Daily Reflector, August 8, 1983


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





Even Road Trip With 5*2 Win

Braves Remember 1982 SkidDouble Play Relay

Greg Brock of the Los Angeles Dodgers is out at second as Atlanta Bravfs sedond baseman Jerry Royster rdays the baU to first for a

double play during the fourth inning of Sundays game at Dodger Stadium. Atlanta went on to take a 5-2 victory over Los Angeles. (AP Laserpboto)

By The Associated Press

Dale Murphy and the Atlanta Braves learned a lesson last August when they were riding high in the National League West with an eight-game lead.

The Braves remember a disastrous West Coast trip in which they lost 10 of 11 games and saw their lead dwindle to 1'^. They didnt want to go through that again.

This time the Braves entered the H-game trip with a 4/i-game lead and the seemingly listless Los Angeles Dodgers coming back to life. But there was no repeat performance for the Braves - they won six and increased their margin to 5'/i games.

Anything can happen, Murphy said after leading the Braves to a 5-2 victory Sunday that averted a sweep by the Dodgers. "But we learn from experience, and that means that it doesnt matter how big a lead you have, youre never safe.

Elsewhere in the National League, Montreal defeated Pittsburgh H, Philadelphia beat St. Louis

5-2, Houston trimmed San Francisco 2-1, Cincinnati edged San Diego 5-3 and New York downed Chicago

6-4 in 10 innings.

The Braves took a 3^ lead in the second inning off Dodgers starter Alejandro Pena, H. Murjlhy got it started with a oneKiut single. Jerry Royster then doubled to left and Murphy scored on a single by Bruce Benedict.

Pascual Perez then hit a tapper in front of the plate that catcher Jack Fimple threw away at first, allowing Royster to score. Benedict later scored on a sacrifice fly by Brett Butler.

Atlanta addisd a run in the fourth on Bob Homers RBI single and in the fifth when Murphy scored from third on a double play.

Perez, 13-3, and Steve Bredosian, recording his 16th save, combined to scatter eight hits.

The Dodgers got their two runs in the sixth. Greg Brock hit his 14th homer of the season and Dusty Baker later scored on a sacrifice fly by Ken

uaimreai

Anyti fflwind. Bravesk

Landreaux.

time youre away for awhile and gain some youve got to be happy about it, said travs Manager Joe Torre.

Expos 6, Pirates 0 At Pittsburgh, Steve Rogers stopped the Pirates on two hits and Tim Raines smashed his second grand slam of the season. It was Montreals fourth straight victory, while the slumping Pirates dropped theirfourth.inarow.

Rogers, 14-6, became the NLs winningest pitcher in tossing his fourth shutout of the season. He struck out three and didnt allow a walk.

' Raines homer, his seventh, came in the second off Larry McWilliams, 11-6. The Expos added runs in the third on Chris Speiers sacrifice fly and and the fifth on Tim Wallachs home run, his 14th.

Pittsburgs only hits were Mike Easlers two-out single in the fifth and Marvell Wynnes single in the sixth.

Phmies 5, Cardinals 2 At St. Louis, The Phillies completed a three-game sweep over the struggling Cardinals to maintain a one-game lead in the ti^t National League East. St. Louis has dropped seven straight games to go 4>/^ behind vdiile the Phillies have won 11 of their last 14.

Marty Bystrom, 4-7, gave up four hits over six inning to regi^r the victory. Ron Reed, going three innings, earned his fifth save.

Mike Schmidt hit his 24th homer, a two-run shot in the seventh, and drove in another run in the first to provide most of the power for the Phillies.

The Cardinals got their runs on Darreil Porters sacrifice fly in the second and Lonnie Smiths RBI single in the third. Neil Allen, 7-11, was the losing pitcher.

Astros 2, Giants 1 Nolan Ryan came back after a sterling one-hitter against S^ Diego last week with a strong three-hitter at San Francisco. The right-hander, 11-5,

struck out eight for a career total of 3,614, only two behind all-time leader Steve Carlton of the Phillies.

The Astros broke a tje in the ninth with an unearned run off reliever Greg Minton, 5-8. Phil Gamer led off the inning by reaching first on a throwing error by third baseman Joel Ywmgblood. Jose Cruz fdlowed with a bunt single and both runners advanced on Mintons throwing error.

Ray Knight followed with a sacrifice fly to deep right to score Gamer with the go-ahead nm. Cruz also smacked a solo homer in tlw seventh off Mike Krukow to tie the game.

The Giants scored in the third on Darrell Evans RBI sin^e.

Reds 5, Padres 3

Frank Pastore nearly did it all for Cincinnati, pitching a six-hitter and smacking a two-run homer against the Padres at San Diego.

Pastore, 5-10, registered his second complete game of the year as he walked two and struck out two in posting his first victory since July 17. It also was his second career home run.

Ron Oester slammed his ninth homer, a two-run shot in the Reds Uuree-run sixth, to chase Ed Whitson, 2-7.

San Diego took a 1-0 lead in the first on Terry Kennedys RBI single and added two more in the ei^th on doubles by Juan Bonilla and Bobby Brovm and Ruppert Jones tw(H)ut single.

Mets6,Cubs4

At Chicago, Hubie Brooks had three hits and four RBI, including a two-run single in the 10th, to lead New York to its seventh victory in the last eight games. The win also marked their first three-game series sweep since September 1981.

Doug Sisk, 5-3, was the winning pitcher. Jesse Orosco came on in the lOth inning to earn his 11th save. Lee Smith, 4-7, was the loser.

Mel Hall homered in the seventh for the Cubs, his seventh of the year.

Rizzo Rallies Past Lock For Boston Five Classic Title

Nicklaus Falls Short Of Sutton

DANVERS. Mass. (AP) Pat Rizzo, the 1982 LPGA rookie of the year, was ready to quit the womens golf tour eariy last month after five payless weeks.

Instead of going home to Florida, though, she decided to stick it out. She got back in the money at Indianapdis and the U.S. Open and realized she had made the right decision.

Ive put a lot of pressure on myself to win this year evwi though I knew I had to work my way up, the 23-year-old former University of Miami, Fla., All-American said Sunday. "Now I feel like I belong.

Rizzos determination, along with her anger over a 1-over-par 73 Saturday, paid off as she charged from behind to overtake Jane Lock and fashion her first Ladies Professional Gdfers Association victory in the $175,000 Boston Five Classic at Radisson Femcroft Country Gub.

I was ready to go today, Rizzo said after finishing with a 4^fflder-par 68 for a 72-hole total of 277 and a 2-stroke victory over Lock, an Australian just starting her second year on the tour.

Many players cant sleep before a final round if they have a d^ance to win, Rizzo said. "But I was furious over my play Saturday, I was so

mad at giving away so many shots that I went to the practice area and hit buckets of balls.

Then I went home and slept like a log. When I woke up 1 felt real good. I wasnt nervous. 1 felt ready to charge.

And Rizzo did just that -char^. She birdied three of the first five holes, pulling into a tie. Then she took the lead for good as Lock took a bogey 5 on the seventh green.

Rizzo built her lead to four strokes, but Lock, looking for her fir^ U.S. victory, refused to (piit. The 28-year-old onetime physical education in-^ctor in Australia pulled to within two with a birdie on the 70th hole, but time ran out.

Rizzo called her victory a present to a Miami doctor, Jimmy James. She said she considered herself a tomboy ei^t years ago at the age of 15.

1 hated golf, she said. 1 wouldn't go near a golf course. Then I broke my ankle playing basketball. I met the doctor and be eventually convinced me to try playing golf. He Uught me the shots. I owe him a lot.

Rizzo said she has played golf every day, without exception, since she started eiit years ago. Her biggest check. $26,250, boosted her

earnings for the year over $65,000.

Lock earned $17,150, her biggest payday.

I had my heart set on winning, but I made some money and now I can pay some bills, she said.

PACIFIC PALISADES, Calif. (AP) - In dramatic and ^lectacular fashion, Hal Sutton and Jack Nicklaus each proved their critics wrong.

The young Sutttm demonstrated that be can play solid golf under intense pressure as he thwarted Nicklaus late charge Sunday and won the PGA Championship by a single stroke.

Nicklaus, 43, showed he can still play the game superbly.

coming from six shots off the pace with a closing 66 that almost carried him to his first major victory since 1980.

After struggling to a demoralizing three bogeys in a row on the back nine and realizing Nicklaus had moved to within one shot, Sutton cooly parred the final three holes to win his first major championship.

Im relieved to cure that label of choking thats been

put on me, said Sutton, 25, referring to his having blown a six-stroke lead on the final day of the recent Anheuser-Busch tournament.

Nicklaus, whose declining success on the tour raised speculation that he was finished as a first-rate player, showed his old brilliance as he came close to cdlecting a record sixth PGA Championship.

When Im playing well. Im

playing as well as I ever have, said Nicklaus, who had to settle for pars on the final two holes. It was fun, coming down 18 and knowing that a major championship was on the line.

Nicklaus, who had played in the threesome just ahead of Sutton, watched as his approach on the final hole fell within 25 feet of the hole. Sutton putted to within a foot, then tapped in for victory.

Sutton, who led all the way in the tournament at Riviera Country Club, shot a closing par 71 to finish at 10-under-par 274 for the tournament.

Peter Jacobsen came from back in the pack with a closing 65 that gave him the third spot, a stroke back of

Nicklaus. Another stroke behind was Pat McGowan, who shot 69. John Fought, with a 71 for a 278 total, was fifth.

Nicklaus said be was pleased with his comdsack after an opening 73 and added that he was not overly disappointed by not winning.

I congratulated Hal and told him that will be the first of many major titles for him, Nicklaus said.

Sutton set a rookie tour earnings record of $237,734 last year and leads the earnings list this year with $397,684, including $100,000 for the PGA victory. He is off to one of the most impressive starts on the tour since Nicklaus debut more than 20 years ago.

Barnhill Chosen ForN.C Unit

Kelly Barnhill of Greenville has been chosen to swim for the North Carolina team in the Southern Zone Age Group Championships to be held August 12-14 at Fort Pierce, Fla.

The tq[) six North Carolina swimmers in each age group were selected at the completion of the N.C. Junior Olympics competition in High Point this weekend.

Teams from North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee ami Alabama wUl compete for the Southern Zone Championship.

National Industrial Champs

The Fire Fi^iters won the National Division championship of the Industrial Softball League this summer. Members of the team are, first row, left to right: Lynwood Owens, Linwood Hines,

Ricky EUis, Lennie Waters, Robert Coggins; J'"* f" *

second row. Skip Eure, Jon West, Doug Branch, Leonard Sawyer, Jeff Walker, Gary Coggins, Lynnie Owens and Don Mills. Not shown is Bruce Mayo and Bobby Thompson.

Will Tear Off Existing Roof And Add A New One Call

David Ross 355-6877

James A. Manning Bethel, N.C. 82S-5631

8outnBStem

Vilas Anticipates 'Court' Action

NASHVILLE, Term. (AP)-Guillermos Vilas says he and the Mens International Professional Tennis Council could up in court before a satisfactory decision is reached, concerning his alleged taking of appearance money to play in a recent Holland tournament.

They (the council) say they have enou^i evidence to show 1 took money, said Vilas, who was in Nashville for a Saturday ni^t exhibition bout with John .McEj;^. I denied it. but I had to pay the fine t$20,OOQ) before I appealed 1 was declared guilty quickly . before I was shown anything about it.

Vilas defeated McEnroe 6-3,

Sfaton-Curtls Take Tourney

RALEIGH - The unseeded duo of Nelson Staton of Greenville and Lionel CiMis of Cary teammed to defeat second-seeded George Wylie and Virgil Mercer of Raleigh 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 in the 35-and-over tournament held this weekend at the Biltmore Hill Community tennis courts.

In the semifinals. Staton and Curtis downed the top-seeded team of John Smith and Robert Ball 5-7,6-2.6-1 to advance into the finals of the 32-team field

3-6, 7-6 in the Saturday exhibition. Vilas won the final two matches of a six-day, six match-tour for the two players.

If his appeal fails, Argentinas top tennis player, who ranked fourth in the world in 1982, faces a years suspension from Grand Prix and Davis Cup events.

The appeal process involves a three-man panel, with one member picked by Vilas, (me by the tmis council and the third by the first two members. The nt), as far as Vilas is concerned, is that all panel members must come from a list provided by the tennis council.

Vilas said be wants to finish with all the technicalities within the game before considering any other action.

Going into the courts is in my mind, but 1 have to talk to my lawyers first, Vilas said.

Vilas would not say be was a scapegoat in the councils efforts to (xmtrt alleged paying of front iiKMiey and splittiiig of purses by players, but said be was a very conveniat person to use as an example.

*i am an independent peram. 1 am a South American, and my tennis association doesnt have the power that this association has. Also, they

bad to take a player from the top five to make it an issue, VUassaid.

McEnroe was enq>hatic in defense of Vilasplight.

He (Vilas) says be didnt take the money and, even if be did, its very unfair. He was made a scapegoat. said McEnroe.

If they (tournament sponsors) put up $250,000 in prize money and if they

choose to give a player some money, thats their business, McEnroe said. "Its fact that certam players sell a lot of tickets before a match.

1 think its time for the players to show a little control over the ganoe. There are a lot of people in tennis who are trying to make some people look bad right now. We (the players) are coming to a period where we have to assert ourselves more, McEnroe said.

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Editorials

Tax Door Is Open

Its just as well the Pitt County Board of Education broke the ice in requesting that the County Commissioners approve the local option sales tax offered by the General Assembly.

Commission members had presumably talked about that extra half-cent tax among themselves as one recourse for the county; but each member was likely reluctjint to bear the onus for proposing a tax increase, and one can hardly blame them.

^ Now the door has been opened.

The commissioners have agreed to contact municipalities and the county and city school boards to get their sentiments on the tax. County Manager Reginald Gray says that if all N.C. counties adopt the tax, local governments in Pitt could expect to receive something over $2 million.

Distribution of the tax money would be determined on a per capita basis among those counties in which the sales tax is colletted.

Statewide, observers have speculated most of North Carolinas 100 counties will want to share in the program. Some may hedge.

There are urban counties, for instance, where people are saying that under the distribution plan they will be getting back less than they pay into the program. That does not please them. But for the majority of counties there is pretty much agreement that they do need additional money and the local option tax offers some relief without the prospect of more painful alternatives.

The proposal leaves room for hope, too, that with reasonable success in participation, the General Assembly may see fit to eventually abandon the sales tax on food. That is one revenue source that leaves a bitter taste in the months of most Tar Heels.

Take A Cold Shower

Even the thought of nostalgia in Italy for the good old days of Benito Mussolini seems improbable.

Yet, the occasion of the 100th anniversary of his birth turned-on a lot of aged followers and modern neo-fascists in Italy.

Most Italians recoil at the memory of hardships, dishonor and tyranny II Duce brought his homeland. They want no more fascism ... any more than they want leprosy; and there are laws intended to insure it will not happen again.

Of course, the myths linger: He was the one who ran Italian trains on time. (The fact is, back then not even a hundred Mussolinis could have made trains run on time in Italy.)

The young people who dream of past glories under Mussolini would do well to heed some very old advice; take a cold shower, it cures fantasies.

Chet Currier

Delay The Cheers

Paul T. O'Connor

There's Money To Be Made

.NEW YORK (AP) ^ In the late 1970s there was much concern over the ailing state of the U.S. dollar As the dollar sank steadily in value against the Japanese yen, the Swiss franc and other major currencies, experts lamented its decline as a symptom of fading U.S. eminence in the world economy. There was even talk that oil-exporting countries might stop accepting payment in dollars and opt instead for a "basket'' of currencies.

Since then, the situation has been dramatically reversed. Last week the dollar reached its highest level in more than a decade. By all appearances, its worldwide standing has been restored as a store of value But hold off on the cheers and applause for a moment. A strong dollar, it turns out, is a problem just as a weak dollar was A different kind of a problem, but still a problem.

To be sure, some of the effects of the dollar's rise are beneficial. It makes imported goods relatively cheap in this

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country, thus helping to reduce domestic inflation. It has setit a torrent of bargain-minded tourists off to Europe and other foreign climes this summer, and one would presume that merchants there are happy to have the extra business the American visitors bring.

That is not the whole story, however. Europeans complain that, with a strong dollar, the United States in effect is hogging all the benefits of economic recovery for itself.

Because of the dollars elevated position, they say, they must keep their interest rates as high as possible to try to discourage capital from fleeing their borders. Even that doesnt always work, they add - the dollar is pulling money away from their economies like a magnet as international investors seek a combination of safety and the highest possible return.

U.S. companies that do a large portion of their businessoverseas are also unhappy. The higher the dollar goes, the less attractive their merchandise becomes to foreign buyers., ,

Worst of all, as some see it, the dollars strength is increasing the chances of a new wave of protectionism - efforts by individual countries to improve their domestic economies and preserve their citizens jobs by setting up tariffs, import quotas and other barriers to outsiders.

In some quarters, protectionism is considered one of the chief causes of the Depression a half century ago. In 1930, the United States enacted the Smoot-Hawley tariff setting high duties on imports.

"Protectionism was supposed to raise the price of imported goods and thereby put Americans to work, Richard Lesher, president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, has said. Instead, nations around the world retaliated by raising their own tariffs and American exports could find no buyers.

Few observers foresee a replay of 1930 looming in the immediate economic future. Lessons were learned from that disaster, and trade' agreements and international financial institutions have been set up since to try to maintain lines of economic cooperation and avenues of trade between countries.

The danger of a new global economic crisis does not appear to be very great, said the Union Bank of Switzerland in a recent appraisal. But it added, The dangers of a new outbreak of protectionism are obvious, and threaten the free system of wdfld trade.

RALEIGH - Who hasnt had at least one great money-making idea in their lifetime? Something like an electronic mousetrap or a car radio that automatically changes stations when the political ads come on.

Try to translate that idea into a product that sells on store shelves, however, and most of us are lost. Put the idea back in your head. You dont have the money to get started, and even if you did, you wouldnt know how.

In North Carolina today, there are plenty of people with money-making ideas lodged in the backs of their heads. Theyre the people who work in our big research companies and universities. They know computers and microelectronimc and they know where a comer of the market could be grabbed. Theyre ready to quit their jobs, set up a business of their own and make a fortune, but they dont have the money to get started and they dont know how to

run a business. They just have a great idea.

Dont laugh*. The microelectronics industry is made up pf industries created in just such a way. Remember, Steve Jobs started Apple Computers only a few years ago with just an idea, a few wires and a workshop set up in his garage. Other major microelectronics firms are owned by engineers who 10 years ago were working fjw' some firm that thought their ideas wei^ crazy.

These people need venture capital. That is, a loan that doesnH get paid back in monthly installments but in a share of the company. The venture capitalist forks over a chunk of money to help get the engineers business off the ground and, in return, he gets 25 percent of the company. For the capitalist, its a risky type of investment. But, when it pays off, it pays better than the New York lottery.

North Carolinas problem is that it

doesnt have a great deal of venture capital available. It is the sort of barrier to our having that full-blown growth we want to have in high tech industry. Gov. Jim Hunt said at a recent press conference.

Why doesnt North Carolina have venture capital? Hunt figures its because North Carolina has always been a poor state. Washington economist Michael K. Evans, speaking in Raleigh recently, said the states major banks have simply failed to get into the venture capital field.

Where will North Carolinas venture capital come from? Hunt says its something that has to be done in the private markets. Its not a function of government. But the General Assembly did appropriate $1 million this year to get a program off the ground that will help grassroots businesses with some of their problems.

Wealthy individuals are usually a good

source of venture capital. They can afford the risks if they balance venture investments against their more reliable traditional investnoents. Hunt figures that much of this money will have to come from out of state, however, and thats the hang-up. Venture capitalists usually like to be close to their investments, Hunt said. They like to keep an eye on their money. They find a person of whom they think highly and they invest in him, they take his word that the idea is an eventual money-maker.

Possibly a local source of venture capital is the states banks and large corporations. In recent years, established businesses have begun putting a small share of their investment money into venture opportunities.

With all the engineers, scientists and garage shop tinkerers in this state, it just seems like there must be money to be made in North Carolina.

Warn

mam

I

1

Evans Witt

Task Isn't All That Difficult

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan has a lot of work to do to sell his policies in Central America to the public, but the task may not be as difficult as opponents would like to believe.

The legacy of Vietnam looms large before the public as the news is filled with U.S. battle forces, American advisers and potential blockades, raising the specter of another quagmire for the United States, in El Salvador or Nicaragua.

Reagan has tried to deal with this time and again, as he did in a recent news conference There is no comparison with Vietnam and theres not going to be .anything of that kind. But the flat denials have not calmed all the fears.

According to a Washington Post-ABC News opinion poll released Thursday, four in 10 citizens see the United States becoming involved in a new Vietnam to the south. In addition, fewer than half those interviewed said they believe the Reagan administration is being truthful when it says it has no intention of sending American soldiers to fight in El Salvador

One reason is that the comparison of Central America today with Vietnam in the 1960s - whether valid or not -unleashes deep and powerful reactions from many Americans. The Vietnam War is burned into the psyche of those who fought in the war, fought against it or watched their sons and neighbors die in Southeast Asia.

No matter what he does, Reagan simply cannot erase the legacy of Vietnam.

But this doesnt mean Reagan cant sell his policies on Central America to the public.

Americans dont know much about what is going on with our neighbors in Central America.

I dont think theyre as aware as they should be weve tried to make them aware - that this is something of a threat in t^is hemisphere to peace, Reagan said at his news conference last week.

A CBS-New York Times poll in June, for example, said that only 8 percent of those questioned could accurately identify which sides the U.S. government is supporting both in the conflict in El Salvador and in the fighting in Nicaragua. That low level is even more remarkable when one understands that, if everyone simply guessed at random in answering the questions, 25 percent would have given the right answers merely due to chance. In the Washington

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

Bretheren, said St. Paul, writing to his friends in the Galatian church, If a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such a one in a spirit of meekness; considering thyself lest thou also be tempted.

Here is important counsel for every generation of men and women. Only the spiritual can restore those who have fallen into mistaken or evil ways. A doctor who is suffering from pneumonia is undoubtedly too sick himself to be of much service to a patient. It takes a

well man to cure a sick man.

But a doctor who has recovered from pneumonia that is another matter. He remembers the difficulties of his own experience as he ministers to those similarly afflicted. So in dealing with the sinner, those who are spiritual are to restore such a one in a spirit of meekness. They are to remember the sin which has so often tom their own lives.

It never pays to be too hard on a sinner. We may be someday overtaken ourselves in a fault which is even worse.

Post-ABC News poll released Thursday, fewer than half those surveyed knew that the United States is backing the government of El Salvador and only three in 10 knew the United States is opposing the Sandinista government in Nicaragua.

The GOP incumbent tends to blame opponents of his policies and the media for this confusion.

Maybe the people are disturbed because of the confused pattern than has been presented to them and the constant drumbeat ... that there is an ulterior motive to this, Reagan added.

Without dealing with the issue of why the public is confused, it is clear that information about Central America is sparse. And that means the publics reactions to polls asking about Latin 'American policy tap broad views and lingering fears.

Public opinion is not frozen in concrete on this issue.

In that lack of knowledge is Reagans opportunity.

In the case of Central America, Reagans words and his actions will be the key. If he can present the case forcefully and then back it up with clearly understood actions that make comparisons with Vietnam meaningless, Reagan has the opportunity to swing public opinion his way.

But Reagan can also fail in this effort. If comparisons with Vietnam seem more and more valid as his policies and actions unfold, winning public approval for U.S. moves in Central America will become more and more difficult.

Tamara Jones

Dissident Wants East Germany Again

BERLIN (AP) - Untold numbers of East Germans have risked death to escape to the West. But Roland Jahn was shoved across the border In handcuffs, and dreams of going back.

Marched through an East German train station in a stranglehold at 3 a.m., arms shackled behind him and struggling with security police, the 29-year-old dissident was pushed aboard a train.

Seven minutes later, he found himself in West Germany with nothing but the clothes on his back and an East German exit visa he did not wanf He watched the train disappear and was filled with despair.

West German border police said that when they encountered him, Jahn had visible wounds from shackles on his wrists and was disoriented.

Despite his treatment and the pressures on his peace group based in the East German city of Jena, Jahn said in an interview he remains a committed communist and I will always be East German.

I want to go back, Hb added, his

voice low and urgent over the clatter of a garden cafe where he sipped apricot juice in a seamy West Berlin neighborhood.

It is something Jahn has been saying over and over again since his expulsion June 9, saying it in newspapers and magazines, on television and radio, in letters to the United Nations and East German leader Erich Honecker.

Honecker never replied, and Jahn said he realizes that U,N. pressure is unlikely to persuade the East German authorities, who labeled him political poison.

But there is always the hope, he shrugged, his gray-green eyes staring into the summer night. I cant stop hoping.

The exijt visa which he claims authorities forced him to apply for forbids him to ever return.

I signed that under extreme psychological pressure when I was in jail, Jahn said, claiming that among other things, authorities threatened to arrest a friend, the father of three children.

Jahn said he immediately recanted the handwritten request to emigrate to West Berlin.

About 20 other East German dissidents were similarly pressured into emigrating, and none was overjoyed about leaving, Jahn added.

East German authorities sent two more activists across the border last Monday after they had participated in illegal peace demonstrations in Jena, West German border police in Ludwigstadt reported.

Dietrich Wagner, 36, and his 32-year-old wife, Jutta, told West German authorities that East German security police had swiftly broken up demonstrations by the Jena activists on the previous two weekends. There was no report of arrests.

The couple said they had applied for 'exit visas in April 1982, but permission to leave the country had been denied.

The dissidents in Jena, in central East Germany, often risk arrest for unlawful assembly.

When Jhn was active there, the

dissidents would occasionally appear in a marketplace or at an officially sanctioned rally and unfurl banners bearing slogans, such as Swords into Plowshares, End Militarism i1i Our Land, and Dont Buy War Toys.

They also sent handmade postcards decrying the arms race to government officials, Jahn said.

The other Jena emigrants have scattered across West Germimy; none has publicly expressed any desire or made any attempt to return to East Germany.

Why go back where Im unwanted? Jahn, a former transport worker asks rhetorically. I cant fully explain it, but East Germany is where my home is, my life, my friends, ray work.

Ihavetoget back.

Jahn said he does not oppose the Communist system in East Germany -just the way it is sometimes implemented.

He keeps in touch with his dissident contacts in Jena and his parents, and gets together often with other friends living in the West to talk about the past.





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The D*Uy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, August 8,1983-5Kirkpatrick's Star Is Rising In The White Mouse

ByO.C.DOELLING Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS (AP) Alexander M. Haig Jr. once disparagingly equated Jeane J. Kirkpatrick*with a company commander, seven grades below his four-star rank in the field of American foreign policy.

In the year since Haigs eclipse as secretary of state, Mrs. Kirkpatricks own star has risen at the White House, where she has become an influential voice in the formulation of administration policies toward Central America.

any shift in the decisionmaking process away from the State Department it has been toward President Reagan and not toward her.

It is, she told a reporter, perfectly regular and normal that particularly salient or particularly delicate issues be dealt Mth by the president. That is a^rue for the Lebanese crisis as it is for the conflicts in Central America, she said.

My role is obviously just a function of my membership on the NSC (National Security Council), she said when reached by phone recently at her office in Washington. Her position as chief U.S. delegate to the United Nations carries cabinet rank.

A senior State Departmer official in Washingto gauged her contributions o Central American polic, , matters as major and ir dicated her influence on th issue had .grown at th expense of that of Secretar

Focus Is On 'Wellness'

J.J. KIRKPATRICK

President Reagan recently appointed the outspoken U,N. ambassador as his repre-' sentative on the bipartisan commission on Central America, which is headed by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick scoffs at the notion that she has become the chief architect of Central American policies, saying that if there has been

Agent Orange Sprayed In U.S.

NEW YORK (AP)-Agent Orange, the defoliant which the Army stopped using in Vietnam in 1972 because of concern for the health of U.S. forces, was being sprayed in the United States by a government agency for six years afterward.

NBC News reported Sunday that Agent Orange was sprayed along with other defoliants on the border in New Hampshire and Maine to mark the boundary with Canada.

The defoliant was sprayed from 1972 to 1978 along 32 miles of the border by helicopters and ground crews by the International Boundary Commission, a seven-member U.S. agency, the network said. NBC said no one in the area was directly exposed to Agent Orange.

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Concentrating on remaining well rather than on treating disease can help control health costs while bringing true health to people of all ages and incomes, speakers in a weekend conference said.

Wellness is a state of high-level good health, the optimum in nutritional, physical, mental and spiritual well-being, about 50 wellness movement health professionals told a 150 participants at the four-day N.C. Summer Wellness Festival at the University of North Carolina.

Many companies have begun organizing employee wellness programs in hopes of holding down health insurance premiums and reducing sick leave, said Don Ardell, a professor at Golden State University in San Francisco.

Ardell told the audience of public health workers, nurses, physicians assistants, corporate medical directors and doctors that the federal government may also become more involved in sickness prevention.

Other conference partici->ants said the major pro-)lem is motivating overweight, lazy, stressed and pill-popping junk-food eaters to accept responsibility for their own long-term health. Giving up smoking and reducing alcoholic consumption are good starts, they said.

Speakers said each person should adopt an individual wellness program that provides proper nutrition, regular aerobic exercise and work stress management.

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of State George P. Shultz, who preferred a less iteto-rical approach to the problem.

Asked to explain Mrs. Kirkpatricks leading position, the official, who asked not to be identified, replied, She knows the key players. She has a lot of experience in that area.

A former professor of government at Georgetown University, Mrs. Kirkpatrick is fluent in Spanish and has a long-standing interest in Latin American affairs. Her doctoral thesis dealt with the Peronist movement in Argentina.

Despite differences in approach, the senior State

Department official said, there is little disagmment on basic policy objectives between Shultz and Mrs. Kirkpatrick. The two continue to communicate with each other, although not on a regular basis, he said.

There have been no reports of personality clashes.

In contrast, Mrs. Kirkpatricks relations with Haig, Shultzs predecessor, were obviously strained, giving rise to recurrent speculation that the U.N. envoy was on her way out. One of the points of contention was U.S. policy toward Latin America.

was reported to have had a heated 45-minute telephone exchange with Haig over the American tilt toward Britain in its conflict with Argentina. She was said to have criticized him for having lost sight, in her view, of longterm U.S. interests in Latin America.

Another flap developed over a veto Mrs. Kirkpatrick cast in the U.N. Swurity Council against an Argentine-backed ceasefire resolution. Minutes later, new instructions were relayed from Haig, advising her to abstain. But it was too late and the veto stood.

During last years Falkland Islands crisis, she

Mrs. Kirkpatrick blamed the mixup on a communica

tions snafu.

Haig, who was in France with the president, added fuel to reports of a feud when he disclosed that he had not personally conveyed the new instructions to the U N. envoy. Haig, a former NATO commander, explained that a general did not talk to a company commander when* he had a corps in between.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick laughed off the put-down. I dont' know really much about military ranks ... I think those may be more meaningful to Secretary Haig, who after all is-a general, than they are to me... a professor in ordinary life.

The State Department official traced the ascent of

Mrs. Kirkpatrick - teamed with National Security Adviser William Clark -back to last January. It was then that Thomas 0. Enders, assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, reportedly recommended that the administration give more consideration to'a ne gotiated, power-sharing settlement of the conflict in El Salvador.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick was sent to Central America in February to make an assessment of the situation for the White House. After her dire appraisal, the president pressed Congress for a $110 million bo^t in military aid to the embattled Salvadoran government.

Three months later, the president removed Enders.

Mrs. Kirkpatrick, who last spring became the target of protests on several college campuses, is disturbed by press descriptions of her as a hawk. She maintains she offers almost no advice on military affairs and is chiefly concerned with the social, economic and political aspects of the Central American problem.

She speculates that her hawkish image stems from her strong views on the Soviet Bloc, which she regards as playing an expansionist role in Central America and providing a lot of support to groups trying to destabilize the region.

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Stern Magazine Pays Heavily In Hitler Diary Hoax

By TAMARA JONES Associated Press Writer FRANKFURT, West Germany (AP) - The Hitler diary hoax has taken a heavy toll on West Germanys most popular newsweekly - far more than the $3.75 million it paid for the fraudulent papers and never recovered.

After the admission that the sensational passages published in Stern were phony, and not the private thoughts of Adolf Hitler, the magazines circulation and newsroom morale plummeted.

Investigators have plowed through reams of paper for three months and stilt have not unraveled one of the centurys biggest literary swindles.

Not a cent of the millions paid for the 62 handwritten volumes has been recovered.

No charges have b^n filed in the case.

Gerd Heidemann, a 51-year-old reporter who purchased the diaries, and Konrad Kujau, the 44-year-old dealer in Nazi memorabilia who confessed to forging the diaries and implicated Heidemann, remain jailed while the investigation continues. In West Germany, a person can be held without charge during investigation.

Heidemann, a veteran journalist, was fired before he was jailed.

The state prosecutor in Hamburg refuses to talk about the investigation until it is complete. Spokesman Peter Beck said it is impossible to speculate when that might be.

Readers fired off more than 500 letters - most of them hostile-to Stem.

Chief news editor Gunther Schoenfeld said circulation for May and June was down 148,000 copies from last year, with about 78,000 of those readers lost because of the diary hoax and the rest largely because of a price increase. Circulation before the hoax was 1.55 million copies.

The staff mutinied when the publishers tried to repair Stems tarnished image.

Fearing for the magazines liberal reputation, the staff occupied the newsroom for a week in May to protest the hiring of two conservative successors to chief editors who resigned in the diary brouhaha.

The company hired re-Seven Die In N.C. TroHic

By The Associated Press

Two members of a Baltimore family on their way to a wedding were killed over the weekend when their car ran off Interstate 85 in Warren County and was impaled on a guard rail, the state Highway Patrol reported Sunday.

A total of seven people died in weekend traffic accidents around the state, bringing the total to 703 for the year.

James McKnight, 48, and his sister-in-law, Gladys Beamon Banks, 46, were on their way to a wedding in Hickory when their car crashed into a guard rail about 6:20 a.m. Saturday. They were pronounced dead at the scene of the accident, troopers said.

Pedestrian Joe James Goddard, 36, of Grimesland was killed at 3:35 a.m. Sunday when a car hit him while he was lying on N.C. 38 near his hometown.

Johnny Franklin Reynolds, 24, of Lincolnton was killed at 9:30 a.m. Sunday when he . walked into the pai of a car traveling along Interstate 40 near Morganton.

Vernon Irvin Pratt, 24, of Morven was killed Friday night while walking along N.C. 145 west of his hometown in Anson County, troopers said.

John Thomas Horten, 17, of Mt. Gilead was killed at 12:30 a.m. Su;iday when he lost control of the car he was driving at high speed along a rural road west of Candor in Montgomery County, He was thrown from the car and run over by it.

Lewis S. Hamilton Jr., 69, of Ardmore, Pa., was killed at 1:20 p.m. Sunday when he ran a stop sign and was struck" by another car at the intel^tion of U.S. 1258 and N.C. 168 in Currituck County near Barco, troopers said.

spected television journalist Peter Scholl-Latour and Capital magazine editor Johannes Gross as chief liters and co-publishers.

The rebellious staff demanded the resignation of ' the new editors, as well as business manager Gerd Schulte-Hillen. The sit-in ended when Gross stepped down.

Chief reporter Heinrich Jaenecke blames, the fiasco on the publishers, who, he claims, were hoodwinked

because they wanted a scoop and purchased the diaries without consulting the editors.

The matter was handled very conspiratorily, he said in a telephone Interview with The Associated Press.

According to Stems own published account, the magazine made its first payinent on Jan. 27,1981, and its final payment last April 29 - a day after publication of what was billed as the journalistic scoop of the post-war

period."

Stem has long had a reputation for paying impressive sums for exclusives.

The magazine says it gave Heidemann the diary money without knowing how or to whom it was to be distributed. Henri Nannen, Stems publisher, has accused Heidemann of pocketing the cash.

Heidemann says he gave most of it to Kujau and that he tossed the rest of the cash into a passing car on a

highway in Communist East Germany, and that diaries came sailing back throu^ an open window in his Mercedes.

Kujau claims he only received the equivalent of $938,000.

The Stem editors involved in the top-secret project waited until the last minute to consult historians and handwriting analysts.

The Federal Archives werent given the diaries until after publication began.

when the passages authenticity was challenged by in-dq>endent experts.

Within a few days, the archives determined throu^ chemical tests that the diaries were plagiarized from a 1962 book.

Stem made its own probe of the affair but has so far kept its findings private.

The 300-page report on the probe by four Stem editors and a former Hamburg jurist doesnt contain anjihing really new or startling, one

of the five said.We didnt recommend that anyone be fired.

I think its clear where the mistakes were made, the source said, without elaboration and insisting on anonymity.^

The committee interviewed some 30 Stem staffers, and Heidemann answered questions from his jail cell through his attorney, the source said.

Bernd Schiphorst, spokesman for Sterns

owners, Gruner and Jahr mblishing house, said a ot of steps were being taken to win back the confidence of our readers and advertisers, but he didnt specify them.

He said no advertisers quit over the diary scandal.

It was a deep emotional shock for everyone, says reporter Jaenecke. We can only hq>e to recover by the eno of the year. Everyone has learned through this disaster.

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A COSTLY HOAX

West German news weekly pays heavy price^ for Hitler diary hoax; none of millions they paid out is recovered; circulation and morale has plummeted. (Page 16)

A RISING STAR

Ambassador J.J. Kirkpatricks star is rising in the White House as an influential voice in shaping of U.S. policies on Central America. (Page 5)SNOW HILL OUSTED

Hamlet eliminated Snow HHi from the American Legion \j State Tournament with an 11-3 J victory Saturday. (Page 9i j ITHE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 170

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 8,1983

24 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

Reagan Staff Gearing Up

For An Expected Campaign

By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -While the nation's capital enters its midsummer doldrums, President Reagan and his aides are doing

everything that a candidate and his staff would do in gearing up for a presidential campaign.

The only thing missing is a formal declaration of the presidents intentions.

Reagan's advisers have identified key groups whose support they want to court and set up schedules to present Reagan to them; plans are being drawn up for a campaign organization; a

timetable for the announcement of the presidents in-tentins is being prepared, and key problem areas are being identified.

Presidential aides say a preliminary re-election

Hunting More Victims In

Another Car*Bomb Attack

By The Associated Press Rescuers searched for more victims in Baalbeks central market today as residents of the ancient Lebanese city staged a generl strike to protest a car-bomb explosion that killed 35 people and wounded 133.

Most of the dead were buried in a mass grave before sundown Sunday, six hours after a car loaded with 220 pounds of explosives devastated the crowded market in the predominantly Shiite Moslem city of 40,000 inhabitants.

Schools, shops and banks were closed today in a day of mourning called by city leaders and the local pro-Iranian ilitia that runs the city in east Lebanons Syrian-controlled

Bekaa Valley, police said

It was the second deadly car bombing in Syrian-controlled Lebanese territory in a three-day span. A remote^ontrolled car bomb destroyed a Sunni Moslem mosque in the northern city of Tripoli during midday prayers Friday, killing at least 20 worchippers. ^

m'The wandering massacre hits Baalbek, said the front-page headline of Lebanons leading independent newspaper An-Nahar today.

Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan said the Baalbek and Tripoli bombings were part of a plan by foreign hands that seek to rekindle internal strife in Lebanon whenever a ray of hope for the nations salvation appears.

Several Major Banks Increasing Their ^rime Rate To 11 Percent

DEMOLITION - The old Central the demolition should be completed Prison, described as an imitation by November or December. (AP medieval or Gothic fortress, is being Laserphoto) tom down in Raleigh. Workers say

NEW YORK (AP) - Several major commercial banks today raised their prime lending rates by one-half percentage point to 11 percent, the hipest level in nearly six months.

Central Prison A Tough Nut To Wrecking Crew

The banks raising their prime, or base, lending charge included Citibank in New York, the nations second-largest commercial bank

by deposits; No. 3 Chase Manhattan Bank in New York; sixth-ranked Chemical Bank in New York; No. 8 First National Bank in Chicago; No. 10 Bankers Trust, New York, and No. 13 Mellon Bank in Pittsburg.

The prime rate had stood at 10.5 percent since Feb. 28, when the industry lowered it .from 11 percent The 10.5 percent rate had been the

lowest since Nov. 6,1978.

The last time a major bank raised its prime rate was when Chase Manhattan raised it to 12 percent from 11.5 percent last Nov. 16. But that was after Chase had undercut the rest of the industry by going to 11.5 percent on Oct. 22, 1982, and no other major banks followed.

The last time all the major banks raised their prime rates was Feb. 17,1982, when they lifted the charge to 17 percent from 16.5 percent

The gradual decline in the prime rate from early 1981 until last February had followed declines in open-market interest rates, which in turn lowered banks cost of obtaining funds for lending

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Workers tearing down the old Central Prison say they have one of the tougbiest demolition jobs theyve ever faced.

Prisons are built to hold people in, said Pete Decker, superintendent of a wrecking crew and a 33-year veteran in demolition. Theres a lot more concrete in there, a lot more reinforcing than you usually would see. Youre talking about 30-inch walls.

Decker and his crew from the Bay City, Mich., firm of Dore & Associates have been at Central Prison for three months. He estimated that they would finish their work

by November or December.

The buildings went up between 1869 and 1884, said Warden Nathan A. Rice Jr. Local historian Elizabeth Reid Murray said convict labor built the prison, and granite quarried onithe site was used.

The maximum-security inmates who once lived in the old buildings have been living in newer quarters at Central since winter. Rice said. By the time the $36 million construction and demolition project is completed, there will be an athletic field and new housing for 192 working inmates

on he site where buildings are being razed.

Two Injured In

Pursuing Cor

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -'Two p^le were injured -including the driver of a fleeing automobile - and four cars dama^ during a chase in east Dm'bam, police said.

REFLECTOR

Lt. R.B. Day said he saw an Oldsmobile hit another car late Friday ni^t and when the driver of the Oldsmobile failed to stop. Day said he put on his lights and siren and pursued the car.

Day said the chase never exceeded 50 mph and stayed at about 35 mph most of the time.

Unequal Match

752-1336

The driver of Oldsmobile, Deborah Sue Jones of Mor-risville, was taken to Duke Hospit^ where she was treated for a fractured ri^t ankle. Day said.

CYCLIST INJURED - Mwnbers (rf the Winterville rescue squad give nergoicy treatmoit to a motorcyclist who was injured early Sunday morning tm Mill Stre^ in Winterville AcoHtiing to Wintefville ptdice officiais, the motorcycle was driva by Dennie Lee Wilson, of Ayden and was beadqd north on Mill Street wba it ctdlided with a car that was driven by Cbariie Lester BkwnL of Route 1, Winterville. Officers said the

Blount vejiicle turned into the path of the Wilson motorcycle and the bike hit the rear of the car throwing Wilam off. Investigators said Blount was charged with failing to see his intended move could be made in safety and driviog under the influence. Damage was placed at $500 to the motorcycle and the car was listed as a total loss. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)

committee will be formed on Oct. 15. Some say the president will announce his candidacy by Nov 1; others say the announcement will follow his two-week trip to Asia, which is likely to begin on Nov. 2.

The initial disclosure of that timetable was described by White House sources as a deliberate signal of the presidents plans

With political planning moving forward, the president and his aides are glowing over progress in tackling what had earlier looked like a campaign killer; the nations unemployment rate.

The presidents travels this summer are those of a candidate: He is talking to such key constituent groups as Hispanic-Americans, veterans, a c^nsen^ative labor union - tRT^International Longshoremens Association, which supported him in 1980 - and the American Bar Association.

And he is visiting politically important states -Florida, Texas and California - where His-panics in particular are becoming significant factors in elections.

To the suggestion that the public and private steps being im^rtakeo were those of a campaign organization moving into hi^ speed, one senior White House official said, Thats exactly right.

During the past week, the president and his aides were in the midst of a minicampaign to try to close the gender gap - the term used to reflct the greater (^position women show to Reagan when compared with mens opinions of the president

On Wednesday, Reagan apologized to the International Federation of Business and Professional Women, whose convention participants had been turned away from a White House tour a day earlier as the result of a mixup in the White House visitors office

Ot

WEATHER

Pan.ly cioudy (onieht and Tuesday wiui 40 percent chance of aitemLiun and evening showers T>. night 1 low in TOs. Tues^'ay high in ii.ts

Looking Aheoci

Co.ntinueo ho: a de!y >catiered afternoon and "evening thunderstorms Wednesday through Fnday Highs ir 90s and lows m Lhe low 70s

Inside Reading

Page r -Farm page Page 7 - .Area items Page - Obituaries Page 12 - Entertainment

Hotline gets Uiings done for you. Call 752-1336 and tdl your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline, The Dafly Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.

Because of the large numbers received, AXline can answer and publish only those items ccHisidered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but (mly initials will be used.

Heavy Rain, High Winds In Some Pitt Areas

TVSETASKED Rose High School has asked Hotline to appeal for a used color television set to be used in teaching computer mathematics courses beginning this fall. Anyone willing to donate a set is asked to call the school, 752-3169 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. any weekday.

By ANGELA UNGERFELT Reflector StaffWriter The Greenville Utilities Water Plant reported a trace of rainfall in the Greenville area this weekid; however Black Jack and other areas of the county reported heavy thunderstorms and hi^i winds.

There were actuadly two storms over the weekend, Malcolm Green, assistant director of K GreenVille Utilities CommiksioQ, said.

The one Saturday was harder on us than the Sunday storm. I guess it started around lunchtime and the bulk of it was down around the Black Jack and Hudsons Crossroads area.

Gren said there were a number of scattered fuses blown, but no real damage. He also said a lot of lightning strikes were reported.

Green said a second crew was called out

Saturday, but only to speed up the process of fixing fuses.

According to a spokesman at the weather plant, the high temperature both days was 95 The low temperature was 68 on Saturday and 67 on Sunday Dick Flye of Carolina Telephone said there may have been some damage to some individual telephone lines, txit "nothing major.

Leroy James. Pitt County agricultural extension agent, said the rain was beneficial to some crops in the county.

"I havent been out to check for damages in the fields yet, but there were a lot of be^fits in terms of rain for soybeans and peanuts. I'm not sure at this point if it will help the tobacco and the com. but there is some hope now for soybeans and peanuts." James said.









S-1De Day Reflector, Greenvllk, N.C.-Mooday, August B, 1983

Wedding Vows Said

On Sunday Afternoon

Jennifer Lynn Sutton of Greenville and Douglas Lee Coward of Winterville were united in marriage Sunday afternoon at four oclock in the Marantha Free Will Baptist Church.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Melvin E. Sutton and Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Coward, both of Greenville, and Mr. and Mrs. James W. Churchill of Winterville.

Officiating at the ceremony was the Rev. Linwood Butts, uncle of the^ bride. He was assisted by the Rev. Alvis Harris of Greenville. A program of nuptial music was presented by Gordon Sutton, brother of the bride, who sang Surround Me With Love, Sweet, Sweet Spirit, The Wedding Prayer and Bless Be the Tie. He was assisted by his wife, Mrs Judy Sutton, pianist, and Mrs. Carolyn Garris, organist.

The bride was given in marriage by her parents and was escorted by her father. She wore a formal ^wn of white silkened organza and Chantilly lace. The gown was fashioned with a fitted bodice and a Queen Anne neckline with an overlay of lace and pearls. The dropped back waistline was outlined with matching lace. The full bishop sleeves appliqued with Chantilly lace motifs were closed with deep lace cuffs. The A-line skirt featuring scattered motifs of lace was encircled with a deq) lace border continuing around the cathedral-length train which was enhanced with an inverted V-panel of crystal pleated tiers of silkened organza edged with Chantilly lace. Her two-tiered fingertip veil of silkened bridal illusion bordered with Chantilly lace was attached to a Juliet cap of lace and pearls. The bride wore a strand of pearls which belonged to the grandmother of the bridegroom, Mrs. Bertha Coward.

Educators

Attend

Convention

Twelve women educators from three local chapters of Alpha Delta Kappa International recently attended the international convitk) in Washington, D.C.

The group attended business sessions and social functions at the convention and visited historic places in the capital area including a tour of the White House. They also attended Sunday services at Christ Church in Alexandria.

A highlight of the convention was a rec^tion honoring Grace Hager And^ws of Charlotte, who was installed as grand president of the sorority.

Representing local chapters were: Cora Whisnant and Elizabeth Savage, Fidelis Beta; Ann Byrd, Shirley Moore, Linda Whitehurst, Ada Bett Savage, Mary Irma Moore and Barbara Parker from Alpha Nu; Linda Ferebee, Vivian Mills. Peggy Rowlette and Mickey West from Alpha Iota.

ADK is an honorary sorority for women educators and locally serves the community through scholarships and other altruistic projects.

Uf the three religions that sprang from the Middle East. Islam dominates there today. But Islam is not limited to the Middle East; it is the principal belief in some 40 nations in Asia and Africa, according to National Geographic

MRS. DOUGLAS LEE COWARD

She carried a bouquet of silk white sweetheart roses and other spring flowers of purple, lavender, pink and yellow. The bouquet was centered with a bridal Bible which was covered and designed by Mrs. Ruth Nobles.

Lisa Hardee of Greenville was maid of honor. She wore a formal gown of lavender taffeta with a sheer flowered overlay. The dress was designed with a wide scoop neckline which was enhanced with a wide ruffle. The skirt was edged with three ruffles which raised at the side to create a Southern Belle pick-up. She carried a nosegay of purple, lavender, pink and yellow silk spring flowers.

Bridesmaids includd Frances Sutton, sister-in-law of the bride; Donna Hodges and Becky Coward, sisters of the bridegroom; Andrea Cox, cousin of the bride; Karwi Gaskins and Cheryl Ramsey, all of Greenville. They wore lavender dresses styled like that of the maid of honor and carried identical nosegays.

The father of the bridegroom served as best man. Ushers included Randy and Gordon Sutton, brothers of the bride; Chris Sutton, nephew of ie bride; Jeff Gould and Jimmy Hardee, both of Greenville; and William Covington of Winterville.

Chris Coward, brother of

Couple Weds Wednesday

Kathleen Marie Weaver became ie bride of Wilbur Adam BaUenger III Wednesday at 6 p:m. at the home of the bridegrooms parents. Branch Estates, Route 13, Greenville.

The double ring ceremtmy was performed by the Rev. Ralph Messick and was attended by immediate family and close friends.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Jayne Silliman of Greenville and the late Sherwood Silliman. She is a manager with Burger King in Greenville.

The brid^room is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kermit H. Woodruff of Greenville and Wilbur A. Ballwiger Jr. of Lakeland, Fla. He is employed by Miller and Davis of Greenville.

The coiq)le will live in Greenville.

the bridegroom, was ringbearer. Miranda Sutton, niece of the bride, was flower girl. She wore a dress styled like that of the maid of honor and carried a basket of silk spring flowers.

Mrs. Sandra Harris directed the wedding. Mrs. Pam Dixon presided at the register. Chris Sutton and Tracy Hodges, niece of the bridegroom, distributed scrolls and programs.

A reception was given by the parents of the bride at the Elks Lodge immediately following the ceremony. Frances Sutton served cake and Mazil Butts, aunt of the bride, poured punch. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Sutton greeted guests and Mr. and Mrs. Travis Purser said goodbyes.

The couple was honored with an after-rehearsal party in the church fellowship hall given by the father and stepmother of the bridegroom. They were also entertained at a cookout given by the mother and stepfather of the bridegroom. A bridesmaids luncheon was held at the home of Mrs. Frances Sutton. The couple was honored with several showers.

The bridegroom graduated from Ayden-Grifton High School and attended East Carolina University. He is assistant manager at Butlers Shoes. The bride is a graduate of J.H. Rose High School and is presently employed at Home Federal Savings in Greenville.

After a wedding trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C., the couple will reside at Route 9, Greenville.

Couple Speaks Vows Saturday

Readers Say Hear, Hear To Calling Men

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by UnivarMi Pr*M Syndicalt

DEAR READERS: A woman wrote: After 20 years of dating, I have come to the conclusion that my mother was wrong when she said, *A lady never calls a gentleman she waits for him to call her.

I recently met a very attractive man and we seemed to hit it off very well, but instead of his taking my number and saying the usual, I'll call you,' he gave me hie number and asked me to call him.

Perfect! I had the option of either calling him or not. It was all up to me. I'd like to hear the opinion of men on this.''

DONT CALL ME. I'LL CALL YOU

My mail has been running 300-to-1 in favor of women calling men. Some of the choice responses:

DEAR ABBY: The notion that it is not proper for a lady to call a gentleman should have gone out with the invention of the telephone. I am flattered by any serious call from a woman who is interested in me.

S B. IN BEL AIR, CAL

DEAR ABBY: Im a 26-year-old male who has never been out on a date. Why? To say that I suffer from a crippling case of shyness is putting it mildly. Id give anything if a woman called me. Then Id be sure she wanted to go out with me. The feminist movement has helped some, but it isnt moving fast enough for me.

FRUSTRATED IN PHOENIX

DEAR ABBY: As a 23-year-old single woman I say bravo! Why shoul^t the woman take the initiative instead of waiting for a man to call her? The same goes for dancing. I love to dance, and when Im at a club and the music is great, if nobody asks me to dance. Ill ask a man. It takes nerve for a woman to ask a man to dance, but 1 can take rejection if Im turned down. Its only fair. Men have had to risk rejection for years.

UP FRONT IN GEORGETOWN

DEAR ABBY: In all my years of dating, Ive seen very few relationships that werent loused up in the end when the woman took the initiative and pursued the man. Somehow the male ego automatically goes into overdrive and then bums out as soon aS the woman becomes aggressive. Im sure it goes back to prehistoric days, when it was instinctive for the male to hunt, pursue and then conquer the female.

Your mother was right, and so was mine. A lady never calls a gentleman.

LEAVE THE CALUNG TO ME

DEAR ABBY: Life has become much simpler since I quit asking ladies for their phone numbers. I just hand them my card with a simple, Call me.

If they do, theyre interested. If they dont, its no big deal. From the ladys standpoint, she avoids the creeps, reserving the right to make or not make contact

LADYS CHOICE IN COLUMBUS

DEAR ABBY: I hope your idea catches on. Im a 26-year-old male, and I am tired of my palms dripping sweat. and my tongue tying itself up in knots every time I call a wonmn.    i

Id%e ecstatic if a woman called me and said, Lets go out sometime.

CALL ME IN OREGON P.S. If its a toll call, call me collect

WASHINGTON -Elizabeth Ross Barton of Grifton and Mark Dewaym Garniel of Manteo were united in marriage Saturday afternoon at two oclock at the home of Merrill Daniels, grandfather of the bride, at North Shores here.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.J. Garris of Grifton and Mr. and Mrs. David Barton Jr. of Greenville. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Garniel of Manteo.

The Rev. Daniels, grandfather of the bride, performed the double ring ceremony. The wedding was directed by Mrs. Daniels, grandmother of the bride.

The bride was escorted by her father, David U. Barton Jr. She wore the formal wedding gown of peau de soie worn by her mother. The alencon lace bodice was re-embroidered with seed pearls and the full skirt extended into a chapel train. She wore a wreath of silk flowers with a waltz length ^ veil of silk illusion. She carried a cascade bouquet of silk ivory teacup roses, calla lilies and blue baby's breath tied with blue ribbons.

Phelicia Brooks of Stokes served as maid of honor. She wore a full length formal dress of apricot voille with an off-shoulder lace bodice. The skirt was styled with a self-fabric tie and a full skirt with a flounced ruffle. She wore babys breath in her hair and carried a silk bouquet of ivory teacup roses, calla lilies and blue babys breath tied with blue ribbons.

Bridesmaids were Rhonda Riddick of Winterville and Carressa Brooks of Stokes. Each attendant wore a ^wn and carried a bouquet like that of the maid of honor.

The father of the bridegroom served as best man. Ushers were Kevin Garniel of Manteo, brother of the bride-^m; and Mark Barton of Greenville, brother of the bride.

MRS. MARK DEWAYNE GAMIEL

Jwo Siskrs    Carolina

announces I he Orand ^Cninj

ji Counfiy Sh^c

Featunng:

^ Country Curtains | \ Handcrafted Linens > ^ ( Woodwork by Local Craftsmen 1 Handpainted Linen and Wood Pieces Stenciled Linens Christmas Items Aug. tOth

Hours: Monday thru Saturday 10 am-5 pm Located. Next door to Parker's Barbecue on Memorial Drive, Greenville 756-3613

Register for a free gift to be given away each week in the month of August.

GREAT DISCOUNTS BEDROOM FURNITURE

Statton * Davis

(In Stock)

Thomasville Henkel Harris Heredon Henry-Link Councill Caro-Craft Mahogany - Cherry - Wicker

30% 33V3% 40% 50%

yttoiil

7.Sb-133b

Mot, Fn 9 30-6

SUMMER SAVINGS

SALE

...Save Up To 40%

Sbowrooa

Honre:

Mooday-Friday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Saturday 8 A.M. to 12 Noon

Hurry...Sale Will End On August 13th

I LIFETIME WVRRANTY

SOMEDAFY0U1X _ lAUGHATEKnVLmrLEYOU

Yem from now, when \ our Hunter^ fan IS still running as quieth' as e\ ec is still covered by its ^-arrann', is sii sa\ing \ ou mnnev on your iiiilin bills, and all the txher ceiling fans you could ha\ e bought have either broken do^n or oum om their v\manties, the few dollars extra you pa\- tor a Hunter now will seem like a bargain of laughable proportions.

HUNTER

E\wTime You Turn UOnYouFedALitdeSmanet

a

FERGUSON

ENTERPRISES,

INC.

of the bride, presided at the register.

A rehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom at the Holiday Inn, Washington. A wedding brunch was given the day of the wedding by Lonnie Abbott Squires and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Peyton Tunstall, aunt and uncles of the bride, at the Holiday .Inn, Washington.

The bride is a graduate of D.H. Conley Hi^ Schol. The bridegroom is a graduate of Manteo High School and is employed by the National Park Service.

After a wedding trip to Hatteras, the couple will reside in Manteo.

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815 Dickinson Ave.

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Lemon Ciutard, Coconut, Pecan. Sweet Potato, Chocolate, Apple. Peach

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Following the ceremony, a reception hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Ashley J. Garris, mother and ^father of the bride, was held at the home of the grandparents of the bride. Cake was served by Joyce Jones. Punch was poured by Emily Tunstall, aunt of the bride. Mrs. Mamie Blake, grandmother ^

FliiE-lT-yORSlLflIiPPF

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Some experts estimate that as many as 70 percent of the 8,000 drownings in the United States each year are alcohol-related, says the American Council of Life Insurance.

Adventures A to Z can be di^vered at Sheppard Memorial Library this summer. The fund includes a reading club, films, pui^ and sU^ hours. For more information, call the Library at 752-4177.

Shop WHITES For Greenvilles Largest Selection Of IN STOCK Drapery And Upholstery Fabrics, Notions And Trims

3108 South Memorial Drive 756*6101

EYEGLASS

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OFFER GOOD THRU AUG. 31,1983

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Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly $1 to (1.35 higher. Kinston 47.00, Clinton, :Elizabethtown, Fayettevilie, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 46.75, Wilson 47.25, Salisbury 47.50, Rowland

46.00, Spiveys Comer 46.00. Sows; all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 33.00, Fayetteville

33.00, Whiteville 33.00, Wallace 35.00, Spiveys Corner 34.00, Rowland 34.00, Durham 31.00.

Poultry .

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina f.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 51 cents, based on full truck load lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized to 3 pound birds. 91 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weighted average of 52.98 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is light to moderate for a moderate to good demand. Wei^ts light to desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was 1,791,000, compared to 1,800,000 last Monday.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index fell 2.74 to 228.68.

NEW YORK (AP) -MkkUy rtocks

Hip Low Last

NEW YORK ( AP) - Stock prices tumbled in early trading today after several major banks raised their prime lending rates by one-half percentage point to 11 percent. Volume was moderate.

Major casualties included auto, computer, chemical, energy, drug and interest-rate sensitive financial issues.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 47.88 points over the past two weeks amid investor fear that interest rates were headed iqp, skidded another 13.32 points to 1,169.97 after the first two hours of todays trading.

Declines held a commanding 5-1 lead over advances on the New York Stock Exchange, whose composite index feU 0.97 to 92.63.

Big Board volume totaled 29.80 million shares at noon EDT, against 33.41 million at that hour Friday.

Among the banks raising their prime, or base, lending char^ were Citibank, Chase Manhattan Bank and Chemical Bank, all in New York; First National Bank in Chicago and Mellon Bank in Pittsburg.

Credit analysts expected the '^crease because open-market interest rates have been rising since May to their highest levels in a year, thereby raising banks cost of obtaining funds.

Among the NYSEs early losers in active trading were Sears Roebuck l^i to 39%, Chrysler % to 24% and Pan American World Airways % to 7%.

Federal National Mortgage fell 1% to 20. A 910,300-share block traded at 19%.

AMR Corp AbblLabs Allis Chaim Alcoa Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmFamily Am Motors AmSland Amer TliT Beal Food Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroPwLl Celanese Cent Soya Champ int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DelUAirl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East Kodak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt Flal FordMi Fuqua 8 GTE Corp GnDynam GenlElect s Gen Food Gen Mills Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacK Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GlNor Nek Greyhound Gulf on Herculeslnc Honeywell HosptCp s Ing Rand IBM

InU Harv Int Paper Int Rectil IntTAT K mart KaisrAlum KanebSvc KrogerCo Lockheed Loews Corp Masonite n McDrmlnt n McKesson Mead Corp MinnMM Mobil Monsanto

31

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Following are selected market quoUtioas:

Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power fc Light

CotlinsftAUunan

Conner

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fieldcrest

Halteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere

Lowes

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Pizza Inn

P4G    521*iTRW,Inc

United Tel

Dominion Resources Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER

Aviation

Branch

Little Mint

Planters Bank

Farmville Bids To Be Taken

RALEIGH - The Department of Tran^rtation is scheduled to receive bids Friday on construction of the Farmville East Thoroughfare.

The project, 3.91 miles from existing U.S. 264 to Secondary Road 1200 (the Stantonsburg Road), is included in the DOTS U.S. 264 improvement project.

Contracts on the first segment of the new U.S. 264 - 4.86 miles from Secondary Road 1507 in Wilson County to the Wilson-Greene County line, were awarded in July. The cost of the first segment had been estimated at (4.5 million.

W.R. Roberson Jr., state secretary of transportation said the fact that the board will consider the contract is a direct result of the 1983 General Assemblys recent appropriation for highway improvements.

26

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Pedestrian Dies On Roadway

GRIMESLAND - Tex Barnett Hooker, 28 of Route 1, Blounts Creek, was charged with hit and run driving and driving under the influence following investigation of a hit-and-run mishap on N.C. 33 near here Sunday in which a pedestrian, Joe James Goddard, 36 of Route 1, Grimesland, was killed.

Trooper M B. Johnson said Goddard was lying in the east-bound lane of N.C. 33 when struck by a car driven by Hooker.

Johnson reported that Wesley and William Nicholson, both of Grimesland, were at the scene at the time of the 3:35 a.m. incident. They had seen Goddard lying in the roadway and had stopped in an effort to warn on-coming traffic.

Hooker, Johnson reported, turned himself in at Washington Police Department, a short time after collision.

Damage to the Hooker car was estimated at (100.

the

the

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NDJAMENA, Chad (AP) - Chadian authorities today put on display before a large crowd a man they claimed was the pilot of a Libyan plane shot down over the weekend at the desert town of Faya-Largeau.

The man was brought before 50 journalists and 5,000 civilians at the Palace ofhCongress and identified as Abdassalam Charfadine, pilot of a Soviet-built Sukhoi fighter.

Libya rqieatedly has denied making bombing runs on Chad, although it says it is providing lo^tical support for rebel forces seeking to topple the government of President Hissene Habre.

Charfadine told the crowd today was shot down Saturday and that there were 12 Suidiois based in the Aouzou strip, a repon in northern Chad that Libya occupied in 1973.

An official at the Chadian Embassy in Paris said the plane was ^ot down by a SAM-7 missile that presumably gas captured from the rebels by government forces.

(Siarfadine said the planes

were rotated in and out of the strip by twos under command of the Libyan air force, and that their mission was to cover the movements of rebel troops led by former President Goukouni Oueddei.

He told the crowd another attack was planned on Faya-Largeau, but I do not know when.

Charfadine said the weapons on his fighter included fragmentation bombs, phosphorous bombs and napalm. He said he was ordered to strike government positions in preparation for the planned attack.

Durham Leaf Sales Begin

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -Flue-cured tobacco sales in Durham opened today with high sales and low prices, but officials said sales were stronger than those on the Eastern Belt earlier this month.

16*4-16*4

23*4-23*4

I-l*

19*-19*4

Man Drowns At ARafeighLake

MONDAY

6:30p.m. - Rotary Club meets 6:% p.m. Hosts Lions Club meets at Toms Restaurant 6:30 p.m. - Optimist Qub meets at Three Steers 7:30 p.m. Sweet Adelines, Eastern Chapter meets at 'The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg.

8:00 p.m. - Lodge No 885 Loyal Order of the Moose

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -An unidentified 40-year-old Durham man drowned ^-day afternoon after divmg from a bridg^ at a Raleigh lake, authorities said.

TTie man, identified by an acquaintance only as Turkey, had been drinking moderately when he jumped headfirst from the bridge at

the Falls Lake, Wake County ild-

TUESDAY

7:00 a.m. - Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m. - Kiwanis Golden K Gub meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p.m. - Down East Chapter of Painting and Decorating Contractors of America meet at Three Steers

7:00 p.m. Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:30 p.m. Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Vernon Howard Success WiUiout Stress study group at HON. Warren St.

7:30 p.m. - Toughlove parents' support group at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m - Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Jarvis Memorial MeUiodist Church 8:00 p.m. - WiUila Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at R^ryClub 8.00 p.m. Pitt Co.Alcohoiics Anonymous at AA Bldg. on Farmville hwy

Sheriffs Deputy N.S. Hole ing said.

He hit (the water) face down, which knocked the breath out of him. He re^ surfaced at least once, and then didnt come back up, Holding said.

Unemployed Conference Set

A conference for unemployed persons will be held tomorrow from 9:30 to 3 p.m at Pitt Community College, Whichard Building, Room 201.

A number of speakers have been enrolled by the Mental Health Association in Pitt County, ^nsor of the conference, to give practical help on j(rt> seeking and coping with unemployment.

Among the speakers are John Anema and Bob Desota, rehabilitation counselors; Tommy Thomason, personnel assistant with Wachovia Bank; Tammy Nobles, personnel interviewer with Pitt County Memorial Hospital; Jerry Cox, personnel interviewer with the City of Greenville; Dick Farris of the East Carolina University personnel office; Gail Wallace, employment placement officer with Pitt Community College; and George Hood, consultant with the Ralei^i Forty Plus support group for unemployed persons.

Lunch will be provided. For more inforemation, call MHA, 752-7448.

Charlie Finch of the Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabilization Corporation said the cooperative was receiving 30 to 35 percent of sales - about 15 percent more than last year. But he said this percentage should drop once things settle down.

The stabilization price support program allows buyers to pur chase leaf at a rate (1 more per hundred pounds than the standards set by the federal govern ment.

Most of the leaf sold today was low-grade, bringing between (125 and (145 per 100 pounds. These amounts are about (10 per 100 pounds less than prices paid last year for the same grade, according to officials from Star Warehouse.

Farmers said prices were hi^r than they expected, but remained concerned as poor-quality tobacco hurt by dry weather brou^it low prices.

Obituary Column

Barnes

FARMVILLE - Mr. Moses Barnes died Friday in Pamlico Nursing Home in Washingtm. He is the son of Mrs. Lillie Barnes Speight and the brother of Ralei^ Speight, both of Farmville.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at the Hemby Funeral Home in Fountain.

Libyan Pilot Is Paraded In Chad

Chandto

VANCEBORO - Mr. David Thomas Chandler Sr., >48, of Route 1, a farmer and security guard, died Saturday.

Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday in Paul Funeral Home Chapel in Washington. Burial will be in Oakdale Cemetery.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mary Patricia (Pat) Ross Chandler; one dau^-ter, Mrs. Teresa C. Bell of Aurora; two sons, David Thomas Chandler Jr. of Vanceboro and Ross Chandler of the home; his father, Jasper Thomas (Pete) Chandler of Vart-ceboro; one sister, Mrs. Alger (Sue) Woolard of Washington; three brothers, Bobby Lee Chandler of Chocowinity, Ruffin Chandler and Gene Chandler, both of Vanceboro; and two grandchildren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home today from 7:30-8:30 p.m. and at other times will be at the home of his father. Route 1, Vanceboro (Chandler Road).

Goddard

GRIMESLAND - Mr. Joe James Goddard, 34, died Sunday morning as a result of injuries received in an automobile accident. He was the son of Walter Goddard of Williamston.

Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hardee Funeral Home.

Harper

Mrs. Susie H. Harper of 108 Fifth Street, Hookerton, died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

Her funeral service will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. in Star of Zion A.M.E. Zion Church, Hookerton, by her pastor. Dr. R.L. Newby. Interment will be in Shady Grove Free Will Baptist Church.

Mrs. Harper was bom and reared in the Hookerton community of Greene County where she spent most of her life. She was a member of Star of Zion A.M.E. Zion Church.

Surviving her are two daughters, Mrs. Julia Ormond of Maury and Mrs. Marsell Anderson of New York; and a sister, Mrs. Janie Bryant of the home.

The family will receive friends at Star of Zion Church Tuesday from 8 to 9 p.m: Norcott Funeral Home,

Treasure Find

LONDON (AP) - A team of Dutch and British divers has recovered a barnacle-encrusted treasure chest cootaining gold ducats and silver coins from a Dutch sh^) wrecked in the Nntb Sea more than 250 years ago, British newspapers reported Sunday.

The Sunday Times said the treasure worth an estimated (740,000 - was brought to the surface from the rotting hulk of the Vliegent Hart (Flying Hart) 10 days ago in considerable secrecy. The find climaxed a four-year search for the sunkoi treasure.

The City provides picnic at City puts fw use by citizens. To make reservations, call 752-4137.

Card Of Thanks

The family of Rev J. Louis Williams \A/ishes to express sincere an<j heartfelt thanks for 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 North 3rd Floor Staff of Pitt Memorial Hospital, St Paul/PH Church and Carson Memorial PH Church_^--^

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Hines

Mrs. Olivia Gorham Hines of 202 Tyson Street,' Greenville, died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Her funeral arrangements will be announced later by Flanagan Funeral Home, Greenville.

Barnhill of Greenville; 26 grandchildren; and 23 great-grandduldren.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home toni^t from 7 to 9 oclock.

Jackson

Mrs. Margaret Thompson Jackson, 67, died Saturday.

Funeral services will be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. from the Seymour Funeral Chapel in Goldsboro with the Rev. T.D. Worthington officiating. Burial will be in Wayne Memorial Park.

Surviving are five sons, Tom Jackson, Steve Jackson, Johnny Jackson, Danny Jackson and Scott Jackson, all of Goldsboro; three dau^ters, Mrs. Myra King Holland and Mrs. Evelyn J. Stroud, both of Greenville and Mrs. Dixie Taylor of Beulaville; two brothers. Dole Thompson of Williamsburg, Va. and Emmett Thompson of San Francisco, Ca.; four sisters, Mrs Lena Dixon of Princeton, Mrs. Murial Tyndall, Mrs. Betty Pate and Mrs. Effie Steele, all of Goldsboro; and 15 grandchildren.

The famUy will receive friends today from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral home.

James

Mr. WUlie C. James, 83, of 207 Meade Street died Sunday.

His funeral service will be conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Fred Lockwood, his pastor. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery.

Mr. James, a lifelong resident of Pitt County, was a retired farmer and a member of Grace Free Will Baptist Church.

Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Lillian Meeks James of the home; a son, Ennis James of Bath; seven daughters, Mrs. Ruth Garris, Mrs. Murl Speight and Mrs. Estelle Williams, all of Greenville, Mrs. Barbara Harrington of Ayden, Mrs. (Tyson Carter of Virginia Beach, Mrs. Carolyn Ritacco of Nutley, N.J., and Mrs. Burnell Lemons of Sanford, Fla.; a sister, Mrs. Nolle

Meeks

Mr. Willie Thomas (Tom) Meeks, 61, died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

His funeral service will conducted Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by Doug Allen and Lairy Osborne. Burial will be in Hollywood Cemetery, Farmville.

Mr. Meeks was rearq^l in the Farmville community and was a graduate of Bel voir High School. A Greenville resident for the past 36 years, he had been employed by the U.S. Post Office for 32 years and was a rural mail carrier. For 17 years he operated a country store on Highway 43 north of Greenville. He was a member of the National Rural Letter Carrier Association and a veteran of World War II who served in the European Theatre.

Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Lina Manning Meeks; two sons, Tommy Meeks of Kinston and Ricky Meeks of Greenville; a brother, Cecil Meeks of Farmville; three sisters, Mrs. Betty Davis of Tarboro, Mrs. Ford (Ethel) Harmon of Baltimore, Md., and Miss Bertha Meeks of Tarboro; and four grandchildren.

The family wUl receive friends at the funeral home Monday from 7:30 to 9 p.m.

Mr. Sabiston was a native of Carteret County who had lived in the Vanceboro community fw many years.

The Latham Morris family received friends at the Wilkerson Funeral Home in Vanceboro today from 1 to 3 p.m.

Torier

Mrs. Margaret Strickland Tozier, 43, died Friday in Chapel Hill.

A private graveside service was cmiducted Sunday at 3 p!m. in Greenwood Cemetery by the Rev. Geor^ Weaver.

Mrs. Tozier had lived most of her life near Greenville and had been a resident of Tarboro for the past five years.

Surviving her are her husband, (Hyde R. Tozier of Tarboro; three sons, Kenneth G. Lewis of Tarboro, Bobby Wayne Lewis of Greenville, and Daniel E. Strickland of Tarboro; two daughters, Mrs. Michelle A. Cobb and Miss Margaret P. Strickland, both of Tarboro; two brothers, Leon F. Strickland of Greenville and Dallas M. Strickland of Trappe, Md.; two sisters, Mrs. Dorothy Lee Simpkins of Eastern, Md. and Mrs. Thelma Jean Mishler of Whittier, Calif.; and three grandchildren.

Trayoum

Mrs. Denotes Patrick Traynum, 41, formerly of Pitt County, died in Brooklyn, N.Y. Sunday. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Mitchells Funeral Home, Winterville.

Sabiston

Mr. John Sabiston, 97, died Saturday in Guardian Care Nursing Home in New Bern.

A graveside service was conducted today at 3:30 p.m. in Celestial Memorial Gardens by the Rev. Bethea Moore.

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But No Cameras Rolling Taken From The Film 'Diner'

SELLECK CRASH - A kneeling workman (top center) ropes off a section of railing damaged Sunday when a Jeep (bottom center) driven by Kevin Selleck, 15, stepson of TV

actor Thomas Selleck, plunged to the ground in Waikiki. The Sellecks were not seriously injured. (AP Laserphoto)

HONOLULU (AP) - It was the perfect scene for a television police show, a jeep crashing off the third story of a parking garage. But the cameras werent rolling and there were no stand-ins for actor Tom Selleck and his stepson, Kevin.

They suffered only minor injuries Sunday in the accident at the Outrigger Canoe Club in Waikiki when the stick shift stuck on the jeep

and it crashed through a barrier with the younger Selleck behind the wheel, authorities said.

Selleck and his 15-year-old son were taken to Straub Hospital by ambulance, but were released a short time later.

Sellecks publicity agent in Hollywood, Calif., Esme Chandlee, said Selleck, 38, will report as scheduled Monday to his first day of

shooting for the new fall programming of Magnum P.I.

The Jeep landed on its nose in an a^halt-covered area, smashing the front of the vehicle, said Martin Kelly, assistant manager at the Canoe club.

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PARIS (AP) - A Canadian tourist standing outside Notre Dame Cathedral was struck and killed Sunday by the falling body of a young French woman who leaped to her death from the cathedrals tower.

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ByTOMJORY Associated Press Writer NEW YORK (AP) -Eddies due back from his honeymoon in Cuba, and Modell wants to bet Boogie $50 that the newlywed will leave his bride at home to join the guys at the diner. They wait, and talk.

When girls think of a guy as sexy... 1 dont understand the whole concept, Modell says. When you got a girl, you got something to look at,

Finally, Eddie arrives, and grabs some fries and gravy off of Fenwicks plate. Elyse, he tells his buddies, feels its time for me to grow up.

In other words, she doesnt want Eddie to spend his spare time at the diner.

The next half-hour is like that - a lot of hot air, and some laughs - as Diner, a comedy special tonight on CBS, picks up where the critically accla med movie of the same name left off.

Its called a special, presumably because CBS has no plans, for now, to make a series of the chow. CBS apparently once considered Diner for its fall schedule.

TV Log

For completa TV programming Information, conault your weakly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

AWNDAY

7:00 Jokers WHO 7:30 Tic Tac 8 :00 Square Pegs 8:30 Beiamln 9:00 T. Witch 10:00 Cagney and 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie 2:00 Nightwatch TUESDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker i OO Carolina 8:00 AAorning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 PriceIsRIqht

rfVITN-TV-Ch.7

MONDAY

7:00 Jetfersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 LiHleHouse 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 World Track 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

TUESDAY 5:30 LieDetKtor 6:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 Allinthe

10:00 Ditt. Strokes 10:30 Saleofthe 11:00 Wheel of 12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 AnottierWld 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Little House 5:30 Dark Shadow 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Baseball 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 World Track 1:30 0\)ernlght 2:30 News

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

MONDAY

7:00 Sanford 8i 7:30 Josle 8:00 Baseball 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nigbfllne 12:30 Starskyli 1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Edition TUESDAY 5:00 Bewitched 5:30 J. Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 GoodMornIni 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue ' 10:00 Happening 10:30 Sanford ' 11:00 TooClose

30 Loving 00 Family Feud 30 Ryan's Hope 00 My Children 00 One Life 00 Gen. Hospital 00 Carnival 30 Wonder W.

30 People's 00 Action News 30 ABC News 00 Sanford Si 30 B. Miller 00 TBA

30 JoanieLoves' 00 3's Company 30 9to5 00 Hart to Hart 00 Action News 30 NIghtline 30 StarskyA 30 Mission 30 Early Edition

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

MONDAY    4

7:00 Report 5 7:30 N.C People 5 8:00 Frontline 6 9:00 Performancei 6 10:00 Kennedy 7 11:00 Monty Python 7 11:30 Ooctorin 8 12:00 Sign Off 9 10

TUESDAY    11

3:00 Programmingii 3:30 ReadingR. 12

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:00 Dr. Who :30 Wildlife :00 Report :30 Old House 00 Nova :00 Lifeline :00 Ascents of ;00 Monfy Python :30 Doctor in :00 Sign Off

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Most of the action takes place at the Fells Point Diner, in Baltimore, aiKi the characters are the same as

those in the motion picture. The actors, except for Paul Reiser, who plays Modell, are new.

The cast includes James Spader as Fenwick, Mike Binder as Eddie, Max Cantor as Shrevie, Michael Madsen

as Boogie and Mady Kaplan as Beth. Alison LaPlaca

plays Elyse, who was mentioned frequently in the motion picture, but did not appear.

Its 1960, a simpler time by almost any measure, and Elyse and her friend Beth, Shrevies wife, still cant figure out what attracts the fellows to the diner.

Can you believe how obsessed guys get at things? Elyse says. Eddie, he talks about batting averages. ... Batting averages.

Beth decides Shrevie ought to stay home, too.

^ What? Are you crazy? he shouts when she breaks the news to him. This is the most insane dinner conversation Ive ever had Why do you have to go to the diner? she asks.

Because ... says Shrevie, who takes off for the place anyway.

Trouble is, the attraction presumably the camraderie, the man-or boy-talk - never seems that appealing. But maybe thats the point. Maybe the diner is a place to spend that uneasy time between adolescence and adulthood.

He dropped out of college to find himself, Eddie tells his mother when she asks

aboutFenwick, cleariy the most intelligent kid in the. crowd.

Find liimself? she re-)lies. Why dont he find limself somewhere near a job?

The guys decide to have a party for Eddie, complete with cake and a silly dance on the counter.

How many hours you think were all here since we started? Boogie asks.

Actual booth hours... ? Fenwick says.

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RIGHTEOUS COMEBACK - Bobby Hatfield (left, in both lictures), and Bill Medley, known as the Righteous Brothers, ive reunited and are touring the nation once again. They first split in 1968 at the height of their popularity and now are doing the oldies and glowing in the ^ory of their rhythm and blues hits from another era. (AP Laserphoto)

12:00 News9 12:30 Young it 1:30 As fhe World 2:30 Capifol 3:00 Guiding Lt. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 TicTacDougl 8:00 On the Road 8:30 Our Times 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 LateAAovie 2:00 Nightwatch

Actor's Son Goes

In Rehabilitation

NEW YORK (AP) - Griffin ONeal, the 18-year-old son of actor Ryan ONeal, has been put in a private drug rehabilitation center in Hawaii because he had to have help, his sister says.

He had to be in a situation where he was not indulged, where he couldnt do just anything he wanted, and where someone would slap his head if need be, to tell him, no. said 19-year-old actress Tatum ONeal.

He had to have help, she was quoted in the current issue of People magazine.

Griffin and Ryan had a

Last Session

fight in May at the Bel Air home of actress Farrah Fawcett, with Griffin losing two front teeth, the magazine said. Two weeks later the Malibu jpolice booked Griffin after neighbors reported him tearing his room apart, and Griffin spent three days behind bars.

Griffin, also an actor, underwent treatment in a drug-rehabilitation program at Los Angeles Westwood Hospital in 1981. He is currently in Habiiitt, a $800-a-month survival school on Oahu.

This path of destructiveness is just his way of begging for affection, but in the wrong way, Miss ONeal said.

Is Planned

Popcorn Theater, a film and book program for fifth, sixth and seventh graders, will have its final session of the summer from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday in the Childrens Room at Sheppard Memorial Library.

In addition to free films and popcorn, those attending will be introduced to and can select among a variety of new junior novels.

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BUCCANEER MOVIES

Having problems with mosquitoes in your neighborhood? The Citys malaria control program may be able to help. Call 752-4137 for more information.

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Price-Fixing in Yams Suspected

WILSON, N.C. (AP) -Growers and shippers of North Carolina sweet potatoes say they are being questioned by federal officials in an investigation of price fixing.

No indictments^ have been brought in the investigation, dubbed Yamscam, but U.S. Attorney Sam Currin confirmed federal officials are looking at the sweet potato business in North Carolina, the nations biggest yam-producing state.

There has been some grand jury work into the yam business, said U.S. Attorney Sam Currin. Im not at liberty to discuss it.

James Bardin, a grower and shipper in Wilson, said he has turned over copies of his records for two years to the Justice Deparatment. He said he knew of no price-fixing.

You couldnt get two farmers to agree on the time of day, Bardin said. If I could have fixed the prices, I wouldnt owe $1 million. Other farmers, who did not want their names used, agreed with Bardin.

They said several growers have appeared before a grand jury in Raleigh and that the Justice Department has asked for five years worth of records from the major shippers and the N.C. Yam Association, the shippers trade group.

Growers and shippers said authorities are asking whether price-fixing takes place at trade association meetings and private meetings among growers of Shippers. Those interviewed said they knew of no price-fixing meetings.

Although they are called yams, the orange potato grown in North Carolina is really a sweet potato, said Jack Jenkins, executive director of the N.C. Yam Commission.

r Joseph's

Two kinds of sweet potatoes are shipped from the state - green and cured. The cured variety are green potatoes that have been stored in a high-humidity, 85-degree shed. Curing makes sweet potatoes sweeter, growers said.

Curing also increases the price. Several growers said the questions asked in the grand jury focus on the price difference between green and cured sweet potatoes.

Production Of Butter Drops

WASHINGTON (AP) -The nations butter production dropped in June to about 110 million pounds, down 9 percent from May, according to the latest Agriculture Department report.

Production of American-type cheese was down 1 percent from May to 280 million pounds, although total cheese production -excluding cottage cheese -rose 2 percent to 436 million pounds, the report said.

Non-fat dry milk output in June was up 1 percent from May to about 158 million pounds. Ice cream production jumped 15 percent from May to 34.5 million gallons.

GUEST SPEAKERS

The guest speakers for the week-long services at Elm Grove Church were incorrectly reported to the Daily Reflector. The speakers are:

Wednesday, Elder C.R. Parker and congregation; Thursday, Bishop J.B. Taylor and the congregation of Coreys Chapel; Friday, Eldress Martha Strong and Pitt-Greene Interdenomination Choir.

All services begin at 7:30 p.m.

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For inforination on the services provided by the City Public Works Department, call 752-4137.

BySAMUZZELL    

Agricultural Extension Agent

Every summer in late July and early August, motorists encounter heavy flights of moths along the highways at night. These moths are the adults of the com earworm and are leaving the dry com fields to find suitable host crops on which they lay eggs. Once these eggs have hatched, then the com earworm goes to work on soybeans, peanuts, grain sorghum, cotton and many other green and growing crops. These moths will be apparent at night now.

The com earworm has been called our most expensive insect. It has the capability to destroy yield potential of certain crops like few other insects can.

It pays to know certain things about the corn earworm. It can feed and survive successfully on many different crops. It can lay literally hundreds of eggs, and it is a strong flier that can cover considerable distances. Hot weather enables the insect to develop from egg to moth in about a week on soybeans. All these factors and more mean that it is essential for farmers to actively monitor populations of the com earworm on soybeans, peanuts and grain sorghum (milo) during August in eastern North Carolina.

There are usually four generations of the com earworm <iach year. Some survive the winter as a pupa (a resting stage between the worm and the moth). These first-generation worms attack com shortly after it emerges and feed in the whorl of the com. The ragged leaves unfold and the worm is called the shatterworm at this time because of the feeding damage.

The second generation of the year is found in the tips of field com and sweet com ears primarily, hence the common name of com earworm. Usually there is only one worm per ear - the worms are cannabalistic and only the strongest survives. Com provides an excellent breeding site and with some two million acres in North Carolina, obviously many com earworms are produced. In late July, the second generation of the mm earworm is through feeding in com and the moths (adult stage) leave the com fields to seek new egg-laying areas.

The third ^neration o! com earworm is the damaging one and the one that requires close attention. The moths that lay eggs on soybean and peanut foilagexan develop rapidly and heavy infestations can strip these crops of leaves and pods.

The fourth generation of com earworm is not a factor because of heavy losses of eggs and larvae due to poor egg-laying sites and adverse weather in late September and early October.

The time has arrived for eastern North Carolina soybean and peanut growers to be aware of the com earworm. It is the most damaging insect to these crops but can be readily controlled with appn^riately timed insecticidal sprays. Careful scouting of these crops will make money, not cost money. For further information on scouting for com earworms, contact your local Agricultural Extension Office.

There will be soybean/peanut insect scouting school Aug. 17 at 3 p.m. beginning at the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Office. Techniques of scouting for insects and com earworm control will be discussed. This workshop will also carry one and one-half hours of continuing certification credits. For more information contact the Pitt County Extension Office at 752-2934.

Views On Dental

Health

Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.PA

ASPIRIN - GOOD AND BAD

If your child has a toothache, get him or her to\ dentist immediately. If this is not practical, 'a proper dosage of aspirin will help make him feel more comfortable until you can get to the dentist. However, you should take precautions when administering aspirin.

Make sure your child takes the aspirin with enough water to prevent upsetting his stomach. Aspirin is a systemic drug; it relieves pain only after it has entered the bloodstream. So make sure it gets , all the way down with plenty of water.

Never place the tablet on the painful tooth or on the gum or let it dissolve in his mouth and ask him to swish it around the aching tooth. The aspirin can irritate the tissue seriously.

Never crush aspirin and place it between the cheek and the gum. Aspirin and related compounds are a common source of burns of the oral cavity. White lesions can develop where the medication touches the cheek or gum. The tissues will become painful and the white cauterized areas may be removed leaving a painful, raw. bleeding area.

Poultry Consumption Is

f

Seeing Dramatic Gains

Zoo. And sure enough, just as it often is with people -somebody had to blink. (AP Laserpboto)

By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) -Per capita consumption of poultry, including broilers and turkeys, has increased dramatically since the mid-50s. One reason: Poultry is a bargain at supermarkets, says the Agriculture Department.

Maui Seeks Onion Test

WAILUKU, Hawaii (AP) - The Maui County Council isnt just sitting back and shedding tears over Georgias claim to have "the sweetest onion on earth.

Instead, its calling for a contest on the teps of the Capitol in Washington to prove its claim that the Kula from the land of Hula is the nations top onion.

Council member Charles Ota, representing the Kula district on the island of Maui, says he wants senators from Georgia and Hawaii to crunch into both kinds of onions to determine which is sweeter.

A recent Time magazine article erroneously describes Vidalia onions, also known as Yumions, as the worlds sweetest onion, said Otas resolution adopted by the council Friday.

Even Jody Powell, former presidential press secretary who claims that Vidalia Yumions will not make your nose run, your heart bum, or your sweetheart gag, would change his views if he tasted the truest sweet onion, the Kula onion, the resolution says.

Local experts say the sucrose content in every Kula onion is so high that some authorities are looking at onion production to compete against the beet-sugar industry, it said.

Processed Kula onion, often mistaken for raw cane sugar, are used mostly as flavor enhancers and sweeteners in such things as jams, jellys, and fruit juices.

In 1955, according to a new analysis, Americans ate an average of 13.8 pounds of ready-to-cook broilers and five pounds of turkey.

By 1981, the per capita consumption rate was 48.6 pounds of broilers and 10.7 pounds of turkey.

Beef consumption, by comparison, grew to 77.3 pounds of retail weight in 1981 from 64 pounds in 1955.

) Tld(rdport wes written by Floyd A. Lasley, an agricultural economist in the USDAs Economic Research Service.

Few industries have enjoyed the success of the poultry industry in improving production and marketing efficiency during the past quarter century, the report said.

Broiler and turkey producers have supplied increasing quantities of high-quality meat, and made it available year around at declining real prices.

Retail prices of broilers in 1981 averaged about 74 cents a pound, compared to 55 cents in 1955.

In real terms, however, consumers now can buy broilers for less than half of what they paid 25 years ago, the report said.

So-called vertical integration, with farm-to-market

operations vested in central ownership - and a network of growers turning out birds on a fee basis -revolutionized the broiler industry.

Vertical integration of the poultry industry was rapid, as small flocks gave way to large poultry enterprises, and developments in feeding and disease control enabled )roducers to raise flocks in arge confined units throughout the year, the report said.

Some other developments; -Total farm sales of poultry rose to $3.3 billion for eggs, $4.3 billion for broilers, and over $1.2 billion for turkeys in 1980, compared with about $2 billion for eggs, $533 million for broilers, and $270 milliion foil turkeys during the early 50s.

-About 1,100 farms, each with more than 50,000 hens, accounted for half of all hens in 1978. Farms with sales of more than 100,000 broilers accounted for 82 percent of all broilers sold. Almost half the turkeys were sold by 304 farms reporting sales of more than 100,000 birds each.

-Sales of processed or cut-up chicken and turkeys have increased faster than sales of whole birds.

-Turkey consumption is less seasonal, with just over

TIFTON, Ga. (AP) - The summer heat wave has left hogs in no mood for romance, and that means less money for the farmer and less pork for the consumer.

Hogs are a lot like us when it comes to the weather, said Frank Owsley, the Georgia Extension Services swine scientist. When its hot, they try to hold strenuous activities to a minimum. And that includes reproductive activities. They just arent making bacon in the 90-de^ plus temperatures that have blistered the hog belt in south Georgia in recent weeks, Owsley said. Quite frankly, the boars arent in the mood, and the sows arent in the mood either. And I dont think I blame them much.

He said the lack of reproduction was viewed by pork producers as the silent killer, although no heat-related deaths or diseases have been reported among hogs.

And we wont know the overall impact of the silent killer on the pork market probably until next year, he said. But one thing is sure - the decline in breeding activity will result in fewer hogs going to market, fewer dollars for the producer andless pork for consumers.

one-third of the nations turkey consumption now o^ curring in the last quarter of the year, compared to more than half in 1960.

Improvements will continue, but productivity gains may come more slowly than in the past, both in production and marketing, the report said.

Poultry producers and processors should continue to shrink in number but grow in output per unit during the 80s, with both trends slowing considerably from years past.

Taiwan A Farm Market

WASHINGTON (AP) -The Agriculture Department says Taiwan has blossomed as a market for U.S. horticultural products since since the Asian nation liberalized its apple import system in 1979.

Apple exports rose to 64,000 metric tons in 1980 and to 75,000 tons in 1981, compared to less than 3,000 tons before 1979, says a report in a recent issue of Foreign Agriculture.

A government monopoly controlled trade and severely restricted imports to protect domestic production, the report said. With the lifting of these restrictions, pent-up trade and consumer demand exploded.

Sales of table grapes, the second leading U S. horticultural export to Taiwan, more than doubled last year, the report said.

Peach exports dropped sharply in 1982, but are now on the upswing with sales in the first six months of 1983 more than five times those of the same i^riod a year earlier, it said.

Other U.S; products showing promise in Taiwan include tree nuts, prunes.

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Sports yHE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUSTS, 1983Perry Baffles Boston For 1-0 Shutout

By Tbe Associated mss

Just once, the Boston Red Sox would like to see a natural delivery from a Kansas City pitcher. Instead, they get side-and under-armed to death.

The Royals had been starving for effective right-handed starting pitchers all season. But this weekend, they got a shutout from Eric Rasmussen on Saturday night and a combined three-hitter from veteran Gaylord Perry and ace reliever Dan Quisenberry in a 1-0 decision Sunday.

Perry, whose two strikeouts gave him 3,506 for his career, two short of Walter Johnson, won his 312th game, surrendering only two hits in seven innings. He a sidearm delivery to stifle Boston until submariner Quisenberry finished for his major league-leading 28th save.

Pat Sheridan belted a home run off Red rookie Dennis Boyd, 2-2, in the fourth for the only run.

Elsewhere, it was Chicago 4, Baltimore 3; Detroit 8, New York 5; Milwaukee 9, Toronto 6; Oakland 6, Minnesota 0; California 4, Seattle 3, and, in a doubleheader, Texas beat Geveland 4-3 before the Indians blanked the Rangers 7-0 in the second game.

Its something I used years ago, and I thought it was time to go back to it beca<jse Ive been having a tough time, said Perry, 5-12, who joined the Royals a month ago after being cut by Seattle. I never used it that much, just something as an element of surprise. It got me in trouble' the first three innings.

The toughest spots for Perry came against another longtime star, Carl Yastrzemski. Boston loaded the bases in the first and third, only to see Perry get Yaz on a grounder, then a fly ball.

Its a great challenge with him up there, said Perry. I tried not to get in a pattern where he could look for

Snow Hill Ousted In Legion Playoffs

HAMLET - Hamlet plated five runs in the fifth and added three more in the eighth Saturday night to defeat Snow Hill 11-3 and win the Eastern Championship of the American Legion State Tournament with a 4-2 record in the series.

Jeff Ginn had three hits in four trips to the plate, and Anthony Russo was 2-4 for Snow Hill, but Danny Mills and Darrell Poe provided the power for Hamlet with each knotching a two-run homer.

Hamlet took the lead in tbe second inning as Poe rapped a two-out single and Mills followed with his homer.

Hamlet added another run in the third with winning pitcher Scott Altman (^>ening with a double and G^ Clon-inger lofting a sacrjfice fly to score the run. ^

Poes two-run blast in the fifth capped a seven-hit, five-run barrage that put the game out of reach.

Snow Hill finally got on the board in the of the eighth.

Coastal Downs Vienna In Babe Ruth Tournament

VIENNA, Va. - The Coastal Plains South All Stars managed just two hits Sunday, but that was all they needed as pitcher Tommy Wynne threw a four-hitter at Vienna for a 1-0 victory in the Babe Ruth 16-year-old All Star Baseball Tournament.

Billy Michelle (^)ened the top of the seventh with a base on balls, and pinch hitter Greg Hardison sacrificed courtesy runner Whit Brown to second. Gary Scott lined a pinch-hit single up the middle to push Brown across tbe plate for the games only run.

Matt McGarthy, Steve Shartbaugb and Robbie Tbondiill singed to load the bases for Viama after one out

in the third, but Coastal got out of the inning when S^n Gallagher grounded into a double play.

, Coastal missed a scoring opportunity in the fourth, tait Vienna stranded a runner at third with no outs in the fifth.

Coastal Plains South meets South Alabama today, with tbe winner advancing to meet Florid^ Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the winners bracket of tbe double eliminatkm event.

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something. I went over the top twice to get him. I kept changing on him. You give a guy like that a pattern and hell spot it.

That was a classic confrontation, said Kansas City Manager Dick Howser. Its not like those two guys are jiet playing for sentimental reasons. Perry was throwing a whale of a game. And just two days earlier. Yaz had beaten us.

He pitched a good game. He got me out when he had to in two situations, and that was the difference in the game, said Yastnemski.

White Sox 4, Orioles 3

Despite the Royals win, they couldnt gain ground on the White Sox, who are five games up in the West after Sundays win at Baltimore. Greg Luzinski homered for the third straight game and LaMarr Hoyt joined Rick Honeycutt of Texas and Scott McGre^r of Baltimore as 14-game winners with his fourth consecutive victory.

Most home run hitters are streaky, said Luzinski. On a streak, you just start seeing the ball good and get up there and relax. Youre aggressive enou^ and you hit it out.

Tigers 8, Yankees 5

Detroit had surrendered 25 runs and 31 hits in the first two games of the New York series, but came back behind pitchers

Dan Petry and Aurelio Lopez and the hitting of Lance Parrish, who got his 17th homer, nd Lou Whitaker, who was 4-for-4.

Were fortunate to lose two games here, three in a row actually, and still be only a game out, said Petry.

Brewers 9, Blue Jays 6

Toronto left home riding high, just two games out of first place and talking bravely about winning on the road. But the Blue Jays were swept in Milwaukee to fall into fifth place in the East.

Charlie Moore had three RBI and Ted Simmons and Jim Gantner each drove in two runs as Milwaukee moved within 14 games of Baltimore.

"I just feel its going to be like this for the rest of the year, Moore said about the division race.

It is just one of those things every ball club goes through. said Torontos Cliff Johnson, who smacked his 18th homer. Were not conceding anything.

As6,TwinsO

At Minnesota, Chris Codiroli and Keith Atherton combined on a six-htter and Bob Kearney scored three runs as Okland won for the 10th time in 14 starts. Codiroli went six innings but, after issuing a pair of walk^, was replied by Atherton.

"This was one of my better game. admitted Codiroli. I got it all together, but 1 just ran out of gas in the seventh. Ranigers 4-0, Indians 3-7 George Wright drove in one run and scored twice, pacing Texas to its fourth straight triumph in the opener. But Cleveland bounced back after five consecutive defeats to win the nightcap behind Tom Brennan, who threw the first shutout of his major league career with a seven-hitter.

Texas had beat us every game in this series, Brennan said. "Its kind of nice to stop a complete sweep. Its a dream. It sure beats the IL (International League).

Angels 4, Mariners 3 In Seattle, Reggie Jacksons sixth-inning RBI grounder snapped a 3-3 tie and Bobby Grich cracked a two-run double as California avoided the first four-game sweep in the Mariners seven-year history.

Jacksons ground ball, which forced Grich at second, scored Fred Lynn from third and gave Jackson a career total of 1,428 RBI, one ahead of Charlie Gehringer and into 28th-place on the all-time list.

Ken Forsch, 10-7, was the winner, while Bruce Kison picked up his first save in his third relief appearance. Bryan Clark 5-4, took the loss.

Tommy Goff, Richie Chase and Steve Sides singled to load the bases, and Anthony Russo reached first on an error to score Goff. But after Ginn drove in a pair of runs with a single, Hamlet got out of the inning with a double play.

It seemed like the last few games we played against them, they were always able to come up with the double play when they needed it, Snow Hill Coach James Pulghum said. We had a good year; we just ran into a ballclub having a better one.

Altman finished the game with three hits including a pair of doubles to lead Hanolet at the plate. Mills and Poe went 2-4, with Mike Moore contributing 2-5.

Hamlet now advances to the state finals against Independence beginning Friday^

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Palmer Picks Up A Win In Minor League Vebut'

Back To The Minors    against the Durham Bulls. Palmer is

Pitcher Jim Palmer unleashes a on rehabilitation assignment with the pitch for the Hagerstown Suns of the Suns from the Baltimore Orioles. Carolina League Sunday afternoon (APLaserphoto)

By BEN WALKER AP Sports Writer

The last time Jim Palmer pitched in the minor leagues, he was 22 - a number he would later make famous in Baltimore while winning three Cy Young Awards with the Orioles.

At that time, shoulder and back injuries were threatening to put a premature end to what many felt could be^ a promising career.

On Sunday, Palmer returned to the minors on a 20-day rehabilitation assignment, a 37-year-old pitcher tiding to overcome nagging injuries that may rob him of his final years.

He took the mound on a hot and muggy afternoon in Hagerstovm. a small blue-collar city nestled in the hills of western Maryland, wearing No. 22 on a jersey specially made for him by his new team, the Hagerstown Suns of the Class A Carolina League.

Underneath his jersey, he wore a good-luck Minnesota Twins T-shirt that he had won 12 or 13 straight games with last season. He changed into his uniform in the middle of the Suns lockerroom because, as the

team said, it didnt have an extra locker for him A crowd of 6,192 came to Municipal Stadium, where advertising covers the outfield walls, to see the Suns lake on the Durham Bulls. Two weeks ago, more than 7,300 fans jammed the small ballpark when the San Diego Chicken showed up.

This time, the fans mainly came to watch an aging hurler with arm trouble, a pitcher with 265 major-league victories who has not thrown since June 25 and. some say, may be finished.

His first outing in more than.a month was not vintage Palmer, yet he seemed pleased.

He went five innings and allowed seven hits and two runs, while striking out five and walking two. Prior to the game, the Orioles said they wanted him to throw either five innings or 70 pitches. He threw 72 pitches against Durham.

Palmer left trailing 2-1, but the Suns rallied for three runs in the bottom of the fifth inning and went on to win 8-6, giving him the victory.

"My arm felt a lot better than I thought it would, said Palmer, who threw an assortment of fastballs.

changeups and a couple of sliders.

"I could have pitched longer. he said, but added that those involved with his recovery program felt it would be better not to risk injury.

Palmer appeared loose and relaxed while discussing his performance and frowned when told the Onoies had lost in Baltimore to the Chicago ^^^lite Sox He bristled only when someone suggested that the Bulls had seemed to , hit him well.

I didnt think the balls were hit that hard, he retorted.

Palmer said he kind of requested a visit to the minors last week during a meeting with Orioles Manager Joe Altobelli The ri^it-hander went on the disabled list for tbe third time this year cm July 8 because of tendinitis in his right shoulder

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In The Area

Steerina Committee Meeting Set

The Family Life Education Steering Committee will meet Thursday at 2 p.m. on the second floor of the Pitt County Office Building.

Persons interested in promoting family life education and working with this committee are urgtfd to attend.

Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co. building on Chestnut Street at the Ralei^ Avenue intersection.

Chief Glenn Cannon said Cephus had climbed the fence and moved a lawnmower from a shed when officers discovered him.

C^hus was placed under a $2,000 bond pending action by thecourt.

See No Early Settlement

ForTelephone Walkout

Hum Runner Club Will Meet

The Rum Runner Ocein Atlantic Dive Club will meet August 15 at 6:30 p.m. at the Ramada Inn.

Reservations may be made by calling 758-1444 or 756-9339.

City Radio Show Guests Announced

ciSi- -------------------------

Cystic Fibrosis Telethon Is Planned

Chaii

airman Tom Swanson and the Greenville Jaycees will man a satellite telephone bank during the sixth annual Cystic Fibrosis Telethon. The satellite station will be for the convenience of area citizens who would like to support the telethon effort without having to make a long distance call.

Co-sponsored by the New Bern Jaycees and Jaycettes and WCTI-TV, Channel 12, the telethon will be aired for 19 hours from 11 p.m. Aug. 12 through 6 p.m. Aug. 13.

Area residents appearing at the telethon will be Valerie Vrooman and Mamie Buck of Ayden, and the Cotten Candy sSingers, Willie Hardison, Terri Williams and the Finishing Touch, allofGreeenville.

Television personalities Phillip MacHale, best known as Runner in the Hardees Restaurant advertisements, and The Cool Ghoul will appear at this years telethon.

More than $90,000 was raised at last years telethon. The funds are used for research, care and education to help those who suffer from cystic fibrosis, a genetic defect. The average life expectancy for children born with cystic fibrosis is now 21 years.

^jty Manager Gail Meeks announced that the guests on the City Hall Notes radio pro^am this week will be Jack Simoneau of the planning division and Capt. Tony Smart, fire-re^ue training officer.

Simoneau will discuss the purpose of city planning, and Smart will talk about fire-rescue training programs.

City Hall Notes is aired each Tuesday and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on WOOW Radio.

Area Residents Win Writing Awards

Reese Helms of Greenville and Gail Robertson of

Greenville Utilities Board Meets Tuesday

The Board of Commissioners of the Greenville Utilities Commission will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Utilities Building at the intersection of Fifth and Washington Streets.

Included on the agenda will be the consideration of Beat-The-Peak incentive credits for September, amendments to the water and sewer capital project funds, and bids for various equipment.    '

Williamston were first place winners in this years Tar Heel Writers Roundtable writing contest, and Jean Tabory of Kinston, wife of a former Greenville resident, received a third place.

The winners of the annual contest were announced Saturday afternoon during a luncheon closing out the I95h annual Writers Roundtable. Helms, energy conservation director of Greenville Utilities Corporation, won first place in the short story competition and was presented a silver bowl for his story titled Yard Projects. Mrs. Robertson, a full-time writer, received a silver bowl, also, for her article on the Elizabeth II. Mrs. Tabory, a psychologist at Caswell Center, received a third-place certificate for her poem, Winter.

By The Associated Press

Union officials sy they do not expect a quick settlement in a strike against Southern Bell that took 7,000 workers in North Carolina off the job Sunday.

"There are no negotiations, no rumors or nothing, said Wallace A. Weaver, president of Communications Workers of America Local 3611, which represents 930 union members in Raleigh an(K:hapel Hl. Were at a standstill.

I would not expect a settlement in the next day or two, said CWA President Glenn E. Watts.

We want at least double the kind of money theyre (AT&T) talking about... The company knows the area in which we must go and theyre unwilling to meet that, he said.

AT&T Chairman Charles Brown said that although the two sides differ widely on a new wage package, other unspecified bargaining issues related to the scheduled divestiture of the huge telecommunications company remain unresolved.

There are a lot more issues than economics, I assure you, Brown .said. The divestiture has caused some

Jeans In War

On Trademark

Flag and Flagpole Dedication Set

A dedication ceremony for the presentation of a

Vehicle Runs Off Road

A car driven by Ernest Lee Bridges of 1904 McClellan St., ran off Evans Street about 243 feet south of the Sara Lane intersection about 5:15 p.m. Sunday, causing an estimated $2,000 damage to the vehicle.

Officers said another $100 damage resulted to trees, shrubs, a sign and a post struck by the Bridges car.

Vehicles Collide At intersection

Cars driven by Jeffery Thomas Bowen of Route 1, Ayden, and Curtis Clyde Evans of 710 Hooker Road, collided about 11 p.m. Saturday at the intersection of Greenville Boulevard and Memorial Drive.

Police, who charged Bowen with failing to stop for a red light, estimated damage at $900 to the Bowen car and $700 to the Evans auto.

_____________ ^    ______ ^    a    flag    and

flagpole will be lield at 4 p.m. Wednesday at the historic Robert Lee Humber House on the comer of West Fifth and Washington Streets. The flag and flagpole were donated by the descendants of Marshall D. Whitehurst and Elizabeth Taylor Whitehurst.

At the ceremony, Walter Faulkner, president of the Greenville Area Preservation Association, will present a plaque recognizing the Humber Houses designation by the U.S. Department of the Interior as a National Historic site.

THe house, built by Robert Lee Humber, Sr., was the home of Robert Lee Humber, Jr. for many years during his career in public service. Dr. Humber was instrumental in the establishment of the State Museum of Art and received international acclaim for his work toward world peace.

The home has been leased to the North Carolina Division of Archives and History for a regional office.

Instructor To Be In State Competition

Mrs. Marietta Jones of Route 3, Greenville, a biology and

Sheppard Library Vault Theft Investigated

Greenville police are investigating the theft of $365 from a vault at Sheppard Memorial Library at 530 Evans St. Sunday.

Chief Glenn Cannon said the theft, reported at 4:30 p.m., occurred between 2 p.m. and 4:15 p.m.

Arrest Made At CTBT Building

Paul Cephus, 16 of 1202 Chestnut St. was arrested by Greenville police about 11:05 p.m. Friday on breaking and entering charges after officers found him inside a fence at the

physics instructor at Washington High School, has been selected to be the Region I representative in state competition for the N.C. Awards Program for Outstanding Mathematics and Science Teachers.

A graduate of Chicod High School and East Carolina University, where she receiv^ her BS degree in biology and her MAED in science education, Mrs. Jones has been employed by the Washington City Schools since 1976.

'The awards program for math and science teachers was established to provide recognition for individual teachers for outstanding contributions to math and science education in their schools, and is sponsored by the Business Committee on Mathematics/Science Education, a group of business and industry leaders.

Region I includes Pitt, Beaufort and 13 other counties.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)

- A legal battle over trademarks will probably result from the seizure of 20,000 pairs of Mexican-made de-nims carrying the Jordache label at Charlottes airport, officials say.

Jorache Enterprises of New York has condemned the shipment seized by U.S. Customs agents as illegal counterfeits, but the Mexican manufacturer says the denims are legal and the Charlotte company that bought them believes it has the right to sell them.

Earlier this year, CMI Inc. of Charlotte, which buys and sells clothes in bulk, learned about a firm that made jeans with the Jordache name in Mexico.

Wayne Bach of Hickory, the attorney for CMI, said company officials went to Mexico, met with government officials and obtained documents showing the Mexican firm could legally make Jordache jeans in that country.

He said the Mexican firm also agreed to pay any licensing fees required when the pants were imported.

We had never purchased out of country before, he said. Normally we purchase.

overruns from manufacturers. So it was new to us. We wanted to check it out and do it correctly.

In a telephone interview Friday, Abe Anzarut, the president of the company that makes the Jordache jeans in Mexico City, said he has the legal right to make Jordache jeans there.

But he said he has been taken to court in Mexico by Jordache enterprises' over the trademark - a legal fight Bach said CMI just learned of.

Bach said he expects to end up in court fighting over interpreting trademark laws. CMI believes it broke no trademark restrictions, and Bach said the company did not try to hide its shipment.

The Customs Service stored the pants in a warehouse after seizing them Wednesday and Thursday.

complexities in bargaining.

About sue union members picketed the Southern Bell building in Raleigh with signs reading, Ma Bell is a tight-fisted mother, and When Ma starts talking, well start walking.    /

Weaver said picket lines were also up in Wilmington, Burlington, Goldsboro, Greensboro, Charlotte, W^ton-Salem, Asheville, Shelby, Gastonia, Laurinburg, Warrenton, Lenoir, Salisbury, Boone and other North Carolina cities.

Picketers included operators, repairmen, technicians and service representatives, he said.

On the picket line in Charlotte, Tom Hawkins, 37, an AT&T Special Services worker said, 1 dont want to lose any of the benefits weve already got,

Id like to see us get some sort of job security in light of the divestiture and job centralization, he said, referring to the court-ordered breakup of AT&T.

Its going to hurt me real bad, said Charlotte picketer Jane Grogan, a 37-year-old Southern Bell technician who is raising two children alone. 1 hope they reach a settlement soon.

Repair technician Jim Amburn, 40, just bought a house and said on the picket line he hopes the strike is over soon. The first payment is due in September. I was hoping the strike would be diverted, but 1 wont cross the picket line, he said.

Telephone service across the nation was disrupted only slightly as managers and supervisors worked in place of 675,000 operators and technicians who struck American Telephone & Telegraph Co. after their contract expired.

There should be little effect on the customer, Ladd Baucom, spokesman for Souths-n Bell in Charlotte, said Sunday. Some mi^t be noticed on long distance calls requiring the assistance of an operator. But we will have management personnel on duty to process those calls and to make emergency repairs of telephone equipment.

Workers represented by the CWA, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, and the Telecommunications International Union walked off their jobs at one minute after midnight, local time, after rejecting managements latest offer for a new contract.

The companys last offer would have limited wage gains for experienced workers to 3.5 percent per year fqr the next three years. It also would would have retained cost-of-living protection that has provided percentage raises equal to three-quarters of the annual increase in the Consumer Price Index.

Among CWA employees, a top-scale systems technician makes $565.50 per week. A top-scale operator makes $389.

REAFFIRMS PROMISE

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) Prime Minister Robert Mugabe has reaffirmed his promise to establish a one-party state at 20th anniversary celebrations for the ruling ZANU party.

For information on voter registration, call the Pitt County Board of Elections at 758-4683.

Tune-ups - Brake Jobs

General Repairs

Auto Specialty Co.

9UW. SIhSt.

758-1131

Expert Shoe Repair

Rms SHOE SHOP

113 W. 4th St. Downtown Greenville

758-0204

Open Mondey-Fridey 8 i.m. 'til 6 p.m. Saturday 9 a.m. 'til 3 p.m.

Parking in Front & Rear

SHOP-EZE

Watt End Shopping Center

Phone 756-0960

Tuesday Luncheon Special Meat Loaf

M.49

Fried Chicken

M.99

Special Served with 2 Fresh Vegetables a Rolts.





Fluorescent DESK LAMP

On/Off Switch Adjustable Neck$12.S8Ingraham Par II Electric ALARM CLCK

MOOIL 4I-M1V

Oyster White Case, Easy To Read Numerals Sweep Second Hand$3.44

fJorelco* CURLING WAND

3-position switch~Hi, Lo, Off.

Polished chrome barrel.

Chrome clamp and stand.

Signal light and ready dot.

Cool tip and swivel cord.$4.99

Receive a $2.00 rebate from NORELCO. See store for * coupon and details.MAKE UP MIRROR

#7546

Regular & Magnifying Mirrors$2.37

kViTki iMft    tM'm

TRAVEL IRON

SECOND STOVE

f

' l6if

Thermostatic Control Lightweight

Detachable 8-Foot Cord

Thermostatic Heat Control

Folding Handle For Storage

Detachable Cord

$5.99

$9.88

IMMERSION HEATER

UL Listed Safety Fuse

Clips To Any Shape Cup

$2.44

Eveready Super HEAVY DUTY BATTERIES

1215BP4    _

1235-2

Size AA Size C*

4 Per Pkg. ^2 PerPkg.

1-27 88^

1250-2

Size "D"

2 Per Pkg. #1 Per Pkg.

88t 91t

Shetland Pro 1250 HAIR DRYER

1250 Watts Of Fast Drying Power

3 Temperature Settings

Convenient Hang-up Ring

High Impact Heat-Resistant Housing

$10.88





r

g 020

H TWO \m MERCURY ZEPHYRS 4 door Man. Like new Automatic, A cylinder. Caii Leo Venters AAotors m inAvden.74i7i.    _

TheUaUy Keiiector.ureenvuie, iM.L.-Monoay, Augusts, 1W3-15

/Mercury

021

Oldsmobile

051

Help Wanted

IM9 CUTLASS - With alot ot new part. Call 77 1W3 anytime_

ISl

miie. 75 3>?9

Loaded.

022    Plymouth

fT^OLAR^^r^owe^feeng"

automatic transmission Excellent i^ondltlon. 7S 0494._

023

Pontiac

1979 GRANO PRIX Dark blue. VA Good condition. Asking S2800 Call Abdulla, 752 ASM. _

024

Foreign

OATSUN WOZX - 2 + 2. 1979 Blue. 58.000 miles. 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition $8200. Call 7SA A33A or 75A 1549 nights.

^ade^llreet    lOS

75A '/114.

beside Todd's Stereo,

MERCEDES 240-0 1981. 4 speed, sunrool, new tires, cream Excellent condition $14,800. Call 75A A33A days. Ask lor Lorelle. Niohts or weekends call 75A 1549. ~

TOYOTA COROLLA, 1971. $A50 !:all 75A 4933.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE Call 355 A354 after A p.m._

19 7 2 TOYOTA CORONA Statlonwagon. Runs good body/interior in good condition Air, 4 speed $800. 752 5578    ____

1 973 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires Runs good. $1700. Call 758 2300days

1974 MAZDA RX4, 49,000 actual miles, Michelin tires, air, mags Interior in excellent condition $1200. 75A 3241

1977 DATSUN 710 WAGON 752 0144._

Call

1978 DATSUN B210 Hatchback Automatic, low mileage. Asking $2500.757 185A

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA AM/FM 8 track, air, $3200 negotia ble. 752 A855 after 5_

1980 DATSUN 210. 4 door, air, automatic, AM/FM radio. $3,750 or will trade for a larger car of equal value. Call 752 7793 after 5

1980 HONDA CIVIC GL1500, dark blue, air, AM/FM cassette, rack, cruise, excellent condition. $3,950. 758-0884

1980 TOYOTA COROLLA Deluxe Liftback. Automatic, AM/FM cassette, air, aluminum wheels, low mileage. Great condition! Call 758 0097 before 8 p. m

1981 TOYOTA TERCEL 4 speed, 39 miles per gallon, 34,000 miles, AM/FM cassette. Must sell! Call 752-A60A niahfs or weekends

It's so eas

looking

marketplace...the Classified section of this newspaper

sy to find the items you're for in .the people's

1982 NISSAN SENTRA 5 seats, 55 miles per gallon (highway), 25,000 miles, needs 2 tires. $800 and take over payments or buy for $4500 firm, (.alt 74A A774_

1982 PRELUDE Excellent condi tion, AM/FM stereo, sunroof, $7500 negotiable. 754 7991 days, ask for Richard. 754-1814after 9p.m._

032

Boats For Sale

14' TERRY BASS BOAT 50 horse power Evinrude, Cox trailer. Good condition. $1195. Call 744 4415.

1976 AQUA CAT sailboat. Complete with trailer and accessories. Kinston, 523-9209 after 5._

1976 20' GLASSTRON Deep Vee Excellent condition. Low hours, blue and white, full canvas, stereo, CB, 302 Ford V8 Mercruiser, full equipment, tandem trailer. $4,000. 756 7004._

1979 14Vj' PISCES tri hull, 28 hp Mariner, electric foot control motor. Pedestal seat. Galvanized trailer. Good condition. $1800. Days, 744 4452. N iqhts, 744 3848.

1981 RINKER BUILT 19'j', 170 horsepower inboarg/outboard Mercruiser, Cox drive on trailer, stainless steel prop, depth finder,

fully equipped, '$8l00 or best otter 754 9908 or f57 7121. ask tor Gilbert

1981 14' HOBIE TURBO Lots of extras. Excellent condition. 754 9730.

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman tops. 250 unfts in stock. O'Briants, . Raletoh. N C 834 2774

1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Root air, awning, fully self-contained. $5300 negotiable. 7S4 8539.__

5TH WHEELER and truck. 28' Coachman, self-contained, $5995. 1977 Cub Cab Truck, $2995. 754 7337 or 754 3984._

036

Cycles For Sale

1982 YAMAHA MAXIM 650. Shaft drive, full fairing, 4,250 miles, no damage. $1950 owed choice of 2 otans. Call 746 6774

1983 HONDA 650 CUSTOM CX V Twin. Black and gold, water cooled, drive shaft, cruise control, mag wheels, white leather tires. Only 800 miles. Still under waranty. In eludes 2 helments and Honda cover. Showroom Condition. $1995 firm. 746 3424.    _

CLERK Changing and verutMe ^itlM in engineering department. Must have oood mathematical skills and type 50 $5 words per minute accurately By appointment only. Contact Grady White Boats. 752 2111, extension 252 between 9 a.m. 4 p.m_

CONVENIENT STORE manager

and clerk 4 months experience helpful, but not necessary Only serious people apply Must be able to work any shift. Apply in person at Blounts Petroleum 1 to 5.

CRACKER JACK Legal Secretary High pressure obr Experience preferred in Real Estate packages Excellent benefits Send resume to Legal Secretary, PO Box 1947, Greenville._

Drive The Big Rigs

See Classified 080 (Instruction)

DRYWALL FINISHERS and

hangers Experience only 527 2285.

ENERGETIC INDIVIDUAL needed

tor part time hours Must be able to work 2 to 3 mornings a week and Saturdays. Apply m person at Leather 8, WoM. Carolina East Mall. No phone calls please!

EQUIPMENT OPERATOR

General land moving equipment. Call 747 3471, 758 4769, or n3 9094 between 8 and 5.

EXPERIENCED CAR stereo in staller Send resume to Car In staller, 105 Trade Street, Greenville

EXPERIENCEDTRUCK TIRE SERVICEMAN

Needed Apply in person. White's Tire Service. 3012 S Memorial Dr.

GREATOPPORTUNITY

for ambitious person who wants a sales career with management potential in Greenville area. The right person will receive expense paid training. Must be 21 or over, have car. be bondable. ambitious and sportsminded. Call for ap pointment and personal interview. Linda MakI 804-282-0700 Tuesday or Wednesday, 9 am - 5 pm Equal Opportunity M/F

HELP WANTED: Full and part time. Apply in person at Bonds Sporting Goods. 218 Arlington

iauiov^rit

HOME IMPROVEMENT SALESPERSON

Represent one of world's largest retailers. Position available covering Eastern Carolinas. Com-missiononly with draw account. In homeselling experience helpful but notnecessary. Must be self starter and have own transportation. Earningpotential: $25,000 to $50,000. Training program, leads furnished. Career position. Contact Al Pierce: 1 800 222 5511 or send resume to P O Box 725, Concord. N C 28025.

059

Work Wanted

GRASS CUTTING at reasonabl

prlsw. All $U9 Y9r<i$. Col!|S2 5^

075 /(Aobile Homes For Sale

GRASS CUTTING, trim arwnd sidewalks and driveways. Call 751Z34L

I WILL DO ODD job services Yard work, window cfeaning, etc. Call

LONG BROTHERS ROOFING All types of roofing commercial and residential. 25 years experience. Free estimates. Call 3S-697.

MORTAR SAND, field sand and rock. Also Dragline Service.

DavefH)ort's Hauling Service

756-S247

R T

tractor

^ iR Cement Con

jver X years experience.

Small jobs: driveways, walk ways, patios, and oaraoes. 757 0533._

060

FOR SALE

ONLY 2 MONTHS OLD Oakwood Montebello. 70x14, 2 bedrooms. 2 bath. $2200 down, assume pay ments. Set up in Birchwood Sands. 758 6312after5:30p.m

USED CONNER AAobile Home $295 down and take over payments. Call

7S6 7!.3r_

USED MOBILE HOMES As low as $295 down Assume payments. Call 756-4687. ask tor Lenn

12.75%

homes

033X

ING

onner

on selected Homes, 754

14 WIOES for as low as $170 per month Call or come by Art Oellano Homes. 756 9841    _

1969 COBURN, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, excellent condition, new carpet and furniture Low down payment and payments under $130    754    9874,

Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass    _

061

Antiques

ANTIQUE DINING ROOM suit with 5 chairs, $250 New air mattress, $57. Call 752 6382

JO LE'S A SCOTT'S ANTIQUES

1312 Dickinson Avenue, Greenville, NC . 10 to 5, AAonday through Friday Good selection of Oak furniture and much more!_

063 Building Supplies

DARLEEN'S DOMESTICS Tired, need more time? Let someone else do your house cleaning. 752 3758.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood tor sale. J P Stancil. 752 6331._

065 Farm Equipment

ATTENTION CORN FARMERS!

Gathering chain, (prices for 8 or more), to fit: John Deere and Internajtlonal $22 95. Massey Ferguson $22.49. Allis Chalmers: Low profile $23.49. Quick switch $23.95. All 1977 1979 $24.49. Others In stock. We also carry the Hutchinson line ot augers. AgrI Supply, ,NC. 752 3W

Greenville,

752:

INTERIOR DESIGNER .

salesperson Experience preferred. Salary plus commission. Send resume with references to Interior Designer, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC    _

INVENTORY CONTROL CLERK

Professional silk screen firm look ing for individual to maintain per petual inventory. Duties involve maintaining perpetual inventory, pulling orders, and preparing or ders for production. Excellent skills in math and legible handwriting are required. Call tor appointment, 744 6134._

L(X)KING FOR A NEW CAREER?

Do you have a friendly, somewhat agressive prsonality? Are you a mature person? College degree? Good telephone voice? Determined to be successful? Who konws, you may have the makings ot a good personnel consultant. For details call Herb Lee, Heritage Personnel Service 355 2020.    __

MACHINIST INSTRUCTOR: Full time Machinist Instructor needed. Ten years machine shop experience, supervisory or teaching expe rience preferred. Starting date September 15, 1983. Send resume and applications to Tom Heath, Chairperson Industrial Services Division, Beaufort County Community College, PO Box 1049, Washington, NC 27889. An Equal OPDortunitv Employer._

MANAGER TRAINEE WANTED

Apply In person at Mr. Gattl's Pizza, 10th and Cotanche Sts._

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 salesperson. Excellent pay plan and benefits. Apply to: Bob Brown or Robert Starling at Brown Wood, Inc., 1205 Dickinson Ave._____

MEDICAL

Immediate

OFFICE

opening

MANAGER

for mature.

poised, people-oriented individual Must possess skills in business organization and personnel supervision, in addition to secretarial and bookkeeping abilities. Salary based upon required experl ence. Excellent environment and fringe benefits. Apply In person at Eastern Carolina Neurological Assoc., 425 Stantonsburo Road.

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR,

317 John Deere with 48" mower

8 X 16 ALL STEEL dual axle trailer with loading ramps. Like new. 927 3474_

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Shop now during Factory Mattress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one half. Next to Pitt P(aza 355 2424.

AMERl

EARLY AMERICAN Herculon couch and loveseat, rust print color, good condition, $350. Very attractive floral couch and chair set, excellent condition, green, gold and brown colors, set $250 . 754-2220 or 752 8948 after 6.    _

KING SIZE mattress. Excellent condition. Box springs and trame, $150.752 4758,_

6 PICE library unit, Ethan Allen, solid oak, $1500 or reasonable offer. 100% wool Morroccan rug, 4'x6', $350. Call 754 9273._^

067    Garage-Yard Sale

INDOOR/OUTDOOR

sale

everyday at Old Fairground, Mon day Friday from 9 to until._

yard ound, Saturday, 7

072

Livestock

HORSEBACK RIDING

Stables, 752 523?_

Jarman

073    F ruits and Vegetables

BUTTERBEANS, tomatoes, field peas, cantelope. You pick. 744 4298

PEACHES!! Excellent for freezin

Nursery

lezing Finch Peach Orchard. 3

and canning. You pick!

ry and Peach Orel miles North of Bailey, Highway 581

North. Open 7 a.rn. to 8 p.m. Monday through Saturday, 235 4444.

074

Miscellaneous

ALL GLASS 6' display, cases, like new, lighted with locks, $240 each 744 6394 or 752 5147.

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL

Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and installation. 919 763 9734.

CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads of sand, topsoil and stone. Also driveway work

CHAIN LENGTH DOG PEN,

12'x18'x6' high. $lk. Call 754 7703

DUNE BUGGY, Sandrall', VW engine and trans axle, 6 bolt system, VW tires in front and 50s in rear. Camaro bucket seats. Runs oood. $350. 744 3424

MOTHER'S HELPER Experienced In toddler care. Pre ferably with some education in child (fevelopment. 754 1945

NEED ROOFERS with experience.

:all 758 5278.

039

Trucks For Sale

1973 DATSUN PICKUP Good con dition. $1750. 757 1173 after 4 p.m.

1973 INTERNATIONAL School Bos. Would make nice camper. $1500. Water bed kino size. $15(). 758 9549.

1976 FORD PICKUP, radio, dual tanks, new rubber, new tires, 6 cylinder, $1200. 1980 GMC pickup, automatic, 4 cylinder, radio. Sierra, $3200. 1981 Ford pickup F100 with overdrive, new robber, $3600. 944 5175 days

1978 EL CAMINO Power steering and brakes, air, tilt. $3200. 752 5888.

1978 FORD VAN 12

Excellent condition. Hie $4700 negotiable. Call7i

6774.

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE Chief. Power steering and brakes, tilt wheel, air, AM/FM stereo. Good condition. Call 754 9041 after 7 p.m.

1982 TOYOTA PICKUP 5 sp^d, 3 year engine warranty, AM/FM cassette, sun root, camp shell. $9500. 756 7704.    _

040

Child Care

MOTHER OF 4 year old with EMT degree, school setting, $30 a week. Located between Ayden and Griffon, 746 4744

MOTHER WANTS to keep 1 or 2 children in my home near Industrial Park. Prefer children 3 years and under. Call 752 3290

NEED EXPERIENCED, responsible person to care for child In our home weekdays. References and transportation required. Rgjly to Child Care, PO Box 1967, Greenville

WANTED SOMEONE to keep 10 month old infant in my home with possibility of rooming in. Refer enees required. 752-1905._

046

PETS

AKC DOBERAAAN weeks old. 757 1653.

PUPPIES 6

AKC REGISTERED Doberman puppies for sale. 5 males, i red and 4 black/tan. $100 each. 752-5369.

FERRET FOR SALE, $45. 758 4857.

PITT BULL BOXER puppies Brindle color, 7 weeks old. Females. $60. 758 3276 or 758 0041

xperienced and Mai

NOW HIRING

versatile Serging Machine opera tors. Vacation, holidays. Blue Cross. A good place to work. Apply at TooTuftToqs, Grimesland._

PAINTER

clean, dependable,

energetic and must enjoy the paint profession, musf have own

ing

transportation 752 729

Call Bucky Dpvis,

PART TIME SECRETARY needed. Must have a NC Real Estate license. Will need to work awroxi-mately 20 hours per week. Salary commensurate with experience. For your confidential interview, call Mary Chapin at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 754-6644._

HOUSE PAINT Sherwin Williams best exterior flat latex, 10 year warranty, super paint, 8 gallons airy blue (light) and 2 gallons channel blue (dark). $12 a gallon. 752 3454 atterSp.m

1971 CHAMPION, 12x65, 3 bedroom, dishwasher, new carpel and furniture, low down payment Payments under $135 month 754 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes, 244 Bypass

1971 STYLEMAR, 12x65. new carpet and furniture, excellent condition, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath Can be yours tor a low down payment Payments under $160 per month 754 9874. Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 Bypass__

1972 12x40 Parkwood mobile home. 2 bedroom. I, bath, built in bar and bookcase, partly furnished 758 7097_

1973, 12x73 near hospital $1.000 down and take over payments of $152.12 month for 3 years. 752 4359, if no answer 754 4444

109

Houses For Sale

BY OWNER Assumable 8' z% loan 1,550 square feet 3 bedrooms. 1'z baths, double ^rage Low $60's

North Overlook I

754 4987

BY OWNER 3 bedroom. 2 bath home in Lake Ellsworth Living room, dining room, kitchen, family room, central air Nice neighborhood Call 355 2282

BY OWNER 2 bedroom. 1 bath house on corner lot in Twin Oaks 754 7755 or 758 3124_

BY OWNER New log home near Aydeo on quiet country road 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable By appointment. R H McLawhorn. 744 2 750 or 975 2488    '_

1974 KIRKWOOD. 12x50.    2

bedrooms, washer, air, partially furnished. $4500. 744 2302.

1979 CONNER

over payments bedrooms, on lot 0333._

lo equity. Take $IOj/month. 2 One owner. 756

1979 14x60, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments of $155. Call Lawrence at Art Dellano Homes, 754 9841._

1980 KNOX mobile home. 14x40, 2 bedrooms, f'z 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 Memorial Drive across from airport Phone 752 4068.

1984 REDMAN doublewide. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden tub. storm win dows. masonite and shingle root with 5 year warranty. $25,995. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841._

2 AND 3 BEDROOM mobile homes Excellent condition. Wi

seoerate or together. 754-0173.

sell

24X52 USED doublwlde. Must see to believe. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841._

076 Mobi le Home I nsurarice

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less mone Smith

2754.

Insurance and Realty, 75

077 Musical Instruments

CONN DELUXE Spinet Organ, in dividual tone oscillators, tuned percussion, toy counter, Leslie speaker, automatic rhythm, walnut cabinet, $3,695 when new, must sell $2,000. (-all 827 5137.    _

USED PIANOS buy and sale. Piano & Oroan Distributors. 355-4002.

WURLITZER PIANO

condition. $800. 754 5430.

Like new

It won't be long before school be That's a great time to sell the 1 cle you no longer need. It's easy to do with a Classified ad. Call 752 6l66.

CLUBPINES

E xcellenf opportunity to be in one of Greenville's leading areas in this 2 story, 4 bedroom, home Double g|mage and its priced at only

FOUR BEDROOM CONDO

with all the amenities 49,900.00. Owner anxious, make up an offer

OWNER TRANSFERRED

That is the only reason this home is available at this give away price This 2 story, 4 bedroom traditional in country is yours lor $94,900.00.

THEN SEE THIS and go overboard with job Rigged from Stem to Stern tor fun, sun, and enioyment. $140.000.00

REDUCED!

Owners say reduce the price for quick sale because of relocat ing 13'per annum assumption Excellent neighborhood and corner lot $79,900.00.

WINTERVILLE

3 bedrooms birck ranch with tamily room and formal dining room for $42,500.00

Jeannette Cox Agency Inc. 756-1322 Anytime

COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East 1740 square feet living area, plus 440 garage, double lot Too many extras to list!! $74,500 BUI Williams Real Estate, 752 2415. _

COUNTRY HOME by owner Wooded lot, 3 bedrooms. I'z baths, fireplace with Craft stove, fenced in

, _ _    .    top.

ment only. Call 754 0552

ep

backyard, workshop. By appoint

115

Lots For Sale

121 Apartments For Rent

WATERFRONT LOT tor sale, i acre cleared lot on Pamlico River priced for quick sale. 946-0159._

W(X3DED LOTS, water taps and itic tank permits Approximately xi90 Westwood. 2 miles east of Ayden $8.000 Financing at 10% 746 4394 or 752 5167_

1.07 ACRES, septic tank and well 320 13' frontage State Road 1765. 1764 Loop Road off Brick Kiln Road R^uced to $10.500 Bill Williams Real Estafe, 752 2415

2 LARGE LOTS on Sfantonsburg Road Call 758 5920_;_

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT A'so 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes Securif deposits required, no pets 75 4413 between 8 and 5

urify

Call

NEED STORAGE? We have any CafI

iqtc

day Friday 9 5. Call

size to meet your storage need Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon 754 9933

121 Apartments For Rent

AZALEA GARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments

All energy efficient designed

Queen size beds and studio couches

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance

All apartments on ground floor with porches

Frost free refrigerators

Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club Shown by appointment only Couples or singles No pets

Contact J T or Tommy Williams __756    7815_

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with I'2 baths Also 1 bedroom apartments Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club

house and P(X)L. 752 1557

licy y to

080

INSTRUCTION

BIGRIGS

We can train you to drive the "18 Wheelers" at Charlotte Diesel Driving School. The industry today is looking for well trained, pro fessional drivers. We have both full and part time training.

After completing the training you will receive:

Federal Certification ,

FREE Job Placement Assistance

If you are ready to STEP UP call tollfreel 800 532 0476, Ext. 109.

093

OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Cali 758 0702.

ICEMAKERS Barkers RefrIz rial Drive, 756-

Sale 40% off. iration, 2227 Memo-117.

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756 4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.    _

MADAME ALEXANDER DOLL Large dark hair pussycat. $90. Call 756 8274.

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT

for sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30 seat cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 758-5154 after 5.

INTERNATIONAL steel building

EXCEPTIONALLY NICE

Brick, 3 bedroom ranch, cathedral ceiling, exposed beams, hardwood floors. $89,900.00

OWNERTRANSFERED

and ready for occupying, recently painted. 3 bedroom, all formal areas, large family room plus game room located in Club Pines and its excellently priced at $49,900.00

DON'TMISSTHISCEDAR RANCH with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, den with fireplace, formal living room and dining room and a play room for the children. Excellent buy at $47,000.00. Owner needs and wants to sell and will negotiate.

DON'T LETTHISONE PASS A rare find in convenient location. Close to schools and shopping areas. Formal areas, den, three bedrooms and two baths Fenced back yard and many extras $60,900.00.

EVERYTHING YOU COULD ASK For Brick rambler features three bedrooms, 2 baths, formal rooms, family room with fireplace, fenced backyard all in mmf condition. $44,5()0.00.

TIREDOF PAYING RENT Then move info your own condo with 2 bedrooms, I'z baths, large living room and dining room ^mmer will be special because of the tennis courts and pool. $45,400.00.

Jeannette Cox Agency Inc. 756-1322 Anytime

NEAR THE WATER! 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and dining combination. 1 bath On lorge lot location: Hickory Point, NC 322 5298 anytime _

NEW LISTING Red Banks Road Appealing contemporary with possible loan assumption Three Bedrooms, Two baths. Foyer, Din ing room, Great room with fireplace. Very Nice. $73,500 Dutlus Realty Inc. 754 5395 ______

NEW OFFERING by owner College Court. Over 2,000 square feet. AM formal areas Den with fireplace, large playroom, 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, large eat in kitchen with pantry Large fenced in backyard with storage building. $71,500 Skip Bright, 758 4228 or 752 4184_

111 I nvestment Property

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GI^EEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condi tioning. clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815

ONE BEDROOM apartment, heal and hot water furnished 201 North Woodlawn $215 754 0545 or 758 0435

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH I bedroom

condominium, oceanlront. families only 754 4207 or 726 3849_

138

Rooms For Rent

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din 9 00 per U REN CO,

ing, bedroom complete month Option to buy 756 3862_

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live ABLE TV

Office hours 10 a m to5pm Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

756-4800

SINGLE FURNISHED room in nice home near Pitt Plaza tor discreet male student or young busi hessman, $125 per month 756 5667

140

WANTED

TAR RIVER ESTATES

142 Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to

share 2 bedroom furnished apart ment 756 7509    _

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house playground. Near ECU

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex '

1401 Willow Street Office Corner E Im & Willow

752-4225

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom. I'z bath townhouses Available now $295/monlh 9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7711 )

FEMALE RCXDMMATE WANTED

Non smoker, studious $142.50 monthly plus ' 2 utilities 355 6795. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted non smoker to share 7 bedroom apartment near ECU $58 per month, plus ' j utilities Call 758 4105

before 6 ask lor Lon__

male RCXJMMATE NEEDED lo share nice 3 bedroom house to help : split $425 rent and utilities Scoff ' Moorhead. Camelt Inn 756 1150.

I ROOMMATE WANTED male or ' female lo share 2 bedroom I lurnished apartment Private bedroom, kitchen privileges, washer, dryer. TV, stereo, radio, patio, gass grill, swimming pool, exercise equipment Terms negotiable Only responsible ipdi victuals need to respond. 756 5564. WANTED Male roommate Grad student or professional Deposit required Call 355 6897 after 6 30

p rn  _____________

$200 MONTHLY includes every thing except food and long distance phone calls 752 41 78 alter 5p m

1 AND 2 BEDROOM apartments Available immediately 752 331 1

1 AND 2 bedroom apartments, carpeted and appliances $210 and $275 Call 758 331 1 __

1 BEDRCX3M APARTMENT Fully furnished full utilities 752 4363 after 5_

2 BEDROOM apartment Kitchen applianes lurnished, totally electric, $325 month Call 756 7447

EFFICIENCIES 1 or 2 beds maid service, cable, pool, weekly rales Call 754 5555. Heritage Irtn .Motel

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, .carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities ana P<X3L. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club 754 4849

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re friqerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located lusfott lOth Street

Call 752-3519

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door

COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS

Quality construction, fireplaces, heat pumps (heating costs 50% less than comparable units), dishwash er, washer/dryer hook ups, cable TV,wall to wall carpet, fhermopane windows, extra insulation

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9 5-Saturday    1    5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd

75-5067

IVj ACRES with 3 bedroom mobile home. Good location for devel opment or private use. 754 0173.

113

Land For Sale

manufacturer awarding dealership

in area soon. No inventory invesf , .    ...    u    j    i-        .

ment. Great Potential. l^edgCor, ' ^yden with ^

W(X)DED LANDSCAPED lot near

303-759 3200 for application.

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris 8, Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015._

MEN'S 10 SPEED bike, $90, Schwinn 5 speed bTke. $45.754 3420.

METAL DETECTORS for an excit ing and profitable hobby. Call for a free catalog, 756 8840. Baker's Sports Equipment, PO Box 3106.

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue.

PINBALL AAACHINE - Arcade type, "Hot Hands". Excellent working condition. 754-1979._

PERSON EXPERIENCED in

hanging and finishing sheetrock and spraying ceilings. At least 4 or 5 years experience. Call 754-0053.

PLUMBER NEEDED At least 5

years experience. 754-7941._

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed. Auto sales ex perience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-/VIERCURY-G/IAC

756-4267

_For Appointment_

SECRETARY - For small chain of preschools. Apply in person at 313 East TOfh Street. No phone calls please._

WANTED EXPERIENCED COOK Make application to Cook, PO Box 2604. Greenville

WANTED SECRETARY part time. 3 mornings per week. Leading, to full time position January 1984. call from 9 to 11 a.m. weekdays. 756-6126._

WANTED: Mechanical engineering student or retired mechanical engineer to work part time for industrial manufacturing facility. Familiarity with computers and NC machining desired. Plese submit resume to; Mechanical Engineering, PO Box 548, Greenville, NC 27834.    __

WENDY'S IS NOW seeking mature Individuals to work at lunch. Ap proximately 10 to 15 hours per week. Pick up applications between 2 and 5 p.m. at 16th Street location. No phone calls please.

POODLE PUPPIES, beautiful tiny black AKC babies. Ready now tor loving home, $100. Also baby Fer-rets. $25 758 0901 or 758 7483._

WHERE WILL YOU be 5 years

from now??? If you find yourself with a no-win situation with your current employment, come visit us at Heritage Personnel Service of Greenville. "Plan your tomorrow by using Heritage todayl!" 103 Oakmont Drive or phone 355-2020.

051

Help Wanted

AUTOMOTIVE SALESPERSON Due to increased sales, we are In need of a salesperson. Experience helpful but not necessary. Must be responsible and have the willingness to work hard and Mrn top commissions. Excellent benefits, working conditions and bonus plan. See Brian Pecheles in Prs<m only 9 a.m. - 12 noon, Monday Friday. Joe Pecheles Volkswaoen.

AUTQAAOTIVE MECHANIC We are in need of an experience 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 756

1135^

AVON

TO BUY OR SELL!

Earn up to one half of everything you sell. Call 752 7006

wwfwroVSf

CallLeeW Weaver, 1 527 4155 Equal Opportunity Company M/F

059

Work Wanted

TYPES

ed and ^ , _________

ming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancil. 752 6331

ALL Licensed

TREE SERVICE

tuM^ insured. Trim

ANY TYPE ROOFING repair. Call

BRICK AND BLOCK work, repairs or additions. 11 years experience Call 825 6591 after 7 p.m._

CERTIFIED CHIMNEY SWEEP 25 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Call Gid Holloman, 753 3503 dav or night

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist, Tar Road Enterprises. 756-9123 day, 7S6-1007 ntoht._

DO YOU NEED somabodv to sit with your eldarly mother 0 imother? Days $35, Nights !allMrs. H^z^e, 756 3855

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment fzirmally ot Dip and Strip. All items returned within 7 days Tar Road Antiques Call tor free estimate. Days 756 9123. Night 756 1007.    _

RCA 25" COLOR TV Solid state, perfect condition, beautiful color. $300.756 2691.

REMINGTON 1,100 12 gauge shot Qun. Call 746 2484

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampoziers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SHARP, SONY 81 GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at $69.88.

SHOES, size 4 to 4Vj, like new. Call 752 7885 after 5.

SHRUBERY:    Holly,    Dog    Wood

tree, Crab Apple tree, etc. Make otter and you remove. Call 752-2901 days, 753 4065 nights

SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quail ty printer. 5 mzznths old. Used 1 month. In mint condition. $550. 752-3980 from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m

SOLID OAK TABLE, one leaf and chairs. Stereo speakers (BES), 2<

watts. 355-6192,

USED AIR CONDITIONER Also 2 year old male bulldog. Call 756 7408.

USED APPLIANCES for sale Re frigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb ing, and electrical service. 75^-9333.

USED COPYING MACHINES Xerox 3100 LDC, IBM II, Savin 770 Bruce Wells, 756-6167.

WHITE WESTINGHOUSE electric stove for sale. $75 or best offer. 749-6421._

WOODSTOVE $450. 752 4988.

WITH BLOWER,

17' HARKER 50 horsepower

ISLAND BOAT with

-______  Evinrude    motzzr,    lots

of extras, $500. Regular size ping ^on^able, $50. % violin, $150. Call

, ILITY TRAILERS $175 each all 752 6185._

075 AAoblle Homes For Sale

NOAAONEYDOWN VA 100% Financing

Naw zizxjble wide 3 bedrzx>m, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $245

RESTAURANT tor sale 100 seat capacity building, land and equipment. Turn key operation. Less than )0 minutes from Greenville. 758 0702.

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals. Financing. Contact. SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street 752 3575.__

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

100

REAL ESTATE

INCOME PRODUCING apartment and office complex. 20% down with assumable loan and owner financ ing Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230.    _

102 Commercial Property

COMMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE tor rent available in Industrial Park on Staton Court. Building has 9000 square feet with 5400 carpeted tor office space. 12 month lease re quired. Call Clark Branch, Real tors, 756 6336 Or Ray Holloman 7f3 514L__

INCOME PRODUCING apartment and office complex. 20% down with assumable lz>an and owner financing. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983; nights and weekends 758 2230._

Serious inquiries only. 744 4669.

5 ACRES WOODED LAND east of Greenville. Call 754 7884 after 4 p.m.

72 ACRES W(X)DSLAND No road frontage. Possible owner financing. 754 3829._

115

Lots For Sale

BLUE BANKS ESTATE 5 wooded acres surrounding a lake, rolling terrain $40,000 00 Call JEANNETTE COX AGENCY, INC

754 1322

HOLLY HILLS Exclusive location, I'-z acres on lake, wooded rolinz terrain. Call JEANNETTE AGENCY, INC 754 1322

EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL

lots from $9,000 $12,500. Call W G Blount & Associates, 754 3000.

PARTLY W(X)DED LOTS 30 minutes from Greenville. 200 yards from Pamlico Sound. $10,000 each. Financing at 10% 744 4394 or 752 5147.    _ _

REDUCED 20% to sell at $9800 in Westhaven. Darden Realty, 758-1983, nights and weekends 758 2230

THE PINES in Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley Marcus Really at 744-2144 for full details._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

106

Farms For Sale

FOR SALE: 8,888 - 140 pounds tobacco allotment. Atwood a. Morrill Company Inc. will be accepting sealed bids for tobacco allotment until August 31, 1983. Bids wilX be opened September 1, 1983. Wrark outside envelzzpe "Sealed Bid". Send bid to Atwood 8. Morrill Company Inc., PO Box 490, Washington, NC 27889 - Attention: Don Baird. For further information contact Don Baird at 944 7743. Atwozid & Morrill Company Inc. reserves the right lo accept or reject any and allbids.

64 ACRES: 50 cleared, 14 wooded; 200 feet road frontage; no allot ments; $80,000 .    752    0398    (day),

756 5708 (night).    _

109

Houses For Sale

Also FHA and cooven-wl tiMHCIng availablel.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 Wast Graanvllle Boulmzard

zseiii

NO AAONEY DOWN VA financing. Two d^ delivery. Call Conner Homes, 7^-0333.    _

NO MONEY DOWN

August Special Only

SINGLE WIDE....$8z495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995

(Loaded)

Anything ot Value In Trade Boats. Horsas. AAonkeys

In-laws AVAILABLE

Sorry FINANCE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING 70S West Greenville Boulevard_

BEAUTIFUL THREE bedroom, 2 bath home on Sunset Drive in Farmville. 2 fireplaces, hardwzx)d floz>rs, 9 ft. ceiling den, breakfast area. 2 car garage, flagstone patio. Priced In the 90 s. Call Aldridge 8, SzHztheriand, 756-3500. Dick Evans. Realtor, 758 1119._

BETHEL 2 bedroom brick home. Railroad Street. Call James A Manning Aoency, Bethel, 825 5631

BETHEL 3 bedroom FHA horn? Moz>re Drive. Call James A Mann ino Aoencv. Bethel. 825 5631.

BY OWNER Nearly 2,000 square feet. Garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 700 sqUare foot greatroom with 18' pool table, dishwasher, newly carpeted, cable TV, 8 years old. Located 3 miles east of Greenville. Priced fz>r quick sale in the $50's. 758 0144 or 752 7663.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

C .1.. l.upton Co.

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton. Co.

7.S2 6116

LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS

are less than rent for your own condominium or lownhome. An affordable alternative to renting available with our financing. Call Iris Cannon at 758 4050 or 744 2439, Owen Norvell af 758 4050 or 754 1 498, WII Reid at 758 4050 or 754 0444 or Jane Warren af 758 4050 or 758 7029.

MOORE &SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedrz)om townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal included. We also have Cable TV Very convenient lo Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM apartment. Near campus. No pets. $215 a month. 754 3923.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

60' 30" beautiful walnut finish Ideal for home or office

Reg. Price {259.00

Special Price

S-I79OO

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S Evans St.    752-2175

AUGUST SPECIAL

Indian Trails Country Club '

Beautiful 18 Hole Course

(iGUST GREENS FEE SPECIAL

Weekdays S4.00 - Students $3.00 Sat. & Sun. $5.00 - Students $4.00

BRING A FRIEND, RENT A CART AND RIDE DOUBLE DEDUCT AN EXTRA $1.00 FROM GREENS FEE. y'

Grifton, NC

|524-5485

RIVERSIDE IRON WORKS, INC.

Eastern North Carolinas largest and oldest metal building contractor. Now doing any type conventional construction.

An Authorized Metal Building Dealer for Mitchell Engineering Co.

We also do machine work, fabricating, sand blasting on contract basis only. Minimum charge for any job will now be one hour.

Cyril Edwards, Jr. President Phone 633-3121

New Bern, NC 28560

4 BEDROOM DUPLEX in fown 2 bedrzzom apartment in country 744 3284 or 524 3180________

122

Business Rentals

BUILDING FOR RENT 50 x 100 15 high, $300 month In city limits Call 75 1723 anytime

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or office space Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet Only $3 40 per .quare fzx)f. For more information.

FOR RENT 10,000 square toot building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowmity Call Donnie smith at 944 5687

4,000 SQUARE FEET Upstairs downtown Greenville 5th Street entrance. Call 754 5007

125 Condominiums For Rent

CONDOMINIUM, Windy Ridge. 3 bedrooms, 2' z baths. Call 754 9 273_

127

Houses For Rent

CENTRALLY LOCATED 3

bedrooms, I bath, central air, fenced backyard Available Sep tember 1 $350 a month Lease and deposit 754 1047

2 AND 3 BEORCXJM houses in Grifton. Phone 524 4147, nights 524 4007.    _

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath home near university. Marrieds only no pets $295 a month. Call 754 9076_

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

12 X 45, TWO baths, air condition, new carpel, ice maker Call 744 4575._ _

12X40. 3 bedroom, with air, $140 2 bedroom with air. $135 Students preferred No pets, no children Call ^8 0745 or 754 9491    __

2 BEDROOM TRAILER 758 0779 or 752 1423_

2 BEDROOMS, i'z baths, washer and air. Call 754 1444 __

3 BEDROOM MOBILE home tor rent Furnished $140 a month No pets Located 4 miles out on New Bern Highway. 754 0975

3 BEDROOM trailer tor rent 2 miles east of Grimesland, $135 6 month No children, no pets 758 3044_______

The Real

Estate

Corner

For Sale By Owner

CHARMING HOME

3 Beorooms 2 baths. 6-10 acre wooded and landscaped corner lot Fireplace with wood stove Patio, hobby room, 9X10 storage area could be converted to office Large great room with buiit ms Detached country workshop Williamsburg accents, crown molding, chair railing, many extras

$63,500 Telephone 752-4162

135 Office Space For Rent

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com mercial 404 Arlington Boulevard 754 8111

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact JT or Tommy Williams, 754 7815. 5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 244 Bypass Plenty of park ing Call 758 2300days__

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS OORS& AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton, Co.

HOMES FOR SALE

306 Summit Street One story frame, living room, ciin-ing    2 n^^^ms,

bath^^tll hAtInd Ir lewly painiHJsle^dLMSk#)

264 By-pass West

Living room, large kitchen with eating area, den, 2 bedrooms. IVzbalhs, screened porch, utility room, garage Lol T25 x 210 $50,000

One Story

Brick veneer dwelling on SR 1415 near Wellcome School. 3 bedrooms, 2 tiaths, living room, kitchen-den with fireplace. 2 car garage. 117 x 180 Reduced to $65,000.

LOT FOR SALE

82 x130' lol on corner of 13th and Greene Streets $7500.

LOT FOR SALE

111 E. 11th Street. 75x85 Price $8000.00.

NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE

TURNAGE

REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY

Get More With Les Home 756-1179

752-2715

Mj 30 Years realtor* Experience

Sales Associate

For Pitt County

Ground floor opportunity. Training at our expense. Stock bonus. Yearly conventions for qualifiers. Protected accounts. $20-$25.000 possible first year. If you have sales experience or a strong desire to make a career in sales, call for a personal interview.

s

Larry Lewis

919-355-2711

Regional Office    Greenville,    N.C.

-_An    Equal    Opportunity Company

EXPERIENCE SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS Good Benefits. Apply In Person.

NO PHONE CALLS

IWPSHm MAHUFACIURIIIIi

North Greene Street

Position Available

Research Associate

Academic Affairs, East Carolina University

Responsibilities; Maintain and monitor budget information, review status reports, prepare budget reports, advise unit budget personnel regarding account status and changes needed, some accounting. Maintain personnel position control reports. Process personnel actions.

Qualifications: Bachelors degree desirable: At least five years experience in higher education budget ano7or personnel administration. Some accounting experience desirable..    _    _    K

Position available August 17,1983. Salary commensurate with qualifications. Submit resume to Dr. Angelo A. Voipe, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, East Carolina University, Greenville, NC 27834. to be received by August 17,1983.

I

A





The DaUy Reflector, Greenville. N.C.-Mooday, Augusts, IW-ll

SCOREBOARD

TANK FNAMARA

By The AMES

Bofboll Standings

TheAaocUtedPre

RICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet. GB Bellimore    62    44    585    -

Detroit    62    46    574    1

Milwaukee    61    46    570    14

New York    59    47    557    3

Toronto    60    48    556    3

Boston    54    54    ^    9

Cleveland    45    65    .409    19

WEST DIVISION Chicago    58    50    537    -

Kansas City    51    53    490    5

Texas    53    56    486    54

California    53    58    .477    64

Oakland    53    59    473    7

Minnesota    45    67    402    15

Seattle    44    67    .396    154

Saturdays Garnet Milwaukee 3. Toronto 0 Texas 6. Cleveland 1 Chicago 6, Baltimore!

New York 13, Detroit 3 Oakland 6. Minnesota 4.13 innings

Los Angeles Houston San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati

560    5'-^

.514 104 595 124 477 144 446 18

Kansas City 4, Boston 0 Seattle 2. California I

Sunday's Games Texas 4-0, Qeveland 3-7 Detroit 8, New York 5 Chicago!, Baltimore 3 Oakland 6. Minnesota 0 Milwaukee 9, Toronto 6 Kansas City I. Boston 0 California 4, Seattle 3

Monday's Games Chicago (Tidrow 2-3 and Koosman 8-3) at Detroit (Berenguer 5-2 and Morris

12-81,2, (t-n)

Toronto (Clancy 12-6 and Williams 1-0) at New York (Guidry 12-7 and Shirley 3-6), 2, (t-n)

Milwaukee (Gibson 2-2 and McClure 8-8) at Kansas City (Gura 8-14 and Renko 54),2, (t-ni Cleveland (Sutcliffe 12-7) at Baltimore (Davis 10-4), (n)

Texas (Darwin 7-10) at Boston (Eckersley6-9), (n)

Minnesota (Schrom 8m at California (John8-8), (n)

Seattle (Beattie 8-7) at Oakland (Conroy 4-4), (n)

Tuesday's Games

Chicago at Detroit, (n)

Cleveland at Baltimore, (n)

Texas at Boston, (n>

Toronto at New York. (n)

Milwaukee at Kansas City. (n) Minnesota at California, (n)

Seattle at Oakland, (n)

Philadelphia Montreal Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago New York

Atlanta

NATIONAL LEAGUE EAST DIVISION W L Pet.

56 SO 56    52

56    53

53    56

50 60 44    66

WEST DIVISION 68    44

Saturdays Games

Montreal 7. Pittsbur]^ 3 New York 4. Chicago t Houston 4, San Francisco 2 Philadelphia I. St Louis0. II innings San Diego 11-6. Cincinnati 4 2 Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 2

Sundays Games Montreal 6. Pittsburgh 0 Philadelphia 5. St Louis 2 New Yore 6. ChicaM 4.10 innings Atlanta 5, Los Angles 2 Cincinnati 5, San Diego 3 Houston 2. San Francisco I Monday's Games New York (Seaver 6-11) at Montreal (Burris 4-4), (n)

Pittsburgh (Candelaria 11-6) at Philadelphia (Hudson6-3), (n)

Only games scheduled

Tuesdays Games St. Louis at Chicago New York at Montreal, (ni Pittsburg at Philadelphia, (ni Los Angeles at Cincinnati, (n)

San Francisco at Atlanta, in)

San Diego at Houston. (n i

Leogue Leoders

By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING (265 at bats): Carew, California, .370, Boggs, Boston .369; Brett. Kansas City. .3H; McRae, Kansas City, .329, Whitaker, Detroit, 329.

RUNS: EMurray, Baltimore, 78, R Henderson. Oakland. 73; Ripken, Baltimore, 73; Molitor, Milwaukee, 72; Cooper, Milwaukee, 71; Upshaw, Toronto, 71; Yount, Milwaukee, 71 RBI: Cooper, Milwaukee, 93; Winfield, New York, 81, L N Parrish, Detroit, 75r Simmons. Milwaukee, 74; EMurray, Baltimore, 73 HITS Boggs, Boston, 148, Whitaker. Detroit, 142rMcRae, Kansas City, 131, Ward. Minnesota. 130; Simmons. Milwaukee, 129 DOUBLES: Boggs, Boston, 35, McRae, Kansas City, 34, nrbek, Minnesota, 31; L N.Parrish, Detroit, 31; Ripken, Baltimore, 29; Yount, Milwaukee, 29 TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Win field. New York, 8; Herndon, Detroit. 7; f. are tied with 6.

HOME RUNS: Cooper. Milwaukee. 24. I), 23; Kittle,

Dawson,

STRIKEOUTS: Moms, Detroit, 142, Stleb, Toronto. 130 Rigbetli, New York. 119, Blyleven. Cleveland. 116, F Bannister, Chicago. 108 SAVES Quisenberry, Kansas City, 28; Caudill, Seattle. 21: Stanley. Boston 2i R Davis, MinnesoUi 19 Lopez, Detroit, 16

NATIONm! LEAGUE

BATTING (265 at baUi Hendnck, St Louis. 331. Madlock. Pittsburjeh. .328; Dawson, Montreal, 323; Herr, St Louis, 323 Knight, Houston. 323; LoSmith, St Louis, m RUNS Murphy, Atlanta, 97; Raines. Montreal, 81 Garvey, San Di^, 76, Evans. San Francisco, 73; Daw Montreal. 69, Horner. Atlanta, 69 RBI: Dawson. Montreal, 86; Murphy. Atlanta, 76; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 74, Guerrero, Los Angeles, 69; Chambliss, Atlanta. 68. Hendrick. StLouis. 68 Hlr: Dawson, Montreal, 139; Oliver, Montreal. 133; Thon. Houston, 131; Buckner, Chicago. 126; R Ramirez. Atlanta, 126 DOUBLES: Buckner. Chicaw 28, Oliver. Montreal, 27; Hendrick, Si Louis, 26 Knight, Houston, 26; Wallach, Montreal. 25.

TRIPLES: Butler, Atlanta. II; Moreno, Houston. 11; Cruz, Houston, 7; Dawson, Montreal, 7, Raines. Montreal, 7 HOME RUNS: Dawson, Montreal, 25; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 24; Murphy, Atlanta, 23; Evans, San Francisco, 21; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 21 STDLEN BASES: Raines, Montreal, 48, Wilson, New York, 37; LeMaster, San Francisco, 34; S.Sax, Los Angeles, 34; Butler, Atlanta, 30; Moreno, Houston. 30 Redus, Cincinnati, 30 PITCHING (10 decisions) : Montefusco, San Diego, 9-2.    818, 3 48. P Perez,

Atlanta, 13-3, .813, 3.02; Denny, Philadelphia, 12-5, ,706, 2,61; Rogers, Montreal, 14-6, 700, 2.86; Ryan, Houston, 11-5, 688.2.16 STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 182: Soto, Cincinnati. 170; McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 145; Ryan, Houston, 120; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 119.

SAVES: Le.Smith. Chicago, 17; Bedrosian, Atlanta, 16; Reardon, Montreal, 16; Minton, San Francisco, 13; Holland, Philadelphia, 12; S Howe, Los Angeles, 12; Lavelle, San Francisco, 12; Sutler. St. Louis, 12; Tekulve. Pittsburgh,

Cleveland

Cincinnati

Houston

PC?WK)'.

Central

I 0    0

0 0 1 1

West

I 0 1 0 0 I 0 2

TbursdaysGames,

Baltimore 15. HoustonO

Fridays Games

Philadelphia21, Detroit 17 Denver 10, Seattle7

Saturdays Games Minnesota 28. St. u>uis 10 Chicago 27. Buffalo 17 Cleveland 21. Green Bay 20 -KansasCity 24, Cincinnati 7

Los Angeles Rams 34, San Diego 20 Prttsburgh 27, New England 16 Dallas 2C Miami 17 Tampa Bay 20, New Orleans 17 Atlanta 13, Washington 10. OT Los Angeles Raiders 26. San Francisco 23, OT

Sundays Game

New York Giants 23, New York Jets 16 Friday, August 12 Cincinnati at Washin^on, (n i New York Giants at Pittsburgh, (n) Green Bay at Seattle, (n) saturda;

Cleveland at Buffalo, ()

Los Angeles Raiders vs. New York Jets. Giants Stadium, (n)

New Orleans at Miami, (n)

Chicago at St Louis, in)

Detroit at KansasCity, (n)

Baltimore at Minnesota, ini Atlanta at Denver, (ni Philadelphia at San Diego, in)

Tampa Bay at Houston, (n)

' yf

by Jeff Miliar & Bill Hinds

ME UAE cyjiuTYiDAaxwop QDUM1tt2PlTilO0 MC 6TiLL WAE A WELLDVA caut&i RPMMiKJG SACK

Jack Nicklaus, 60,000 Peter Jacobsen. 40,000 Pat McGowan, 30,000 John Foubt, 25,000 Fuzzy Zodler. 19,000 Bruce Lletzke. 19,000 DanPohl, 16,000 Mike Reid, 10,880 DougTewell, 10,880 Jay Haas, 10,880 Scott Simpson, 10,880 Ben Crenshaw. 10,880 Keith Fergus, 6,750 Hale Irwin, 6,750 Jim Thorpe, 6,750 Roger Maltbie, 6,750 David Graham, 6,750 Lee Trevino, 6,750 John Cook, 4,750 Raymond Floyd, 4,750 Danny Edwards. 4,750 Fred Couples, 3,912 Don Pooley, 3,912 Chip Beck, 3,912 Jerry Pate. 3,912 Bobby Wadklns. 3,200 Buddy Whitten, 3,200 Seve Ballesteros. 3,200 Andy Bean. 2,650

Andy

Mark

Armas. Boston.

Chicago, 23;

_ '    Tampa    Ba^^aimouston,    (n^)^

Exhibition Stondings New

GB

528 -519    1

.514 U-s .486    44

.455    8

.400 14

Luzinski, Chicago. 23; Rice, Boston, 23.

STOLEN BASES: R.Henderson, Oakland, 70; R.Law, Chicago, 52; J.Cruz, Chicago, 46; W Wilson, Kansas City. 45; Sampfe, Texas, 34.

PITCHING (10 decisions): Haas, Milwaukee, 9-2, .818. 3.79, Righetti, New York, 12-3, 800, 3,38; Rozema, Detroit, 8-2, .800, 3.17; McGregor, Baltimore, 14-4, 778 3.13; Gossage, New York, 9-3, .750, 2,24; Slaton. Milwaukee,9-3, .750,4 30,

By The Associated Press American Conference East

W L TPct. PF PA Baltimore    l    0    0    1 000    15    00

Buffalo    0    1    0    .000    17    27

Miami    0    1    0    .000    17    20

New England    0    1    0    .000    16    27

NY. Jets    0    1    0    .000    16    23

Central

Pittsburgh    2    0    0    1.000    54    30

Monday, August 15

Dallas at Los Angeles Rams. (n)

Golf Scores

PACIFIC PALISADES, CalH. (AP) -Final scores and money winnings Sunday in the 65th PGA national championship on the 6,946-yard, par-71 Riviera Country Club course:

Hal Sutton. 1100,000    8586-72-71-274

PfeU, 2,650 Tom Welskopf, 2,650 Bob Boyd, 2,^ Johnny Miller, 2,650 Jim Simons, 2,650 Bob Shearer, 2,087 Urry Nelson. 2,087 Calvin Peete, 2,087 Jim Colbert, 2,087 Tim Simpson, 2,087 Bobby Nichols. 2,087 GaryHallberg, 1,875 Barry JaeckeT, 1,875 GregNorman, 1,875 Lou Graham, 1,875 Gary Player, 1,875 Larry Mize, 1,730

7365-71-66-275

73706865-276

6867-7369-277

6769-71-71-278

72-7167-89-279

67-71-70-71-279

72-706969-280

69-71-72-70-282

74-726967-282

687269-73-282

66-7370-73-282 6866-71-77-282

6870-72-73-283 72-70-7368-283 8872-7469-283 71-71-71-70-283 7069-74-70-283 706874-71-283 74-716871-284 69-737169-284

67-7871-70-284

71-787371-285 726874-71-285

72-71-7872-285 6872-7874-285 7372-7467-286 68787377-286 71-787267-286

71-7371-72-287 7371-7873-287 78706872-287 7877-7268-287

72-737367-287 687372-71-287 7367-7872-288 72686860-288

6871-7872-288 73687873-288 78787872-288 73687870-288

71-7371-72-289 737467-75-289

72-72-7875-289 7374-7872-289 74687374-289 78787375-290

Peter Ooatejhuls, 1,730 Morris Hatalsky 1,730 GibbyGUbert. 1,730 Mike Nicoiette, 1.730 Un Hinkle. 1,730 Vance Heafner, 1,730 Tom Watson, 1,730 Gil Morgan, 1,610 George Burns, 1,610 Charles Coody, 1,610 Jack Renner, 1,610 Ed Fiorl, 1,610 John Adams, 1,610 Jim Nelford, 1,565 Scott Hoch, 1,565 Bruce Fleisher, 1,535 Bob GUder. 1,535 Craig Stadler, 1,535 Mare Lye, L535 Mike Donalil, 1,306 Tom Kite, 1,506 Arnold Palmer, 1,506 Nick Price, 1,506 George Archer, 1,506 T C Chen, 1,500 Urry GUbert, 1,500 Pat Lindsey, 1,500 Rex Caldwell, 1,500 Ron Streck, 1,500 Jim Logue, 1,500 Bill Britton, 1,500 Bol% Heins, 1,500 Lee Elder, 1,500 Ed Sneed, 1,500 Allen MUler. 1,500 Bob Eastwood. 1,500

7371-71-73-290 68737373-290 78688874-290 72-71-7374-290

78737871-290 737872-71-290 7467-7870-290 72-737872-291 786872-73-291

7372-7878-291 7871-7373-291 73687374-291

7371-72-73-291 72-72-7872-292

7372-7873-292

78737872-293 71687877-293 72-737872-293 7367-7378-293

71-71-7876-294

72-737374-294

78737873-294 72-74-7874-294 7877-7873-294 72-737868-295

71-74-7875-296 78726871-297 78737375-297

72-7377-76-298 737877-76-300 787377-76-300 73787378-300 7871-77-77-301 78737379-301 687877-78-302 787877-79-302

Terps Look For New Defense

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer FOXFIRE VILLAGE, N.C. - While Marylands offense is essentially the same one that nearly upset Washington in the Aloha Bowl, their defense this year will be starting almost from scratch.

In the 11 years Ive been at Maryland, this is the first year that we dont have a starting defensive lineman coming back, assistant coach Gib Romain told reporters at the Atlantic Coast Conferences annual football rouser.

Weve usually had someone we could hang our hat on. At this point, we still dont know whos going to be our front four.

Romain represented head coach Bobby Ross at the meeting while the boss attended another gathering in Ohio. The Terrapins were chosen to place second in the

ACC pre-season poll of sportswriters and broadcasters.

Along the line, defensive tackle Mark Duda, guards Frank Kolencik and Mike Corvino and tackle Gumest Brown have moved on, as have linebackers Joe Wilkins, Mike Muller and Howard Eubanks. Safety Bill McFadden is also gone. That defense was 17th nationally in total defense, while Duda tied a school record with 13 quarterback sacks.

To replace them, Romain is depending on a mixture of experience and youth. Along the line are senior tackle Pete Koch and guard Tyrone Furman. Behind them are linebackers Eric Wilson (98 tackles and a sack), J.D. Gross, Bobby DePaul and Brian Baker. In the backfield are Lendell Jones, the con

ferences best thief with seven interceptions, and Clarence Baldwin, who added two pickdfR;'--

As of this point, we still dont know whos going to be our front four, Romain said. We feel when it comes down to the shooting in the first football game, well be able to put out 11 good players on defense. Our biggest question mark is depth.

Were hoping to get some help from our freshman class. Were keeping our fingers crossed there, and we have to stay healthy. We cant afford to get hurt, he added.

There are no questions about the offense. It scored a school record 353 points and produced a record 4,608 yards, including 2,367 yards passing.

Leading that attack is Boomer Esiason, who entered the Terrapin record book with

2,231 yards in total offense.

Boomer had an excellent spring, Romain said. Hes a much better football player now than he was last year.

Junior Kevin Glovers been moved from left tackle to center and is flanked at the guard positions by junior Leonard Lynch and senior Ron Solt. Senior Harry Venezia suffered a knee injury last year and missed all of 1982 but is ready to fill the spot vacated by Dave Paqella. Junior Greg Haraka is listed at the other slot.

When Esiason isnt throwing to Russell Davis and Greg Hill, hell be handing off to senior Willie Joyner, who averaged 103.9 yards oer

contest. He had school record 240 yards and two touchdowns'in a triumph over North Carolina. Hes recovering from cartilege surgery.

Fullback Dave DAddio is a three-year letterman whos finally found a home after a stint at linebacker. Also back to enhance the offense is Rich Badanjek, whose 56 points in 1982 were the most ever by a Maryland freshman.

The kicking games is on solid footing with placekicker Jess Atkinson, who scored 87 points on 16 field goals and 39 straight extra points. Atkinson hasnt missed a PAT in 51 efforts. Alan Sadler punted for a 38.6 average last season and booted a 66-yarder.

DANVERS. Mass (AP) - The 72-hole final scores and money wlnnlnB Sunday In the 8175,000 LPGA Boston Five golf classic at the 6,008yard, par 72 Radisson

Ipock-Taft Win Putt

Bobby Ipock and Jeff Taft led all the way to win the Sunday Night Bestball Tournament by three strokes at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.

Danny Pollard and Jake Loftin defeated David Manning and Jimmy Silverthorne on the, fifth hole of sudden death to claim second place.

Ferncroft Country Club teur):

Paid Rizzo, 526,

Jane Ixick. $i7,l'iU Vifki Tabor. $10 .500 Pam Gietzen. $6 50.)

Sue Ertl. $6,.56:i Donna Caponi, $.5.i;l.'i Stephanie Farwii. $.5,i;U Sandra Palmer, $5,133 Beekv Pearson. $4,025 Patty .Sheehan, $4.825 Jan .Stephenson, $4.025 Carol C'narbonnir. $3,;t25 Alice Miller, $2,888 C Montgomery. $2,888 Mindy .Moore.$2,888 S Lynn Grams. $2.144 Hoify Hartley, $2,144 Lauren Howe, $2,144 BeLsy King, $2,144 Karen Permezl, $2.144 Nancy Rubin, $2,144 Debbie Austin, $1,64.5 Jane Crafter, $1.645 M Floyd DArmn. $1,645 Dale Eggellng, $1,645 Bfenda (loldsmlh, $1.645 S Cunningham, $1,290 Sue Fogleman. $1,29 Gail Hirata. $1.299 Rose Jones, $1.299 Pia Nilsson, $1.299 Mary Dwyer. $1.015 l.inrfaHunt.$l,0|5 Joan Joyce, $1.015 Cindy mil, $1,015 a Saflyyuinlan Cathy Sherk, $1.015 Marl McDougall, $840 Julie Pyne. $840 Lauri IMerson. $840

287

288

;ncer Devlin. $718

Judy Clark, $718 M .SpencerDevli Uri Huxhold. $718 Deedee Lasker, $718 Beverly Davis. $.591 Judy Ellis, $591 Marlene Hagge. $591 Tern Luckhurst, $.591 Lvnn Adams, $.508 Kathy Hite, $508 Bonnie Lauer. $.508 Penny Pulz, $.508 M J Smith, $.508 Laura Hurlbut $4.18

la-denotes ama

66 70 73 68 277 71 6768 73 279 7069 70 73 282 69 70 72 72 283 71 (6 73 73 28;i

71 70-71 74 286

72 73-70 71 286

74 71 69 72 286

74 66 73 74 287 72 71 73 71

75 68 70 74 72 76 69 71 74 73    70-72    289

69 7:i    76-71    28'.)

71 73    71 72    289

77 70    7172    290

72-69 78 71 290 74 76 70 70 290

75 70 70-75 290 7.5r71 72 72 290 70-74 75 71 290

71 77 71 72 '291 . 71 77 ~2 71 291

72 72 75 72 291 8169 7269 291 71 77 71-72 291

74 72-72 74 292

73-76 73 70 - 292

71 71 76 74 292

74-75 70 73 - 292

75 72 74 71-292

73 766 9 75 - 293 69-74-75 75 293

72 71 76 74 293

77 6 9 72 75 293

72 74-72 75 293

76 73 71 73 293 75 73-73-73 294 75 76-70-73 294

78 70 73 73 294 78 70-73-73 '294 77-71-70-77 - 295

77-73 73-72 - 295

78-73-73 71-295 T2 74 74 76 296

74 75-75-72 -296

73 71 82 72 296

71 74 76-75 - 296 74-77 71-75- 297 72-77-71 77 - 297

72 76-76 73 - 297 69 75 74 79 297 72 71 78-76 - 297 71 76 73-78 298

Catherine Panton $438 Marty Dickerson. $438 U)riGarbacz,$394 Cnlleen Walker, $394 JoyceKazmierski $368 A "Keinhardt, $117 (arolvn Hill. $117 l.vnnStronev, $117 Janet Coles '

Susie McAllister n H B Duntz a Mary Gale Chris Johnson Sarah l,eVeque Pal Meyers Silvia Berlolaccini Barbara Kunkowsky

n 73-T5-73- 29* 75 71 73-79- 2*8 73 73 77 76 - 2*9 7^76-75-76- 299 77 71 75-77 - 300 7574 76-76- 301

72 76-75-78-301 77 73-78-73- 301 71 74-78 79- 302

73 77-75-77 - 302 74-75H-78- 304 70-76-75-84- 305

74 76-75411-306 786583 78- 308 74 7563 76- 309

72 74-74-DQ 74 72 76-WD

Tronsactions

By The Aaaoclated Press BASEBALL Amertcao League

BALTIMORE ()RI()LES-Reactivated Mike Elanagan. pitcher Optioned Dan Morogiello, pitcher to Rochester o( the International Uague CHICAGO WHITE SO.X - Recalled A1 tones, pitcher, from Denver of the American Association Optioned Chiis Nyman, first baseman, to Denver Milwaukee BREWERS-caiied up Tom Candiotli. pitcher, from Vancouver of the Pacific Coast League Moved Ned Vost, catcher, from the 15-day disabled list to the 21 day disabled list BASKETBALL National BaafcetbsU Assoclstioa NEW JERSEY NETS-Hired John Kilhlea as an assistant coach FOOTBAU National Football League HOUSTON OILERS-C^ Donald Martin, offensive lineman, and Joseph Olding, defensive lineman HOCKEY Natlooal Hockey League ST LOUIS BLUES-Named Jack yuinn director of business operations and exe<-ulive vice president

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Arias, Temesvori Follow Path Of Connors, Evert

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - With their victories in the 74th U.S. Open Clay Court championships, teen-agers Andrea Temesvari and Jimmy Arias have put themselves on a road followed by tennis greats Jimmy Connors and Chris Evert-Lloyd.

Arias, who will be 19 next week, scored a comeback triumph over Andres Gomez of Ecuador in Sundays nationally televised, 2/^-hour mens championship match. The jet-like serves of Gomez had Arias in trouble frequently before he recorded a 6-4,2-6, 64 decision after losing three of the first four games in the final set.

- Temesvari, a 17-year-old from Hungary, defeated Zina Gairison of Houston 6-2, 6-2 in Saturdays womens title showdown.

Connors and Evert-Lloyd were frequent .competitors here earlier in their careers. Since Connors won the mens tournament for a fou^ time in 1979, the title has gone to foreign entries. And Evert-Lloyd, who won the first of five titles here when she was 17, is undefeated : after 31 matches in the tournament.

: But, both have bypassed the tournament in recent years and officials have been looking ' for a new group of favorites to draw the fans.

The loyalities of the fans toward Americans ; was evident in both championship matches.

' From the start of the mens final, it was evident that the favorite of the 5,500 estimated fans was Arias, the teen-ager from Grand Island, N.Y., who has climbed from No. 673 on the tennis computer rankings to No. 11 in just over three years.

The crowd was all behind me today, and I think that really helped me because I was getting tired a little bit towards the middle of the third set, said Arias. He was on a roll 3-1 iq) in the third and when I broke serve that game, the crowd really seemed to get behind me and he got down a little bit and started to miss a few.

The fans didnt affect me, but it really . helped Jimmy, said Gomez, after his second loss to Arias in three weeks. I think the crowd brought him up again. He was down. ^ ' Temesvari, a tall blue-eyed blonde who i speaks French and English as fluently as her . native language, also noticed the crowd was 'against her.

The first three or four games I was mad,

said Temesvari, who like Arias won the Italian (^n earlier this year. I didnt know why

' they were against me. I thou^t, What did I do to these people? But then I told myself to forget that, forget everything, forget that I am

tb^ and just give my Iwart to the court.

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) - After three days of 9(H)egree-plus heat, humidity and smog, Jimmy Connors might have bad

I

the

reason to complain, despite winning $300,000 High Stakes tennis tournament.

But Connors, who had just won a 6-3,6-4,6-2 victory over Tim Mayotte Sunday, could only see the positive aspect of the weather.

When 1 played Eliot Teltscher on Friday, I lost four or five pounds, he said. Yesterday, I lost five or six pounds, and thats all water weight. It makes me feel good. I probably lost more today.

On the balance, though, Connors won a lot more than he lost. Sundays victory was worth $100,000.

And even in defeat, Mayotte got his biggest paycheck ever - $65,000 - and a sobering lesson.

I thought I was hitting the ball well but when I play a guy like that I realize how much further I have to go, he said.

Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia beat Mats Wilander of Sweden, 64, 6-2 in a consolation match. Lendl collected $45,000 and Wilander received $35,000.

Connors used the lob effectively throughout the match and Mayotte estimated he was able to return only about one of four.

It was so hard for me to play a guy like that because he just neutralizes my best shot. I had to serve and volley and my forte is in the backcourt, and he took that away, Mayotte said. .

I was consistent enough over a long period but then when hed lob me. Id try to pick a side and go for it... I got one out of four lobs back.

Greenville Swimmers In N.C. long Course

HIGH POINT - Greenville swimmers Kelly Barnhill,P-aul Mark Kelly, Edward Clark and Won Kim placed in individual events in the North Carolina Long Ciwirse Junior Olympic Champion^ips held in Hi^ Point this weekend.

In the boys 15-16 age group, Barnhill was second inthe 50-meter freestyle, fifth in the 100 backstroke and 100 freestyle, and seventh in the 200 free and 200 back. In the boys 13-14 age group, Kelly placed sixth in the 100 breaststroke.

Clark placed fifth in the 100 free and seventh int be 100 breast, while Kim was eighth in 100 butterfly in the boys 11-12 age group.

In the 400 medley relay for 13-14 boys, Kelly, Jeremy Shadle, Jon Jolly and Sellers Crisp captured fifth place for the Greenville Swim Club,

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U-The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Monday, August 8,1983

District Court Report

Judge James E. Ragan III and Judge W, Lee Lumpkin lit disposed of the following cases during the July 18-22 term of District Court in Pitt County.

Vivilia Ann Artis. Riverblufi Apartnienib speeding and no operators lictuse, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Charles Norwood Barnes, Wilson, speeding and driving under the influence. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $125 and costs, surrender operator's license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

John Whitaker Beavens, Raleigh, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Stephen Canfield, Belhaven, injury to personal property, 90 days jail su.spended on payment of $25 and costs

U*wis Michael Cox, Route 3, Greenville, fail to report accident, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

John Scott Dedrick, Grifton, speeding, 5 days iail suspended oh payment of $10 and costs.

Jasper Dixon, Farmville, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended, probation 1 year, pay $200 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school .and pay $100 fee

Scott Thomas Friddle, Belhaven, injury to personal property, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs

Angel Guerroro Jr., Farmville, reckless driving, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs

Albert Stancill Hardison. Bell Arthur, stop sign violation, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $35 and costs.

Billy Ray Harper, Farmville, driving under the influence and driving while license revoked, 6 months jail

Elizabeth Louise Hobbins, Route 6, Greenville, careless and reckless driving, not guilty.

Reginald Leon Holliday, Fletcher Dorm, breaking and entering a coin operated machine, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs, probation 1 year

Bryan Jarvis, Oakwook Acres, exceeding safe speed, pay csts.

David Wilson Jennings. Washington, following too close, voluntary dismissal.

Robert Johnson. Snow Hill, improper passing, pay costs.

Teresa Thomas Jordan, Route 6, Greenville, exceeding safe speed, pay costs

Eddie Lee Langley, Grimesland, no operators license and driving under the influence, voluntary dismissal.

Joseph Carroll Mobley, Williamston, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Jerry Mullins, Route 10, Greenville, communicating threats, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

Karen Lee Pericio, Charlotte,

Terry Glenn Pennington, Jacksonville, driving in excess of 10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Julian Fleming. Pierce Jr., Ayden, speeding and careless and reckless driving, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $125 and costs, attend and complete alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Jo Ann Powers, Forbes Street, damage to real property, voluntary dismissal; no registration plate, voluntary dismissal.

John Edwin Rogers. Eastbrook Apartments, exceeding safe speed.

pay costs.

Edward Lee Ross, Dudley Street.

driving while license revoked and

display revoked license, dismissed. William Tommy Smith,

Clarks

Trailer Park, assault inflicting serious injury. 90 days jail suspended, probation 2 years, pay $200 and costs, pay restitution for medical billsof J.M. Ross.

Scott Bryant Stoll, Foxberry Circle. exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Brian Knight Strother, Kinston, improper passing. 10 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.

William C. Trainer, Wilson, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Arthur Ward. Route 5, Greenville, safe movement violation. voluntary dismissal.

Clifton Ervin Warren Jr, Stokes, careless and reckless driving, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Raymond Lawrence Young, Raleigh, exceeding safe speed, pay costs

Frd Douglas Johnson. Fremont, exceeding safe speed, prayer for judgment continued on payment of

costs.

Allen Wayne Buck, Roverview Estates, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check

Marilyn Braswell, Farmville, injury to personal property, voluntary dismissal.

William Harper, Farmville. assault on a female i2 counts). 90 days jail suspended on payment of $2,') and costs.

I) William Ellis. Farmville. assault, voluntary dismissal

Linwood Baker, Farmville, gssault on a female, voluntary dismissal.

Frank Norris, Nash Street, injury to personal property and assault with a deadly weapon, 90 days jail

suspended, probation I year, pay $100 a

pended on payment of costs Tony J Hines, Winterville, un

authorized use of conveyance, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $.50 and costs Tony Eugene Holland, Ayden, possess malt beverage under age 18, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Margie Miller Lewis, "Jackson Trailer Park, reckless driving, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

L.C. Mills Jr., Route 3, Greenville, consume malt beverage in unauthorized place, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs

Brenda Baggett Page, Route 3, Greenville, exceeding safe speed, pay costs Anthony Vinson Smith, Harvey Drive, driving under the influence, voluntary dismissal Isaac Taft. Vanderbilt Lane, assault on a female, voluntary dismissal David Eugene Webb, Ayden, possess malt beverage under age 18. voluntary dismissal Rosa Lisa Clemons, Moore Street, shoplifting, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation 1 year,

Marshall Grumpier 111. Lln-denwood Dr.. assault on a female and injury to real property, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs Willie Edward Johnson, Cherry Point, speeding, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.

Andy Daniel Majette, Grimesland, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

David Roach, Gum Road, assault by pointing a gun, voluntary dismissal.

Brenda Baker Chauncey, Myrtle Street, larceny, 3 days jail.

Ricky Eric Newton, Tyson Street,

trespass. 30 days iail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.

Virgil Alvin Pilgreen, Evans Street, trespass, 30 days jail suspended, probation 2 years, pay costs, attend Pitt Mental Health Clinic; intoxicated and disruptive, 30 days jaii; trespass, 30 days jaii suspended on payment of costs, probation 2 years; assauit on a female, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, probation 2 years.

Kenneth Ray Saulter. Forbes Street, fraud, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, pay $50 restitution and $105 restitution, pay $200 counsel fees, probation 2 years.

Lester Shelley, Hines Trailer Park, obtain prowrty by worthless check, 60 days jail suspended on

payment of costs-remitte Claxton Stacil Jr. Route 9,

Greenville, assault with a deadly weapon and trespass, 6 months jail suspended, probation 2 years, pay costs.

Ponderous Omego Streeter, Battle Street, possession with intent to sell a controlled substance, volunta^ dismissal.

iregory Ray Sutton. Oak Grove Avenue, larceny and resist arrest.

unauthorized use of conveyance (2 counts). 9 months jail, pay $150 restitution to Phillip Brown.

Otis Washington. Route 6, Greenville, breaking and entering, voluntary dimissal; assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs; assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs; damage to personal property, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs and $130 restitution and $150 attorney's fees.

Carl Purcell Jr., ECU, assault inflicting serious injury, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs, perform 200 hours of community service work, resign from fraternity; hazing, prayer for judgment continued on payment of costs.

David Earl Simpkins, Washington, worthless check, 30 days iail.

Melvin Anderson, Virginia, fall to produce valid license, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs; no operator's license, not

Willie Earl Barnes, Route 4, Greenville, ficticious registration plate, 30 days jail suspended on /mentof$lOand costs.

payr

James Lee Bright, Jacksonville,

larceny, 90 days jail suspended, probation I year, pay $100 and costs and $15.03 restitution.

Clarence Cherry, Winterville, possession of malt beverage in unauthorized place. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs

Larry D. Daniels, Greenville, worthless check, 30 days jail suspended for 1 year, pay costs and check.

Dewey Lee Gurganus Jr., Bethel.

driving in excess of .10 blood

tary dismissal George Benton Head, Snow Hill, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend multiple offenders school Norman McGee Head, Snow Hill, aid and abet driving under the influence, voluntary dismissal.

Bronie Hill, Caririina Avenue, exceeding speed, 5 days jail sus-

alcohoT content, 6 months jail sus pended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operator s license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee

Randy Hardy, Ayden, injury to personal property, voluntary dismissal.

Rayford R. Jones, Wilmington, threats over telephone, voluntary dismissal.

Fannie Elizabeth Moore. Ayden. child abuse, voluntary dismissal.

L.C. Perker, Farmville, communicating threats, not guilty.

Terry Randal Pierce. Quail Ridge Trailer Park, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, probation 1 year, surrender operator's license.

Carl Purcell Jr., East Carolina University, assault inflicting \ serious injury, voluntary dismissal.

Patricia Ferda Riggs, Jacksonville, larceny of gas, 90 days jail suspended, probation 1 year, pay $100 and costs.

Levie Spehder, Stokes, assault, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs; assault by pointing a gun, voluntary dismissal; trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

David Whitson, Cotanche Street, keep vicious animais, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs and $105 restitution.

Susan Wood, Summit Street, keep vicious animals, voluntary dismissal.

Jonathan Ward Lee Walden, Charles Street, operate vehicle with body protruding from vehicle, voluntary dismissal.

Edward Spender Mayo, Churchill Drive, larceny, voluntary dismissal.

Diane Gayle Tetterton, Route 8, Greenville, shoplifting (2 counts).

LIFT-OFF - Some of the 65 competitors in the Norieast Regional Hot Air Balloon .    ,    Championshms    wait on the ground for their lift

S S std Tiw ?rsi 1 off Sunday. The host town for the competition, fees    Bloomsbiu7,    New    York,    changed    its name to

Dennis Gerard Joffe, East 3rd

Balloonsbury dunng the three-day event. This was the sixth year that the competition has been held at the town, and it also marked the 200th anniversary of mans first balloon fU^t. (APLaserphoto)

Street, driving in excess of .10 percent blood alcohol content, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $100 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Gay Mitchell Buck, Polk Avenue, exceeding safe speed, pay costs.

Mildred Ann Tyson, Farmville, exceeding safe speed, pay $10 and costs.

Mrs. Rodney Moir, Aurora, worthless check, 30 davs jail suspended on payment of costs and check

Craig Adolph Gibbs, Bayboro, driving under the influence, 6

Retirement Homes Are Test Case In Tax Issue

months jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs, attend and

complete alcohol school and pay $100 fee, surrender operators license

Catherine Johnson, Conley Street, worthless check. 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs and

Nancy P Slater, Bethel, communicating threats, not guilty.

Malcolm Tyson, Mill Street, assault, 30 days jail suspended on /ment of costs.

payr

Cynthia Barnes, Church Street,

not

injury to personal property, guilty

Edward Earl Nobles, Bell Arthur, assault on a female, 90 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Jeffrey Jackson, Bubba Boulevard, assault on a female, 6 months jail.

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - A challenge by a retirement community to a state ruling denying it exemption from property taxes could affect all religious homes and lifecare centers in the state, officials say.

Twin Lakes retirement community began after Burlington millionaire Wade G. Coble died in 1980 and left $4 million to the Macedonia Lutheran Church in Burlington with the stipulation the church build the home. It was the largest individual bequest to a Lutheran church in the United States.

North Carolina currently

has about 20 lifecare facilities, and more are being developed. At the centers, residents usually pay large admittance fees and additional monthly charges. They live in cottages, apartments or nursing facilities where they receive graduated degrees of care until they die.

If this case goes against Twin Lakes, all truly religious homes in the state may suffer depending on the scope of the decision, said Frank Bullock, president of the North Carolina Association of Nonprofit Homes for the Aging and administrator of the Methodist Home in Durham.

Royall Eyes 1984 Race

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State Sen. Majority Leader Kenneth C. Royall Jr., D-Durham, says he may run for governor in 1984 if Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green does not.

I have always said that if he doesnt run, I would be interested, Royall said. 1 havent done anything about it. I think he is going to run. That being the case, that would drop any thoughts Id have about running. I am supporting him 100 percent.

Green, awaiting trial orv bribery charges in connection with the FBIs Colcor probe of corruption in southeastern North Carolina, says he still plans to run.

Some conservative, business-oriented Democrats say Royall would be an attractive alternative if Green does not run. Former state Commerce Secretary D M. Lauch" Faircloth is also courting conservative Democrats.

Support Teacher In Dismissal Fight

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A Durham County teachers battle against dismissal is being supported by the North Carolina Association of Black Educators and her pastor.

Durham County Superintend! nt J. Prank Yeager has recomiuended that Vivian M. Crump, who has taught in the county 27 years, be dismissed because of inadequate performance.

Yeagers decision came after a three-year evaluation by a five-member review panel, which recommended that Mrs. Crump be dismissed as a seventh-grade teacher at Chewning Junior , High School.

school systems fault.

Meanwhile, the N.C. Association of Black Educators said in a statement distributed at a hearing by the county school board that the three-year evaluation began when a white parent wrote Mrs. Crumps superiors, inaccurately discribing an incident and demanding her dismissal.

Yeager said the associations claims are not true. He said the evaluation process began before any letter was written.

The N.C. Property Tax Commission denied Twin Lakes exemption from local property taxes on June 1, saying it did not qualify. Twin Lakes disagreed and appealed to the state Court of Appeals. It contends that state law grants exemptions to facilities like itself, and it already has exemptions from state and federal income taxes.

The issue is arising because the lifecare concept is still new to many communities and local governments are strapped for tax revenue, said Sheldon Goldberg, director of the American /association of Homes for the Aging in Washington.

If such communities lose their tax-exempt status in North Carolina, operating costs will rise, forcing up monthly fees, and the number of elderly able to afford such an option will decrease, officials say.

The homes could also lose their tax-deductible gifts, said the Rev. Harvey Johnson, past president of the N.C. Association of Nonprofit Homes for the Aging and administrator of the Moravian Home in Winston-Salem.

Johnson said most lifecare communities have multimillion-dollar budgets and large payrolls. He said they provide communities with employment, local business, sales taxes, visitors and residents who pay income taxes. ,

On the advice of her lawyer, Mrs. Crump, who is black, has declined to discuss the case.

EARTHQUAKE

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) - An earthquake and aftershocks in Baluchistan jrovinces Ziarat Valley has eft at least 7,000 homeless, officials said Sunday.

The Rev. Lorenzo Lynch, pastor of the White Rock Baptist Church, has led the fight against the dismissal. He said Mrs. Crump has been blamed unfairly for a discipline problem that is the

There Oughta Be A Law

and costs, pay $93.72 restitu tionand pay hospital bills Harry Lee Suggs Jr., Candlewood Drive, driving under the influence and no operators license. 6 months jaij suspended on payment of $500 and costs, probation 2 years, attend AA meetings and Pitt Mental Health Center.

Robert Gray Langston, Farmville, speeding, pay $10 and costs.

Alvin Dixon, Farmville, drunk and disruptive. 30 days jail suspended on payment of costs.

Julius Vines. Farmville. assault. 30 days jail suspended on payment of $50 and costs.

Kimberly Rouse, Farmville, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on .uivirp'-.t of costs.

\ppl( I ii'ior Moye. Farmville,

' ^pass, 1 uays jail, released for .me served.

Donald Ray Barnes, Hookerton, possess revoked license, 60 days jail suspended on payment of $^ and cost, no registration piate and no liability insurance, not ^ilty.

William Earl Cox, Robersonville, speeding and driving while license suspended. 6 months jail suspended on payment of $200 and costs, surrender operators license.

Marshal Ann Graham,' Pitt Street, stop light violation, volun-

^MENTVIE BOSS MAWE A MISTAkE, T^E

entire office MUET

SHARE THE RE5PON51&IUITV:

BUCK UP/ WE'LL DO BETTEf? Nprr

MU AN 8LM, HUSN/NQ, NV.

Ul

@ur IF vtx) make EuEM tme mEsrmii, WHO DO you think shoulders the BL4MF?

this is f\ TWO, MOT A SVEM r CAT vcv DC ANVTHING RICWT- V

4IV.-H//4V /S TB

m BC^'S my WAV.

NOW YOU KNOW - U youve ever wondered Just bow airline baggage handling s^ms manage to damage your bags so quickly, just ask Bob Oiwsko, quality assurance manager for American Tourister. Bobs company designed and built this machine to reproduce the battering bags receive from airport conveyor systems. The machine subjects test bags to the battering of years in just a few hours. (APLaserphoto)    ,

THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified

Rates

752-6166

3 Line Minimum 1-3 Days.. 45* per line per day 4-6 Days.. 42* per line per day 7 Or More

Days 40* per line per day

Classified Display

2.90 Per Col. Inch Contract Rates Available

DEADLINES Classified Lineage Deadlines

Monday Friday 4 p.m.

Tuesday Monday 3 p.m.

Wednesday. .Tuesday3p.m. Thursday. Wednesday 3 p.m.

Friday Thursday 3 p.m.

Sunday.........Friday    noon

Classified Display Deadlines

Monday.........Friday    noon

Tuesday Friday 4 p.m.

Wednesday .. Monday 4 p.m. Thursday Tuesday 4 p.m. Friday.... Wednesday 2 p.m. Sunday... Wednesday 5 p.m.

ERRORS

Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowance for errors after 1st day of publication.

THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.

YOUR AD COULD BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS

SPACE e

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

NORTH CAROL COUNTY OF PITT

The undersigned, having qualified

deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons

v.ov wiiiicif im

having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Ad

r----------------1    W.    9th Street, P.O.

'ille. North Carolina

mlnlstrator at 21 ...

Box 2126, Greenville, .    _    .

27834, on or before January 26, 1984 or this Notice will be plead In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make payment to the undersigned Ad

ministrator. This 20th_da

 ayof July, 1983

JACKP^AN

OR OF THE

ADMINISTI ESTATE OF CHARLES VERNON MORGAN DECEASED Gaylord, Singleton, McNally & Strickland P.O. Box 545 ^

Greenville, NC 27834 July 25, August 1,8,15, 1983

gPrVmP*

The undersigned t

ICE

undersigned having qualified

as Adminlstratix of the estate of Burnie W. Haddock, deceased, this

is to notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the

undersigned or Its attorneys.

   *    Hef-

Williamson, Herrin, Stokes & Hef-

bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will

make immediate payment

unc^slgned.

This the 28 day of Koma Hardee t

please to the

July, 1983. Haddock

Administratrix of the Estate It Burnie W. Haddock,

ot B l Deceased

Rt. 2, Box 584 Ayden, NC 28513 Mickey A. Herrin Williamson, Herrin, Stokes & Heffelfinger Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 552

Greenville, NC 27834 August 1.8, 15, 22, 1983

RosaN Vs

Juan Francisco Garcia Defendant

To

MSION DIMS 'Moreno Garcia

PUBLIC NOTICES

Sfi-Wofl ,

Having qualified as Ad mlnistratnx qf the Estate of Grace Lynette Horne,Tate of Pitt County, this Is to notify all persons havlr-

this Is to notify all Pfrjons havlho claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Ad mlnistratrlx within six (6) months

from the date of the first publication

of This notice or some will be pleaded in bar of their I---------- -------

 recovery. All persons

Indebted to said Estate wilf pl< make

_______________/    pi-

. Immediate payment to

ioutel. Box 313 A untain. Nc

OVVEWr?ll^NVK')^^

Attorneys^ Law

P.O

3: Juan FranciscoGaixia TAKE NOTICE THAT a pleading seeking relief has been filed against you in the above entitled action. The

nature of the relief being sought is as follows

1. An absolute divorce based on one year of separation

You are required to make defense to such pleadfnt

13, 1

ing not later than Sept.

said ifite being forty (40)

days from publication. Upon your failure to do so. the party seeking service against you will apply to the qurt for fhe relief sought.

This the 28th day of July,

Gwynett Hllburn

1983.

Attorney for Plaintiff 113W,^lrdr

 JStreet

P.O. Box 5063

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 August 1, S. 15,1983

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 758 4276

July 18, 25; August 1,8.1983

FILE

IN THE

COURT

noRthcaSol

SUeV JOHNSON VS

ROBERIAJQH

Tof Robert

IVISION

rt A. John TAKE NOTICE that a pleading ^klng relief Mainst you fias filed In the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought

is as follows:

Absolute divorce, alimony and an equitable distribution of marital pro

^ou are required to make defesne to such pleading not later than September 11, 1983, and upon your failure to do the party seeking ser will ap

*9

vice against you'will apply fo the irt for the relief sought.

Cwrt for the relief sought.

1983.

STOK S & H E F F E L F LNG E R ANNHEFF

......_    FELFINGER

210 s.^washington street

PO BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752 3104 August 1, 8, 15, 1983 _

STATE Om^8"ci^Rb!.NA COUNTY OF PITT

Under and by virtue ot thejx)wer of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Paul L. Cano, fo

James O. Buchanan Trustee, dated the 16th day of June, 1980, and recorded In Book B-49, Page 671, In the Office of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, default having been made In the pay

ment of the Indebtedness thereby secured and the said Deed of Trust being thereby secured having

demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfyjng said in

debtedness, and the Clerk of the Court granting permission for the foreclosure, fhe undersigned

Trustee will offer for sqle at poiblic auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse Door In Greenville, North Carolina, at 12:00 Noon, on the 22nd day of August.

19M, the land, as Improved, con-d of Trust, the

veyed in said Deed same lying and being in WIntervIHe Township; PItt (Tounty, North Carolina, and being more par tlcularly described as I "

Lying and being situate in Winterville Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, ancl being Lot No. 43, in

llock E, of Weathington Heights ubdi vision. Section 11L as shown on map thereof made by Stroud Engineering 8, Land Surveying, Co. dated November, 1978, and recorded in Map Book 28, at Page 20 and MA. of the Pitt County Registry, to which reference is made for a more complete and accurate description.

SUBJECT, however, to taxes for the year 1983.

Five percent (5%) of the amount of the highest bid must be deposited with the Trustee pending confirma tion of the sale.

Trustee, substituted by that

Instrument recorded In Book 1-51, Page 135, PIM County Rc ^------ "

eglstry. North Carolina Augustl, 15,1983

FILE

IN THE 6jN|RgjC0URT

DISTRICT OURT DIVISION 5TATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ioyNTYOFPITT 5e RNA WILSON CLOPTON lalntlff

CARLF CLOPTON Defendaot..

PROCESS BY I

TO CARL F CLOF

NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you fias been ...     filled    action.

filed in the above-enf

wherein the plaintiff Is seeking an absolute divorce based on the

grounds of a one year separation. You are required to make defense idlng

to such pleading not later than forty (40) days following Monday, August 8, 1983, and upon your failure to do

w, the plalnfifT will apply to the Court for the relief soughT

NELSON B CRISF Attorney for the Plaintiff 119 West Third Street P.O. Drawer 7146

Greenville, NC 27834 Telephone: (919) 752 ust8~15,22, 1983

August 8.

752-6161

WANT

ADS

752-6166

on

Autos For Sale

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Wayl Authorized Dealer In Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114._

012

AMC

013

Buick

lUlCK jellent condition. Asking ] :all William 756-3984 or 756-3555

 RIVERA, 1981, V 8.

xcellent condition. Asking $10,900.

1969 LeSABRE Excellent condition. S1.000. Call 752 6185.

1977 BUICK SKYLARK 2 door, V6, air, tilt wheel, AM/FM radio, fresh oil change. Clean inside and out. Call 756-3191 after 7p.m._

1979 BUICK REGAL Silver. AM/FM stereo, cruise, power windows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mlleaoe. Make offer. 756-8539.

015

Chevrolet

1974 AAONTE CARLO S400. Call

75Q-3142.

1976 CHEVETTE 85,000 miles, AM/FM,.........

AM/FM, 4 speed. $1,000. Days 758 4333. nlQhts752-1195._

1977 CAPRICE Good condition. S2095. 756 8593.

1979 CHEVETTE with air. $2500. 7523412.

1982 CHEVETTE, 4 speed, AM/FM, condition.

air, excellent 756-3988

$6,250.

1983 CAAAARO Red, T top, air power steering and brakes, AM/FM cassette, extended sound range stereo system, tilt steering. Under warranty. Call 746-4665 after 6 p.m.

016

Chrysler

1977 CORDOBA Loaded with all options. New paint. $2200. 752 5888.

..._ CHRYSLER LeBARON Loaded. Bought new in December

1982

Still under waranty. Nothing down, just take up payments of $^7. Call 747 5953 anyflme, 522 1

day*_

1025 on Sun

018

Ford

FORD FIESTA, 1978. Excellent condition. Call 758 0513 after 5 p.m

WRECKED 1972 PINTO tor sale,

2000 cc rebuilt engine under 25,000 miles, S200. Also 4 new tires Reynolds $25 each. Call 752 2046.

1971 MAVERICK 4 door, new tires. runs good. $795. 756 1188 or 756 8833. 1974 FORD WINDOW VAN 6 ylinder, automatic. $1,000 cash. all 758 4363 after 6 p.m.

1975 FORD GRANADA One owner Air, excellent condition. 746 2624 after 5 p.m.

1978 FORD VAN

Excellent condit $4700 negotiable

N - 12 passenger. Ion. High mileage. Call74?6774.

1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck.

757 0451, ask (or Mr. Carrawav-





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$2.49

Playtex

TAMPONS

Regular Super Plus

Super

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Scotch Magic TRANSPARENT TAPE

5piece DRAWING SET

3/4" X 300

2 for 99<

Venas COLORING PENCILS

12 Coloring Pencils

___





Couple Marries On Sunday

Cynthia Ann Minch of Greenville and Donald Gregory Mills of New Bern were united in marriage Sunday afternoon at three oclock in the Grace Free Will Baptist Church. The Rev. Randall Riggs and the Rev. Fred Lockwood officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Kenneth Minch of Greenville. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mills Jr. of New Bern.

A program of wedding music was presented by organist Susan Forlines. Jon Forlines sang The Wedding Prayer; Beverly Riggs sang Each For the Other, Sunrise, Sunset" and with This Ring I Thee Wed. The bride sang I Love You Truly.

Escorted by her father, the bride wore a formal gown of white chiffon over taffeta. The Victorian styled gown was fashioned with a high neckline encircled with embroidered Brussels lace. The sheer square yoke of Brussels lace was edged in a ruffled border of Brussels lace. The blouson bodice was enhanced by an inset band overlaid in Brussels lace. The long full sheer sleeved were fashioned in pleated chiffon with fitted cuffs of matching lace. The full skirt and attached chapel length train were edged at the hemline in a pleated flounce of chiffon banded in lace. She wore a white braid garden hat trimmed in miniature silk flowers and overlaid in imported white illusion extending to an elbow-length veil in the back. She carried a bouquet of pink roses and white pom pons accented with babys breath and tied with long pink streamers.

Maid of honor was Patsy Arnold of Greenville. She wore a formal gown of rose chiffon over matching taffeta. The high neckline was enpircled with a Victorian collar of chiffon and taffeta bordered in rose silk Venise lace. The sheer scooped yoke of rose point desprit featured a wide border of rose Chantilly lace in a bertha collar effect accented with silk Venise lace. The sleeveless gown was designed with a modified natural waistline enhanced by a

belt of rose satin ribbon. She wore a pink picture hat accented by a wide rose ribbon. She carried a nosegay of rose,, pink and white pom pons and babys breath accented with streamers.

Bridesmaids were Julia Ritter of Farmington, Mo., Phyllif Sutton and Billie Ward of Greenville. They each wore a ice pink gown styled like that of the honor attendant and carried an identical bouquet. Their pink picture hats were accented with pink ribbons.

Elaine Elks of Greenville was flower girl. She wore a formal gown of ice pink. She wore a pink picture hat accented with pink ribbons and carried pink rose petals. Chris Coggins of Greenville was ring bearer. Kenneth Minch, brother of the bride, and Kenneth Nelson lighted candles.

The father of the bridegroom was best man. Ushers were Donny Foreman of Hubert, Jeff Mills, cousin of the bridegroom, Kenneth Nelson and Chris Rivenbark, all of New Bern.

The mother of the bride wore a street-length dress of light pink polyester with long sleeves. The mother of the bridegroom chose a long-sleeved rose polyester street-len^h dress.

Lynn Dixon, sister of the bridegroom, presided at the guest register.

Following the ceremony, the parents of the bride entertained at a reception in the reception hall of the church. Punch was poured by Edna Brooks, aunt of the bride. Cake was served by Ann Bailey. Rice bags were distributed by Melissa Dixon,

The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C.-Mooday, August S, ISO-S

t/ ypb'

MRS. DONALD GREGORY MILLS

niece of the bridegroom, and Valerie Elks.

A bridesmaids dinner was given by Edna'Brooks, aunt of the bride, at Bonanza Restaurant. An afterrehearsal dinner was given by the parents of the bridegroom at Abrams Restaurant. Several other parties and showers were given in honor of the bridal couple.

The bride is a sophomore and the bridegroom is a junior at Free Will Baptist Bible College. The bridegroom is employed by Jims Stereo and Video Center, Nashville, Tenn.

After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside in Nashville, Tenn.

Corey-Reddick Vows Said

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor BRUNCH FARE Cheese Omelets 4 Rolls Blueberry Kuchen 4 Coffee BLUEBERRY KUCHEN One of our most popular coffee cakes.

2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour 2 tea^ns baking powder t^tea^)oonsalt ^cup(liOfaquarter-pound stick) butter cup sugar llargeegg cup milk

2 cups fresh blueberries Streusel Topping, see recipe

On wax paper tlMroughly stir together flour, baking powder and salt. In a large bowl cream butter and sugar; beat in egg until blended. Add flour mixture and milk; stir just until dry ingredients are moistoied. Fold in blueberries. Turn into a buttered and floured 9-inch spr-ingform pan; sprinkle with Streusel Topping. Bake in a preheated 375Kleee oven until a cake tester inserted in citer comes out without any batter adhering to it - 45 to 50 minutes.

Clara Louise Reddick and James Melvin Corey were united in marriage at the home of the bride Sunday afternoon at five oclock. Elder Dennis Wooten of Falkland assisted by the Rev. Chars Wilson of Baltimore, Md. officiated at the double ring ceremony. Eldress Phillis Watts said a special blessing.

Miriam Harris of Greenville presented a program of wedding music. Virgil Glenn Lathan of Greenville, nephew of the

Fashion Show Announced

A back to school fashion show will be given at the meeting of the Greenville Christian Womens Club Aug. 16. The meeting will be held at the Greenville Country Club from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Presenting the fashion show will be Davida Brons-tein of Youth Togs.

Dianne Pickett of Greenville will be featured soloist. Danette Rutherford of Fayetteville will be the guest speaker. She was a semifinalist in the 1980 Miss North Carolina pageant and is also a teacher and musician.

A free nursery will be provided at The Memorial Baptist Church.

Reservations for the nursery and luncheon should be made with Faye Barber at 756-3610.

The cost of the luncheon is $5.95.

(If Topping begins to get very brown towards end of baking, cover loosely with foil.) Cool on a wire rack for 5 minutes. Loosen edges; remove springform band. Serve warm.

bridegroom, and Pfc. Curtis Reddick, son of the bride of Fort Knox, Ky., sang One In A Million You, Sweetheart and The Lords Prayer.

Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. Willie Fleming of Greenville and the late Steven Ward. The bridegroom is the son of Lucy Lathan of Greenville.

Given in marriage by her mother and children and escorted by her brother, William Earl Ward, the bride wore a formal gown of sky blue and white of silkened organza over peau de soie designed with a V-neckline outlined in Chantilly lace. A self-tie satin belt encircled the waistline from which fell the gathered skirt featuring double ruffles of Chantilly lace outlining the hemline. The long puff sheer sleeves were self-ruffled at the wrist. Her fingertip veil silk illusion was attached to a white derby styled hat and she carried a cascade bouquet of miniature carnations, white pom pons and blue babys breath tied with blue and white bridal satin. It was centered with an orchid corsage.

Carolyn Louise Riddick, daughter of the bride, was maid of honor and wore a formal baby blue gown of polyester knit which featured a drop shoulder neckline and miniature rolled shoulder straps. The A-line skirt was accented with a cummerbund at the natural waistline. She carried a nosegay of mixed summer flowers.

Bridesmaid was Thelma Wilson of Baltimore, Md. She wore-a pink formal gown designed similar to that of the honor attendant and carried a nosegay of summer flowers with constrasting ribbons. They both wore sprays of babys breath in their hair.

Roosevelt King was best man and the usher was Ernest Lamonte Eaton, nephew of the bridegroom of Greenville.

The mother of the bride

wore a formal gown of,off-white with a wine jacket and the mother of the bridegroom wore a formal gown of blue and white. They were each presented a white carnation corsage.

The wedding was directed by Rosa L. Harris of Greenville.

A reception was held at the Bachelor Benedict Club and guests were greeted and introduced by Beula Peele. Cake was served by Ruby Taylor, sister of the bridegroom, and punch was poured by Reba Crandol and Linda Clemons presided at the guest registar.

An after-rehearsal refreshment hour was held at the home of the bride.

The bride is a graduate of Beaufort Community College in Washington and is owner and operator of Claras Beauty Box in Greenville. The bridegroom is presently employed at Union Carbide in Greenville.

After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will live in Greenville.

Turn an everyday necessity into an elegant show-off accessory by stitching this Tulip Time design on a background of colored plastic canvas. Make the phone book cover in shades of pink, rose, lavender and green on a pastel canvas or in gold and bronze tones on a darker canvas - or in any color combination you like.

The same design motif and materials could be used for covers for photo albums, engagement books, wastebaskets or any of a variety of other household items. Whatever your choice, youre likely to make several for yourself and a few more for much appreciated gifts. Alternate border patterns are included to allow for variations in shape and size.

To obtain directions for making the Tulip Time Phone Book Cover, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-0807 with $1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler, The Daily Reflector, P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.

Or you may order Kit No.

N-0807 by sending a check or

money order for $12.50 to Pat

Trexler at the same address,

specifying your choice of

pastel or bronze tones. The

kit price includes canvas,

yarns, needle, instructions

and shipping charges.

When you are trying to decide on a particular pattern stitch for a needlepoint border, you must first find out how many canvas threads (for cotton canvas) or ribs ( for plastic canvas) you have available on the outer edges of your finished piece. Since Ill be discussing plastic canvas today, 1 will use the term, rib. However, the same principles will apply to the threads of cotton canvas or to the stitch count of evenweave fabrics.

Most people find it easier to count holes than to count ribs, but you must use a rib count to decide what pattern stitches will accurately fit in the space allowed. You can still take the easy way out and count holes, but subtract one from your hole count to give you the correct number of working ribs available in each direction. The ribs along the outer edge are not counted as working ribs since the pattern is not worked over them.

The front of the phone book cover pictured today was worked on a sheet of canvas with 109 holes down and 91

IVIONITOR THOSE PROBLEM AREAS CLOSED CIRCUIT TV SPECIALISTS ROBINSON & BRITTAIN, INC. SECURITY SYSTEMS SPECIALISTS 355-6387

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CALL TODAY!

756-8545

lOSOakmont Plaza

Bridal Policy

The Daily Reflector will now publish engagement and wedding photographs of a bridal couple pictured together, or of the bride pictured individually.

A black and v^te glossy five by seven photograph is requested for engagement announcemmts. For publication in a Sunday editkm, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday. Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date. After three weeks, only an announcmoit will be printed.

wpAting writenips will be printed through tbe first week with a five by seven picture, during the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giving less description and after the se(^ week, just as an announcement.

Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The Daily Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All ' informatiooiould be typed or written neatly.

Carolina east mall k^greenville

Its Coming

BELK-TYLERS

22 HOUR SALE-A-THON

. Starts Friday August 12 And Runs Through Saturday August 13-Two Big Days

holes across, giving me 108 working ribs down and 90 working ribs acioss. Each of these rib counts can be evenly divided by 2,3,6 or 9.1 could, therefore, use any pattern stitch that has a multiple of any of those numbers. If my rib count was 108 by 92, I could use patterns that had multiples of two or four.

Multiple means the number of ribs that are covered by a single repeat of the pattern stitch. The number of ribs neecjed for several repeats must, therefore, be a number evenly divisible by the stitch multiple.

If you are figuring on a single edge only, you will probably have several choices. When you are making a border around all edges of a square or rectangule, you must have the correct multiple in both directions.

Lets say that your minimum count on a piece was 108 by 92 and you particularly wanted to use a pattern with a three-rib multiple. In this case, just cut your piece with one additional rib across, so that you will have a usable count of 93 in that direction. The one extra rib will only add a fraction of an inch to the width.

An alternate choice is to work one or more extra rows of tent stitch on any sin^e edge of the canvas to bring your count to the needed multiple.        

Rib or thread multiples are seldom mentioned in pattern stitch descriptions but you can easily figure this for yourself from the stitch diagram or chart. Just count the chart lines crossed and this Will equal the number of threads or ribs crossed.

(Pats Pointers: The Needlepoint Handbook by

Birth

Hadley

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Howard Forbes Hadley, Raleigh, a daughter, Mary Elizabeth McGinnis, on Aug. 3, 1983, in Duke Hospital, Durham.

BOOK COOVER . for a telephone book can be done in a tulip design in needlepoint.

Pat Trexler has organized needlework instructions for easy crafting by beginners and veterans alike with a host of patterns to please every fan. To order this 200 page book, send $8.95 plus $1 postage and handling to Pats Pointers, in care of this newspaper, 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairway. Kan. 66205. Please make checks payable to Universal Press 'Syndicate.)

(Because of the large

volume of mail she receives, Pat is unable to answer your letters personally. However, she welcomes all questions and hints and will use those of general interest in the column whenever possible.)

Eastern

Electrolysis

133 OAKMONT DRIVE, SUITE PHONE 75M034. GREENVILLE, C PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOQIST

NEED WHEELS? Call Rent A Wreck!

Reni yesterdays cars at yesterdays prices and save!

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Bela Bartk, the Hungarian pianist and composer, was born in 1881.

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CroMBWort! By Eugene Sbeffar

ACROSS

1 Simon-" (chd'sgame) S New Guinea port gRdefor Marie liirilsm

12 Passions

14 Kind of tide

ISMakesa social debut

ISTIirash

17 Goal

18 Scholarship-giver

20 Quiets

23 Sui^KHting timber

24 Fifth and Park: abbr.

25 Wanderers

28 Garden plot

29 Sticky cake

30 Word with gun or shaft

32 Flower clusters

34 Stratagem

35 Actor Sharif

30 Blockheads

37 President

of Mexico (1940^2)

40 Total

41 Word on the wall

42-,UtUe Sheba" 47Praninger or Kruger

48 Rival

49 Presently 50-Harbor,

New York 51 Scarletts home DOWN 1 Dry,as wine 2, amas, amat

3-Kippur 4Prepares the clams 5 Weaver's need *

I Babylonian god

7 True copies: Law 8Itmustbe reported

9 Peruse

10 lions pride

II Simians 13 Wife of

Osiris 19 Harness part

DSIIdn    gBD

B IHII

um isia mm fl[!]Q mm giiSB mm onaQ mm [Egiizis mm mm mm

8-8

Answer to Saturdays puzzle.

21 Rainy day rarity .

21 Affirm

22 Castors moth-

23 Tree pest

25 Certain

novels

28 Berate

27 Sediment ^

29 Musical thane

31 Le^ matter

33 An inducement

34 Bearlike animal

38 Contest of honor

37 Andys sidekick

38 Mother of Apollo

39 Within: comb, form

40 Complacent

43 Medical suffix

44 Onetime

45N.T.book

48 Malay isthmus

CRYPTOQUIP    8-8

NLG CKUTUVY IKV LKC LUVMCUYLN-

LGC K EGKE KMIUEKT.

Saturdays Cryptoquip OUR CHAMPION WEATHER FORECASTER AND HIS WIFE DANCED UP A STORM.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: K equals A.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipho* in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Sii^e letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

)tU King Ftaturts Syndjcttt, Inc.

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1863 Tribune Company Syndlcair Inc

ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ

Q.l-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:

95 ^J84 OA106 Q9852 Your partner opens the bidding with two hearts. What do you respond?

A.-There is no point to introducing your club suit. Your job is to set the trump suit as soon as possible, and three trumps to an honor is excellent support for a demand bid. Start off by bidding three hearts - partner might want to initiate a cue-bidding sequence.

Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

95 ^AQ8752 01063 ^54 The bidding has proceeded: North East    South    West

1 NT Pass    2    Pass

3 <7 Pass    ?

What action do you take?

A.-By raising hearts partner has shown a good fit and a maximum no trump opener, i.e., 17-18 points. You want to be in game, but you really dont want the lead coming through partners hand. Bid three no trump - that will mean that the lead comes up to partner. Your hahd should produce six tricks, and partner might find it easier to make three more for game than the four you would need had you contracted for ten tricks in hearts.

Q.3-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

A1092 ^ 765 0 K852

Partner opens the bidding one club. What do you respond?

A.-With four-card suits it is customary to bid your suits up the line. Bid one diamond. If partner has a four-card spade suit, he can still introduce it into the auction.

BIRTHS DECLINE PEKING (AP) - Pekings birth rate declined in the first half of 1983, the first decrease since 1977, the -Peking Daily reported Sat-nlay. ^ a

Q.4 -As South, vulnerable, you hold:

A10952 ^76 OKQ852 &

Partner opens the bidding with one club. What do you respond?

A.-Holding two five-card suits, you usually want to get both suits into the auction. Therefore it is correct to first respond in your higher-ranking five-card suit - in this case, spades.

Q.5Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

872 '7J762 OKJ865 ^3 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West

1 Pass 1 0 Pass 1 Pass ?

What action do you take?

A.-You have enough for only one bid, and you have taken that. Be thankful that you have found a reasonable fit - pass.

Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

872 ^KJ76 OKJ865 43 The bidding has proceeded: North    East    South    West

1    Pass    1 0    Pass

1    Pass    ?

What action do you take? A.This time your hand is a bit stronger, labile you still dont have enough for a second forward-going bid, you dont have to settle for a contract out of fright; you can try for the best spot. Bid one no trump.

A Bolt from the Blue

A typical lightning bolt, which lasts only one-millionth of a second, packs from 10 million to 100 million volts. Only about 25 percent of all lightning strikes ever reach the ground, but, if you are caught outside during a lightning storm, you should take precautions. Lightning always seeks the best conductor to the ground, and it always strikes the tallest conducting object in the landscape. Never take shelter under a tree during a lightning storm, because lightning that strikes a tree will often jump to a person standing nearby. Instead, crouch low with your hands on your knees and your feet close together, thus minimizing contact with the ground.

DO YOU KNOWWho showed the connection between lightning and electricity in 1752?

FRIDAYS ANSWERPresident Carter first appointed Chairman Volcker to the "Fed."

, VEC. Inc 19H.

FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, AUGUST 9.1983

PEANUTS

IT happens just by

LOGONS AT YOU

I CAN FEEL A CRITICISM COMING ON

BC

assi

NUBBIN

BLONDIE

GENERAL TENDENCIES: The early part of the day is fine to work out problems with other persons and to show that you are a cooperative person in long-range plans with older persons.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Know what regular partners expect of you and cooperate more with them and do not upset a co-worker.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Tasks seem boring in but get at them anyway and then improve your appearance in some way. Be thrifty.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Dont do anything risky with your fundamental affairs. You can get your talents . expressed nicely in the afternoon.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Be careful in handling monetary affairs. Study reports, etc. for possible errors which are troublesome.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Personal affairs do not seem to go right and business affairs also. Study financial affairs for future success.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Better get at that boring task and get it out of the way. Later you may find outside tasks frustrating and unnecessary.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) A pal may deter you from doing something you had in mind in the morning, and later a loved one proves difficult.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Morning is fine for going after the information you need, but forget anything of a worldly nature. Attend to business.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Have that talk with a fine friend who can assist you in your personal aims, and then keep any promises.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Early look into your accounts and handle as many as you can, then study into new ways to expand. Keep a low profile today.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Come to a better understanding with an old-time friend. Don't argue with a close tie about trivia.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Study your work and iron out any wrinkles in it. Use tact with a co-worker and avoid a confrontation over inanities.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be capable of making plans for a long time to come and can get dong with others admirably. However, upon reaching maturity may become so involved with details of projects that the main issues are ignored.

"The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

Denies Conflict Of Interest On Routing

KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK

BEETLE BAILEY

FRANK & ERNEST

DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - A member of the Orange County Board of Commissioners who pushed to have Interstate 40 run through the county says his ownership of land along the route does not constitute a conflict of interest, the Durham Herald reported Sunday.

Commissioners Norman Walker and Ben Lloyd both own land along the proposed route, the paper reported. Walker and his partners bought land along the route to sell to the state at a profit when the state began buying right-of-way for 1-40, and Lloyd owns land at what will be the junction of 1-40 and

Interstate 85.

Walker said he bought the land knowing the interstate would pass nearby. He said he hopes to make a profit on the land but that his financial interest in the routing of the interstate is not a conflict of interest.

It has never been a secret transaction or anything," he said. I bid on it at a public auction and the deed is on file at the courthouse.

Lloyd could not be reached for comment.

The majority of the Orange County Board of Commissioners fought to prevent 1-40 from passing through the county, citing environmental factors.

REAL ESTATE

ITi IIV MY /2AN6, eh? WEtU, THATi ONE $T72\I<E AfiA'NiT IT.

TnAves 8-8

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

A GALAXY    Tfo

* FAR AWAY. BUT f NOT NEARLY FAR / ENOUGH, FUNKY lYfNKERBEAN PRESENTS THE

JEDI JOKESl

IF MAN OLD AND U1K

, 5k3V6ALKEf^ OERE BOTH (N A BLiXIC OF ICE, OlHAT OOLD THE,) BE ^

o

o O O

..o    ^

; 3xm NVH TOCO

^HOE

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If you like the Calabash Style,

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We Now Have Plenty Of Parking 4:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. Closed Sunday

YOO'VEPATEPALL

W. I GAVE 1HEM ALL FOUR

sm.

T

R)uesrAK?'.RX

nmmm

IN TO PUMP?!

KCa.iiiviPEpm

AlMElWpi

sgtAyawis jij


Title
Daily Reflector, August 8, 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.) - 30536
Date
August 08, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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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.
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