup-

ported ^ ideas that grocery

stores ale featuring specials on bacon, sources said. In addition, the wholesale price on cash markets is sharply higher than the futures price, and the futures price is likely to advance to close the gap between the two, Holbert said.

Live cattle settled .35 cent lower to .43 cent higher with the contract for delivery in August at 62.65 cents a pound; feeder cattle were .25 cent lower to .10 cent higher with August at 62.75 cents a pound; live hogs were .80 cent lower to .55 cent higher with August at 46.32 cents a pound; and frozen pork bellies were 2 cents lower to 1.85 cent higher with August at 57.40 cents a pound.

Stock Market Zips Up,

(I

Then Out As Week Ends

BUY AMERICAN - Labor Secretary Raymond Donovan answers a question during a news coference Saturday at the Textile Hall in Greoiville, S.C. Ceremonies were held

launching a can^iaign to promote the purchase of U.S.-made goods. Mai

goods. Manufacturers hope to win back a share of the U.S. dothing maitet, which now shows imports accounting for 30 pox^oit of all domestic sales. (AP Laserphoto)

Automakers Take Lead As Industry Goes Black

Weekly Stocks In Spotlight

NEW YORK I AP) Yearty higk-low. weekly ules, high. low. dosing price and net change o( the most active stocla Iradina (or more than SI:

rading (or i |h Um%^

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704

51

564 127 35*

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50    ATT    5,557.500    61*.    60'i.    61 -    *i.

24*.    Exxon    4,634,800    35+    \

25* DeltaAr    4,335.200    37'    30*,    31'^-    4'/<

HI'-,    MerLy s    4.303.500    50S.    44*    45*-    3*

62'    IBM    48.000    127    Ill'S.    1*-    4

6*, Chryslr    4,203.700    32    '-    27

4,150.600    77'!,    72',    73*-    IV,

3,969,900 31*, 2

3.(12,800 33*,

41

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6*, 21*, FordM 3,412.000 63*, 58* >+ |

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18' Sears 3,247.000 45' 41*, 42*s- 1

57*, 31* GenEI s S,2.700 54+ 49

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49- 3* 29*- 1*

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3.010,900 I9)> 16    16V,-    I

3,821,700 15 14',, 14*,- *

2.954.900 40 X 36*-2*

2.750,600 30*, * *,- >

JAMES PELTZ Business Writer NEW YORK (AP)-Black is back at some once-ailing U.S. industries as the economic recovery, and de-iressed year-eariier results, lelped some of them turn sizable second-quarter profits.

The auto industry was a prime example as General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. said this past week that their earnings more than doubled to $1.04 billion and $542 million, restively. Chrysler Corp. eariier said its profit nearly tripled to $310.3 million - a quarterly record for Chrysler.

Also, sales of new domestic-made cars in mid-July climbed 38 percent from a year earlier after rising 43 percent in the first 10 days of the month.

Other companies that stru^ed through 1982, including some oil, airline and aluminum concerns, also posted impressive rebounds in the second quarter.

But there is one main industry that, as often happens, is lagging the others -steel.

Industry leader U.S. Steel Corp. said its pre-tax operating profit nearly doubled to $163 million, but after totaling taxes, interest payments and other expenses, the bottom line was a net loss of $112 million.

Second-ranked Bethlehem Steel Corp. followed with a $92.7 million loss, and it forecast more losses for the third quarter and whole year.

A substantial part of the steel industrys customer base is the capital goods sector - where factories,

machinery and other equipment are produced. Since companies often want strong evidence of a recovery before building a new factory, or buying expensive machinery, the capital goods industry usually ags much of the recovery. So steel does, too.

The steel companies and other makers of heavy industrial equipment probably have another six to nine months of difficulty ahead before they see a turnaround, said Ted Gibson, senior economist at Crocker National Bank in San Francisco.

However, he also said corporate spending for capital goods appears to be rising faster after this latest recession than in the 1975-76 economic recovery.

The economy seems to be trying its best to help. After retail sales, production and other economic categories rose in June, the Commerce Department said the June reading of its main forecasting gauge of economic growth rose 1 percent -its nth monthly gain in the past year.

The recovery also is building confidence among consumers to spend more, especially for such durable goods as cars, major appliances and furniture.

Sears, Roebuck & Co., for example, said its second-quarter profit rose 88 percent to $308 million, as earnings nearly doubled at its merchandising unit.

But two other contributors to the higher earnings of many industries, especially those involved in heavy smokestack operations, were the companies cost-

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cutting during the recession and the fact that a lot of the companies were operating off a depressed base in comparing year-to-year results, said Steven Dobson, senior economist at Bank of America in San Francisco.

Gibson said, Many of these companies that suffered heavy losses during the worst of the recession took measures on their own to reduce their break-even points.

He said the result was a really spectacular 8.9 percent increase, at an annual rate, in second-quarter manufacturing productivity as reported this past week by the Labor Department.

However, economists also say that some industries will have to closely monitor their now-reduced production capacities, or otherwise find they are restrained from additional output in 1985-86.

By STEVEN ROSENFELD AP Business Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market gave new meaning to the word volatility this piast week.

The Dow Jones industrials briefly flirted with record heights, capping a 60-point, six-day su^e at midweek, then coUap^ in a selling ^ree that wiped out most of those gains.

An old nemesis, interest-rate jitters, was a primary contributor.

But a Peanut also played a pivotal role at the markets turning point.

Peanut is an industry designation for a home computer model believed under development at International Business Machines. When speculation grew this past week that IBM was ready to put its Peanut on the market in September, computer stocks took a beating, with the selling spUling over to other issues, aborting the rally.

The once-hot high technology stocks soured because of conceni about heightened competition in the home computer industry, a business that currently is suffering widening losses.

Suddenly the technology group wilted. It seemed to drag down the general market, said Eldon Grimm, a senior vice president at Birr, Wilson & Co. Inc. '

Corrections always begin with unexpected changes in investor sentiment, said Julius Westheimer, a partner in Baker, Watts & Co. Correction is a Wall Street term for a short-term setback in a rising market.

Most analysts agreed the market was vulnerable for a fall when the 30 bluenrhip issues comprising the Dow Jones industrials leaped over the 1,250 mark in the early

a day, against 84.63 million a week eariier.

Hje jarring roller-coaster ride for stocks over the past two weeks reflects what has been happening to the market at a more gradual pace since mid-April.

Since April 20, the Dow Jones industrials has held between 1,180 and 1,250, with a record closing high of 1,248.30 set June 16.

On July 18, the Dow Jones industrials stood at 1,189.90. It leaped to 1,253.00 after the first half hour of trading Wednesday, then retreated as low as 1 J93.51 in the heat^

of the selloff Friday before recovering sli^tly in the final hours of trading.

Perceptions about the course of interest rates were a major factor in the swings.

During the rally, fears faded that rising interest rates would cut short the recovery after Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker said the central bank was paying less attention to the rapid growth of the money supply.

During the markets slide fears grew that because of the economys rapid recovery, private demand for credit would grow. Volcker

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ke the rest of the market with them.

The generals wre moving ahead but the infantry / was not keeping pace, and when this occurs, it is difficult to keep an advance going, Newton Zinder, an analyst at E.F. Hutton & Co., said in a market commentary.

liie stock markets best-known indicator ended the week down 31.95 points at 1 199.22.

The New York Stock Exchange composite index fell 3.47 to 94.27. The American Stock Exchange market value index, which reached a record-high 249.03 on Tuesday, wound up the week off 9.24 at 238.38.

Big Board volume averaged 87.58 million shares

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China, U.S. Reportedly Agree On Textile Quotas

By THOMAS W.NETTER Associated Press Writer

GENEVA, Switzerland (AP) - China and the United States have agreed on quotas for Chinese textile exports to America, well-placed sources said Saturday. An agreement would end a trade battle that sharply reduced Chinas purchases of American farm products and strained political ties.

The two countries are expected to exchange notes and officially sign the new agreement in the near future, the Geneva correspondent of Chinas official Xinhua news agency reported.

Other sources, who declined to be identified by name w nationality, said there were still differences over language and other technical points. However, like Xinhua, they said the question of quota amounts had been settled.

Details were not immediately available, but China had been pressing for a 6 percent annual growth rate in its share of the

U.S. market and the United States had been offering 1.5 to 2 percent, industry sources said.

Conclusion of an agreemeitf durii^ the seventh round (rf talks, which began here Monday, was expected to ease significantly the economic sparring begun vitas the United States imposed unilateral quotas after previous agreemei^ expired in January.

The dilute wlUi the Chinese, and paralld talks wi) the Soviets, had left those two major U.S. grain export markets in jeopardy. Both the Soviets and Chinese bad trimmed or halted their purchases of U.S. farm products to bolster their bargaining position, according to financial analysts.

Agreement with the Chinese follows a five-year accord reached Friday in Vienna under which the Soviets agreed to txiy about 9 million t(Mis of U.S. wheat and com a year, 3 million more than the minimum under an expiring 1975 pact.

The Soviet Union, the worids lar^ sin^e grain importer, has reportedly purchased only slighUv more than the 6 milli(Mi-t(Hi annual minimum this flscal year, hurting U.S. farmers who already are languishing from overproduction aiKl declining demand.

At the same time, the Chinese, thought to have contracted

to buy 6.million tons of U.S. com and wheat annually, have sine jamuuy halted

Last year, textile aqmrts frmn China to the United States

of grain as well as U.S. cotton, soybeans and chemical fibers, at least partly due to the tmctite quotas, according to industry analysts.

UJS. officials omtend the declining purchases are due to betto* Soviet and Qiinese harvests rather than trade di^|)utes. But the decline hit hard and U.S. agricultural expMts are expected to fall to $34.5 billion during fiscal 1983, 12 parent below 1982 and 21 percent below the peak of $43.8 billion in 1981.

The inqmrtance of Uie textile talks for the U.S. clothing and textile Mustry was unlerscored Tuesday when ,U.S. mamifacturers and retailers, who were advising government negotiators, walked out. Manufacturers argued the U.S. position was too soft, and retailers said it was too hard.

The mamifacturers are vying for Amerian market shares now held by imports from China, to Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan. U.S. officials have described the U.S. textile maitet as particulariy depressed.

amounted to about $800 million. While China says its exports *    " ' * of the value of all U.S. textile

account for about 6 imports, the United States says Chinese products exceed li percent in volume.

The talks have placed the Reagan administration in a difficult position, between farm groups who want to boost exports, and textile workers and manufacturers suffering from increased Chinese imports.

But they also involve political problems of strained U.S.-Chinese relations. The Chinese press, in attacks earlier this year, called the U.S. attitude mde and unreasonable and said the matter cannot but damage Sino-U.S. relations.

Another difficult issue between the two governments is Taiwan.

China contends that debite formally recognizing Peking as the sole government of China, the United States gives indepoidait status to Taiwan, seat of the rival Nationalist Chinese government. It objects e^ially to U.S. arms sales to the island of 18 million po^le.

"SchM. BICYCL

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liVElf

WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal government said Friday it will sell its ri^ts to 14.4 millitm Chryder Corp. shares to the public, a sale inai could bring in around $200 million. The company denounced the (teciskm as going for the last ounce of blood and said it would appeal the decision to Congress.

As part of the federal bail-out plan for the automaker engineered in 1980 and 1981, the government got 14.4 million stock warrants, or rights to buy shares from the company.

The government had the option of exercising the warrants, selling them or forgiving them. The last option had been ruled out by Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan after Chrylser proposed it earlier this summer.

SHOWCASE FOR BUSINESS - Coors Classic winners Dale Stetina, left, (d Indi-anpdis and Rebecca Twigg of Serttte are pictured in the winners circle after their overall champtondiips in the cycling race last

weekoxl. The worid of competitive cycling has beccMne a dwwcase for business, with i^pectatOT stands, plastic cups, dues, bikes and the ridos themsdves ^rtii^ a vast array of corporate names. (AP Laserphoto)

Chrysler took out $1.2 billion in loans guaranteed by the government. Earlier this month the company announced that it will pay back, seven years early, the remaining $800 million it owes under the guarantees.

In a statement released at Treasury after the close of the stock market Friday, the Chrysler Loan Guarantee Board said it had decided to sell the warrants it held throu^ a competitive

un-

Businesses Find Area Of Profit

In Backing Competitive Cycling

By JENNIFER PARMELEE Associated Press Wrttor

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - The world of competitive cycling has become a merchants dream, with spectator stands, plastic cups, shoes, bikes and the riders themselves ^rting corporate names.

But not only business profits from the arrangement.

American amateur cycling, long drained of its best riders as they turned professional, has gotten a shot of adrenalin from corporations that sponsor its -competitors.

Raleigh, Schwinn and 7-Eleven field the most prominent teams and allow top cyclists to ride and train witlKMit worrying about taking outside jobs. In addition, companies have pumped mimey into training programs, cycling facilities and the development of high-tech bicycles.

The payoff for bicycle makers is an increased interest In cycling, which boosts sales of everything from bikes to cycling caps. Its not bad for public relations either.

Being associated with a squeaky clean, all-American qwrt just cant hurt, said Craig Kuhl of Addph Coors Co., the Golden, Colo., brewer.

Coors and Southland Ck)rp., parent of the 7-Eleven store chain, sponsor Americas top bike race, the Coors International Bicycle Classic.

The returns for bike racing from corporate sponsorship have just started to show, in part because American cyclists have begun to make their mark on the sport.

Americans have had their best season ever in the tough Eun^)^ races, and Dave Prouty, new executive director of the U.S. Cycling Federation, said corporations have filled in for the gov-emmoit siqtport and cycling clubs found in other countries.

You can have the spirit and the talent, but without the financial siq^rt, we wouldnt be where we are today, Prouty said.

U.S. cycling officials say the 1984

design fw the American Olympic bicycle, said Raleigh president Lloyd Docter.

Docter, a cycling enthusiast who said he began importing bikes when he was 15, estimated Raleigh will ^nd more than $1 million on the Olympic effort. Some of that will go to develop an aerodynamically superb bicycle at its Dayton, (Ro, headquarters, he said.

We do it because it makes good business sense and because its fun, said Docter, whose company seUs about 8

Olympics will be the first in which miUion bicvcles a vear'The visibilitv of

^cycling is fundamental to our success. We want America to Think bicycle.

medals. American women have been quietly bringing home gold medals for years from international cycling events, but the upcoming Olympiad is the first to invite women. American men are now rated fourth in the world.

The prospect has prompted a fresh flur^ of business involvement.

Mike Bn^hy, a ^esman for 7-Eleven, said Southland decided to get involved after the U.S. hockey team won the Olympic gold medal in 1980.

We offered to write the Los Angeles Olympic Committee a blank check for their swimming facility, he said. They replied that McDonalds was already building that, and how would we like to build a velodrome?

Southland wound up building two of the indoor cycling tracks, the second one in Colorado Sprint, ending $6 million to $7 million, Btt^%said.

A bicycle maker such as Raleigh has a more obvious connection. A division of Huffy Corp., Raleigh sponsors several teams and is at work on a top-secret

The recent Coors International Bicycle Classic held in Boulder offered con-panies the (^rtunity to sell more than just bikes.

A shoe company (kmated medical equipment along with shirts and shoes bearing the corporate label. A Denver car dealer offered the use of a halfmillion dollars worth of new cars and was praised over the public address system that was wired for free by a Denver-based company.

The competition for space and attention is not always friendly. At one point, 7-Eleven and Coors officials wrangled over which corporate logo womois winner Rebecca Twigg would wear on her hat for the vict

Its sort of a corporate ego side to the whole thing, Docter said. Each company wants to look good and be successful. They end up fueling each other and thats good for cycling ampetition.

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derwritten public offering, and had rejected a Chrysler offer to buy them back.

As you know, the board has an obligation to deal with the warrants in a manner that is fair to the interests of both (^rysler Corp. and the American people who supported the Chrysler loan guarantee, Regan wrote in a letter to Chrysler Chairman Lee lacocca.

The statement said Regan, chairman of the loan board, also told lacocca, The board has concluded that this obligation can be best met by dicing of the warrants at fair market price, which can best be achieved through a sale to the public through a

competitively bid underwriting. lacocca said in a statement in Detroit the companys terms would have offered the government a $250 million profit and the govenunent decided to go for the last few bucks of profit.

What really concerns me is the impact of this decision (HI all the per^Ie who made sacrifices to keep the company alive, lacocca said. This has to further hei^ten the expectations of our workers and all the others who up to know who have practiced restraint. Chryslers workers earn about $2 an hour less than their counteparts at other

automakers under concessionary contracts negotiated when the company was on the ropes. On Wednesday, early talks on a new (xmtract broke down.

Company spokesman Baron Bates said the companys higha profit estimate d^nds on the price of the stock when the warrants are sold.

It was Bates who said, They are going for the last ounce of blood.

We dont believe ... they are acting consistently with Congress intent, Bates said.

The company statement said Chrysler would ask tlw relevant congressional

committees to determine if the loan board was acting in accord with congressional intent.

We believe basically that the intent of the act was to restore Chrysler to profitability aMd not take actions that would threaten the corporation in any way. The history of the act ^ifically disclaimed the ^vernments intention to acquire equity securities of Chrysler ... the only thing was Chrysler was to pay a 1 percent fee, Bates added.

Those fees have amounted to $31.2 nllion through April of this year. A small part of that has been used to j^y the expenses of the loan^ard.

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Let me call you sweetheart, Stox sings, accompanying himself on the button box accordian given him by his father. Hes been playing this instrument and the mouth harp since he was a young man, he says.

Tyree Stox A Satisfied Man

WINTERVILLE - What is so rare as a man who is satisfied with his life just the way it is now and with a past just the way hes lived it?

Winterville resident Tyree Stox admits hes had his vexations and his frustrations, but mostly hes been pleased to be the tobacco farmer, husband, father, foster father, big brother, cook, barbecuer, gardener, musician, and Santa Claus that he is.

Now 74 years old and so energetic he likes to be on the go from his regular rising time of 3 a.m. to 10 or 11 p.m. each day. Never did need much sleep, he said. Theres too much I want to do.

Has Worked Hard

In retirement, as in childhood, his life has been flltod with work. The pace is more leisurely now, though, than when he and his wife of 56 years were raising their family and when he was his mothers right hand man, helping keep house and rear four younger sisters. This time of year, he works in his garden for an hour or so, then shows up at Bums Restaurant in Ayden for breakfast. Then its back home to garden some more or over to his son Chesters building supply business to make some deliveries, or into the kitchen to get a pot of coUards on for dinner while his wife, Letha, sews. His sitting time comes at night, he says, when he

admits hes prone to nap a while in his lounge chair before bedtime.

Middle Child

I was the youngest of the five boys of J.B. and Mattie Stox, Stox said, and then four girls came along. Mama was just as busy as she could be with babies, plus, if she had her way shed rather work outdoors than in the house. So when I was about 10 or 12, she started teaching me to cook. Pretty soon I knew how right well and she started leaving it all up to me. That was 11 head to cook for.

Plus, I saw to the babies a lot, too. I wore out three carriages walking those babies. And Id like to have a nickel for every diaper Ive changed for my baby sisters. And for every one Ive ironed. Now they use paper diapers and before that nice soft ones. But back then the material wasnt soft and it was line dried, so every diaper had to be ironed so it would be soft enough not to chafe. Id turn back the tablecloth on the dinner table and iron diapers while I minded the meals I was cooking. And when there was time to spare Id sweep yards with a dogwood branch cut for that purpose.

In 1925-26 Stox said he worked days for his father. Nights he cleared two acres of woodland with an old gray horse named Maude and a grubbing hoe he still owns. When he was finished, he

said, he asked his father for a portion of the land hed cleared. His father said, though, that a quarter-acre up in the comer of the yard of the family home west of Winterville would be better for his crop. So Tyree planted his first tobacco on that quarter-acre the spring of 1926. He still has his tobacco warehouse bill from that crop made $147.71 selling it at Smith and Su^ Star Warehouse in Greenville that year and from every one thereafter through 1967. He asserts he never had a total crop failure. Even the wet year of 1929 when nearly everyone around Winterville, including his father and brothers and uncle, lost their crops, his was made, he says. He loaned his father money that year, he said, to pay his taxes.

Wed 56 Years A few days after his 18th birthday in 1927 Tyree married Letha Mills, a Grifton^ area girl hed met while she was visiting relatives who were his familys neighbors. He brought her home to live with his parents. Within the next couple of years they got their own place. He and his wife have four children and two they reared as their own. Their children are Chester Stox of Ayden, Mamie Ruth Cayton of Greenville, Johnnie Stox of Austin, Tex., and Hu^ Allen Stox of near Greenville;    their    foster

children,    Betty    Jean

Roberson of Greenville and Sam Mills of Clayroot. They

have 16 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

Stox has been a member of the Winterville Free Will Baptist Church since he was 16 years old and went there as far back as he can remember. He belongs to Mohican Tribe No. 56 Order of Red Men. Two of his greatest joys, next to tending his garden and giving a barbecue with the pig cooked in the pit he built himself in his back yard, are playing his accordian for church and other gatherings and being Santa Gaus on Christmas Eve and the days leading up to it each year.

A couple of years ago he got sick and started staying in most of the time.

Has Recovered

Everybody thought I was going to die, he said, and to tell you the truth, 1 kind of thought they might be right. I felt so bad and the doctors just couldnt seem to find out what was wrong with me. "rhen my sister, Chessie Robinson, said she was going to take me to one more doctor. She did and he found out what 1 had was stomach ulcers. 1 took the medicine like he said and pretty soon 1 started feeling better. Now Im as good as new. I fedl wonderful. And Im enjoying myself just as much now as I ever did - if not more. Growing old isnt so bad. Its all in how you look at it and what you do with every hour of every day the Lord gives you.

Tending his garden is something Tyree Stox enjoys nearly every spring and summer day. He chops, for the benefit of the, camera, with the grubbing hoe he used in 1925-26 to clear two acres of land for his father.Text & Photos By Carol Tyer

The bill for his first tobacco crop, made out to his father, began the collection of bills saved by Stox throughout all his years of farming.

t 4    f    ^

As Santa Claus, Stox amused the patrons of the Ayden Senior Citizens Center recently with a July visit. Any time of years a good time to try to help make people feel happy, he





Lori Elizabeth Hooper Marries J. B. Haddock

The First Presbyterian Church here was the scene of the wedding cermony of Lori Elizabeth Hooper and Joseph Bryan Haddock, both of Greensboro, Saturday afternoon at three oclock. The Rev. James H. McKinnon of Wilson officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Reid Hooper of Greenville. Parents of the bridegroom are Mrs. H. Kenneth Roberts of Greensboro and Joseph Edsel Haddock of Hilliard, Fla.

A program of wedding music was presented by organist Frances Cain and soloist Susie H. Pair, both of Greenville.

The bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. She wore a formal gown of candlelight silk, designed with a high neckline of organza beaded in pearls and crystal rocaille and a sheer scooped yoke outlined with pearls in a scalloped pattern.

The long fitted sleeves featured calla points at the wrist. A full circular skirt and attached chapel length train feU from the modified Empire waistline, which was^ enhanced by an inset band of matching fabric beaded in pearls. She wore a candlelight illusion veil held in place by a tiara headpiece of matching fabric beaded to complement the gown. She carried a cascade bouquet of white pom pons and butterfly roses interspersed with pink sweetheart roses and babys breath featuring canndlelight lace and satin ribbons with garlands of ivy and centered with a white rose corsage.

Valerie Hooper Eg^estcm of Eden, sister of the bride, served as matron of honor. She wore an ivory crepe blouse with embroidered yoke and pearl buttons, a formal dimdl-styled skirt of French blue linen and a carnation pink grossgrain cummerbund. She carried long-stemmed pink roses with white babys breath tied

Shes Stm In There Pitching

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) -Vera Miller isnt one to take it easy even if she could win national honors by quitting her favorite pastime.

The TO-year-old woman is more commonly known as Granny Miller when shes on the pitchers mound.

In her 57th season, the right-hander is the nations oldest active woman player in the Amateur Softball Association, according to Executive Director Don Porter.

Her playing time dwindled last year, but she promises to continue in womens league games as long as theres still a coach out there wholl let me play.

She pitches about once a week in a 50-game season for the Uyeda Bunch. Other players range in age from 15 to 32.

Mrs. Miller has been cleared for membership in the Softball Associations Hall of Fame, but theres a catch about joining.

Either I must die or be retired for at least five years, she said. Sure, Id love to be around to receive the honor. I c(xild retire ri^t now and be dead in five years and miss two to three good years of ball.

Coach SteveUyeda said, We just consider her a normal ballplayer. We dont consider her that different, and thats the way she wants it.

She still holds her own as far as pitching. Shes not able to run bases as well as she used to. She has slowed up some on running and hitting, he said. As long as shes able to contribute, shed like to continue to play.

Uyeda has been using a designated hitter for Mrs. Miller most of this season.

I enjoy playing too much to quit, so I wont, Mrs.

Miller said. She cant quote any lifetime statistics, saying simply, Never figured anyone would be interested.

I never thought much of anything except staying one run ahead of the other team, and I know I sure bate being one run bdiind, she said. If Im not out playing. Im out watching games, and Id rather be playing.

From the records that have been preserved, it is evident that Mrs. Miller has had a proud career on the field. She has been a member of two national championship teams.

She hurled a perfect game at age 33 for the Fresno Rockets in a 1946 national tommament.

Six years later in another champkinship bid, she pitched two fO shutouts in the same day. Her playoff record in 1952, when her team finished third, was one earned run in 27 innings.

Mrs. Miller has been playing with high blood pressure controlled by medication since age 42, but her physical downfall may be arthritis in her left hip and right knee.

My hands are OK and so are my ankles, she said. I never was a fast-ball pitcher. My stock in trade has been control. Ive always had control and still do. Never struck many out, maybe one a game. But thats all I ever walked in a game, too.

She has had a simple system on the mound.

I threw it, and the team got it and made the outs, she said.

Therell soon come a season when I just physically wont be able to do it anymore. Then, reluctantly, ru have to quit.

Brightening, she said, Softball is my exercise. Its my life. I love it, and I hope I never have to quit playing.

with deep rose ribbons.

Bridesmaids were Linn W. Co^ill of Greenville, Mary Elizabeth Narron of Greensboro and Janet P. Scott of Washington. Each wore a ^wn and carried flowers like that of the matron of honor.

Valerie Hagan Eggleston of Eden, niece of the bride, was junior bridesmaid. She wore a white organza print formal gown trimmed with lace and rose ribbon.

The father of the bridegroom served as best man. The junior usher was Glenn James Carmichael III, nephew of the bridegroom, and ushers included Glenn James Carmichael II, brother-in-law of the bridegroom, both of Stone Mountain, Ga.; Carlisle B. Jennings of Greenville; and Gary D. Sellers of Greensboro.

The mother of the bride wore an accordian pleated gown of mauve chiffon designed with a pleated neckline and a corsage of miniature pink roses and babys breath. The mother of the bridegroom chose a long-sleeved gown of apricot chiffon and a matching corsage of rosebuds.

A rec^tion was held at the Greenville Country Gub following the ceremony.

An after-rehearsal dinner hosted by Mr. and Mrs. H.K. Roberts was held in the candlelight room of the Greenville Country Club. An after-rehearsal cocktail party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Barnhill, assisted by Dr. and Mrs. John L. Wooten and Dr. and Mrs. James H. Eggleston. On Saturday, a wedding brunch was hosted by friends of the bride at the homeofKayV.Whichard.

A bridal luncheon hosted by Mrs. Ruland Davenport and Mrs. Frank Saunders was held at the home of Mrs. Davenport. A shower was held at the home of Sarah Winboume hosted by Linn Coghill, Faye Creegan and Mrs. Winbourne. Other

MRS. JOSEPH BYRON HADDOCK

showers were given in honor of the bridal couple.

The bride received her B.S. and M.B.A. from the East Carolina University School of Business and was a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. She is a commercial loan officer with First Union National Bank, Greensboro. The bridegroom received a B.S. in biology from ECU and was a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity. He is a sales representative for Chem Central Co., Greensboro.

After a wedding trip to Kiawah Island and Charleston, S.C., the couple will reside in Greensboro.

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FALKLAND - Lori Michelle Pickens of Charlotte and Donnie Louis Gorham of Falkland were married Friday, July 22, at 9:30 p.m. at the home the bridegrooms parents, Victor and Mamie Gorham.

The double ring ceremony was conducted by the Rev. James Harris, cousin of the bridegroom. Thomas Stith of Durham was the best man and ring bearer.

The bride is the daughter of William and Katherine Pickens of Charlotte.

The bridegroom is a recent graduate of North Carolina Central University. The bride is a student at N.C.

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Wedding Vows Said In Private Ceremony

Conner-McKinney Vows Are Solemnized On Saturday

nw Duly Reflector, GraesHUe, N.C -Suodsy, July 31.130-C 3

something excitim is

BETHEL Virginia Gray BuUerwortta and Jobn Har^ Clements were united in marriage in a private ceremwiy in the Bethel United Methodist Church Saturday afternoon at three oclock. The Rev. Ellis J. Bedsworth officiated at the double ring ceremony.

Mrs. Robert Harold Staton of Bethel presented a program of organ music and Mary Wells Andrews, also of Bethel, sang If God Left Only Vou and TTie Lord Bless You and Keqi You. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Millard Butterworth Jr. of Bethel. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Robert Arthur Clements of Isle of Palms, S.C., and the late Mr. Clements.

Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of ivory empress peau de soie which featured a fitted bodice with imported re-embroidered alencon lace beaded in seed pearis accenting the oval neckline. Beaded alencon lace appliques formed a matching spray enhancing the front of the full traditional skirt, which fell into a chapel length train. She wore a full len^ mantilla of silk Illusion re-embroidered with alencon lace and seed pearls. She carried a nosegay of pink roses and white daisies with babys breath and love knot streamers.

Cotten Butterworth Moring of High Point, sister of the bride, was matron of honor, and Ashley Cotten Moring of Hi^ Point, niece of the bride, was flower girl.

The matron of honor wore a full length skipper blue linen gown with an off-the-shoulder neckline and gathered skirt with a deep flounced hemline. She carried a nosegay of pink miniature carnations and white daisies. The flower girl wore a handmade light blue swiss batiste and lace gown with a hand-smocked batiste picture collar. She carried a small wicker basket of miniature carnations and white daisies.

Robert Arthur Gements Jr. of Greenvil^ served his brother as best man. Ushers were Joseph Millard But-

MRS. JOHN HARRY CLEMENTS

The wedding cerenwny of Stacey Lynn McKiimey and Thomas Nathan Conner, both of Gastonia, took (riace in Gre^ Springs Park Saturday nuNrning at ten oclock. The Rev. Harold P. Greene, pastor of Arlington Street Baptist Churdi, Greenville, performed the double ring ceremony.

Wedding music was presented by a brass quintet and Ginger Powell sang May the Lord Bless and Keep You.

The bride is the daughter of Frances Jackson McKiimey of Winterville and Curtis Conway McKinney of Plymouth. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul N. Connor of Gastonia.

The bride was escorted by her father. The father of the bridegroom served as best man.

Leslie McKinney Smith of Bowling Green, Ohio, served her sister as matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Connie Beth McKinney of Greenville and Sarah Frances McKinney of Win-tervUle, both sisters of the bride.

Ushers were Homer Heracklis of Gastonia and Etson Williams of Blowing Rock.

Vicki Paul of Pantego was mistress of ceremony.

MRS. THOMAS NATHAN CONNER

terworth III of Jasper, Ind., brother of the bride, and Thomas Bicket Moring of High Point.

Mrs. Daivd Ordway Speir of Bethel directed the wedding.

The bridegroom is employed by the East Carolina Vocational Center and the bridegroom is employed by Phelps Chevrolet.

Following the ceremony, the parents of the bride entertained wedding guests at a reception in their home.

Bridal Tips On Remaining Calm

A reception was given by the parents of the bride in Green Springs Park following the ceremony.

The bridal couple was honored with a dinner party Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Ordway Speir. The hosts for the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Speir and Mr. and Mrs. Fernando Curtis Martin.

After a wedding trip to the Isle of Palms, S.C., the couple will reside in Greenville.

NEW YORK (UPI) -While wedding jitters may be as common as weddings, there are ways to make sure anxiety doesnt get out of hand, acoHtling to Brides magazine, which lists these tips:

-Dont be afraid to admit yore upset. Tell your partner whats bothering you, whether its a serious question about your relationship or a relatively trivial worry. If you try to keep stressful feelings to yiHirself, youll only transfer them to something else, getting overiy irritated by some minor annoyance. Sign up for a premariU workshop.

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Lizzie Borden, the alleged axe-murderess, was acquitted by the jury who tried her for the murder of her parents.

- Share wedding responsibilities. Dont assume you have to do everything yourself. Ask your fiance to join you in picking out a

catering ball and registering for gifts. He can write a share of the thank-you notes, and handle all the honeymoon arrangements.

-Ke^ a calendar of ev-ei^ing you have to do. It will ^ve you a feeling of security. Gather any business cards, fabric swatches or magazine clippings all in one place - in a wedding lanner made for this purpose or a manila envelo{M. Organization helps reduce anxiety.

-Pace yourself. Dont tackle more than one major job a day.

-Dont let a hectic schedule keep you from eating pn^rly. Be sure to get enou0i rest and exercise, too. If sleep is a problem try time-tested soothers: a hot bath, warm milk, or a backrub.

The bride is a gradaute of Pungo Christian Academy and attend Chowan College. She is employed by Mt. Holly TV and Appliance. The bridegroom is a graduate of Ashbrook High School and Gaston College. He attended North Carolina State University. He is employed by Mill Power Supply Company. The couple is also self-employed in a sailboat dealership.

After a wedding trip to Racone, Wis., the couple will reside in Gastonia.

"Greenville's finest bakety for 63 years. ~

815 Dickinson Ave.

A Variety Of Pies Baked Fresh Daily

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

752-5251

A

Home Design System

Shop WHITES For Greenvilles Largest Selection Of IN STOCK Drapery And Upholstery Fabrics, Notions And Trims

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - A computer program which allows a builder to measure the energy performance potential of any new home design, has gained wide acceptance, according to a building materials manufacturer.

More than 500 builiters now use the Energy Performance Design System and estimates for homes de-

of Owens-Coming FIberglas Corp., which developed the system.

The computer program helps builders design and rate homes for ener efficiency, and, he says, it gives homebuyers an annual estimate of heating and cooling costs.

Merrilee*s

)Theres Only One Menilees...

And Ive Been Cutting, Curling And Frosting Hair For Over 20 Years. Im Open Almost Anytime To Suit You Even Some Nights And Until 2:00 On Saturday.

Call Today For Your Appointment!

752-7889

Located Near Simpson

signed with it in 1983 exceed 7,200, says Richard Trumbull

' green ville

Save Up to M5 on the Entire Stock of 9-West Fall Shoes and Boots

$44 to $75.

20%

Off

Entire stock of ladles 9-West shoes and boots 20% off for fall. Soft leather uppers on top of a variety of heel heights. Pumps, slings, boots. Your choice of tortoise, navy, biack, chianti and smoke. Sizes 5^/z to 10. A gift to give yourself.

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10 a.m. Until 9 p.m. Phone 756 B-E L K (756-2355)

The China Department

at Coin & Ring Man Introduces

SILVER

CHINA

CRYSTAL

Call us to replace missing pieces or add to your service! specializing in discontinued patterns.

ESTATE GIFTS

Find the perfect, unique gift for any occasion.

Antique Jewelry Antique Furniture Collectors Items Brass Copper Silverplate Thousands of beautiful and unusual gifts to choose from. We accept MasterCard, Visa or Layaway

Located in the old Best Jewelry Store Next Door To Coin & Ring Man 402 Evans Street-752-3806 Open Monday-Saturday 9:30 to 5:30

naoDe

X

TtTisweek

at Belk Tyler.

Dollar Day Sale...

Our August Dollar Day Sale begins Tuesday night, August 2, at 6:00 P.M. and continues through Wednesday as long as the special priced merchandise lasts. We will close at 5:00 P.M. on Tuesday afternoon to prepare for this event. This is a departure from former years when weve had this sale on the first Thursday in August. Weve had many requests from our customers to begin this sale at night so as to give those customers who work during the day an opportunity to get in on the bargains. All summer merchandise is drastically reduced for clearance to make way for new fall goods arriving daily. Look for the ads in todays paper and tomorrows paper. Don't miss this sale. Doors open at 6:00 P.M. Tuesday night for three hours of tremendous savings.

Sportswear for Petite Ladies...

In our continuing efforts to bring a broad assortment of merchandise to our customers, we have added Personal Petites by Personal Sportswear. This is the same fine quality clothing that Personal Sportswear has offered our customers for years except the design is for the small lady 5 feet and under in sizes 4 to 14. We have blazers, skirts, blouses, and slacks in falls most beautiful fabrics and colors.

Bill Blass, Norman Norell Fashion Show.

A fashion show featuring original designs by Bill Blass and Norman Norell will be held at the Greenville Country Club on Thursday, September 29. The show is being held in conjunction with Ultima II Cosmetics who owns these original designs and is sponsored by the women of the club. Tickets to the general public will go on sale oh September 13. There will be two shows - a luncheon at noon and a wine and cheese party in the evening.

Welcome to Virginia Emory...

We extend a warm welcome to Virginia Emory who has joined us in our Regency Room. Mrs. Emory comes to us with a great deal of knowledge of fashions and experience in helping the ladies of this area select their wardrobe. She extends a cordial invitation to all her friends and customers to come see her. New fall designer fashions are arriving daily and she would consider it a pleasure to show them to you.

Nipon Fragrance Added...

Albert Nipon, the world renowned designer, has added his name to the ever-growing world of fragrance and we offer it to you. It is a pleasing floral scent that penetrates and lingers. The design of the bottle is very contemporary and adds to the excitement of the fragrance. Come by the Charles of the Ritz counter and let Brenda Lewis share this new fragrance with you.

Planning a Fall Party???...

If youre planning a fall party, let us suggest it be a wine and cheese party. All you have to do is to come by and let us help you. We will suggest wines, cheeses, crackers, and dips that will delight your guests. We have wine glasses to rent, also. For an evening of carefree fun, come to our wine and cheese shop and let us do the work and

planning for you.

Noritake Showcase...

The Noritake Showcase of savings is available to our customers again. It is eastern Carolinas largest china assortment in stoneware, formal china and progression - all at tremendous savings. All patterns are offered for a limited time only at 25% off regular prices on a special order basis. Come in to see our china consultants during this big event. It starts tomorrow.

Decorators Available...

We have trained interior decorators to discuss your desires and needs for your home or business. We will do a window or an entire house or building. There are many wallpaper books and drapery samples for your approval. Come browse. Also, we have a great selection of carpet samples beginning at $8.50 a square yard. Whether your taste is traditional or contemporary, we have furniture and accessories that will satisfy your taste and budget. Visit our Interior Design Department soon. The welcome mat is always out for you.

Color Me Beautiful...

Mrs. Sissy Weil of Goldsboro, the only certified Color Me Beautiful consultant in our area, will conduct several sessions limited to six ladies in each group beginning Monday, September 19, through Wednesday, September 21. (See the schedule below.) Registration is $50 on a first come basis. Since these sessions fill up early, call our Cosmetic Department for reservations. The number is 756-2355.

Monday, Sept. 19 Tuesday, Sept. 20

Wednesday, Sept. 21

6:00-8:00 P.M. 10:00-12:00 P.M. 2:00-4:00 P.M. 6:00-8:00 P.M. 10:00-12:00 P.M. 2:004:00 P.M.

Back to School Sale...

Our annual Back to School Sale begins Thursday morning, August 4, at 10:00 A.M. Be sure to look for the circular inserted in Wednesday nights paper which will be jam packed with extraordinary savings for those who are headed back to the campus.





Wife Wants More Than Stolen Kisses

By Abigail Van Buren

rSBby Unwn PrmSyMcaiK

DEAR A6BY: Buddy (not his real namei and I haw been nuuried for sii years. We have two kids and low each other very mnch, bat he has spent at least three years of our marriage locked up. Thats where he is right now.

My mother doesnt like him and never K For a long time shes be trying to talk me into feaving him and finding someone else. Bease dont think Im tvagging, bat I am a nice-looking woman and I get lots of offers.

I love my husband and dont like the idea of another man playing daddy to my kids, bat I am confosed. Baddy is really a nice man. He doesnt care for regalar work, and he loves me and the kids so much he finds other ways of getting money. He tries not to hart anybody. He just steals.

I hate to kave him, bat I need a man who spends more time on the outside. What is your advice? Sign me...

LOYAL

Engagement

Announced

EVELYN B)WARDS. is the dauber of Mr. and Mrs. HB Dail of Aydeo, who amwonce her engagement to John Re-die Lawson Jr son of Mr. and Mrs. John Lairson al Hayneville. Ala. Tile wedding will take place Aug. 27:

Name Tags

Made By

Coostal Uniform

Pitt Plaza, Greenville

DEAR LOYAL: Nice men work to sopport their familiea; they dont steal what other people have worked hard for. Its too bad Baddy dont care for **regnlar work becaaae thats the way honorable men msdre it in this world.

Tell Baddy that you love him and don't want another Bian playing daddy to his kids, bat anleas he goes straight and stays straight, he will loae a loyal woamn who loves him. ^

Luring Teens Away From Realities Of Life

DEAR ABBY: Its usually worn who are reluctant to tell how old they are. bat i recently met a yoang man who simply will not tell anyone his age. If anyone attempts a guess, he doesnt let on whether the perscm is right or wrong.

I feel a very strong attraction for this yoang man, and I know its mutual, but I dont want any problems to arise, such as contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

I am 20, and Im sure he is younger, but I dont know how much younger. I dont want to mess things up by pressuring him to tell me how old he is, but Fd sore like to know.

Any ideas?

MAD ABOUT THE BOY

DEAR MAD: If he refuses to tell his age, hes probably not old enoagfa. Throw him back. Hes not a keeper.

DEAR ABBY; After months of agonizing over how I was going to tell my husband of six years that I wanted out of our marriage, 1. finally gathered the courage to tell him that I admired him, liked him and respected him, bat I just didnt love him, and I thought oar marriage was a mistake.

I also told him honestly that I had met another man who I felt was more right for me, and Abby, before I finished the sentence, my husband hugged me and said, Fm so glad, because Ive found somebody else, too. Abby, when a marriage isnt working, its usually bilateral.

REUEVED IN PASADENA

NEW YORK (PI) -Romance fictioo is luring teraagers away from the bard realities of life, as depicted in young adult novels in recent years that dealt with drugs, pregnancy and broken bmnes.

A special repol in the May issue of Seventeen magazine quotes one expert as saying the trend to romance books is a teenagers way of saying enough.

Teenagers have seen their adolescence taken away by graphic television shows and movies and books. said Jane Yolen, who teaches childrens literature at Smith Colley. The return to romance is really a way to return to the mystery and beauty of love, even if only 00 a sigjerficial level.

Mary Alice Keilo^ author of the magazine article, said the new breed of romance books deals with basic human needs: The need to be loved and accq>ted, to be a leader in your group, to be yourself, and to relate to the world around you without compromising your own special values.

Folk Art

Uniques

Summer Hours Fri.-Sat. 10-5 Sun. 2-5

Reproductions

A Taste Of The Past"

7ST3944

11 Miles West Of GreenviOe 1 2 Mile Off 264 On Hwy 13 At Langs Cross Rds Farmville

Hair Works

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 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

DEAR ABBY: I served as a chaplain in the military, and after coonaeling servicemen whose mothers had written to me or to their commanding officers, I learned that most of those non-writing enlisted men had valid personal reaSdns for not writing home. Many joined the service in order to grow up and break away from domineering parents. In any case, their personal reasons are their own business.

Complaining to a servicemans superior is an unfair, vindictive way of punishing a son (or daughter) who has left home to join the military, and I for one would like to see that practice abolished.

WISCONSIN RABBI

The Youth Shop

Cvolbu Lat Ceatn

Back-To-School Special

hntire Stock

20% ,,,50%

WHY PAY MORE?

I ,dv<iudv. i oi Kdc U r School' i oi Your Shoppinq t onc>nn'n( e Our Slort VC ill Be Open The F ollouinq Hours Beqinning Cuqusi Isl Mon Fri 10 8 30 Sdl 10 7 30

The largest hollow-stern champagne glass in the world is on display at the Korbel champa^ cellers at Guemeville, Calif.

656 Arlington Boulevard

756-0949

(Located Next to Kitchen Cupboard)

Sale

Select Items

V2

Price

Rug Sale

Drastic Reductions On Entire Stock Of Rugs

Select your china, crystal, and silver patterns from our in-store stock or special order.

V

No

Layaways

Bwgins TuMdiy MgM At 6.*00 P JL And ConttnHM ThRMgh WHdnMdiy At MW PJL OunnliliM Af UntlMl And Al Mwchwidtot Advwtiswf WIN Bn Offtmd Fdr Sain On Tunsdny Emning.

Laidies Dollar Day Items

inp Skits B} Ceelay..........

Ran. S24JW

$700

CeoiieaesBf Persem 1 Mile She

Vahiot To SfOJIO

Saeedvier

TSkits.............

Rog. $0.00 To $1400

.7

Levi Sped

iaar Paris..........

Rog. $25.00

$1300

Desipa

K Skirts...........

Rog.532J)0

$1600

bag Sleeve fiari Skits..........

Rog. $3400

$1700

ladies Skats

Rog. $17.00

$g88

GnkRadi-

iaiii^ Skirts

Volaos To $29.00

$1200

GrRack-

rasen Hapenusiay

Vahiot To $0400

75%.

Ladies

BettaSkirts

Hog. $45.00

$1300

Ladies SwkBiits

Rog. $21.00 to $42.00

$1050.$2100

lakes Dresses

Valuot To $$2.00

6fr%tw -

Ladies

Tmnnnn

leny moes.........

Vaiuoo To $44.00

ladies Bisters

Rog. $15.00

$700 _

Ladies Parties

Votuos To $2.75

I^Prle#

lakes Bkases

Rog. $24 To $2400

11

lakes Bkases

Rog. $17.00 To $19Jt

8

Ladies Bkases

Rog. $29.00 To $32JW

13

GnkRadi-

lanes spaiswea....

Valuos To $120.00

60%.

Lakes Large Size Sldtls..........

Rog. $32.00

14

Lakes Large Size Spatswea......

Vaiuoo To $72.00

60%.

1 Junior Dollar Day Items

Shkt Dtbssbs

Vaiuoo To $22.00

10

iHiAakdRMh

UKNO YWXi........

Valuot To $24.00

9

Shdkt DrBSS8S

$1400

Valuot From $25.00 To $32.00 1-^,

Snner SUh  . Ronmoo

Sanar Dresses...

Qaeee Sluts.....

Valas Fram 134.00 To 350.00

Rag.t1M0

Shat Sleeve Tee Skirls ......

$<1288

$2280

$700

tew

Shop Monday thru Saturday 10 am. to 9p.m.Phone 756-2355

mmm.Ml





Vew Doctor Paid Her Way With Pageants

]ByJEFFMBKER

issodatedpmitritar

lliXENTOWi, Pi. (AP) - ;For yeani^^ Qammw Kolalski gBVBs and

cims, ^ she woD a sue-, cesin of beauty pa^ants; Juiior Miss, Hiss Penn State, MisS 'Cetttral

Blanching Vegetables Is Necessary

i -

1( is tempting to talce a slKBtcut, but don't skip Uaiching when prqiaring ve^kables for freezing, says Dr.: Nadine Tope, extension spejrialist-in-cbarge, foods antf nutrition. North Carlina State University.

fianching - the scalding of Vegetables in hot water beQre putting ttem in a pa<^^ - is a must. Blan-chii^ inactivates naost of the pla|g enzymes that might otherwise make the food tou|h, musty or softened, chvge its color or flavor and det^ase nutritional value, the^xtension specialist says. It ^icularly enhances the cote of green vegetables, inchiding peas, broccoli and spiiach.

Ifederblanching is worse than not blanching at all because it stimulates enzyme activity.

Quick cooling of the blanched vegetables is also necessary. Plunge the hot vegetables into ice water or spread them on a wet towel in ftont of a fan. For safetys salte, make ^ the fan doesnt get wet. The cooling tinae should be no longer than blanching time.

Proper blanching time varies with the type of vege taUe, so using accurate directions is very important. The county agricultural extension office offers charts in leaflets based on the latest scientific studies of safe canning and freezidg methods.

The only exceptions are herbs, hot peppers and green tomatoes, which should not be blanched before freezing.

For more informatioo on canning of fruits and vegetables, contact your ho^e economics a^nt at the agricultural extension office.

Births

Toler

Bom to Mr. and Mrs. John Anthony Toler, 224 Alexander Drive, a son, Jonathan Aaron, on July 25, 1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Johnsm Boro to Mr. and Mrs. Ted Lee Johnson, Edgewood Trailer Park, a daughter, Marcus Lee, on July 25,1983, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.

Pennsylvania and Hnally, MissPetmsylvania.

But at 27, Miss Kowalski has switched to a white lab coat with a stetlmsci^ coiled m the pocket. Bte name tag reads Cbannaine Kowalski, M.D.

To her, b^uty pageants were always a means rather than an end. Before she ever considered vying for Miss Pennsylvania, Miss Kowalski dreamed of being a psychiatrist.

Last spring, teving used the (20,000 she gained in various pageant scholarships, Miss Kowalski graduated fnmi the Hershey Medical Center of the Pennsylvania State University, where she bad also earned her undergraduate pre-medical ctegree.

In June, she began a one-year residency at the Lehigh Valley Hospital Center, to be followed by a three-year residency in psychiatry at Beth Israel Medical Center in Bostmi.

When Im on the job, Ive got my hair in a bun and I wear glasses, Miss Kowalski said. I dont think people stand around and say, Theres Miss Pennsylvania.

Miss Kowalski said she was in no way ashamed to have entered the pageants, which began in high school when she won the title of Centre County Junte Miss. With money for college a problem, she said the contests represented a chance for her to further her dream of going to medical school.

She remembers how, after she won the Miss Penn State title, feminists wrote letters to The Daily Collegian, the student newspaper, to protest the alleged exploitation of women.

Angered, Miss Kowalski wrote a reply to the newspaper, pointing out that ^ades, honors and knowledge of current events were all part of being in a pageant. She said some of the women, like herself, simply needed the money for school. Winning the pageant paid for Miss

A. A. A.

[carriage]

trade

ANTIQUES

A    802 CUfli Stmt

(FoTBMily The Stripper)

f CMtom Hand RcAnlah-4 ingAadRMtoiatloii.

f Ciwton Boytaif On A

Cori Pluc Baria

AmMm, ChlM. CiyMal Aai

HouaaholdAppralaala.

4 laananct Eattaataa.

4 By Chance or ^ By Appointment

^ (CloMdSaBd^^aMMkUy)

757-1982

Treat yourself to tasty, nutritious 100% natural organic foods!

Gourmet International

now features a wide selection of bulk goods and mixes.

Try our

Sniiy, sassy California Mix with Turkish apricots Rainbow Medley-bursting with exotic fruits and nuts Student Food*a nutty blend with plump raisins Morning Delight-a new breakfast treat from $1.79 to $2.89/lb.

For the sweet in your family, we have rich yogurt and carob candies starting at $2.65/lb.

We also carry seeds perfect for munching, sprouting and cooldng.

Come Visit Us Today!

Qournie/

Store hours: 10-5:30 Monday thru Saturday Convenient parking at the rear entrance. , 117 E. 5th Strecf752-3411

Kowalskis fmal terms tuition.

.They didnt know anything about me, Miss Kowalski sakl of the letter writes. They didnt know my background, my grades, mr why I was there.

Miss Kowalski was crowned Miss Penn State on an April evmng in her sente year after spending eight hours taking the Medical College Admission Test.

While an undergraduate. Miss Kowalski earned a 3.95 grade point average out of a possible 4.0.

Shes always pushed herself to the limit, said her mother, Margaret. The kowalskis live in State Cd-lege, where Penn State is located.She has an insatiable desire to always conquer something next.

Her daughter entered the pageants basicaUy because they were scholarhip pageants, she said.

A classical pianist. Miss Kowalski played Griegs Piano Concerto in A-Mlnor to help her capture the Miss Pennsylvania title in 1978.

From th%, she moved on to the Miss America pageant in Atlantic City, N.J., where .she earned a special scholarship to help ^y her first year of medical school.

Her reign as Miss Pennsylvania lasted through the year. She toured the ^te in a( car with Miss Pennsylvania written on the side in shiny letters and equi(^ with a teleplmne andaCB-radk).

Truckers would pass by and say, Whats it about. Miss Pennsylvania? she recalled.

During that year. Miss Kowalski said, the one thing she nevn- got used to was wearing a crown during public appearances.

I used to say, Im just Cbarmaine Kowalski, a normal person, she said.To deal with it, I used to try to pretexl I was Ronald McDonald <ht Burger King - a fairy-tale character.

When she finishes her residencies, she said, she plans to donate to the pageants.

Td like to bdp someone like me, she said.

TTWCeraSb

Is Now Open \

Classes On Tuesday Nights From 7 to 10

757-3637

Rt. 6, Box 309 Greenvllln (Bolvoir)

Btl 'n Brth Btttfijue

Carolina East Mall 355-2583

30% OFF CLEARANCE 30% OFF

We have to make room for our new Fall Stock This Sale lasts for 2 weeks only!

Everything in stcx:k: Towels, Shower Curtains, Shower Accessories, Wicker, Rugs, Soaps, Brass, Acrylic Accessories, Throw Pillows, Pictures, Ceramic Accessories

Bring in this coupon and receive 30% off of everything in stock Bring in your wallpaper and carpet and Jj ALL SALES FINAL! match everything to it. sale ^nds 8- 13-83j

greenville

Rarely-in any store, anywhere-such a large, exciting selection of famous Noritake formal china, casual and not so casual dinnerware

Substantial savings, too, on open stock, place settings, sets

Come see one of the largest Noritake displays ever assembled. Choose from Noritake formal china, stoneware, Versatone, Progression China, formal and casual glass and stainless. Open stock, place settings and sets-savlngs are substantial, but time is limited.

OFF

Regular Prices

Shop Monday Through Saturday 10A.M. Until 9 PM-Phone 756-B-E-L-K (756-2355)





Engagements Announced

RHONDA JO EASTWOOD...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Thomas Eastwood Sr. of Route 11, Greenville, who announce her engagement to William Thomas Corbett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Dudley Corbett of Route 11, Greenville. A Sept. 24 wedding is planned.

CHERYL LYNN BAKER...is the daughter Of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Baker of Elizabethtown, who announce her engagement to Charles Randal Tyson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Heber Lyman Tyson of Farmville. The wedding is planned for Sept. 11.

Cooking Is Fun

Most of us come into this world virtually unnoticed ex-c^t by our parents and a few masked strangers in the deliver room.

From that time on, however, everyone tries to make it up to you.

Take birthdays. Please. They started out with a sample card and a present contained in a box that had nothing to do with the present inside.

If you really wanted to be classy, someone sent you a tdegram. As birthdays pro-gre^ and became harder to show up for, some frioids sprung for a candygram or a flowergram.

I cant remember the exact year the family took me to dinner on my birthday but just as I was enjoying the warm intimacy of a family gathering, five waitresses in headbands bearing a Twinkie with a sparkler on it showed up and sang, Happy Birthday Dear Eia atmy elbow. I threatened if they ever did that to me again, I would impale myself on the sparkler.

After that, the birthday productions became more show biz. One night, a guy in a Volkswagen jammed three silver balloons filled with

a cream pie in your face and says, Have a good one.

The only reason I am br-in^g this up is a friend of mine hit 40 and to take away the pain, her friends gave her a Bellygram. She was just sitting there thinking how she had come to terms with life when this guy in harem pants and knotted shirt draped himself across her lap and bepn clicking castanets in her face.

She said her friends debated whether to give her the belly dancer or the new gram that is sweeping the coun^... the strippers.

I just wanted to add a postscript to my own family. A belly dancer or a stripper will not get my heart beating again. It will not make me smile. It will not make me feel wonderful that I bothered to get up in the morning. It will only get you killed.

What would make me happy for my birthday? A check would make me happy. Money somehow seems so... so tasteful.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor APRICOTPANDOWDY

l>/2 pounds (about 13 small to medium) fresh ripe apricots h cup granulated sugar 2 tablespoons domestic apricot-flavored brandy (70 proof)

1 ci^ unbleached all-purpose flour

2 tea^ns baking powder ><2 tea^)^ salt

>4 cup firmly packed light brown sugar V< cup butter 1 egg

>/4 cup milk Vanilla ice cream Pit and quarter apriccks; slice 'i-inch thick. Arrange, overlap

ping, in bottom of buttered 8 by 8 by 2-inch cake pan. Sprinkle with granulated sugar and brandy.

In medium bowl stir together flour, baking powder, salt and li^t brown su^r. With pastry blender, cut in butter until particles are fine.

Beat together egg and milk until blended. With a fork, gradually stir into flour mixture just enough to moisten it; drop 9 large spoonfuls close together over apricots. Bake in a preheated 40(klegree oven until top is golden brown about 25 to 30 miiuRes.

Sme warm topped with vanilla ice cream; spoon juices in the pan over ice cream.

Makes 9 servings.

In 4th century Denmark, citizens who failed to pay their taxes on time had their noses slit.

Complete

Restoration & Preservation

Oil Paintings

Cleaning

Repairing

Retouching

Varnishing Call Dan Morgan

756-0200

P.O. Box 1923-Greenville, N.C. 27834

J

helium in my hand at 11 oclock at night and said, Happy Birthday... and for Gods sake is it asking too much to put a light on your house number? and left.

Another time, a person dressed in a band uniform sang for 15 minutes and between each chorus a small monkey would do a backflip and scratch. I was several years older when she and the monkey left.

Friends tell me their birthdays have been marked by the visit of a magician who made everthing disappear -including their guest - and of course theres the perennial day-brightener when a stranger appears and throws

ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS

at

uNino rieuRE salon

We hegin our third year wHh THIS:

One Month Membership....................omyMa.00

(Charter Member) .....................M0.00

NoLlmHOnClatsas    OHer    Good    One    Week    Only

Sun Tan 15 Visits Oniy.......................

_OHer    Qood    One    Week    Only_

New Aerobics Class-Beglns Tues. Aug. 2nd Meets Tues., And Thurs. 7:30-8:30 P.M. 8 Sessions *9.00 Members *18.00 Non Members Call Now 756-2820

OiilU'Is Outlets Outlets Outlets Outlets OutUUs OutU'ts Outlets Oiith'ts Outlets

I Belvoir Factory Outlet

Located in Old Belvoir Schoolhouse. Hwy Thursday & Friday 9:'to 5P M

TomltTbdo

SPORTSWEARVr-S aPLAY7wEAfl

INC.

Located Between Bethel & Tarboro on Hwy, 64 Hours 9-5 Mon -Sat. We Accept Visa & Mastercard

Shop Our Store Nearest You -

Factory Outlet B

Located in Old Grimesland School House On Hwy. 3.3 Hours; Thurs.-FrI. 9:.30-5 _Sat.    9:30-    3:00

\

120%.

All Summer Merchandise

Summer Clearance Sale

Pony Club Udles Placket

A Group Of

Assorted Tops

Shirts

With Duck Embrolday Reg. $26

$Q99

Our let Quality Navy, Kelly Green. ,pium & Many More Colore To Chooee From.

For Girls And Ladies Sizes 7-14 Reg. Price Up To *12 Now *2.50 Ea. Or

Bridal Policy

The Daily Reflector will now pubUsb engageneot and wedding photographs of a Mdal cmg)le pictured together, w of the bride pictured iodtvkhudly.

A Ua^ and white glossy five by seven photogn^ih is requested for oigaganent annoimcements. Fw pubUicatioo in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted fay 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three wedcs prkur to the wedding date. After three wedts, only an announconent wfll be printed.

Wedding write-iq will be printed through the first wedt with a five by seven picture. During the second week witha walfot size lecture and writenq giving less descriptioo and after the second week, just as an announconent.

Wedding ftuins and pictures should be returned to The Dally Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All informatk should be typed or writtoi neatly.

Rapid weigbt-loss diets involving severe restrictions of protein or calories (to less than 800 per day) can cause a temporary hair loss.

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CHICAGO (UPI) - The National Safdy Council is selling a deck <A playing cards that could beccmie a life saver.

The standard deck of 52 cards contains life-saving first aid information as well as the usual playing card symbols. Two joker cards contain the index.

The council, a nonprofit public service group, says the First-Aid Reference and Playing Cards set is designed to devdop safety consciousness among employees, friends and family members.

It includes instructions and tips on such mergency responses as heart attack,

moments after sometme suffers a heart attack, poisoning, dectric shock or other medical emergency can save a life.

Action taki immediatdy and before medical aid arrives can also minimize a potentiaUy serious injury and reduce rectgierative time.

The price deck is 84.50 for council members or $6.65 for non-members.

Ray Scliait Swim Sdiml

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Classes available for all levels: Mother & Baby to Adult

Small classes-Maximum of 4

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Next Session Begins Aug. 8

Classes available at Tar River Swim Club & Courtney Square Swim Club

For more information or registration Call 752-3400*752-7429756-9339

choking, shock, beat exhaustion, spinal or neck injuries, electric shock, poisoning, head injury, bums, stroke, bleeding and hypoerma.

The council announcement, says knowing what to do in

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Wood-Grady Vows Said On Saturday

The wedding ceremony of Barrie Olivia Grady and David Styron Wood III, both ^ (rf Greenville, took place Sat-; urday afternoon at two oclock in The Memorial Baptist Church. The Rev. E.T. Vinson officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Raymond Paul Grady of Greenville. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. David Styron Wood II of La Grange.

A program of wedding - music was presented by organist Joseph Goodwin. The wedding was directed by Mrs. Frankie Hardee Jr.

The bride was given in marriage by her mother and was escorted by her brother, Raymond Paul Grady Jr. She wore a formal gown of candlelight tissue taffeta designed with a tucked bodice ^featuring a sweetheart neckline and dropped V-waistline. The gown had a row of taffeta covered buttons on the back bodice and the elbow-length tucked sleeved were puffed and accented with lace cufflets, silk

GOOD IDEAS

STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) - Many companies encourage money-saving suggestions.

Pitney Bowes says its suggestion program has resulted in savings of millions of dollars for the firm since 1943. In the past five years alone, the program has produced savings of more than $2 million. In the same period, it has enriched employees, . whose suggestions are ad(^ted, by some $400,000.

Awards for winning suggestions are based on the money saved by Pitney Bowes. Employees can win a maximum of $30,000 per suggestion, paid in increments of $10,000 over a three-year period.

Dieters take note - the .people who live longest appear to be those who eat the most, but dont get fat because they are physically active.

flowers and satin ribbon. The full antebellum draped over-skii I was accented with silk flowers and satin ribbon atop double lace ruffles which flowed into an attached chapel length train. She wore a walking len^ mantilla bordered with scalloped embroidered schiffli lace with a rolled edge. She carried a white colonial bouquet of sweetheart roses, miniature carnations and babys breath accented with streamers of miniature ivy.

DeLora Lynn Good of Winterville was maid of honor. She wore a formal gown of cranberry taffeta with an off-the-shoulder bodice and puffed sleeves. She carried a bouquet of pink and burgandy silk roses accented with tiny white blossoms and babys breath accented with satin ribbon streamers.

Bridesmaids were Jane Hadley Goforth of Greensboro; Nancy Jo De-Bruhl of Kinston; and Vickie Beaver Pippin of Greenville. They each wore a gown styled like that of the maid of honor and carried a bouquet of pink and burgandy silk roses and babys breath with satin ribbon streamers.

The father of the bridegroom served as best man. Ushers were Jeffrey Brothers Clark and Richard Lee Pippin, both of Greenville; and John William Roberts of La Grange.

The mother of the bride wore a waltz-length lavender chiffon dress. The mother of the bridegroom wore a pastel voille waltz-length dress. Both mothers wore cream cymbidium orchids.

Following the ceremony, a reception given by the mother of the bride was held in the church fellowship hall. Guests were greeted by Mr. and Mrs. John C. Jenning of Kinston, aunt and uncle of the bride.

A rehearsal dinner was given Friday evening by the parents of the bridegroom at the Greenville Country Club. A bridal luhcheon was given at the Kinston Country Club by relatives of the bride Mrs.

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Wedding

Invitation

Mr. and Mrs. George Kenneth Minch request the honor of your presence at the marriage of their daughter, Cynthia Ann, to Donald Gregory Mills, on Aug. 7 at 3 p.m. at Grace Free Will Baptist Church. No invitations were mailed in town.

Personal

Ms. Brenda Wilson Jones of Ayden is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital, room W-119.

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MRS. DAVID STYRON WOOD III

Bessie H. Grady, Mrs. Nola G. Jennings, Mrs. Anna G. Harper and Mrs. Lib G. Taylor. Several pre-nuptial parties were held in honor of the bridal couple.

The bride is a graduate of J.H. Rose High School and East Carolina University. She is employed by the Greenville Athletic Club and plans to teach in the fall. The bridegroom graduated from North Lenior High School and Lenior Community College, Kinston. He is a purchasing agent for Electricon, Incorporated in Kinston.

After a wedding trip to Kiawah Island, S.C., the couple will reside in Greenville.

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Jack Thomas, A.S.I.D., Formerly a Greenville resident and cunently residing in Naples, Fla., 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

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C-8-Tbe Dafly Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 31,1983

Engagements Announced

loirole Marries n Saturday

PATRICIA HUDSON ANGLE...is the daughter of Mrs. 'Christine Rogerson of Route 5, Greenville, and William Earl Hudson of Wilmington, who announce her engagement to Kenneth Martin Brown, son of Mrs. Jean Brown of Olaton, Ky. and the late M. Charles Brown. The wedding will take place Sept. 4.

LINDA TERESA FAULKNER...is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence B. Faulkner of Route 2, Ayden, who announce her engagement to William Frank Worthington III, son of William F. Worthington Jr. of Route 2, Ayden. The wedding will take place Oct. 8.

WINTERVILLE - The Winterville Baptist Church was the scene of the wedding ceremony of Andra Deadwyler and J. Carrtdl Smith Saturday morning at 11 oclock.

The bride is the dau^iter of Dr. and Mrs. James Deadwyler of Roanoke, Va. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Selma Smith of Ayden and the late Jesse Cicero Smith.'

The Rev. Dino Schulmeier officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a tea Ungth dress of candlelight pdy silk fashioned with long puffed sleeves and a three tiered collar edged with antique lace ma(te by her ^t-grandmother. She carried a bouquet of melon-colored silk roses.

The maids of honor were Lesley Gail Deadwyler of Boston, Mass. and Donna Lee Deadwyler of Roanoke, Va., both sisters of the bride. They wore identical dresses fashioned of melon embroidered eyelet and carried a single candlelight silk rose.

The best man was Bill ^

After the ceremony, friends of the bride and brid^room entotained with a wedding feast in the diurch fellowship hall. Wedding cake was served hy Helen Lawrence. Entertainment during the wedding feast included mime Pay Wilson and a selection of classical music by the string quartet.

An after-rehearsal dinner was given at the home of Mrs. Irma Worthington in Ayden. Hostesses were Mrs. Worthington, Betty Faulkner and Selma Smith.

After a wedding trip to I9th century inns in the mountains of North Cardina, the couple wUl reside in Win-ten^e.

The bride received her B.A. degree from West Virginia University and her M.Ed. degree from the University of Arkansas at Uttle Rock. She is employed by the North Carolina Divisimi of Services for the Blind. The bridegroom received his B.S. degree from East Cardina University and is employed by the Pitt County Schools.

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LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI) -An up-to-date record of health care procedures can help avoid needless duplication, says Kathy Pro-chaska-Cue, a family economics and management specialist for the University of Nebraska extension.

She suggests separate notebook pages for each family member to include:

-Birth date, place and any special circumstances.

-Any regular exposure to toxic substances.

-Blood type, Rh factor.

-Dates of immunizations, vaccinations, booster shots.

-Results of recent blood pressure. Pap and any diagnostic tests with the name of the doctor who ordered them.

-Dates and types of X-rays.

-Details of pregnancies and births.

-Major illnesses, accidents and operations with dates and outcomes.

-Medications currently used, including the reasons they are prescribed, dosages and any experienced side effects.

-Allergies.

-Severe illnesses of parents, graiK^>arents and other close relatives.

- Name, address, phone number of family doctor, dentist, pharmacist and specialists regularly consulted.

Bryan of Henderson.

A program of wedding music was performed by the Atlantic Christian College String Quartet of Wilson. Jerry and Cheryl Cribbs of Wilmin^n sang selections and Cribbs directed a choir composed of frioMls of the bride and brklegroom. Organist was Susan Lambert and trumpeter was Bill Phraser. The Wedding Song was performed by Mark Laing and Dean Barham.

The wedding ceremony was interpreted for the deaf by Kathy Beecham.

There are thousands of beacons along Americas shores and most are on buoys and small stationary towers. Only some 250 are classical lighthouse ^ructures, according to National Geographic.

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Inventory

Mall Store Closed Until 1:00 Monday

Downtown Store Closed All Day Monday

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Shop Daily 10 to 5:30 Shop Dally 10 to 9

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122 126 S MAIN ST FARMVILLE. N.C 75.3 3101

American grown rice is a high quality product and needs no washing before or after cooking,

Milled rice, white, parboiled and pre-cooked will keep indefinitely on the pantry shelf. Once opened, rice should be placed in containers that keep out dust, moisture and other contaminants.

Christmas In August Sale

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Brown rice, because of the oil in the bran, does have a limited shelf life of about six months. Refrigeration will slow spoilage.

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ECU Will Form Madrigal Choir

ECUNmBoreau

A madrigal choir dressed in costumes of the Hizabethan period which will be available for a series d Americas 400th anniversary celebration concmt toure is being planned as part of East Carolina Universitys quadricentomiai activttes program.

The 400tb anniversary cdebratioo is to begin April M, the date on which the first two (d Sir Walter Raleighs ookmizing ships sailed from En^and with a royal patent granted by Queen Elizabeth L It is to continue through Aug. 18,1987, the 400th anniversary of the birth of Virginia Dare, the first English child bom in the NewWorid.

As part of ECUs program of 400th anniversary activites, the madrigal choir is being planned by the ECU School of Music and the Department of Drama and ^leech, according to Janice E Faulkner, director of the ECU Regional Development Institute.

In addition, Faulkner said RDI and the division of coidinuing education are w(tlng to establi^ an ECU ^)eakers Bureau to provide programs for various groups thrmighout the eastern half (rf die state.

Faculty members and other resource persons with expertise in various aspects of the historical and cultural significance of the 400th an

niversary are being identified and recruited for such programs,' Faulkner said.

The ECU Department of Hist(My plans to sponsor a forum on the devdopmoit of appropi^te 400th anniversary curriculum materials ot use in the public scho(ds. Dr. Fred Ragan, history chairman, said the department will be working with RDI, the Rural Education Institute, the state Department of Public Instruction and local units to devek^ a(^ropriate curriculum materials.

Ih-.    David    Phelps, ECU

anthropdogist, and colleagues in the departments of sociology,    anthn^logy

and ecwiomics have been conducting archaeological and anthropological studies along the Chowan River near Harrellsville for several mmiths. The project to discover    more    about pre-

Elizabethean Indian settlements may provide additional    400th    anniversary

celebration material, according to officials of the anniversary committee. Algonkian Indian sites are in the Chowan River area.

Faulkner announced the ai^intmrat of Dr. Richard H. Laing, professor of art and former dean of the ECU SdKxrf of Art, as community development q>ecialist in cultural affairs for RDI to coordinate ECUs 400th anniversary celebration activities.

DISPLAYED - This photograph eiditled Country Morning by Dean James of Deans Photogrqihy in GreenvUie was selected fbr dlsiriay in the General Exhibit of Prafessioaal Photographers of Ainerica Inc.

The photograph was first displayed at the associations 1983 oooveotloo July 16-21 at the DaUas Convention Centa*.

James wiU receive one merit fbr acceptance into the General Exhibit. The molt can be applied toward the Profesional Photogrqibers of America Master of Photography degree, which requires 25 merits.

PUBUC WORKS

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States is slipping behind other developed countries in public works facilities and needs to increase ending from (56 billion to $160 billion to meet minimum infrastructure rebuUding needs, according to the Associated General Contractors of America.

The U.S. invests only 7.8 at of its Gross National zt in infrastructure

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Play Depicts Life Of Faulkner

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Give John Maxwell a small stage, a handful of props and a few hours, and heU take you (m a lau^i-filled theatrical vteit with WUliam Faulkner, the late writer \ritose work earned him the Nobel Prize.

Maxwell says his portrayal of Faulkner in the one-man play, Oh, Mr. Faulkner, Do You Write? is a sampling of the surprising wit and opinions of a man who loved his individuality and his privacy.

I dmit think anyone can offer a definitive portrait of William Faulkner in an hour-and-a-half performance, and I dont pretend to do that, says Maxwell,

whose show has toured the South. And if you come to this play expecting a reading of obscure Faulkner works, youll go away disappointed.

I try to provide an entertaining evening of theater using slices of Faulkners life that lend themselves theatrically - such as his colorful lectures to an imaginary class.

Maxwell, who teamed with Tom Dupree to write the play, quickly draws his audience into the act having the character of Faulkner angrily demand his uninvited guests to leave his Rowan Oak home in Oxford, Miss.

The imaginary Faulkner soon mellows and, with a

construction, the nations system of water and water treatment systems, roads and bridges, locks and dams, airports, railroads and public ^ buildings, the AGCsaid..^

Japan, by comparison, invests 20 percent; Saudi Arabia, 19 percent; Canada, 16 percent; Sweden, 16 percent; Italy, 11 percent; France, 10.3 percent and the United Kingdom, 9.8 percent.

A Review

'Staymg Alive' Typical Stallone

Rooney and Garland and Astaire and Rogers. Comparisons are inevitable when writing about Staying Alive, now playing at the PlHt Theater. Sylvester Stallone directs John Travolta playing Tony Maero, and the movie forces us to think about Saturday Night Fever and Rocky.

Staying Alive is actually more Stallones film than Travoltas. Sylvester Stallone wrote the screenplay with Norman Wexler, produced it with Robert Stigwood, and directed it all by himself. Signs of his work are everywhere. Nearly every film Stallone is associated with is about an underdog who makes good against a background of upbeat music and flashy cinematography.

Stallone keeps dialogue to the barest minimum and emphasizes action. His characters are seldom intelligent; they have good hearts and bad heads. The world is almost too much for them, yet they win. Rocky, Stallpnes best film, is the perfect example, and if you substitute dancing for boxing, SUying Alive is Rocky IV.

Travoltas Tony Maero is four years older but not much wiser than he was in Saturday Night Fever. He has given up discos and Brooklyn for modem dance and Manhattan, but Broadway isnt Bay Ridge, and he is finding it harder to land a job in a musical than to pick up girls under a spinning mirrored ball. Finally he gets his break, landing a spot in the chorus of Satans Ally, a musical version of Dantes Inferno, and then stepping into the lead. His performance is, of course, a triumph. Applause.

Travoltas performance is energetic. He moves well on screen and creates the impression of power. His performance in the rehearsals and performance of Satans Ally is more athletic than aesthetic, but Travolta is not a professional dancer. The problem with his role is when he is not in tights. In Saturday Ni^t Fever, Tony Maero was young, crude and vulnerable, and Travolta made that character come alive. The Tony Maero of Staying Alive is almost a caricature. Forced to give such lines as, If I appreciate you and you appreciate me, why dont we get together and appreciate each other, cannot make Maero a character anyone can believe in or care about. The fault may not be his. Outside of dancing and flexing, Stallone has not given Travolta much to do.

niis lack of something to do outside of the performance numbers is at the heart of Staying Alives failure. The most. successful screen musicals - Tq) Hat, Singing In the Rain, Cabaret, and All That Jazz were more than mere vehicles for song and dance. They were stories in themselves with characters, plots and dialogue. A musical doesnt have to be serious, but it should say something. Staying Alive says that John Travolta has a great body, and that is not enou^.

Staying Alive will do well, however. The Travolta fan club is made of millions of young girls who seem to adore his screen presence. A number of them were in the audience when I saw the film, and they squirmed and squealed throu^iout the entire performance. One day John Travolta will take on a role that forces him to push himself, and when he does I think he will surprise many people.

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rich Southern drawl, he relates to the audience his war misadventures, encounters with stars of the silver screen and his involvement with a varied assortment of family members.

Maxwell skillfully mixes good times with bad. One moment, he sprawls head down and feet tq> across a chair to demonstrate Faulkners difficulty in getting a bottle of liquor following a plane crash. In the next, he grips his rocking chair in a tearful scene with his mother about a dying loved one.

His Faulkner character even offers cookies to the audience and, on more than one occasion, he has successfully lured an eager volunteer to the stage to help the old writer repair a broken shelf.    '

Maxwell began reading Faulkner about eight years ago. I loved his work so

much that I started readmg his material and about his life. At that point, I felt he would make an excellent subject for a one-man show. After working out the script with Dupree, Maxwell was able to get the New Stage Theater in Jackson to produce the play, fmanced with a grant from the Mississippi Arts Commission.

The title of the play came from a conversation between Faulkner and the late film star, Clark Gable, during a hunting trip m Califomia.

Maxwell tells the audience that Gable asked Faulkner who he consittered to be the best writers. Faulkner re-^nded with a list that included himself.

At that pomt. Maxwell says in the play that Gable responded: Oh, Mr. Faulkner, do you write?

Faulkner quips in his response: Yes, Mr. Gable.

And what do you do? Maxwell says that reaction to his play has been good.

People react differently to Faulkner and his humor, but were receiving good reviews everywhere we go, Maxwell says. People in the South associate more closely with Faulkers humor, but theres a certain mystique about Faulkner that people outside the South are intrigued with.

Maxwell, who has performed in theaters and at

colleges and art gathering primarily in the South, said his goal now is to take Faulkner to the Midwest.

I think theyll respond very positively to Faulkner because out West they will identify with his sense of individuality his no-nonsense approach to life.

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Kate Jackson Finds New

Role Mixture Of Duties

By JERRY BUCK AP Television Writo-

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Amanda King, like many housewives and mothers, has a part-time job. She moonlights for an intelligence agency.

Kate Jackson is Amanda King, who putters around the kitchen, drives the kids to school, and is sometimes faced with a dilemma: Can she make the PTA meeting tonight or will she have to save Western civilization instead

She stars with Bruce Box-leitner in Scarecrow ahd Mrs. King, a CBS fall series that mixes laughs and thrills. Boxleitner is an undercover agent (code named Scarecrow) for a Washington-based intelligence group known as The Agency." Mrs. King becomes innocently entangled in one of his cases and helps him solve it. The Agency figures, why break up a winning team?

Five years ago. Miss Jackson played the TV role of Sabrina Duncan in ABCs Charlies Angels. Sabrina was known as the intelligent angel, the one \1h) took charge of this sexy trio of private eyes.

Mrs. King IS not luce

Sabrina Duncan. Amanda King hasnt a clue to whats going on. She just walks in and shes in over her bead.

The character is on the page. Its written and directed. Its a person to play, not just an attitude as in Charlies Angels. So Amanda is in over her bead, but shes feisty and game. She may not admit it, but shed love to have an adventure.

Mrs. king is divorced and lives in the Washington suburbs with her two childrwi and her mother, played by Beverly Garland. She is an innocent in troubled waters, but she is not a pawn. She leads a double life, but her family comes first. Put the latest intmiational crisis on hold as she has to take the kids to a Little Lea^ game.

The humor arises from these dilenunas and from Boxleitners discomfort at being yoked to such an unlikely partner.

After she left Charlies Angels in 1979, Miss Jackson tx^ for a career in motion pictures.

She made a TV version of Tipper with her then husband, Andrew Stevens, but it was a fizzle. Then she made a movie in Canada with Ellint Gould called

Dirty Tricks. She says, It was fun, Montreal was a beautiful city, but it was a terrible movie.

She also starred in Making Love with Harry Hamlin and Michael Ontkean, a former co-star from her first series, 11 Rookies. Her other TV movies were Thin Ice and Listen to her Heart.

The movies were disappointing, she says. We talk about how bad televiskm is, but there are so many bad movies, too...

Miss Jackson says, I never intended to ^ back to doing an hour series. But I alwa^ wanted to go back to television. I bad a contract with CBS and I wanted to do a three-camera comedy series. In an hour Show aU you do is work. Work and sleep. Especially with a two-character show like this.Exhibit

Alan Alda, right, and Mike Farrell of the tdvision aeries M*A*S*H look at an exhibit from the Aow that was donated to the Smtthanwian Institutions National Museum of American Ifisto-ry. Hie exhibit features two sks, props and costumes from the award-winning series. The di^v opened Saturday and will ranain through Sept. 30, 19U. (AP LaseriAoto)

CBS wanted her to do an hour show but she kept saying no until she read the script for Scarecrow and Mrs. King.

'Plugger' Pushes Songs For Records

Miss Jackson and her husband, David Greenwald, are partners in Shoot the Moon Productions, which is involved in the making of Scarecrow and Mrs. King.

By JOE EDWARDS Associated Press Writm-NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Ronnie Gant doeait write songs, sing them or play in recording sessions. But hes responsible for the smash hit, Elvira, which sold more than 2 million (xmies for the Oak Ridge Boys two years ago.

All Gant did was suggest that the flashy quartet record the snappy song after he heard it played by a house band in a Texas ni^tclub.

The 38-year-old Gant returned to Nashville and urged the Oak Ridge Boys producer to put the tune on the groups next album.

Producer Ron Chancey took Gants advice, and the song became one of the most successful in history, crossing-over from the country music field to the popcharts.

For Gant, one of 150 or so

song pluggers in Nashville, it was all In a days work, even if it didnt earn him anything.

Gant works for Acuff-Rose, Nashvilles oldest song publisher, founded in 1942. Its his job to take scmgs writtoi by Acuff-Rose composers and get them recorded.

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After Gant heard Elvira, he thought it was good enou^ to be recorded byatopartistorgnxq;)-The song had been written and recorded in 1966 by Acuff-Rose writer Dallas Frazier. It was a mo(terate hit by Frazier, and even recorded once by Kenny Rogers before be became a superstar.Sonic Drive In

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The DaUy Reflector, GreenviUe, N.C -Sunday, July 31,1983-C-I1

SECCA To Open New Exhibitions This Week

A TOUCH OF THE EXOTIC - Satyr sconces lend an unusual Ugbt to the breakfast room at Cbinqua-Penn Plantation in ReldsviUe. In keeping with the Penns eccentric style, an Italian artist painted matching satyrs around the top of the walls in the nxn, and thats one of the more ordinary decorating touches there. (AP Laserphoto)

Rock Musical Opens Second Summer Season

KENANSVILLE - The rock musical GodspeU (^)oied its second summer season here July 20 with performances being held every Wednesday and Friday at8:15p.m. through Aug. 19.

Last summer the musical brought more than 2,500 people to the William R. Kenan Memorial Amphitheater.

A cast of 20 professional actors will perform Michael-Tabelaks musical, which is under the direction of Duplin native David Thomas.

The historial drama The Liberty Cart also (^lened in Jtdy and will run through Aug. 21 at the amphitheater beginning at 8:15 p.m. nightly.

WINSTON-SALEM The Southeastern Coiter for Contemporary Art will open four new exhibitions to the public Aug. 6.

For the second time in the history of SECCAs current facility, the Main Gallery ^ace will be devoted solely to a one-man exhibition. Frank Faulkner, a South Carolina native and former resident of Winston-Salem, will exhibit his recent acrylic-on-canvas paintings.

Also q[)ening at this time will be a solo exhibition of large-scale ceramic sculptural works by Stephen Frazier of Knoxville, Tenn.

Grant

Program

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WINSTON-SALEM - The National Endowment for the Arts and the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art announce the eighth annual grant program of Individual Artists Fellowships for Southeastern artists.

Artists 18 years and older with established residency in North Carolina. 11 other states and the District of Columbia may apply for the grant.

There will be seven $2,000 grants available for professional painters, sculpters, printmakers and photographers. Final application must be postmarked by Nov. 1, 1983, to be considered by the National-Regional Selection Panel.

NEA and SECCA define the purpose of the grant program as to enable southeastern artists to set aside time and/or purchase materials and generally enable them to adance their careers as they see fit. Southeastern artists are encourgaed to request guidelines and application forms by contacting: Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art, 750 Marguerite    Drive,

Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106, telephone: 919-725-1904.

ANOLDHIRITANT

PEKING (AP) -Thousands of Chinese citizens fathered by Japanese during World War II are t^ing to claim Japanese citizenship and emigrate, creating an irritant in bilateral relations, foreign diplomatic sources report.

On exhibition in the Overlook Gallery will be recent mixed media sculptural pieces by Genna Watson of Alexandria, Va.

The fourth show opening Saturday will feature large metal sculptures by Mary Mintich of Belmont in the Open Air Gallery.

All four exhibitions will be on view through Sept. 25.

Through Aug. 7, the public may view a two-artist exhibition in Gallery A. Jim Jacobs of Greenville is represented by his recent oil paintings and Douglas Jaeger, Washington, D.C., is showing his mixed media assemblages.

Sculptures and an earth works instillation by Herb Parker

of Greenville mav be seen on the SECCA grounds until Sept. 18.

On Aug. 7 at 2:30 p.m., SECCA will offer Curators Comments. Vicki Kopf and Richard Craven, SECCA curators, will lead a walking tour and discussion of the recently opened show exhibitions. They will be joined by exhibiting artist Frank Faulkner for a discussion of his show. This program is open to the public, free of charge

The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art is located at 750 Marguerite Drive, and it is open to the public, free of charge. SECCA hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday, 2 to 5p.m.

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6.The Lonesome (iods, Louis LAmour

7.Godplayer, Robin Cook

8.Ascent Into Hell, Andrew M. Greeley

9.The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco

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6.The Price of Power, Seymour M. Hersh

7.How to Live to Be 100 -or More, George Bums

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(Courtesy of Time, the weekly news magazine)

TOP DANCERS - Rudolf Nureyev and prima ballerina Natalia Makarova vault high over the corps de ballet during a dress rdiearsal at New Yorks Metn^litan Opera House of Notre Dame de Paris. She portrays

Esmeralda and he plays Quasimodo, the hunchback, in the ballet by Roland Petits BaUet National de Marseille, based on the Victor Hugo classic. (AP Laserphoto)

Curators, Directors Plan Exhibition In Carrboro

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Artists who judge, select, exhibit and/or promote art by others will show their artwork at Center/Gallery in Carrboro Aug, 4-28. Makers and Movers recognizes the talents and efforts of North Carolina museum and gallery curators and directors who spend most of their creative time and energy helping make art visible.

Artists will include fulltime " university gallery directors James Tucker of the Weatherspoon Gallery at UNC-G and Randy Osman of East Carolina Universitys Museum of Art and Gray Art Gallery in Greenville. Tuckers acrylic paintings of the Barrier Islands capture the infinite space of sea, sand and sky, Osmans clay pieces and drawing are inspired by the salmon rivers of Oregon.

From the non-profit organizations for art, Howard Spector, founder and director of the well-known Light Factory in Charlotte, will exhibit his photographs. Also exhibiting photo^aphs will be Ruth Pinnel, curator of the Green Hill Art Gallery in Greensboro. Cynthia Fer-rence, executive director of

the Green Hill, has provided mixed media boxes. Jacque Menache, founder and director of the Art School in Carborro, will exhibit paintings of a layered process equal to'A caving.

Drawings that 'relate to elementary and high school doodles will be displayed by Richard Craven, associate curator of the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art in Winston-Salem. Lee Hansley, also an associate director for SECCA, wUl present abstract color studies on paper.

Rinda Metz, formerly of Chowan College in Murfreesboro, and Edward Brown of Atlantic Christian College in Wilson, are pro-fessor-gallery directors and will ej^bit ceramic and stone sculptures.

Jill Flink, owner and operator of two commercial galleries in Raleigh, will display her prints. Other curators and directors will be represented.

In conjunction with the exhibition, a slide show of North Carolina curators and directors will be on view. Resumes and slides from across the state have been

provided for this public presentation.

Center/Gallerys hours are 11-5 Thursdays through Saturdays and 2-5 on Sundays. This exhibition was funded in part by the N.C. Arts Councils Grassroots Program.

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The Greenville Recreation and Parks Department will hold lessons in a combined class of modem jazz, tap, ballet exercise and acrobatics.

Classes include instruction for beginners, intermediates and advances students ages 3 and older. Attention will be given to poise awareness, movement and coordination as well as intricate steps and routines, depending on stu-dent8 abilities.

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C-12-The Day Reflector, GrewivUle, N.C.-Sunday, July 31.1983

WSongwriter Tom L Hall Draws On Events In His Kentucky Home

By TOM CONNELLY

For The Associated Press

OLIVE HILL, Ky. (AP) -The country ballads that seem to flow so easily from the pen of singer-songwriter Tom T. Hall are actually so real and personal that Hall has a hard time even talking about where the stories come from.

The place is here, in the wooded hollows and hardscrabble back roads of the Tygart Creek Valley in eastern Kentucky, where Hall once ran bootleg whiskey, sang and brawled at the country store, watched his mother die of cancer and looked hard at the colorful life around him.

When I was a kid, I thought this valley was a stage play where real people acted out the parts, Hall said recently as he drove w ith a friend past scenes he has since made famous on the nations airwaves and concert stages.

The millionaire celebrity wore jeans and a T-shirt, drove a borrowed car, and, as the hard landscape rolled past, it wasnt hard to imagine him as Tommy Hall, the hellraiser son of the pmr Baptist preacher on Tick Ridge.

Look over there, he said as he turned onto a Sleepy street in Morehead, where an antique neon sign with letters WMOR hung from the Monarch Supply Store.

Got a job there as a disc jockey when 1 was 15. The older guys had been drafted into the Korean War, he

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said.

A few years later, Hall followed, strolled into what is now a drab brick dollar store near the radio sation with signs in the window for discount motor oil and underwear.

That was the Army recruiting station back then, he recalled. I joined up, gave my brother a 1949 Fort and left this country.

Hall was one among thousands who moved away from a depressed Appalachia for what they hoped would be easier lives in the cities, but found that although they had left the country, the country hadnt left them.

I knew a lot of these people, Hall mused as he steered east from Morehead through the Tygarts Creek Valley past mobile homes and frame houses where abandoned cars rusted in front yards.

Some left the hills to work in factories but came back because they couldnt stay away, he said. *Look at the bumper on that car. It rusted clean off from road salt in Ohio or Michigan.

Every curve called back tales of humor of pathos from the crazy patchwork of Baptists and bootleggers, mountain religion and raw violence that found their way

into Halls son^ or his novel, The Laughing Man of Woodmont Coves.

When I was 14 I ran illegal whiskey along this road to Olive Hill, he said. County was dry. I carried cases of half-pint bottles or Seagrams Seven. That was all people drank.

His bootleg runs took him past the sweatbox Limestone Apostolic Church where he remembered a lady preacher who ranted against sin until she ran off with a local musician.

Nearby was the hamlet of Soldier, little more than a post office and gas pump.

A danmed good guitar player lived here, but he spent most of his time in prison for robbing that little post office, Hall said. Never robbed anything else. They would parole him, and he would do it again. Just past Soldier he swung onto a dirt track which circled an abandoned shack.

Preachers and bootleggers kept the country dry, he grinned. People bought their whiskey here. Local c(^s always said they tried hart but could never find this place.

Not all the memories along the road were humorous.

We mountain people have deep currents of violence.

By MARGARET CLARK

Few works of fiction have ever caught the imagination of so vast a public as did The Exorcist.

Now in "Legion, William Peter Blatty takes the reader on an eerie exploration of the many levels of horror. While the previous bestseller concentrated on one extraordinary case of demonic pos^ion, Legion explores the terrible realities of everyday life: murder, sickness, pain, fear, loss.

In this sequel of sorts to The Exorcist, the devil returns to the Georgetown section of Washington, D.C., where aging Lt. Kinderman investigates a grot^ue series of murders. A 12-year-old boy is crucified, a priest is decapitated in the confessional, another clergyman is drained of his blood and a nurse is slit o|wn. Kindermans investigation brings him face to face with evil itself in a stunning climax.

Another type of possession is described by Ann Rule in her latest novel. In Possession, Joanne Lindstroms husband, a police officer, is killed in a horrible accident as they backpack in the Washington wilderness. And the only person who can help her out of the isolated wilderness is a psychotic killer who has watched and waited for just such a chance.

As Joanne becomes completely de^ndeot on the man for her survival, a bond grows between them that will erase all memory of her former life, and she becomes, in every sense, his possession. Another police officer, a close friend of Joannes husband, tracks them through the forest, but perhaps he will be too late to save her.

Anne Rule draws on her background as a policewoman to provide a stark, suspenseful story of love, terror and obsession.

From the master of techno-horro com^ a spellbmding novel of medicine gone mad.

In Robin Cooks Godplayer, no one at Boston Memorial can figure out why cardiac surgery patients (who have been recovering nicely) are dying. Pathology resident Cassandra King|sley, who is married to the hospitals noted heart specialist, has been aiding her pathologist friend in an intense investigation of the mystery.

Against her husbands furious objections, Cassandra is determined to stop the killings even as she fights to save her ^ marriage. Only after she stumbles onto a terrifying discovery is she forced to realize that her dreams have become nightmares, and that her search for the truth has opened the floodgates of unimaginable horror.

compassion and hatred, Hall said as he recalled the mountain feuds that in^ired the ballad Rowan County Troubles.

Some of my friends ended up in jail, and others were killed in local fights, he said. He pointed to a frame house in a small hollow.

That guy was a boyhood friend. He left here for a factory job up north, but was stomped to death there by a street gang, Hall said.

Halls own search for success away from the hills finally brought him . to Nashville, where he arrived on a cdd January day in 1964 with his guitar, a box of song lyrics and $46 in his pocket.

It took him five years to leam he couldnt find his future by trying to run from his past.

1 was writing those standard Nashville love and cheating songs, when anybody could do, he said. What was a Tom T. Hall song?

Then came Harper Valley P.T.A., HaUs late 60s hit which poked fun at the hy-I^risy of a small Dixie town like the ones that dot his native county.

I was learning one never escapes his background, that I would be a mountaineer in part always and wanted to write about these people, he said.

So Hall made the first of many trips home with a tape recorder and a stack of notepads. The result was the album In Search of a Song, and tunes like The Year Gayton Delaney Died. Now Hall pulled up in front of the huge C.A. Raboum

and Sons country store in Lawton and talked about Clayton Delaney.

He was really Floyd Carter, a loner who lived on Tick Ridge and sang and played for the locals on the front porch of the store. Tommy Hall used to walk two miles down the hollow to listen.

The storekeeper had rules, as he walked to the rear of the store, Hall said. No fighting in the front 1<X. Do that back here. I did a lot of time in this back lot.

On the rutted road to the crest of Tick Ridge where small scratch farms clung stubbornly to the backbone road. Hall drove past his old one-room schoolhouse and stopped at a modest house on a ridge ^ur.

This was my boyhood home, he said q^tly.

Below was Olive Hill with its main street now named Tom T. HaU Boulevard and the brickyard where Virgil Hall wortced 10-hour shifts to feed his family.

Hall was 13 when his mother died painfully of cancer. He watched from a bam loft when pallbearers carried away the woman who had told him that Me and Jesus will work it out.

Me and Jesus was written for her.

Floyd Carter died the same year. He had beoi a hero to Hall.

Thirteen was my year of sadness, he said. But it was also the turning point. The next year he quit school and left the ridge, carrying with him the images that found expression in Country Is, I Love,

Ballad of Forty Dollars and scores of others.

Some remain hart for him to sing, like Homecoming, in which a hillbilly singer comes back to the farm and confronts his past when he meets his father in an empty pasture. The encounter really happened.

There were debts to pay for every song I wrote about

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Day Forward, the historial drama of the Waldenses who settled in western North Carolina in the late 1800s, will be retold for the 16th consecutive season in Valdese, The drama will be presented nightly in the Old

on Church Street Aug. 4-7 and Aug. 11-13.

Ticket prices for the drama are $5 for adults, $3 for children under 12 and $4 for groins. For more m-formation call Cheryl Kendrick at (704 ) 874-0176.

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Jones Takes On New Role

HOLLYWOOD (AP) -James Earl Jones, known in the theater as one of Americas great Shakespearian actors and to millions of youngsteh as the voice of Darth Vader, has assumed a new role in life.

At 52, he is a father for the first time. Cast as the baby is Flynn Jones, 7 months. In the role of mother, is Jones wife, actress Cecilia Hart.

Could you call back in five minutes? The baby just threw up, Jones says in that resonant voice during a telephone interview from San Francisco.

Flynn and his mother are traveling with Jones on a six-month tour of the Athol Fugard play, Master Harold... and the Boys, in which he appeared last year on Broadway.

He will open in Los Angeles at the Huntington Hartford Theater for a, three-week engagement beginning Wednesday. Then the play goes to Israel and Canada.

Having his family with him, Jones says, is the salvation of being on tour. I dont know if I could do it without them. I know I couldnt be without them. Id be spending more on the phone and on the plane than I would earn as salary, so its just as well theyre with me.

The fact that hes 20 to 30 years older than most firsttime fathers doesnt bother him.

Im starting just on time, he says. Its one time when I know I can handle it - be the best father lean be.

Fatherhood has not changed his high standards of acting, he says. But I tell you this, if I was in a production I was not totally happy with, I would be more likely to stick it out because the paychecks involved. Jones, who grew up in Mississippi, won a Tony Award and an Academy Award nomination for The Great White Hope. He also won critical acclaim for his performance in Othello with the New York Shakespeare Festival.

Hes done other plays by Fugard, a noted South African playwright, he appeared in Roots - The Second Generation and provided the voice for the evil Darth Vader in the Star Wars movie trilogy.

He has mixed feelings about doing the Vader voice. Actor David Prowse was inside the costume.

I dont want to make too much over the fact that 1 did the voice, Jones says. For the first two episodes, I refused credit. I took credit on the last one (Return of the Jedi) only because of the end of Darth; I wanted it on record.

Now, he says, hes on the market for doing commercials.

Carolina Today

The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 31,1983C-13

Neil Galagher and Ron Holt, who will talk about citizens against pornography, are among guests during the coming week on Carolina Today. The early morning show is aired each weekday from 6-8 a.m. over WNCT-TV, Channel 9, with co-hosts Slim Short and Shauna Bamaby.

This weeks calandar is:

Monday - 6:40 a.m.. Dr. Larry Roberson and Bruce Williamson will talk about education opportunities in agriculture; 7:15 a.m.. Tucker Littleton will speak on Swansboros X)th anniversary and the 400th celebration; 7:25 a.m., the Pitt County Shrine Chicken Fry will be discussed and 7:40 a.m., Judy Stoddard and Janet Haddow will talk about culture under the carport.

Tuesday 6:40 a.m.. Dr. Thomas Chaplinski will discuss diet and cancer; 7:15 a.m., the topic will be Air Force recruiting; 7:25 a.m., David Sparrow of the Long Acre Township Rescue Squad will be the guest and 7:40, Hurrican Awareness Week will be discussed.

Wednesday - 6:40 a.m., Jim Brown and ^.Education Spotlight; 7:15 a.m.. Dean Preston Rawls of Coastal Carolina (Community College will be the guest; 7:25 p.m., focus on fitness and 7:40 a.m., the topic will be the summer drama workshop.

Thursday - 6:40 a.m., Jim Cheatham will talk about living wills; 7:15 a.m., Mary Ann Pennington will be the guest; 7:25 a.m., focus on fitness and 7:40 a.m., the topic will be help for the home.

Friday - 6:40 a.m., Neil Galagher and Ron Holt will talk about citizens against pornography; 7:25 a.m., Hal Moores music teacher will be the guest and 7:40 a.m., Eddie Harrington will be the guest.

ew

Every day in

THE DAIIA' REFLECTOR

Hospitality House

WASHINGTON, N.C. - The whys and hows of hurricanes will be discussed Sunday on Hospitality House, WITN-TVs talk and public interest show seen from noon until 12:30p.m.

Hostess Kay Currie will talk to Albert Hinn, meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Wilmington; Jack Roper, WITN-TVs weatherman, and David Stick, an author and historian from Kill Devil Hills who has experienced three hurricanes on the Outer Banks.

Topics include hurricane tracking, preparation for a hurricane and weather elements preceding a hurricane. Filmed footage of previous hurricanes will also be shown.

'Colony' Cost Will

Present Concert

GREEN GRASS CLOGGERS - The Green Grass Cloggers will perform in the Sunday in the Park activities tonight from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Their performance scheduled for last weekend was postponed because of adverse

weather. Cloggers shown are, left to right, bottom to bp,, Grien Soloman, Karen Roberson, Edie Duff, Nancy Spainhour, Greg Roberson, Bill Cochlin, Steve Mason, Doug Baker and Mark Freese.

Top Country

Best-selling country-Westem records of the week based on Cashbox cagazines nationwide survey.

1. Pancho and Lefty, Nelson & Haggard

2. I Always Get Lucky With You, George Jones

3. Your Loves on tire Line, Earl Thomas Conley

4. Hes a Heartache, Janie Fricke

5. Snapshot, Sylvia

6. The Qoser You Get, Alabama

7. Love Song, Oak Ridge Boys

8. I Love Her Mind, Bellamy Brothers

9. Lost in the Feeling, Conway Twitty

10. Oh Baby Mine, The Statler Brothers

'Sunday in Park' Features Cloggers

The Green Grass Cloggers, a Greenville-area group formed 11 years ago, and the Too Wet To Plow String Band will be featured bnight in this weekends Sunday in the Park Concert.

The concert will be held on the grassy slope east of Reade Circle, beginning at 7 p.m. A concert by the same groups was rained out last weekend.

The Cloggers feature traditional Southern Appalachian-style clogging. Most of their members are from Greenville, with at least three from other communities in eastern North Carolina.

Sunday in the Park is funded by the city of Greenville and is coordinated by the Greenville Parks an Recreation Commission.

MANTEO - The Lost Colony choir and dancers will present a combined concert in honor of the plays retiring producer, Emma Neal Morrison. The concert will take place Saturday at 10:30 a.m. in the Elizabethan Gardens on Roanoke Island, near where the famous Paul Green play is produced.

The program will consist of rarely heard choruses from Handels Messiah, a group of English madrigals and Serenade to Music by Ralph Vaughn-Williams. This latter is set to words from Shakespeares Merchant of Venice and will be performed jointly by the dancers and choir.

Musical director for this concert is Rosalind MacEnuity, now in her eighth summer in that same capacity with The Lost Colony. The dramas associate choreographer, John Walker, has created the

choreography for Serenade to Music.

Admission to the concert is included with the normal $1.50 admission to the Elizabethan Gardens. For more information, all 919-473-2127.

The

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Austrian Emil Jellinek commissioned a car from the Daimler automotive works and named it Mercedes after his daughter. When Daimler and Benz merged, they retained the name.

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THE DAILY REFLECTOR

Sunday, July '^1. 1983 D1Veteran jeweler Floyd Robinson of Greenville works precisely and accurately on a watch as he is surrounded by jars, parts and tools of his trade.

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Carolyn Wilson and Joyce Grimes of Greenville get advice on the possible purchase of a piece of jewelry from Mike Robinson as his father Floyd looks on.

Everyone from time-to-time has worn pieces of jewelry. Most jewelry is found in the jewelry department of stores or in a jewelry store. Most jewelry stores are brightly lit. Silver, gold watches, rings and chains highlight the showcases. Robinson Jewelers on the Evans Mall is one of the many stores in Greenville speciliazing in selling jewelry, but one addition to the shop is to provide service to watches and repair of many items. Jeweler Floyd Robinson takes his place at his face-level work bench at the end of the narrow walkway through the middle of the 42-year-old shop.'    '

The shop now occupied by Robinson and his son, Mike, was once leased by Jake Stauffer and over the years has had the name changed to various jewelry shops. The store has always been a jewerly store of some type.

Robinson has been in the watch repair business for about 37 years, starting his carrer working part-time in 1946 and in 1949 by attending a school in Washington. D.C.. to learn the art of repairing the "hair spring in the older style watches.

Robinson, when asked his choice of the old spring run watch or todays quartz, commented: "The quartz are by far the better watches. Although I dont work on those: leave them for Mike.

Mike Robinson started working for his father before he was out of high school. He attended Wayne Community College for watch repair, returning to work on a full-time basis. The Robinsons are accompanied by fellow worker Jo Sparo.

The elder Robinson likes to work on older timepieces that might need a good cleaning or a face refurbished or a crystal replaced. Robinson said he has really come upon some collectors items during his years of work.    

With his freshly lit cigar placed aside, Robinson sat down at his work bench and began working on another customers watch.

A picture-story by TOMMY FORREST

Robinson places a watch in his shop window getting ready for the days business.

It takes a steady hand to work on a watch. Robinson has had plenty of experience since he has been in the business for 37 years.

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CEMETERY MONUMENT - lilis carved sbne stands at the eotrance to a dog cemetery at Cherokee, Ala., that contains the remains (tf ISO coon dop of good reputatioo." Mayor

Jimmy &own of Cherokee often takes visitors to the cemetoy. The monument has a coon carved at the top and tivo dogs at the bottom. (APLaaophoto)

Train Buffs Plan Special Ride To'84 World's Fair

By WOODY BAIRD Associated Press Writer MEMPHIS, Tena (AP) -Pat Plemons and his friends long for the plusher days of railroad travel, for cushy sleeping cars and diner tables covered with silver and linen.

I used to ride with my grandfather on steam locomotives. I love railroads, and I think a lot of other people are that way, too," said Winston Hoover, one of Plemons associates at the Memphis Transportation Museum.

The museum, a non-profit gro^) of SO or so raUroad buffs, plans to operate an eight-car train, refurbished 1940s style, for runs b^een Memphis and the Worlds Fair in New Orleans next year.

It will be completely self-contained, said Plemons, preadent of the museum. Well be aUe to handle everytl^ you need, from an aspirin for a headache to ironing your clothes.

Besides the eight cars, the

git^ has two engines, one of which is a steam locon

locomotive that will make the inaugural trip next May.

Plonons said that first run will arrive in New Orleans on the fairs opening day.

Plans call for having the train sidetracked in New Orleans for two or three days before it returns to Memi^.

The train will be a hotel while theyre thoe, he said. And they will get a red-carpet train ride to New Orleans.

Plemons, who runs a bobby

sb^ and is enamored with railroad hist(Nry, said his groq;) will have the only privately owned train in the country making overnight charter trips.

After the first trip, we intend to leave the steam engine here, said Keith Therrell, board member of Sentimental Journey, a non-profit group set up to handle the day-hxiay business of managing the train.

Therrell said the train will contract with railroad lines for subsequent trips, relying on the those companies for engines and mechanical

GOREN BRIDGE

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IS GOD ITALIAN?

DEAR READERS: We have had many requests over the years for those hands that we consider to be our favorites. That makes qmte a list. For the time being, therefore, we are devoting the Sunday eol-nmn to a series of famons hands. At the end of the series, we wfll go back to onr weekly question and answer coiumn.

North-South vulnerable. East deals.

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5 <;?

5 4 7 4

Opening lead: Two of <7.

In the finals of the 1975 World Team Championships, the U.S was leading Italy with only a few boards to go. Then Benito Garozzo and Giorgio Belladonna bid this hand to a grand slam.

The opening two club bid showed the equivalent of a normal one club opening. Two diamonds was forcing, and the rest of the auction was natural, including a number of cue-bids. But somewhere along the line the Italians went off the rails and reached a dreadful grand slam.

The American West led a low heart and Belladonna

blanched when he saw his dummy. So did West, who had expected his king of trumps to be a trick. Is God Italian after all," he remembers muttering to himself!

There was only one line of play. Belladonna ruffed the opening heart lead and led a club to the queen. When that held he cashed the ace and, when the king came tumbling down, the grand slam was home and Italy had won the world championship.

But would Belladonna have made the hand had West played the king of trumps on the first lead? If East had indeed started with four trumps to the ten, the grand slam could still be made via a trump coup.

Declarer would have to find an exact distribution. East would have to have exactly three spades. Declarer would ruff two more hearts in hand and discard a diamond on the ace of hearts. After cashing the high diamonds he would ruff his fourth spade in dummy with the queen as East underuffed. A plain suit lead from the table would then catch East in a trump coup.

We have asked Belladonna how he would have played the hand had the king appeared. He confessed that he quite likely would still be sitting in Bermuda trying to make up his mind. Had he opted for the trump coup, he would have gone down and the world title would have gone to the Americans. Of such things dreams are made.

Seid uy qiMttioat {r this crinii to: Churlet Gsrra sad Oasr Sharif, care al this ewspaper. Each week a priie of a copy of the new Goreas Bridge Coapleto, a 19.95 valae, wiU be awarded for the qaestioa jadfod the best received.

Charles Gorea sad Oaar Sharif porsoaaOy caaaot oader-take to aaswer all qoestiaas sab-

I

be Memphis Transportation Museum was founded in 1980 and gets the train cars through donations.

The cars once were used on the Rock Island Railroad and on such well-known trains as the Santa Fe Superchief, the Santa Fe Chief, the Lacawanna Limited and the Wabash Cannonball.

After buying a car and refurbishing it, a donor, or group of donors, gives it to the museum and takes a tax write-off.

Theyre just businessmen around town who are soft on trains,Therrell said. They want to see them rtinning again, and they want to ride.

Plemons said the cars can go for 510,000 to $25,000 with renovations doubling that original cost.

If the trips go according to plan, the train will be making three runs a month to NewOrieans.

Fees for the tr^ havent been established, Plemons said.

The idea for a private, charter train came up three years ago when the Republican National Committee asked for advice on setting up a series of campaign whistle-stops,besaid.

The four sleeping cars will have room for 22 passengers each.

Staterooms will be equipped with private toilets and wash basins, and showers are being built in a car originally designed for carrying baggage.    j

Staterooms will be arranged for two adults each with adjoining compartments available for children.

The train also will have a dining car with a complete, stainless steel kitchen.

Hoover said the train crew, which will total 24, will prepare full means, rather than relying on sandwitches and snacks now siqiplied on passenger trains making the New Orleans run.

There wont be any paper plates, be said.

Plemons said the museum hopes to attract travlers from throughout the country, and perhaps from abroad, fw the New Orleans trips.

If petle are planning to spend enough money to travel long distances to visit the Worlds Fair, they can spend a little more mid take a sidetrip to Memphis for a oneK)f-a-kind train ride, he

ICemetery Is Only For 'Good' Coon Dogs

By HOYT HARWELL Associated Press Writer

CHEROKEE, Ala. (AP) The rule is strict; only coon dogs with good reputatioos can be buried in Key Underwood Cooo Dog Memorial Park.

Since Underwood buried Troop Sept. 4,1937, 150 others have been pm under the gromid at the isolated conetery south oi this town in northwest Alabama.

Its the only graveyard of its kind in the world, said Underwood, at 80 years old still working at a gas supply company.

I never had one come up to old Troop, who was trained by a whisky-maker, said Undwwood, who figures be and his dogs took about 2,000 coons

during his 52 years of hunting before he gave it im last year.

There aint much place to hunt any more, he said. You cant find space big enough to hunt in. So much of the land is posted and so much timber hasbeencut.

You cant Marne the farmers for posting it. Too many four-wheel drive vehicles wme teving iqp

the land.

Underwood still drives the 12 miles from Cherokee over asphalt and gravel roads to the cmnetery almost evoy day. to mak sure everything is OK and to see bow many visitors have found their way to the spot deep in the Thomas Wildlife Management Ar^.

More than 6,000 people a year, sign the spiral notebooks he piRs in the pavilion at the cemetery. The visitors see grave markers with names such as TraeL Jim, Red, Chink, Rock, Loud, Bobo. Felix, Blue Blaze, Sam, Rattler. Preacher. Nite Champion, Blue Tick, Old Boy, Rusty, Jill, Bhie Girl, Blue Boone and Bladr Raa^, whose marko- reads He was as good as the best and better than the rest.

the graves are deqmated with [Elastic

Ralei^ was he name, treeing coons was his game,^ooe M the markms reads.

The markers themselves are as diverse as the names. For Troop, Underwood got a piece of stone and carved out the name and dates. There are aluminum crosses, crossed sticks tied together with the (k^s collar, funmal home mufcers, stones, bricks.

-Grooked Oaks Rubys grave has her kennel club certificate and a picture of her and the owner, Jerry G. Bolton of Russeilville, Ala., imdtf 0ass atop the grave.

Many of the Bowers.

Huntos from throughout the country have buried thdrck^bm.

The Tennessee Valley Coon Hunters Association, with 75 members, leases 10 acres from a paper cmnpany for the graveyard, which takes iqi only about one-third of an acre, and for gatherings.

There is one picnic, for members only, in the spring and then a big one on Labor Day when the coontiiffltms clean up the area, ledecmate the graves, sit around and talk about tbeir dogs, and eat barbecue.

The park contains a carved statue, five feet high, of a tree trunk with a coon cowering at the top and two dogs at the bottom.

Underwood chose the locatioo because it is the spot where be and others gathered for years to start tbeir hunts.Job Applicants Crash Airline's Offices

ATLANTA (AP) - Every day at Delta Air Lines headquarters in Atlanta theres a crash - as the a{^licatk>ns and resumes hit the personnel office.

Debite the current economic woes of the nations airiines, despite the fact that air travel is no longer a novelty to many Americans, people still want to work for the airlines.

Sc many people, in fact.

that if you want a job flying, your od<^ might be aboM as good in astronaut school.

Evoy day, 800 to 850 job appficatkms arrive at Deltas personnd office. At any given time, there are aromxl 100,000 q)plications in the active file. And thats with dumping all unrenewed applications after six months.

At Eastern Airlines headquarters in Miami, as

soon as we announce that we are hiring, huge, huge, mail bags come in every morn-ing, said Woody Mont^mery M the airi^s lersonnel department. Hir-mg or not, he said. Eastern gets between 50,000 and 80,000 applications a year.

Maybe the golden days of the air industry arent aroun<d anymore, Montgomery said, but we still have a very tremendous

number of people interested in working for Eastern Airlines - particularly as fli^t attendants.

They see the travel and all that.

At Ddta, betvreen 500 and 600 applications a day come from people who want to be flight attendants, said Ken Alten, the airlines system anploymeM manager.

Sheer mathematics would advise people with tbeir hearts set on a flight attendants job to consider another career.

The flight attendants job has always been a glamorous job for applicants, be said.

This spring. Delta held its first three training classes for flight attendants since July 1981, with each class containing between 50 and 75 lucky applicants.

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THE QUIZ

V

worldscope

(18 ponMs lor ndt question    eorfc8y)

I l-rjcl ajtttj i    pulllwk    oi    ,l^    UixifN Irom

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2 Meanikhijc Kucli Prim Mincer ctflehrjicij h, 'hh hir?hjj\ jmni fumor> nt ho pUnx lo retire Irom

hrc

' Philip Hjhih jnmmnced ho rtM^njtion j> I S Spe-eijI    In the (( HOOSf 0\F Middk F^

( entril Amenci i

4 Seven memScrh iM the firnnpejec Foundjiion %i\ Amencjns jnJ j { jnjduin mere rck-ised h\ Soviet ittficiaK I he members ikcrc jrrcvted lor ph^^o^faph-ing (C HOOSF ONf hjiin nperjiums nuelear p<ier ptdfHM m the So\iet I nnin

A Intlaiion (( HOOSf ONf rose fellt h\ 0 T perteni m lurvc toi an annual rale of 2 percent lof iK' lifsl hall ol the vejrnewsname

(10 poinls H you can idanttty Hut parson in Itic ntyts)

Onl\ months after m\ retirement" from pfofessM'na! lenms I have announced plans to re-I turn lo the pro ranks nevt vearmatchvrords

(4 poinit lor MCh corrtct match)

I'bovcoii    a*pu//le.    bcvnWer

newspkture

(10 points it you i

r this quastion eorractty)

Pttland'> miltlarv ytnrrnmrni anmiunced an end lo nincietn monlhs o( matiijl U and plans In rcltast nearK KOO prisoners eligibk for amnesiy under the nt dtstee Hoacier Poland's miliiars leader . remains in diKv aiih hfnader p'*er lo suppress dissent

peoplewatch/sporriight

(2 pomts for tich qimtion wwcrtd corroetty)

1 Samantha Smith returned home to Massachusetts after her two-week visit to the Soviet I nion She was mvited there after writing a letter to Soviet

leader

2 frenchman I aureni figon won the '^IHh running of the Tour de France, the world's most grueling (CHOOSF ONE marathon run. cycling race )

} The NCAA won hack the right tocontrohetesiMon rights !0college football games this tall "NCAA" stands for

4 Steve Scott of '* scored his first victory over world record holder Sebastian Coe at the British Amateur Alhltlic Association Championship mile run in I ondon

a-ihe I S t-lretand c-Britam

5 I aufcn Howe heat oomc of the best m the world to win her first professional women's (CHOOSF ONF golf, tennis tournament, the Mayflower ClassK in Indianapolis. Indiana

2-hsundarv

.W>lundeT

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5-barrage

b-aitack bombardment c-avotd. Slav awav d-ltmiied. border e-mistake error

roundtable

FwnHy diKuttion (na icore)

( ndcf lui ctrcuimiincn. if an>. n civil disobedience (usuried in bringing puWic alleniion lo a problem' Fjplain your answer

VOUR SCORE 1 lo 100 point* - TOP SCORE' 81 lo 90 point* - Eicnil 71 lo SO pomt* - Good. 81 to 78 point - Fair VEC. Inc. 81-83

Astronomer Soys Space Will Yield Signs Of Life

ByMELREISNER Associated Press Writer

ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) - After a multimillion-channel system of radio telescopes begins to monitor interstellar signals around the end of the decade, astronomer Frank Drake figures on another 10 years or so before mankind makes contact with life in space.

Thats not to say that he believes human life as we know it will be seen on other planets by 2001.

It is unlikely that the end product of a long evolution would be a duplication of us, he says. We just know that it will be intelligent enough to communicate. You the sense that theres a lot of life out there. It will be fascinating when we learn about it.

Drake, 52, is known as the father of the search for extraterrestrial life (SETI) because of his work on the subject for nearly three decades. He helped organize the first SETI conference in 1%1.

Twice, as a young researcher, Drake was disappointed when he found that what appeared to be signals emanating in space turned out to be sounds apparently from a passing airplane or truck.

Undaunted, he developed an equation to calculate the number of possible communication-capable civilizations in space. The 22-year-old equation, which Drake wrote while preparing the agenda for the first SETI conference, is widely known, especially since its use in James Micheners novel Space.

SETI is just one of the pursuits of Drake, who teams with Carl Sagan of televisions

Cosmos to give Cornell perhaps the best-known astronomy department in the nation. Drake is believi to be the first to send a coded radio message to the stars. He also discovered Jupiters radiation belts, worked bn the Mariner series of Mars explorations and has been studying the measured, steady emissions of energy - pulsars - from neutron stars.

The radio telescope, first set up in the 1950s, is the instrument that gave scientists visions of getting in touch with extraterrestrials. Cornell was the right place at the right time for Drake after it completed the worlds largest radio telescope at Arecibo, Puerto Rico, in 1963.

Featuring the trademark aluminum dish mounted upside-down to intercept radio waves, the 1,000-foot-diameter Arecibo instrument is capable of picking up, filtering and delivering to a computer sisals from incredible distances. Renovations will make it 2,000 times as sensitive as before.

The development is what makes Drake confident of contacting life in space before the turn of the century.

Drake is not put off by the fact that he would not be around to make friends with communicants from space. Radio waves travel at the speed of light -186,000 miles per second -which means that a transmission from the nearest star would have to travel more than four years to reach earth.

Pointing out that television waves travel at the same speed, he says, If you can intercept their TV, you can learn what you want to know without asking questions.

Zimbabwe Saves Game Animals From Drought

CHIREDZI, Zimbabwe (AP) - Game warden Clem Coetsee knelt on the barren earth, aimed his rifle at a white rhino bull 40 yards away and squezed off one round.

At 3,000 pounds, the animal was 500 p^ds underweight, hide hanging loosely from his ungainly frame.

The bull was a prime candidate for the search-and-rescue operation Coetsee was leading to save wild game from the ravages of draught across southern Africa.

The shot sent a barbed dart, loaded with 10 milligrams of morphine derivative, a full two inches into the rhinos rump. Startled, the bull and the rhino cow and calf with him began a two-mile trot throu^ the bush to evade the men pursuing them.

Twenty minutes later, the bull slowed dizzily, then slumped over. Two dozen men rolled the rhino onto a pallet and winched him aboard a truck for the trip to pens on Lone Star Ranch.

There, the rhino was injected with a stimulant. He awoke, staggered to his feet and joined seven other rhinos captured by Coetsees National Parks team. The rhino

T

cow and calf left behind were to be the next days targets.

Operations like this could mean salvation for the white rhino and three other severely threatened queries in southeast Zimbabwe, where a two-year drought is devastating one of southern Africas richest wildlife areas.

Game ranchers and parks officials plan to capture 28 rhinos, 300 of the regions 600 rare and stately sable antelope, 60 giant Lichtenstein hartebeest and a breeding herd of 30 soorting, playful wildebeest. The captures are taking place on 11 private ranches in a lOO-square-mile area, home for a major portion of Zimbabwes wildlife.

The rescued animals will wait out the drought in pens on the ranches, on sugar cane tops and horse feed. They will be released in March at the end of the southern hemispheres summer, if it rains and the grass grows again.

The bush is bare now, with nothing for grazing animals to eat in the landscape of mopani trees and enormous baobabs. The only sparse grass is gray, two years old and unpalatable. None grew this year. Rainfall totalled

only four inches, comparea to 20 inches in an average year.

The game ranches have won acclaim from wildlife groups for successfully crapping impala, kudu and other buck for local sales of venison, while maintaining a stock of animals for tourist and hunting safaris. Owner Tommy Warth said 40 impala were killed weekly for the butchery on his 34,000-acre Sarvo Estates ranch.

Colin Saunders, head of the National Parks Advisory Board, said game ranching and safaris earned Zimbabwe well over 81 million last year. Civil turmoil elsewhere in the country has caused numerous tour cF/tyons this year, althou^i the troubles have not touched the southeast of the country:

A more serius problem in this region along the Mozambican border is poaching. Lone Star owner Ray Sparrow said be has counted up to 20 poachers on his 100,000-acre property on a moonlit night, some of them armed with bows and arrows, atares and dogs.

Neverthdess, populations of most species had increased on the ranches until the drought.

Florida Tests Tax On Foreign Income

By KEN KLEIN Associated Press Writer

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) - As Southern states compete for new industry, Florida takes on a dubious distinction as the first state in the region to start taxing the foreign income of its corporations.

Business leaders from Atlanta to San Francisco say the new unitary tax puts Florida at a disadvantage with its neighbors.

Florida would stand alone as the only state in the Southeast which repels business by taxing foreign income using worldwide combination, Coca-Cola Chairman Roberto Goizueta warned from Atlanta when he learned Florida was considering the tax.

The rest of the Southeast would enjoy a distinct advantage in attracting continued economic growth.

Florida was the first state to take advantage of a U.S. Supreme Court decision June 27 upholding Californias unitary tax.

In sum, the law lets states take a corporations international income into account in calculating the firms state tax bill.

The other states that have unitary tax laws are Alaska, Colorado, Idaho, Massachusetts, Montana, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Oregon and Utah.

New York repealed unitary taxation June 26, the day before the Supreme Court declared the principle valid.

Floridas Legislature adopted a unitary tax July 12 as part of Gov. Bob Grahams $233 million program for public education. The new tax will cost business some $95 million, according to state officials.    '

But business leaders say that estimate is low.

Florida, with no personal income tax, was rated No. 1 in business climate by the Chicago-based Alexander Grant Co. That was before the law was passed, although Graham says Floridas national image wont be hurt by tlie new tax because

overall taxes remain relatively low.

Companies will come to Florida because they will understand that our commitment to better education is real, said Graham, who has traveled the globe to promote Florida business.

However, Lt. Gov. Wayne Mixson, who also serves as state commerce secretary, has indicated that the unitary tax might be dropped if it undermines progress.

Im sure that if any damage does appear to our states image - significant damage - we will assess it all and if necessary we have time to do whatever is necessary to continue to be No. 1, Mixson told business leaders in Tallahassee last week.

Privately, some state leaders are grumbling that Floridas pro-business reputation has been tarnished.

Other critics protested that the unitary tax was rammed through the Florida Legislature in one day without much public comment.

Mississippi indians Evolved Dramatically

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -Archaeologists may have only scratched the surface in uncovering the story of Mississippis early Indians but their findings point to a dramatic evolution from roving bands of hunters to community dwellers who valued both their land and society.

There was no written re- * cord to identify the early visitors to Mississippi some

12,(K)0 years ago, but researchers do know the names and life styles of the settled tribes who greeted the early French and Spanish explorers the Natchez, Tunica, Ofo, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Biloxi and Yazoo, among others.

Jim Laureo, an archaeologist with the Mississippi Department of Archives and History, said the Indians that inhabited the

Southeast were nothing like Hollywoods portrayal of painted horsemen bent on war with themselves and the early settlers.

After about 500 A.D. and until about the time the Europeans arrived, our Indians were living in villages year-round, Laureo said. They had mastered cultivation and hunted only to supplement their food supply.

They did not have to move from place to place because agriculture was the main source of their food, he said. There is even speculation that they dabbled into cross-hybridization of com and were able to develop a real sturdy strain.

The heaviest concentration of Indians was in the Delta and coastal regions and along the river systems. The rivers provided these early

settlers with both food and transportation.

Mississippi is one of the states where we have a great number of sites and we are fortunate in that a lot of archaeological research has been done, Laureo said. For example. Harvard University has had a research project going on in the Mississippi Delta for the past 40 years.

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Upright Logs Form Ends Of New-Concept House

By GORDON HANSON Associated Press Writer

MANDAN, N.D. (AP) - Taking his lead from ancient Egypt, a homebuilder on the weather-beaten high plains of North Dakota has a proposal.

For the same price as a conventional house, Thomas Rothschiller will build you a home he says can be heated for less than $100 a year, holds a natural summertime temperature below 72 degrees and has a maintenance-free exterior.

Rothschiller says the house gets its unique qualities from hundreds of 2-foot logs, set in special concrete and insulating foam, that form the exterior walls.

The building also has excellent inside acoustics, muffles outside noises and could last for centuries, according to Rothschiller.

A brochure says the house might be safer in a windstorm than a regular frame structure, has reduced insurance premiums, and with slight modification could qualify as a fallout shelter.

Rothschiller, 45, is president of Log End Homes, headquartered in the east-central North Dakota town of Carrington. He and his family of five live in a three-bedroom, 1,340-square-foot log-end house.

My total dectric heating bill over a 14-month period, including the last two winters, was about $75, RothscbiUer said in a telephone intoTiew.

Rotbschillo' was an accountant for 22 years before selling his business four years ago to build log-end houses.

Its an extremely efficient home, Rothschiller said.

Several days last year it was above 100 degrees and the temperatures inside the home never got above 72 degrees.

without air-craditioning, he said. Its just like a stqitf-insulatedhome.

He says hes used dectric baseboard heat for two winters, and the total dectric bill was $50 to $75 because he rdied on a small wood-burning stove. A year ago, be do^ied using the electric heat altogether.

This is an ageoid method of building. ^id Rothschiller.

He says the cmic^, as nearly as be can ddoimioe, may have started with Egyptian pharai^ then was continued centuries ago by the Swedes before it ^read across Europe. Log-end structures were later used by North American settlers along the St. Lawrence Seaway, he said.

The exterior walls in a log-end home are 2 fed thick. The walls are formed by hundreds of logs, each exactly 24 inches long and laid side by side, with one end of a log on the inside of the house and the other on the outside.

The logs are hdd in place by a special cement mortar and

vary frmn 3 to 10 inches in diameter. The lodgnole or white ceto logs come firom dry standing timba* in Mimtana and Minnesota,

The motar te a^riied to just the exterkur and interio 3 inches of the logs, leaving a I64nch-wide hollow in the wall.

That bdlow is fUed under pressure with a special foam, and the result is a fomidabie bit of insulatkm, said Jack Karabish,i9,ofMandan,liDi ------------

Karaben, who is Rotbschiller^s cdsinri^ a masonry ccmtracto and a Log End Homes dealer. He is also building (me of the houses for himself.

Karaboisb said the insulating foam also flUed cracks in the logs, resulting in wateiproof and fireproof exterior walls.

Finished ike this, its 100 pocent maintaiance free, be said. However, if preferred, the walls could be stuccoed, drywalled, paneled or painted. _______________

Here's the Answer

By ANDY LANG APNewsfeatures Q. - We recently bought an old house that has plenty of rooms but not all the things we want. For instance, my husband plays tennis and would like to have a small tennis court built at the back of the house. Is there any kind of chart that might tell how much more our property would be worth with a tennis court? We have no present intention of selling, but just in case.

A. - Adding a tennis court to property would increase your husbands enjoyment, but it is doubtful bow much, if anything, It would add to the sales price. A tennis court mi^t be useless to a future buyer unless somebody in the family played tennis. If not, the pro^tive purchaser might consider it a detriment, since the court would have to be maintained whether or not anybody used it. Nobody can answer your question with certainty. Why not enjoy it and forget about what it might add to the sales price of the house?

Q. - In your recent article about patching gypcum board, I got several good tips, especially the part about bow to handle popped nails, but one thing puzzles me and I did not find it in the story. Why do nails p( in the first place?

A. - It can be any one of a number of causes. The most usual is the lumber used for framing has warped because of shrinkage. Once in a while it is because the gypsum board was not installed properly.

Q. - When going through the gadgets at a hardware store or home simply coiter, I sometimes run across what is called a countersink bit with a kind of fancy end on it. What is this used for?

Q. - You probably are referring to a countemink used to open a drilled hole a bit wider at the surface of the wood. This opening is made when you intend to drive home a wood screw so that it g(^ a little below the surface. Because of the special opening, the screw fits neatly in place and can be easily covered with wood putty.

Q. - One of our house walls is badly in need of repair. I think the best thing to do is to cover it vrith textured paint. Can you recommend the be^ kind to cover defects?

A. - A textured paint is good when a wall surface isnt all it should be, but you must not think it will cover boles, cracks or other gaps. These must be patched ahead of time whether you use ordinary paint or textured paint. Once the mars have been filled and smoothed out, go ahead with the textured paint and then, for further coverage of problem walls, dab the wall with a regular household grange. A whisk broom is another good tool for this purpose.

Q. -1 want to expand the ^ace in our attic before I finish It into two rooms. It has been suggested a dormer will accomplish this. I have never done any roof work, but would like to take a crack at it. Any suggestions?

A. - Yes. Dont. It requires specialized skills which, jud^g by your wording, you have not yet accpiired. Try a project of that kind after you have had considerable carpentry and roofing experience. ,

Q.- We have moved into a house which has a large basemoit which we intend to finish into two or three rooms. However, we have discovered that the teiilding code in our area says that the heightof-the ceiling must be 8 feet. Ours will be closer to 7 feet. Do you think it will be possible to break up the floor, which is made of concrete, and tba dig down about a foot, Uius raisipg the ceiling?

A.- Of course its possible. But it would be a tough, difficult job. This is one of those cases where you might have to hire a professional or, at least, get an estimate on the project. A contractor not only can handle the job, he can advise you whether there is any alternative and whc^r you might be able to get some sort of variance so you do not have to break up the floor.

(The techniques of using varnish, shellac, lacquer, stain, bleach, remover, etc., are detailed in Andy Lmigs booklet, Wood Finishing in the Home, which can be obtained by sending 50 cents and a long, stamped, self-addr^sed envelope to Know-How, P. 0. Box 477, Huntington, NY 11743. Questions of general interest will be answered in the colunm.)

New Gadgets Offer Help With Mending Chores

By BARBARA MAYER APNewsfeatures Few Americans today are unaware that new types of consumers are influencing the development of home furnishings products offered for sale.

Manufacturers and marketing consultants have spoken often about consumers who are single by choice and live al(me or with another unrelated adult; les who both work and stay home to wait for a

coupli

cant

repairman; individuals who prefer to cfo their own r^airs to save time and money, and those inner-directed persons who have money to pay for services but prefer to i^t it on other things.

To appeal to the perceived

needs of these consumers, appliance manufacturers have initiated do-it-yourself repair programs, housewares makers have designed small appliances for preparation of one or two servings, and furniture

makers have produced furniture the individual can take home in a box and put together himself.

Taken together, these various items geared to single, affluent, well-educated, do-it-yourself or

iented individuals are some times known as

P

N

R

HOM

THE

HOUSE

Rustic Ranch Features Fireplace

9076 - The Ferndale

By Jerry Bishop

Natural wood siding and stone chimney transport this three bedroom home deep into the w ilderness, where its fireplace warms the living and dining rooms. The front porch of the Ferndale. translates a certain old-

Area    Sq. Ft.

First rbHN-    -    1,140

Basement    -    1,140

fashioiwd. homey comfort, but the interior claims certain modern touches, such as the master hedrisom's private bath. A full bath otf the hall serves the other bedrooms. Closets are plentiful, included even in the living room, and additional storage can be found'in the full basement

TO ORDER YOl R PLANS FOR IHF FLRNDALE

Please send me the setts) checked bekm:

5 sets (Minimum Const. Pkg.) $711

I set (Study Pkg.) ...............    $.tS

Addhkmai sets.................$15 each

Materials List And Energy Saving Specifcaliun Guide included ORDERS SENT L'.P.S. OR PRIORITY MAIL

AMOUNT ENCLOSED ______

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Make check or money order payable to and .send UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE (MPT. 6-A 200 Park Amwe, New Vbrk. N.Y. 10166

C-1)

Q. My late-season cucumbers had plenty of blooms but few fruits last year. The plants seemed healthy. I kept them sprayed for diseases and insects. (O.L., Mooresville)

A. Your plants lack of cucumbers could be due to poor pollination. There are fewer honeybees in the late summer than earlier in the season. You could have further reduced the honeybee population by misapplying an insecticide. Remember to read carefully any pesticide label and follow the instructions. If you have a few plants, you may want to help the bees by j^llinating by hand using a cotton swab. Touch from the inside of one blossom to the inside of another with the swab two or three times a day. The best times are 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and early afternoon. Discard the swab after each days work to help insure that the next days blossoms will receive viable pollen.

Q. How do you teeq) Irish potatoes from turrang green? (W.E.,Troy)

A Keep the potatoes out of

Garden

Clinic

light, either natural or artificial. Besides being dark, the place you store your Irish potatoes should also be cool and dry.

Q. A friend suggested putting six matches under the roots of our pepper plants when we planted them. He said this made his plants do better. Why? (I.L., Eden)

A. The plants probably did better because the mat-chheads contain phosphorus, an essential plant nutrient. The phosphorus in a complete fertilizer would serve the same purpose and probably be cheapa. If you only have a few plants, and dont want to buy fertilizer, using matches you have at home would be better than nothing.

Q. What causes tomah^ to crack? (F.D.,Mayodan)

A. Dry weather slows the growth of tomatoes. When dry spells are followed by periods of warm, rainy weather, the cells in the tomatoes expand rapidly and sometimes cause the fruit to crack.

Q. What are some varieties of seedless gr^qies to grow in North Carolina? (C.H., Raleigh)

A. Lakemont is a good quality white seedless vari-e t y t b a t h a s small-to-medium-size fruit. It bears early in the midseason. Himrod is another white seedless variety with smaU-to-medium-slze fruit. It bears eariy in the season but is disease susceptible. Suffolk Red is good ipdity red variety

\

with medium-size fruit that bears in the eariy midseason. Venus is a seedless black variety that bears in midseason. It has medi-um-to-large-size fruit. Overcropping (producing too many fruit clusters) can be a problem with Venus. It is better, eqiecially on young vines, to do some cluster thinning in years of heavy fndt set.

ByANDYLANG

APNewsfeatures

The big value of a portable circular saw is that you can take it with you for on-the-job cutting. But it is a tool with tremendous power and should be accorded ^t respect every second it is in use.

Because of its power, the saw should feel comfortable, a truism with all tools, electric or not. When buying one, therefore, it is imipor- tant to h(dd it in your hand and move it around, being certain it does not ai^pear to be heavy. If it does, it will seem doubly heavy when you are cutting with it.

The pn^ feel, plus the use of the correct blade, intense concentration on what you are doing and observance of the manufacturers printed instructions, will help you avoid an accident.

Some saws have slip clutches or other devices to prevent motor burnout if the blade sticks and to reduce the likelihood of kickback and loss of control. If you idiould get an economy miidel without such an arrangement, you can keep the motor from overheating, especially when cutting tough materials, if you work at a very slow pace. All mcxfols should have a nonlocking trigger switch that instanUy shuts off the power when released.

The most pi^Milar circular saw is the 7V4-inch model, with (to general sizes being 6V4, 7, 1% 8 and 8V4. These sizes designate the diameter of the blade which the saw wUl take. To judge the work capacity of a saw, you must know the depth it will cut verticaUy and at an angle. For instance, if you have a 6>/^-inch saw, it usually will cut at least 2 inches vertically and about 1% inches at an angle. Since depths are not the same among different brands, check a saws maximum depths of vertical and 45-d^m an^e cuts if that will be important to you when you get the saw home.

It would be ideal if the electric circuit to which you connect the saw were used for iKtog else but povrer tools. That is not often the case, so check the amperage ratings of the saw you intrad to buy. The average amperage ratings are tetween 6 and 13. Those at the iqiper end of that range should never be connected to an ordinary household circuit if

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another appliance is operating at the same time on the same circuit.

You have extra protection when a saw is marked double insulated or something similar. This type of tool is manufactured to eliminate the need for special grounding, but do not ne^ect to read the manufacturers instructions for (perating the tool - and do it before you begin to use the saw, not after something happens.

A seal, such as to from the Power Tool Institute, means the machine has been inspected under power at the factory and has directions for safe use in the carton.

When using a portable circular saw or any other electric tool, wear safe clothing with no dangling parts, keep safety passes in place and work by yourself. Accidents are frequent toi somebody is using a circular saw and lifts his head for a

second to greet someone who has just come into the room. Whenever possible, clamp the worlpiece securdy to prevent it from sl^ii^ as you cut.

A sharp circular saw will cut easily through any kind of wood and, when fitted with the proper blade, will handle stone, ceramics, fiber glass, metal and almost all matarais.    ,

Never touch-the saw for any reason except to cut unless it is disconnected from its power source. It is not oxHigh to turn off the machine; pull out the plug, whether you are going to change the blade or make even a minor adjustment.

(Do-it-yoursdfers will find valuable data in Andy Langs handbook, Practical Home R^airs, which can be obtained by sending $1.50 to this newspaper at Box 5, Teaneck,NJ 07666).

use or lifestyle products.

Recently, Sii^ Co. altered the field with four new personal use sewing gadgets designed to handle an or most of an individuals mending chores.

Singer is best known as a maker of sewing machines, but the company poiMs out to its new Easy Menders product line te not aimed at, sewing enthusiasts.

The four new productS4U not sewing machines, but were oigineered specifically to do one or two mending jobs. They are aimed at those who do not necessarily know bow to sew and vdK) dont necessarily wish to learn.

Instead, they are finr men and women who have neither the time nor inclination fo mend clotbing but RdM would like an alternative to pato a tailor to do minor cmbing repairs, explained a spkesman for Singer.

At $80, the most expensive item in the line te a portable, 6-pound electric machine which looks like a small sewing machine but can only go forward. It te preset for mending, patching and minor alterations and will stitch throu^ sevoal fabric layers.

IBoG^

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When you need something, check classified first."

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your daily

Horoscope

from the Carroll RIghtor Institute

roRECAST FOR SUNDAY, JULY 31.1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Today, the last day of the month, brings you the need to carry through with whatever you have already placed in motion and not to yield to a restlessness.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Not a good day to got into anything new, so take it easy and keep calm, cool and collected. Avoid arguments.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Some secret worry could prevent you from getting into constructive activitMS. if you permit. Avoid heavy conversations.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Make sure you place your energies properly if you are to gain that personal aim. Some friend could be in real trouble.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You feel like planning changes in your vocation, but this would only set you back. Spend time with kin.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Important you stay pretty , close to home today and get caught up on tasks awaiting youi; attention. Creative ideas abound.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Concentrate on responsibilities you have assumed and don't feel imposed upon now, but plan how to discharge them properly.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Be sure to carry through with whatever you have agreed with associates and not try to make changes.    >

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Dont argue with one who does not agree with you today but keep calm. Take care of health matters today.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) You want to have some expensive kind of recreation but you had better settle for the less costly.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You do not like things as they are at home and want to make radical changes but still get opposition.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) You are anxious to get to work with partners, but you had better wait until tomorrow for this.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Not a good day to handle money and property matters since you are not thinking very clearly and dont have enough data.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will have a myriad of ideas and will dislike being thwarted in putting them in motion, although they have not been thought out carefully first. So teach early to think the matter over thorougUy before going into it.

FORECAST FOR MONDAY, AUGUST 1,1963

GENERAL TENDENCIES:A day and evening when it is not advisable that you make important business or finandal decisions. You are very practical about what requires your present attention.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Important that you get your bills paid to the best of your ability today.Take health treatments.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Your personal wishes may not be attainable to get problematical affairs handled wisely. Work on details.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Advisors do not seem to give you the right solution fOT some secret worry, so listen to what a family tie suggests.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) It would be well to go after your personal wishes alone and not tike that bumptious frimid with you.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Take care you do not irk a %i|d>^up is 0 warpath where you are concerned. 'SmJi hdvice.

i. VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Not a good day to get at that new condition that is developing, since litUe could be done about it now. Be more channing.

LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct. 22) Not a good day to come to any important decisions where your business affairs are concerned. Seek expert advice.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Do not interfere in an argument between a partner and an official otherwise you could get into trouble.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Dont argue at work over more money, etc. but be as efficient as you can. Avoid a jealous person.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22 to Jan. 20) Dont get away from valuable work just to have a good time or you will surely regret it. Listen to suggestions.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Use tact so that difficult situation at home does not erupt into a big fi^t Be efficient at work.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Be careful in both speech and motion today otherwise you can get into swious trouble. Stick with a partner.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she wUl get into one project or another and gain from it, and also be good at trouble-shooting matters. However, your progeny should be tau^t early to reach quicker decisions . 'Spiritual training is a must.

The Stars impel they do not compel. What you make ,of your life is largely up to you!

,1        1983,    McNsught    Syndicate, Inc.

Travel Market Failure Feared

WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional critics of a Civil Aeronautics Board decision to end exclusivity arrangements between airlines and travel agents say the action will i^ll trouble for American travelers. .    

:Sen.' John W. Warner, R-Vj|.t...^fh^rman of the

Senate Tourism Caucus, told a House panel the decision will cause a collapse of the travel marketing system and result in a totally chaotic marketplace.

The CAB has moved to eliminate requirements that airlines sell tickets directly or throu^ accredited travel

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Iran Maintains Unbridled Flow Of Persecution Against Bahais

PEANUTS

VOD can't remember

HER NAME?TRy60IN6

THR06H THE Alphabet

50METIME5J5THEARIN6 A LETTER WIU J06 yOUR MEMORy...

ByKENKUSMER Associated Press Writer HAIFA, Israel (AP) - The solemnity of the Bahai World Center dominates picturesque Mount Carmel here. The ^IdeiKlomed Shrine of the Bab glistens in the hot summer sun and two white marble edifices stand amid rows of manicured gardens.

The tranquility here differs dramatically from the mood 750 miles away in Iran, where another ugly ch^ter in the faiths brief history is unfolding. Bahais there are imprisoned, sent to the gallows or forced from their jobs by a ^v-emment that considers them heretics, subversives, prostitutes and Zionist spies. Bhhai shrines have been bulldozed.

In June the situation in Iran deteriorated drastically. The fundamentalist Islamic regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini scoffed at an appeal by President Reagan for the lives of 22 Bahais and executed 17 of them in the space of two weeks. The World Center claims two other prominent Bahais were kidnapped on the streets of Tehran, while 130 Bahai men, women and children were held captive by neighboring villagers and pressured to recant their faith. Meanwhile, the official Iranian news agency IRNA reported that 50 Bahai families had converted to Islam.

We are alarmed and very concerned that the extent and the intensity (of the persecution) may be increasing, said Donald Barrett, secretary-general of the Bahai international organization.

Jewish author Elie Wiesel, the chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial, recently suggested that the U.N. Human Rights Commission probe the plight of the Bahais in Iran.

We all vowed after the Nazi outrages - never again. Now is the time to act on that vow, Wiesel said.

The Bahai leadership claims that since the Khomeini regime gained power in 1979,142 Bahais have been killed and 14 are missing and presumed dead. About 275 are imprisoned.

Bahaism, often erroneously referred to as an Islamic sect, embraces the unity of all religions, and besides Mohammed, it considers among its prophets Moses, Jesus, Buddha, Krishna and Zoroaster, as well as its own prophets.

We are not a sect. We are not a section or part of anything, Barrett said in a recent interyiew. Because our roots are in Islam, pmple tend to think we are an Eastern reli^on, to lump us as an offshoot of Islam.

Until recently, there has been very little knowledge about the Bahais, Barrett said, But because of the persecutions in Iran we have become the focus of world attention.

Already, the United Nations, the

European Common Market, the U.S. House of Representatives and the national parliaments of Canada, Australia, Fiji and West Germany all have passed resolutions condemning the persecution.

As secretary-general, Barrett represents Bahai concerns on behalf of the top Bahai administrative body, the International House of Justice. A silver-haired, affable American and former senior legal counsel for the Gulf Oil Corp., Barrett, 55, is the chief Bahai spokesman, explaining the faiths little-known history and beliefs and answering the charges Iran has leveled against Bahaism.

Bahaism was founded in 1844 and has spread to 134 nations with more than 2 million adherents. Its larg^ community - 1 million - is in India, and it has

100.000 followers in the United States, where it is headquartered in the Chicago suburb of Wilmette, 111.

Bahaism has consistently been persecuted in the land of its birth, then called Persia and now Iran, and has been banned at least partially in several other, predominantly Moslem countries, including Iraq, Egypt, Morocco, Syria and Indonesia.

Bahaism is the largest minority religion in Iran today, with an estimated

400.000 members, but is not protected under the constitution of the Islamic republic as are other minority faiths like Judaism, Christianity and Zoroastrianism.

Now it is virtually impossiWe (for a Bahai) to leave Iran, Barrett said. Why? Were the scapegoats. If the war with Iraq goes bad, blame the Bahais. If the cn^ goes bad, blame the Bahais. Bahai leaders claim that Iranian Bahais are guilty only of membershqi in the faith, and that conversion to Islam offers immediate freedom for incarcerated Bahais.

Bahaism has been regarded as a heresy to Islam since the founding of the faith in 1844. Mina ali-Muhammed, now worshipped by Bahais as the Bab (the Gate in Arabic), announced then in the southern Persian city of Shiraz that a new prophet was coming. The Bab and 20,000 other Bahais were executed within the next six years.

The new prophet, Mina Husayn Ali, known as Bahaullah (The Glory of God), proclaimed himself in 1863 in Baghdad, where he had been exiled from Persia 10 years earlier in the aftermath of the Babs execution.

According to Bahai literature, the popularity of BahauUabs teachings was his undoing, as local rulers viewed him as a threat and succesaivdy banished him to the Ottoman cmiters of Constantinople and Adrianqile and finally to Acre, eight miles north of Haifa.

Bahaullah eventually won relative freedom in Acre, and died the in 1892, and Acre and Haifa together serve as the ^iritual and administrative cmiter of the faith. About 250 Bahais - all officially connected to the center - live in Israel.

The influx of Bahai money and pilgrims to Haifa has tri^red the Iranian accusations of Zionist espionage, a charge that for many years caused the world center Iwre to avoid comment on the Iranian situation.

Because Bahaisms roots are in Islam, Iran regards it as a heretical sect and a threat to Islam. But Barrett argi^; We are the only other major religion to recognize Mohammed as a prophet and the Koran as a holy book. Bahaism is as distinct from Islam as Christianity is from Judaism, be added. We seek unity in diversity. We are not seeking unity in sameness.

Iran also charges the Bahais cooperated with the previous Iranian monarchy, but a basic Bahai tenet demands obedience to ^vemment and forbids participation in partisan politics. Bahai literature describes the systematic violation of Bahai human rights under the Iranian shahs, and Barrett points out the case of one Bahai who was exctrni-municated when he accepted a ministerial post undm* the shah.

Another frequent Iranian cb^ is that Bahais are immoral and prostitutes. This derives from the fact that Bahai marriage is not recognized in Iran, and that women are treated equally with men. In fact, Bahai women more so than men are encouraged to pursue highm* education, and universal education is one of the religions most fundamental principles.

Barrett said Bahai women are teachers of the faith, a nde that takes on special significance as Bahaism has no priests. Bahai services consist of meditation, prayer and readings frmn the Koran, the Bibles Old and New Testaments and other holy books.

Barrett said the clergy, while serving a function in the past, would in fact be an obstruction.

Bahais believe all of the major religions teach the same basic principles, but vary only in their social princ^les. Asked how Bahaism is able to embrace such diverse prophets as Moses and Krishna and Zoroaster, Barrett said, Each of the pnH)bets is the return of the spirit of God.

Barrett said the attitude of Bahais is moderate but very much in the vanguard of modem movements, particularly the equality of the sexes, universal education, cooperation between labor and management and the compatibility of rdi^ and science.

1 think were realists and we*re optimists, but I dont think were idealists, he said.

Czech Church Attendance Rising

ByMORTROSENBLUM

PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) - As Pope John Paul II praised God over loudspeakers around Poland in June, clerg^en echoed the message forcefully to cautious but growing congregations across Czechoslovakia.

Roman Catholic and Protestant leaders report a surge in interest among Czechoslovak youths, with growing overall attendance in urban centers, (tepite a religious repression that the churches regard as one of the worlds worst.

Rude Pravo, the Communist Party daily, r^rted the p(H)es arrival in Poland on the sports page and dispatched the eight-day pilgrimage in a total of 360 words.

But his visit to nei^boring Poland made a clear impact, underscoring a trend that has been building for several years.

Its the young people who have the courage, said a senior Protestant churchman who could not be named. Older people are afraid of losing jobs, or having their children miss out of the best schools. But the children, they are coming to church.

At the twin-spired Tyn Church, Suzanne J., 19, shouldering a knapsack after Mass, said;

I used to scoff at religion, but now Ive found a new life. There are many young people like me. Many.

One recent Sunday, young Czechoslovaks pressed into a medieval Protestant church to bear a pastor recall bow, centuries ago, 27 Czech noblemen died for their faith.

We must stand in the truth of God, the pastor said. The message is also for us in these times when we are being tested.

In a sign of the atm<pbere, congregation members asked a visiting reporter not to identify the pastor, although his sermon was public.

Vatican officials estimate that 8 million to 9 million of Czechoslovakias 15 million people are baptized Roman Catholics. More than a million others adhere to 17 Protestant

Clergy Preparing To Serve Elderly

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) - Every day, says Dr. William Gements, 5,000 people celebrate their 65th birthday and 3,500 people over 65 die.

And the clergy who minister to the 1,500-a-day gain in the ranks of the elderly often arent ready for the task, says Clements.

Tbey are very interested, very compasnonate, very wiOii^ b they are very ilkwiq^red,besaid GemenU, an associate professor in the DepartmaA of Family Practice at the Univerrity of Iowa as weU as a United Methodist clergyman, conducted workshops on the subject here recently The clergy might have h^ a course in youth mjjiistry or adolescent

psychology in seminary, but they had nothing in the way of older-adult psychology, he said.

And one reason they arent ready is that the knowled^ base they should have is just being created, he added.

Part of that new knowledge base is the fact that in 1900 a typical 500-member con-egation had 47 members older than 55. Today, 176 of the 500 members are older than 55.

More important - and absolutely astonishing, be said - is a poll showing 75 percent of the elderly surveyed had attended church or temple within the past week.

You cannot separate religion from the proce^ of aging, he said.

denominations.

The constitution allows religious freedom, but Marxism discourages it. Arrests, harassment and discrimination have forced many Czechoslovaks to avoid church. A number of clergymen conduct services and rituals secretly.

Religious expression is free, but the consequences are not, observed one aging Catholic leader who spent more than a decade in jail and still fights for church rights in underground writings.

About 20 Franciscan monks and scores of church workers were detained in March in what Western diplomats described as a tactic to frighten away new churdi members. There was disagreement over how many were held, and most were later released.

Vladimir Janku, head of the governments Secretariat of Religious Affairs, denied any conflicts, and said in an interview: There are the best of relations between the church and the state.

He said that recent arrests were not connected to religion, and none of the detainees was a legitimate representative of the church. He gave no details on the reasons for the arrests, however.

They broke the law, and we must punish everybody equally, whether they are in the church, or the Communist Party, he said.

He blamed the Vatican for failing to name new bishops, leaving ei^t of the countrys 13 dioceses vacant.

But Vatican officials express coiKmm at vigorous state control of the church. About half of Czechoslovakias 3,200 priests belong to the state-sponsored organization Paeon In Terris. Last year, the Vatican pointedly forbade priests from joining groups polluted by political ideology.

Church sources said state authorities must approve nominations to the hierarchy, and the Vatican is reluctant to fill vacancies under those circumstances. Vatican officials, asking not to be named, said the government has frozen relations with the Holy See and has ignored attempts to thaw them.

Czechoslovak officials protested in January when the Vatican named two bishops in the West, a Czech and a Slovak, to administer to emigrees.

Western diplomats and unofficial Vatican sources rate religious repression in Czechoslovakia as among the worlds most severe.

Cardinal Frantisek Tomasek has fought for improvement, they say, but his means are limited under state control.

When you call him up, he has to answer his own phone, 83 years old, pacemaker and all, one d^lomat said.

Church officials fear a difficult confrontation when a new cardinal must be named.

They make it very hard, very hard indeed, remarked one Catholic churchman, who acknowledged that a number of religious practices are kept underground.

A Protestant clergyman noted, Its funny, but often when a senior party member dies, his family or friends will come to us to perform the rites, quietly. The de^ of belief is there. Gergyma earn the minimum wa^, equivaloit to about $100 a numth at the official rate. Positions are limited for youths wanting to enter the six state-run seminaries, and aging priests often must take on extra parishes to fill the gap.

Despite the problems, many of the young new faithful say they are finding something their government and soeietv does

not provide. In interviews, the words, meaning of life, arise repeatedly.

At the 800-year-dd St. Martins in the Wall Protestant Church, Dana, 19, said her parents have tried for a year to dissuade her from going to church. But they cant. she

said.

Janku, the governments religious affairs official, acknowl-dged that religion is not dying out as f^ as Marxist might have wished at the beginniog.

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SUPERIOR OURTD NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF PITT

nI?1ce ^Ic^Iditors

Having qualified as Executor of the estafe of JASPER ELBERT HARDEE, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of Jasper Elbert Hardee to present them to the undersigned Executor, or his aHorneys, on or before January n, l84, or this notice will be plead in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate

ARDENJ HARDEE Route !, Box 57 Grimesland, NC 27837 E xecutor of the E state of Ja^r^bert Hacdee,

Gaylord, Singleton, McNally &

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July 10, 17,24,31, 1983

NOTICE

Having qualified as Administrator of the estate 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 Jeketer Courf Winston-Salem, N.C. 27105 Administrator of the estate of Roy Gorham, deceased.

7,24. 31, August 7, 1983

Roy ( July 17

NOTICE TOCREDITORS NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersignetL having qualified _j Administrator CTA of the Estate of Clyde L. Stauffer, deceased, lafe of Pift County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons 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-

thls 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

NOTICE TOCREDITORS STATE OF NORTH CAROL INA COUNTY OF LENOIR The undersigned was qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Irving Henry Greer. This Is to notify all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the undersigned on or before January 31.1984, or this notice will be pleaoied In bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment ro the undersigned.

This 31 St day fg July, 1983.

Dora White Greer

402 Aztec Lane

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Mr. Harvey W. Marcus AXarcus, Wnitley and Coley Attorneys at Law Post Office Box 3555 107 South McLewean Street Kinston, North Carolina 27834 Telephone: (919)523 7111 July 31, August 7,14,21,1983

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1975 FIAT - 124 Spider Convertible. 5 spieed. 55,000 miles, AM/FM, $3500. Days 823-2444, Nights 752

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA 5 speed. Very good condition. $1100 firm 752 9074.

1975 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe. Good condition. Good mileage, new radials, $2500. Call 754 7784 after 4 on weekdays

1974 DATSUN B210 hatchback, automatic, AM/FM radio, very good condition. Must sell. $1450 negotiable. Nights 754-3890.

1974 MAZDA MISER 4 door, 4 sp^. 88,000 miles. Good condition ITioq. 758-4425.

1974 TOYOTA CELICA llftback, air AM/FM cassette. Asking $2500 757 1353._

1977 FIAT X19. AM/FM cassette. Excellent condition. $3500. Call 744-4854 anytime

1977 TOYOTA Corolla Deluxe wagon, automatic, air, FM/CB, very good condition, 95,000 miles 54-4219.

1978 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 speed, 2 door, AM/FM, air, new tires, new paint job. $3,000. Call 7540470 Monday through Thursday, after 4.

1982 DATSUN 280ZX Call 754 4854 after 4 p.m

1982 MAZDA GLC, air. $5800 firm Will finance. Johnny Kelly, 523 4111

1982 PEUGEOT 504 Diesel sta tionwagon, automafic, air. In dash cassette player and radio. StII under warranty. $10,300. Call 825-0210 after 4

424 AAAZDA, 1982. 4 door sedan. Can see on Safurday at 102 Carlson Street, Westwood area. 754 4203.

030 Bicycles For Sale

SCHWINN ladies 10 speed. Like new. Sacrifice $90. Call 758-0812 before land 752 1137 after!.

032 Boats For Sale

PHANTOM SAILBOAT 14' with Cox trailer and accessories, $1200. 752 0400 before 5 p.m., 752 7444 after 5 gjn

SAN JUAN 21' sailboat, 5 horse power Volyo outboard. Fleet cap-taln trailer, $4500.758-7018.

14' FISH AND SKI, 70 Chrysler still under warranty, new tires, new battery, canopy, boat and motor coyer, water ready. $1500.754-7577

17' MFG. new battery, new gas tank, boat, motor, and trailer. $1350. Call 752 5484 after5:30

1974 20' GLASSTRON Deep Vee. Excellent condition. Low hours, biM and white, full canvas, stereo, CB, 302 Ford V8 Mercrulser, full equjpmenf, tandem trailer. $4,000.

1978 BONITA Open V - 17'. 85 Mercury. Really nice! 825 4931

1979 ROBOLO, 20' with twin 70 horsepower Johnsons. dimIni top, VHF, CB, straight line recorder, Lee out rigger. Narco Epirb console and complete cover, E Z loader trailer, excellent condition, $13,000. -all 752 7131

20' GRADY-WHITE DOLPHIN with 200 horsepower Evinrude. (1979). Like new, dry stored. Cox trailer

ilVWr WI J 9IWI    WA II allVf .

VHF, depth, compass, 2 batteries, rigged, bait wafer rods, available. $7900. Call 724-4439

M'p'DAY, 9.9^ OB, shore power. /HF Extras. Excellent condition. Must sell. 754 4404._

034 Campers For Sale

COLEMAN CAMPER 1978. ExcelTent condition. Sleeps 4. Gas stove. $1900. 754 5849 after 4.

COX CAMPER - fold down. Sleeps 4. Has Ice box, sink, gas heater, and bicycle rack. Very good condition. $1160. Call 753 3493    _

COX POPUP CAMPER Contains sink. Icebox, water and electrical connections. Sleeps 4. Good tires with extra spares. Needs new canvas too. $4(. 754-8492; 752 5124.

FIBERGLASS CAMPER SHELL, its fong lied mini pickup, built in boot, suding glass windows, $200 firm. 744-3313._

NEW JAYCO POPUPS Close out prices (Tamptown RV's, 744 3530.

1970 MONTE CARLO, $400. Call 758-0022.    _

1978 CHEVETTE 1 owner. Automatic. 4 door, AM/FM, 41,000 actual miles, new tires. Excellent condition. $1700. 754-3974.

1978 NOVA Air, V 8. Cruise control. AM/FM tape player, very good condition. Must sell. Moving overseas. $2800. Call 757-1134 before 2 p.m

1979 CAPRICE, excellent condition, loaded with extras, priced to sell. Call 825 8851 (day); 754-0759 tnlaht), flSK y Ponpy

1900 CITATION, automatic, air. 40.000 miles. $32()0. 754-4733._

016

Chrysler

1977 CHRYSLER NEWPORT Good condition. Excellent family car. $1200 negotiable, (fall 757-3^ after ^30.

018

Ford

^ORD FIESTA 1978. Exct ondltlon. (fail 7^-o$i3 afer 5 p

Excellent

1947 MUSTANG $1400. Call 744 4509.____

Good transportation. $850^ cl 74fc2ZH.

1973 AUVERICK, 4 door, air, $800.

fion. 752 4944 aHer 4._

1982 EXP FORD tor sale or will trade for late model mckup truck. 757 0451,askforMr.Carra;;av.

019

Lincoln

020

Mercury

LYNX^ SQUIRE WAGON 1982. Fully EquTppied, 15,000 miles. Call Leo Vemers (Motors, Ayden, 744-4171._[_

1979 COUGAR XR-7, good condition, ^l^ot^ltlwlng and cruise control.

1982 LYNX L, 4 speed, air, AM/FM stereo, power steering, power brakes, reclining seats, rear louvers. Call 752-^1 after 5:30.

021

Oldsmoblle

JSa-'ieil

a iHir ?        end    YywMnd^

MiM

lERA Loaded.

022

PlynNNfth

GTX SUPER SHARP. S1S9S.

1988 GTX SUPER 7f9W7?ft8ftP.in

PLYMOUTH DUSTER cylinder straight drive. S4S0. 72-7491.__

1975

Ur

Call

TRAVELIER, 14' camper. Bath with shower, stove, refrigerator, sleeps 4. Excellent condition. $1995. 744-4840.    _

TRUCK COVERS Ail sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 unUs In stock. O'Briants, Raleloh. N C 834-2774.

TRUCK COVERS ^hawk and Cobra. Camptown RV's. Ayden, ^84-3530.

1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Roof air. awning, fully self-contained. $5300 neootlable. 74 8539.

1979 NOMAD 2ir, factory air, like new, on Oceanfront lot at Emerald Isle. Call 754 7745 days; 355 2070 nights.__

036

Cycles For Sale

039

Trucks For Sale

1981 DATSUN, 5 speed pickup. Red with stripe, chrome rails and bumpers. 30 plus miles per gallon, 41.000 miles. S500 or trade for older t.rgck.5344%,_

040

Child Care

051

Help Wanted

BABYSIT IN OUR home for infant. 7:30 5:30, Monday Friday. Refer

iday Friday enees required. 754-4394 after 5:30 I WANT TO BABYSIT in my home AAondav-Frlday. 754 1057.

AAATURE LOVING experienced sitter to keep infant In my home. References required. Own trans portation desiraole. 754-8143.

PERSON to babysit. My home or 'Ours - part time. 10 months old.

yours -757 9304.

WILL PROVIDE transDortation for your school child (Chicod Elementary School, Highway 43), also afternoon care provided. Send replies to 'Child Care', P O Box 1947, Greenville, N C _

WOULD LIKE TO take care of children In my home for working mofhers. Hours 7 to 4. Farmville area. 753 5287aHer 4p.m._

WOULD LIKE TO keep 1 or 2 children in my home. 758 5236.

046

PETS

AKC BASSETT HOUNDS 524 5001 aHer 5.

AKC BASSETT HOUNDS 10 weeks 3 males tri color, 2 DHL, and 1st Parvo shot. $150 each. 443 3308

AKC DOBERA8AN PUPPIES

Black and rust. 1 female, 1 male. 4 monfhs old. Tail and ears cut. all puppy shots. $150 each. 355-2227 days, 754 7428 nights

AKC GERAAAN SHEPHERD pup pies. Females, 8 weeks old, $75. 1 black male, 4 weeks old, $125. 752 3735 or 758-4449._

females. 12 weeks old. *vTt*\ell Price negotiable. 754 4197.

AKC LHASA APSO Date of birth July 10, 1983, 1 male, 1 female. $150. Call 1 793 9953._.

AKC MALE Pomeranian puppy. Call 754 8495.

AKC REGISTERED GREAT Dane pups. Championship blood line. Call anytime after 5,1-442-4517._

BLACK LAB AKC pups, performance breed for outstanding field trial or hunting doos. 523-9455

COLLIE PUPS. AKC Registered Chanipion bloodlines. 2 Sable males left, shots and dewormed. 754-9281 after 4._^_

FEMJ^E SIAMESE CAT 1 year old. CFA Registered Petagree. Very gentle and loving Moving over seas, must sell. Extras in eluded. $150. (all 754 8718

FREE KITTENS 1 tabby, 1 black, 1 mixed. 752 5484

FREE TO GOOD HOME AKC registered male Irish Setter. 4 years old. 754 2045._

PITT BULL BOXER puppies Brindle and tawn. $75. 75 3574 or 758 0041. _

SCHNAUZER-YORKE

3Vz months old female. $100. (;al) 75? 7194.

2 COCKER SPANIELS 1 red male and 1 blonde female. Call 758 4433 after 3:30.__

051

Help Wanted

ALOE VERA Representative needed. Set your own hours. Work In vour neighborhood. Call 754 5252.

ATTENTION HOMEMAKERSI Need extra cash? Show toys and gifts now through December. Home

or delivering. 754-4410, or

party plan. No investment, collecting, or    .......

753-2534.

AUTO/DIESEL INSTRUCTOR Candidate with Vocational Diploma preferred. Primary responsibility will be to provide instruction in the skills and competencies required to inspect, diagnose, repair, adjust and overhual diesel engines utilized In diesel powered farm equipment, trucks, autos, boats and industrial equipment. In addition, the instructor will be required to recruit, advise and assist In the placement of students. Practical work experience required. 5 to 10 years work experience preferred. Industrial and farm equipment experience required. Position available September 1st. Applications accepted to August 10th to Employment Security Commission, Willlamston, NC 27892. Martin Community College as Equal Opportuni ty/Affirmative Action Employer.

AUTO MECHANIC for full time employment. Experience neces-Mry^ Call. 754-1447 between 3 and 5

Ed,

day through Thursday, ask for

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Due to Increased sales, we are in need of a salesperson. Experience helpful but not necessary. Must be responsible and have the willing ness to work hard and earn top commissions. Excellent benefits, working conditions and bonus plan. See Brian Pecheles In person only 9 a.m. - 12 noon, Monday-Friday. Joe Pecheles Volkswagen

AUTOAAOTIVE MECHANIC We are In need of an experienced mechanic due to an increase in business. Must have tools and willingness to work hard. Contact Steve Briley , Service Manager at Joe Pecheles Volkswagen at 754 1135.

OPERATE YOUROWN HOME PARTY BUSINESS

Become a direct distributor tor Harbor To Harbor. Unlimited In come. We carry a beautiful line of wicker and wood decorative home accessories. If you have experience in sales and recruiting, we are looking for you. Experience a must! Call toll free: 1 800-438 4985, 9 5 p.m. Monday Friday

DO YOU NEED extra money? Sell Avon. Set your own hours. (Must be 18orover). Call now: 752 7004

DRIVER/TRACTOR TRAILER

Must have 5 years driving eimeri-ence and be 25 years old. Clean drivers record a must. Based in Greenville, deliveries made In Eastern North Carolina. Send application to Operations Manager. McKesson Chemical. PO Box 1^5, Greensboro. NC 27419. EOE M/F/V

ENERGETIC INDIVIDUAL needed to work part time position. Apply in person Monday through Friday at Leather & Wood, Carolina East Mall. Noohone calls olease!

EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY Large corporation has outstanding sales opening for a sales representative. Individual must be local resident with managerial ability, ambitious and show progress tor age. Business or sales background helpful. In requesting personal interview please submit resume stating personal history, education and business experience. Write PO Box 404, Greenville, NC 27835

EXPERIENCED Word Processors needed on Wang, Lanier and IBM Displaywriter. Call for an appointment.

Manpower Temporary Services

118 Reade Street

757-3300

EXPERIENCED HAIR STYLIST needed full or part time. Excellent working conditions and good benetits. Call days 355 2074, nights 754 4544.

FREE ROOM and board In exchange for housecleaning and some child care. Call 355 4179

FULL TIME TYPIST Must have medical experience and type 40-45. Excellent pay. $4.50 to $8.00 per hour. Call Ted, 758-0541, Snelling 8, Snellino Personnel

GROWING BUSINESS in need of a full time person for a bookkeeping/sales position. Apply at Mof-fitr's Magnavox, 2803 B Evans Street, Greenville. No phone calls. please. Ask for Sally

HOUSEKEEPER Two days weekly, references requested. Reply to 'Housekeeper', P O Box 1947, Greenville, N C 27835.

IMMEDIATE OPENING for

Director of Nursing Services in Long Term Health Care Facility to assume administrative management of total nursing services. Must be RN licensed in nC BS Degree desirable. Experience in Geriatric Nursing and Restorative Care with working knowledge of management principals preferable. Competitive pay scale with excellent benefits. Send resume to Administrator, PO Box 2037, New Bern, NC 28540; or call 438-4001 for appointment._

LOOKING FOR WORK?

We Need

Secretaries - 40 wpm

:!^TW*Sr.

Word Processors - Lanier, IBM,

Wang

Call lor an interview today!

Anne's Temporaries, Inc

120 READE ST 758-6610

MANAGER Money motivated person for t< spot with outstanding company. Must have retail sales background and strong manage ment skills. Position local, no relocating. Call Gertie, 758 0541. Snellina 8. Snellino Personnel._

MANAGER TRAINEE Take

charge! If you have what It takes to supervise people in store operation for well established conmany, don't miss out on this one! Call Gertie, 758 0541. Snellino 8. Snellino,

MANAGER WANTED for

automotive parts in business. Must have knowledge In parts and busi ness, and be able to deal with the public. 752-4124.

AAANAGERS, ASSISTANT Manag ers, ana Watchmakers wanted. Reed's Jewelers, an expanding guild jewelry chain In North and South Carolina, desires experienced managers, assistant managers, and watchmakers for Mall locations. Excellent salary, profit sharing, life and health insurance, and paid vacation. Please send resume In confidence to Jim Payne, Senior Vice-President, Reeds Jewelers, 414 Chestnut Street. Suite 302, Wilmington, N C 284Q1

AAATURE LADY to care for a child In my home. Send work experience and references to Child Care, Rt. 1, Box 231 B. Ayden, NC 28513.

&E A MONEY ^KERI Sell Avon reat people. Earn $$$. Set youi own hours. Call now: 752 7004

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

Instructor. Candidate must have Master's Degree in Business Administration with documented strength in economics, accounting, marketing, and EDP Will Instruct day and/or night In business area. Usual duties of student advisor, etc. Minimum 2 years teaching and business experience preferred. Position available Slept. 1st. Applications accepted throubh August 9th to Employment Security Commission, Williamston. NC

27892. Martin Community College, an E(3UAL OPPORTUFTi TY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION

EMPLOYER

CASHIER

Convenience store. Good atmosphere. Steady employment. Apply at Dodges Store, 3209 Sooth

CHILD CARE CENTER Positions available - prefer teacher aides and/or some experience working In a child care facility and with handicapped children. Call 749 4011 Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., ask for Mrs. Barnes.

HONDA CB125S, 1981, 2,000 miles, 90 miles per gallon. Very good condition, 500. Call 754 4W (leave number)

HONDA XR 80. Good condition. $250. 752-7494.

SUZUKI, 1982, Junior 50, child's motorcycle, $250. A1 shape. 752

as*'

1974 YAMAHA 500. Great on gas. Runs good. $385. Call 744-4848 after

_

1979 HONDA XR80. Very good condition. $300. Call 754 4908/

1^^ 750K HONDA Call 752 4284

1981 HONDA MOTORCYCLE - 400 Custom. Showroom condition. Serious inquiries only. Call 758-7345

754 4*53 aHer 4 p.m _

1963 HONDA MOPED, like new, low mileage, new windshield, side baskets with lock lids, $550. 758-

_

039 Trucks For Sale

CHEVY 19*7, 307 4 barrel. Rebuilt engine and front end. Chrome rims. Have to see to appreciate. $1050. After 5:30p.m..757?40.

FORD. 1947. New white spoke rims, new Goodyear tracker tires, 289 engine, straight shIH, new brakes. Run good. $^5. Call 754^149.

GMC STEP VAN, 1973. Excellent condition. 110 volt generator air cqndltjpner^^ G>rpe(^yd panel

iSit^"iFVro5;S\"Kt.iir.'''St

offer. 752-7494

1973 CHEVRQ{.ET BLAZER Four wheel drive. Call 752-2841 before 5

p.m.; 758-05<)5nlQhts.

1973 TRIAXLE CHEVY 15 yard 0fnB,C6tiy44 3m___

I960 BLUE 4 wheel drive Toyota ^iKk short bed, $3500 negotiable. Call after 4p.m 795 4419.

1900 CHEVROLET SCOTSDALE Loaded. $600 and assume payments. Call 744-4930._

1977 CJS JEEP Low mileage, extra clean, new oaint. Very good condl-tJaa,14.000. Ku751^SS?4.

JEEP CHEROKEE Chief steering and brakes, tilt air. AM/RM stereo. Good

CONTINUING EDUCATION

Specialist, Division of Community Health Service School of Public Health:    Position    specializes    in

planning, implementing, and evaluating continuing education programs for public health pro essionals, especially Public Health Nurses in the state. Minimum qualifications: Bachelor of Science In Nursing and Masfer's degree in health, education, or related field; three years of experience In designing, teaching, and evaluating continuing education programs for public health or related organization. Persons without a nursing degree and 3 years of continuing education experience need not apply. Starting salary about $20.000 depending on training and experience. Send resume by August 22, 1983 to Richard M House, Acting Director, Division of Community Health Service, School of Public Health 20111 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, or call 919/944 224 Equal Opportunity Employer.

CONTINUING EDUCATION Specialist, Division of Community Health Service School of Public Health: Position specializes in planning, implementing, and evaluating continuing education

iirograms for public health pro essionals. Minimum qualifications: Master's degree in health, education, or related field and three years of experience In designing, teaching, and evaluating continuing education programs for public health or related organization. Persons without a Master's degree and 3 years of continuing education experience as noted above need not apply. Starting salary about $20,000

depending on training and expert ence. Send resume by August 15, 1983 to Rivard M House, Acting Director, Division of Community Hea th Wvlce, School of Public Health 201H, University of North ^rollna at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27514, or call 919/944-2248! Equal Opportunity Employer.

CONVENIENT STORE manager and clerk. 4 months experience helpful, but not necessary. Only serious people apply. Must be able

CRIME PAYS!

Earn above average income. Sharp people neeM immediately to work our local fire & Crime Prevention Program. No experience necessary. Company (raining provided. Most

TIME COMPUTER program needed. Computier science students welcomed *- Knowledge of BASIC structures preferred

gylred. Apply Injpers______

prug^ Store, 2^ Sooth

PART

mers _______ __________

to apply.

^------ and DATA

iferred, but not re son at Hargett's r/    'TT'    South Chorlos

jtreet, 9 ajn.-3 p.m. Saturday, a^itV    samples^

MECHANIC AND SALESPERSON NEEDED

Due to the increase in service business and a future move to the By-pass, we are in need of an experienced mechanic and an experienced saiesperson. Exceilent pay plan and benefits. Appiy to: Bob Grown or Robert Starting at Brown-Wood, Inc., 1205 Dickinson Ave._

051

Help We'-red

salesperson tor growing cataiog showroom with knowiedge of camera equipmenmt and one salesperson with knowledge of jew el^ for catalog showroom. Apply at J 0 Dawson Co., 2818 t 10th Street. See Bruce Hudson._

SECRETARY - For small chain of preschools. Apply in person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone calls Bisase

SECRETARY Excellent opportuni ty for the person with good office skills. If you are career minded this could be the job for you. Shorthand or speedwriting skills a plus. Great benefits. Fee negotiable. $11K Call Susan, 758-0541. Snellino A Snellina.

SECRETARY Type well? Excellent opportunity tor a motivated energetic individual who wants a position with advancement. Call Gertie, 758 0541, Snelling & Snellino Personnel

SECRETARY Snelling 8, Snelling has six secretarial positions in the medical, legal and sales pro tessions. Salaries range trom $8500 to $14,000. Good typing skills plus light bookkeeping will enable you to do several of these jobs. Fees are negotiable. Call Ted, Susan or Gertie. 758-0541, Snellino 8, Snellino

SERVICE STATION Attendant needed. Full or part time. (Tall 754-1447 between 3 and 5 Monday through Thursday, ask tor Ed

TEACHING PARENT and Teaching Parent Assistant Positions. Immediate Openings. Must have degree, associate, or equivocal related experience. Work involves treatment of emotionally disturbed adolescents In a Residential Treatment facility. Experience working with children with knowledge or behavior management preferred but not required. Extensive training provided. Must be on N C State Competitive Service System Register to be

employed. Send ..........

State

two _______ ..        ...

Personnel Officer, TIdeland Mental Health Center. 1308 Highland Drive. Washington, N C 27^. Inquiries may be made at (919 ) 944 804). An Equal Opportunity Employer

ce oysTem Kegisrer ro oe oyed. Send completed N C Employment Application and letters of reference to:

THE PITT COUNTY Board of Education is accepting applications for the following vacancies. 1 GT position, 1 EH position. To apply please contact Personnel Depart ment. 752 4104.    _

THE TRAINING NEVER STOPS

Consider an exciting career in Real Estate. We otter 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. (A North Carolina Real Estate License is required)

105 W. Greenville Blvd. Call RodTugwell 756-6810

CENTURY 21

TIPTON & ASSOCIATES

TWO LABORERS to work in yard leveling dirt. Apply at trailers Vj way between Worthington's Crossroad and Haddock's Crossroad Monday morning. Prefer school bovs. Minimum waoes._

WANTED

Full and part time drivers tor Domino's Pizza. Must be 18 with own car and Insurance. Must be pleasant in appearance, willing to hustle, good driving record, and familiar with the area. Can earn up to $8.00 per hour. Apply In person between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. anyday at the Charles Boulevard Store or Rlveroate Shooolno Center Store

WANTED: Mechanical engineering student or retired mechanical engineer to work part time tor industrial manufacturing facility. Familiarity with computers and NC machining desired. Plese submit resume to: Mechanical Engineer ing, PO Box 548, Greenville, NC 27l34-

7 TO 11 AND 3 TO 11 positions available for LPN'sor RN's. Please apply at Oak Manor Nursing Home, Snow Hill. 747-2848. Competitive salary._

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

Licensed and fully Insured. Trimming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancll. 752 433).

ANY TYPE OF REPAIR WORK

Carpentry, masonry and roofing. 35 years experience in building. Call James Harrington after 6 pm. 752 7745.

BRICK AND BLOCK work, repairs or additions. 11 years experience. Call 825-4591 after 7 p.m

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist, Tar Road Enterprises. 754 9123 day, 754 1007

COLLEGE STUDENT with lawn tractor will mow any size yard 8, do other yard work. Call 744-4773

MORTGAGE LOAN Processor Ex perlenced or in banking. Full time. Excellent benefits. Call 355-2048 between 9 and 4, Monday through pHdpy

NEED EXPERIENCED reliable sitter to take care of my 5 month old Child days. References. 752 7413.

OVERSEAS, Cruise Jobs $20,000 $40,000/year possible. Call 805 487 4000 Ext.J 8752_

OWNER/OPERATORS

We have an immediate need for experienced mobile home transporters locally and nationwide. If you presently own or can purchase a lafe modef single axle truck, are oyer 21 years of age, and can meet DOT requirements, please call us collect.

NTC Of America, Inc.

(804)799-3331

PART TIME temporary telephone interviewers needeci for the Greenvlile/Rocky Mount/New Bern/Jacksonville areas. Call 803 271 0415.

PART TIME SECRETARY needed to work in afternoons. Must be good typist. Send brief resume to P O Box 1884, Greenville, N C

PART-TIME JOB tor mature col lege student. For Interview, contact Mrs. Hartmann at Northwestern Mutual Lite, 752 4080

PATIENT ACCOUNT Supervisor Immediate full time opening In a progressive hospital buslrtess de-parTment for patient accounts supervisor. Requires 3 years of telephone collection experience with a bank and/or finance company. Must be high school graduate with some coll^ experience in finance and/or business management. Excellent benefit program. Send resume to Employment Officer, Craven County Hospital, 2000 Neuse Boulevard, New Bern, NC 28540.

PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5

YwrsoxBeriento ?j4_794i

QUALITY CONTROL supervisor. Experience in apparel

manufacturing. Only experienced need apply at Preo Shirt, 758-3T

3147.

REAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE or management brokers needed! We are expanding our sales staff wifh local, regional training programs available. Call for interview, 355-222L

RESTAURANT MANAGER TRAINEE Outstanding opportunity for individuals with collMe background. Degree desired. Op portunlties for advancement and a situation where you could own your own store. Starting salary $9560 to $11,000. Potential earnings after once you become a manager will be S25K to S45K pending on the volume of business. Call Ted, 758 054), Snelling 8. Snelling Personnel

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and mefal. Equipment formally of Dip and Strip. II items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call for free estimate. Days 754 7123, NIoht 754 1007

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 T341

GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583

LAWNMOWER REPAIRS We will pick up and deliver. All work guaranteed. Call 757 3353 aHer 4 p.m., weekends anytime

LIGHT CARPENTRY, glass work, storm doors, windows, siding, alu rnlnum carports, awnings. Will in

stall or repair. Familiar with all metal-wood products. 753-2498

PLUMBING AND CARPENTRY

Specializing in remodeling old bathrooms. State license 4703/. Call 752 1920 or 744 2457

REPAIRS FRIGIDAIRE

Appliances and all other brand name appliances and televisions. Call 744-2138. Fleming's Repair Service

jANDING and finishing floors. ,mall carpenter jobs, counter tops. Jack Baker Floor Service, 754 2648 anytime. If no answer callback

WOULD LIKE to clean your house or office, dependable and reasonable rates. Call Susan, (local) 355 4443._

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

AUTHENTIC ANTIQUE - Empire Sofa, 82". Excellent condition. 754 3197

063 Building Supplies

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do vour house cleaning. 752-3758.

064 Fuel, Wood, Coal

'ine Uauy neiletior inetrvUle. N ion.uy, July 31, 983D-7

066

FURNITURE

ASSUME PAYMENTS of $29 26 on a 6 piece Western living room suit Sofa, chair, rocker, and 3 tables. Furniture World, 757 045)_

BASSETT SOLID WOOD table and 4 chairs, china hutch and base Take over payments on only $67.37 per month. 757 0451. Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Shop now during Factory Mattress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one halt. Next to Pitt Plaza 355 2626_

BEDRCXJM SUITE, all wood, dresser, mirror, headboard, chest. Take over payments on only $26.33 per month. 757 0451. Furniture World. 2808 E 10th St

BRAND NE.W BUNK BEDS Just taken out of package. 757 3988. ask for April.__

COLOR TV

Want one? Check out ColorTyme, check out Tele Rent, check out Curtis Mathes, and then check out Furniture World. We rent to own for less money than any store in Greenville. 757 0451. Remember that Furniture King will not be undersold. He don't pfav

FURNITURE! FURNITURE!

THE FURNITURE KING has It all! For the lowest prices on bedroom, dining room and living room furnifure, pick up the phone and call 757 0451 We finance in our store. Remember the 'Furniture King' will not be undersold at Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St

MATTRESS WORLD at Furniture World. We keep a truck load all the time. We finance. For the lowest price on bedding, visit Furniture World, 2808 E Toth St or phone 757 0451

MEDITERRANEAN dining room furniture, good condition. Large, two leafed table, 8 chairs, hutch, table pad and lace tablecloth. $600 Call 758 4188 until 4:30 and 758 0483 after 7 pm._

RECLINERS We have 50 to choose trom. Barcalounger and Catn^per 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 andT3 tables Only $29.26 per month at Furnifure World, 2808 10th St. Phone 757 0451._

RENT TO OWN Three piece living room suite, sofa, chair, loveseaf $26.33 per month. Your choice of fabrics and colors. Visit Furniture World, 2808 E 10th St or phone 757 0451.

2 SINGLE BEDS with frames. Excellent condition. $50 each. 758-4972._

067 Garage-YardSale

EVERYTHING MUST GO No rea sonable otter will be refused. We are moving, so all household items must go, 2518 Sunset Avenue, Sat urdav and Sunday, 9 a.m. to9 p.m

INDOOR/OUTDOOR yard sale everyday at Old Fairground, Mon day Friday from 9 to 6, Saturday, 7 until.

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING Jarman Stables, 752 5237

LEATHER REPAIR

North Hills Saddlery. 746 2134.

073    F ru its and Vegetabies

FIELD PEAS, $4.50 a bushel. But ter peas, $4 a bushel. Butterbeans and lima beans, $4 a bushel. B & B You Pick. 795 4444, Hassell._

PEACHESII Excellent tor freezing and canning. You pick! Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard. 3 miles North of Bailey, Highway 581 North. Open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 235-4464.

YELLOW CORN, Silver Queen corn, butterbeans, tomatoes, field peas. You pick 744-6298._

074 Miscellaneous

A 2 SEATER ULTRA LIGHT ride! Daily except Monday. Cost $20 per person. For more information, call 744 4878 or 355 2970

ALEXANDER DOLLS New for sale. Mommie's Pet, Mary Mine, Victorian and Christening Gown, Lord Fauntleroy, 12" Scarlet, or will trade tor something of equal value. 756-0416

ALL USED REFRIGERATORS, air

conditoners, freezers, ranges, washers and dryers are reduced tor quick sale. Call B J Mills, Authorized Appliance Service. 744 2444 a) Black Jack

ANTIQUE GLASS DISPLAY counter, $80; American Standard porcelain toilet, $40; 4 radials, 14", $40. 758 7748.    _

ATARI 400: 14K RAM, program recorder, software including BASIC $200. Call 754-6904 (leave number)._

BELL St. HOWELL Super 8 movie camera and lloht. $45. 758-5363

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 919 763 9734._

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale. J P Stancll. 752 4331._

065 Farm Equipment

COTTON PICKER PARTS

Spindles to fit International and John Deere $2.49 each for 100 or more. Doffers-International $5.79; John Deere $5.99. Moistener pads-Internatlonal $1.09; John Deere $1.19. 55 gallon drum spindle oil $184.49. Come In and take a look! A^rl Su^y Company, Greenville.

RN'S AND LPN'S Are you interested In giving real patient care to those who are in need? We have a good employee benefit package and salary scale. If interested, contact Director of Nursing 792-1416 Mon-day through Fridav. 9 to 3.    _

SALES Must have outside sales experience, knowledge of clothing helpful. Work on established accounts plus develop new ones. Salary plus commission. Call Susan, 756 0541, Selling A Snelling.

SALES CAREER Will train ag gressive person tor exceptional career opportunities. Substantial starting salary plus Incentive increases as earned. Sales experience helpful but not essential. Write or send resume to TH, PO Box 20004, Raleigh, NC 27419. EOE M/F

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed. Auto sales experience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC

7S6-267

_For ApDolntment_

ELECTRIC MOTORS Totally enclosed farm rated motors Vh horsepower single phase for bulk barns, $423.95. 5 horsepower for bulk barns $275.95. Vi horsepower single phase $82.49. 2 horsepower single phase $149.49. Sizes from '/z horsepower to 10 horsepower In stock. Others available. Agri Supply Company. Greenville, NC iHl Tfm.

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR, 317 John Deere with 48" mower

njwmptor, Cj)l!.754:6J0g,_

ORDERING TOBACCO? Try a steam cleaner or pressure washer trom Agri Supply. Cleaners made by Electro Magic. Model lOOB steam cleaner, $999.95. Model 2500D hot high pressure washer 2 gpm. 500 psi $999.95. Other size cleaners In stock. Parts and repair work available. Agri Supply Company, Greenville. NC 752 3999.

TOBACCO HARVESTING Supplies - We carry a large line of supplies for the tobacco farmer including Taylor hygrometers $29.95, PVC irometers $13.49; belts. Idler

hygr

pullles, wrockets, chain, rollers and bearings for harvesters. We also have hoist, door Insulation,

racks and much more, so stop in and check us out. Aorl Supply Company, Greenville, N<f 752 39451

WANT TO BUY used Roanoke turn table. 759 0702 davs. 752 03i0 nights.

1 POWER BULK Tobacco Barn, 150 racks. 1 turn table, 1 chain horse. 744 339$

2 ROW ROANOKE tobacco har vester with both heads - Ready to go in field. 758-0702 days, 752 0310

4 LONG BIG BOX tobacco baKss W H Chambliss; Empo/jb, Virginia. (804) 4^ 2340 aHer 8 p.n):

BUYING-INSTANTCASH

TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold 8, silver, dlampnds, cameras and equipment, typewriters, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games 8< 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

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 30)3, (or small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work._

CHINA, Savanna by Norltake, never used, retails $54 a place setting, will sell tor $25 a place setting. Some serving pieces available. 754 7)95.

CLARK .COMPANY

3112S Memorial Drive

756-2557

GENERATORS

Used 300 Watt Generator $150

400 Watt Generator.............$295

1200 Watt Generator    $325

5000 Watt Generator...........$1000

ENGINES

4    Horsepower    Horizontal    Shaft

Briggs 8, Stratton..............$170

5    Horsepower    Horizontal    Shaft

Briggs 8, Stratton..............$180

5    Fforsepower    Horizontal    Shaft

Briggs 8, Stratton 6 to ) ratio. ..$180 5    Fforsepower    Horizontal    Shaft

Briggs & Stratton Industrial $190

8    Fforsepower    Horizontal    Shaft

Briggs 8. Stratton..............$250

UsecT 15 Horsepower 2 Cylinder

Wisconsin......................$250

All Marine Accessories 25% OFF

All Gas Powered Weed Trimmers On Sale

074

Miscellaneous

MARY KAY cosmetics. Phone 756 3659 to reach your consultant for a facial or reorders.

MICROSCOPE: BASCH LOMB

Excellent conditon. Call 752 0973 between 9 and 5 Monday through Friday

MOPED, 1981 Honda. Excellent shape helment included. $230. 756 0271.

MOVING Brunswick Bumper pool table and accessories. $150. Like new. Call 744 3744.

MOVING Ping Pong table and accessories, like new. $45. Call 746 3746. ,

MOVING SALE Everything most go! Queen size sofa bed, dining room set, other good furniture. Sunday 9 5, Doctors Park Apartments D 5 During week call after 5 p.m , 752 1365._

MUST TURN OFFICE at home into nursery. Large secretarial desk, $160, like new. 746-6626.

NEEDED OFF WHITE or ivory wedding veil to rent or buy. CafI 757 4445; 8 to 5, after 5, 752 2694, ask for Porcia Benton.

NEW 2 DOG HOUSES for small and medium size dogs, $45 each. 752 6987.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue._

NOW FORMING - Christian band. Need backup singers, guitar players, drummer, pianist. It Interested call 757 6830 between 8-5 or 758 4155atter5:30.

ONE ARMSTRONG OIL heating

plant, good condition - $100. Call 756 3391 after 6P.m.

OSBORNE MODEL I, 44K, CPM, 400K disk storage with word processor, electronic spread sheet, BASIC, more. New in cartons. Full warrarfty. Lists tor $1,995 - Now $1.195. Call today. (703 ) 845-0300. Dealer.

PORTA CRIB and sheets, $20. Call

752 7691.

QUEEN SIZE Early American sleeper sofa and chair. Excellent condition. Call 746-6412 atter 2p.m.

ROSEWOOD SOFA 758 5234.

SEARS 26" Cut riding lawn mower with 6 horsepower and 3 speed transmission. Only used 2 seasons. Sold tor new at $895 asking only $275. Like new. 17" RCA portable color TV with simulated wood grain design Only $150 like new. 754-0492.

SHAMPCX) YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company._

SHARP, SONY 8, GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88

SINGER SEWING Machine with cabinet Less than 3 months old. Call 752 3606 atter 5 p.m.

STEREOCITY

Now open featuring Marantz Sansui Sharp-and other brands. We offer quality components and match systems at ois-count prices. Financing available. Call 75T0451, located 2808 East 10th Street.

A Division of Furniture World.

TRS-80, MODEL I: Level II BASIC, 48K RAM, Line Printer VII, Software including word processor and micro soft BASIC, $700. Call 756-6904 (leavenumber).

TWO BURNER GAS GRILL, uses natural or propane. Bakery showcase or display case, adjustable shelves, also with lights and storage space. 24 selection vending machine, displays nebs, chips, gum. and candy. All items priced for quick sale. 752 2810, ask (or BUI.

TYPEWRITER:    IBM    Selectrlc.

Good condition. Call 752-0973 be tween 9 and 5 Monday through

Friday.

USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re frigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb-inq, and electrical service. 752-9333.

USED COPYING MACHINES

Xerox 3100 LDC, IBM II, Savin 770. Bruce Wells. 754 6167._

WEDDING DRESS, white velvet. $60. Tent, 8x10. new. $75. Call

756 1776._

WHITE PINE WOOD molding W. 15per toot. 758 4112.

WHITE STOVE and refrigerator. 5 months old. Set $500, Can 744-4189 after 6 p.m.

WOULD LIKE to buy used window and central air conditioners that need repair. 744-2444._

17' HARKER ISLAND BOAT with 50 horsepower Evinrude motor, lots

of extras, $500. Regular size ping-pong table, $50. violin, $150. Call 752 3927.

19" COLOR TV Rent to own. $23.11 per month. Furniture World. 757-045).

19" HITACHI Color TV Remote control. Used only 4 months. $400. Call 757 0143 after 4 p.m.

19 " RCA COLOR TV Excellent condition. 4 years old. Must sell Immediately! 754-8974._

1949 RAMBLER, runs good, good tires $200. Whirlpool electi^ range, double oven, self cleaning $20<f 758 1 451._

21 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator with icemaker. $175. Call days 758-2525; 752 3300 atter 4.

21,000 BTU General Electric air conditioner. $400.00. Call 752 8003.

25 " OIJASAR AAOTOROLLA console color TV New picture tube. $155. 754 9508 after 5.

3 PIECE BEDROOM suit. Great bargain at $200. 403 Summit Street.

4 FIRESTONE RADIAL tires with chrome double basket wheels. $150. 758 0954 anytime. _

7 PIECE Early American bedroom suit. Lowrey organ, Genie L5 model, take up payments. 1971 Volkswagen Dune Buggy. Call 744-4174 alter 4._

7 ROOMS OF CARPET Colors ruby red. rust, green and gold. Priced right. Call 754 7310.    _

8x14 TANDEM-AXLE tilt-bed steel trailer Call 753 5732 or 752-4529.

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

ALL NEW OAKWOOOS reduced for

July "Red Tag" sale. Prices on all new Oakwooo homes at our sales centers in Greenville and Wilson have been slashed. Call or stop by today! Greenville 754-5434, Wilson 291 7850.

ASSUME PAYMENTS 1980, 14 wide. Low monthly payments - $400 down. Call 758 7191

DOUBLEWIDE 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances, central air. Underpinned barn attached. Set up on 1 acre of land. 946-8434.

COPPERTONE refrigerator with ice maker, $300. Large chest type freezer, $300. 758 3052.

COPY AAACHINE - AB Dick. Good conditon. Call 752-0973 between 9 and 5 Monday through Friday

CUT YOUR FOOD BILL! Coupon Shoppers Club. PO Box 2442, Greenville._

DOUBLE SLEEPER SOFA, excellent condition, $175; 10 x 14

gold and brown rug, $40; 8 x 10 red raided rug, $30; Kenmore washer, $50. 758 5491

DRY PHOTOCOPIER, 3M Model 76. works. $45. Call 754 0441

ENGAGEMENT RING - 14K yellow gold, with one pear shaped diamond. Approximately .50 Karats. Weight. $800. 795 4954

FOR SALE: 2 door refrigerator freezer. Call 752 5747.

FOR SALE: 8 horsepiower riding lawnmower, electric start, $350 . 6 horsepower riding lawnmower. $225. CL70 Honda. $/0. 757 0440

FOR SALE: 1 security system, approximately 2 years old, halt

firice. 1 boat cover for 19' boat, used ess than i year, half price Call Spain's Foodland, 752-4835.

FORMAL DINING R(X)M suit, large china closet, table and 6 chairs. Best otter. Can be seen at 106 Brinkley (Brentwood) Road. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Shop. Stripping, Repairing & Re finishing. (Formerly of Eastern Carolina Vocational Center) Located next to John Deere Equipment Company on Pactolus Highway. Call 752^3509.

_ CART, 5 horsepower, 2 seater. all 757 3437

HARVEST GOLD electric stove, $115. Double bed with frame, $50. Call 355 4214 after 5:30 p.m

HOSPITAL BED Like new, excellent condition, side rails in eluded. Phone 752 2594.

HUNDREDS OF USED kitchen cabinets, doors, windows, ranges, bathroom fixtures, furniture, shelving, display counters, floor tile, lots more. F 8, J Salvage. 2717 West Vernon Avenue, Kinston, 522 0804.

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off Barkers Refrigeration. 2227 Memo-rlal Drive. 754-6417.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 754-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Huqsgrv

LAWNMOWERS New and used tor sale, parts and service, trade-ins accepted. Rentals on lawn garden and equipment. Call 754 0090 nights and weekends._ I

MOVING, MUST SELL Soon! 1974 12x50 Newport by Conner. 2 big bedrooms, kitchen, living room, stove and refrigerator, couch and chair, 2 beds. For more Information, call 758 2790. Can be seen at Lot 13, Quail Hollow Trailer Park.

12 X 38 Conner, 1 bedroom, underpinned, air, excellent condition. $3^. Call 756 9547

NO MONEY DOWN

July Special Only

SINGLE WIDE....$8z495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995

(Loaded)

Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In-laws

FINANCE AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING /QiVypst Greenville Boulevard

NOMONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of (ess than $245 per month Also FHA and conventional financing avallablel.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 We*t Greenville Boulevard _754^191    _

NO MONEY DOWN VA financing Two day delivery Call Conner Homes. 7^-0333.

USED CONNER Mobile Home. $295 down and take over payments. Call 756 7136.

VACATION mobile home 12x40, fully furnished, I'/i baths. 3 bedrooms. Located at Oriental. 744-4448 after 8 p.m.

12.75% FINANCING on selected

homes Call Conner Homes, 754 0333_

14 WIDES for as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Homes. 754 9841

1972 RITZ CRAFT - 12x60. 2 bedrooms, air. Set up In nice park. 758 4849.    ,

1972 12x60 Parkwood mobile home. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, bullt-ln bar and bookcase, partly furnished. 758-7097

1973 12x73. $8,000 negotlablejiN lot near hospital. Call 752-4a9 754 4444, ask for Molly.    (

Nice





D-ft~TDei>aiiy cieuecwi. ui vi

U.c-UAiUdy, Ju*j vii, itks)

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

I97S CONNER. )2x6S, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, unique kithcen/dining area. central air plus extras. 355 2i41.

197S RIVERIA, 6$ x 12 Central air. 1'j baths, washer/dryer, 2 bedrooms. Days 823 2644. Nights 752 7300

093

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS

OPPORTUNITIES

1974 ZHYENNE. 12x65 2 bedrooms fully furnished with central air. freezer, sun deck, and utility barn Asking 46800 neootiable 752 8510

1977

14x70.

^INA mobile home ;all 524 4863 after 6.

1977 VOGUE mobile home for sale

14 X 60. Straight sale or assumable Call Nell at 758 8309 after

loan

D.m

1978 CAROLINA 14x70. 3 bedrooms,

1'2 baths, partly furnished. Set up in Pinewood A^ile Park in Ayden

Price ncdotiable. 746 2478.

No

guity. Take ...    ^    ,    $10/month

bedrooms, on lot. One owner. 756 0333.__

1979 CONNER over payments

1979 OAKWOOD mobile home. 14 X

70, 2 bedroom. 2 baths, fireplae disposal, dishwasher. Call

garbage disposal. 756 5567 after 6 pm.

1979 14x60. 2 bedroom. I bath, some equity and assume payments of *155. Call Lawrence at Art Oellano Homes. 756 9841

1980 KNOX mobile home. 14x60. bedrooms. I'/} baths, like new. *9.500 Call Greg 8 to 5. 757 7227. 747 2052 after 5

1983 14' WIDE HOMES Payments as low as *148.91. At Greenville's volume dealer. Thomas Mobile Home Sales. North AAemorial Drive across from airport Phone 752-6068

1984 REDMAN doublewide Microwave, stereo, paddle fan. fireplace, garden tub, storm win dows, mas(Hiite and shingle roof with 5 year warranty. *25,995. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841

24X52 USED doublwide Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.

076 AAobi le Home I nsurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754,

077 Musical Instruments

KENT GUITAR with case Excellent condition. Price negotia ble 7M 9060

PIGGYBACK Univox electric guitar amp. Call 752-2804 after 6 and anytime on Sunday

PROFESSIONAL bass guitar, *300 Call 795 4824._

USED PIANOS buy and sale Piano a, Organ Distributors. 355-6002.

082    LOST AND FOUND

LOST SUNDAY, July 24, older, large, red female dog, mixed breed, no collar, in vlcmity of Stan-tonsburg Road and Bell Arthur. Answers to "Red". Reward. Call days, 753 3031, nights, 752 5660.

LOST 8 month old black Labrador Retriever. Dog named "Ollie." *100 reward. Call work 756 6336. Bill Clark or 756-0046

LOST; SMALL BLACK dog in Hillsdale area of Arlington Boulevard. Hair clipped short, white markings. If found, please call 756 8803._

EXCITING AND TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY Well established convenience store-grlll located in downtown area ot booming city with in several hundred yards of several thousand college girls ( and bovs).presently doing more than *100.000 annually with easy potential of at least twice that much; owner selling at tremendous sacrifice due to health;

WELL ESTABLISHED CLOTHING STORE FOR SALE Modern store recently renovated after more than 80 years in business; specializing in name-brand merchandise for men; located in progressive city with many growing Industries, owners selling due to other business interests.

MOBILE HOME PARK FOR SALE 15 acres with 27 spaces already developed and rented; room for 28 additional spaces; city water and streets already in; *2500 ^ month

income potential; cash or terms;

EXCERCISE AND FIGURE SALON Well established business

with repeat clientele; good oppor        '    '    income    or additional

tunity for i

.   -  ^1

second income. Well located in beautiful facility in prosperous

town;

RETAIL CLOTHING STORE FOR SALE Modern store, recently renovated, specializing in name brand merchandise for men. women and children, located in progressive area with several growing industries; gross annual sales 01 more than *100,000 with potential of much more;

106

Farms For Sale

FARM FOR SALE 100 acres. Old River road, 3 miles trom city limits 1.900 paved road frontage, 1,400 river front, 45 acres cleared, wooded, no allotments. *180,000 756 5960 6-9 p.m or PO Box 874.

Grggnyilte,.

109

Houses For Sale

A REALLY NICE starter home at 103 N Jarvis Street. 3 bedrooms, 1'/^ baths, living room, dining room and kitchen. Aldridge 8 Southerland, 756 3500. Dick Evans. Reaitor. 758 1119

_________ NEW LISTING

Conveniently located to shopping

ALMOST

and schools. Assume 9>.'>% loan Payment approximately *438.61 PITI 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den formal

areas.

living room and dining room. Only *59,900. Call Davis Realty. 753-3000, 756-2904. 756 1997._

ASSUMABLE FmHA. 3 bedroom brick ranch. l'/j bath, Im

 _    heat    pump

new carpet, immaculate condition, quiet neighborhood, fenced backyard. 804 Jeanette Street, WIntervllle. *42.000.756-8718

ASSUME FMHA LOAN plus equity Attractive brick veneer ranch. : large bedrooms, I bath, large fami ly room, handy kitchen, and utility Winterville school district. OnK *39.900. Call Davis Realty, 752-3001 756 2904. 756-1997._

ASSUMPTION Lovely bedroom, intercom system.

Onl^ 9'/a% FHA!

bath home, door

intercom system, garage do opener, really nice loit. Aldridge _ Southerland 756-3500; Jean Hopper 756 9142

OTHER BUSINESSES AND REAL ESTATE OPPORTUNITIES Priced from *10,000 up. some with owner financing, for additional information in confidence, contact Harold Creech , Business and Real Estate Broker with THE MARKETPLACE. INC 752 3666.

EXCELLENT

B^SI.N E SS

, _     ng

for a dealer in Greenville to sell and

opportunity. Water Purification Systems of Wilmington is

service the world's largest manu facturer of water treatment

systems. Only serious inquiries, please, For more information call

pie; _____    ______ _______________ ____

Steve Breece collect at 395-0446, 9 to 5, AAondav through Friday

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Completely'farm supply. Established 21 ^ars. Owner deceased, family has oth^ interests. Call 758 0702.

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT

for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30

seat cocktail lounge, ful^ equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Ouintard 758-5156 aHei^._

ATTRACTIVE

Wooded lot in nice_____

Excellent floor

city taxes large bedrooms,

/II

?reatroom/flreplace l'/2% loan assumption

*50's. Call 756-8171.

ContemporOry I e subdivision. No floor plan. 3 1</ii baths.

AYDEN

TWO BEDROOMS, living room.

bath, den with fireplace, kitchen, utility room, cenfral air/heat Beaufiful location. *38,000

GET AAORE DETAILS on this ideal home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, living room

n, la -

dining room, large kitchen, utility

roorn, 2 car ^^rage. on large

wooded lot. *72,5

Ayden Loan & Insurance Co 74-3761    74-6474

BEAUTIFUL WHITE brick home in the country

GROCERY STORE business with las, beer and gameroom tor sale II eqyiprnent and stock. High

traffic location on 4 lane highway Great potential , for growth anc

money maker. Must sell immedi ately. Sacrifice at *7300. 758-4988.

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 8, Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757-0001, nights 753 4015.

093

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

NIGHT CLUB - Eastern NC Prof itable.

AUTO ACCESSORIES and toys Eastern NC Profitable.

SHOP

LADIES LINGERIE Eastern NC

SERVICE STATION on busy thor oughfare in eastern NC Established over 20 years. Profitable. Priced to sell.

MOTORCYCLE SHOP - Major line. Profitable. Some owner financing. Eastern NC

PIZZA SHOP Eastern NC

PIZZA SHOP

Profitable.

On busy highway. - AAorehead City

SHOE SHOP

CANDY SHOP Eastern NC

Greenville. Several ; shoes. Goc ing available.

Excellent location.

fine lines of ladies shoes. Good location. Some financi

CONVENIENT STORE Eastern NC Very profitable. Some financ

ing

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 needed, local management

will train.

Plus many others.

CONFIDENTIAL BROKERS

758-064

RESTAURANT FOR

good business. Owi._  ......

19.500. Bill Williams Real Estate 752 2615.

SALE Very ner retiring.

RESTAURANT for sale. 100 seat capacity building, land and equipment. Turn key operation. Less than 10 minutes from Greenville. 758 0702._

TO BUY OR SELL a business. Appraisals. Financing. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATE'S, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 752

3575._

TYPEWRITER BUSINESS

machine - small computer techni

macnine - small computer technician. Retired Borrougns employee seeking similar person to form

partnership in repair business. In guiries held confidential. Write to

artnershjp, 305 Pinewood Road, Greenville. NC 27834 or call 756 9006 after 6._

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP GId Holloman. Carolina's original chimney 25 years expenence working

North sweep chimne day or

imneys and fireplaces. night. 753 3503, Farmvllle.

CRACKER JACK High pressure

preferred. Excellent benefit^Send

Legal Secretary |Obr Experienct ent benefits. Senc resume to Legal Secretary 1967, Gr^nvlflg._

Box

STANCIL'S Company, for 23 year

S PAINT and Wallpaper . serving Greenville area years. Interior and exterior painting and wallpapering, minor repair work. Thomas Stancil Owner, call 746-4426

TOPSOIL AND SAND for sale. Septic tank installed. Rogers Construction Company, *46-4780, Ayden, NC

100

REAL ESTATE

102 Commercial Property

COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 quare feet with 5400 carpeted for jfllce space. 12 month lease re quired. Call Clark-Branch, Realtors, 756-6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FOODLIONylNC.

Americas fastest growing supermarket chain announces the following opportunities at our new Ayden-Grifton store.

MEAT CUTTER

MEAT WRAPPER

PRODUCE CLERK

FROZEN FOOD & DAIRY CLERK Consider our excellent wage/benefit package.

Apply in person August 1 through August 5, 8:30 to 4:30, at the Greenville E. S. C., 3101 Bismarck St.

Equal Opportunity Employer

,3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal living room and dining room, huge family room with fireplace. Heat pump. Located on over 1 acre (also available for urchase 2 adjoining acres) ossibly Federal Land Bank financ ing. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge 8. Southerland. 756 3500, nights 756 5716._

BELVEDERE Three bedrooms and two baths, beautifully lartd-scaped home on Cresfline Boulevard. Several qualit features. *60's. Call 756-3837 after pm,, gxa>t.yiag.KOTlf4

BELVOIR Cute as can be! Great kitchen with lots of cabinets and

large dining area, pine panelled den, 2 bedrooms, living room with

fireplace, carport! *30's. Aldridge 8, Southerland f56 3500, Jean Hop^ 756 9142

BETHEL 2 bedroom brick home. Railroad Street. Call James A Manning Agency, Bethel. 825 5631

BETHEL 3 bedroom brick home. V/7 baths, Roberson Street. Call James A AAanning Agency, Bethel,

825 5631._    _

BETHEL 3 bedroom FHA home -Moore Drive.. Call James A Mann-

ino Agency, Bethel, 825 5631.

BY OWNER l1Vi% assumable loan. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, den, gas heat, central air, fenced backyard. 107 Azalea Drive. 756 8281__

CHARMING is just the word tor this all brick 3 bedroom cottage! Living room with fireplace, pTne panelTed den, 3 bedrooms, detached garage/workshop, beautiful lot! FHA assumption. Aldridge & Southerland 756 3500, Jean Hopper 756 9142._

CORNER LOT in private

neighborhood. Wood deck for those summer cookouts. Only 3 years old. 11Vj% Interest rate on fhi* FHA

assumable loan. Move-in with no credit check or loan application. *53.900. Red Carpet Steve Evan* & Astoclates. 355 2l?7

COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East. 1740 ^uare fjMt^Jiving^area. plus 440

*0 IfTi

state7M*2^'

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

10B , Houses For Sale

CENTURY 21B. FORBES 756-2121

WINTERVILLE SCHOOL district bedroom home, family room, kitch en-dining combination. High 30's.

THE WHOLE FAMILY will enjoy

this 4 bedroom home. Living room, dining room, fireplace and game

room. Low 30's.

LOTS OF POTENTIAL This . bedroom home in University area can be converted into two apart ments. MM 40's.

HOME FOR ALL Seasons

Beautiful 3 bedroom ranch features patio for warm times, and wood stove for cold. Large workshop Low 60's.

CONTEMPORARY HOME

country. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, wood stove, patio, and central air. Hl^ 60's.

CHOICE BUY This 3 bedroom, , bath home features great room with fireplace. Chain link fence in back Many extras. Low 70's.

FmHA LOAN

JMPTION

ASSUM

bedrooms, I'/z baths, carport fenced In back. Excellent condition.

CLOSE TO SHOPPING bedrooms. IV2 baths, dining room, fireplace, outside storage building Low SO's.

POSSIBLE FHA LOAN assumption

3 bedrooms. I,^ baths, living room with fireplace. Covered and

screened patio, garage, fence. Low 50's.

2717 S Memorial Drive Independently Owned

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-666

BROKER ON CALL Pat Hartkopf-355-6426

Large Family - You'll love this home! A traditional style brick home with 5 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, formal areas, large family room, two fireplaces, ail kitchen appliances, and a garage. Owner is willing to finance a part of the equh^ Won't last long, call today

4 BEDROOM 2 bath contemporary with 2300 square feet. CameMral living room, dining room with skylights, master bedroom with private deck, gourmet kitchen, and a great den arc just a few of the extras. Make an appointment to see this one, you won t be sorry! *84,900. 556.

PACIgUS JOWNHOUSE CONDO

EOU(

Has many extras such

as two large bedrooms with private Craft fireplace Insert,

baths, greatroom.

ft tircpt louvered

really great buy at this new low price. *19,900.1436.

DEAL STARTER OR INVEST MENT HOME! Snug three bedroom bungalow with LOW VA assumable loan. It is neat as a pin

inside, and has a pretty wooded'lot back yard with

and fenced detached All this for

in

^a^ workshop.

NEW LISTING for those who like to entertain! 3 bedroom split level home has a super family and rec room area on lower level. Terrific kitchen with all solid wood cabinets, dishwasher and trash compactor

.arge    ^^ryn_    i*_    open    from

oyer and kitchen. Features double garage, and extra large utility room with workshop. Listed at *76,900 Take a look! 582.

BELVEDERE - This 3 bedroom has ,ill yoiur family wll ever need! -ormal living room and a den with fireplace, kitchen with breakfast nook, and a double garage. And a price at only *59,900 - why don't you call for an appointment to see it today? 513    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

PLANT MAINTENANCE MECHANIC

A ttBBi fabricator in Eaatarn North Carolina has an opening for a Plant Maintananca Mechanic. Must be able to cHagnoaa and remedy mechanical and electrical machine problems. Send resume to:

MECHANIC

P.O. BOX 338 GRIFTON, N. C. 28530

ACCOUNTING SUPERVISOR

Block and Decker, the inforkJ's leoder in Power Tool Manufacturing has an immediate opening in its Tarboro, North Carolina plont for an Accounting Supervisor.

The position reports to the Plont Controller, includes responsibilities and supervision of clericol employees reiotive to Doto Processing key punch operation, plant payroll, oil occounts poyobie functions, and cost accounting.

If you possess o college degree in business/finance, or reloted finonciol department experience, including supervisory experience in o finonciol or monufKturing environment ond ore chollenged bi highly professionol finance environment with ottroctive solory ond benefits, please submit your resume with solory requests to:

mi lUi Street Tatore, Nirfb Caralai 27tl

Blacks Decker.

An Equal Opportunity Empioytr M/F/H/V

EMPLOYEE HEALTH SERVICES

An excellent opportunity exists for a Registered Nurse or person trained in EMT to administer an Employee Health Services function.

Job Duties include administering first aid, health screenings and programs for employee wellness. Successful applicant will enjoy working with people, demonstrate initiative and exhibit a high degree of professionalism. Monday-Thursday 7 a.m. until 5:30 p.m.. Interested applicants should sent a letter of application to:

Larry Hamby Eaton Corporation Rt.11.Box 287 Greenville, N.C. 27834

An EEO Employer

108 HousBsForSBle

OVERTON & POWERS 355-4500

teller wjll te iMvIr^ in

862,900.

August. Needs to sell this loveiy home. Fantastic neighborhood and location. Children will love the large backyard. Mom and dad will love the spacious Interior. Has at>urtdant close' rooms.

et space and larga

864,900. Brand Elmhurst. This

new listing In _liphur*t. This home will sell quickly. Corner lot. 3 bedrooms.

reat room with fireplace, formal ining room or downstairs bedroom. Great storage area. ERA warranty tor one full year.

865,000. Consider these special

features. 1900 square feet, custom built home with formal areas, large den, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, hardwood

floors, doubla garaga, cantral heat and air. attic, fenced backyard Very nice neighborhood.

879,900. Country estate? This is Ul Located on country lane. 4

bedrooms, groat room with fireplace, formal dining room, extra large playroom, additional large building which can be utilized for many purposes. Excellant VA 8% loan assumption._

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756-6666

108 Houses For Saf

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY 756'6666

BROKE RON CALL Pat Harthapf-3554426

EASTWOOD If you are looking for a Brick Ranch with three bedrooms, and two baths, this naw listing may be iti Has a family room with fireplace, formal area.

EIfi*

Id garage, and the utility very reasonable^ Call for

j^cyr^^lwita showing. Priced at

GRIFTON FOREST ACRES If you want quality, this is it. An exceptional 3 bedroom home, with

screened porch and an acre plus of wooded prqperty, in a beautiful area. Listedat 865,000. Taka a look.

and make an otter. 311.

NEW LISTING CLUB PINES En oy

:n|oy the spaciousness of contem

porary living In this 4 bedroom. V/t bath honrie. Greatroom with

fireplace, huge master suite on the first floor, pfus a nice deck. And priced at only *89,900. 583.

WINTERVILLE Looking tor the perfect home? Well, thi* could be Tt, and It has been reduced! On three acre* of land, 3 bedroom*.

ireatroom with fireplaca, e^' has for a garden. Batter hurryl

grtatn

space

*57,900

EVERY DAY YOU WAIT to buy a home It I* going to cost you more money. Invest now, and this home in Club Pines could be Just the investment for you. Close to shopping, churches, and schools. It has four bedrooms, 2V5 baths, eat-in

kitchan.formal. dinIrM room, and i sunny family antique brick fi

warm

family room with IrMlace. Has been reduced to tSI.m, and owners would Ilka an'Offer. Call to see it today! 477.

LOOKING FOR YOUR HOUSE? Than look no three bedroom home '

FIRST This tor suit look

and you'll agree with us. *44,500. #510.

o more. T

the'smYn family.'a^ prMd to i your pocketbooK. Take

COLONIAL ELEGANCE This two story home ha# avarything you could want. Four or five bedrooms, all formal areas, family room with tiraplace, and much more. Bast ot all it Is located outside the city imits for the plantation faelingi *74,800. 520.

CHARMING AND OELIGHTFULI

Expect to be envied by your friend* this like new brick

boy

ranch 1n Aydn. Hardwood floors have just been reflnished. New paint inside and out. Plus it has an assumable FHA loan. *48.500. 517.

SHOWPLACE IN LYNNDALEI This home has to be seen to be appreciated. Has all formal* areas, den with fli bar,

n with fireplace and walk-in wet r, large kitchem with dining M, and too many extras to list.

'f mis* your chance to l_ beautiful home. *139.900. 407.

this

COLLEGE COURT 2 bedrooms, ith, 1400 square fee^lay

den, 1 be corner lot^ by owner

1. garden space. 75ri628 after*.

CENTURY 21 BASS REALTY

7S66666

BROKER ON CALL Pat HaHkopf-3554436

THE PINES looking for

AYDEN

neighborhood -This new listing

It you're resflglous

108 HousBsForSale

DUPLEX

9SU% to

REDUCED Assume ualTflad buyer. Rented (each sida 300). Positive cash flow.

IS. I bath, kitchen, utility, oom. hat _ pump. Good (ownor

ESTATE REALTY CO.

752-5058

BRENTWOOD - Close location to everything Including shopping, school^ cfnurches; thrse bedroom home features formal araas, family room, kitchen with eating area, two

full baths, carport with storage -oriced at 8^m. OWNER SAYS SELLt

COUNTRY LIVING In either of two loratiqns; one located eight miles from Carolina East on i.5 acres, three bedrooms, two baths, two-car

garage, room for horses *74,900. Another three bedroom home about

13 mlla* west with swimming pool, detached garaga and spacious lot *67,500.    .

GREAT STARTER HOME with thrae badrooms on spacious corner lot; chain-linked fence, storage building, sunning deck, one car above average condition.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING

consisting ot 3600 sq. ft. situated on

108 HouoMForSalB

BY OWNER 3 bedrooms. J.baths, iUce

living room, dining room. kitc^.

BV OWNER U7.m. 3 b^eooN^ baths, large kitchen. In ground swimming pod, wage. Close fo schools and shopping caters. No realtors. Only mterasfed persons

BY OWNER Aswm^le8Wi%low.

I. V/2

1.550 squar# feet. 3 bedrooms. . baths, doubla garage. Lw SO's North Overlook Of Iv8- 7M49q7

BY OWNER; EDWARDS ACRES 3 bedroom home featuring -greatroom, kitchen with , dining area, I'/li baths, utility room, patio, garage. Located on wooded lot. (kwdToan assumption. *54,500. Call , 758-7901 attar 6 P.m. No realtor*.

CAMBRIDGE Great onportumtv for smart buytr. This T-stonr 3 bedroom be^ ls_redced and owner said '^teill" Don't miss itI Aldridge A Southerlend 756-3500;

CAME LOT heated home backup. Lovely . huge den with bedrooms. 3

Energy efficient sdar le with heat pump

Jsan

floor plan features fireplace. 3

. formal araas. Ily nice kitchen.

 and 756-3500.

foooar 756-9142

t to sell ___________

Classified ad for quick response

Want to

llveatock? Run a

three acres of land only three miles

jf Farmvilla; could ba usad for

retail sales, garage, etc. Call for

details.

TWO BEDROOM ___________

Ayden just right for the baginnar or young couple; fully carpatad, blinds, cantral heat and air, one car garaga 842,9001

LOT IN COUNTRY between Ham's and Boyd's Cross

quiat prestlgkx look no furtfver.

 ling has approximately

3000 square feet, wlttn^r or five

bedrooms, two full and two half baths, large foyer, formal living and dining rooms, family room with fireplace, huge recreation room, lippadklt.....

fully equipped kitchen with corning cook top and doubla ovens, separate laundry room, tranmandous closet and storage space, double garage

with work room, and an extra larM lot. Don't miss this

wooded comer _ beauty. 891,500. 506.

OWNERS HAVE OUTGROWN this two bedroom, two bath home In College Court. Excelfont condWonI Extra insulation, retlnishad

hardwood floors, knotty pint dan, and lots moral *49,900. *440.

RUSTIC CEDAR FARMHOUSE This listing In Tucker Estates otters superior construction. Pewter light fixtures and period wall paper ^Tve

the home a Williamsburg tlali

Floor plan Is a raproductlon of the owner's Grandmother's home and

lends a touch of nostalgia. Owner's transferred and regret having to sal

Call now for your private showing. Redeuced to 78,90(r 1441.

CUL-de-SAC - spells privacy! This 1742 square foot home offers formal areas, dan with tiraplace. eat-in kitchen, three .bedrooms, and 2 ths.

batl

As a Bonus, two rooms

uDstairs can ba used as a playroom - TV room or extra bedroom. Call

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MID-EASTERN

BROKERS

75M254

1979Mu8aRX-7.....1S895

1977Putl8cMPi1]U128Q0 1978 Tayita (Mica ST.. $2an

1977 Mmvy Moorch

1978 Clevmet 4X4.. 197STrii^TI-7 .. 1982TiyiUCorella.. 1979IWaPrele..

.12200

19900

14400

for more details on this new listing.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Dfiitai

iltttptionbt

Recoptionlst with a growing group practicB. Good salary and fringa banafits. Six months axporlanca as a receptionist and typing skills. Send Raaumo to: Dental Rsceptioniat, P.O. Box 1967. GrMnvilla, N.C.. 27834.

____- crossroads with septic

tank and well. Ideal for trailer or building site, consisting of approximately two acres.

Jarvis or Dorlls Mills 752-3647

Bll^Wllytl

EXCELLENT BEGINNER home

complete with 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, llviiM room and eat In kitchan. Air condition

oning and fully carpeted. *43,500. Call now, sue Dunn.

Alcf^^ A Southerland. 756 3500 or

EXCLUSIVE AGENCY Super location and investment for the wise

buyer. New 2 bedroom duplex - heat pump. Custom built. Low S60's. Call tor details. Davis Realty 752-3000,

756 1997. or 756-2*04.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

A Steel fabricator In Eastern North Carolina has

an immediate opening for a Quality Control Manager. The successful candidate should possess the following minimum requirements: a B S degree, 5 years Quality Control experience and 2 years supervisory experience. Send resume

in strict confidence to:

QUALITY CONTROL

P.O. BOX 338 GRIFTON, N.C. 28530

HELP

WANTED!

RNS and LPNS FULLTIME. Salary commensurate with experience. Call 946-9570 for further information. An equal    opportunity

employer.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ARMYSURPLUS

CAVPING    Sf.-PINr.

VIILITAHI GC'.^iOS

OvHi [i. I,--..-" ",.nv

ARMV-NAVY STORE

Now

69

00

Other* Also On Sale 98 Days Same As Cash $1000 Instant CredK

wwimifpnmcuini W0HMBMB6BIIIMI 9kBB*nMm    nu)i*ni4ii

PART TIME WEEKEN D WORKERS

We need skilled punch press end press brake machine operators willing to work Saturday or Sunday, day or night, approximately 16 to 20 hours per weekeiKf. Must be able to set up and operate these machines. Send resume to:

MACHINE OPERATOR

P.O. BOX 338 GRIFTON, N.C. 28530

HOUSEWIVES

Need extra spending money? Want to get out of the house a few hours a day while the kids are in school? McDonalds is now hiring for the fall school year during the day shift. We have part time available 3-5 hours per day, Monday-Friday. We have flexible hours and are looking for cashiers and cooks. If interested come by McDonalds, 632 N. Memorial Drive, QreenviHe, from 2-5 p.m. Monday, August 1,1983 for interview.

Pool Construction

All Shapes and Sizes

Pool Supplies Chemicals Maintenance

No more expensive weekende or travel. RELAXATION, EXERCISE, AND TOTAL FAMILY ENJOYMENT it what you get when you InataH an Inground Swimming Pool. Free Estimates

FINANCINa AVAILABLE

CiteDVillePNltSMhCi.

758-6131 AlBloGuaa

Swimming PoqjChemicalo

AT HOLT OLDSMOBILE-DATSUN

We Are Overstocked With The New 1983V2 Nissan Trucks

4X4s, 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

01 Hooker Rd.

758-311

I





109 Houses For Sale

OVERTON & POWERS 355-6500

. NE'"' LISTING Newly Kilir* d out. bedrooms! feZil/uiiu***!? Located outside Gn^llle. House payment below

Back on the market! Very Private loca tlw with room tor garden. 2 be^ooms. family room, pretty kitchen.

find

rent

taiLtpO. A tetter boy you won't anywhere. Paymenfs less than i aMliancM furnished. Central osan offer Near university. Make

$31,000. NEW LISTING Owner fi ''Jlno available. Save on closing

anw furnished. It s a great oppor [100. Hwe's a great deal! 3

"? P'' teths. garage. Brick

Sl!Shte?h^"**^

$43,000. Looking tor a place for your

I *    ..*** "'T * months old.

Bwtifolly decorated townhouse. All aMlia^es including dishwasher ri    Located    on    quiet

cul-de sac in woods

PRICES SUSHEDII!

urjM MW mm. co.ir, nom with fireplace, newly painted exterior, all appli anees furnished including washer/dryer.

$41,100 NOW $30,000. Kennedy Estates is the location of this nice home. 3 bedrooms, l'/i baths, central heat and air, totOlly fenced in yard.

$42,100 NOW $30,100. Take a look at this home. Spread out in this 2120 square toot home. 4 bedrooms, large garage or workshop. Carport.

$40,900 NOW $41,900. Located on Stantonsburg Highway. 1900 square feet. Central heat and air. 4 bedrooms, 2</2 baths. Decorate inside to your liking.

$44,100 NOW $44,100. Beautified tri-level condominium nqar university. 148S square feet, heal pump, thermopane windows.

$44,900 NOW $42,900. A home with everything. Corner lot, great room with firepi, formal dining room, bedrooms, 2baths. double garage.

$142,100 NOW $130,100. We em phasize - AAake us an offer! This is the best opportuni ty you'll have to own a home in Lynndale. 3000 square feet. 4 bedrooms, large game room, beautiful solid brick den with fireplace, formal liv ing room, formal dining room, double garage. Large exterior bunding. 3 baths, heat pump.

OVERTON & POWERS 355-6500

QUALITY CAN be easily detected in this well decorated 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Wintervill school dis trict. Large corner wooded lot

Kavldes attractive setting for the y window in kitchen andteautitui great room with fireplace and woodstove. Price reduced to $48,500. Call Davis Realty. 7S2-3000, 754 3904.756 }997.    _

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

Retail t139S 00 Model KV2M7R

26" Remote Color

Now

$114900

Othort Also On Solo N Ooys Sanw As Cash (1000 Instant CroditThe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 31,1903-0-9

100    Houses For Sale

exclusive agency Walking distance of university. 3 bedrooms, large family room with fireplace, cenlral heat and air, deck, patio, ^ble garage, attic converted into large room. Needs decorating. $42,m. Call Davis Realty. 712 3m, 754 2904. 754 1997

GREENVILLE BOULEVARD -location for professional couple! Easy access to anywhere in

town. Living room with fireplace. 2 large bedrooms, office with b^^lves. large eat In kitchen, lus deck. Aldridge S Southerland

office with eat-in kitchen.

754 3500. jean Hoooer 754-9142.

HOME REDUCED $3100. Owner "tvst sell. Well established neighborhood. Winterville school disfrict, no city taxes. Brick veneer

rw\mA    s    '*

home with p^xin^atey!375 fMt. 3 bedrooms. W7 baths.

square

S ivrvt. I#    ______

cwtral heat and air, wood stove. Trees, trees, trees! Call Oavis Realty, 752 3m, 754 2904. 754 1997.

100    Houses For Sale

LAKE GLENWOOO Beautiful corner lot provides perfect setting for this all Wick 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Williams

floor plan with    _    ____

double garage, huge patio. Aldridge & Southerland 7M-3100; Jean Hoooer 754 9142.

Williamsburg colors, lovely h air formal

LOVELY QUIET street in Farmville at 102 Allen Acres bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with a fireplace. Has gas neat for economy. Priced at $42,100. E 15 Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500 Dick ^ans. ReallW. 758 1119.

LYNNDALE Exceptional home features all formal ar

lull and 2 hall ______

Best pric Aldridge ^

________ -    formal    areas, .

bedrooms. 2 full and 2 half baths, office and playroom. Best price in this

you'll find Southerland 754-3500; Jean Ho>er 754 9142

HORSE LOVERS Nice 3 bedroom, 2 teth. greatroom, country home.

sflv^re foot heated area. Nice 7 stall horse stables all on approximately 3 acres. Lease fort $440 month or boy for $85.m. Available Now!

^PULAR HOME on brick toun dation. Over 1400 squre feet. Sf^ious kitchen, has attractive kitchen island and breakfast area. 3 large bedrooms, 2 large baths, good size den. All applamces remain. $40's. Cali Davis Realty, 752 sm. 754 2904. 754 1997

NEAR THE WATERI 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and dining combination, 1 bath. On loroe lot -location: Hickory Point. NC 322 5298 anytime.

NEWHOMESmOOO

Recently Completed

3 Bedrooms, IV2 Baths $1350 Down S435 Per Month Total

Call

East Carolina Builders 752-7194

NEW LISTING Shaded lot, 3 bedroom. IVj bath brick ranch. Large family room, also features approximately 600 square feet detached garage and workshop, excellent Tocafion. Call now to see this one. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500; nights 754 5714.

NEW LISTING $48,900. Spacious 3 bedroom. V'7 bath home, formal living and dining room. Convenient location. Call June Wyrick, AldridM & Southerland, 754 3500; niohts 754 5714_

NO CREDIT CHECK Neat starter home in country. 3 bedrooms, central heat, wood stove, deck, good size lot for gardening. Only $34,500. (Possibility of 10% nnanciiM). Call Davis Realty, 752 3000. 4 2904,

ONE OF THE BEST BUYS Around! Reduced to $42.800. Assume 9Vj% FHA loan plus equity. Payment $420.41. Beautiful Williamsburg masonite siding home with bay window, carport. Almost 1400 square feet. Winterville School dIs trict. 2 heating systems (heat pump) electric baseboard heat, attic (an. 3 targe bedrooms. 2 lull baths, cozy den with fireplace, formal areas (living room and dining room), kitchen with all extras plus handy utility. Good neighborhood. Owner must sell, no reasonable offer refused. Won't last long^! Call Davis Realty, 752 3000, 54^4. 754 1997._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

LYNNDALE Over feet. All fbri tamil

2,4flp

formal areas: den, large family room, breakfast nook.

laundry creened porch, bedrooms. 2 baths. Large private lot. Priced to sell by owner. $94,500 Call 754 5194._

MAKE YOURS THE LUCKY family to call this house home! Situated on an acre lot. This home is large enough to fill the countless needs every family has for extra space. Den with fireplace, living

room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, and double garge are just a few of the many features. Locatd on a sloping lot

iust minutes from Greenville 77,900. Red CarMt Steve Evans t Associates, 355 2l?7._

MAVIS BUTTS REALTY

758-0655

ASSUMPTKMSASSUMPTIONSASSUMPTIONS

TWIN OAKS Charming 3 bedrooms, 2 bath contemporary ranch. Floor plan includes eat-in kitchen, living and dining rooms, lovely landscaping and many extras. FHA 235 loan assumption to qualified buyer. $54,900

PINERIDGE The simple elegance of a contemporary home this charmer offers sunken great room with fireplace and sliding glass doors to patio, dining area, galley kitchen, 3 bedrooms (master has glass doors to patio), 2 baths, pull down attic ana lovely wooded lot. NO QUALIFYING VA LOAN ASSUMPTION $58,500.

PARK AVENUE AYDEN Cute starter home in quiet neighborhood. Features 3 bedrooms, 1 full bath, eat-in kitchen, living and dining rooms, nice front porch and fenced back yard. VA loan assumption with no qualifying. $34,900.

PINERIDGE - Beautiful contem porary styling sets the pace in this 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with features that include great room with fireplace and (flning area, galley kitchen, laundry room, storage shed and lovely landscaped yarcT Loan

assumption available to qualified buyer. $54,500.

FAIRLANE Stylish brick Cape Cod offers 3-4 bedrooms (make one your 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 lot. $45,900.

Elaine TrolanoON CALL 754-4344 Jane Butts Shlrlev Morrison

754-2811

758-1443

FOR SALE BY OWNER Great buy without paying realtor tees. Nice home in Cherry Oaks. Call after 4 p.m. weekdays. 754-8384._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

AUCTION

Saturday, August 6th 9:00 A.M.

Location: BayView, N.C.. Behind water tower. Watch for auction signs.

House With Large Lot

FURNiTURE Living Room Suite 2 Bedroom Suites Oen Furniture

MiSCELLANEOUS fools Large Amount Dishes Washer And Dryer TV-Like New Many, Many Other Features

Household Items Will Be Sold ' House Will Be Sold At 12 Noon

3 bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, den, living room, double car garage. Sets on 4 large lots and fenced In. 3 years old. Owner reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids. S% day of sale. Balance in 30 days upon delivery of deed.

Sale Conducted by

OI.NIRY liOYS AIK I ION AND    (I),

n. Hnx I.    W.i    .hiiuitoM,    Niii Iti ( .tMiIm.i

OOUC CURKINS Creenvllle. N. C.* 75S-1S7S

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

.. RALPH RESPESS

SAFE^ Safe Buy lOOUsedGars

1983 Pontiac Trans Am

Pewter. T-tops, power windows, cruise control, tilt wheel, stereo radio, 5,000 miles. Excellent buy.

1983 Ford Mustang GT

Red. T-tops, 5.0 litre engine, 7,000 miles, fully equipped.

1983 Ford Conversion Van

New. Flaised 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, 5 speed transmission, 7,000 miles, RS package.

(2) 1982 Lincoln Continentals

Low mileage, fully equipped. Save thousands!

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

Oreen, 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.

EA<iT

CAROLINA

GMC

UNCOLN-MERCURY-GMC WoMEiMCirelc    GracnvUU.    N.C.

I *

t

109

Houses For Sale

NEW LISTING by owner Belvedere. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Call 754 3745 tor aooointment.

RED OAK

____Reduced    and    rezKly    tor

smart shopper! Excellent floor plan, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, formal areas, detached garage and run. Aldridge & Soutlierland 35()0. Jean Hoppyr 754 9142

RENT WITH AN option to buy 3)08 Sherwood Drive. Williamsburg style. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, family room with fireplace. Heated and cooled with a heat pump. Carpeted throughout. $77,900. E 18. Aldridge & Southerland, 754 3500. Dick Evans. Realtor. 758 i) 19._

RIVERHILLS Lovely 3 bedroom. 2''} bath, split level, features living room, family room with fireplace, large kitchen with beautiful greenhouse window, also heat

Sump. Call June Wyrick, Aldridge Southerland, 754 3500; nights 754 57)4._

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, loft/bedroom, 1'7 baths, master bedroom with fir^lace. one acre lot. Many extrs. Aldridge 8, Southerland 754 3500, Jean Hopper 754 9142.__

SITUATED ON a beautiful wooded lot. in the country in a beautiful neighborhood . Almost like new one story home with 1500 square feet -        -    tell

home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace and dining area, heat pump. Only $45.900 Call Davis Realty, 7 3000. 754 2904, 754 1997

SITUATED ON A WELL land scaped, wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms. IVj baths, large kitchen, family room with fireplace, heat pump, huge attic, (could be con verted in (age office or etc.), patio, gargage wired for 220. Needs some rove and tender care. $40's. (Possi bility of 10% financing). Call Davis Reaftv, 752 3000. 754 2^, 754 1997

STRATFORT Right In the heart of town, but situated

quiet,

wooded lot in lovely area. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, den with fireplace, carport, plus a huge screened porch! Aldridge & Southerland 754 3500. Jean flop 754 9142

Topper

THE CHOICE IS YOURS 3 or 4 bedroom brick ranches with IVj baths and garages. In nice neighborhoods in Winterville. Call 754 1297 or 754 4854.

THIS LOVELY RANCH located at 317 St. Andrews Drive has a 12% assumable mortgage with low, tow equity. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, formal dining room and a breakfast area. Really special. $45.900 E 21. Aldridge 8, Southerland. 754 3500. Dick Evans. Realtor, 758 1119.

THREE BEDROOM. 2 bath ranch in the country complete with wood stove in greaf room and all kitchen appliances remain. Full carpeted. Must see to appreciate. $45,000. Call Sue Dunn at Aldridge 8, Southerland. 754 3500 or 355 2588.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

109 Houses For Sale

WESTWOOD Terrific home lovely lot! All formal areas, den with fireplace. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, covered patio, garage Can also be rented! AldriJ^ & Southerland 754 3500. Jean Hoooer 754 9142

1 YEAR OLD - Energy efficient 2 bedroom Passive Solar house. On large partially wooded lot in Farmville Assumable FHA loan 753 5445 aHer 4.

13'/V ACRES with a nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Only 10 minutes from Greenville. Federal Land Bank financing available. Aldridge & Southerland. 754 3500 Dick Evans. Realtor. 758 1119._

1950 SQUARE FEET, garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, workshop, large great room with 8' ptel table and fireplace. Newly carpeted with dishwasher, cable TV, 7_years old. Located 3 miles from Greenville. Priced in the $50's. 7584)144 or 752 7443_

2 BEDROOM LOG HOME in private wooded setting. 17 minutes South ot Greenville. Serious in-quirers. Call 524-4782 after 5 p.m

3 BEDROOM. 1'/i bath. GE heat pump, fireplace with insert, pay ^3.^ and assume 7<^% loan Pavmentsot$305.05 PITI 754 5212.

111 Investment Property

ATTENTION INVESTORS: Shelter some income with this new brick duplex/townhouse. 1010 square feet each side. 2 bedrooms. ivi baths, major kitchen appliances, private sundeck with storage, conveniently located. 3 more lots available for future units. Call Mavis Butts Realty. 758-0455 or Elaine Trolano, 754 4344_

CENTURY 21B FORBES 756-2121

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY! Country store with well established business. Owner financing avalla ble. Hlgh40's.

CONSTANT INCOME producer 3 Mobile homes and one house with rental income of $595 per month. Low 30's

2717 S Memorial Drive   Independently Owned_

For The Best In

DUPLEXES

Call Joe Bowen East Carolina Builders 752-7194

113

Land For Sale

5 ACRES WOODED LAND east of Greenville. Call 754 7884 after 6

p.m._

72 ACRES WOODSLAND No road f^njage. Possible owner financing.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

115

Lots For Sale

BEAUTIFUL 32 ACRES wooded homesile, 8 miles east of Greenville. $14.500. 752 1915

CENTURY 21B FORBES 756-2121

THREE WOODED LOTS in country on paved road. Call today for more information.

THREE MILES from city limits. Residential lots with community water.

WITHIN CITY LIMITS Approxi mately 8.5 acres, partially wooded.

COMMERCIAL LOT

-approximately 200' X 150'. Owner financing available.

2717 S Memorial Drive Indeoendentiv Owned

EVANSWOOO - RESIDENTIAL lots from $9.000 $12,500. Call W G Blount a Associates. 754 3000.

LARGE LOT in Baywood. $17.500. Aldridte & Southerland 754 3500, Jean Hooper 754 9142.

Lowest Single Family Lot Prices In Greenville!

If you are looking for affordable, wooded lots within the city limits, you must see BAYTREE Prices start as low as $11,000.

758-6410

LYNNDALE LOT ) of the last Call 355 2220,

AAACGREGOR DOWNS 3 5 acres, beautiful wooded. Aldridge & Southerland 754 3500, Jean Hopper 754 9142.__

ONE ACRE LOT between Ayden and Griffon on State Road 1110. Call 754 2482_

ORCHARD HILL Subdivision Four beautiful lots for sale by owner 1000 sq. ft. minimum building size. VA FHA approved. $10,000 firm per lot. Call 75^4715 aHer 5__

If that vacant apartmant is losing you money, remedy the situation quickly with a result getting Classified ad Call 752 4144

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NO DOWN PAYMENT!

Discover the joys of Engage-A-Car, the common-sense alternative to BUYING a new car It's the modern way to^ drive any new car, van or truck your heart desires...foreign or domestic. With Engage-A-Car, you can laugh at inflation because NO DOWN PAYMENT is necessary and your MONTHLY PAYMENTS are lower! You owe it to yourself to gel all the exciting details now.

Mid-Eastern Brokers

Pitt Plaza    75frJ9sa

Shopping Center

I

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!

A5TING

FORD

Dealer No. 5720

758-0114

S

Greenville N C 27834

Greenville's Finest Used Cars!

(Located At Honda Store)

1981 Hoiida 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.

1980 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

T-top. All power. Just like new.

1980 Buick Regal Limited

2 door, ^cellent 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.

k)b Barbour

SEBSB

3300 S. Memorial Dr. Greenville 355-2500

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,

1977 BMW 320i

2 door, red, AM-FM stereo, air condition.

1977 Lincoln Mark V ^

White with green top. Just like a new car with all the options.

(Located At Volvo Store)

1981 Honda Accord LX

Luxury model. Air* condition. Luxury with economy.

1981 Pontiac Grand LeMans

Marcjon, maroon vinyl top, fully eyuipped with tilt wheel, cruise control, sport wheels.

1981AMC Jeep CJ-7

Renegade. 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.

1980 Olds Cutlass Supreme

14,000 miles. Tilt wheel, cruise control, stereo, air. Car Is like new.

1978 Olds Cutlass Salon

2 door. Runs great, nice car

1976 Ford Thunderbird

Power windows, power seats, air condition.

BobBarbour

V()L\'() \.\lf ,k'C|> Renaiill

li / W. Tenth St./Greenville,^758-7200

115

Lots For Sale

THE PINES in Aydeo 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10.5(X) Call Moseley-Marcus Realty at 744 2144 tor full details

'/I TQ 5 ACRES, Highway 264 South. Ayden Griftoo area and Highway 33 South Call 754 2482or 757 0277

117 Resort Property For Sale

AADBILE HOME set up in family park on Pamlico River screened porch. Call 758'9126atter4p.m

TIME SHARING CHALET Trade all around the world 2 weeks a year forever! $4,000 Beech AAoun lain.NC 757 1533after5 Mo m

2 BEDRQQM COTTAGE at Pamlico Beach 150' pier, boat lift Cozy, quiet place Call 355 2544

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Security te^its required, no pets. Call

I 4413 between 8 and 5

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need Call Arlington Self Storage, Open day Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933

121 Apartments For Rent

A 2 BEDROOM, I'z bath duplex, kitchen with dining area, appli anees, hookups, convenient loca tion $285. 754 7714

APARTMENT AND TRAILER lor

rent in Winterville Call 758 1280 alter 6 30 weekdays, anytime weekends._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartment For Rent

AVAILABLE immediately duplex near ECU, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, no pets. $235 per month 752 2040

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenvilles newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments

AM energy efficient designed

Queen size beds and studio couches

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches

Frost free refrigerators

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams _754    7815_

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'j baths Also 1 bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups. laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

SALE

SALE

I

WHOLESALE

Dealer Wholesale NADA Book And Lower

One Example of our many Specials

1981 Ford Thunderbird...cost$5850.00

N.C. Sales Tax 117.00

Title & Processing fee 20.00

Your Cost $5987.00 On The Lot Financing With Approved Credit Sale Ends Aug. 1,1983

BROWNIE MOTOR SALES

Corner Of 14th Street & Farmville Blvd.

752-0117

SHOPTHE BEST SHOP HOLT QUALITY USED CARS

1983 Oldsmobile Firenza

4 door. Dark blue with blue velour interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control.

1983 Honda Accord

4 door. Charcoal gray with gray velour interior. Loaded. 8,700 miles, like new.

1983 Ford F-150 Ranger XLT

Loaded, 5,000 miles. Burgundy and white with camper shell.

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 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

Black with saddle interior. Loaded. One owner

1981 Toyota 4X4Truck

White with saddle interior, AM-FM radio, sliding glass window, sport wheels, very nice.

1981 Datsun4X4Truck

Long bed, 4 speed, air, AM-FM, red with black interior.

1981 Pontiac Grand Prix

Dark blue with landau roof, dark blue vinyl interior, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo with tape.

1981 Mercury Marquis

4 door, tan and brown, beige cloth inferior, 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. 40,0(X) miles.

1980 Chevrolet Malibu Classic

4 door. Automatic, air, brown with buckskin velour interior.

1979 Toyota Corolla

2 door. Yellow with brown vinyl interior, one owner, looks new.

1978 Datsun Truck

Short bed. Red with black interior, AM-FM radio, sliding glass window, sport wheels, very nice.

1978 Olds Delta 88 Royale

4 door. White with blue velour interior, 58,000 miles, one owner, automatic, air condition, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control, power door locks, looks new.

1978 Olds Delta 88

4 door. Diesel. Blue with white vinyl interior, loaded.

1978 Buick Century Wagon

Blue with blue vinyl interior. Automatic, air condition, AM-FM radio, tilt wheel ciuise control, power door locks.

1977 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

4 door. Silver with burgundy vinyl roof, burgundy interior. Loaded, 54,(X)0 miles.

DISCOUNTS UP TO $2500.00 On These Company Demonstrators , All Vehicles Carry Full Factory Warranty

1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera Brougham

4 door, diesel. Loaded. White with tan fop and matching tan interior.

1983 Olds Cutlass Calais

Loaded. Light gray fern, bucket seats.

HOLT OLDS-DATSUN

101 Hooker Rd.

756-3115

111

6M QUALITY SERVICE MRTS

MNHAL MOTORI COIPORATION

I





D-10-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.->UDday, July 31.1W3

121 Apartment For Rent

121    Apartment For Rent

i 121 Apartment For Rent

COOL CONDOMINIUMS

with monthly payments lower than rent' Units available at Brookhill,

rtrrii- v/ima

Cannon Court, Twin Oaks. Tree and Shenandoah Call today more details Owen Nor^ll at

rT

758 6050 or 75 1496, Wil Reid 8f 758 6050 or 758 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029

MOORE &SAUTER no South Evans 758-6050

DUPLEX, laroe roomv appliances furnished, fully carpeted. i block from ECU $185 References re Quired 355 2446

EASTBROOK AND

VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

327 one. fyw> and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV. modern appli anees, central heat and air conditioning. clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

7S^5100

EFFICIENCIES 1 or 2 beds, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates. Call 756 5555 Heritaoe Inn Motel.

IN WINTERVILLE 3

irtnwf Appliances^ furnish^

apartment Appliances furnish No children, no pets. Deposit i .lease. 1210 a month. Call 756-5007.

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden

apartments. Carpeted, ran, frigerator. dishwasher, dlsp and cable TV Conveniently located

to shopping center and schools. LocalediusfoHlOth-

iStreet.

Call 752-3519

LOVETREES?

E xperience the unigue in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEYSQUARE APARTMENTS

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

For All Your New And Used Car And Truck Needs, Come To HASTINGS FORD. Ask For DALLAS TRIPP And Ill Get You A Good Deal. Well Sell Your Car Or Truck For You. Call Me At 758-0114.

construction, fireplaces.

its 50% less

Quality -heat pumps (heating cos. than comparable units), dishwash

121 Apartment For Rent

GreeneWav

I bedroom garden uart carpeted, dish le TV, laundry rooms

Large 2

ments.  ---

washer, cable TV, laundry rooms balconies spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Countnt Club. 756^869

GRIFTON AREA 2 and 3 bedroom

apartmwts jCentral ji^caget and

SXies. Call M4-4239 or 524 .

NEAR HOSPITAL 2 new duplexes available immediately. 7 bedrooms. I'/i baths. No pets. 752 3)52 or 752 6715, ask tor John or Bryant

NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms 1 mile from hospital med school. Really nice. t300 Deposit. lease 825^1

121 Apartments For Rent

ONE BEDROOM, furni>hed apartments or mobl>e homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams 756 7815

RENT FURNITURE: Livtiw, ing, bedroom complete. 579.00 of month. Option to buy. U-REN CO.

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The    

Office hours 10 a.m. teSp.n Monday through Friday

NEW DUPLEX TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms. I'T baths 5300 pw month plus utilities. About one miie from med school/tiospital. Female desired. Call Laura 1 772 5398 after 7 p.m. or 1847 5055 davs._

Cell us 24 hours a day at

er, washer/dryer hook-ups, cable I carMt, fh windows, extra insulation.

TV.wall to-wair carpet, thermopane eneri

NEW TOWNHOUSE available August. 2 bedrooms iv> baths dine in kitchen with appliances private sundeck and stora

ate sundeck and storage, gy eHkient. 5325/security. (Ml Ts Butts Realty. 758-0655 or

Office Open 9-5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    1-5    Sunday

Merry Lane Ott Arlington Blvd

75A-5067

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

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 BUIIT

jommam.

Subaru Of Greenville

605 W. Greenville Blvd.

Authorized Parts & Service Phone 756-8885

Greenville

GRANT BUICK-MAZDA, INC.

603 Greenville Blvd., Greenville, N.c.

GREENVILLES FINEST

1983 Chevy Customized Van

(3) 1983 Buick Regals - 2 door, power windows, tilt, stereo, sport roofs, landau

roofs, low miles.

1982 Buick Reviera - Dark blue, buckskin roof, loaded, 15,000 miles, Like New!

1982 Buick Regal - 2 door, white/white, 28,000 miles, power windows, tilt wheel, sport wheels.

1982 Pontiac Bonneville Model G 4 d(X)r, 28,000 miles, power windows, tilt wheel, wire wheel covers.

1982 Buick Regal 4 door, white, power windows, tilt wheel, Real Nice Car!

1982 Datsun 280 ZX - 11,000 miles, just like new. Maroon.

1981 Datsun 280 ZX - 2 plus 2, automatic transmission, T-tops, 26,000 miles, white.

1981 Buick Regal - 2 door, dark Jadestone, tilt wheel, sport wheels, local car.

1980 Ford Custom Van - Brand New Conversion, 28.000 miles, Very Sharp!

DEPENDABLE GAS MISERS

1982 Mazda GLC 2 door, beige, 12,000 miles!

1981 Honda Accord - 2 door, 5 speed, stereo, 39,000 miles. Burgundy.

1981 Mazda 626 - Luxury power windows, cruise, stereo, 31,000 miles. Local Car! 1980 Chevrolet Citation - 4 door, automatic, air condition, low miles.

1979 Mazda 626- 4 door, automatic, air, AM/FM, sharp local car.

EASY ON THE BUDGET DEALS!

1979 Buick Century Wagon - Pastel blue, local car!

1978 Ford LTD - 4 door, power windows, cruise, local trade in!

1976 Chrysler Cordoba - loaded with options, only 36,000 miles. You Must See This One!

1975 Buick Riviera - One owner car, Jade Green/White Roof, Very Clean! 1974 Buick Regal -.2 d<x)r, new paint, new vinyl roof, only 46,000 miles!

Open: Weekdays 8:30 to 6:30 Saturday 9:00 to 2:00

Phone: 756-18771982 Pontiac Trans-Am Sparkling 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 state 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 Chevroiet Citation 4 door, silver metallic with burgundy vinyl trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air. radio, cruise, clean car.1982 Pontiac J-2000 Wagon Light lade

with cloth trim Power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio, local trade1981 Olds Delta Royale Brougham Dark

blue with velour trim, options include tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, wire wheel covers,

33.000 miles1981 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

Mevs' Butts Realty. ElaineTroiano. 756-6346.

NOW RENTING WILLIAMSBURG AAANOR BRANDNEWLUXURYAPARTAAENTS

Feature

ns>-^

2 large bedroom:

I'/ baths

Thermopane windows

E 300 Energy eHicient

Heat Pumps

Spacious floor plan

Beau:'........

itiful individual Williamsburg inferior

Patios with privacy fence Washer/dryer hookups

Kitchen appliances * Custom built cabinets

CALL 756-7647

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

T wo bedroom townhouse apart  -----    -        5ish

ntents. 1212 Redbanks Road washer, refrigerator, range, . ^osal included. We also have Cable

dis

I iii%iuwvu. nv aiw iiovw

Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. 5215 a month. 756 ^923.___

CLASSIFIED DISPUY

30 X 60 DESK

M69

CAnUU OFFICE EUmDT CO.

Conwr of Pitt B Qrawi Si.

756-

tar RIVER ESTATES

1. Z and 3 bedrooms, washer-dryor luxTk-upv cable^ TV, |^. ctuo

house, playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It AM -"A Community Complex."

1401 Willow Street Office - Comer Elm A Willow

752-4225

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom. I'.'} bath townhouses. Available now. 5295/month. 9toSMon<^ Friday

756-7711

WEDGEWOODARMS

2 bedroom. IV2 bath townhouses. Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

121 Apartments For Rent

TOWNHOUSE. 2 bedrooms, m baths, oulet neighborhood, central tun Mr

loc'atkmT'nqjpetsT deposit, 5340 per month. 756 7314. after 5. 756 4950

! ments.

1 AND J BOROOM PfrtT' Available immediately. 7^331]

7 bedroom apartmmt. f*- ;t-

applianes iurnished, totally efectric. ~

apartment. Kitchen les iurnished, tota 1325 month. Call 756 7647

deposit and lepse- no nets. 756-6834.

before 5 p.m.. 752-8179.

J4IM EAST 3RD STREET 1 bedroom furnished, upstelrs ayrg^lN 5iM.^Le^ end deposit.

4 BEDROOM DUPLEX In tow^ 2 bedroom aMrtment in country 746 ^ or ^4 3180'_

704 EAST Third Street. 2 bedr^s. furnished, 2 blocks from ECU

Stovir'tetrtoerBtor. LMSa and _ Doslt. 5360. 7l6 IW 9 to 5 wefktfdJg.

122

Business Rentals

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL w office space. Arlington Boulevard. 3.000 square feet. Only 53.60 per s foot. For more fnturmation, ealEs

square ------    _    -

call Real Estate Brokers 752-4348

FOR RENT 10.000 square foot building. Idealjy located ^on

building. Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity. Call DcSinle Smith a) 945M7._

100 SQUARE

210 for 1 center

RE FEET of retail space in small strip shopping Contact Aldridge I

Southerland RealN, 756-3500; nights Don Southrl4nd76 5260

4.000 SQUARE FEET Upstairs downtown Greenville. 5th Street entrance. Call 756 5007.

127

Houses For Rent

CENTRALLY LOCATED 3

bedrooms, 2 baths, living and dining den with fireplace, heal

pump,

month

detached studio. 5450 per Call 754 44IOor 756 5941

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

THE SHOE OUTLET

Name Brand Shoes at Discount Prices

WORK SHOES

CASUALS DRESS SHOES

SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Next Door To Evans Seafood

GREAT

UsedCarVauea

Stock No.    Description

4199-A - 1970 Olds Cutlass Convertible 4355-A - 1978 Ford Futura 4368-A - 1980 Mercury Bobcat 4392-A - 1980 Mercedes 300-SD 4459-A - 1983 Toyota Clica 4S14-A - 1980 Chrysler UBaron 4521-A - 1981 Toyota Pickup

4549-A - 1981 Honda 550 Mairim Motorcycle - 9.500 mUes

4568-A-1981 Buick Regal

4577 A - 1978 Toyota Corolla

P-8214 - 1982 ToyoU Wagon

P-8260 1982 Toyota Corolla

P-8261 - 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 Toyota Corolla

P-8289 - 1982 Toyota Corolla

P-8295-1982 Pontiac

P-8308 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

P-8315 - 1982 Olds Cntlass

P-8316 - 1982 Olds Cutlass

P-8318 - 1982 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

P-8323 - 1982 Olds Cutlass Ciera

P-8324 - 1982 Olds Cutlass

P-8325 - 1982 PontUc Grand Prix

P-8326 - 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

P-8331 - 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

P-8332 1982 Chevrolet Chevette

P-8337 - 1982 Toyota Tercel

P-8339 - 1982 Toyota Tercel

P-8340 - 1982 Toyota Tercel

P-8341 - 1982 Toyota Tercel

P-8342 - 1982 Toyota Tercel

P-8345 - 1982 Toyota Tercel

P-8346 - 1982 Toyota Corolla

P-8347 - 1982 Toyota Corolla

P-8348 - 1982 Toyota CoroUa

P-8349 - 1982 Toyota Clica

P-8351 - 1979 Toyota Corolla

R-7083 - 1982 Toyota Truck

R-7092 1981 Toyota Truck

R-7114-1979 Ford LTD

R-7126 - 1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo

R-7127 - 1981 Toyota Truck

R-7129 1981 Toyota Truck

R-7130 - 1982 Toyota Corolla

R-7131 - 1980 Toyota Corolla

R-7138 1979 Toyota Truck

Everything Is Priced To Sell!!

109 Trade Street Greenville 756-3228

srffUPiOiuurr

aadDmikCOSn

1980 Olds DBlta Royale Dark burgundy metallic with burgundy vinyl top and trim. Extras include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo, 60-40 split seats, air, wire wheels. 1979 Buick Skylark Light green with tan vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition. AM-FM radio, 50.000 miles.

1978 BMW Sparkling black with tan trim. 4 speed, air condition, AM-FM stereo, sharp car.

1978 Cadillac Sedan De Ville Dark green metallic with leather trim. Equipped with most factory options including wire wheel covers.

1978 Datsun 280-Z Medium brown metallic with brown trim, 5 speed. AM-FM radio, air, (lip-up sunroof.

1977 Cadillac Sedan Da Ville - Burgundy with full vinyl roof and cloth trim. Equipped with moat factory options includinq wire wheels. Clean car.

1977 Cadillac Eldorado white with blue leather trim, and blue landeu top. Fully equipped,

60,000 miles. Excellent condition, one owner trade 1976 MG Midgot Burgundy metallic with a new black convertibie top and black vinyt trim, 4 speed transmieeion, 32,000 miles, local car.1976 Pontiac Grand Prix wnite with

burgundy vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, 61,000 miles, local trade.1975 Olds Cutlass Sedan Beige with

brown vinyl top and vinyl trim, power steering and brakes, automatic, air condition, only 59,000 miles, local trade, good transportation.1974 Pontiac Lamans Sports Coupe 2

door. Medium green metallic with green landau vinyl top and vinyl trim. Power steering and brakes, automatic, air, local trade, sharp car.1973 Pontiac Grand Prix Black with black

vinyl top and white Inferior. Options include power windows, tilt wheel, cruise control, AM-FM stereo with tape, 77,000 milM, local trade.

1972 Fiat 124 Sadan Balge with tan vinyl trim, automatic, 78,60OmllM.

windows, cruise, control, automatic, AM-FM cassette. 38,000 miles, sharp car. 1981 Dodga Arias K Wagon 4 door, tan with tan vinyl Interior Automatic, air condition, stereo radio, 23,000 miles. 1980 Mazda RX-7 Silver metallic with burgundy trim. 5 speed transmission, air condition, stereo, local tradeDickinson Ave.

Brown-Wood, Inc.752-7111

Befora You Tradt Your UMd Car SeeUs WE BUY GOOD CLEAN UTE MODEL USED CARS Or We Will Sell It For You    

f

I

127

Houses For Rant

CLUB PINES executive home, all formal areas, large den, heat pump, in mint condition. Available lember 1. 5550 month. Lily Rich-ardson Realty. 75? 4535

COUNTRY HOME near hospital..3 bedrooms. 7''t baths, central air and heat. AAany extras. 5400 mon-thlv. Cal I 754 3962 after 5:30

HALF BLOCK from campus. 3 bedroom, central air, fireplace, 5375 plus deposit. 754 0174

IN TUCKER ESTATES, bedrooms. 2 . baths.

___________ 2    baths,    den    with

firMlace. all formal areas. Call (91?) 724 4446.

THREE BEDROOM, iv> bath, now ECU, 5350 month. Day 757-0042; eveninos 654 4040

2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses m Grlftqn. Phone 524-4147, nights

2 BEDROOMS, Perfect for y.

ing couple. Lease i p^s. 7543714 efier 5

... University area, ad students or work-

end deposit. No

p.m.

3 BEDROOMS, 1V5 baths, ill Woodside Road.- Greenville Ter

race. 5300 a month plus de^lt. Call 754 7417._

3 BEDROOM home, available Sepj tember 1, 1943.

deposit. 754 9129,

5335, l44se and

129

Lots For Rent

VILLAGE TRAILER Park. Ayden. Paved streets, city water, sewage, trash collection. First month free or

we^|M^^^Tioving expenses. 744-2425

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

133 MoblltHomt* For Rent

DOUBLEWtOE mpWle ho ^ rent. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. 5225 per i

month. 752 4614,

FURNISHED^    home.    

Excellent condition. Bell's Fork,, KinstonV522 2345.

area^

12X40. 3 bedroom, with air, 4160. 2-

MM f J      -    'l    

bedroom with air, *'3?.    '

prelwred. No pets, no children. Call 754-0765 or 756-9691.

12x60 7 BEDROOMS urni^s^

Washer7 d^. 'no air condition. ^165 Call 7542409 after 2,

2 BEDROOMS - on shady lot. No-;;;

pets. Call 744-3734. _

2Je^oom trailer

754-0779 or

2 BEDROOMS, turnip, waslw, air, carpet. Good location. No pets..i nochlldran. 754 4457.

7 BEDROOM, washer and air. Call 754 1444

3 BEDROOMS FURNISHED Wim' air co(Ktioner - no wast^_nd ' dryer. Loceted in Colonial Park.' Rent 5165. 744-2542._

135    Office Space For Rent

DOWNTOWN Just off mall. Singles-' and multlolas. Convenient to courthouse. Call 754^)041 pr

FOR RENT 2500 square teet.^ Suitable for oHIce space or conj-;J marcial. 404 Arlington Boulevard.^'

7^6111.:.

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact/ J T or Tommy Williams. 756-7415.

Have patt to lell? Retch more pj^ pie with an economical Classified

ad. Call 752-4164.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

NOTICE

Do You Need Small Repair Jobs Done Around The Home Or Business.

GIVE ME A CALL I DO IT ALL!

Jimmy Hughes 757-3121

THE

REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

ill

21

TIPTON & ASSOC.

756-6810

JEANNETTE COX AGENCY

REALTOR

756-1322

1SI6 Greenville BlvC

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO GREENVILLE

Call 7S6 1322 or write P 0 Box 667, Greenville, N C lor your free copy ol "Homes For Living". 6 monttily publication pKked with pictures, details and prices of homes and available locally.

IF YOU ARE MOVING TO A MEW CITY

Get ydur free copy of "Homes for Living", in the city you are going to. Know the real estate market before you get there Your copy i> in our office. We can help you buy, sell or tradt a homo any place in the nation.

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Recently remodeled 3 bedroom brick ranch lots than 1/4 mUt (rom Eastom Elomontaiy School and rocroatlonal parfct. Boautiful carpol and hardwood floor combination. Largo living room, tunny kitchon with plonty of cabinola, toparalo dining aroa, cozy den with fireplace. Laundry room wHh alorago aroa. PIcturosqut, oncloaod back yard wHh 6 foot naturatty woathorod lonco to gWo privacy to your 1IX36 inground pool. Almoat a yoara aupply ol pool chemicela and aoaaonod wood for Mxt M^ora fir^indiido^at^ at 366,666!

758-1355 before 7: AM or after 9:30 PM Sunday Anytime ' k

EASTHAVEN

103 DEERWOOD DRIVE. Very seldom does a home go on the market in this prestigious area. Lovely, well shaded lot with fenced In back yard. Features oversized living room, den, kitchen with separate dining area, study with built-ins, full bath and unique double-faced fireplace downstairs-Four bedrooms, 2 baths upstairs. Quality built with cedar closet, laundry chute, almost new split gas furnace, double carport-Drapes and refrigerator remains. NOW PRICED AT ONLY $87,000,

ELMHURST

HILLSIDC drive. Located on a very private, quiet etieet. this lovely

ranch is ideally located to the ECU campus. Immaculate and well kept, features formal living room with fireplace, dining room, sunny kitchen with separate dinnette area, 3 bedrooms, IVii baths, over-sized family room with built-ins and fireplace. Deck. Gas heat and central alr-AII drapes and refrigerator remain. NOW PRICED AT ONLY $68,000.CALLTODAYl

REALTY WORLOb OR

CLARK-BRANCH REALTORS ^ 756-6336 IE DAVtS-71

-r

f





135 Office Space For Rent

&000 SWARE FEET office build

137 Reeort Property For Rent

ATl/NTIC BEACH 1 bedroom conAMnlnium, (xeanfront, families OOty,iS*4y)7or7?6 3a9

BEECH MOUNTAIN condo fw rent by mo day. vi^ or monfh. To

by mo day. week or monfh golf ond swimming. Call Sy. 940 0694 night?

. ennis. 946-340

! at ATLANTIC BEACH: 3 special ekday per nighf. Oceanside. gPW Jacuzzi, tennis. Call 758

PCE^ FRONT CONDO 3rd floor

SoMTnr.ct*S.4Ml

TcS|7M

13t

Rooms For Rent

FOpRENT

semi-privteron^d

kitchon privil^s for 1 girl student noofcolleiie. 7^2301

FURNISHED BEDROOM with air condition and refrigerator. Across from colloqe 758 25r

t^CE ROOM Use of kitchen and ^ggd^^room. 530 per week

ROOMS FOR RENT Call from 9 p.m. P.m.. 752 6583

SINGLE FURNISHED room in nice lone "Mc Pitt Plaza for discreet malo student or young busi-jeswTvan. $t25 per monfh. Call 756-5667 affer5D.m. _

M Roommate Wanted

P00?*AUTE to share .??''oom house. 1145 includes -1, Call David at 758 0966

ALE ROOMA8ATE NEEDED to $125 per month. V? I utilities. 752 1175 or 756 1455 after

.ATE^ TO SHARE trailer.

iionabie. Call Kav. 752 3460. WANTED: FEA8ALE roommate tor > bedroom trailer share v, Smytl5am.tol0p.m..

TOUNG kmale rooamaate

Good rMponsible person, board free as long as she y'lllIJ'S fo help take care of l^sohofd chores. Such as cooking, ^ning, and so forth. Call B 3 it! ' 1?.    miles from

^eonvllle. near Black Jack.

144 Wanted To Buy

bSaSLEV LUMBER. Products will

.    ...I

- -.r --J tor good grade Pine logs dollvored to Scotland Neck mill

LUMBEF______________

to $150 per M for good grade ifandlhg Pine Timber. Also *" Rricos paid for jopd grade Pine 1

Call Gene Baker

!2ftJ2fi2

826 4121 or

BOYS Call 73

 BICYCLES: 20'

:all756 93Zafter6D.m

and 26"

TQ BUT /, acre of land in a r^ius of miles from Greenville or

Si

ilnferville area. III. 756 9078.

Contact Louis

WE ARE LOOKING for Property, duplex, triplex, etc., needing im DTOvements, also Residence with Out building suitable for Antique Shop. Please call Les Riley Real Estate. 1 798 7461._

141

Wanted To Rent

ECU PROFESSOR looks for 3 or 4 bedroom apartment. Cali 752 0924

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STOhm WINDOWS DOORS a AWNINGS

C I. Luptori, Co.

lllRllrSillA

MussliCiiifMiici

contact Harold Creadi

The Marketplace he.

3723 E. 10th St.    752-3666

SPECIAL Safe

Model S-1 Special Price $122*0 Reg. Price $177.00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

r566 S. Evans St.

752-2175

Rent To Own

CURTIS MATHES TV

756-8990

No Credit Check

AUCTION

2 BIG PUBLIC AUCTIONS FRI. AUG. 5,10:00 A.M. SelaSHa+OS South, Exit 105 Baglay Rd. Kanly, N.C.

Farm Impl.-lndudriat Equip.

Big Trucks a Trailars To Consign to Auctk>n-Call: (919)284-5541 AYCOCK AUCTION

Kenfy, N.C.-N.C.AL.2M7 N.C.A.L.2I8

Retail S)3S.OO Model 40PW3000 40" Remote Color Must Sell Now At

*3399

16 Days Same As Cash $1000 Instent Credit

The DaUy ReHector, Greenville, N.C.-Sunday, July 31,1983-D-ll

The Real Estate Corner

NOW

IsTlieTineToBvililYoiirNewHonR

Build Nw While InteresI Rales Are Down Build Now Before Maferial Prices Increase

Let 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

Itwi

The Name Of Quality Call Now For Details

756-7647

Your Way to Better Living

Office 746-2166

COME SEE

This lovely 3 bedroom brick ranch today. There's something for everyone. Dad will really enjoy the 16x20 workshop in back with underground'utilities. The children can romp and play in safety in the big fenced back yard, and Mom will appreciate the handy kitchen with built-ins, wall to wall carpet and cozy family room boasting wood burning stove. Sliding glass doors lead to covered patio the whole family will enjoy. Theres 2 baths, heat, air, and so much more. In Ayden, great location at $65,500.

HERES A COZY, COMFY, CONVENIENT brick home we have just listed in the country outside Winterville. The home is located on W acre lot surrounded by split rail fence. Theres 6 rooms including 3 bedrooms, ceramic bath, kitcheh with loads of cabihets, heat, air, and carport. If you want country living, convenient location, and no city tax, take a look today $40,500.

A SUMMER BREEZE through a lot of trees and a murmer of the pines will lull you into cozy relaxation. This brick ranch in Ayden is located on a lot boasting a profusion of young pines. The home is nice too, featuring 3 bedrooms, heat, air, formal areas, den with wood burning stove, 1 Vi baths, and a location you will be proud to call home. At $43,500 you should see this one now.

FOR THE YOUNG couple or the retired folks or for anyone who doesnt want a big place to maintain we may have just what you want. Located between Ayden and Winterville in a very nice rural community, this 2 bedroom home features large kitchen with free standing double oven range, cozy den with stove, central heat, attic storage and attic fan, and detached workshop. Only $29,900.

FfflHA BRICK RANCH home in Kennedy Estates, Ayden. The home is nice with 3 bedrooms, good size kitchen, 1 Vi baths, living room, den, and large lot. $36,000.

WHAT CAN WE SAY? You really need to see this exceptional brick home In Ayden to appreciate the care and love that the present owners have given this house to make it a home. The home is in a beautiful location on a beautiful lot which is fenced in back and features a detached storage building or workshop. The home is immaculate and has. 3 bedrooms, new heat pump, new roof, cozy den, formal areas, and lovely wall to wall carpet. But why go on when you can see this one yourself? $45,000.

DO YOU WANT a whole lot of room? A house with charm and character and a good location? Then take a look at this older 2400 square foot home in Ayden. Central heat, 3 or 4 bedrooms, formal areas, huge den, big kitchen with pantry, 3 porches, a foyer you wont believe, carport, and a whole bunch of fruit trees in the yard. See us for more details and owner financing. $43,500.

YOUR FAMILY WIU FIT just fine in this large 3 bedroom, 2 bath home in Ayden. Formal living room with fireplace, spacious kitchen, family room, carport, heat, air, large yard, and good location. $47,500.

YOU DON'T SEE one like this everyday but you will be glad you took a look. This home In Griffon has over 1900 feet of living area and features ceramic kitchen with cooking Island and lots of cabinets, screened side porch and B-B-Q, slate foyer, texas size living room, family room, 2 fireplaces, basement, and large lot on a hill. Presently rented so we will need an appointment. Qrlfton, $56,500.

THERES NO TOWN tax when you live in the Ayden Country Club Area: and we have a very nice brick colonial listed that backs up to the 14th tee. The home has 4 bedrooms, carpet, formal areas, foyer, 2 baths, and big, big lot. Unoccupied so you can move in right away. $07,500.

OLDER HOME converted into nice duplex In nice, convenient location in Ayden. Each side has 2 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, living room and porch. Good investment or live in one side and rent the other side out. $35,000. QUALITY, CHARM, CHARACTER and big with a basement. This 2 story home In Ayden is in good shape, on a corner lot, in a very good neighborhood and is ready for you. Wood frame with new roof, detached block garage, and central heat, the home has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, formal areas, big front porch, utility room, beautiful lot with trees, and convenient location. $38,500.

COMMERCUU. BUILDiNQ downtown Ayden recently vacated. 2 Story, 2 heating systems, 12,800 squarp feet including office area, storage, utility shed, 2 baths. 69x140 corner lot facing East Second Street. Zoned Light Manufacturing. Needs work so owner is selling right at tax value. $26,000.

LAND. 5 acres wooded 4 miles east of Ayden. $10,000. Same area 14 acres all cleared with 400 feet road front. $66,000.

FOR RENT In Ayden. Great location. 1900 square foot home, 3 bedrooms, tVi baths, formal areas, garage, den with fireplace, utility room,''and nice lot with trees. Deposit required. $350 per month.

Non-OfflcB Hour$ 752-1026 Opn Sunday 1 to S P.M.

On Call - Marcua McClanahan, REALTOR

Ol*Di_

TIPTON & ASSOC.

NEW LISTING. University Area. Two story home featuring over 1800 square feet on wooded corner lot. 3 bedrooms, tVi baths, carport. $60,000.

UNDER CONSTRUCTION in

Lynndale, outstanding 5 bedrooms, 3 full bath home featuring all formal areas, double garage and over 3000 sq.ft.$1008

UNDER CONSTRUCTION in

Club Pines, 18th Century Georgian that features 3 bedrooms, Vh baths, large great room and over 2000 sq. H. $90s

THE CHARM that says "you have come home" welcomes

ru to this lovely 4 bedroom, bath traditional. All formal areas. Lovely screened in porch. Heavily wooded lot. $87,000.

UNDER CONSTRUCTION in

Horseshoe Acres. Still time to pick out colors on this traditional 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. Possible 11 Vi loan assumption. $63,000.

FARMERS HOME assumption available on this 3 bedroom, tVz 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.

PRIME COMMERCIAL space, over 5000 sq. ft. for sale or lease in the downtown area. Building has potential for many uses. $125,000.

756-6810

Nights. RodTugwell 753-4302

w.g. blount & associates

REALTORS - DEVELOPERS 756-3000 ii

YOULL BE AMAZED AT WHAT $37,900 CAN STILL BUY AT HERITAGE VILLAGE

Roomy two bedroom floorplans Great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace

Fully equipped kitchen including refrigerator with icemaker Outside storage room Private patio

No monthly maintenance fee FHA/VA or Conventional Financing with low down payments Landscaped yards with paved driveways & walkways Superb location off 14th St. &

Red Banks Rd.

offered by

ball & lanr

752-0025

THANKS A LOT. JEANNFTTE-THANKS A EOT. .lEANNETTE-THANKS A >

BUYING OR SELLING

MVe Get Right On It!

COUNTRY4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, stables......

LYNNDALE4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths, playroom ..

LYNNDALE4 bedrooms, 3 baths, playroom......

RIVER4 bedrooms, great room, pier, sandy beach.

26 acres $147,800^ $142,900 $140,000

FOREST HILLS4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, sun porch .........$133,900

LYNNDALE3 bedrooms, 3 baths, playroom..............................$ 120,000

BROOK VALLEY4 or 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room..............$ 119,000

a BROOK VALLEY-4 hedrooi^(^|]|)i s, garage ......$109,000

CHERRY OAKS4 bedrooms,    farmhouse....................$107,500

BROOK GREEN-4 bedrooms, 2 l^;()|ijQ contemporary................HW,000

COUNTRY-4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, 3 1/2 acres.........................   $99,400

COUNTRY4 bedrooms, 31/2 baths, Florida room Reduced.................$94,900

CLUB PINES-4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, garage .......... ........$89,900

BETHEL4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, beautiful moldings and floors..............$89,900

COUNTRY4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, 3 acre lot on lake ........$89,900

TUCKER ESTATES-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage..........................$89,900

LAKE ELLSWORTH-3 bedrooms, 2Vz baths. Contemporary, NEW LISTING... $89,500

KINGSBROOK DRIVE onis, 2 baths .......$88,700

CHERRY OAKS3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage.............................$85,300 |l||

WESTHAVEN3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, garage.. ^. Reduced    $81,000r

STRATFORD3 bedrooms, 2 baths, contemporary.........................$82,900

WESTHAVEN 1-3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, Williamsburg, NEW LISTING.......$82,500

STRATFORD3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. Salt Box ..................$81,900

TUCKER ESTATES-4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths. f^Qlt^^rd.............$79,900

QUAIL RIDGE 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, flat ..........$79,900

CLUBPINES3 bedrooms, 2 baths, playroom . Reduced............$69,900

CHERRY OAKS3 bedrooms, 2 baths, playroom... Reduced........$67,000

WINDY RIDGE-4 bedrooms, 21/2 baths, NEW LISTING...................$69,900

CHERRY OAKS3 bedrooms, 21/2^04^01/2% loan assumption..........$69,900

LAKE GLENWOOD3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room......................$67,500

RIVERHILLS-3bedrooms, 2baths. Ranch, NEW LISTING .............,.... $64,500

UNIVERSITYDuplex, 3 years old, excellent investment.....................$64,000

OSCEOLA-3 bedrooms, 2 baths, NEW LISTING...........................$60,900

COUNTRY3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room..............................$52,900

HIGGSOlder home converted into'four apartments........................$35,000

BLUE BANKS5 acres, wooded, surrounding lake ........$60,000|

HOLLY HILLS11/2 acres, wooded lot on lake.................................

AGENCY, INC.

COX

756-1322 Anytime!

Alice Moore, REALTOR 756-3308 Home

Valerie Dragoon 756-7171

Cypress Creek Towpljoipes

MODELS OPEN EACH SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2-6

Bob Barker.....975-3179

BUI Blount.....756-7911

Betty Beacham . 756-3880 Stanley Peaden. 756-1617

WE KEEP ON SEUING WHY NOT BE NEXT!!

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 greafroom 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 intentions of ever moving. A job transfer makes this one a kind home available. Built on 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,    full baths, garage,

well decorated interidNKifi lllit ftlfs. 122/3% Adjustable mortgage available atVJAjKfIm ItoRffer. $45,500.

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. There's 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!

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, enormourlot 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 theres a large kitchen with big eating area, Vh baths, living room with fireplace and dining area. Private street and priced at $59,900.

UNBELIEVABLE BUY FOR McGREGOR DOWNS. Who could imagine you could find anything for this price in this popular location near the hospital and medical complex. Different contemporary floor plan featuM| ljp|| toyewkh sunken living room, formal dining room, tJ^ffh'mAecEoms or a study. Big kitchen with loads of caAtwlMWeblMnuble garage. $72,500.

LOTS OF BITES. Lots of bites but no takers on this lovely authentic Williamsburg in lovely Windemere Subdivision at 105 Windemere Court. Two story floor plan features large formal foyer, 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 off eating and dining room. Big lot and over 2500 square feet of heated area. $116.500.

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.

THE D.t. NICHOLS AGENCY

Oavid Nichols 355-6414

752-4012 GROWING TO HELP YOU

Kstharina Vinson 752-5778





THE REAL ESTATE CORNER

iJI. --'t

WILLIAMSBURG. All formal areas, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths,japartment for relative. Large wooded lot in Cherry Oaks. For Sale By Owner.    ,

Call 756-5596 After 5 P.M.

\

FOR SALE BY OWNER SPACIOUS HOME

BETHEL

Two story, good condition, landscaped yard, 4 twdrooms, study, den, formal dirdng and living rooms. 1Vi baths. Comer lot, large storage house. $49,900.

Telephone 825-1905

9 to S PM only

Discount Prices, High Quality Guaranteed

mm EASTWOOD GONSmUGTIOII tOMPANY

111 Blacksmith Lane P.O. Box 3181 Greenville, N.C.

758-7354

Residential & Commercial

New Work Renovations Roofing

OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2:00-5:00

101 EVANSWOOD

TRULY OUTSTANDING beautiful Cape Cod features large family room with antique brick fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2^/^ tile baths, kitchen loaded with appliances and cabinets and walk in pantry, formal living & dining rooms, garage, intercom, central vac system, expandable walk-in attic, and so much more. Come out and take a look. $79,500. No. 563

756-6666

Bass Realty

Independently Owned.

Your Host Eddie Pate

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY A NEW HOME!

CAMBRIDGE

New cedar siding E-300 home with country porch just waiting for you. Well planned living area featuring lovefy 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 wHh fireplace, foyer and dining room all ac^nted with crown moulding and chair rail. Energy-efficient. Low STOs.

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. $60s.

N.C. HOUSING FINANCING. 10.15% interest mortgage money available to qualified applicants. Call for details.

The Evans Company

Call 752-2814

OR

Faye Bowen Winnie Evans

756-5258

752-4224

OfGieenvlalnc

701W. Fourteenths!.

If HOME FEDERAL ANNOUNCES THE AFFORDABLE 12% MORTGAGE

(PER ANNUM RATE)

THIS COULD BE YOUR KEY TO HOME OWNERSHIPl 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 Ad|ustable Rote Mortgage Guarantees No Rote Changes During The Ad|ustment Period. Our 1 Year Ad-{ustohle Rote Mortgoge Is Avollohle Right Now. And Longer Ad-fustment Periods Are Also Avollohle. .

CALL OR COME SEE US FOR MORE INFORMATION ON OUR NEWEST KEY TO HOME OWNERSHIP

* APR s 12.27% based on 80% loan to value and first payment date 30 days after closing. Index iMsed on 1 year Treasury Bills. Offer subject to change with market conditions.

HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION

OF EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA

Downtown Groonvillo Arlington Boulovord

758-3421

756-2772

Esiz:,

Jr

\DUFFUS REALTY. INC.OPEN HOUSES TODAY2-4 P.M.

1309 FANTASIA TUCKER ESTATES

Addorable ranch on a nicely landscaped wooded lot. Foyer, great room with fireplace and exposed bean ceiling, dining area. Three bedrooms, two baths, wood deck. Possible loan assumption. $81,500.

1402 RONDO DRIVE TUCKER ESTATES

A possible loan assumption on this neat contemporary. Featuring an entrance (oyer, formal dining room, breakfast area, three bedrooms and two baths. Wood deck, garage. $84.500.

520 CRESTLINE BLVD 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.

S23 CRESTLINE BLVD CLUB PINES

A big reduction on this four bedroom, three bath, two story home. Only a few years old. Foyer, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplace, microwave, solar hot water. Wooded lot. Storage. $99,750.RELQ

WORLD LEADER IN RELOCATION

756-5395

SOUTHFOUES Com*f lot Thfee bedrooms, belli, Imno rbom, breeklast irei. gvage. U3.000

nx-rr-u*

This Ihree beoroem and bath home on Thiiteenth Street needs up Just right lor the handyman Living room: dining room Selling in as is condition {23.000 WOOOUWN AVENUE Reduced in price Within Iking distance ot the University Four bedrooms, bath, Innng room, iamily room, carport Novi priced at t2S,m.

FOR YOUl STUDENT Convenient to dovmtown and the university Living room, dining room, three bedrooms, bith Deep lot. {27,000.

STOKES

Cute bunglaovi style home near Stokes nth

three bedrooms, bath. Iwng room, dining area I {31.000

inthekllchen Oilheat I

CONOOOUNIUM Buy this to live in, as an investment, or (or your student Two bedrooms. tVi baths, living room, dining area, retrigerator, patio {32,000 UNIVERSITY CONDO Greet location Tvio bedrooms, tvy beths. living room, dining area, patio, stove, refrigeralor and dishwasher {32.500

BROAD STXEFT Three bedroom and bath, cottage style. Living room, dlmng room, tamlly room, central air. nicely landscaped. {3S.OOO

BaVOnGHWAY A three bedroom, one beth ranch home Living room, dining area, carport, central air {3B.000 REDUCED HflXSOAU And a possible FHA loan sssumplion Three bedrooms, liath. living room, lireplace. dining room Quiet street Now only {3.000 PARIS AVENUE Throe bedrooms, IW baths with living room, recreation room, fireplace, tencing {39.500 TOWNHOME A really great townhome with a possible loan assumption. Two bedrooms, I'/i baths, living room dining area, unlinlshed basement Wildwood Villas {42.900

GREENRRIAR Neal ranch on a corner lol Three bedrooms. t'<5 beths. living room, dining area carport, central air, fencing {44.500

PAMLICO REACH Pretty beach front cottage with new aluminum siding Three bedrogms. bath, living room, too foot pier, storage building {45.000 UNIVERSITY AREA Ideal location tor your student or lor a laculty member Three bedrooma. bath, living room with lireplace. dining room, pelio, storage spece {45 500

COUNTRY SQUKE New homes with I0'n% APR (inancing Three bedrooms, 115 baths, living room, kitchen doting costs and poinis paid

EDWARDS STRECT Four bedrooms and two beths with living room, dining ara and petio Buy to live m. or as a rental investment. {47.000.

DUPLEX IN AYDEN Choice area of Ayden Two bedrooms, bath living room, dining room, family room on one side Two bedrooms, btth. tamdy room on other side Live In one side, rent the other Double carport {47.900.

CKOE DRIVE A three bedroom and ivy bath home in Hardee Aeree Livmg room, dining aiea. garage Postibleloanatiumption {40.500 SLAY DRIVE What a pretty little ranch and what a pretty yard Three bedrooma. t'A beths, living room wllh fireplace, dining room, carport Take advantage of Ihit opportunity {40.500 DUPLEX

In Colonial Village with two bedrooms, bath, living room and kitchen on each side Central air Both sidea rented Poasible investment opportunity {40,100

VACATION COTTAGE

Looking lor a summer piece where you can relak? This Pan

I Pamlico Beach cottage has three bedrooms, bath. IMng room, dining area and sunporch Some lumishingi {51.500.

PIEASANTUDGE New homes to be built in Pleasant Ridge. Ayden Three bedrooms, t'y baths, living room, dining area, heat pump Cloaing costs and poinli paid {51.000

FAKLANE

Pbtatble loan ataumpiion Three bedrooms, ivy baths, toyer. living room, laimly room, caiport. nicely lendecapad {52.500 EDWARDS ACRES About a year old wRh living room, dining area, three bedrooma and 1V5 baths Paneled garage, central air with heat pump {52,500

COUNTRY

A two bedroom, two bath home in the country on SR 1755 Foyer with parquet floor, great room with Itrepiace, ceiling tan. central air Nice. {53.900

NEW HONES 10>yS APR FINANCING Yes, you can buy one of these new homes in Edwards Acres and finance them at tOVy% APR FHA or VA Amazing, because the current market rate is t2'/y% APR Three bedrooms, tvy baths, fireplace, wood deck, paneled garage Closing costs paid {54.000.

COMNERa STREET Very impressive tour bedroom, two bath two story Tradrtkjnal style home Living room with lireplace. dining area, central air. patio, garage You will like It {54.000

PRETTY RANCH With Ihree bedrooms and two beths in Ayden Living room, dmtng area, family room, bteakfasi area Two car garage, tencing. garden and grape vine {56.000

VALOANASSUWnON At 9% APR with payment ot the equity Loan balance of approximately {40,500 and payments of {421 00 Living room with fireplace, dining room, tamlly room, three bedrooms, bath, Ihree car garage {55.000.

LINDEUROAO Very private and convenieni Very nice three bedroom, bath, living room with fireplace, two car garage, tencing. Possible loan assumption and owner will consider secondary linancing. {55,000

FOURREOROOMS

A four bedroom and two bath home in Coghlll, Living room with fireplace, dining area, deck It you need a lour bedroom home, here it is and with an affordable piice {55,500

loiys APR. GREENWOOD FOREST A pretty Ihree bedroom and IVY bath, new home, ear the hospital and medical school. Livmg room with fireplace, dining area, pretty kitchen. .Sliding glass doors, wood deck, paneled garage. 10y% APR, FHA or VA. {50 400

N. EASTERN STREH

You will like the location and the home. Brick ranch nth three bedrooms and bath Living room, dining area, family room {50.500 REDUCED EDWARDS ACRES This home has everything that you fflighi want. On a cuLde-aac. three bedrooms, ivy baths, living room, dining ares, family room with wood stove {50.500

PLEASANT RIDGE

Three bedroom and two bath farmhouse style home on the edge ot Ayden Great room with fireplace, dining room, heat pump, garage, deck, tencing. Possible loan assumption (57.000

WINDY RIDGE

Two story condomrmum in a very private section Three bedrooms. 2Vy baths, living room nth liraplece. dining room, breektasi bat. extra msulellon, completely floored attic, patk) {57.500.

REDUCED RANCH HONE In Hardee Acres and a larger Hardee Acre* home Three bedrooms, two biths. living room with fireplace, dining area, icreened porch, paneled garage {57.000

UNWERSITY Thu pretty home has Ihree or lout bedrooms and two baths Living room with fireplace, dining room, lanuly room Master bedroom upstairs with bath Fencing {50.500

NEARHOSPnAL And in the country Foyer, great room, lireplace. dming room Ihree bedrooms, two baths breaklait    building {50.000

A mce area and a nice home (or your family Three bedrooma. two beths. imng room, paneled family room, carport, lood deck, almottnewlumaceandair {50.000 umvERsnY You can walk to the umversity Irom this mce two story home on FHih Street. Three bedrooms, ivy bMhs. IMng room, llreplice. dining room, toltitum. {50.900.

RED OAK

Comer lol. Ihree bedroome, two bMhs. Foyer, living room, dining room, tamlly room, double gaiage PosaiUy aome owner Unancmg. {50.900

EAST IMUGHT ROAD

A ranch home with three bedrooms end two baths, living room, lamlty room, dining area, acraaned porch, carport. {50,000.

NEARKINCALSCHOai In Horaeahoa Acras Only a law yoars old with thrae badroomt and two btlha. Foyer, groal room wllh llraplaca. dining room, caipoit (02.000

201 Commerce StreetON CALL THIS WEEKEND

Sue Castellow BrokerDuring Non-OfHce Hours Please Call 756-3082

REDUCED WESTHAVEN A ranch home in a mce area and on a comer Id Three bedrooms, two beths. foyer, living room, (ormal dining room, family room with llreplice. carport, fencing (03,900.

REDUCED IN FOREST HOLS A substantial reduction on this Forest Hills ranch home Now is the time to see III Three

CONTEMPORARY

IB. Greet room lith llreplece.

bedrooms, two beths. toyer. riving room, dining room, family room with lireplace.

carport. 107.000

RED OAK

A pjcture book and immaculate in-level on a quiet cuFde-aac Three bedrooms, two baths, living room, dining room, family room, garage, storage building {67.900.

UG REDUCTION On Bus home in Camelot Corner lot mee bedrooms, two baths, toyer with hardw d Boors, great room wllh fireplace, formal c ng room, wood deck. Jenn Aire range K {00.900

FOURREOROOMS

Four bedrooms and 2Vy baths ir ,er is. Foyer, livtng room, formal dining jO, lamily room with flrepiace {72.500

FOUR REOROOM CONDO And these are difficult to find' Foyer, living room, family room with lireplace. Th beths, lenced patk) Close to recreational areas Windy Ridge (72,500

CHERRY OAKS Two year old comer ranch home Three bedrooms, two beths, toyer. great room with fireplace, dining room, garage Shod walk to recreational area. {72.000.

REDUCED HIWAY4J SOUTH This pretty home in the country has been subsltntially reduced In price Four bedroom.v three biths. toyer, living room, dining room tamBy room, hm fireplaces, dual heat pumps carport Now only {75,000

GRVTON

Spacious and gracious Four bedrooms. Tfi biths, foyer, living room, dining room, breakfast vei. lamily room with lireplace, garage {75.000

STRATFORD

Only three years old and on a quiet slieet Convenient to everything. Two stoiT Iradiflottal with three bedrooms. Th baths, great room with flrepiace. dining room, wood deck {70.500

CHERRY OAKS Spacious ranch Three bedrooms, two baths, toyer. living room, dining room, lamily room With flriplaca. garage {71.500

dining irai, thrae bedrooma, two baths, olfice, wood deck, carport Possibl loan iisumption U2.S00.

CLURPMES A cadar ranch on a nicely wooded lot Three badroomt, two baths, foyer, living room, lonnal dining room, lamily mom with ffraplace. braaklaat ait, acreaned porch (04,500.

HOUYHRLS ESTATE Beiutilul ranch home and three mcely landscaped acres. Four bedrooms, three baths, loyer. sunken living room, formal dining room, lamily mom. solarium, two flraplaces. garage, decks. Large lenced swimming pool. Abaoiute-ly lovely

CAMELOT

A tine lot in this nice subdivision Build your new home here or purchase lor your future invettment. {0,500.

FOUR ACRES In Bethel, zoned lor business Look at this locMion! {40,000.

AYDEN-GRFTONLOT Between Ayden and Gnfldn. thia kB may be just what you are looking lor! r.OOO RED OAK LOT Specious lot with nice trees. Build your new homehere. (0.500

PINEVIOOO FOREST Choice wooded lot in Pinawood Forest. Perfect

site lor your new home {16.000 COMMERCIAL LOT This lot on Commerce Street already has the peilung tot mtlalled. (20.000

I. garage (71 DREXEU

A really great irat in which to Be. Ranch home wWi three bedrooma. two batha. toyer. living room, formal dining room, family room Mh Rtepiice, carpan. I79M CHEnVOAKS Only I law yean old. Three bedrooma. two bellia. toyer, great room whh Nrepltce. formal dkiktg room, tola ol cknel apace. Poiaibie aeiumplton. (71.000.

TUCKER ESTATES Monti ranch on a Mcaiy landscapad wooded lol. Foyer, great room whh firsplace and tkpaoad baim ceiling, dining area, three bedroomt. two bsiht. wood deck Poasible toen aaaumplion: (01,500

TUCKER ESTATES

A poeeKBe toen aaaumplion on this neat conlamporary. FeMuring and entrance foyer, tormil dining room, braeklaat area, three bedrooma. and two baths. Wcod deck, garage (S4J00

LOVaYRANCH And on a beeutiluHy iHidecKMd lot in Camelot. Three bedrooms, two betha, foyer, great room with firaptace, dining room, wood deck, garage {S4.000

COLUMBIA.N.C Greet lor reflrement or peace and quiet On Albemine Sound. Five bedrooms. 3Vy bethc. living room, dining room, family room, two fireplaces, screened porch, about t.4 acres Renovation needs to be compteled (05.000 REOUCEDdUBPMES A big reduction on this lour bedroom and three bath, two story home Only a lew years oM Foyer, living room, tormil dimng room, tamlly room with firaptace. microwive, tolar hot water, wooded lol. Storage (00.750

BROOK VALLEY Perfect location Baiutiluily wooded and secluded, but close to the club house Four bedrooms and 2Vy baths Recrealibn room or tBth bedroom Foyer, living loom. dining room, lamyy room with firepiitoe. large double garage iOO.000

REDUCED-LYNNOAU Fbur bedrooma and 2vy baths A traditional two Itory wHh loyef, living room, lormal (lining room, iamily room with llraplace. wood deck, gauge Ppaaibleaaaumptian Now (134.000 DEUGHTTUL CONlEMFORARY On a large wooded lot Four or live bedrooma and 2Vy baths. Foyer, Bving room, dming room, large family room with flrepiace. pretty kitchen, wood deck, icraened porch, garage (150.000.

LYNNDALE

Impresaive Sik bedroomt. four battis Foyer wiVi fountain, living room with fireplace, dining room, breikliel area. iamBy room rlth flrtpltce and wet bar. cbmtortable study Screanad porch, cafoort. {100,000.

BROOK GREEN Exotptionil. Fkra badroomt and thrae batflt. Foyer. Hving room, dining room, solahum. dMng area, lower level lamily room, three flreplacet. tewing and laundry room, wotkahop. caiport Many, many aitraa. (101.000

FIVEREOROOMS in Lynndals Take advantage ol thia lowered price Five bedrooma 3iy bilht.living room, spacioua dining room. tamBy room, two flrapucsi, acraanad porch, garage Additional araaa that can bs llniihed. (105.000.

GRCENVIU courmv CLUB One bf a kind. Foyer with Wt floor, lunkan Bving room, spacioua dining room. tamBy room <>Mh flriplace, lour badrooma. 3vy baths, aun pdlCh. brick pitic. girage. cna icra wooded Beautiful. (105.000NEW LISTINGS

COUNTRY

A two bedroom, two bath home in the country on SR 1755. Foyer with parquet fioor, great room with firepiace, ceiling fan, central air, nice. $53,900.

CHERRY OAKS

Only a few years old. Three bedrooms, two baths, foyer, great room with fireplace, formal dining room, lots of closet space. Possllbe assumption. $79,900.

EJ WE SELL GREENVILLE

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

SueCasteUow.BfolicrAiidliisunncc.........

. . 756-3082

Sue Henson. REALTOR.....................

........756-3375

Thdna Whttehunt. REALTOR. GRl. CRS.....

355-2996

Catherine Creech, REALTOR................

........756-6537

EvdyoDaidea, Broker........................

......758-9878

Charlene Nieleen, REALTOR, Rentab.......

..... 752-6961

Kay Difis. Broker...........................

......756-6966

Anne Dnfhis. REALTOR, GRl................

........756-2666

Nanette Whkhard. REALTOR.................

......756-7779

Jack Dnffus, REALTOR, GRl, CRS.. ........

........756-5395

Deborah Hylemoa. Broker...................

......752-1809

L

I





THE REAL ESTATE CORNER

LYNNDALE

This unique 2V2 story home offers superb living areas plus study, playroom, 2 fireplaces and screened porch. Listed at $114,900 but take a look and make an offer!

Call

ball & lane

752-0025

Estate Realty Co.

752-5058

OPEN HOUSE

Sunday 1:00 - 5:00 p.m.

Come to Whichards Beach and drop by this immaculate two bedroom trailer at Portside; just like new, completely furnished, covered deck, storage building, includes lot only $28,000. Follow Open House signs. Host: Billy Wilson.

See our other ads under classified

'cMtfinut in iki <Siatt

752-3000

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY, JULY 31

2:30-5:00 PM

MARY WARD, HOSTESS

Beautiful custom built home in quiet subdivision of Winterville. You will love the warmth of the great room with chairrail, wainscoting and fireplace. Formal dining room, 3 large bedrooms and 2 car garage on a large corner lot. $68,500.

DIRECTIONS: Go out Evans St. Ext. to Winterville. Take right on, Main take right into Ragland Acres, 2 blocks turn left to Carson Road. Turn right on Alma, home on left.

The Daily ReOector, Greenville, N .C.-Sunday, July 31,1983-D-13

NEW LISTINGS

POSSIBLE FHA loan assumption on this 3 bedroom home Fence, carport, storage building or workshop with 'h bath

Listing Broker.

J.C. Bowen 756-7426

AFFORDABLE 3

bedroom, 1 bath home. Large deck and pool. Office or fourth bedroom. Excellent condition. Lining Broker Ray Everett 758-9549

COUNTRY LIVING! 3

Bedrooms, 2 baths, carport, fenced in yard, 2 storage buildings. Hookups available for extra mobile home Listing Broker: Ray Everett 756-9549

CENTURY 21 B. FORBES

2717 W, Memorial Dr.

756-2121

Greenville's First Century 21 Location EACH OFFICE INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

INVESTMENT PROPERTIES

29.500Near E.C.U.1st Street, rental, 4 bedrooms, down paymsni of $8,000, psyments less than monthly rent. Good lonanls.

45.000Oupiax. Unhrersity area. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath each side.

49.900106 Emmas Place. Duplex, 2 bedrooms, 1 beth each side. $400 per month Income.

55.000Grimesland. Service station with 5 acras of land. TO.

55.000OUPLEX. $6,000 per year income, close to ECU, good condition, excellent return. C12.

59.500Rhrerbluff. Duplex. 1550 square feet total. 2 bedrooms each side, assumable financing, balance of $37,000.00. Age IVt years.

69.000Commercial building, Dickinson Avenue. 8040 square feet heated, large paved parking lot.

220.000Eight unit apartment building, walking distance from E.C.U.. Excellent construction, low maintenance.

209.000Homes of this caliber are not avallaMo in the GreenvHle area very often. Located around several outstanding properties at Routa 0, the home has 3800 square feel, alts on 4 acras of land with horse stable, riding area, and swimming pool. Interior features 3 bedrooms with potential for 5, formal areas, huge family room with fIreplKe, recreation room, many extras.

149.500LynndaleCedar farmhouse. 4 bedrooms, formal entry foyer, stained hardwood floors, 2 firaplaces, solar hot water heat, kitchen with Jann-AIre, many exias.

119.500Lynndale4 bedroom two story in this fine area. Formal entry foyer, living room, dining room, kitchen with many extra features, playroom lor the kids, deck, much more!

90.500Club Pines. Immaculate 4 bedrooms, 2V5 bath traditional with hardwood floors throughout the formal areas. Roomy kitchen with eating area, family room with firaplaca, and doubio garage In corner wooded loti

90.000Farmvllle. Located in one of the finest areas, this home is a delighl. Beautiful entrance foyer, formal areas, pecan panelad family room, two tireplacos, 9 toot ceWngs, and much more.

4,000Trae Tops. The country lifeetyie with cily convenience. 3 bedrooms including master suite, offlca, great room with fkeplace, formal dining room with stained hardwood floors. Almost new and immaculata. Only a transfer makes this home available.

2,500Brook Valley. Attracllva 2 story in this wonderful area. 4 bedrooms, 2Vt baths, formal entry foyer, living room and dining room.

02.500Assumabie VA loan! 2 story traditional homo locatod In Tucker Estates. 4 bedrooms, 2% baths, lovely kitchen with Jonn-AIre raitge, family room with fireplace and formal araas. Only 3 years young.

M.OOOBrook Valley. Oramatic contemporary rsnchi 3 bedrooms,

2 full baths, all formal areas, dan with fireplace, deck, playroom and beautiful fenced back yard.

10.900Paaco and quiet. Beautiful home on over an acre sized lot. 2100 square feet of heated area, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, targe famHy room with fireplace, formal areas, double garage. Low Interest financing available.

O.SOO-Over 5,000 square feel wHhin walking distance of the downtown area. ExcellenI house for fraternity.

7,500Pamlico Rhrer. Beautiful permanent home only 25 miles from Greenville! On the water with pier, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, huge family room with cathedral celling and firaplace. Deck circlas home with screened porch, full basement-garage.

12.500Rustic contemporary situated on 1 acre wooded lot. Large great room with vaulted celling and llreplacs, with loft overlooking room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge deck, garage and storage room. Just lovelyl

79.900Qlenwood. Mora lor the money! Huge 4 bedroom ranch on Iramendous corner lot. Formal areas, famHy room with fireplace, lanced back yard.

70.000Aydans linesll Over 2500 square feet of heeled area, with axtras loo numerous to mention! 4 bedrooms, 2 lirsplacas, huge recroom thats fantastic! Must seel

79.500Country living with convenience. Abundant acreage with beautiful Williamsburg, located only 5 miles from Qreenvlllo. This 4 bedroom home could bo the one! Call fordetaHs.

70.500606 Eleanor Street. Unique contemporary in Cherry Oaks.

3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, targe groat room with fiiepiaca and garage.

Shenandoah Village Townhouses $41,900

Financing AvaHsble With Low Initial Investment

AftordaUe Monthly Payments

tot Phase Sales Ara Brisk, A Few Unils Are StUI AvaHble

71.500Cherry Oaks. Sunken great room with fireplsce, feeling of space as great room opens Into kitchen with eating 'area. 3 bedrooms, including master suite. Really super interior!

79.500Camelot. Dramatic contemporary on heavily wooded, private lot. The beat Is in every room, from kitchen with built in microwaveand Jcnn-Aire, to the spacious bedrooms w|^\qdm|j|vieJB^townslairs den, or the trees outskftNplluda Boulle arage and plenty of

79.000Contemporary- Wooded, private.setting. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, high ceilings, 2 fireplaces, spacious deck under shady trees. It you are a contemporary lover, youve got to see this one!.

70.900Tucker Estates. Williamsburg! 3 bedrooms. 2 lull baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, well decorated, better hurry on this one!

70.000Cherry Oaks. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, sunken great room with old brick fireplace, slate foyer, super floor plan!

77.000Tucker Estates. Beautiful Williams|)urg!3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, huge kitchen with separate eating area, famiiy room with firepiace. E18.

76.900Grifion Country Ciub. Weil built custom home. Three bedroom brick colonial. Formal areas, large den.

74.900Once In a lifetime. Unique contemporary located within walking distance of E.C.U., yet setting in secluded area on the rhrer. Lots of glass (insulated) and deck. Very special!

73.500Camelot. Solar heat supports highlights this fine home. Formal living room, kitchen with eating area, family room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Call us for more daUils.

71.000Unhrersity area. Located In solid residential area but still dose to E.C.U. 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, formal araas, cozy family room, kitchen with many nice features, beautiful lot.

69.000Large 3 bedroom ranch located on over 13 acres of land, only 10 miles from Greenville. For country lovers, this could be the one, possible Federal Land Bank financing.

69.900Camelot. Custom built by one of the best. 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch. Great room with fireplace, modern kitchen with all the goodies. Decorated to a T.

69.900Lake Glenwood. Well kept ranch style home on large corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, kitchen with convenience and breakfast area. Double garage and patio.

69.900Stratford. Charming, convenient, privatecan you ask for more? 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with bay window, huge screened porch, much more!

67.500Westwood. Spacious 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch In mint condition. Large den with fireplace and built-in desk and bookshelves, covered patio and double garage.

OO,900Ragland Acres. Roomy 3 bedroom brick ranch in this desirable area. Modern kitchen with eating area, formal dining room, huge great room, private office and more!

60.900Rad Oak. Almost an acra lot on quiet, traffic free circle. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace.

66.000Country Living. Yet only a couple miles from Greenville city limits, or the industrial park. This Southern Colonial has the charm of another time. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace, modern kitchen.

85.900St. Andrews. Convenience is the name of the game. Close to everything. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room with fireplace, 12% assumption with low equity.

65.900Lake Ellsworth. 3 bedrooms, including gracious master suite, bright and sunny kitchen, huge great room with fireplace. Immaculate Interior.

.65,900Oellwood. Assumable loan, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal llvfng and dining rooms. Completely remodeled kitchen, family room with fireplace, rec room, new carpet throughout, huge back yard.

65.500Four bedrooms In this affordable price range. Located in Lake Ellsworth, with pool membership availabla. Interior features formal areas, family room with fireplace and roomy kitchen with separata eating area. A real bargain.

65.0009Vi% VA loan assumption. 3 bedrooms. 2Vi bath 2 story. Den with fireplace and formal areas. Beautiful landscaped yard. Lake Ellsworth.

04.900The Pines" Aydan. Nearly 2000 square feet on a beautiful wooded lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with flrepla^^lB JRlbtl a IRI^wlth fireplace. 2 car garage and^Mr! Iniiltlonl inf ailed overhead and underneath    ^

ON DUTY THIS WEEKEND MYRA DAY...................524-5004

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-528-5832. Ext. 335D

756-3500

Aldridge fir* Southerland Realtors

T

LOOKING FOR A HOME?

Dial PHONE A HOME andleamaU about our newest listinp 24 hours a day!

756-5522

65.900Camelot. Very attractive split level in this popular area. Family room with fireplace, formal areas, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Possible rent with option, also.

63.500River Hills. Charming brick ranch on heavily wooded private lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, den with fireplace. Really special with an 8% VA assumption!

63.000Westwood. Excellent all brick ratKh on well landscaped lot. All formal areas, 3 bedrooms, full baths, garage, covered patio. Owner will sell FHA, VA or conventional.

62.900Riverhills. Split level with 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, and attractively landscaped wooded lot. The fireplace-bookcase wall in the family room and the large greenhouse window in the kitchen make this home special!

62.500Forest Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2Vi baths, formal areas, family room with fireplace and wood insert. Beautiful wooded lot!

59.900Wright Roa^^ hd(!?8|ii 2 RRtk brick ranch in this convenient MBbalprral Intryioyjr, formal living room, family room WbAiA|ReUKuP

59.900Contemporary close to schools and shopping. Decks and glass galore! Huge great room, step saving kitchen, two large bedrooms, 2 full baths, loft area and full basement.

59.900Camelot. Ideal location in growing neighborhood. 3 bedroom co^lkp^lTVr^h.jpilb foyer, formal dining room, great lBMlwitl|oo<Sto4, wooded lot, wood

59.900Qrifton Country Club. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal areas, kitchen with eating area, playroom, and super lot.

59.500SingliffedK Almost now brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, family room with firaplace, fenced back yard with detached double garage. Assumable 9V>*/. financing.

58.500Cambridge. Really special 2 story In this convenient location. 3 bedrooms, 2Vj baths, formal areas, den with fireplace, deck for these delightful evenings!

58.500Red Oak. Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, super kitchen, double garage, 8% assumable financing.

57.900Rad Oak. 4 bedroom ranch like this one is hard to find. Formal entry foyer and living zoom, family room, garage with automatic door opener. Now the best part, assumable loan with low equity. Better hurry!.

57.900Eastwood4 bedrooms,(terriflc area and super price! Family room with fireplace, kitchen fit for the gourmet, fenced back yard, and quiet dead-end street!

55.900Westhaven.    dfl^tlrle fllllb3 bedrooms, formal areas, cozyTfyl kityfc wth Eating area, garage,

55.900Ayden. Choice brick ranch on large fenced, corner lot. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, large den with fireplace, kitchen with eating area. A lot for the money!

55.900Hardee Acres. FHA 245 t0%! Yes, yoB can afford it. Cute as a button, 3 bedrooms, 1V5 baths, beautiful deck and pool. Dont miss it!.

55.500Grifton Country Club area. Maintenance free 3 bedroom ranch. Formal areas, large back porch and double garage. Beautifully landscaped.

55.000Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, den with fireplace, formal living room, fenced back yard, double detached garage.

54.900Ragland Acres. Large 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet cul-de-sac. Well landscaped lawn, double carport. Interior features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen with eating area, den with fireplace. 086.

54.500Grifton Country Club. Better than new 3 bedroom, 2 bath home at the Country Club. Features beautiful great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace, spacious dining area, and inviting deck. M9.

54.900Warren Street. Quiet area within walking distance of university. Large ranch with maintenance free siding. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, huge kitchen with eating area, great room with fireplace.

53.500Charming all brick ranch In Pleasant Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room with fireplace, kitchen with many bullt-ins. Almost new!

52.500Singletree. 3 bedroom brick ranch, immaculate interior. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, central air, family room with fireplace, fenced yard. Low equity on assumption.

49.900Edwards Acres. 3 bedroom brick ranch on quiet circle. Almost new, with family room, and roomy kitchen with separate breakfast area. Assumable financing available with affordable monthly payments.

49.900Grifton. Lovely brick ranch, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, large kitchen, 3 bedrooms, move-in condition. Mtt.

49.500University area. 2 story frame house with the Southern Colonial accent. 3 bedrooms, 2V: baths, family room with fireplace, charming home.

48.900Eastwood area. 3 bedrooms, great room, kitchen with eating area, excellent condition, central air.

47.500Grimesland. 3 bedrooms, bath, family room, kitchen with eating area. Only minutes from Greenville.

47.500Grifton. 3 b^wdlf^ fcathBffkh. Living room with fireplace, emy^ Arllitiol ergy efficient. Will

45.900Biltmore. Duplex less than block from campus. 2 bedrooms each side, recently remodeled. Rent $500.00 a month.

45.000Belvoir Area, tastefully decorated 3 bedrooms. 2 bath ranch. Great room with fireplace, kitchen with many extras.

45.000Super nice all brick 3 bedroom home. Living room with fireplace, pine paneled den. garage and workshop. J33.

42.900Shenandoah. Townhouse with 2 bedrooms. V/i baths and fireplace. Soft earth tone decor with great decorating possibilities. Perfect for single or couples.

44.500Rock Springs. This bungalow located on a quiet, shaded, dead-end circle, could be the one you've dreamed about. 3 bedrooms, family room with fireplace, sun room overlooking beautiful back yard. Better hurry!!

42.500Colonial Heights. Cute 3 bedroom brick ranch. 1 bath, kitchen with eating area, shady, fenced back yard. C1.

42.500Farmvllle. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull baths, formal living room, family room with fireplace, carport, assumable financing.

42.500Colonial Heights. Excellent beginner home that features 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, eat-ln kitchen, fully carpeted, central air and woodstove.

42.5004 bedroom, 2 bath cottage style house in Meadowbrook area. Family room with fireplace, kitchen with eating area, detached storage building and workshop.

39.900Vary attractive brick ranch in the Stokes area. 2 bedrooms, with master suite and 2 lull baths. Great room, kitchen with eating area. Possible Farmers Home financing! Low payments.

39.500Jefferson Drive. Assumable 10% tinancing. payments like rent! 3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen with eating area, tastefully decorated interior, detached garage.

39.000E.C.U. Area. 3 bedrooms, den with fireplace, formal dining room. Could be starter home, or investment properly.

36.500CharmingCute bungalow just outside the city limits. 3 bedrooms, family room, kitchen with eating area. Pine paneling, pecan trees, excellent condition.

35.500Colonial Heights. 3 bedroom bungalow for the young couple. Family room, kitchen with eating area, beautiful wooded lot.

35.000University area. Cute 3 bedroom, 1 bath bungalow. Walking distance from campus. Perfect for rental or first home.

27.900MacGregor Downs. Over 3 acre wooded building site in this fine area.

27.500New Listing. Ayden. 3 bedroom. 1 bath older home on large lot in good location. Room lor expansion by finishing two upstairs bedrooms.

26.500W. 13th Street. First home buyers, or investment. 3 bedrooms, large kitchen and family room. Has been rented lor $250 per month.

10.500 Mobile home and lot.

$49,500Ayden. This three bedroom, 2 bath ranch features a large country kitchen for entertaining your family and friends. Call about the 8% VA loan assumption available on this well kept home.

$42,900Wildwood Villas. 2 bedroom, 116 bath townhousa close to the University. Full basement can be finished to give almost 1500 square feet of living area. Excellent condition with central air and fenced patio.

OPEN HOUSES TODAY

2-5 P.M.

500 Riverhills Drive Located on a well landscaped wooded lot. this 3 bedroom. 2 bath home has all formal areas plus a large kitchen and family room with woodstove. The i% loan with a balance of approximately $41.000 is assumable. $63,500. YOUR HOSTESS: Alita Carroll.

1313 Rondo Drive

Tucker Estates. Williamsburg style In this desirable area. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, great room with lireplace, professionally designed kitchen with many extras, charming interior. $78.900. YOUR HOSTESS: Sue Dunn.

317 St. Andrews Drive

Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with great room and heat pump. Aeaumable 12% FHA loan assumption with a very low equity. $65,900. YOUR HOST: Dick Evans.

PwMonlsow.......

OlchEvaH...........

Jeaa Hopper.........

SeeDiuui............

J

7S6-0942    JuncWyilck............................

758-1119    Myra Day...........................

756-9142    Ray Spears.............................

355-2588    AlHeCarroU............................

I

756-5716    Jeff Aldridge...............................355-6700

524-5004    Mike Aldridge..............................756 7871

758-4362    Don SoutherUnd...........................756 5260

756-8278





D-14-Tbe Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C -Sunday, July M. HP

CfOBSWord By Eugtne Sxffer

ACROSS 1I dont give -!

S Actws comments 12 Less fresh UUnit

14 Nabokov novel

15 Seer

II Ron Howard role 17 Astronaut Slayton

19 Author Kesey

20 Part of speech

22 Flying org. 24-demer 27 Become pale 29 Single 32 Height in-creasers 35Jai-31 Noted canal 37 Spigot 38-Kapital 40 Begone!

42 Sandys bark

44 Bakery output

41 From-to riches

50 Took an apartment

52 Egg dish

54 Actor Peter

55 Sununer temperature

51 Pique

57 Gluts

DOWN

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2 Painter Salvador

3 Outsider

4 Catch 5Geta

diploma I Frenzied

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8 Actress Lupino

9 Cultivating tool

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30 Pasture

31 Sixth sense

33 By way of

34 Ocean 39 Bit of

time 41 British

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

CRYPTOQUIP    7-30

JMSUHLTF SYFV CMJYLHVT JMIMVHYE

FUYV CYL CQE HE VKT FQE: VKT IMUT.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip: OUR TOUCHING WEDDING IN WARSAW QRCUS HAD THREE RINGS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: V equals T.

The Cryptoquip is a sinqile substitution dpber in which each letter u^ staixis for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single kttors, abort words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

C 1W> King FmIutm Syndtutt. Inc.

Pets Are Pampered As Owners Travel

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The dog is part of the family. But sometimes when vacation time comes around, that part of the family gets left out.

Richard and Kal Sand-ers-Greenberg ask why not give the pampered ^ a vacation too? It takes away the guilt of leaving Fido if hes being well cared for and is having fun.

The Sanders-Greenbergs have started a pet boarding service, Pets Are Inn, that arranges lodging for pets in the homes of other animal lovers while their owners are away.

Pets Are Inn has about ISO caretakers scattered throughout the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Most live in suburban homes with fenced yards, but they have some apartment dwellers who take in parakeets, gerbils and indoor cats. For large dogs, theres a nearby farm.

If the dog is used to sleeping in bed with its owner, the Sanders-Greenbergs find a caretaker that doesnt mind having a canine bedmate.

The house is really open to the animal. Thats part of our pampering service. It helps ease the animal through the difficult transition process, Sanders-Greenbergsaid.

The pet owner is asked several questions about the animals habits: Is Fido allowed on the furniture? Is he used to a fenced-in back yard? Then Pets Are Inn matches the animal with the caretaker they feel is best for that pet.

The caretakers have all been carefully screened.

Weve visited all the

homes and personally interviewed all the pecle. Weve taken quite a bit of trouble to make sure we have topnotch people that we can trust, Sanders-Greenberg said.

The Sanders-Greenbergs -who began the business May 1 - will hrrange boarding for most kinds of pets, but they say the biggest demand is vacation homes for dogs and cats.

There are more dogs than just about anything else. Your dogs are the animals that seem to have the hardest time. Dogs really need that human contact, that attention. They just thrive on it, Sanders-Greenberg said.

These dogs get a lot of attention, he added.

A contract is drawn up outlining the responsibilities of the caretaker, stipulating that the animal wUi not be neglected, will have fresh food and water and will be walked on a leash for a certain amount of time each day.

Any specific requiremmts for an individual pet - such as daily brushing and combing for long-haired dogs -also are included in the contract.

The caretakers have access to 12 veterinarians who are on call around the clock in case a pet gets sick. And Pets Are Inn carries $300,000 in liability insurance in case of an accident.

Pets Are Inn picks up the animal at the owners home and returns the animal to the home following the vacation. For pe^le coming into the Twin Cities from out-of-town for the weekend, the Sanders-Greenbergs will pick up their pet at the hotel.

The Answers

WORLDSOOPE: 1-Syria; 2-Menadiem Begin; 3-MkkDe Eut; 4-whalingopmtioof; S-roae NEWSNAMErBjoniBorg

MATCHW0RD6; 1-c; 74;    4-a;    Sh

NEWSPICTURE: General Wojdecb Janizdaki PEOPLEWATCH/SPORTUGHT; 1-Yuri

race; S-Nattonal Collegiate Athletic Aaiod

3-; 4^;

Life As It's Lived

nver tt Elviss middle name 43 Memorization 45-fixe

47 On the sheltered side

48 Obtains

49 Piggery 51 Witticism 53 Actress

Farrow

r'TTTiir

By GAIL MICHAELS BeforelhadZach^.I used to swear that no child in this worid or any other was a match for Megs demon energies. But I take it all back. Compared to Zachary, Meg at age 3 was sluggish.

Or maybe Im the one thats sluggish. It certainly is true that I dont have the energy I did when Meg was smaller. Thi I could play witdi or dragon for hours with no more than an occasional Excedrin fix and a mandatory nap for both of us. I even managed to cook a decent supper once in a while and to carry on an intdligi-tde conversatkm with Philip for half an hour at a time before my eyeballs began to roll backwaid in my head.

Phillip now gets 15 minutes a day if hes lucky, Zadiary

gets 15 minutes and two stories each time he promises to sleep, and M^ gets half an hour to 45 minutes. (She hasnt lost her talent for fmiagling a di^r^rtkmate share of the attmiti(m.)

The rest of my time I spend repairing the damage from Zacharys forays into forbi(klen areas, fending off surprise attacks fnn my lisping monscer, and resting.

Phillq) has suggested that if I were more vigilant, perhaps I wouldnt have to devote so much time to disaster duty. Admittedly, with my waning energies I am not as vigilant as I was with Meg. Ulan again, Meg occasionally asked permission to paint the cabinets, skate in the cooking oil, or fix her own meals. Zachary never asks for anything.

This includes activities which,    altbou^ not obviously    disasterous, have

always been strictly monitored in our household; televiskm is a prime example. 1 cannot count the times that    Ive stumbled

downstairs in the early morning hours to find Zachary with his feet propped up on the arm of the sofa, chewing a loUtpop stick and watching the Today Show.

I wish that youd stop plundering my kitchen, is my inevitable reaction.

I    needed some

breakfast," be explains.

And 1 dont like you watching television like this.

But I couldnt find any cartoons.

I usually turn it off, but afternoon TV is a different story. Whereas I used to sit with Meg wboi she watched her allotted hour of PBS so that I could contribute to the learning experience, I sneak off for a few precious minutes of readii^ while Zachary vmws unsupervised.

I had convinced myself that no real harm would come of. this, but Mm evidMtly was not so sure, rilling in fw her lazy motho', she marched into my room the other day with Zachary struggling in her grip and said sternly, Do you know dmt this boy has been watching?

Mr. Rogers?

Correct. And do you know what that man said right there on the air?

Na

He said there was no t-<H)-t-hf-a-i-r-y!

Thats terrible.

Yes, it is, and what I want to know is do you really want your son to bear things like that? Hiere is no tdling what that man is going to say next.

I agree that Mr. Ri^rs remarics were uncalled fw, but perhaps Zachary will forget, 1 said, trying to soothe hmr.

This boy! Oh, mother. She sighed and shook her head. Why do you always underestimate him? >

I think its some kind of defense mechanism.

Some 800 million pecle -almost one of every five people on Earth - are Moslems. Most Middle Eart-em countries, such as Efi Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Libya, and Yemen, are heavily Moslem, yet the countries with the most Moslems are outside the Mideast. They are bidooesia (135 million), Bangladedi (80 million), Pakistan (75 million), India (60 million), the Soviet Union (45 milUoo), and China (30 million). There are 2 million Moslems in the United States.

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Beautiful People PlayThe Hampt

QjrJAYBOmN    a^w^n^irin^    box    pattern.    I    think    hell    arrogant,    but    thats    what    I    The Movies    expect such hones-

In    1975,    Chicago television    critical discord between^skel    ***    movies. That    may be    think.    Steady    viewers of    At    ty,    and Roger    Ebert    and    Gene

?*    *    and the bespectacled Ebert (the

reviewer to ever win **    * PuUtxer Prize). "We had met

tnred    two    kx^ nev^pers    in 1969, Ebert recalls, when

rr    Gone became the TCbunes

5*    Titic; we did our first tele-

^ the Tnl^, talking and vision pilot six years later, but leering atmt nw films, we did not know each other T^yes later, tte static weU. With a knowing laugh,

Siskeladds,Wedidh5veatti-c* other.

bom ^leak Previews, the though. Ebert rejoins We pr^am that liaa^ the dm into certainly did! We attended

sereeningB together and nodded extent ttot theycarned t^ to each other in the elevator. popul^y to another vehicto. (We also knocked each others Tte    prpg^    At    stories to our editors, Siskel

The Movies is just endii its reports)

first year, and num^ sur. Theres as much good- natured banter between the two ugh^-rated mow offered to critics offHUimera as there is on 1^1 stabons during the 1982- the screen, but Siskel maintains *i 1 w 1 I. theres Still an underlying rival-^ thats inescapable. Weve the team (Ihe ^tt and Wf of thought about what would hap-pen to the show if one of 5 IT    indtate    croaked," he says, and what

if?"    '    ^oW be lost is that subtext -

they ^ area t sold on their actually, almost a primary text ^ TV mccess. According to _ of real competition. Ive got-i!ii ^    ^    I    ta say, as friendly as we are

toward each other, we sbll go

iT u : . r- L iciievi un UK iwo men wno

7^1 i    bis and Siskels

and thats what I do for moft of former seats on the PBS series my life, six^ys a week. People Sneak Previews, Jeffrey are actuaUy watehi^ itwo Lyons and Neal GaWer Just ne^pmnn taft ttoniM, about anyone who wants to th^dt^aboutMysub^*-, know what I think about me recognizes, tlmi|li, and my show, and them and ^tifsnec^tonMvent their show, does know. On the he and Eb^ ^a other hand, hed be baffled if he on a parti^ j^ ture. At a certain pomt, it does guys think about anything! become unproducfive. We've Siskel is in virtual agreemmt j^ourpattff downtoami I dont find them interesting as nte.an^.half or so, and wfH individual critics, noTas a team, he states. "As I watch boot a Wgger film, our show from time to time, does seem to be some-mate tte switch from PBS to thing when you put us together. S3^^ were now mart With those two guys, though, I able to do what we want, and in dont find any chemistry ^propo^mwant todpii Ebert and Siskel both eirioy We dm t feel cheated for tme guiding viewers toward , smaU films that mig^t.be Ttat has ai^^ t^ to largely ignored otherwise; coodud occmiopal half-^ recent examples indnde ftn-devoted to a single theme.i0t der Mercies, Local Hero Gregorys Girl and Valjw of, san ^ is wjhro Girl. Ebert claims, I M generally been the first wltb want to tell people what they wUlorwotftlttef^batlciffi^ ly want to teU them what h dangertea^lantl^. wo liked. H rve found somethhi| were able to point oot the cwf that might be a little ov^

ies. A lot of critics dm t go to abare that    cmcurs:

see everething; ^ e t^no- Thats part of why Pm in the Job, frankly. Fm vere comfort-while Oew ^ I see JnM aboM abte with the ^

tthats aronBd.    : am might go to see my setec-

their acqmiatance yom, rather than follow the

Siskel plan to keep guaranteeing them nothing less.

wwcucn

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look is taken at the vast area of roUiog open plains in the middle oftheU5.(lhr.)

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O Lom Star Two brothers (Alan Antry, Lewis Smith) who are modmi-day Texas Rugers confront a sinister rancher (Chuck Connors) attanpting to take over a nei^bors ml-ricfa

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(SHOW) Morie Star Wars" (1977) Mark Hamill Harrison Ford.

(ESPN) SarflBg Duke Kahanamoku Championships

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(HBO) Morie Hanky Panky (1912) Gene Wilder, Gilda Radn. An innocent architect who was framed for a murdm-and a woman whose bother committed suicide under mysterious drcumstances are thrown togetho'in a dangerous game (rf intrigue. PG (1 hr., 45 min.) (NKK) Tke Ikrd Eye Under The Mountain A mystical stranger saves infant twins from certain death. (Part 1) MIO NakviUe AUve! Guests: Steve Wariner, Zella Lehr, Randy Parton, Danny Davis, Nashville Brass. (1 hr.)

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(ESPN) HaO Of Fame IndBctioo OwcmonieB Major League Baseball honors Juan Marichal, Walter Alston, Brooks Robinson, and George KeU as the 1983 inductees into the Hall Of Fame (from Coopmtown, N.Y.). (R) (2 hrs.,30min.)

(NICI) The Third Eye Under The Mountain

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O e Morie Assault Force (1980) Roger Motare, James Mason.

( Mere Griffin Guests. Shirley Maclaine, Ronnie Milsap, attorney Lucinda W. Penningtoii, a visit to La Toque Restaumat with Lynn Redgrave. (1 hr.)

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QJimBakker

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Prinecm DiaM Lady Di. the young woman destined to be the next queen of England, is prbiled.(lhr.)

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Twilight Zone (ESPN)SportsCeBter (USA)Ovation

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(SHOW) The Lom Sttf Bm A GriD One Step At A Tiroe Gub owner Buddy Tyler is forced by his fnancial problems to borrow money aiod a mysterious fire engulfs the club (1 hr., 30 min.)

IMie Larry JoMs

Gharicf Young Rerival

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(ESPN) Auto Racing Formula I British Grand ix (from Silverstone, England). (R) (1 hr., 30 min.)

12:5^0penUp 12:MO John Osteen OGospdlfinistries

(HBO) Morie Cat People U981) Nastassia Kinski, Malcolm McDoweU. (2 hrs.)

1M5^ For (kr Tlmoo Whats Wrong With This Rctwe?: Gen-trificrik The problems created by the more by aShwnt dti-aens to Bostons newly soptetF caled South End. whkh is resulting in the displacemeot d former tenams, are examined 12:450 Morie Death Squad (1973) Robert Forster, Mdvyn Douglas. (1 hr., 15 mio.)

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2450 Morie Stallioo Road (1947) Ronald Reagan, Alexis Smith. (1 hr, 50 min.)

(HBO) Movie Penitentiary H" S4l0Eycaat Kcaeth Copeland (ESPN) Old Tl^ Baseball Cracker Jack Classic (from Washington, DC.). (R) (2 hrs.) 348 (SHOW) Movie "Lunch Wagon" (1981) Candy Moore, Chuck McCann. (1 hr., 30 min.) 44I(HB0) Morie The Pirate Movie" (1982) Kristy McNicbol. Christopher Atkins.

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(SHOW) Marie (Iloa) This ConU Be Tke NighT (lff7)(Tke) Three Little Words (1950)(We* "The Gre* Carmo (IffOXTki) Tke Toast Of New Orleaas" (195f)(Fri) "Her Twelve Men (1155)

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(HBO) Howard Bihm: Tte bride Story (FH)

(aA)Seaya lP-ff0OEdr Of Night OSSakOfTkeChatey OaChitfaPby eSaffordAadSoa 9 Ba Hadm (Mm) Gods News Bebad Ike News (We* (SPN) Pfctne Of Health    

(ESPN) Vick Vaca* L* (I) (Tk* Pby Yow Best Golf (R) (Wed) Sportswoman (Tha) bstrvctkn* Series (Fri) 1MS(ESPN) tarinelhnl Scrim (PW)

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rowed to become Wbrid dmnrfew a a fe*iwwM>i to tbek frith bat he wooid owe diy re9a bk foaL As a beqaeff colw cammeatator faripeedway erook far CBS Spots. ESPN. etc Bn ha beea able to earily ouke the cnawar ialo acthb. ARhoa^ "OHV* ha been caaccied, I M9eit yoa write to Bnn m c/o NBC-TV, 9 W. Almneda Amsae. Bah^ Ch., nss.

DEAR MKHELE: GaaU yee pro ae MW faa ew Jebi Skaa. whe pkys Me nk * Haekk Pah* m tScnr* Hapi^ Plaa kl ae where I afptt wike a hta. MKBELLE LEWS. TRMITY. NXL TO MKBELLE IN TRINlTy: Johns fiist ippearaKe oo GH n Jaaoaiy UlS, maihed hk trieririoB debaL OripaaBy risned to appe m o*y five epkodes, aaiHen regona wa

fwnwndoas aad hk character wa    a g wwitiiviiM

role. Bon a Loi Anfric* eigfateen^rev-old Joha k the Hdv* chiU of B1 aod Loretta Stamn. k pao h*h icfaoai JUbs ioterest a morie emerged, and it is a paaioa he coothraa to parae. RTith hk two bat bteads be fanned a rock hand, now aOed Destby. wfaicfa performs at sack local spok a Dk-neyiairi, Kiwtts Berry Fann airi tlw (been Mary, with Jcbn on diunn. White thriOed with hk profasrioaal sncceas, Stana stiO finds hk peatest satkfactka dow to home. He padiy endura

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(NXX) Yoa Caal Do tut On TeievWon (USA) Radio IIN 7:lsaGraaAcra 7:NeDoteGjHis OOTkTacDoth OPiLMapsiae CE1II*A*S*H OAbce a^amilyPend a Tkreei Company aBuneylfilkr a E^ker John Bertolacd a North Carolina People (SPN)InBght (ESPN) Inside BaaebaO (HBO)Pra|gieRocfc (NICK) The Adren tares Of Black Beaity (USA) Sports Look 7:35 a Andy Griffith Mteisn 0 0 6 Baseball Regional coverage of New York Yankees at Chicago White Sox or Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia Phillies. (3 hrs.)

.( The Saint O a Love, Sidney O a Sqiare Pejp a Camp Meeting, USA

a Swival Penguin Sununer" David Niven narrates a close-up look at the penguins of the Falkland Islands the coast of South America, focusing on the active period every winter when the penguins breed. (R)n(l hr.)

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(NICK) The Tomorrow People

The Doomsday Men When the Doomsday hten have taken over the spactship and are threatening the world with noclear power, it faUs to John to think of a last remedy. (Part 3)

(USA) Tennis Volvo International Men's finab (from North Conway. N.H.) (4 hrs.)

I:BS(B Morie Shenandoah (1965) Jama Stewart. Doug McClure.

1:300 O Fanly Ttes After their home b burglarixed, Steven and E3yse change their liberal views on gun control and boy a weapon. (R)

O O Braumgan 4 Mapa After the unezpec^ death of hb wife, an advertismg executive (Don Murray) tria to raise hb

three stepchildren with the help of the oldest girl (Dana Hill). (SPN)MoMywdrks (NICK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain A srk attack embroils the twins in the life or death struggle between Mr Jona andtheenemy. (Part3) 0:000 700 Chrii 3) Mcrv (tiffin OO Movie "Mirror. Mirror" (1979) Lee Meriwether. Loretta Swit,

O O Tnckeri Witch Amanda s psychic powers are pitted against those of another clairvoyant (Paul Hecht) who robbed a botel of millioa in cash and gems. (R)(lhr.)

S JimBakker

O Great Performances

Brideshead Revbited: Sebastian Against The World Sebastian continua on hb path of self-destruction, finally choosing to leave Oxford rather than submit to strict supervbion. (Part4)(R)n(ihr.)

(SPN) Tekffince UAA. Fiction. The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 5) / Night Music: Serge Lama / Tele-Storia: Horsa Of The Sun (Part 4) / Artview: Frances National Heritage / "In Performance; Monsieur Schumann (4 hn.) (ESPN) Auto Radng ASA Milwaukee 200 (R) (2 hrs.) (NICK) Artist And Athkte: The PvsMt Of Perfectk The par-alleb of artistic and athtetic endeavor are explored against the backdrop of the Lake Placid Winter Olympia in 1980. (1 hr., 5min.)

IMOfDNcwi O 0 Cagney 4 Lacey Mary Beths husband Harvey (John Karlen) suspects that the fatal fall of a high-rise construction worker was a murder instead of an accident. (R)(lhr.)

0 Lester Sumrall Teaching 0 Kennedy Center Tonight (SHOW) Bizarre John Byner shows you things stranger than truth, larger than life, and zan-ier than anything youve ever seen,n

(HBO)^ Movie "The Soldier" (1982) Ken Wahl, William Prince. A ruthless CIA agent b

(SHOW) Movie The Bat Uttle Wborritouse In Texas (1982) (ESPN) NPL's Grestest Mwnewti More Than A Game (1 hr.)

(HBO) Movie Firefox (1982) Clint Eastwood, Freddie Jona. A U.S. pilot goa bebind Russian' lina to steal a supersonic fighting (dane. PG (2 hrs., 15 min.)

On Family Tia, Alex Keaton (Michael J. Fox, I.) becoma a Big Brother to a 10-year-old Vietnamae boy (Eugene Akutogawa), who he tries to school in his ultraconservative American ways. I Gotta Be Ming is rebroadcast Monday, Aug. 1 on NBC.

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sent to neutralize a Soviet-backed terrorist plot to hold the Mideast hostage with nuclear explosiva. R (1 hr., 30 mm.) 10:0S(NICK) The Creatkn Of A Ballet 'The Overgrown Path This ballet by Jiri Kylian. artb-tic director of the Netherlamb Dance Theater, b filmed in rehearsal starting with its initial staga to actual performance. (1 hr., 20 nun.)

10:150 News KhSOO Star Time ffiJertySavdle (SHOW) Movie Hit" (1973) Billy Dee Williams, Richard Pryor 11:08000000 News (SOddCoupte S Introdnctk To life S Monty Pythons Flying Orcus > (ESPN)SportsCenta 11:05 0 All In The Family 11:15 (ESPN) PKA FuU Contact Karate

11:25 (NICK) First Editioo Guats critic Clifton Fadiman, Bob Gottlieb, editor-in-cbief of Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., publbh-ers.

IIJOO Another Life OOOABCNewsNightline 3)Ko)ak

O O The Best Of Carson Host Johnny Carson. Giwsts: Steve Lawrence. Maureen Murphy. (R)(lhr.)

O H*rt To Hart Jennifer's research on an article about prostitution involva her and Jonathan in the dangerous world of hardcore nightlife. (R) 0 Charlies Angels 0 The Blackwood Brotben 0 Doctor In The House (HW) Howard Hughes: The Inside Story Home movia, still photos, letters, documente from previously secret fila and film clips provide the substance for thb invatigation of the life of the reclusive billionaire. (1 hr.) 11:350 The Catlins 1100 O Boms And Allen (USA) Hot Spots BHLT 4 Friends" (from The Coffee Pot in Roanoke, Va.).(l hr.)

12:050 Movie "There s A Girl In My Soup" (1970) Peter Sellers. Goldie Hawn. (2 hrs.)

12:300 Jack Benny O To Be Announced O More Real People (SNews

o O Late Night With David Letterman Guests; actor-screenwriter-director Carl Reiner, actor-comedian John Cleese. (R)(l hr.)

0 Carter Country Starsky And Hutch (HBO) Movie "Lookin' To Get Out" (1982) Jon Voight, Ann-Margret.d hr. 45 min.)

12:400 Movie Cover Girls (1977) Cornelia Sharpe. Jayne Kennedy. (1 hr., 20 min.)

11:45 (ESPN) The World Sportsman British Cliff Climbing" Guat: Susan Oliver. (R) (1 hr.) 11:50 (SHOW) Movie Zapped!" (1982) Scott Baio, Willie Aama. (1 hr., 35 min.)

1:0001 Married Joan O Rt Patrol ONews

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1:300 My Uttle Margie

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O O NBC News Overnight Missioo: ImpoBsiUe (SWf) Movie Barefoot Boy " (USA) Bowling "PBA Doubles Classic" (from Las Vegas. Nev ) (R)(2hn.)

1:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:000 Bachelor Father ONews

( Private Secretary O CBS News Nightwatch 0 JimBakker (ESPN) Inside Baseball (R) 2:050 Movie The Hoodlum Priat " (1961) Don Murray. Cin-di Wood (2 hrs. 5 min.)

2:20(HBO) Movie "Zapped!" (1982) Scott Baio. Willie Aama. (1 hr. 35 min.)

2:300 Life Of Riky O AO In The Family O ONews

(SHOW) Movie Beach Girb ' (1982) Debra Blee. Val Kline (1 hr. 30 min.)

(ESPN) Auto Racing ASA

Milwaukee 200 (R) (2 hrs , 30 min.)

2:50 (SPN) Movie Billy The Kid's Law And Order" (1942) Buster Crabbe. (1 hr. 10 min.)

3:000 700 Qub Featured find out how a childs drowning and dramatic return to life altered the liva of hb family. (1 hr. 30 min.)

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9:00    9:30    10:00    10:30

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Post Time Scuba Work)

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Movie: Firelox"

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Movie: "The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas"

Tom People

Against Odds

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Biffiards

Store's 11B) AnHtvsriarY

Joseph Papp Presents

Movie: "OklyKnigM's Work"

OonOrysdale SportsLook

1-000 Tic Tael OOOOOOlONews

S Pirate Adventares ODoctorWho

(SPN) Microwam Are For

I Barry liaoilow: In The Rotnid

(ESPN) Inside BaaebaU(R) (HBO) Movie Force 10 From Navarone(1978)

(USA) Cartoons 1-OS I Dream Of Jeannie ISO O Love That Bob O0ABCNew8n

Andy Griffith ^ OONBCNews OOCBSNews Good News America Wildlife Safari (SPN) Name Of Game Is Golf

TJOODobieGillis OO Tic The Dough QPJLMagaxiiie (BM*A*S*H OAlice S Family Fend O Three's Company Barney Miller SOral Roberts SnisOUHome

(9*N) Jimmy Hootoo Outdoors (ESPN) Tm Rank Bining (NICK) Adventures Of

(NKX) Iut WUl They Think Of Nest?

6:350 Father Knows Best 7:000 Bums And Allen OGood Times OABCNewsg d) Threes Com^y OOTheJeffersons O Joker's WUd O Entertainment Tonight Sanford And Son Jewish Vmce Broadcast S MacNeil / Lehrer Report (SPN) Money, Money, Money (ESPN)Sporttnter (NICK) KidsWrites (USA) Radio 1990 7:05 Green Acres

Black Beantv (USA) Sports Look 7:35 Andy Griffith 1:0001^

O O Half-Hour Comedy Hour A fast-paced show of comedy sketches and blackouts is hosted by Thom Sharp and Arsenio Hall. dUV Saint O O The A-Team O On The Road With Oaries Kuralt Camp Meeting, U^

Nova Fat Chance In A Thin World Some surprising answers to the question many Americans ask themselves every day ~ "Why cant I lose weight?" - are revealed. (R) n (1 hr.)    ^

(SPN) Post Time (SHOW) Movie Firefox (1982) int Eastwood. Freddie Jones.

A U S. pilot goes behind Russian lines to steal a supersonic fighting plane PG (2 hrs., 15 min.

(HBO) Movie Tlie Best Uttle Whorehouse In Texas (1982) Burt Reynolds, Dolly Parton. A flamboyant, ninckraking TV personality tries to close down a popular bawdy house. R (1 hr., 55 min.)

(NKI) The Tomorrow People

The Doonosday Men Stephen tracks down the kidnapped Douglas McLelland, overcomes the kidnappers and transports Paul and Douglas back to the lab. (Part 4)

(USA) Movie Dirty Knights Work" (1976) John Mills, Donald Pleasence. The son of a murdered 20th-century knight enlists the aid of an eccentric, retired Scotland Yard detective. (2 hrs.)

1-65 Kidnapped The swashbuckling advoiture classic by Robert Lewis Stevenson about a man who is kidnapped and sold into slavery aboard a ship bound for Virginia. (Part 1) (2 hrs., 20 min.)

1:300 O Joanie Loves Cha-

chi

O Our Times With BUI Moyen Contemporary issues that affect the daily lives <rf Americans to different d^rees are examined by correspondent Moyers.

(SPN) Scuba World (NICK) Against The Odds Mead And Pasteur Margaret Mead and Louis Pasteur each led the

world to a new appreciation oi the diversity of life on Earth -Pasteur with hb studies of microscopic life and maos need to control it and Mead through her studies of exotic people and cultures.

6M 766 CUb O O B IWcsh Company (!) Merv Griffin O B Remingtoo Steele O 6 Movie The Promise (1979) Kathleen Quinlan, Stephen CoUins. After an engaged couple's serious car accident, the young maos mother agrees to pay for his fiancees ptastic suigery if she vows never to see him agun. (2 hrs.)

BJfanBalto

B Lifeline Dr. William Watson MiH-gan Dr. Morgan, a dedicated country surgeon specializing in chUd care, treats three chUdren at Memorial Mission Hospital in Asheville, N.C. (Part l)(lhr.)

(SPN) Telefraace U.SJL Cine-Club: Mais On Et Done Ornicar

/ Fictioo: The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 5) / Night Music. Serge Lama (4 hrs.) (NICK) Joseph Papp Preset^ Sticks And Bones This Tony Award-winning play starring Cliff DeYoung, Anne Jackstm and Tom Aldrlge examines the complex relationship between a blind, embittered Vietnam veteran and his famUy. (1 hr., 50 min.)

9:966 B 6 Reggie (Premiere) An average American (Richard Mulligan) tries to cope with the various pressures of his personal and professional lives by escaping into his own world of fantasies. Q 10MB B G Barbara Walters Summer ^ledal The reporter-interviewer talks with Goldie Hawn, Eddie Murphy and WUlie Nelson in encores of previously aired segments.gj(l hr.)

O O St Elsewhere LeMer Snmrall Teaching BAscentOfMan (ESPN)Billianls(R)

(HBO) The Comedy Stores 11th Anniversary The West Coast nightclubs anniversary is cele-

TV Chatter

By Polly Vonetes If you ALABAMA fans have ever wondered what the individual m^nbers of that famous group do in thor qure time, let me bring you up to date: fEDDY has just opened a dog hotel for the town of R Payne, Ala., so that owners can leave their pets when th^ need a sitter; JEFF has opened a recording studio (which is turning into a pnrfitable business) and MARK HERNDON is now a licensed pilot.

brated with performances by Richard Pryor, Robin Williams, Jiouny Walker and Sandra Bernhard, as well as up and coming young comedians, taped at several Comedy Store sites. (Ihr.)

(USA)DooDryadalesBaseban 16M(8HOW) linde The Betsy (1978) Laurence Olivier, Robert Duvall. Based on the novel by Harold Robbins. A powerful and relentless Detroit auto tycoon trgs a daredevil racing star into his company to dev^ a revolutionary new vehicle. R (2 hrs., 5 min.)

IbMBNews 16-J6B Star Time BJdtaOuieen

16:15 Baseball Atlanta Braves at San Francisco Giants (3 hrs.) 16M(NICK) Great Writen, Poets Featured: Walt Whitmans A SongOfMyseH. llMBBGBOOeNews (SOddConle BTheLaBayes Monty Pythons Flying Circus

(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) Hot Spots Cafe Ole (from 23 East in Philadelphia, Pa.). (Ihr.)

11:15 (ESPN) HaU Of Fame Induction Ceremonies Major League Baseball honors Juan Marichal, Walter Alston, Brooks Robinson, and George Kell as the 1983

inductees into the Hall Of Fame (from Coqierstown, N.Y.). (R) (2 hrs.)

11J5(NICK) NUrtcap Topic: new forms in the Broadway musical. Featured: top- contemporary composers Marvin Hamlisch and Stephen Schwartz talk about their careos and love of music.

11MB Another Life BBGABCNewsNightline (1^

G B Tbnight Host: Johnny Carson.

Q Qnincy Charlies Angeb BUfeAnew B Doctor In The Ronse 1106 B Bum And Alien BJimBakker (USA) Radio 1996 (R)

11190 Jack Benny BToBeAimonHed 0 Mor Real People (DNews

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O 0 Archie Bunkers Place 0 Camp Meeting, U,SJL 0 The Magic Of Dance (SPN) American Baby Featured: the ninth month; pre^red childbirth.

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(ESPN) Top Rank Boxing Melvin Paul / Bobby Johnson 10-round Lightweight bout (live from Atlantic City, N.J.). (2 hrs., 30 min.)

(NICK) Mary Stuart A modem version of Donizettis opera based on a fictional dramatic encounter between Mary Stuart, doomed Queen of Scotland, and her rival. Queen Elizabeth. (2 hrs., 23 min.)

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0 LeMer SumraU Teaching 0 Guttering Crowns Edward Fox narrates this special which brings the viewer into intimate contact with members of royal families. (1 hr.)

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(USA) Countdown To 84; Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates.

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0 John Ankerberg (SHOW) Thats Stupid! Comedian Gallagher spoofs the silly thin^ of the world in a series of comic shorts.

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0Chariies Angels 0 Sound Of The ^irit 0 Doctor In The House (SHOW) Movie Southern Comfort (1981) Keith Carradine, Powers Boothe. A group of National Guardsmen on weekend maneuvers in a Louisiana bayou spark a small guerrilla war with a community of backwoods Cajuns. R (1 hr., 40 min.) (ESPN)&)ortsCenter (HBO) Jtovie Firefox (1982) Gint Eastwood, Freddie Jones. A U S. pilot goes behind Russian lines to steal a supersonic fighting plane. PG (2 hrs., 15 min.)

11:35 0TlieCatlins

11:45 (ESPN) Auto Racing "ASA Milwaukee 200 (R) (2 hrs.)

13:000 Bums And Allen CSKojak 0 JimBakker (USA) Radio 1990(B)

12:050 Movie Adventures Of Marco Polo (1938) Gary Cooper, Basil Rathbone. (2 hrs., 10 min.)

12:300 Jack Benny O To Be Announced 0 More Real People O O Late Night With David Letterman Guests: Brooke Shields, movie producer Hal Roach of Our Gang and Laurel Hardy fame. (R) (1 hr.)

0 Carter Country

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1:0001 Married Joan O Heres Lucy Od)News 0 Eyewitness News 0Gene Scott (SPN) First Nighter (USA) Don Drysdales Baseball 1:20 (SHOW) Movie "Summer Lovers- (1982) Daryl Hannah, Peter Gallagher. (1 hr., 40 min.) 1:300 My UtUe Margie ONews

O O NBC News Ovonight 0 Mission; Impossible (SPN) Movie -The Siege (No Date) Fernando Rey. (1 hr., 15 min.)

(USA) Countdown To 84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and previews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates. (R)

1:35 (HBO) Movie The House Where Evil Dwells (1982) Edward Albert, Susan George. (1 hr., 30 min.)

1:45 (ESPN) SportsCenter 2:00 OBacbelw Father ONews

(S Private Secretary O CBS News Nigbtwatch 0 JimBakker

(ESPN) Hydroplane Racing

Champion Spark Plug Regatta (from Miami, Fla ). (R) (i

hr.)

(USA) PBA Bowling Aqua Fest / Mr. Gattis Open (from Austin Tex). (R) (2 hrs.)

2:150 Movie Little Caesar (1930) Edward G. Robinson, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (1 hr., 45 min.)

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2:45 (SPN) Movie Texas Buddies (1932) Bob Steele.

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(ESPN) Auto Radng SCCA Super Vees (from Clevelantf;' Ohio)(R)(lhr.)

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Camp Meeting, UBA S Sneak Preriewi Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons host an informative look at what's new at the movies.

(SPN) TraveOeri World (SHOW) Wkats Up America! Featured; the current controversy over videocassettes of films; male models; New York City's newest melting pot community, Elmhurst.

(ESPN) PGA GoH PGA Championships First round (from the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif). (R) (3 hrs.) (NICK) The Tomorrow People Secret Weapon Colonel Masters has offered Stefdioi a job at the Research Establishment, but the Tomorrow People have not bargained for the Colonels mind-reading assistant. Miss Conway. (Part 2)

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t:MO O 0 Too doK For Comfdrt Henry has a hard tne explaining to Muriel why a beautiful young woman (Cisae Cameron) is in their bedroom, wearing only his robe. (R)

0 WQd America Mountain Monarchs A kwk is taken at the special adaiAatkms that allow al[ne animals to live in the severe high mountain ecosystem. (R)

(NICK) Agninri He Oddi Lenin And Darwin Evolution and communism are two ideas men have fought over and debated for a century - Charles Darwin forced man to consider his past and future as a link in phyricai evolution and Vladimir Lenin put Karl Maras theory into practice.

9:000 700 Onb Featured: Dr. and Mrs. Ed Wheat share the importance of intimacy and pleasure for a successful marriage. (1 hr., 30 min.)

000 Rcgffr Reggies fantasies about his secretary Joan (Jean Smart) reach thdr peak when the two of them end up alone at his house.

3) Merv Griffin G&ests; Christie Brinkley, Marilyn Michaels, Luis Lima, Dr. James Curran, authors Neal A. Peirce and Jer-

SHagstrom. (1 hr.)

O Gimme A BreakTlffoagh a strange series of events, Nell and Grandpa (John Hcqrt) are mistaken for bank robbers. (R) O 0 Stansa * Sbnso The Simons and an insurance investigator (Anne Schedeen) search for a fortune in diamonds stiden from A.J. b> parachuting thieves during a plane flight (R) (Ihr.)

0JbnBakker 0 Diamonds In The Sky

(SHOW) Movie Outland (1911) Sean Connery, Peter Boyle.

(HBO) Mofrie Force 10 From Navarone (1978) Robert Shaw, Harrison Ford.

(NKX) Perfonncn Showcase: Bntas Trio, Op. 17 The claaiie Brahms Trio, Op. 07 is performed by legoidary violinist Isaac Stern, pUnist Engene Istomin and cellist Leonard Rose.

frNO O 0 tt Thiua TWO The punk-oriented lead ringer (Chip Van Eman) of Aadys band falls for Lisa, then asks her to leave home and tour with him. (R)

0 0 A GMs Life The acting profenion poaes numerous ckaL lenges to an ambitkns young woman (Karen Vakatine) striv-iag to make her mark ia show buainem. -

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O O HUl Street Blaes In the pilot episode. Prank and Henry try to nepitiate with two street-gang members who take hostages after a bungled robb7 attempt. (R)(l hr.)

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^IStaisky And Hutch 12:45 (HBO) Gabe Kaplan As Ghroncbo Kaplan portrays the legendary comedian in a one--man show taped at the Smothers -Theatre of P^iperdine University in Malihu, California. (1 hr., 30 min.)

14001 Married Joan O The Real McCoys 0E)tewitiiemNews 0JewU Voice Broadcast

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1145(NKX) PetfOrmers Showcase; b Rehearsal With Ashley Patnam American soprano Ashley Putnam of the New York City Opera takes the viewer into the challenging (^lera world while rehearsing.

1145 (NKX) Nighhap Topic; animation. Featured: animators Ralph Bakshi, Larry Elin and Don Bluth discuss the revived art of animation.

11:900 Another Life O e 0 ABC News Nightline (1^

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(SHOW) Morie Double Exposure (1982) Michael Callan, Joanna Pettet (1 hr., 35 min.) dBSPN) Anto Racto Indoor Midgets; Heroes vs. Outlaws (from Pontiac, Mich.). (R) (1 hr.) 2:15(HBO).Movie Cat People (1901) Nastassia Kinski, Malcolm McDowell. (2 hrs.)

2:300 Lib Of Riley OAlIbTlwFaii%

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IfavaetorsActioBLiiie jPGAGolf (NICID The Advcatares Of Black Banty (U8A)SHrtsPitibe 7J90Aaiy Griffith

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OO The Dnkes Of Hassard eCampMeetinU.SA 0 WaahinitooWeek In Review (SPN) Home Based Boiiieas (SHOW) Movie Arthur (1981) 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 working girl. PG (1 hr., 53 min.)

(NHX) The Tomorrow People

Secret Weapon The Tomorrow People give Professor Cawston a homing device so they can trace his whereabouts when he goes to the Research Establishment. (Part 3)

(USA) Countdown To '84: Sarajevo And Los Angeles Highlights and lureviews of worldwide pre-Olympic competitions, profiles of Olympic participants, and world record updates. (R)

IKlSffi Movie Ten Tall Men (1951) Burt Lancaster, Gilbert Roland. When Legionnaires try to stop a Riff atUck on Tarta, a sergeant captures a young girl and faUs in love with her. (2 hrs.)

1:30 O Swisi Family Robinson O 0 Too Good To Be Tne Right teen-age boys cause havoc when they are accepted at a traditionally all-girl school.

0 WaU Itreet Week Our Word Is Our Bond Guest host; Carter Randall. Guest: Peter Gordon, president, T. Rowe Price Tax-Free Income Fund.

(SPN) First Nighter (NKK) The Third Eye Under The Mountain Rachael* and Theo find themselves in grave danger with their knowledge of the aliens' secret labyrinth. (Part 5)

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0JlmBakker 0VictotyAtSea (SPN) Tekfrance UB.A. Cine-Club: Mais Ou Et Done Ornicar / Fiction: The Gentlemen Of Bois-Dore (Part 5) / Night Music: Serge Lama (4 hrs.) (HBO) Movie Body Heat (1981) William Hurt, KathlM Turner. A smalltime Florida lawyer is persuaded by his lover to murder her husband. R (1 hr., 55 min.)

(NICK) Manon Anthony Dowell and Jennifer Penney star in this ballet choreographed by Ken-, neth MacMillan to music arranged from the Jules Massenet score. (2 hrs., 10 min.) (USA) Boxing Live from Tampa, Fla. (2 hrs.)

9:30 World War I (ESPN) CFL Football Saskatchewan Roughriders at Edmonton Eskimos (3 hrs.)

10:00 O O 0 ABC News Cloieap (Ihr.)

(BNewi

O O Eischied O 0 PaIcod Crest

artist Howard Finster. (1 hr.)

O Movie Fighting Mad (1976) Peter Fonda, Lynn Lowry. A mao pits himsdf against a corrupt corporation when his fathers ranch is threatened by a strip-mining operation. (R) (2 hrs., 15 min.)

O MiMcO^ News Top Country Hits Of The Year Hosts Ray Stevens and Tammy Wynette honor the 15 top songs of 1982 as selected by the readers of the nations oldest coun^ music publication, Music City News. Featured performers include David Frizrell, Sylvia and Con-way^^(2 hrs.)

0 Doctor In The Honee 12MO Buns And ADen O09ABCNewsNiglitliiie 0AnBakkcr

(SHOW) Movie Firefox (1982) Clint Eastwood, Freddie Jones. (2 hrs., 15 min.)

13180 Jack Beaqr (BFM-TV

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(ESPN) BUUards Willie Mosconi vs. Jimmy Caras (R)(l hr.) (HBO) Movie The Deer Hunter (1978) Robert De Niro, Meryl Streep. (3 bn., 3 min.)

118 01 Married Joan OHeresLncy O RockNRon Tonite 0SUaskyAndHutdi 0Zob Levitt (SPN)NikkiHaMmn 1:300 My little Margie ONews

OEyewltneeiNews O Heritage U.SA Update (SPN) Movie Heros In Blue (No Date) Dick Purcell. (Ihr., 15 min.)

(ESPN) PGA Golf PGA Championships Second round (from the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif.). (R) (3 hrs.)

1:330 Night Tracks 3100 Bachelor Father OO NBC News Overnight 0 Evening At The Improv OJimBakker 3:030 Night Tracks (SHOW) Movie Can You Keep It Up For A Week? (No Date) Jeremy Bullock, Richard OSullivan. (1 hr., 35 min.)

3:300 Life Of Riley ONews

(B Movie Born Losers (1967) Tom Laughlin, Elizabeth James. (2 hrs.)

. 0 Europe: The Mighty DCOt

(SHOW) Movie Foul Play (1978) Goldie Hawn, Chevy Chase. A librarian enlists the aid of an inept police detective after she becomes involved in a bizarre series of murders and kidnapping attempts. PG (1 hr., 50 min.) lO150News 10:300 Star Time Ben Haden 10:350 Baseball AtlanU Braves at Los Angeles Dodgers (3 hrs.) ll:OOOeOOOO0News (B Odd Couple 0 K-Dimension Magazine 0 Monty Pythons Flying Circtts

(HBO) BiUy Joel In Concert Joel performs many of his chart-topping hits, from Just Hie Way You Are to Its Sll Rock N Roll To Me in his first televised concert, taped at the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island. (1 hr., 5 min.)

(USA) Night Flight 11:10 (NICK) Great Painters Fea-tui^: Czanne.

11J3 (NICK) First Edition Guest: Dr. Lewis Thomas, author of The Youngest Science.

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Monciay-Fridav Daytime Cont

(ConttBaed From Page 4) looo Your Dollars Worth (Moo) Sewing Etc. (Tue) Make It Microwave (Wed) My Little Margie (Thu) American Baby (Fri)

OO0OneLifeToUve OO Another Worid O How Cui I Live? (Mon) Good News (Tue) Westbrook Hospital (Wed) Jerry Falwell (Thu) Jimmy Swaggart (Fri)

(SPN) New Antiques (Moo) Sewing With Nancy (Wed) American Baby (Thu)

(STOW) Aerebidse (Wed, Fri) (ESPN) Celebrity GoH And Tennis (Wed)

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(NICK) Todays Special (USA) Are Yon Anybody?

2.-03 (STOW) Aerebidse (Moo) (STOW) Movie (Tue) The Toast Of New Orleans (1950)

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(S Insight (Fri)

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(SHOW) Pygmalioo (Moo) (SHOW) Movie (Wed) The Pirate Movie (1982XThu) My Champion (1981X1^) "Foul Play (1978)

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(HBO) Gibe Kaplan As Groncho (Thu)

(NKK) Dnstys Treehouse (Moo-Thn)

(IKA) Yon: Magazine For Women

135 0 Woman Watch (Thu) 3:000 700 Qub O O 0 General Hospital (S Popeye And Friends O O Personal & Confidential QQGdding Light 0 PTL Seminar

0 Teaching Students ffith Special Needs (Mon. Wed) Programming For The Gifted (Tue, Thu) Over Easy (Fri)

(ESPN) Australian Rules Football (Moo)

(HBO) Howard Hughes: The Inside Story (Mon) P.T. Barnum And His Human Oddities (Tue) (NICK) What Will They Think Of Next?

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3:050 Funtime (Mon, Tne, Hm, Fri) Baseball (Wed)

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4:000 Another Life 03) Tom And Jerry

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(HBO) Dr. SeenThe Cat In The Hat (Wed) Video Jukebox (Tbu) (NICK) The Adventures Of Black Beauty (USA) AUve And Well'

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In Los Angeles, this year's Woman of the Year," Laerea BaeaU, whom Broadwayited refer to as Jaws, is gett^ a reputation for being beloved while shes in the Westwood Marquis Hotel. 1 wldn't believe it, so I asked her about it. She answered, All I ever hear about is how tough I am. I'm so used to being rapped that I cant

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East Mdc; llM Mil. kl around ki tfwa IbqF^ foiag to be fibabg CB Ik MdBwkb of New ToriL Bteod on tbe Badge starts this month with Tsay La Biaaca in a lead and Gcrn* Caseey in a cameo... KathariM Hepharas Tbe Ultimate Skntioo of Grace is Kates personal baby. ^ has been trying to get it into prodnctioa for ld years. Nick Naite coatars.

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Sports This Week

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a^irtSiMiSchedoled: Gold iCip Bfimttcd Hjdroplane Race (froa > Bvmville, m.); PKA CkunpioBikip Karate (from AtlaMk Otj, NJ); Sor-Thral of the Fittest (womens dimb ttd rappd, white water swim and raft, from Son River, Orel(lir..miB.)

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MONDAYS SPORTS AUGUST 1,11

SMO Baseball Regional cover-w of New York Yankees at (Sicago White Sox or Chica^ Cobs at Philadelphia Phillies. (3 hn.)

FRIDAYS SPORTS

AUGUST l,lia

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IIMO PGA Championship Highli^ts of the rst two roimds (from the Riviera Golf Gob in Los Angeles, Calif .)

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"Bouchard Ready For Talladega 500

Yood have to look hard to find a^NASCAR Wlvton Cup driver who UDdcntaadi the ups aod downs of the famed 2.66iile Alabama Intenatknal Motor fipeedway better than Ron Bouchard of FitcUnirg, Mass.

In IMl, en route to winning Chaunpioa Spmfc Phig rookie of the Year on the Winston Ciq> circuit, Bouchard captured a thrilling victory in the Talladega 500, schednled tUs year to air on CBS, Sunday, July 31. He slipped past vetenuw Dan^ Waltripand Terry Laboote to win by less than a noae.

In inz, Bouchards Buick suffered a broken valve and finished 34th. The team completed only 47 laps.

We've had aome awfully good times tH Talldega and weve had some bad luok, too, Bouchard said. I just fiipire thats all part

of NASCAR Winston Cup National racing. If you run long enough, good things are gmng to happen to you and bad things are going to happen to you. When you learn from the bad things, noore good things are going to happen"

Bouchard says hes learned a lot from his four races at the Alabama Motor ^[leedway Talladega is a special track, and ^ve got to race it like it's special. There tnn a lot of great, exciting races there long before 1 started running it. This year, I hope I'm one of those guys causing that excitement.

In only four races, Bouchard has distinguished himself as the 21st most successful Winston Cup driver at the speedway in terms

 Golf Dominates

/HRBORNE Sunday Afternoon

Through most of the week at Despite his reservations, the 1982 Canadian Open Cham- Lietxke captured his second Ca-pionship, Bruce Lietzke kept in- nadian Open title and the 376,500 sisting that he did not expect to first prize. Lietzke will return to win. Even though he led by two the Glen Abbey GC this week to strokes going into the final round defend his title. CBS will broad-at the Glen Abbey Golf Club, he cast the final round of the event still said, be really didn't expect on Sunday, July 31 (4:304 p.m.).

With

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When his game is right, Leitzke is one of the finest golfers on the Tour. This season, although he hasn't finished better than a tie for third in the Tournament Players Championship, Leitzke has won ovw 3110,000. Since 1977, be has avmged over 3200,000 in winnings annually.

Its hard to believe, but there was a time when Leitzke put his golf clubs away and wasnt certain if he wanted to continue playing. It was the spring of 1973, shortly after he left the University of Houston.

"I had played so much through high school and cdlege that I was tired of it," he said. Oh. I suppose, in the badi of my mind, I knew I would get back to it. Six months later, he did and turned professional in 1974. He qualified for the Tour in the , 5Brihg,qfW5. ......

Saturday Evening

kMQ Coikfe FoothaO tt: A SeaM Of SarpifR Andy Roo-oey basts this special featuriog highlights of tte many crazy pUyS made this past season IMeSoWhenSpottanan 0 Baseball Re^ooal coverage of New York Mets at Giicago Cohs or Montreal Expos at Pittsborgh Pirates. (3 hrs.)

2M O Greatest Sports Lefeads SMO Wide WoiU Of Sports Scheduled: U5. Long Coarse Swimming Championships (from Clovis, Calif.X U4. Diving Champioiiships (live from Bartlesville, Okla.). (1 hr., 30 min.) 4M0 PGA (lanyphmslup Third round (live from the Riviera Country Club in Los Angdes, Calif.) (2 hn, 30 min.)

540 0 TTaek AM PieU Preview A look at the upcoming World Champiooships of Track and Field in Helsinki, Finland. (1 hr.) 11:30 OWtesthng

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of money winnings 366,490 to date.

Once you learn the track, Talladep can be very good to a driver, Bouchard said. Look at all the drivers who have won thoe more than once (Buddy Baka, 4 victories; Waltrip, 4; Bobby Allison, 3; David Pearson. 3; Richard Petty, 2). Shoot, there is a regular Winston Cup racing hall of fame right there. That alone should tell you a lot abmit

L-N0 The Moaroes S)KuHFh O000News

0 The Blackwuod Brothers 0SBeekPreviewi (8PN)HoQaM On Satellite (ESPN) Play Your BeM Golf (R) (NKX) Reoie Jacfceons World Of Sports (USA)Ool M60Wrestlia| fcMO0NBCNews OCBSNews 0Reflectkw 0BreuthOfUfe 0 The Poaddon Files (ESPN) NPLs Greatest

As for the July 31 Talladega 500, Bouchard hasnt counted himself out of being the second repeat winner of the event Waltrip won last year, snapping a string of 13 consecutive races without a repeat winner.

(HBO) Movie The Music Man (1962)

(USA) You: Mapshw For Wom-

7M0ISpy

00HeoHew

ONewi

d) Tines Oompaey ODeaoeFdmr

OSoUdGoU 0Writliii

0 GodhNews Behind The

(8PN)JepulM

(SHOW) Movie The Bad News

Bears(1976)

(NKX) Spedal Delivery (USA) Sporta Probe 7JIO Mon Real People (M*A*S'H OAmerkaiTopTen 0RockChBcb (ESPN)SportaCenter (USA) Sporta Look IMO Movie The Fabulous Texan (1947) WUd Bill EUiott, John Cant>U. An honest cowboy turns thief when Texas is overrun ^ carpetbaggers. (2 hrs.)

0 O 0 Love Boat The crew of the Pacific Princess stages a gala musical-variety show aboard a cruise boanied by Gophers mother (Ethel Merman), Docs former mother-in-law (Ann Miller), Isaacs mother (Della Reese) and Julies aunt (Carol Guuming). (R) n (2 hrs.) d) Movie Emergoi^ Room" (1983) Sarah Purcell, LeVar Burton. The relationships and day-UHiay situations of people involved in the life-and-death environment of a hospital emergency room are drymatized. (2 hn.)

O 0 DifiYent Strokes The chool toogh guy (Andrew Clay) f(NTes Willis to teach him how to charm giris. (R)n O Walt Dimey Sky Trap After being forced to aid a gang of heroin smugglers, a young sailplane pilot (Marc McClure) engages in aerial combat agateJtfli ctfnlnals. (Part 2)

(R)(l hr.)

0 The Lon Rawb Parade Of Stare Lou Rawls hosts this star-studded annual spectacular benefiting the United Negro Col-Fund; featured performers include Stevie Wonder, Paul McCartney, Roberta Flack, Lionel Rkfaie, Susan Anton, Thelma Houston, Sister Sledge, Taste Of Hooey and Debbie Allen. (3 hrs.)

0 Nature Of Thii^

(USA) Ovatioa The Day After Trinity. J. Robert Oppenbeimer And The Atomic Bomb / Full Circle" (2 hn.) ia0 Movie Good Guys Wear Black (1978) ChiKk Norris, James Francbcus. A Vietnam veto-an launches his own investigation into the mysterious deaths of the other soldiers who were in his military unit. (2 hrs.) IJ80 0 Silver Spoons Kate unexpectedly joins a ski trip that Rkfcy had planned on taking with just his father. (R)

0 Jack Van Impe (ESPN) Women's Billiards World Invitational 7-Ball Championship-Match 1(R) (NICK) IV Third Eye Under The MounUin A shark attack embroils the twins in the life or death struggle between Mr. Jones and the enemy. (Part 3) 9:90 O 0 QviDcy After suffering extreme emotional trauma as the result of being mugged, ()uincy tries to bring his assailants to justice. (R)(l hr.)

O Movie Manbeast! Myth Or Monster (1978) DocumenUry. Visions of the legendary Abominable Snowman, also known as Bigfoot in the American Northwest, are simulated at the locations of reported sightings. (2 hrs.)

0JifflBakker 0 A Horseman Riding By (SPN) Tdefrance U4A. Cordon Bleu Cooking; The Grapes Of Passion / Theater Gala: The Deceased; The Medusa Banquet; Dont Run Around Naked / In Performance: First Class

With Marcel Marceau (3 hrs.) (SHOW) Movie Night Shift (1982) Henry Winkler, Michael Keaton. Two nighttime morgue attendants become love brokers for a group of bookers who have lost their pimp. R (1 hr., 45 min.)

(ESPN) PKA FaU Contact Karate

(raO) Movie Firefox (1982) Clint Eastwood. Freddie Jones. A US. pilot goes behind Russian (Continued On Pas4^2)

New

Medicare

Supplement

Protection!

Do you want help paying every Medicare approv* ed bMpital & doctor bill? pr more information call...

David L. Harrell The Hanell Agency

103 Oakmont Drive Greenville. N.C. 919-355-6157

Ci

Georgia International Life

iniunng your U'orfd

A Bertage of Phe Pristi

IFI

MORGAN

MINTCnS, Inc.

color process priming technical manuals nevisletters brochures programs \ post rs V    I'oo.s

granhif CeS'gn

adverrtsms soe^ a ' .Oa 75J 5151





Saturday Evening Continued

tiVtt

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bKS t SMt a MKMrip 0^

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A prcseaUlioi f VOUun Shakespeares best kaom comedy of    to**        a

spl^ New Yeck Skakopcare Festival prodaetioii.(J bra.)

IMieSaiMAaMrim aeePMMptoMAm cessfol man (Sainny Davis Jr.) tries to correct the wtoags he did to otben ia yn foae by. and a dyiag woman (Joan Prather) vohateers for a doctors (Michael Lemback) Man* espeiWiit(R)n(lbr.) CSHns ^    _

m Bikan ItaM * The

Hostc Rick Ihmh aai lime Thoeoas. Gmslc The Bm Boys.

(R)(lbr.,9lBaig ODmeefmar 0 Maeto Cat O'Niae Tbik (im) Karl MaMea. James Praociscis. A inardar-at-large is parsaed by a bitod man and a newspaper reporter. (1 hfs.)

hr.MM

(3)lWi

Kkk-

1.-MWW) Maria Ssribem Comfort (IMI) Kritk Carra-

DOBbcv (im) es.BeaJobmoa.The

SKimninirimi TheAveain (USA) ABM Btohcack PN>

IMSe BasehaB AtlaaU Bnves at Los Angeles Dodfers (3 In.) IftMDPafsn**

IL-M Rock ChMh PMdatam OOOO0Nms (SOMOoopia

laThaeh 0'

Warren Ories,!_____

life of Joba DOhacer. the Botori-ons gai^ster, is traced from bis prnoB breakoat to bii esecatioa

atheFBL(2bn..SSiiiiB.) LoweULmMm TtmRomtoi

(SHOW) Maria ffit (1173) Billy Dec Williams, Rkhwd Pryor. A black federal ageat bitter over his danghters death sets ori to trap the gang of Preach drag smngi^ be behevcs to be responsible. H(3 birs.. 15 min.) (BBO) Maria Heavy Metal (INI) Animated. Voices of John Candy. John Vernoa. A mysteri-ons green orb of fremendons power has a strange effect on a variety of characters in differ-ert times and idaces ia the m-vene.R(lbr.,Mmin.)

dine, Powen Boofte. a br., 40 mia.)

tNOABbThaPHi^y

(SPII)_ _

(19) Tea Ritter. Am ben (1

hr.,15miB.) (ESFlDSportoOmtor IrWe Maria The Ooa b Dead^ (1173) Anthony QaiBB, PMeric Forrest (1 hr., 55 mia.)

MMTMbi tJOeONaws d) Marie Xkt Carter (1971) Michael Caine, Britt Ektoad. (8 bn)

IrMdOO) Maria The Masic Man (1913) Robert Preston,

SbirieyJoaes.

(B8PN) CPL Saakatchewm

Parihall at

JTwfli^iom (SHOW) Biane John Byner shows yon things stranger than trath, largCT than life, and saltier than anything yoive ever

18M0 Bayoad Tha Hartaoa: UB.

ar

/ImmMagaitor

OM Of Ifiridght Special JtaaBakhar

seean

(EBPfifSportaOeatar (HBO) Over Here, Mr. Prcsidaat This situtioe comedy takes a bumorooa look at the Washing-

(SPN)LooUiBari (ESPN) FGA Golf PGA Cham-ptontoba 'fldrd romd (from the Rivien Conrtry Ctob in Pacific Palisades, Calif.). (3 bn)

torn

ress corps.

(USA)NghtW 11:15000 ABC Newt llJieSalMGoH VrtolllBg

(S) Maria Baona Sera, Mn CampbeU (1919) Gina LoUobri-^fida. Trily Savalas. An Italian womans scheme backfires when three veterans altear, each wanting to see the dangh-ter hes supported for 20 yean (2hn)

O Sotorday Nght Live

lb0SaalTraiB 0 Movie Sssasa (1973) Strother Martin, Dirk Benedict (2 bn)

(iA)NiMn^(

3:1I(SPN) Marie Hanting Tron-ble (No Date) Richard Tal-madge.(l hr.. Smb.)

3d>l0IB.Da< ^ OAflkThePMQy 0PbHArai

SriKSHOW) Maria Breaking Away (1979) Denato Clristo-l*er, Paul Dooley. (1 to., 49

1.)

l.-M0ThaAaaaricaaTrafl

OBboay/JetOelebrilyShow-

0CtoiatopherClaaHp OSolMGoH 0PTLClBb(apaBbh) (SPN)JoeBBrtoaJaB 1BS0NM Tracks > (HBO) Marie Looter (INI) Albert Finney, James Coburn. (1

It

0(_______

0D.JamBabaBO^

-M0 Nght Tracks 4J9(SPN) Moris *Xaw Of The Rio Grande (No Date) Bob Custer, Bastar Crabbe. (1 to., 19

4iM0RaaaBagtoy (S) Marie Calli

Drummond (INI)__________

geon, Margaret Leighton. (1 to., Mmin.)

Calling Bulldog (INI) Walter Pid-

Monday-Friday Daytime Cont.

(CoattaoedFromPagaT)

O Hens Lacy 0WoadcrWomm 0 Sipa Of The nmea (Wed) How Can I Live? (Fri) MPN)PaalRyaa (BOW)PiaeaO(Crie(MoB) (SHOW) Marie (The) Oliver Twvt (1975)(Fri) Btock Beau-(1971)

)Tha Crier Of Primihkii I My Mother Was Nevto A Kiddbu)

(BPN) CFL PerihaB (Mn) Sportswoman (Wed)

Magle y M

SlarTM News 0Dark Shadows OAady Griffith 00lWpiesOoart 0Readtag Rainbow (8PN) Pafik Oefmder (Mob-IM)

(SHOW) Moria (Wed) Challenge To Be Free" (1975)

Ltoa Mteaa The Baad-

IB Asaeriea

(ESpSS^Soccer (Wed)

(HBO) Movie (Mon) Six Pack (1992)

Video JriHbn (The)

Rock (Fri)

Uvewfre 5J5 0 Starcade (Mog) BewHcbed (TBe.Thn.Pri)

(HBO) 1 Fragglel (MC^L

PragM Rock rbitTrhe Astro

(Wed) Uttle Orbit,

Dog (Thu) Natimal Georaphic

Special (Fri)

(fe*)1

) The Tomorrow Pnopto 4jt0 The Addaam Phadly (Moa. The. Tha. Fri)

Ml 0 Chata Reaeilm

O Peoples CiNrt 0TheJeffcraoos

0 IN Huatky Street

mr -    -

llfatorl (ffN) Life 0 Rilsy (Moa-led) Telephone Auction (Tha) Looking East (Fri)

^W) Movie (Mon) My ChampnodNl)

(ESPN) Vkh Vaeaat Let (R) (WtoO

(HBO) Bostod By Shari

(MCI) The TIM ^ (Moa^ Against ikt

Odde

wed, Fri)

(The. Thu)

MI0 Gomer Pyle (Mte The; Th^Pri)

100 Lets MrimAOeri VMmRaalPeapla 0GeoMrPyle

There wUI be Mg driap ea NECs "AiMther WeriT Thnraday. Aag 4. Two ceaples, (top) Saady Cary (played by Chris Rich) aad Blaiae Ewtog (Lura Rbleae) tad (bettoai) Mac Cary (Deatfam Watoea) aad Rachd Davie (Vietaria Wyadham) arc Mag the kaet

(aaiiM iwgw atftdhi^wi uo nan

oPf^an's

VE\S V.EAR

Hart

Schaffner

&Marx.

CUSTOM TAILORING SERVICE

The Tari Schaflnet Matx ciibiom taiioring service make'? it ea?y to. meet your lequiremeut^ for a special fit or distincti'ce taste's. The result i.'- a suit or sport coat tliat is uniquely vf)ur'> Simpk come into our '-tore and select your prefened style and faknc. ()ui tailor'^ take your exact mea-urements. ilie't Hart '^diaffner Maix's yxpert ciaft^men tador hie garment to voiir specifr'ations, l.ofik to the Mart Sc!...iH;icr -v Maix co-tom tai- .ring -e'Mce t-i

:t- <inci -DoiT

dVlctJd: d- LOll

At All Of Our Fine Stores

oPi^ans

MENS '.VE.AR

Dow.mow Cjtct'iwillt'

( iiroliud l.dsl .Mdll Gri't'milli' Idrrv'town Mall KocUv Mooot

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-gr

The Saving Place*

SALE ENDS TUES., AUGUST 2,1983

I    0    0    0    0    91

K mart COUPONS ARE NOT REQUIRED AT K mart STORES IN ILLINOIS

2(i-ia    ,    .j    ,    j





-

' ' i

ssaK

4-pc. Mac Setting Of Corf

Cholee of decor-comptenv elle Set Includes plate. I

DUTCH BOY

CANON

..4,

.Jf V

Save *6

Gallon

_    Our    Reg.    16.97

iniiiNtfloMf AerylleM Hoiiw Faint    Canon Inappy 20" 39i|

'Our Bair ooiyHDn flot tnhh In whilo and custom tints.    Aut^atlc exposure, film

i Om lAf7. HflOffMf* Oioti fkMM Yt Trim Fohit. Ool. lO.f?    Pocol* Vi" Camera Strap WIfl

r T    V    lottaflMnotlnoMtO

HOMELITE

SUPER

COUPE

FOLDING PHOTO / SPECIAL

36-xp. Slide mm. 2.28

Sole Price

1.48

LOnlar 2"tol| Df.Frinlt tUdeOrMoviomoairine

IS!?!!'20-exp. slides oi\ mndSoveOnTlietfKllel. smm movie fllryt. ?

Per ROB

^fcn0$ave-Oii

/3X4OOfXoC(Wln0ai*

K mart IS A PROUD SPONSOR OF BOTH THE WINTER AND SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES ON ABC TV.

iy

jS.SLAi* * I #1*.

f 1981 ABC Inc. Star In Motion" 1980 LA Olympic Committee

3A<3.5*tl1    40-12)





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SHARP

wat. ComfoftabW.

nfciiiii rtirtu

'ffiariSMsrssK

Our $369

.    Take-wth

Price

;/ Shoip^ teouMi* Mlerewave WHh Auto-Toueh"*

^ i t Aiulo^ouoh'*cofitroltrtthprogrcmnrTKiblecookinQ C ond elictronfc timer. PkJt automatic food rotation.

AMMWOM^riniaieM Wm

UghtKItWithlO" Schoolhoui

se Globe... 9.6

Our Regular Low Prices

On Al li*iip Oeeoralor IHfidt Or Mini Mindt

Ultro-mm 4 viny! rolkip bnete m 72" tength. 1" aluminum louver bNnds^ odMsfable to 64" length.

84i77sa,

Inergvsavlng 52*lnch Hugger** Ceiling Fan

Styled with 4 light oak blades, and reversible 3-speed motor. Adapts for use with light kit.* Save.

'light kit not included

NELSONIC

YriiitWieiiitiy

nMMlO

tram the tolowtno Atari- 2600 corthclgei; AiiwoidtiM. Yar't M, MhiVe Command, Star RolderatM. BerzerktM. spoce invoderttM, le Game Cotrtdges mutt be purchaied with the 2600 VCS coniote.

64.97

mAii

Alart^ 2600 Video Computer System^**

Features 2 joysticks and Combat Game Prograrrf *. X  ........7    46;    VMeo    Oome    Center    For Atari Or Mottel Oamet, 19.97

"OMiergameiioldtepatotely

VAGABOND

OFF!

OFF!

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

^ ^Nolseieif Ftfet

uAdercobinet. ^ compartment.

ATARI

ATARI

Sale Price

.97 24.88

AANNfoldt *Cortridge

66 video games for one to two players.

Ooloxkin Cortridge

Exciting two-way fight for one or two players.

Saving Place*

Enjoy A Taste-tempting PHaburgerWlth Crisp, Golden French Fries!

Avolable Only In Stows tWIlh Coteteita

S-124-S)

V





cz>

Coupon Good Ju^31$t

i*noouCTs nt

Kodak

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Coupon Good July 3lit.

K mart COUPONS ARE NOT REfiUIRED AT K mart STORES IN IlLINOIS

The Saving Place^

Weve got it... Texas nstruments home computer... and weve oo

programmed for savings

Weve got calculators and vveve got them at

f    *' he tanws makers have to offer In scientific calculators,

119    i    sSS    Butlnetf    Analyst    Calculator     29.98

Pracra^rna    Modol    With    Solar    Powor,    22.48

Programming And Statlstlet  29.98 8*dlglt With Popular Footuros 11.23

Our Reg.

Low

Prices





starts Monday, Aug. 1; ends

Dear Customer    >L -j-.ir::i t, N -vrsti-.... .^ <-

:%

Tnr-

V

on Ml ^ONEWEBC ONLY

strawberry Shortcake Is a copyright of American Greeting Corporation.

'/2 off

Rough-Housers* jeans for big boys

Were $9.9M1Z99 Spring, 1963 F pair

Closeout. Boys' rugged denlma are hard to wear out, easy to care for. Polyester and cotton Jeane In sizes 8-20. While quantities last.

Special purchase. Little boys Rough-housers* Jeans, while quantities last ...4J7

4off

Bigger girls traditional school dresses

Reg. $12.99

099

Weach

each

I Lovely transitional styles 'She'll wear now on into the fall school year. Choose from several styles in our collsctlon. All in bigger girls sizes 7 to 14.ISearsSave to ^5

Tops for children

3 to 7

Shown are just a few from our selection of tops to keep your kids looking sweet and neat for back-to-school. In sizes for little and bigger boys and girls.

For little kids

$6.99 Strawberry Shortcake print top.....

$5.99 Little boys stripe top..............

4.99

3.97

For bigger boys

$7.99 Rugby stripe top, sizes 8-20____^.....

$8.99 - $9.99 Oxford cloth shirts, sizes'8-20.

$6.99 Triple tape top, sizes 8-20..........

$10.99 Preppy knit top, sizes 8-20____ ____

For bigger girls

$4.99 Short sleeve puff-sleeve print top.... $4.99 Short sleeve puff-sleeve solid top____

4.97

4.97

5.99

....7.99

2.99

2.99

*4 off

Toughskins |for big and little boys and girls

Levi's jeans [for big and little boys and girls

ItMli on Ml# ,ONE WEEK ONLY

Tough blend of polyester, cotton and nylon denim makes them our beet. Assorted styles.

tS.9M10.W Llttl* boyt'

IZM....................6Je-7JS

I10.ee Llttto oirli' siZM.. 7JO

eiaee siee t>oy>

(uMon)Mnt................12JS

t13Je Blgetr boyt

wMtom Jtant................BJO

S12.ee Blggor girli

dtnim iMfw...............

on

lONBWBC ONLY

Big VALUES

Bock-to-School war for little boyt, giiit and bigger girls

All are cotton and polyester or polyester and cotton in little kids sizes Mx, big girls 7-14.

For llttlt kidt

unit girit tmock Mta......SJ7

S8.es unit boyt ptr)1t

Mtt.....................SJ7

unit gIrIt cttuti Ittnt.....4J7

Linit gIrIt 2-pltet lumptr Mtt.....................0J7

For blggtr girit S1S.se Unllntd corduroy

bitztrt..................11    JO

SS.se Efflbroldtrtd knit top. .BJS

S7.se Oxford thirt..........4J7

Twill or oorduroy pull-on ptntt......... 7J7

Send them back to school In style and comfort in Levis denims of cotton and polyester or 100% cotton. All In sizes for little and bigger boys and girls.

siz.ee unit boyt jttns.  s.ee

tie.9S Big boys strtlght itg 12.99

$18.99 Big boys

prtwtthed leans.............14.99

iS20.99 Big girls denim jeans... 16.99

25% oH

Sears Best Childrens underwear

For little kids

$5.49 Boyt T-ahlrts or briefa,

In packages ot 3...........3.99

$5.49 Girls vests or panties,

In packages of 3...........3.99

For bigger boys $8.49 Briefs or T-ahlrta, In

packages of 3.... 4.79

$7.99 Tube socks, pkg. of 6.-. 5.99

For bigger girls $5.99 Vests or briefs,

pkg. of 3..................4.49

$4.99 Slip.................3.99

$1.99 Orion knee-hlght.....1.49

7/31/83





Solid, reg. MO

Save *3 to *5

Save ^6

Jeans-That-Fit: they come in shapes, not just sizes

Our fit story translates beautifully to 2 great easy-care cotton arrd Dacron* polyester denim jeans: classic western and cinch-waist styles. In regular and full-hip sizes for misses. Reg. $18 to $19.

^3 to M off

Misses' The Shirt

Print, reg. M2

'99

It's the Perma-Prest* Shirt in sensational polyester and cotton solids and stripes, polyester prints. Ail in misses sizes.

In our Sportswear Department

Ask about Sears Credit Pians

Levi's jeans for juniors

1099

Your favorite great-fitting Levis jeans are now sale priced, so you can buy several pairs! Choose super straight legs in navy and prewashed styles or Red Tab 505 jeans. II are in junior sizes.

$26.99 Stonewashed jeans........23.99

Levi'S

LEVI STRAUSS 8. CO

10

Men durable leather spice tan work shoes

Oxford, reg. *32.99

Durable leather uppers, oll-raslstant crepe soles and heels. Steel shank for extra arch support Goodyear welt construction. Mens sizes.

$39.99 Boot............29.99

mm





SAVE

190

on this Deluxe Kenmore

Laundry Pair!

6-cycle Kenmore washer

379

99

Regular $489.99. Cycles includes knit, delicate and permanent press. Dual-Action* agitator for our most effective washing action. 3 wash/rinse temperatures, 3 water levels and selfcleaning filter. On sale until September 3.

Large-capacity electric dryer

299

99

Dual-Action' agitator gets large loads uniformly clean

3 wash rinse temperatures. All with cold rinses to help save energy

' Touch-up setting helps remove wrinkles from dry no-iron garments

Large capacity lets you dry more items in each single load. Saves time.

Regular $379.99. Large-capacity Kenmore dryer has automatic termination and special Touch-up setting to prevent set-in wrinkies. End-of-cycle signal. Thru September 3.

SAVE MOO!

Kenmore 18.0 cu. ft. capacity refrigerator with icemaker

Regular $699.99. No frost build-up, no messy defrosting jobs. 13.90 cu. ft fresh food section with 2 adjustable shelves and twin crisper.. 4.10 cu. ft. freezer with door shelf. On sale until August 13.

Icemaker hook-up to water, extra

Ask about Sears credit plans

SPECIAL PURCHASE!

BG-SCREEN Color Television

Reliable^ electronic tuner. 3-function remote control. Super Chromix* pic ture tube for bright, natural color. One-button color adjusts color, tint, brightness, contrast. 19-in. diag meas, picture.

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

SAVE '30!

Kenmore heavy-duty wosher Kenmore microwave oven

13.1 cu. ft. Kenmore freezer

299

99x

379

369

99

Regular $329.99. Has 3 washyrinse temperatures with cold rinses, 3 water levels to help save water. Sale ends August 13.

Regular $549.99. Whole-meal cooking, cooks up to 3 foods at the same time. 2-stage memory. Large-capacity oven. Sale ends Sept. 3.

Regular $429:99. Has thinwall foam insulation and Power Miser switch to help save energy. Sale ends August 27.

91874

Compact stereo system

199

Regular $399.99. Dual cassette for play/record with automatic reverse. AM/FM stereo. 2-speed record player. Electronic digital frequency readout. Thru Aug. 3.

Kenmore 2*tpeed automatic washer

399

Reg. $499.99. 8-cycle. Dual-Action agitator. Selfcleaning filter. Thru August 2.

Kenmore spoce-Ing m 1099

199

Great for singles or small families. Has timer and oven light. See It at Sears!

19.0 cu. ft. Kenmore refrigerator

5W

43901

Reg. $749.99. FrostlessI 12.20 cu. ft. fresh food section, 6.80 cu. ft. freezer. Thru Sept. 3.

20*pint capacity Dehumidifier

179

Reg. $229.99. Has automatic humldlstat. Rolls easily on it's own wheels. Thru Sept. 3.

Kenmore free-orm 4-stitch machine

139

Reg. $199.99. 2 utility, stretch stitches. Converts to flatbed. Thru August 2.

AGOC: batteries extra AC line cord Included

21931

Portable stereo recorder with AM/FM

89

Reg. $119.99. Cassette play/record, AM/FM stereo radio. On sale until September 3.

Solid-state sensing. Wrinkle Guard* II and it's largocapacity.

Largo-capacity olfctric dryer

259

3 timed cycles, Cotton/ sturdy, permanent press. Timed termination.

91172

Kenmore 1.7 cu. ft. refrigerator.

119

Reg. $149.99. 1.58 cu. ft. refrigerator. 0.16 cu. ft. freezer. Thru Sept. 3.

KENMORE WINDOW AIR CONDITIONERS

NOW ON SALE I

Save on many models, many are high-Sfficiency to help save energy.

Powerful Kenmore Canister Vacuum

99

Reg. $139.99. Powerful suction for deep down cleaning. Thru August 2.

SAVE MOO!

VHS video cassette recorder

449

Reg. $549.99. 6-hr. VHS VCR has remote pause control. Thru Aug. 2.

of these advertised Items is readily available for sale as advertised

Large items such as appliances are inventoried in our distribution center and will be scheduled for delivery or pick-up, delivery is extra.Hi





SHOP Seors for lots of Home Fashion and Back-To-School Buys!FREE LABOR

with purchase of any custom floor-length drapery. Also... SAVE 40% on selected aluminum blinds and more!

Save 40% on selected custom aluminum horizontal and vertical blinds manufactured by Levolor Lorentzen,

Save 40% on custom woven woods. Choose from a wide selection now sale priced. Save 30% on, custom

shades.    ^

Save 30% on custom bedspreads. Choose from all sizes in twin to king. Dont pass up this bargain.

Ask about Sears Credit Plans Custom Shop Sale ends August 20

I    Avtro

S^otSigaiid

M cfp*l pfotactqr ^

SPECIAL PURCHASE plush carpet with quality features found in our ^24.99 sq. yd. Elegant Plush.. .that's 40% less!

Special Elegant Plush is made of the same Premium Soil Resistant nylon plush pile as our regular fine Elegant Plush. Available in 8 vibrant colors.

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

Cushion, Installation extra

Ctrpat not sold in: Concord, Dsnvllla. Goldsboro, Greenville, Rock Hill

Diane VonFurstenburg Bath Accessories

SPECIAL PURCHASE Solid color, super-absorbent towels with 100% cotton surface, cotton and polyester base. While they last.

Hand Towel........  2.99

Washcloth ..............1.99

SAVE 20%-30% on these accessories

Superslze towel.....................  8.99

$16 Bath rug or tank cover.............  11.99    each

$10 Lid cover...................................... 6.99

099

O nii.

Take Sears Back to School Don't miss these SAVINGS!

Computert are available In Seara larger stores only

Trapper Portfolio Reg. 49s. With 2 vertical pockets. Stock up now!

Theme Books Reg. 69c. Spiral notebooks containing 70 sheets. Buy several.

NOW

ONLY

NOW

ONLY

194

294

MORE FANTASTIC SCHOOL VALUES!

$2.19 Crayola* markets...........  99f

$1.98 Scripto erase, pkg. of 4............99s

99 Pocket portfolio....................59f

$2.99 tote accessory........... 1-99

$5.99 Totes and Knapsacks.............3.99

$5.99 Pac Man Backpack...............3.99

You Get *50 Rebate on

Txos Instrument Computer

Built-In. 16K RAM ex- SS' pandable to 52K. Plugs        SO-QP

into your TV. With Your qq qq manual. Reg. $149.99.    TTeTT

School supplies are limited to B each per customer

School suppllee are not available in Shelby, WHIlamson

SAVE *30

Manual TypowrHor

59

Reg.

$89.09

Has 6-Step correction. $239.99 electric.. 179.99

Typewriters not sold In Ashland, Biuellald, Shelby, Wllllemson

SAVE *10

Insuloted sleeping bog

24

Reg. $44.99. 4-lbs. of polyester insulation. Nylon tricot liner.

SAVE *10

Window Fon

49

Reg. $59.99.16-inch. Reversible, 3-speeds.

SAVE *60

9x11-ft Fomily-sized tent

209

Reg. $269.99. Don't miss it. Great for this summer! $109.99, 6x8-ft. tent. .79.99

8120

SAVE *5

20-in Breeze Box

19

Reg. S24i99. Keep cool thls> summer. Easy to move around.

BIG SAVINGS

Spinning Combo or Splncost Combo

1098 your ^ CHOICE

*$30.BS spinning rod and rtal. 12786 aplncaat rod and rtel. regular aaparata prtcaa total.

8000

SAVE *5

Ofcilloflng fon

19

Reg. 124.99. 9-inch portable. 2-8peeds. Thru August 13.

SAVE *3

Wilson weor for Kids

n99

each piece

In easy-care fabrics. S, M and L Reg. $14.99. In our Sporting Goods Dept.

Ftriia-yMT warranty gainat

Hoefdwt er breaking

6382

Troth contoiner

^99

32-gallon ribbed container. Green. Reg. S15.99.

[ Walght banch and weight sata are sold aoparately

SAVE *50

Weight Bench ond \ 151-ib. weight Set Weiglrts    Bench

49    59

Weight set regular S69.99. Weight bench regular S89.99.

Bikes paniaHy aasembled

SAVE *50

26-inch racer for men, women

99

$149.99 In 1963 Fall Qan. Catalog

Lightweight and strong SI 39.99 FS2bO bike.. 99.99

10066

1/2 PRICEI

Cookwore set

29

Rag. 8p. pricea total BBO.BB 7-pc. aluminum; Silver-stone* interior. Hurry, while they last_

SAVE *3

Loundry detergent 10^.

24-lbbox

Reg; S13.99. Dont miss this fantMtic savings. Thru Aug. 27.





M90-*200 off

^ on Craftsman Power Saws

YOUR

CHOICE

349

99

f

Craftsman radial arm saw

Regular $539.99. Sears Best, IVj-HP motor develops 2V2-HP. Permanently lubricated sealed ball bearings. Automatic blade brake. With leg set.

Craftsman 10-in. table saw

Regular $549.99. Capacitor-start 1-HP motor develops 2-HP. Includes 2 table extensions and steel leg set, fence and miter gauge. Partially assembled.

Sale ends August 13

Ask about Sears credit plans

A.1172

*40 OFF!

Craftsman portable

power tools

W99

YOUR CHOICE

Regular $99.99 ea.

A. Craftsman 1-HP belt sender uses 3x21-in. sanding belts, extra.

B. Craftsman 2 circular saw with edge guide. Auxiliary grip.

C. Craftsman automatic scroll saw develops maximum Vj-HP.

SAVE OVER

099

YOUR CHOICE 7 m.

$21.99 Glue gun. Craftsman. UL listed. $22.48* Riveter kit. Craftsman. With rivets. $24.98* Stapler kit. Craftsman. With staples.

Sale ends August 27

10357

TERRIFIC BUY!

Craftsman

workbench

99

Craftsman quality. Has 4 drawers, top and shelf. Unassembled.

SAVE 40!

Craftsman wet/ dry vacuum

59

Regular $99.99. 8-gal. size vacuum. Includes Hose, nozzle. Thru Aug. 13.

7 OFF!

Weatherbeater 1-coat exterior flat house paint

Q99

Galloi

30005

Gallon

Regular $16.99. One-coat, washable, mildew resistant, non-yellowing and no-chalk washdown, also stain resistant. On sale until August 13.

For one-coat results all Sears paints must be applied as directed.

85005

85955

SAVE *5 a gallon!

Fashion Touch Interior paint

Flat or calling whita    Saml-glon

8 R^. '13.99    1 0 r2 15 99

Freshen-up your inside with Fashion Touch interior paint in 9 colorfast colors. 1-coat coverage. Thru August 20.

SAVE ^200

2-HP compressor

399

Regular $599.99. Delivers 7.5 SCFM at 40 PSI/100 PSI maximum. On sale until August 13.

CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING SALE!

*200-M00 OFF

PRE-SEASON HEATER SALE!

SAVE *50 to *70 NOW

III i

SAVE 70! 9300 BTUH reflection heater

\

25,000 BTUH High-efficiency unit

23,600 BTUH residential or mobile home unit

Sale ends August 20

24,800 BTUH replacer air conditioning unit

99

99

40211

*799

Regular *1199.00

Install a new, efficient whole house cooling system for reliability and lower operating cost. Thermostat refrigerant tubing, installation extra.

*799

Regular *1099.00

This system is a dependable whole house cooling system which helps shut out noise and air pollutants. Thermostat, ducting and installation extra.

*699

BTUH

CAPACITY

REGULAR

PRICE

SALE

PRICE

31,100

$1399.00

$999 00

35.600

$1499.00

$1099.00

42,000

$1699.00

$1299.00

47,500

$1799.00

$1399.00

BTUH

CAPACITY,

REGULAR

PRICE

SALE

PRICE

30,200

$1199.00

$899 00

34,400

$1299.00

$999.00

42,000

$1499.00

$1199.00

46,000

$1599.00

$1299.00

Regular *899.00

Replacer is a dependable whole house cooling system which helps shut out noise and air pollutants. Thermostat, refrigerant tubing and installation extra.

BTUH

REGULAR

SALE

CAPACITY

PRICE

PRICE

28,400

$ 999.00

$799.00

35,400

(T $1099.00

$899.00

40,000

$1199.00

$999.00

SAVE *151

KMimor* ThrHt-T Mtbacktharmostat

39

Reg. $54.99. Helps save energy; for heating and air conditioning. Thru Aug. 20.

SAVE *100!

Wholo-housa fan with shutter

199

Reg. $299.99. 30-in. fan. Easy to install for home cooling. Thru August 20.

64835

SAVE *10!

Power attic ventilator

40303

64412

INSTALLED

Turbine vents

49

89

Reg. $59.99. Roof mount; electric powered. 1000 CFM. Thru August 20.

A for

Installed on single-story roof of normal construction within 15-mlle radius of Sears retail.

40305

Reg. $169.99. Heats up to 15 hrs. on 1.1 gal. of kerosene. Electronic ignition for fast starts. UL listed. On sale until August 27.

SAVE ^60! 12,500 BTU portable heater

119

Reg. $179.99. Electronic ignition means no matches. Up to 16 hours of heat on 1.6-gal. of pure kerosene. On sale until August 27.

SAVE <501 19,700 BTUH portable neater

149

Reg. $199.99. Burns up to 10 hours on 1.6-gal. of pure kerosene. Electronic ignition. Tip-over switch. On sale until August 27.





Mf! I i <  I

Rtgular

prica

each

Sata '

prioa

aach

^plu^E^I aachaiKl I old lira 1

radial

wMtawall

AR78-13

94.99

56.99

1.90

BR78-13

101.99

61.19

2.05

DR78-14

114.99

68.99

1.97

ER78-14

119.99

71.99

2.15

FR78-14

124.98

74.99

2.27 '

6R78-14

129.99

77.99

2.23

HR78-14

134.99

80.99

2.60

GR78-15

134.99

80.99

2.46

HR78-15

139.99

83.99

Z67

JR78-15

144.99

86.99

3.05

1 LR78-15

151.99

91.19

3.23

Wt*U    4k>0tifli

f iwifriiw

- CMlr OMM    '

".wlieiifsr me ^ Hit i

-m

CAR

CARE

iaaMaMMMMMiSears





copyright 1983 Kroger sav-on Quantity Hgms Reserved None SoM TO Dealers

MWBrnSH ITBM POUCT E*ii oi ow* adeertted iiHie is leoMed to be feader aneaw for saK in eacb raier saeaa. ecept as spedficAr ROM ! timad jfedonwomofaniweomrtioinmmdioice of a comparaMe iteM nmen aadaue. cnKtmy nw same sai mgs or a rainobeck mMcii    enuae yoM to pmtlnse me aMr

tised Mm at be adwmed prtoe MR SO da*s URbtone

GoKrogerng

fOr BIC SAVINGS

during our

Items and Prices Effective Thru sat Aug. 6.1983

BUY ONE GET ONE FREE!

Sa PACES 2 & 3 FOR

Savings Up

On tnese BUY ONE GET ONE FREE OFFBS!

RATH LEAN N MEATY 3-5 LB. AVC. WCT.

Spare

Ribs

DIET PEPSI, INT. DEW. PEPSI FREE OR

Pepsi

KROGER OLD FASHIONED

White

Bread

NONE SOLD TO

dealers

OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY

600 GreenvMe Blvd. - Greenville

Phone 756-7031

PC 1 M





buy

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

ASSORTED FLAVORS

6-a. BOXweight watchers Treat Bars

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

WEIGHT WATCHERS 6<T. BOXice Milk Sandwiches

BUY ONE GET ONEFffiE

ASSORTED FLAVORS 8-OZ. CUPYubi Yogurt

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

12-a. PXC. COUNTRY OVEN PLAIN, COMBO ORSugar Donuts

SAVE

99

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

KROGER 10-02. JARGrape Jelly

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

KROGER 1-02. JARInstant Tea

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

KROGER 4-02. CANChiliPowder

BUY ONE GET ONEFRS

ASSORTED FLAVORS 16<T. BOX KROGERHerbal Tea

SAVE

75<

SAVE

99c

CMN





BUY ONE GET ONE

BOJO 5-OZ. PKC.

Stuffed

Crab

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE

1.5-02. LIBBYS

Potato

Toppers

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE

3-02.

Crab

Thermidore

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE

KROGER 1-lB. PKC.

Jumbo All Meat Wieners

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE

ADULT

Colgate

Toothbrush

BUY ONE GET ONE

RS

8-OT. PKC.

Potting

Soil

BUY ONE GET ONE ^.

I ^    ^:50-I00-I50^

REE

C.E. 50-150

3*Way Light Bulb

PC 3 ALL





go Krogering for the best of everything Ife

i

Tuborg

Cold

DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW, SAVE PEPSI FREE OR 5QC

BATHROOM

Pepsi

Cola

Fleece

Tissue

BIANCO, ROSATO OR

Celia $979 Lambrusco Ltr ^5

KROGER WORCHESTERSHIRE

PAPER

CHABUS RED OR COLD TAYLOR

Lake

Wines ... II

Steak    ^9^19 Scott

Sauce.....S    Napkins.... p? 89^

39

KROGER    AU PURPOSE

Tuna In s 25    0 Aiax

water. . .5 M*    Cleaner

28-

Oz.

Jug

REGULAR OR UCHT

HammS Beer

6

12-Oz

Cans

$209

V

KROGER CHILI TOMATO, OR CHEESEBURGER

99^

WHOLE KERNEL CORN    ^

Hamburger Magic

79<

Sweet Peas

Ubbg>^

8.25-Oz.

BOX

Teas Vi

3..M

Cans

100*

ct.

BOX

$<^99

VAN CAMP'S NO SALT

Pork 'n Beans

ZIPLOC

Sandwich Bags____

OOCFOOD

Field Trail 2S<fruit b Rations ... & ^5^ Drinks

CATS CHOICE

Cat

Food....

KRISPY

_ __  Sunshine

2<&89* salt'nes

16-

Oz.

Box

69

ASSORTED

Fruit Box SPack

8-

. . Oz. Pkgs.

PETER PAN CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

7AC Peanut / Butter

28-

Oz.

Jar

$229

10

Lb.

Bag

$399

SHOWBOAT

Cut

Yams

KROGER

23-

OZ.

Can

69< StSSSe.. i. 38*

5-OZ. .can.

EMBASSY

Salad Dressing

69<

32-Oz.

Jar

N

ORANGE OR LEMON-LIME

Gatorade

46-Oz.

Bti.

88

PC4M

KROGER FRESH PACK

StrawberrY Perserves

18-Oz.

Jar

$^29





CEinmUL BINGO

ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE AS OF JULY 16, 1983

Scneduiea termination date ot tnis promotion IS August 6,

1983, however, game otficiaiiv ends When all came Tickets have oeeh distriPuted

KROGER SKIM MILK,

2% LOWFAT OR HOMOGENIZED

KROGER

lOkl Fashioned

Bread

0

V2-Gal.

Ctn.

r/2-Lb.

Loaf

KROGER HOT DOC OR

12-

Oz.

Pkg.

59

KROGER    KRAFT AMERICAN

Butter-Me-Not    Sliced

Biscuits... 2 ct 89^ Singles

WE^CHT^WATCHER^ OR    , QUARTER    WISE RIDGIES

Br6V@rs    . o    L3ncl 0L3kGS A 1.    P0t3t0    7. AAA

Yogurt 5cups^2 '^3^93Hne. .2o'i%88 Chips b% 99

KROGER

Instant Coffee

lO-Oz.

Jar

$329

DelMonte Catsup

99c

32-Oz.

Bti.

SAVE 10% to 40% EVKYDAY ON

COST CUnER BRANDS

TTCD lAIUni C I^CDMCI

KROGER

Orange Juice

Vz-Cal.

ctn.

99

COST CUHER WHOLE KERNEL, YELLOW OR

Cream Style Corn /n

COST CUTTER

Orange

33

COSt^UTTER

Evaporated 13

Milk..... Sn

39

COST CUHER MEAT. MUSHROOM. OR PLAIN

89^ Spaghetti 32- aac  sauce ?i99^

MINUTE MAID

Orange Juice ..

POST SUPER

Sugar Crisp...

ALL FLAVORS

Kroger

Gelatins

. .1/2-' Gal. Ctn.

18-

Oz.

BOX

19

$^55

COST CUHER

Ground Coffee

1-Lb.

Bag

*1

69

\

aOUQD

coFPee

HEAfmutDnoeusr

U

NfiWrtiCUlllS) <!>'

COST CUHER

Apple Juice

64-Oz.

Btl.

$1

17

wesson

ALL VEGETABLE

Wesson oil

48-Oz.

Btl.

$239

Tniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii





STOCK YOUR FREEZER

RECULAR OR MORE PULP

Minute Maid Orange Juice

REGULAR, MINT. OR CHOCOLATE

Sealtest Polar Bars

REFRESHING

Kroger 9 Lemonade <9 I

WELCH'S FROZEN

crape

Juice can^ I

COST CUTTER

Whipped Topping.

8-

Oz.

.Cup

age

ASSORTED VARIETIES MORTON

ppt    C8$^99

ORE IDA

CRINKLE CUT    _

French '

Fries Bag

SARA LEE CINNAMON RAISIN, CHEESE OR

Apple

Danish ... Pkg

PEPPERIDCE FARMS BLUEBERRY OR

Orange

Cranberry    

Muffins____BOX

WEIGHT WATCHERS PLAIN OR

Black Cherry Cheese cake

Rnx I

WEIGHT WATCHERS APPLE OR BLACK

Cherry ^ cobbier.. Pkg

$.|29

KROGER BROCCOLI CUTS OR

Italian style vegetables

KROGER

Fried

18-24-

Oz.

Bag

99<

ASSORTED VARIETIES

^ r Totino's

j, 1 Party Pizzas

CRISP CRUST

f99^

Partjrtoy

PEPERRONI OR COMBO TOTINOS

Extra Pizzas ..

KROGER CUT CARROTS. CUT CORN. GREEN PEAS OR

Mixed    mTQC

vegetables. Pkg

PATIO MEXICAN BEEF ENCHILADA OR    .

combo oz $119 Dinners ... pkg.

ASSORTED VARIETY BANOUET

Buffet    2

Dinners ....

MORTON KING SIZE CHICK R

Salisbury steak no Dinners ..

GREEN GIANT BROCCOLI OR

Cauliflower w/ Cheese Sauce

KROGER

Tri    M

raters..... sag

REGULAR

Kroger    yi

waffles... .Hb

KROGER

Glazed    II

Donuts Box

KROGER

Onion    ,

Rings......E

KROGER DEEP DISH

Pie

Shells

GREEN GIANT

Rice Pilaf

GREEN GIANT

Corn On The Cob

KROGER

SIlCGd

Strawberries P^g.99

FILO STRUSEL

6-

Ear

Pkg.

llliS 169

^ S^ABOEFGHJMIIN^ {t! i > i f i f r h h 111! i i i 11 i 11 i I f n

i/ - > f '    )    1

iiin

f iiiiH nil Hi

HHSHf lllllf





SUMMERTIME Ice Cream Treats

OLD FASHIONED DRUMSTICK

ice Cream

Treats

$139

6-Ct. I ^ BOX

FREEZER PLEEZER

Twin

2^1 ASSORTED FLAVORS COUNTRY CLUB

ice

Milk

99^

-Gal.

ctn.

KROGER

Natural Flavor

ice Cream

$189

Vz-Gal. I ligll

FREEZER PLEEZER

Ice Cream

Sandwiches

$169

12-Ct. I

12-BOX

99

FREEZER PLEEZER

Assorted ie

Pops . . . BOX

FREEZER PLEEZER

Ice Creami2<^xo Bars I*

FREEZER PLEEZER CHOCOLATE, STRAWBERRY. OR BUTTERSCOTCH

Pudding Time

Bars

$169

2-Ct. I

^=v

KROGER CHEESE

KROGER CHEESE

Colby Midget Longhorn.. . VI

$239

Shredded

Colby

mm Pkgs.

KROGER CHEES:

Fullmoon

Colby

$^59

KROGER LONGHORN CHUNK OR SLICED

Colby

Cheese

$149

10-

02.

Pkg.

KROGER INCREDIBLE HUNK CHEESE

Colby Brick

Cut

12-

OZ.

Pkg.

20-32-

OZ.

Pkg.

$339

Lb.

PC 7 ABDEFCHKLM





Kroger means bu

U.S.DA CHOICE HEAVY VVESTBM CAP ON BONELESS

Sirloin Tip

Steak

U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN BEEF 9-11 LB. AVC. WCT. CAP-ON WHOLE

Boneless

Sirloin Tip

FiiOZEN SLICED

Beef Liver..

Lb.

158

Lb

88

USOA

CHOICE

U.S.DJV. CHOICE HEAVY WESTERN

U.S. GOVT INSPECTED EXTRA LEANGround    aoBeef......Lb^1^

BEEF BONELESS    ^    AASiloin Tip Roast.....

OLDE VILLAGE REG. OR POLISH

Smoked    o

Sausage. . .Lb^1

ALL VARIETIES JIMMY DEAN

Pork    CO

Sausage... Lb ^l

RATH HOT OR MILD

Pork A eo Sausage.

FROZEN CAME

RATH BLAWK HAWK OR

Cornish

Hens

22^

.Each

FRESHORE OCEAN

Perch Fillet...

Maple

Flavored eg Sliced Bacon^j I

1-Lb . Pkg.

$^68

HOUY FARMS FRESH

Combo

Pac

3 THIGHS 3 DRUMSTICKS

Lb

98

DOUY FARMS FRESH

Ftyer

Breast

M2S

m





letter meat

WHOLE GLENDALE OLOE SMOKEY 7-9 LB. AVC. WOT.

$

Lb.

Boneless

Ham148

CAROLINA PRIDE WHOLE OR SHANK HALF BQNE IN

CMZOLINA PRIDESmoked Picnic .88^Smoked Ham

GOURMETSliced Ham.

Lb.

98<

$289

Fresh Seafood

Lb

FRESH PICNIC STYLE

Pork

Roast...

KROGER AU MEAT

Chunk Style Bologna.

CAROLINA PRIDE

All Meat Wieners.. pg

98

1-Lb.

Pkg.

$108

68

ICRGl^ AU MEAT OR

All Beef

Wieners

18

FRESH FROM THE WATERS OF ALASKA FRESH WHOLE 4-6 LB. AVC. WCT.

Alaskan

FARM RAISED DRESSED

Fresh Catfish

$029

Lb. Hi

FRESH ALASKAN SALMON FILLET OR

Salmon Steaks

?5

COST CUTTER BREADED

Round Lb hrimp .... Pkg

FRESH OCEAN

Perch Fillet ?2





Co Krogerng fr Special ^ Savings from Kraft

PC10M

rmtr

la

m





The Deli Prepare

our Summertime Treats

/

SLICED OR SHAVED

imported

Ham

SLICED TO ORDER

Roast

Beef

LORRAINE

Swiss

DELI DELICIOUS

Pineapple

Cheese *3    ^    24,2 Waliiut Delight

DELICIOUS    save

Macaroni io Salad.......

Lb

88

GLAZED

SAVE

SLICED

SAVE

Yeast 20 Donuts...

FRUIT TOPPED SAVE

DOZ.

1

79

Lb.

$1

79

Boloona    Sweet    ao    <^49

Boiogna ib 1     0    49

DAILY

Plate Lunch Special____

Ea.

ICED \v

Chocolate oqc Eclairs.... ^ForOS

FRESH IN STORE MADE CHEESE OR

Taco Pizza

FRESH BAKED .

French Bread 2.*1

CAKE OF THE WEEK

Cherry

Delite Cake $

^ave'^

Restaurant

Lb

DELICIOUS

BBO Ribs

$359

LEAN

Roast Beef Platter

SAVE 20<

69

5-PIECE

Wishbone Fried

Chicken

$

PC 'I' '1 srr.i





Pharmacy

Co Krogering and save with generic medications. Your Kroger pharmacy stocks a wide variety of generics, and they all offer comparable quality to name brands, at condiderably lower prices. Just ask your Kroger pharmacist to help you choose which generic is best for you. with generics you get the best of everything, including the price.

SOLID

DEODORANT

soft & or

2-

OZ.

.Btl.

$1

77

MAXI-PADS

30-

Ct.

New Freedom . Box

$297

APRICOT FACIAL SCRUB

Aapri...

4-Oz.

Btl.

$357

DISPOSABLE DIAPERS TODDLER SIZE

comforts

40-Ct.

BOX

PERFUMED DEODORANT BODY SPRAY

Impulse

2.5-Oz.

Can

$197

News'.;

I ilcenemy SFechg

DISPOSABLE

RAZORS

 KS.'gg*

6-Ct.

Pkg.

Good News

$1*7

PC 12 M

iKHaoA r

Wkte





DISCOUNT

Cosmetics & Fragrances

EVKYDAY s 16%

roqer

mB.

ST

\\U-\A-'

MAX FACTOR ^

COLORFAST

LONC-LASTINC

Lipstick or Nail Enamel

$119

Your Choice

^1klNCi: MAICIIABI.

mpcsuccestk cologne price $? so

CflCHCT.

AS INDIVIDUAL    OUr

AS YOU AR IS Choice

Cologne

fmOQ)On^ 65 oz STAYS ON (C) MFC. SUGGESTED HIS MIND

Cologne

Chimere Cologner

ICE $10^0

,5-Oz

MFC. SUGG. PRICE $10^

Cachet Colognei 5 0Z

MFC. SUGG. PRICE $9.50

Wind Song colognei

SUGG. PRICE $9.50

l'Oreal:

JEWEL-LIKE CASF (    MOISTURE RICH

$297 Lipstick . .    ^

COUTURE COLORS

Nail .n,$477^

PRICE $6.50

PC 13 ADEFCHJKLMNOVWX





10 MEDIUM BLACK OR BLUE INK PENS

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KIWI LIQUID WHITE. BLACK. BROWN

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HOLDS AN ASSORTMENT OF SUPPLIES

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DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEE!

WII Double your money back if you're not satisfied with the fruits and vegetabies you buy at Kroger.

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Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available tor sale at or below the advertised price in each A&P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad

PmCES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. AUGUST 6 AT ALL A&P STORES IN NC & SC EXCEPT SPARTANBURG, GAFFNEY, BEAUFORT, SC & HENDERSONVILLE, NC. ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS.SUMMER SAVINGS

a

BUY ONEGET ONE

FREE

(16 OZ. PKG.) SKINNER

Elbow Macaroni

BUY TWOGET ONE

^A&P COUPON W ^

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200 FEET P&Q BRAND

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UMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY. 0000 THRU SAT., AUG. 6 AT A4P.

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I I I I I I I I I

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UMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY, G00DTHRUSAT..AUG.6ATA*P.^0oV

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FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND, WE WILL DOODLE 3 MFCS COUPONS EXAMPLE:

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Between now and August 6, we will redeem national manufacturers cents-off coupons up to 50* for double ttieir value. Offer good on national manufacturers canta-off coupons only. (Food retailor coupons not accepted.) Customer must purchase coupon product In specified size. Expired coupons will not be honored. One coupon per customer per Item. No coupons accepted for free merchandise. Offer does not apply to A&P or other store coupons whether manufacturer Is mentioned or not. When the value of the coupon exceeds 50* or the retail of the Item, this offer Is limited to the retail price.

cmioN

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25*

25*

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18

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36*

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75*

25*

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Flav^HUch Milk

LIGHT BUTTERMILK HOMOGENIZED

Vi gal.

cm.

SAVE UP TO-W





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SAVE 21

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, m tovtoto p-ce - toc*    Sto* .cito toc'^'*? -toto

Tomato Ketchup I MayonnaisB

ANN PAGE

ANN PAGE

32 oz.

btl.

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DOMALO DUCK PNC UNSWEETENED

TEXAS PETE MOT DOO    ^flfl    DOlwiLiiuuvr^^w-. CfM

Chili Sauce 3 ss 1 Gnwefmit Juice 9r

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Spaghetti ii Oy Apple Juice ail

59*

MUELLEirS

ANNPAOE

Elhew Macaroni IS: v9^ Fniit Cocktaii

IS os.

SAVE 30^

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SAVE 40'

SAVE 10=

Chunk Light Tuna | Spaghetti Sauce | Potato Chips

In Oi!

In Water

DOUBLE Q

6' 2 oz. can

1

AAP QUALITY

69

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Plain A&P QUALITY Meat

Mushroom

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AAPQUAUTY    AAPQUAUTY    ^29

Macaroni & Cheese ^ 1 Pink Sahnon 'is straMieirPiB8siw$ 1

39^    rttedMeat Ais    Grape Jelly    1^99^

UBBV    2    OO#    AAPQUAUTY    ||||^

I    Vkmiia Sausage soar    Salad Olives    V^oSr

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JM DANDY

Quick Grits

16 oz. pke-

CAPH CRUNCH PEANUT BUTTER CEREAL OR

Cnmch Berries

Corn Flakes

Comet Rice I Kosher Dills

POST TOASTIES

LONG GRAIN

0

m

12 oz. pkg.

SAVE

20'-

42 oz. box

99

0

SAVE

MT OLIVE FRESH

.J I'U.KI

30c

46 oz.

iar





Ann Page Cola I Utoldorf

SAVE 10

Bath

ASSORTED-DECORATED

4 roll

pkg-

89

AfimCUL SWEETENER

Sweet N Low

SENECA

Lemon Juice

WELors

Grape Drink

LEM0N4JIIE ORANGE FRUrr PUNCH

32 OK. ML

99

Sqwinclier    Viva Napkins

FOR YOUR LAUNDRY    41Q    15*0FFLABEL

Rinse Detergent    409 Cleaner ^    it    I*

AAPBLUE'GREEN    20OFFLABEL    4QQ

Dish Detergent    99^    Ciorox 2    ^ 1

SAVE 40'

SAVE 16'

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Crisco Shortening I Fab Detergent I Purex Bleach

REGULAR BUTTER FLAVOR

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I

III

iHmx

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Pork & Beans 3

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Applesauce 3

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Green Beans 4

ALL PURPOSE CLEANER

Fantastik

TEXIZE 25* OFF LABEL

M jMIMga all varieties    4fin

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Pine Cleaner 99*^ Pointer Dog Food 5 ^1

ISViOK.

Tomatoes

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EX. ABSORBENT (60 CT.)> TODDLER (48 CT.) QQ BONUS PACK 2 LBS. FREE    AIQ

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Pampers Diapers I Purina Dog Chow

VALUE PACK

S1.00 OFF LABEL

Newborn (90 ct.) Toddler (48 ct.)

Ex. Absorbent (60

Your

Choice

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THEBUTC

I

Each of tfwM atfvortisod ilonis is roquirod to bt roadily availablo lor salt al or bolow tlio advortisod prico in oach AbP Sloro. aicapl as spacifically notad in this ad    _

3

SAVE 71 LB.

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

WHOLE

lb.

va

Cut & Wrapped Free!

rCEB

Variety Shop Specials

Box-O-Chicken

US.DA. INSPECTED FRESH

Save 16* lb.

US.D A INSPECTED FRESH

Whole Fryer Legs

ULSJ)A MSPECTED FROZEN

Baking Hens

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM COUNTRY STYLE

Pnk S|iare ffibs

FRESH LEAN COUNTRY FARM BOSTON BUTT

Boneless Fork Roast

lb.

lb.





HER SHOP

K Each ol thasa advarlisad ilams is raq^uirad to ba raadily available lor sale at or below the advarlisad pnce m each AiP Store eicept as spacilically noted in this ad    _

)

SAVE 71'LB

MARKET STYLE

Ground

5 lbs. or

Beef T

BONELESS BOTTOM

Round Roast

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

A&PAND OSCAR MAYER TEAM FOR SUMMERTIME VAUIES

OSCAR MAYER (BEEF LB. 1J9)

lb.

Meat

Wfieners

1-lb.

pkg.

OSCAR MAYER 8UCED (12 OZ. 148)

Save 30* lb.

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

HOSTESS

Boneless Rump Roast

WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF

Eye of Round Roast

A&P QUAUTY EXTRA LEAN

Fresh Ground Round

AAP QUALITY

Fresh Ground Chuck

lb.

lb.





DAIRY&FROZEN

Each of Mtoao advorltsod itoms i* roouirod 10 bo rasdily availabla tor ...........eota  --------------

salo at or bokm Hta advortiaod pricom oach AAh Slora. oicofM as spacilicaHy nofad in Ibis ad.

)

SPECIALS

SAVE70<= I    SAVE 11^Ice Cream I A&P Pizza

SAVE 10'

FLAV-O-RICH

PEPPERONI SAUSAGE ' CHEESE

1/.

2 gal. ctn.

169

10 oz. pkg.

88

0

A&P CHILLED

1/

/2 gal. ctn.

99

0

FROZEN

Ann Page V Lemonade

601.

iOO

CREAM STYLE W/BUTTER SAUCE

REGULAR

Green Giant

Niblet Com

10 01. pkg.

0 Eggo

Waffles

11 01.

pkg.

79

French Fries T Margarine T Ann Page Biscuits

rATER BOY REGULAR

139

MRS. FILBERT'S

BUTTER-ME-NOT

9V2 oz.

cans

CMCKEN CROQUETTES * SALB. STEAK CHAR4R0IL mmr SLICED TURKEY MEAT LOAF

Ann Page Entrees

2 lb. pkg.

SEALTE8T

WITH CHEESE SAUCE

Cottage

Cheese

12 OL ctn.

79^

Green Giant

Broccoli

10 01.

pkg.

Morton Pot Pies I Cheese Food Slices

CHICKEN-BEEF-TURKEY

KRAFT AMERICAN

179

12 oz. pkg.

159mirn





SUIWIERSIZZIJiyiG HEALTHS BEAUTY APWLUES!

Light n Easy Sponge Mop

0 CEDAR

STtall Angler Broom Pov/er Strip Wet Mop

each

3

8oz.

Ml.

7oz.

Ml.

REGULAR EXTRA GENTLE

Vidat Sassoon

Shampoo

VIDAL SASSOON

Finishing Rinse

VIDAL SASSOON

Pump Hair Spray

VIDAL SASSOON

Aerosol Hair Spray

VIDAL SASSOON

Re-Moist Creme

25* OFF LABEL

Miss Brock Hair Spray

20Z.

tube

90Z.

can

199

I ^

199

99

   save

   70*

199

IT

You Pay Only

129

   save -

   80*

BUY TWO-GET ONE

FREE

I Crest iToothpaste

S2.37

3 ct.

10W30 MOTOR OILPlaymate Cooler I 10'^ Fry Pan I Quaker ^ate

IGLOO LITTLEFOLEY SLICK-KOTE

SUPER BLEND

PlayMte

Cooler

MVTl ^ 1yi ir

save

$2.90

quart

can





Fresh With Quality

Is Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available lor sale at or below the advertised price in each AAP Store, eicepi as specifically noted in this ad

At the Farm, we give you low prices on fiesh from-the-farm fruits and

'>RICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, AUGUST 6 AT ALL AAP STORES IN NC A SC EXCEPT SPARTANBURG. GAFFNEY. BEAUFORT SC A HENDERSON. NCJuicy GrapesCALIFORNIA WHITE SEEDLESS OR REDRipe BananasGOLDEN YELLOW

save 50' lb.

CAUFORMA GROWN

Ripe Nectarines

^NEWCROP

Bartlett Pears i^ Kr

FLORIDA JUICY    41111

Seedless Limes 10 4 1

SIX ASSORTED VARIETIES ARDEN

Organic Rice Cakes x #9

ROMAINEOR

Green Leaf Lettuce x 39

SNOWWMTE

Fresh Mushrooms x 1 Green Cahhage 4^1^^

CALIFORNIA    41111

Red Bliss Potatoes 3 41





THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GREB^^YILm, N.C

JULY 3 1 . 1983

m

Should a Mother Sacrifice Her Own Life For Her Chilen?

By Mcholas Ga^e

d

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ASK"IDI10tS

LOS ANGELES Alfam Gangs' remake of 1960's Where the Boys Are will be coming out next spring. FraaUe Avalon and An-

S<d your quMtton, on a poolcard. to "Aik." Famtl> MMkly. 1515 Broadway. Hym York. N Y. 10038. _Wa'II    pay W ter puMUhad quaattoni. Sort wa can't antwtr ottiati.

.Y

EkoK madman acroa the water.

nette Fnioello have signed for a new version of their beach movies. Now therell be a reunion of TVs golden oldies. NBCs High School U.S.A. TV movie will star Elinor {Father Knows Best) Dona-hoe, David (Ozzie and Harriet) Nebon. Tony (Leave It to Beaver) Dow, An-^tkifahe Room forDcukfy)Cn-wright and PMil(77ie)on-na Show)

Pderaen. Theyll play parents to some of todays vidkids like Todd (Diff'rent AoAes)BfidgeB and Naicy(77re Facts of Lik)Mc

Keon In mainland China, where rock music is considered deca- ^ dent and corrupting, Elton Jolm was able to go around virtually unnoticed despite the two<arat diamond in his left ear. His e^ was just as monumental. Said Ehon of China, This is the only place 1 could possibly go sightseeing without being hassled or asked for mv autograph... .Singer Jock Joneo, who warbles The Love Boat theme on TV, has his own love boat in San Franciscos Marina. While appearing at the Fairnimt Hotel, Jack and his new wife, Kim, get a suite free but cant bring Jacks dog in the hotel. So during his two-week engagements, he rents a yacht so all three can live aboard happily A

celebrity auction held for Nor nan Lear's anti-Moral Majority group. People for the American Way, netted $125,000. Some of the items bid away: personal interviews with former Preaidenl Ford and Carter ($4,000 each), a pasta dinner cooked by Don DeLniae ($1,500), dinner with DwBey Moore ($3,000) and lunch with (TNeiD ($2,000). Debbie Reynolds will jump out of a cake for $1,000 (even though she bid $100 so she wouldnt have to). The bargain of the evening, however, was John IVavollas sweater from Staying Alive. It sold for $50, to ac-tress Danielle (Archie Bunker's Place)EKboth.

Robert Windeler

NEW YORK - What g(^ can come out of toing chai^ with all^|edly cash    i    n    g

,$18,014 worth of So-c i a I

checks issued to your deceased mother? Says actress Monique Van Vooren,

"Now 1 know who my friends are and who has been using me all these years. 1 have a list of everyone who has beea_ supportive and those who could not wait to bring me

Mommy Jestka: tongs for her own baby boom

down... .Talk-show host Regb Philbin recently nailed the elusive Johnny Carson for an interview. Then hosting A.M. Los Angeles and now cohosting New Yorks The Morning Show, Philbin first asked Cauwn why he never gives interviews. Re^nded Johnny,

Ive nothing more to say.

There are only so many times you can repeat the same thing about your life. . . .Oscar winner Jessica Lange doesnt want to be one of those actresses who reach middle age wih nothing to show for it but a slew of scrapbooks. Already the mother of 2-year-old Alex-andra (by Mikhaii Baryshnikov), Jessica says shed rather have a slew of kids... .After Don Rickies presented his 13-year-old son, Lawrence Corey, to the audience at Las Vegass Sahara Hotel, the boy bowed, then panicked. What do I do now? he gulped to his father, whose response was, Get off quick and see what Mommy is doing with our money.

Anita Summer

WASHINGTON - To many Mr. T may be the toughest guy in television, but Representative Mickey lAnH (D-Tex.) wants to cut him down to size. Leland thinks hes a poor image for blacks and other minorities in TV programming. During recent House hearings Leland blasted the star of The A-Team, calling him a buffoon and a Stepin Fetchit. Says Leland, Gieorge Pep-pard does all his thinking for him. .. .Now that their 1-year-old son. Quinn Bradlee, is toddling about. The Washington Post's Ben BratUee and SaDy Quinn have apparently decided they need more living space some $2-million-worth more. That's what sources say the couple paid for their new Georgetown digs. The property includes a tennis court, guest house and historic 40-room mansion, where Abraham Lincoln's son, Robert Todd Lincoln, once resided. The seller: RJ. Reynolds tobacco heir Smith Bitfiey and his wife, Vicki.... Ronald Reagan showed off a poets touch recently at the annual Gridiron Club dinner, an off-the-record evening in which the towns press and politicos skewer each other and sometimes themselves. The President crooned this verse, among others, to the tune of Manana;

We 've had a little problem Over at the E.P.A.

No matter what we try lodo It won 't go away.

The Congress gives me headaches All It does is moan and grouse But now it's not my worry.

It 's that of Ruckdshaus.

Kathleen Maxa and Jane Ottenberg

tOGniiOORE

siororOctopussy

It aeema that you're always patting yourself down. Yntyt -^M., Ban-

rn; Me

I do its because I'm convinced that in this business its more important to be lucky than talented. In fact, the ratio is 99 percent luck, 1 percent talent. 1 guess I m one of the lucky ones. It s also not what you know but whom you know. Furthermore, it's good to be at the right place at ie right time and know the right person to give the right answers to.

star of Remington Steele

Yoare 26 already. Do you think youll ever get mar-ried? RJ., Santa Fe, N.M.

Im for it. I believe in it I want to get married. One reason for my unmarried state is that I dont believe in sharing a man. Every man 1 date must dale me exclusively, because Im old4ashioned. The only thing is. with the series and my stage work. I live like a nnonk right now, because 1 get up at 5 A.M. and dont get home till 8:30 P.M





Warning; The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

IntroducingcenTaste that delivers

llfjHI'. lj-j        :.U

t II ff H ir !n(]            '    .    -

<U l;(:r    

TEAR OFF AND MAIL

FREE PACK

of.New CENTURY Filters or Lights

Taste that delivers

^pack

NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL AREAS.

nbfc.2

$200 OFF

a carton of New CENTURY Filters or Lights

fO lights

NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL AREAS.

Please send me a store redeemable coupon

good for $2.00 off a carton of New CENTURY. Filters or Lights.

My regular brand is:    I certify that I am a smoker at least 21 years of age.

Limit one request per household. Allow 6-8 weeks for shipment. Offer limited to smokers at least 21 years of age. Otter good only in U.S.A. Offer void wherever restricted or prohibited by law. All promotional costs paid by manufacturer.

Offer expires September 30,1983.

NAME

ADDRESS

(PLEASE PRIMT CLEARLY)

CITY

STATE

ZIP

(REQUIREDI

11'>Al l( J tdryTK*,", "Uavjj r>j





1 was once told a remark of Winston Churchill s that I have recalled many times It is the courage of a few." he said, that makes the rest of us possible.

His words have special meaning for me because 1 am one of those who would not be here if it werenf for the o\ erw helming courage of one of those few.

Every' page of recorded history is blotted with examples of mans inhumanity to man. but every now and then an individual stands up, a light in the darkness a person who risks everything for others in a transcendent act of courage.

Often these people come from the most unexpected quarters. Such was the case 18 months ago in the after-math of the terrible airplane crash in Washington D C. The entire nation watch^ on television as Arland Williams Jr.. a fiftyish. balding passenger known at the time only as the man in the water, passed a lifeline dangling from a hovering helicopter five times to fellow victims clinging to a piece of tail section, each time putting anothers life before his own, until he dipped silently to his death in the frigid water.

We search for examples of those few to whom we owe so much, and we think of Gandhi; Martin Luther King; Mother Teresa, working among the poor and dying of Calcutta; Father Damien. the 19th-century Belgian missionary who ministered to the forgotten lepers of Molokai until he, too, died of their disease; Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who rescued ^.000 Hungarian Jews from deportation to Auschwitz before he was abducted by Soviet police in 1945 and disappeared into the Gulag prisons.

W ' s

Sacrifice Her,0i . -Far Her OS^ fy Nttokoge

But most often, those individuaN who demonstrate superhuman courage and love are anonv'mous. their acts unknown and their deaths unmarked Nevertheless, we owe them e\er\-thing, including the hope they gi\e us by showing that the human spirit can survive death.

My three children and 1. m\ four sisters and their children all owe our lives to a simple peasant woman wtio

Eleni defed her whole village, even though it would mean execution be/ore a firing squad.

lived in an isolated village in Greece 35 years ago. She never attended school beyond third grade nor traveled more than 50 miles from the stone huts of her village. She grew up in a socieu so strict and repressive toward women that from the age of 11 she was not allowed to speak to a man until she was handed over as a bride to a stranger a visitor from a foreign land selected by her father. She carefully followed the rules of her primitive society and never rebelled against those who told her how to behave.

But when this peasant woman was faced with a threat to her children the one thing in life she loved most she found extraordinary courage. She defied her whole village and the army of guerrillas that h^ occupied it, even though in the end her defiance would

Author at age 8 with his sisters and his mother, who chose decah to save her family-

4 Famicv Weekly jliy si iwci





mean her imprisonment, torture, trial and execution before a firing squad. She died in a lonely ravine in 1948, her body tossed into a mass grave and covered with stones. She was 41 years old.

That woman was my mother, Eleni. I was 9 years old when she was murdered. If she had not found that courage, which is given to so few, my youngest sister and I would have been collected by the guerrillas who occupied our village during the Greek civil war and sent to camps over the border in Communist countries, along with the 28,000 other Greek children who were taken from their parents. My older, teen-age sister would have been conscripted by force and sent to fight with the guerrilla army on the blo^-soaked battlefields of northern Greece in the last months of the war.

My mother was not one to look for trouble. From the day the Greek Communist guerrillas, captured our village of Lia in November of 1947, she tried to appease them. She went uncomplainingly on the daily work details required of ail village women: building fortifications, carrying wounded, baking for the guerrilla army. She allowed our house to be taken over as the security prison (where she would later be tortured), moving her family into her mother s two-room hut. She watched as our food was taken away. No one forced her to make the choice she did. But there was one thing my mother would not sacrifice: the safety of her children.

In the spring of 1948 the guerrillas instituted a new program called the pedomasoma. They announced that all children older than 2 would be taken from their parents into Communist countries where they would be raised and educated as Communists. The children of Lia were starving before their mothers' eyes, and the guerrillas offered food to any children who were volunteered. Then one day, hiding in my grandmother s bean field, 1 heard two guerrilla officers talking, saying that they were going to take all the children of the village, whether their mothers volunteered them or not. I ran to tell my mother and she began to plan the ma.ss escape that would send us behind the lines of the Nationalist soldiers, so our father could reach us and bring us to America, where he had gone a decade earlier.

My mother had a choice. Like the man in the water, she could have saved her own life. She could have hoped, as most mothers in northern Greece did, that one day .she would be reunited with her children. She knew that her older daughters would be sent to fight with the guerrillas, but she could hope they would .somehow survive. Most of ihe mothers from our village took that chance, and in many cases thev did find their children.

many years later. Others were not so lucky.

But my mother was not willing to rely on luck when it came to the lives of her children. She found a way to organize our escape down the mountains, through the mine fields, to where we could contact our father. At the last moment, as the guerrillas demanded women to harvest wheat in a distant village, she elected to stay behind, knowing what it would cost. Her driving obsession was to keep her children safe and together, and she succeeded.

Today my four sisters and I live in Massachusetts, along with our children, the grandchildren Eleni never lived to see. They are her legacy. 13 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. surrounded by family, love and the opportunities available in the land my mother always dreamed of reaching.

As a child I felt helpless to deal with

my mother's murder. But soon 1 realized that one day I would have to travel back to the village where I was born to learn exactly what had happened to her.

I don't know if it was de.stiny or design that led me into journalism in college and then to a career as an investigative reporter. Even as an adult, in my 2()'s, when I went back to my village of Lia for the first time, where my mother's bones lie in our neighborhood church, I still wasn't ready to listen to the details of what .she had suffered. But 1 knew one day I would have to do it. and when I was sent by The /Ven York Times with my wife and three children to Athens in 1977 to be a foreign correspondent covering the Middle East, all the elements for my .search started coming together.

I had gained the skills necessary to pry the truth from reluctant witnes.se.s who knew what had happened to my

Nicholas Ga^ with his back to Lia, the Greek villa^ where his mother. Eleni, was murd^ed; below, Katis caught on him by a hidden camera tn Greece.

mother after we escaped from the village. Many of the villagers who had betrayed her and spoken against her at her trial, and the guerrillas who tortured her and fired the shots that killed her. were returning to Greece after years in exile. And those who still lived behind the Iron Curtain could be tracked down. In 1980 I left my job with The Neu York Times to devote all my energy to the search for the truth.

The journey that followed was the must difficult of my life. It took me to England. Canada, America. Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and all over Greece. I interviewed hun

dreds of people former friends and neighbors of my mother, villagers who had witnessed her trial, false friends who had testified against her to win approval from the Communist guerrillas and the guerrilla .soldiers and officers who carried out the policies that led to her death. I spoke to witnes.ses of her execution. 1 learned many things that I had never suspected about my mother and, eventually, about.myself.

As soon as 1 began my journey. 1 realized that it wasn't enough to tell what had been done to Eleni. I wanted to take physical revenge on those most responsible for her suffering, if I could put my hands on them. Besides the miniature tape recorder I used to record all inter\iews, sometimes in secret, I carried an unmarked pistol 1 had obtained during my years covering organized crime for The Times.

I hoped to track down those who had killed her and to make them .suffer as they had made her suffer. The rage that had been growing in me all those years, what Aeschylus called "the pain that never sleeps,' demanded the relief of .spilling blood.

The search took over two years, and finally 1 did confront the one man .still alive who had the greatest responsibility for her torture and death. The villagers knew him as Katis "the judge" but I di.scovered that he was a retired justice of the peace named Achilleas Lykas, living in the village of Konitsa, It was Katis who had arrested and interrogated my mother, pro.secuted her at her trial, ordered her to be tortured and sentenced her to death.

Finally / did confront the one man stili alive who was responsible for my mother*s death.

The first time I knocked on his door, with my gun concealed under m\ jacket and the tape recorder hidden in my .sock, 1 found Katis surrounded by his wife, his daughter and his little grandson. He was an old man, but as arrogant as ever, 1 confronted him w ith his crimes and he denied them. The pre.sence of his family made me hesitate, and I tried to goad him into attacking me, knowing that if he did my rage would take over and 1 could kill him without thinking of the consequences. Finally I spat in his face, the worst insult to a Greek. He ro.se to his feet shouting, "'Vou spit on me! Do vuu know who I am?" But his wife leaped between us and pushed him back in his chair. The moment had passed and I turned and walked out, vowing that next time I would corner him alone.

Several months later I followed Katis to a vacation apartment on the sea, waited until his family had gone out for

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a swim and forced the lock of his apartment. I found him asleep in an armchair, his pajama top open to reveal his caved-in, withered chest, his mouth gaping to show the missing teeth; a wreck of a man who appeared already dead. As 1 pointed the gun at his temple, I realized 1 could smother him with a pillow and his family would think he died in his sleep. But as 1 stood there, thoughts of my children crowded into my head. My children and my mother. Her last words, according to a neighbor passing by the execution site, had been not a cry of vengeance, but of love: "My children!" In order to summon the hate necessary to kill Katis, I would have to destroy the part of me that is most like my mother.

i'm still not at peace, nor has the longing for revenge left me. But the long and painful journey that ended in the judge s apartment lias yielded me many rewards that 1 didnt expect.

As 1 tried to recreate the last 10 years of my mother s life years of war. famine and hardship I learned that her story was liot one of total misery, but of joy as well. I rediscovered the good times we had together, the games we played and the jokes we shared. And 1 found an understanding of her as she really was not a fountain of strength, as I had seen her from a child's perspective but a complicated, troubled woman subject to fears and doubts. But when she was pushed to the wall, she possessed the intelligence to know what she had to do and the courage to do it. 1 have a new knowledge of my mother now and, as a result, a new joy in my own children and in the life she bequeathed us.

I have also come to know the strange, primitive world in which Eleni lived a world of magic and superstition, rich in customs and practices that now seem as distant as the Middle Ages. The story of my mother is the story of a woman trapped, like so many women around the world, in a rigid society and victimized by political forces that she couldnt comprehend for my mother was a stranger to politics; she was motivated solely by human compassion. She even hid two young Communist guerrillas in our house to protect them from persecution, yet it was their comrades who ultimately killed her.

1 found a new understanding of the plight of all civilians caught in the path of a revolution. 1 gained a new respect for women and especially for the power of a mother's love. But most of all, I discovered a new appreciation of what she has given me: my life in a free country, my children, the richness

Nicholas Ga^e. former im esliifalor. reporter and foreiifn correspondent for The New York Times. IS the author of Eleni (Random House)

of opportunities open to us.

All these things are her legacy and. having finished my journey and committed what 1 have learned to paper, 1 know that the story of Eleni is not one

of tragedy but of triumph. The only material things 1 have left of her are her burgundy wedding kerchief, some sepia photographs, a few words written in her hand on the back of an

icon. But we, her children, and the grandchildren who never saw her. are her legacy. She was one of those few whose courage makes the rest of us possible. R

Family Weekly JUY 31.1983 7

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GETTING PERSONAL WITH'nMO'THY LEARYTHE HIGH PRIEST OF LSD EMBARKS ON A NEW TRIP

Leary with wife Barbara and stqjson Zachary: Am I getting respectable?''

Perhaps no man has been more often held responsible for the highs (and lows) of the 60's counterculture than Dr. Timothy Leary psychologist, pioneer in drug research and proponent of Ihe intelligent use" of LSD. Although Learys followers praised him for being a head of his time, he was also blam^ for encouraging millions of young people to take psychedelic trips, sometimes with tragic results. In I%5 he was arrested for posse^on of marijuana and he was imprisoned in 1970. After several months he made a dramatic escape to Europe, was captured and returned to prison in 1973. Since his 1976 release, Leary has been leading a quiet life with his fourth wife, Barbara, and stepson, Zachary (he also has two children of his own from his first marriage). He has been lecturing and writing; his most recent effort is an autobiography aptly titled Rashbacks (J.P. Tarcher Inc.). When Family Weeklys Mary Ellin Bmns recently dropped in on Leary. 62, he refiected on his colorfiil life.

BruDs: How have psychedelic drugs changed your life?

Leary: The first time you have a sexual experience your life is changed because you see that theres a whole other reality there. 1 use that as an example of [what happened] the first lime 1 had the psychedelic experience. You discover multiple realities.

Q: Did your children get involved in the drug experfanenU?

Leary; Yes. My daughter had two or three experiences. But shes always been a conservative person, probably as a reaction to having a wild, Irish father. She stopped using drugs and today she's a churchgoer and she doesnt drink. My son experimented with D and marijuana and is a little tougher. But now hes calmed down.

Q: Do you ever regret that you perhaps unwittingly encouraged

some people to do themselves harm?

Leaiy: 1 have always been against or at least neutral on the use of all drugs except psychedelks. I certainly regret that I wasnt able to be more forceful about planning and preparation [for taking psychedelic dru^j. I regret that I got so involved in the pressures of the times that I wasnt a better husband, a better father. My going to prison... had catastrophic effects on my marriage

and my kids Now I have a 9-year-

old stepson who is playing Little League and I was amazed and amused when 1 was offered the job of Honorary Team Father. I came home and looked in the mjrror and asked myself, Am I getting respectable?

Q: Recently you were interviewed about the poodbility that J.F.K. took LSD. Do you really think that happened?

Leary: Its my hunch, and I've heard

8 Family Weekly jlly 3i i983

this from other sources, that he was experimenting with psychedelic drugs

Q: Do you think the spirit of the Os is still around?

Leary: Its pervasive. I think that the bom-again Christian movement is a byproduct of the drug culture. The very concept of bom again is the notion of turn on, change your life.

Q: Who were the most Influential people of the Ms?

Leary; The musicians. They were like an enormous swarm of wonderful, multicolored flying objects that changed everything.

Q: Youve been called a megalomaniac Are you one?

Leary: 1 think everyone should be allowed a half hour of megalomania a week. Im in favor of high standards At times you have to boast a little.

Q: Youve written a lot about qwce miration. Is it really right to think m terms of uring up and discarding our planet?

Leary: Why did we leave Ireland? Did we use it up? No, the Irish immigrants set out to find something better. Why do the bees leave the hive? Why do the termites leave the old colony? Because its lime to move on. Dont worry, people will continue to live in America, although some of us move on. When a beehive gets too big and when a queen flies off and starts another one, now, is that leaving the world?

Q: 1 guess youll be on the first available spaceship.

Leary: I dont care about that. I love it down here. W





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SWEET CORN SERVED IN HIGH STYLE

Com days are here again! When we tire of com on the cob and grilled com, there are other ways to enjoy the sweet texture and flavor of this all-American

By Marilyn Hansen

vegetable. Here are a couple of easy-to-prepare recipes that you might enjoy making.

JUDfOMm

bdlpepper taned red bcH pepper lea.liClillybeein

M cup hemry creaa or Bilk 2 cape cm cooked core Sak to taole

Few twMa freekly groawi btock

1. Cut stem end oB tomatoes and scoop out seeds and pulp with a spoon, making a tomato cup. Turn upside down to drain.

2. In a small skillet, melt butter, add onion and both peppers, cook and stir I or 2 minutes to wilt. In a small bowl, beat egg with fork; add cream and beat again to mix. Add com and the onkxvpepper mixture, salt and pepper.

S. Place tomatoes cup^side up in lightly ^eased baking pan. Stir com-egg mixture and spoon into the tomato cups. Sprinkle tops with grated cheese. Bake in prdieated 400 oven for about 15 to 20 minutes, until custard is set and surface is lightly browned. Serve immediately. Makes an excellent lunch, brunch or li^t-supper main dish, accompanied by cold sliced ham. mustard and atossed-greenssalad. Makes 6 servings

2laUc

2U

1 taMpoM tmi or Id lame Few Iwlilo freokly jnod black

2 capo cm cora, fbiely chopped

1. Mt butter in a medium saucepan. Blend in the flour, salt and few twists of pepper. Gradually stir in milk. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly until mixture thickens and comes to a boil.

2. Add the chopped cut com. instead of hand chopping, you may want to process in a blender or food processor using metal chopping blade.

S. With electric mixer, beat egg yolks until thick and light in color; stir into com mixture.

4. Using clean beaters, beat egg whites in a medium-size bowl until stiff peaks form. Using a light hand, fold egg whites into com mixture. Pour into a greased 2-<]t. casserole or souffle dish. Bake in preheated 350 oven for about 30 minutes, until puffed and lightly browned. Serve immediately.

Makes 4 to 6 sewings

10 Family Weekly jiLV 31 19S3





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DOES ROMANCE GET EASIER WHEN YOURE HARDTO GET?

By John E. Gibson

TRUE OR FALSE?

1. Most people's definitions of love are hazy.

2. The speed with which a romance develops partly depends on the physical characteristics of the two people involved.

3. When it comes to love and romance, playing hard to get can really get you somewhere.

4. Many people who are friendly and sociable tend to have problems sustaining mutually satining physical love relationships.

5. The older you get, the less pleasure and satiaction you derive from love-making.

6. The need for power can be destructive to a relationship.

ANSWERS

1.Fals. A National Science Foundation psychological study found that most peoples definitions of love are specific, including feelings of care and need for the partner and trust in his or her integrity and sincerity. However, feelinjp of care are more important in definitions of love than feelings of need. And trust plays a more crucial role in definitions of true affection either in love or friendship than any other attitude.

2. True. City University of New York researchers observed in a study of physical attractiveness and romantic involvement that two equally attractive individuals fall in love quickly (less than three months). But couples in which one member is more attractive than the other progress more slowly from friendship to love (they tend to

know each other at least eight months before even dating).

3. False. The hard-to-get dale was singled out as an arrogant person with an exaggerated sense of self-importance by undergraduates whom investigators surveyed at East Tennessee State University. The highly available dater, male or female, scored no better. The most favorable perceptions were associated with the moderately available dater, considered more trustworthy, less selkentered and generally more desirable than the other two types.

4. False. A study conducted by specialists from the University of Nevada, Kent State University and California Polytechnic State University found that people who have difficulty developing satisfying physical love relationships tend to be anxiety prone, hostile and antisocial.

5. False. While a highly active sex life is not mandatory for healthy and happy aging, according to University of Connecticut researchers, they also concluded that when the elderly do have sex, they enjoy it more than their younger contemporaries.

6. True. A University of Michigan study indicated that for many people, the drive for power and the will to love represent opposite poles of human existence and are great sources of human conflict. Power is defined as the capacity to get things done, while love means caring for others. The study showed that people who can integrate and balance the two can attain the highest degree of personal development. However, in their most perverted forms power becomes domination and love becomes manipulation, and if you use power to get love or love to gain power, a relationship becomes destructive. RV

Tiny laxative pill works in IJie lower tract, not in your stomach.

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When you want temporary relief from simple constipation, don't let it be an unpleasant experience. Take tiny Carters Little Pills. Read and follow label directions.

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In fact you MUST get the pain relief and comfort you seek or your money back FOOT DOCTOR a unique blend of modern science and the wisdom of ancient Chinese is so easy to use that the results will amaze and delight you right from the start It increases flexibility and improves the general health of the toot Just imagine what a blessing it will be to be PAIN FREE - TIREDNESS FREE - ACHE FREE - at long last. The FOOT DOCTOR provides mild exer cise to 75% of the muscles of the hip. teg and foot Gives a full range of motion to the joints of the ankle and knee without weight strain or pressure on them

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NIH'S LOOKING KrYOU,SACC!NI

This is the story of a tough, tighNipi^ fellow nam^ Robert Sac-chi, AKA the man with Bogarts face. Sacchi grew up in the Bronx, a super-streetwise guy. But a romantic, too, and loaded with integrity. Just like you know who.

I think Im Bogarts best PR person," Sacchi, 40, told us with Bogart's distinctive lisp. "So maybe he should send some residuals down, huh? In truth, the blessings have been sent down in (Sam) Spades. Sacchis cloned ^ pearance has landed him roles in a half-dozen films, hundreds of TV commercials and one Broadway play (ffay It Again, Sam). He just had a No. 1 record in Europe, and hes now recording an album and hosting Gma Hollyuxxxl Mysteries for TVs Entertainment Tonight.

Not long ago he was just another hungry actor. Then one day he hear about a play featuring a Bt^art characterization, and the days of wanting to be Paul Newman were over. But Sacchi stresses that playing Bc^ie requires an actor, not a mimic. There are

lots of good impersonators who do Bogart. But thats over in 30 seconds. You have to give a full interpretation of a dtaracter."

Sacchi does point out one major difference between himself and Bogie: "Im better lookin. U.S. FOKSUCCnS

^p|ongratulatk)ns! KmwI ^^be participating in the ^il984 Summer Olympics. This year, for the first time, Americans wilt be able to vote on the outfit the 700 members of the U.S. team will wear in the parade of nations during the events Opening Ceremonies.

Your chance to be an Olympic judge of sorts is being brou^t to you by Levi Strauss & Co., this years official Olympic outfitters. You can cast your ballot through Sept. 30th at particip^ing stores that carry Levis apparel. V)ters have a choice of the three looks pictured below (from left): active, western or classic.

But dont make your choice too hastily. Betty Louis, Olympics apparel, director for Levi Strauss, explains that the company has to design outfits that will look good on both men and women, everyone from an 80-pound gyronast to a 300-pound weightlifter.

It comes to ^nding a vacation aweyfiom home.

Unfortunately, says Runz-heimer spokesman Peter Packer, none of these cities is really much of a crossroads, or what you could call prime tourist areas, although Albany isnt 'far from Plains, Ga. But then the days of crowds rushing to Plains seem to be over.

theres no place like ... well, home. A recent survey by Runzheimer and Company Inc., a Rochester, Wis.. consulting firm, concludes that even the overnight traveler pays dearly.

According to the study, Manhattan is still the most costly place to visit. One night in a first-class hotel and three meals in good restaurants costs the well-heeled traveler $164. Next on the pricey list is Washington, D.C., ($146) followed by San Francisco ($125), Los Angeles ($125), Chica^ ($122) and Atlantic City ($116).

Of the 100 cities surveyed, Rockford, III.; Sioux Fails, S.D.; Albany, Ga.; Great Falls. Mont.; and Springfield, Mo., are the bargain ^ts to visit. An overnight visitor can get a room and three meals all first class for about $60.I'iiniily >\tkJv

IS the world ready for designer salami? One hopes so because according to Food & Drug Packaging magazine, Molinari & ^ns will be sealing salamis in can-nisters designed and signed by famed Italian designer Primi Angeli, available only in a limited edition, of course. The idea is to familiarize consumers with Molinaris new image, so select salamis will be sold to the truly statusconscious, in canrusters featuring the green, red, blue and gold design soon to be used on all of the companys deli meat packaging.

JK nd

MM doe l^^morGG

nd they say crime doesnt pay. This ith, William Morrow and Company is publishing Who KUIed The Robins Family?, which will award $10,000 to the lucky reader who answers that question by April 15. 1984.

The new mystery was created by literary agent Bill Adler and penned by veteran mystery writer Thomas Chas

tain. They promise that the book contains at least as many clues as it does Robins family members.

For, you see, one has to answer not only who killed the eight Robinses, but also where, when, how and why. And with all the bitterness and bad blood flowing be tween family members and their business associates, the possible motives for murder are many.

Only Adler and Chastain know the answers, which are sealed in a vault. Even I wasnt given the answers. says the books editor, Jeff Stone. And I havent figured them out. either.

The prize money will be awarded at the May 1984 American Book Convention in Washington, D.C. So brush up on your criminal psychol-0^, all you Sherlocks out there, and get to work. Ten grand isnt robins feed.

Mnt iieek, a liBBrty toastBIRTHMYS

(All Leo) Sunday Don Murray 54; Milton Friedman 71. Monday Dorn DeLuise 50; Arthur Hill 61; Tuesday Carroll OConnor 59; Peter OToole 51; Myma Loy 78; Gary Merrill 68. Wednesday Tony Bennett 57; Leon Uris 59; Martin Sheen 43. Friday John Huston 77; Loni Anderson 37; Neil Armstrong 53. Saturday Lucille Ball 72; Robert Mitchum 66; Andy Warhol 56.

Patrick M Linskey

ViM PiMidMil Md Ad Oiractor

Gerald Wroe

ViM PtmUmIjnd QotL Mql

Jonathan Thompson

Arthufcooper Ctmnmii EmmMim, Morton Frank

Managing EdIKK Tim Mulligan. Design Oiracioi; Retort Aitamua. ArticiM Editor, Kata White. Senior Editora, Patnce Adcrott. Enoi Kaoian. Food Editor Marilyn Hansen Aaaoc Editor Mary Eiim Bruns; Copy Editor Diana Browme. Research, Karen Errtmons; Photo Editor, Victoria Blair. Art Director, Richard VSidati. Asst. Art Director Susan Pereira Art Barbara Jablon Contributing Writers. Retort Coles. Norman LoOeeru. Amta Summer. Kathleen Maxa and Jane Ottentorg (Washington). Robert Wmoeier (Lee Angeles)

V.P.-Mtg. A Dk of Operatlona. Richard Muien. Prod. Dir, Christine Qarman. Planning, Michael Montemurro. Makeup Mgr, yViiiiam Kenny Typogr^ther, Debra Rose V.P.-Asaoc Ad Dir.. Joe Fraser, Jr Eastern Mgr., Lewis G Green. Dk.. Client & Agency Helationa, James B Powers. Assoc. Eastam Mgr, Richard K Carroll Southern Mgr Kenneth Sherry Detroit Mgr. Lawrence M Finn. Calif., Perrnns Spening, von der Lieth and Jones, V.P.-Marketing Dit, Stanley RosenfekJ. Mwketing Mgr. Kent D Alessandro Promotion Dl Patricia Kyle. Creative Dk.. Robert Banker. Sis. Pro. Mgr., Doromy Schoentek), Merchandising Mgr., Donna Gentile. Spec. Events Mgr., Lydia Janow Newspaper Relations: V.P., Lee Eis, V.P. Newspaper Services. Robert j Christian. Newspaper Rel. Mgrs., James G Baher. Robert H Marnott Ron Seivaggio Joseph C Wise TTanspor-tatlon Mgr., jim McCann, Distribution Mgr., Phyiiis Piiiero Consumer Svcs., Lmda Mount Admin. Asst., Barbara Shapiro V.P.-Flnance, Allan Rabmowitz. Controller, Jamas Ennghi

J

Dir,

14 Family Weekly jlly 3i i983





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Self-stick labels feature your name, address on cute green frog or wise brown owl; letters in crisp black on glossy white labels. Jumbo TxlVi'. Up to 4 lines, 22 letters/spaces per line.

P2073 Set of too Frog Labels. $2.49 P2074 Set of 100 Owl Labels.. $2.49 Two sets for ..........$3.99

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Make quick, professional-looking repairs on burns, rips,'holes. Easy method lets you match color and grain on vinyl and plastic materials. Repairs almost impossible to detect. Great for car seats, luggage, furniture, etc. Generous supply for easy, inexpensive repairs.

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S717 Set of 1,000 Labels $1.29

DELUXE BUSINESS CARDS

Your name, address, company, etc. printed on fine card stock. Choose beige card with deep brown printing & twin-band border, or mist green with forest green. 5 lines, 35 letters and spaces each. No designs. Please print.

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SELF-STICK RETURN ADDRESS LABELS are the perfect way to personalize your letters, identify valuable records, books, cameras, tools, etc. Selfstick, they cling at a touch. Your name,-address and zip code, up to 4 lines, 22 letters & spaces per line. Printed in black on glossy white labels. 2" x ^4 ! P6030 250 White Gloss Labels $2.98

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TOILET TRAIN YOUR CATI

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MAGNIFYING CLIP-ON GLASSES

Added magmficatioii for presaiption glasses. Pfect for reading small prim, numbers, product warnings, etc. 3X magnification. Ends constam focusing, leaves hands free. Great for threading needles, removing splinters. Fit over most glasses.

S306S Magnifying Clip-Ons..............$6.99

SEW HEAVY MATERIALS

Professional type awl lets you sew leather, canvas, etc with strong lock stitch Fix shoes, tents, awnings, upholstery yourself, quickly and economically. Save on repair bills Kit includes awl. 2 needles, heavy waxed thread, illustrated instructions H3087 Leatbar Awl.........$3.49

TOENAIL SCISSORS

These surgical-type scissors teature short, tapered blades especially designed for toenail clipping The long shank gives extra leverage and maneuverability The sharp steel edges are designed for cutting tough, thick toenails easily and quickly' 4 inches long F4091 Toenail Scissors .    .    $3.99

NO MORE ICED-UP WINDOWS

Auto Bonnet takes just seconds to install-yet it keeps snow and ice off all night Heavy plastic shield fastens to fender and bumper with elastic belts In the morning, remove Auto Bonnet and look-windshield and windows are cleared instantly!

H7002 Auto Bonnet... .....$5.99

BUNION TOE RELIEF Designed by an orthopedic surgeon. alleviates pain! Urges the big toe toward a more normal position Adjustable tension gently but firmly counteracts the causes of discomfort and deformity while you sleep. Washable Specify shoe size, man or woman, right or left foot 4-6 wk del D1013 Bandege $14.99 2 for $26.99

PBISOIIAUZED eOlHirS TOWEL

has Ms or iwr name embroidered in hri|kt rod boliw o smiling golf ball and toodosipa. Cotton terry towel is lO'V' i IG'-bip aoouph to be useful, small oaoaA to bKk into bag or hang froa cart BooMjf handy on those hot days OB tho Mo. Print name wanted F7229Plm.QoH8rs Temti.................S1.99

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EXTRA LARGE DRYER HOOD

Cut drying time in half over the old, tight-fitting dryer bonnets. Super-size hood is made extra large for air to circulate freely around your hair. Fits comfortably over jumbo rollers too! Made of long-wearing plastic with attractive floral design. Fits all makes of hair dryers. N1002 Super-Size Bonnet... $5.99

LOOSE RINGS FIT INSTANTLY

End annoying slipping of rings, stop danger of loss with these easy-to-use adjusters. Just snip clear vinyl band to fit inside ring, and slip it in. Special design stays in place easily Gives you custom fit. Set of 5 bands to fit any ring. Save costly jeweler's charges. F6190 5 Ring Size Adiusters $1.98

YOUR STATE RETURN ADDRESS LABELS

Your home state silhouette, its nickname and your name and address printed in rich blue highlight these extra large 2V V white self-stick labels. Up to 3 lines, 28 letters and spaces each All 50 states available, plus D C. and Puerto Rico Set of 250 labels P697 Pers. State Labels .. . $2.99

TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT OF COOKING SPAGHETTI! Never cook too much or too little again. Plastic utensil features 4 proportioried openings-lets you measure dry spaghetti into exact servings. Double or combine portions for more than 4 servings. 11, white. Great kitchen helper! K6226 Spagtietti Measure $1.99

PROTECT YOUR BANK ACCOUNT!

Pocket-size check protector guards against possible altering of your checks Simply dial in amount you want, stamp check. Rollers are impregnated with a built-in ink supply, good for thousands of impressions Ones instantly Great for anyone who writes checks. 3" case. S5051 Protect-A-Check $6.98

3-YEAR APPOINTMENT CALENDAR

Keep track of events coming up in 1984 thru 1986! Put ail your memos down in one place where you wont overlook them. Each 8!2" x 11" sheet shows a full month at a glance, with roomy squares for daily notes. 3 full years with each month tab indexed. Leather-like cover.

S720 Three-Year Calendar

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LIFETIME ADDRESS BOOK

Always up to date, always alphabetical To make a change, just replace a loose-ieat card' Ends messy cross-outs - hook is always neat! leather-like cover, alphabetical dividers Desk size 5" XIW pocket size 2's" x 5" Refills avail S5056 Pocket Size. 100 cards S2 99 S5058 Desk Size. 100 cards $5.99

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RETURN AOORESSLABaS WITN RAISED 6010 LETnRS

Ybur name ft address in raised gold letters on lovely matte^inish white self-stick labels. Distinctive touch for all your letters, packages. etc. Boxed set of 250. h" x IV. Up to 4 lines, 28 letters and spaces per line P6177 Raised Gold Labels... $2.98

KITCHEN SnU SHIELD covers oap be^ tween counter and stove-keeps food spills out of narrow hard-nxiean spaces. No installation-simply position Spill Shield over the space between appliance and counter; 3 strong hidden magnets hold it securely in place. White polyethylene, fire retardant, easy to wipe clean. 2Vx2r:

K1352 Spill Shield $3.99; 2 for $6.99

GIANT MEMO CALENDAR

Forgetful? Haw trouble remembering dates, engagements, anntversar-es? Let this giant daily memo calendar keep you straight in Sd! Shows current month plus two weeks of following month on each 14V* 21V sheet Each date in a large' square has lots of room for daily notes, memos, names

S704 Giant Memo Calondar.. $1.99

BAKE POTATOES ONSTOVETOP

Stove-Top Oven does all sorts of small baking jobs-uses only about 1/12 the energy of an oven! Great for potatoes, brown-and-serve rolls, custards, apples. Fine crisper and bun warmer. Saves en-. ergy, keeps kitchen cooler. Chrome finish. For gas or electric range.

KS166 Stove-Top Oven $8.99

SELF-STICK KITCHEN LABELS th

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PROTECT HAIRDO AS YOU SLEEP

Wake up beauty shop-fresh when you wear this bonnet Comfortable but firm net adiusts to any coiffure to keep it fresh, neat and uncrushed-even if you toss and turn! Velcro closure holds bonnet snugly, comfortably Help expensive sets last longer Washable N5083 Sleep Cap...........82.99

REMOVE UNWAMTEO HAIR safely &

easily with "Touch of Velvet" disc No messy creams or waxes No painful tweezmg No nicks or scrapes Lightly rub specially treated pumice disc over skin Unsightly hair is "erased" without irritation Leaves face, arms, legs soft & smooth In handy compact N2053 Touch of Velvet Disc $2.99

UP MH AW EAR lARSAEEiy!

Good Brooming demands that unsightly hair in nostrils and ears be removed-and now you can clip it out safely! Why risk infection by plucking, or by nicking with scissors? Tiny multi-blade rotary shear is safe, gentle, effective. Finest surgical steel.

F4I8 Klipette...............55.99

IIOKKTTERIIIISTANTIY!

Fel better, too, with Posture Bra Comfortable elastic back support gently holds your shoulders, helps you stand straighter Ybu look slimmer, younger. White nylon/spandex with power net Elastic straps, side & bottom panels. Order by bra size N1085I34BI N10BBI34CI N1091140CI N1086I36BI N1089I36CI N1093I360) Nt087|38B| N1090I3BC) N1094I38D) Posture Bra................$8.99

LOOK SUM AMO TRIM! Have a pot belly

Put It in Its place' Waist Belt slims you up the moment you put it on Instant-grip Velcro' closure makes it easy to put on, take off 6" wide, adjusts from 28" to 50" Elasticized cotton for easy wash n' wear Helps relieve back fatigue, too! For men, women N2044 Waist Belt...........$5.99

ELECTRIC CALLUS ERASER

Erases ugly calluses, corns, dead skin - leaves feet smooth as silk from heel to toe Lightweight, as easy to use as an electric shaver Safe, gentle vibrating action smooths rough, scratchy skin that looks so unpleasant and snags nylons Tough white plastic: 5'2 ft. cord N894 Electric Callus Eraser.. $6.99

VACUUM TAKES OUT BLACKHEADS

Don t squeeze and injure skin - let Vacutex remove blackheads gently Just put the tip on the blackhead, press the little pump-blackhead is gone! Gentle vacuum does the trick' This is the genuine Vacutex, not to be confused with imitators Guaranteed F259 Vacutex..............$1    98

YOUR CHOICE OFCOUMFULOESMMIIt'sfunto express yourself with these attractive labeis) Qioose from 16 designs sudi as; a monogram in royal blue . acheerful green shamrock even a imght rarl heart! Or a special label to let people know you've moved! Snowy white labels personalized in black (except flag, which is blue). INim up to 4 lines, 26 letters/spaces each. Set of250 labels, 2-5/l6'xS/B' Choose any design illustrated below

sn OF 250 LABELS (one design).........$198

.\V

   dk        V

ORNATE    morse    Pines    heart    pacms    Gull    smile    palette

P4105    P411I    P410I    P411J    P4109    P4IM    P411S    P113

H    #        B

ROSE

P4114

EiSM

P4117

Flag    cactus    moved-    Clover    clef    script

P4120    P4110    P411S    PS127    P4119    P4107





REMOTE CONTROL SWITCH

Extend your reach 15 feet across the room Stay in your ctuy bed or comfy chair to turn off TV, radio, lamp-|ust flick this syyitch! Plug appliances into this unit, unit into wall plug. That's all there is to it! A luxury tor yourself, so nice for the bedridden UL listed.

H3328 Remote Control Switch $5.99

OVAL RETURN ADDRESS LABELS

Your name, address and hp code featured in elegant Park Avenue script Graceful oval shape and flowing script lend a distinctive flair to all your correspondence. Self-stick labels cling at a touch Rich black print on 250 crisp white labels; 1" x 2 Nicely boxed JPM72 Oval Address Labels.. $2.98

RAISED4JTTER NOTES

feature your name in lovely raised blue saipt, set off by a smart, slim border. Looks like costly engraving. Perfect for thank-you's, quick notes, invitations. 5^ x 4V folded. Set of 50 crisp white notes with envelopes. The perfect gift. Print name wanted.

P8331 50 Irrformal Notes ... $3.99

m

KEEP YOUR MONEY SAFE in the zip-pered money pocket inside this handsome black ground leather belt. Choose IV4" or 2" wide; 2 or 3 initials on silvery buckle Looks like stylish dress belt Specify initials and size 128-32 . 32-38", 36-40 or 40-44"! P7132 Pers.    Money Beit $4.99

P4041 Pers. 2    Money Belt $5.99

AMMMf MMMfii

MlMkMariiiMtfwaN

Anr2...t12J9 Mmg.V.fM

SLEEPBETTER

ATNMMTI

MrMialMMIiNM|L pt pMla fna pv iMMi bMk M Nw Hp Pi M aM iris IBM aiMt PipliPMtNiptiPffcpiK

$23.99

SELF-STICK FOIL LABELS

Your choice of gold or silver foil labels with any name and address up to 4 lines Handsome border, attractive black printing. Cling to any clean, dry surface-ideal for personalizing books, cameras, briefcases, etc P6128 250 Gold Foil Labels $2.98 P6129 250 Silver Foil Labels $2.98

mtSOREYOUR . OIWHNtBISE

SmtmJSti ASt

FABUUNISKEY-LI6NT

End fumbling for keyholes in the dark! Plastic mini-light snaps onto the base of your key-has its own loop to attach to your key ring. Just push button on side; a bright beam of light illuminates area around keyhole. I>i"x1^", with replaceable battery and bulb included. H6307Key-Ute..$2.99 2for$4.99

$249

BAiwoiaiurMn SBtrCWHB . _  wiMjpiiBMffBrShiS

If Plm iMAtMiP.... 89J9





ELF STICK METAUZEO LABELS

br permanent identification for fishing rods, olf clubs, skis, tools, cassettes, luggage, ershoes. etc. Silver metalized mylar labels |lick tight at a touch. Name can't be crossed ut or changed. Flexible. 2M*" x H" 3 lines. 1 letters each.

II 100 Mylar Labels... $2.98

AUTOMATIC CARO SHUFFLER

Put 1 or 2 decks of cards into the side frays, push the center tray & PRESTO! Vbur cards are shuffled quickly and thoroughly every time. Made of sturdy plastic. 8" x 5" x 3'! Operates on 2 "C" batteries (not incl.l; easy instructions included A perfect gift!

F1250 Card Shuffler $12.99

GET RID OF BED SLATS

that cause bed springs to sag. squeak or even collapse Sturdy steel supports hold up to 1.000 lbs Eliminate bed slats completely For coil or box springs Heavy gauge steel Set of 6 Order for wood or metal bed

H5082 Supports (for wood bed! $6.99 HS083 SupiMrts (for metal bed) $5.99

BATHTUB SAFETY RAIL

Most home accidents occur in the bath! Reduce danger of slips and falls with this sturdy chrome-plated steel rail. 4 rubber sleeve-tips firmly grip side of most tubs Provide security for children, the elderly- a must lor shower-takers 13" long, about 8" high HI 363 Bathtub Safety Rait.. $11.99

INSTANT KING-SIZE BED!

Convert twin beds to the luxury and comfort of a king-si2e with Span-A-Bed It fills the gap so neatly you never know it's there! Strong, washable polyurethane foam insert can be used with double or single headboard twins. Bottom sheet holds it in place H2243 Span-A-Bed.........$7.99

BATHTUB SAFETY SEAT

Bathe in safety & comfort! Sturdy metal seat is great for foot baths, shampoos, sit-down showers, bathing children Sturdy grips help convalescents & elderly people get in and out of tub White enameled finish, non-skid rubber feet Choice of 3 positions lO' ?" x 16' 2" x 20" H489 Bathtub Seat.........$18.99

1

1 Walter Drake mail order form

Charge to my:

MasletCaid Account XiinilKt

Bank Vumbat Irom youi MaslerCaid

Visa Account Number

Ecbiration dale on youi chatge card Mo    v.

AUTHORIZED SIGNATURE Ineeded to. cl.,e orders onlyl

nEASE ADO THE F0U0WM6 AMOUffT FtMSMmiK AMHAN0UM6 Hyowoidef it: llploS 3.00-AAIS .50 $12.01 toSt7.00-AMS2.60 S3.01IOS 6.00-AMS1.20 S17.01 loS23.00-AMS3.00 S8.0ttoS12.IW-AMS2.10 Ovee $23.00-AM $3.30

NAME-

ADDRESS.

CITY & STATE.

Item No How Many

.ZIP.

Name ot Item. Sire and Color

'''3tsastr SHIPPING AND HANDLING

TOTAL ENCLOSED (chacfc, moMy ordar or diargod)





AjiirN'. L'.iil.sCHEERY PERS. RAINBOW MU6

Your name and the message, "look for the rainbow"! Uulti-hued bright rainbow on fine white porcelain mug; your name is hand lettered in rich brown right ir) the cloud. Generous lO-oz. cup is dishwasher-safe. Please print first name Gift-boxed!

P7595 Rainbow Mug $3.99

250 SELF-STICK

HANDSOME BRASS FINISH BUSINESS CARD CASE keeps your business cards neat and orderly-lets you hand them out in style. Slim executive-style case is handy for credit cards, tool Satiny brushed brass finish, 3-5/B"x2-1/6"x3/16". engraved with your name. Up to 17 letters/spaces. P6310 Business Card Case.... $7.99uHUSinSelf-stick labels an the Mart, ees? ny to persomlin lettan, books, etc. Any nenw, addms and zip code up to 4 lines beautifully printed in Mack on the finest white satf-stick label paper available. IX" ienp. Bosad. P81112BISallkblalMsllJB

iwntlMe vw bv Im Mw Dnka ii SMIMImV n tMM W VMM IMIWV Mtkl

Mn. Fred D. Johnson 221 S. 23rd Sircci West Highland Park Aaytown. Kansas 80940YOUR NAME & RETURN ADDRESS

in striking calligraphic style printing will add a distinctive touch to your letters, packages, etc. Graceful print resembles elegant hand lettering on a handsome scroll background. Up to 3 lines. 30 letters & spaces each. Set of 250. Self-stick, they cling at a touch P4073 Calligraphy Labels.... $2.98

It's Faa-Fast-Easv

TO ORDER BY MAIL FROM WALTER DRAKE

Sdwed^oBlboiRAINBOWNAMEftAOORESS LABELS

Add a cheery personal touch to letters, envelopes. A golden sun and bright rainbow accent each labl. Your name and address printed in crisp black on 250 snow-white selfstick labels. 2-5/16"x5/6",they cling at a touch. 4 lines, 26 letters and spaces per line P1071 Rainbow Labels $2.98FUU FADE MAGNIFIER

Magnify an entire page with this 6*2' x 11 magnifier. It's a deluxe 4X-brings print up to 4 times its sire! You don't lose your place because you magnify so large an area. Wafer-thin so it can be kept in a book. Plastic with vinyl hand grip on one side S3062 Full Page Magnifier.. $3.9932 5 5245

Send any sire color slide or color print (up to 8"x10"| and receive beautifully finished copies on quality KODAK paper. Original returned unharmed. Order your selection by the item numbers shown below:

P83S9 32WnllwPlwtas.........$2.45

P63B0 18 WallMs, Two S "x7".....$2.45

P6364 18 Jwabo Wallets.........$2.45

P4082 Two 5"ir, One rxHT.....$2.45

iz raanuiin FMU *2

Here's a gift that's sure to make a hit with every young scholar on your list - quality Venus pencils with his or her own name imprinted in gold! Kids love em! Great for home, offices and stores, too.

Name helps prevent loss. Any first and last name you want, one name to a set. Full size 7 " pencils with smooth-writing No. 2 lead and rubber erasers. Please print name. S854 12 Pars. Pencils 52.49

Eyrvthmg you buy fiom Wilttf Ottku guxranned to pttm or vow monov bKk*





THE DAILY REFLECTOR

GREENVILLE, N.C.

NEWS

FEATURES SPORTS

PEANUTS

SUNDAY. JULY 31. 1983by Charles Schulz

IT SEEMS TO BE A NICE PAy FOR SAILINS...

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ANDV CAPP

bv

BEETLE BAILEY

by Mort Walker

THERE'5 THE FIRST OHE





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CAN YOU TRUST YOUR lYltf IRm MU t M tia #HIm-MCM M rewmi MiNs NRmm M Mii feaNmi pMwlt. Nmv Nvckly CM VM RNi NMMt Cmcfc MtMCrt NR Rmw Mmv.

II Itf 9 muhumi II 4pe t Uftliw 9M ItMfiiMi c * iUAMMip II Id UiOH ( MMUt l{ tn c 6uiMIIU II 9WW I TVTftlilO

   TAKING    SlOCSf    Trvc    or    falser.. 1. RrMMtnt Marry TrumM IcM-handc.

2. Babe    Rvfh    batted    left-banded.    3. Lady Oodiva Is sbaeni m Nic leN fide ef bar horse.

4. Mapoleen is shewn ndtb hfs rlfiit band In Ms iacbet.

*14 J* l|UtJU||{ IIV

o Pipe This! A Wise guy cut two inches from the end of Jerry tht plunHier's yardsticb. If Jerry unhnovingty uses fbb yardstick to measure and cut a 15-toot length of pipe hbw many inches short will it be? p>4irr nn MMi|i IP -O) MM3UI04H jcm imjw ux o WfeN VtrMdt A MHMg all persens detest. aNtiDugh ill by everyane feN; by two Mtlers felty ea-pressed, by twMa boo Invariably m. Wbpt word is the answer?    |    n    ni.*Mt*,pjo(A

o Riddie-AAe-Thlsf What exercHM toughen the skin? Callus thanics. Whaf shouMjl you buy if you don't want to sing alena? A duet-yoifrseif kit.

QUICK ON DRAW?

TRY THIS TEST

Ten numbers 1, 2, 3,

4, 5, S, 7,1, 9 and 10 -were placed in a container. whereupon five persons Henry,

Eileen. Bill, Mil and Lil were asked to draw two numbers each.

The sum of the two numbers each draw was as follows; Henry,

14; Eiloen, 11, Bill. 4,

Mil, 17 and Lil, 7.

How quickly can you determine the two numbers each person drew?

P.S.: Solve the prw blem by a process of elimination.

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NOT 0061 Simply add the fallewinf colors naaify ta the scone above: 1>Red. 2->Lt. blue. 9~Yellow. 4*U brawn. b^Flesh. 4-Ok. green. 7Ok. brown. b^Qfc. bMe. 9-Blacfc. KKOrey.

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Our Slor^: king Arthur's rule has collapsec? im east anslia, where

SAXON INVAPERS OVERRUN THE COUNTR/SIPE. AS ARN ANP NINIAN SCOUTQUT im SMOH positions they are AM0USHEP SY THIEVES, RESISTANCE PROVES RJTltE, THEY ARE STRIPPEP OF THEIR WEAPONS ANP PURSES ANP PREPARE TO MEET THEIR ENP. THEN NINIAN SPEAKS UP:    /PS    MUNGOJ"

THE ROBBER KIN6 EVES THE LAP. "/S that L/rrUA//N/AN? THE SMiTNY'S    SATISFIED

THAT IT IS, WE ORPERS HI5 prey UNBOUNP.

" YOU THOUGHT ME PAP, gHf SlAfN 0Y 3AKON3 ? HE SPITS BITTERLV. OP U$ MERE HAVE THE SAME BTORi. CAMiE HOME ONE CHkY TO NP OUR PAM/UES SLAUHTEREP, OUR CROPS BURNEP. ANP WHERE HERE THEKme^SMEN? WHOCOULP WE TURN TOP 03BERN? A MAN /N THE SAXON'S PAY?

'^OHE AFTER another we TOOK TO THEGREENWOOP ANPIHEP BY OUR WITS.'^    I8M0VEP BY THE TALE. I

AM THE NEW PARKER OF ORR* HE SAV9. "OSOERN /S JAAEP, HELP ME ANP X WtU SEE YOUR CRIMES FOR6/VENANP YOURPROPERTr RES70REP.* mMQO LOOKS TO HIS MEN. THEY SIGNAL ASSENT.

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"Z HAVE A Pan, " ARN says. '^YOUKNOW these parts, MUN60. where CAN the R/VER FLANKING CASTLE ORR BEA6/LYPAMMEP?" MUNGO leaps the party TO A SHEER GORGE WHERE THE WATERS NARROW. EVERY SPRING PEBRIS FROM UPSTREAM GATHERS HERE ANP CHOKES THE FLOW, STARV/NG THE RIVER BEYONP OF/TS USUAL

tribute, for emys the bep/spry.

'^THEN THE 06JAM BREAKS ANP THE WATER SLAKES THE PPYBEP'S THIRST. CATTLE FORAGING AMONG BOTTOM-WEEPS ARE AUNAYS CAUGHT BY SURPRISE. WE LOSE A HERP OR TWO each year "NEXT WEEK: The Plan

7 31

PONYTAIL

by Lee Holley





FORGCr MvsflcePflNMy E66BERTER Rts^'-RAK!} CPS OF FLOOR---

REDEYE

by Gordon Bess





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FLASH GORDON

by Dan Barry


Title
Daily Reflector, July 31, 1983
Description
The newspaper was established in 1882, and was originally named the Eastern Reflector. It was founded by Julian Whichard and David Jordan with equipment they purchased from The Greenville Express. On December 10, 1894, it adopted the name The Reflector and began publishing every day. Cox Newspapers acquired The Daily Reflector in 1996. Creator: Daily Reflector (Greenville, N.C.) - 30528
Date
July 31, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95439
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