Daily Reflector, August 9, 1983


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MOkE t<!) COME? 1

PAYING FOR HEAT 1

SPORTS TOnAV

Analysts predict cost of borrowing could go even H higher after, banks raised prime rates Monday. White H House spokesman hopes for no trend". (Page 16) H

Nations air conditioning bill was an estimated H 22 percent above normal in last weeks of July,' 1 reflecting prolonged ordeal of heat. (Page 7) 1

Dave Winfield continues to be a bird killer as he helps the Yankees sweep two from the Blue Jays. (Page 9)

THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 171

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 9, 1983

22 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

School Board 'Puzzled' By Bread Product Prices

HAPPY GROUP - State Sen. R.C. Soles, Jr. (center), flanked by his attorneys David Long, left, and Joe Cheshire, right, outside the federal

building in Wilmington, N.C. after judge J.C. Fox dismissed three of the four charges against Soles. (AP Laserphoto)

Soles' Case

By MAKY ANNE RHYNE

Associated Press Writer

WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) - A federal jury began deliberations today to decide whether state Sen. R.C. Soles, D-Columbus, is ^ilty of aiding and abetting interference with commerce by extortion.

Also today, Bolton black leader Herbert Riggins was given a five-year probationary sentence for his {Kirt in a liquor-by-the-drink referendum in Bolton. Riggins had cooperated with the prosecution against Soles.

The jury began its work about 9:53 a.m. after receiving instructions from U.S. District Judge James C. Fox.

Fox told the jury that to find Soles guilty, it must

determine that former Columbus County commissioner Ed Walton Williamson induced FBI agents to give him money, that Williamson did so as part of his duties as a public official and that the result affected interstate commerce adversely.

Fox said the jury also must determine that Soles knew Williamson was extorting money and specifically intended to help him. He said the jury must also find that Soles wilfully acted to bring about the extortion.

The charge, the result of the FBIs undercover probe of political corruption in Columbus County and neighboring areas, carries a maximum punishment of 20 years in prison and a $10,000 fine.

REFLECTOR

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It is based on undercover agents payments to Williamson in connection with a 1982 liquor-by-the-drink referendum in Bolton.

On Monday, Fox dismissed three other charges against Soles because of insufficient evidence. Those charges were conspiracy to interfere with commerce by extortion, vote buying and perjury.

In closing arguments Monday, attorneys for both sides agreed the trial focuses on the nature of political power but they drew different conclusions about Soles use of that power during his 15 years in the Legislature.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Douglas McCullough said Soles used his office to get allies in a position where they would owe him favors that could be collected at any time. But McCullough said that in stockpiling favors. Soles stepped across the boundary of politics and crime.

He replayed, part of a videotape from Dec. 15,1981, in which Soles told the un-(PleaseturntoPage?)

By JERRY RAYNOR ReflectorStaff Writer

Contracts for dairy and bakery products were approved by members of the Greenville Board of Education Monday night, with members voicing puzzlement and concern over the tremendous increase in price of bread products.

Valerie N. Wood, director of the food service program for the city schools, reported that, on bids received from three firms specializing in bakery products, increases in prices over last years products "are approximaely 65 percent for loaf bread, 60 percent for hot dog buns, 50 percent for hamburger buns, and 85 percent for hoagie buns.

Franklin Sunbeam was low bidder of the three firms submitting bids. The bids are on the basis of flour being provided to bakeries by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Franklins low bid prices for bread items, with their prices (in parenthesis) for the 1982-83 school year are;

White bread, 54.51 cents ^ per loaf (33.07 cents).

Weiner rolls, per dozen, 62.87 (39.23 cents) Hamburger buns, per dozeh, 58.87(39.23 cents) Hoagie buns, per dozen, 80.10(42.50) '

Carolina Dairy was successful low bidder of three firms bidding for dairy products. Prices for the six dairy items are;

Milk, per half-pint carton - low fat, 14.29 cents; whole milk, 14.29; chocolate milk, low-fat, 14.29.

Ice cream sandwiches, per dozen, $1.80; chocolate covered ice cream on stick, $1.80 per dozen; ice cream cones, nutty buddies, $1.80 per dozen.

On being questioned about the possibility of delaying action on approving bread bids until attempts could be made to seek out cheaper sources, Supterintendent Delma Blinson told board members such action would be on legally shaky grounds, as the bids had been put out on a prescribed contractual basis.

Some mention was made of the possibility of having to increase the prices of lunches at a later date if food service operating fund levels fell below a prescribed reserve level. Such action, school board members agreed, can hopefully be avoided. 'The motion for approval was for accepting the bids and maintaining the previously announced lunch prices.

Ms. Wood was requested to (Please Turn To Page 8)

Local Phone Service Not Affected By The Strike

By SUE HENSON Reflector Staff Writer

Officials of Carolina Telephone and Telegraph Co. say telephone service for Greenville and Pitt County will not be directly affected by striking Southern Bell employees and that, as far as they can tell, (?T&T employees have no plans to join the strike.

Michael J. Pittman, manager-staff operations of CTT&Ts home office in Tarboro, said CT&T employees still have a year left on their contract.

About 50,000 union-covered employees of the Southern Bell and other AT&T-related companies in Georgia, Florida, North Carolina and South Carolina have been striking since Saturday at midnight when the Communications Workers of America went on strike against the Bell System nationwide when its contract with American Telephone and Telegraph expired. Among the reasons for the strike were employee concerns about money and job security.    ,

Prior to the strike, union negotiators were seeking assurance that workers would be protected against displacement when AT&T breaks into 22 separate units on Jan. 1 as part of an anti-trust settlement. The union rejected a 3.5 percent annual raise for workers at top pay levels.

Greenvilles CTJtT General Manager Dick'Flye sai(j area customers should not be concerned about telephone service. He said phone users should only experience delays when using directory assistance for information out of the CTT&T

service area.

Carolina Telephone and all other independent Bell Systems are all hooked together on long distance services, but as far as the strike is concerned our customers wont be affected because 87 percent of our customers dial calls direct through an automated system. The only time our customers might experience a delay is when they dial 1-555-1212 for out-of-the-area directory assistance and involve a branch that is on strike, he said.

Pittman said that, although telephone service to Pitt County and Greenville will not be interupted, 5 percent of CT&T customers located around Raleigh and Greensboro might be affected.

In Raleigh, only about 250 employees of the Southern Bell workforce of 1,100 showed up Monday, a company spokesman said. To handle the workload left by strikers. Southern Bell put managers on longer work schedules and called in vacationing management employees.

According to Pittman, concerns of the striking Southern Bell employees are more or less universal in the telephone business today. Carolina Telephone, as well as other companies, is seeing more and more automation and as such, conventional jobs are disappearing, making what is going to happen to poples jobs a major concern, he said.

Automation is changing the workforce and that is obviously of concern to employees and management of Carolina Telehone to meet that challenge, he said.

U.S. Adopts Wait-And-See View Of New Guatemaia Government

WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States is taking a wait-and-see attitude toward Guatemalas new government, with Vice President George Bush saying he hopes the coup will lead to economic and democratic reforms.

At a news conference in Albuquerque, N.M., on' Monday, Bush said the coup will not affect U.S. policies in Central America.

Things are in a state of change right now in Guatemaia, Bush said. But I don!t think that it will have any effect on our policies down there.

Bush said it was too early to assess the new Guatemalan government.

We understand they are talking about elections and that, of course, is good. We would hope for economic and democratic reforms, he said.

Gen. Oscar Humberto Mejia Vctores on Monday siezed the presidency of Guatemala from Efrain Rios Montt in a military coup.

At the White House today.

deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said the administration understands that Rios Montt is safe, but has no further details.

Speakes said there have been some private contacts with the new government since it took power, but there has been no formal discussions or anything along those lines.

In Nicaragua, meanwhile, that ntions leftist San-dinista government accused the Reagan administration of plotting the coup as part of what it called a scheme to launch its aggression against Nicaragua. The Sandinistas claim Mejia Victores, a staunch anticommunist, * will be more cooperative with Washington than was Rios Montt.

The new Guatemalan leader was one of three defense ministers from Central American countries who visited the U.S. aircraft carrier Ranger on Saturday, Robert Sims, a spokesman for the National Security Council staff, said today.

752-1336

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

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

HOME BURNED*

The home of Mary Ross and her daughter, Sissy, in Oakwood Acres near here burned Saturday night and aU their belongings were destroyed.

Landmark Baptist Church has asked Hotline to appeal for donations of household goods, clothing and cash for the two. Their sizes are 8 and 18^. Anyone who has anything to donate may send it in care of Landmark Church, Box 1058, GreenvUle, or leave it at Venters GriU, where Mrs. Ross works, any day between 6 a.m. and 8 p.m. Inquiries about the needs of the family may be made by calling 752-0135.

Ayden Board Sets Public Hearing Sept. 12 Over Local Option Tax

ByMARYSCHULKEN Reflector Staff Writer

AYDEN - A public hearing on the proposed one-half cent local option sales tax has been set for S^t. 12 at 7:30 p.m. at the Ayden Town Hall.

The Town Board of Commissioners scheduled the hearing at its monthly meeting Monday after discussing a resolution calling for a referendum on the tax. We should have public input to provide the (Pitt County) Commissioners with data on public opinion in this area, said Commissioner Elliott Dixon, who made the motion setting the hearing.

Id like to hear what the public has to say and Id like to see in terms of dollars and sense, in black and white, what Ayden can get out of the tax, Dixon said.

County Commissioners, who can also call for the half-cent tax by resolution, last week agreed to seek input from the various municipalities in Pitt on whether a tax should be levied.

In other business Monday:

The board held a public hearing on annexation of the

Greenbriar Apartment Complex, located west of Ayden Elementary School. An annexation date of Nov. 30 was set.

A conditional use permit was granted, pending acceptance by the Planning and Zoning Board, for extension of an existing apartment building located at the comer of Venters and Second streets. A public hearing is scheduled for Sept. 12.

Mark Suggs, the towns electrical director, was presented a certificate of appreciation for his three years of work with the town. Suggs will leave his post Aug. 12 to assume a position with Pitt-Greenf Electric Membership Corporation.

Raymond Eakes was appointed safety director for the town, replacing Mark Suggs.

Commissioner J.J. Brown noted that electrical customers who need to pay bills after hours may use the ni^t deposit box located at the town hall. There is no reason that a bill must be paid late because the customer cant get to the town hall during business hours, said Brown. They can use the deposit box nights and on the weekends and should be made aware that its there.

But he called the visit totally unrelated to the other events.

The Pentagon had announced over the weekend that the carriers departure from the area was being delayed so that various Latin American leaders could visit

Improving

'The Greenville Tobacco Market recorded improvement in key areas Monday as local warehouses began the first full week of sales following a twoKlay opening period that was disappointing in terms of prices and buying company activity.

After opening Wednesday with an average of $148.47 per hundred pounds and slipping to $146.49 Thursday, the market posted an average of $157.34 Monday as 1,185,083 pounds sold for $1,864,633. ' The percentage of tobacco taken by the Flue-Cured Cooperative Stabilization Corp. decreased Monday as 414,126 pounds or about 34.94 percent of total sales was )laced under government oan. Monday marked the first time this seasra that poundage topped the million mark here. Stabilization receipts on opening day were 41.16 percent, while the second day total dropped to 38.26 percent.

With 12 Eastern Belt markets having saies Monday, total purch^ by Stabilization remained high as 3,140,065 pounds or 40.62 percit of total sales were claimed. The coop bought just under 45 percent each of the first two^ days of eastern auctions" lastwedi.

The belt average increased Monday to $158.16 per hundred pounds from $149.54 on opening day and $14^.17 Thursday.

the ship. Rios Montt was invited, but did not attend. Navy officials said.

The State Department refrained from any official comment on the nature of the relations the United States may have with the new regime. But it issued a statement saying the usual practice for a new government is to pledge respect for its international commitments and to show a desire for friendly relations with the United States.

The department indicated that there would be no interruption in normal diplomatic relations between the two countries.

We understand that Gen. Mejia has pledged to continue the process of democratization and pluralism, the statement said. We would welcome any concrete step to set up an orderly process for a return to democratic rule.

:'T.

WEATHER

Forty percent chance qf .showers early tonight turning fair Low around 70, Partly sunny Wediies day. high near 90

Looking Ahead

Fai^ Thursday ann Friday, Partly cloudy Sat urday with chance of afternoon or evening thunderstorms. Highs each day will be mostly in 80s. with low 90s, in east. Lows will be in 70s.

i

Inside Reading

Page 5-Gem hunters Page 6-Area items Page 8-Obituaries

'





2-The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, August 9,1983

From Clothes To Cars: Color Forecasts Are Her Business

By GAY PAULEY UPI Senior Editor

NEW YORK (UPI)-June Roche, whose career is color forecasting, says we are just beginning to see the importance color plays in our lives.

"Weve just touched the tip of the iceberg, she said. I have never seen people so aware ^ colors influence.

"Artificial flower manufacturers write me for guidance. I hear from the greeting card people. 1 once had

Couple Argues About Who Foots Bill

By Abigail Van Buren

1963 by Univer*! Press Syndicate

DEAR ABBY: I am an elderly widower in good financial circumstances, as is my ladyfriend. I take her out to a fine restaurant once a week, and in turn, she invites me to her home for dinner. We both enjoy our relationship, but we have one serious problem. If I invite her to go on a trip, she insists that 1 should pay her expenses, even though she has ample funds.

I try not to be smallish, but I resent having to pay for-her company. The amount would not be insignificant if we < went to Hawaii, for example. The money saved this way will eventually go to her children and grandchildren, who are not in need of it.

We are both stubborn and cannot find a compromise. For my part, it is not the money, its the principle of the thing. I should like to learn your opinion.

NAMELESS, PLEASE

DEAR NAMELESS: Whfn someone says, Its not the money, its the principle of the thing, its usually the money. Since you invited her to go on the trip, it should be your treat. (If she invited you, it should be her treat.) Because you are both stubborn, you are letting life pass you by without enjoying many of the pleasures you can well afford. The one thing you cannot buy is time. Make the most of your lives while you have the health to enjoy them.

DEAR ABBY: My wifes parents invited us to accompany them on a trip to visit some relatives who live in another state. It was a nice drive, but far enough away so we had to stop at a motel overnight.

As we were checking into the motel, it became evident that her parents expected us to share a room with them to save expenses. The room was large, with two double beds to accommodate four people, but I didnt feel comfortable with this kind of arrangement so I told my in-laws in a very nice way that I preferred a room of our own, which I would gladly pay for. (I did.)

My wife didnt say anything until we were in our room. Then she said she was very disappointed in me for not going along with her parents wishes. And for me to insist on having my own way was disrespectful and I owe her parents an apology.

Abby, I just couldnt imagine my wife and me sleeping in the same room with my in-laws. (Well be married a year next month.)

Was I disrespectful? And do 1 owe them an apology?

"        LIKES    PRIVACY

DEAR LIKES: Disrespectful? No way. And no apologies are necessary.

DEAR ABBY: Had it wrote that her^usband informed her that he was not happy working at any job, and since he has the right to be happy, he intends to stay home.

That caused me to recall the words of Leo Rosten:

The purpose of life is not to be happy. The purpose of life is to matter, to be productive, to have it make some difference that you live at all. Happiness, in the ancient, noble verse, means self-fulfillment and is given to those who use to the fullest whatever talents God or luck or fate bestowed upon them.

ARTHUR H. PRINCE

If you put off writing letters because you dont know what to say, send for Abbys complete booklet on letter-writing. Send $2 and a long, stamped (37 cents), self-addressed envelope to Abby, Letter Booklet, P.O. Box 38923, Hollywood, Calif. 90038.

an awning manuiacturer tly to Detroit where I was giving some color shows; he just wanted to see what was doing.

First lady Nancy Reagan is one of the aware ones. This could be why red is one of her favorite colors. All colors in the red family are loving. said Miss Roche, in her 24th year of forecasting. "Red symbolizes family, home and hearth. You notice people who wear it.

"In beige, the first lady would be a wallflower, the colorist said. A neutral alone makes no statement. You have to wear an accent color, say one matching your eyes. This keeps bringing people back to you. They listen to you ... a special help if youre out in the business world.

Miss Roche said she forecast the sweep of purple

Aspirin Can Cause Problems

Too many people think of aspirin as a harmless drug which may be safely taken for minor aches and pains. While aspirin is generally recognized as safe and effective, large doses can cause nutritional problems, points out Sarah Hinton, extension nutrition specialist. North Carolina State University.

"Aspirin can cause small amounts of intestinal bleeding, which means a loss of iron. It may also interfere with the bodys use of vitamin C and absorption of folic acid, says the extension specialist.

This can lead to real problems for the elderly, who need extra iron. They are also more apt to be taking large quantities of aspirin for arthritis.

Many young women are already short of iron because of menstrual blood losses. And if they are on the pill, they may be deficient in folic acid. Both groups of people may end up anemic if they take large quantities of aspirin.

People who take aspirin regularly should increase the iron and folic acid in their diets by eating more liver, meat, whole grains and leafy vegetables, says Mrs. Hinton. They also need to eat more citrus and other fruits and vegetables to boost vitamin C intake.

It has been said if aspirin were invented today it would be considered a miracle drug. Its benefits are undeniable, but people need to be aware of possible nutritional problems, Mrs. Hinton says.

MELVILLE PAPERS

NEW YORK (AP) - The New York Public^ Library says it has purchased a collection of papers and documents by and about author Herman Melville.

It says the collection includes a first draft of a portion f Melvilles first published novel, Typee, as well as hundreds of family letters and memorabilia.

Help keep Greenve clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752-4137 for more information.

Cooking Is Fun

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor DINNER FARE Glazed Pork Butt & Slaw Corn Fritters & Rolls Watermelon GLAZED PORK BUn A fine-quality pork butt will probably be lean.

3-pound boneless smoked pork shoulder butt '-cup firmly packed ligl)t brown sugar h teaspoon dry mustard l-3rd cup orange juice 1 teaspoon aromatic bitters, if desired

Cook butt according to package directions, drain. Using heavy foil jor several thicknesses of regular foil), turn up sides to shape a small shallow pan just big enough to hold butt: place in a shallow pan. Place butt in foil pan. Stir together sugar, mustard, orange juice and bitters; spoon over hot butt. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven until sugar melts and butt looks glazed - 20 minutes. Slice and serve, with the glaze. Makes 6 to 8 servings.

Better Than Back To School Prices!

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at least a year ahead of its mass adoption in the fabrics industry. The forecast was easy although the industry had thought of purple in terms of something for royalty or little, white-haired ladies.

Women took to purple because its pretty and becoming. Theres a purple for every woman. The offshoot of purple itself was a multitude of mauves and plums, all still going strong.

She also forecast the onset of teal blue and curry or mustardy tones in fashion.

Im always at least a year and a half ahead of the retail market, she said. I have to be. All of my 1984 colors are in.

So, for the next few seasons watch for lingerie-colored or cosmetic tone accents that si^al a new onset of femininity. Theyre the dusty pastels (peach, pink and coral), great accents, she said, with grays, browns or black.

June Roche came to the color business by way of a bachelors degree in textiles from Southeastern Massachusetts University. Dirctly from school she joined Milliken, one of the largest textile manufacturers in the United States. She started as a stylist but today is corporate fashion director.

For Millikens Visa polyester line alone, she said, there are about . 2,000 shadings, counting the repeats and new specials. Every one is developed under her supervision at the companys central dye laboratory in Spartanburg, S.C.

Twice a year, she presents her color forecasts with extravaganzas at the Milliken Theater in New Yorks garment center. Word of her expertise has spread to the point that she also makes presentations for the automobile manufacturers in Detroit and the furniture industry in High Point, N.C.

The brown-haired, hazel-

COLOR FORECASTING:..is the career oi June Roche. She is corporate fashion director of Milliken, one of the largest textile manufacturers in the country. (UPI Telephoto)

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NOTICE

In our School Sale which begins August 10, 1983 and ends August 13th, 1983 the pictures were transposed on the gents and youths blue suede and nylon jogger and the mens and boys grey suede/nylon jogger. The grey jogger is on sale for $9 pair and the blue suede and nylon jogger is on sale for $8.50 pair. The incorrect price was shown in the price circle on the Charleswood open wall unit. $24.88 is the incorrect price, the correct price is $36.88 each. Themossburg pump shotgun shown in the picture in this tabloid is also incorrect. The correct gun on sale does not have a select choke. The price is correct.

We apologize for these errors and hope this has not inconvenienced any of our customers.

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Couple Weds In July

Karen Rene Santo and Gerald Kenneth Forrest were united in marriage July 16 at 5 p.m. in Hobker Memorial Christian Church by the Rev. Ralph Messick.

The organist for the ceremony was Rosemary Fischer.

Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. William Atkins of Longwood, Fla. and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Grace Forrest and A.E. Forrest, both of Greenville.

The couple is living in Greenville.

eyed Miss Roche calls her work my magic act.

Unlike the volatile fashion industry, the car and furniture makers dont want to be too far ahead on color. A car takes longer to pro-s duce and the eye must get used to change, she explained.

Miss Roches accurate forecasting comes from a combination of instinct, experience, and nose to the grindstone.

I cant afford to be wrong, she said. A lot of jobs and money are on the line.

She travels to Paris, Milan, London and Tokyo, the major fashion centers in addition to New York, taking thousands of color photographs of whats in store windows. These are the trends that will one day hit the mass markets, she explained.

She goes to the movies and the theater because they provide clues. And she reads

the trade journals.

I Our lifestyle influences

color trends, she said. But like our lifestyle, the trends -change.

Remember the era of the whites? We had white kitchens, men wore white shirts, beds were covered in white sheets. Then color and pattern came along.

So whats happening? Were changing again. A whole generation of kids who grew up on avocado refrigerators now is back demanding white appliances.

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Miss Barnes, Mr. Fields Vows Exchanged Saturday Afternoon

Ga\. hosted an alter-' rehearsal cookout-The bride is a graduate of

Marry Sunday Evening

WILSON Mary Beth Barnes and Franklin Osborne Fields were married Sunday evening at six o'clock in Wesley Chapel, First Methodist Church here The Rev Dennis E Chestnut performed the double ring ceremony.

Parents of the couple are Mr and Mrs. Luther Haywood Barnes and Dr and Mrs Wilbert Osborne Fields, allofW'ilson,

The bride was given in marriage by her parents and escorted by her father. She is a graduate of Greenfield School in Wilson and attended East Carolina University.

The bridegroom graduated from Sanderson High School in Raleigh and attended Davidson College. He is now associated with A.R.A. Food Services Co. at Carson Newman College in Jefferson City, Tenn,

The couple will live rn Jefferson City, Tenn. after a wedding trip to the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee.

The maid of honor was Amy Jo Barnes of Wilson, sister of the bride.

The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included Haywood A. Barnes of Wilson, brother of the bride, and John H. Whitesell of Raleigh, brother-in-law of the bridegroom.

A program of wedding music was presented by

MRS. FRANKLIN OSBORNE FIELDS

Laura Davenport, organist, and Debbie Southwick, soloist.

For the ceremony the bride

In some families, the women are the compulsive shoppers. Not in our family. Its my husband. Recently on a trip to a small town in Europe when we left the city, the streets were lined with merchants. Some were crying uncontrollably; others threw themselves on the hood of the car and begged... yes, begged unashamedly for us to stay.

Several times my husband nearly relented, but I reminded him of the first-degree charge card burns on both of his hands and the need for medical attention.

The man will buy anything for which there is no purpose whatsoever except being cute. Ceramic frogs, fourleaf clovers in hermetically sealed paperweights, dancing pigs, a paper mobile of a boy riding a duck, a monkey that turns a backflip every three seconds, a cigar that lights up in the dark.

He is the most gullible man

MEDICAL SPECIALTY

ATLANTA (AP) -

Pediatric rheumatology is an emerging medical specialty that focuses on the treatment of children with arthritis, according to the Arthritis Foundation.

This does not mean more children have arthritis, but rather that juvenile arthritis is becoming diagnosed more easily and that better treatments are available for it, says Dr. Frederic C. McDuffie, foundation medical director.

The foundation estimates about 250,000 children have some form of arthritis, which can begin in infancy and last into adulthood. About three times more girls than boys have these diseases.

in the world. He once bought a piece of the cross on which Christ died from a man in an alleyway in Rome whom he asked the time and who had 15 watches up to his elbow.

Another time in Philadelphia. I stopped him as he was buying the original draft of the Declaration of Independence by convincing him that there were too many typing'errors. He has amassed drawers of key rings made out of reindeer fur, calendar tea-towels printed in Gaelic, rocks that say, Bless This House, music boxes that play, Fly Me to the Moon, salt and pepper shakers shaped like windmills. In Mexico once he bought an entire band of frogs who played everything from the piano to the tambourine. (The government wanted to honor him for doing for the peso what John McEnroe has don for body English.)

At first I thought his buying was linked to a deprived childhood. I figured he had never had a toy for Christmas and amused himself by racing cockroaches or smelling oilcloth. Wrong. He came from a family who celebrated Christmas from October to

February.

Then 1 figured he was going throu^ his mid-life crisis substituting back-scratchers and outhouses with funny sayings on them for back street indiscretions. But he wasnt that slow.

If you think he sentences all this stuff to a drawer it. Its a .living monument to his vulnerability and to dust!

I wouldnt tell him this for the world, but he has something I envy and would love to have ... a bit of the child in him that can still find joy in a ceramic armadillo with a smile on his face and a mound of jelly beans in his back.

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wore an ivory gown styled from English netting with an all-over design of schiffli embroidery. The fitted bodice featured a scoop neckline styled with scalloped schiffli lace and short puffed sleeves. The floor length gown featured a scalloped hemline. The waistline was gathered and accented with scalloped lace designs. She wore a lace and silk flower circulet with seed pearls. Two tiers of silk illusion and satin ribbons cascaded from the center back. She carried a semi-cascading bouquet of white sweetheart roses and babys breath accented with sprigs of miniature ivy.

The honor attendant wore a rosette taffeta gown designed with a T-strap bodice overlaid with ecru lace. The peplum waist was sashed with ecru satin. The gathered skirt flowed to floor length. She wore a band of silk flowers in shades of pink with babys breath. She carried a clutch bouquet of mixed summer flowers highlighted with shades of pink tied with dusty rose ribbons.

Immediately after the ceremony a reception was given by the parents of the bride at the Heart of Wilson,

The refreshment table was centered with mixed summer flowers and greenery in a crystal bowl flanked by burning tapers in crystal candle holders with hurricane globes.

A wedding brunch was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Long in Wilson Sunday.

A backyard pig pickin was held at the home of the bridegrooms parents on the evening of the rehearsal.

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FARMVILLE - The wedding of Eunice Faye Edwards and Alfred Ray Tyson took place on the lawn of the home of Louvenia Ford, aunt of the bride, here. The Rev. Robert Phillips officiated at the double ring ceremony.

The bride is the daughter of Ms. Minnie Edwards of Greenville and Columbus Edwards of Farmville. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Rosa Taylor and Clifton Pitt Jr., both of Farmville.

A program of wedding music was presented by Urban Tyson, organist, and Yvette Hart sang "The Lords Prayer. Dianne Edwards sang What A Difference Youve Made in My Life.

The bride was given in marriage by her mother and was escorted by her father. She wore a formal gown of white organza over peau de sole designed with a high neckline encircled with cluny lace. The gown featured a sheer yoke of illusion accented with seed pearls outlined in a pinafore of cluny lace. Matching lace encircled the empire waistline. The long fitted sleeves were accented with cluny lace cuffs. The full circular skirt and attached chapel length train were enhanced with an overlay skirt enhanced with cluny lace and tiers of organza edged in matching

lace. She wore a sheer white hat of illusion and chanlilly lace held in place by a caplet overlaid in matching lace and pearls She carried a bouquet of miniature chrysanthemums, while pom pons and babys breath.

Jackie Edwards of Norwalk. Conn., sister of the bride, was maid of honor. She wore a formal gown of lavender and purple organza with a ruffled neckline. The gown featured a draped asymmetrical empire bodice with low shoulders. She carried a lavender chrysanthemum with white streamers.

Bridesmaids were Cheryl Edwards and Teresa Edwards, sisters of the bride, and Chintal Taylor, sister of the bridegroom. They wore formal gowns of lavender organza The gowns featured a bodice of sheer illusion accented with Brussels lace bordered in a ruffle of Chantilly lace with sheer caplets. They carried lavender chrysanthemums with white streamers.

Stephanie Dupree of Norwalk, Conn., cousin of the bride, and Kosha Edwards of Greenville, sister of the bride, served as junior bridesmaids. Each junior bridesmaid wore a formal knee-length dress of lavender, white and pink organza with a portrait neckline, ruffled bertha collar and empire

bodice. The flared skirt was accented with a ruffle at the hemline overlaid with a ruffled flounce and rolled bow-trim They carried white chrysanthemums with lavender and white streamers

The flower girl was Letisha Tyson, niece of the bridegroom She wore a formal white knee-length dress with Chantilly lace and a ruffled neckline. The bodice featured sheer sleeves trimmed in lace with a sheer flared body and a lace trimmed flounce hemline. She carried a basket of lavender and white flowers.

Larry Edwards, brother of the bride, was best man. Ushers were Jimmy Edwards of Greenville, brother of the bride; and Joel Hardy and Bernard Dixon, both of Farmville. The ring bearer was Corey Williams, son of the bridegroom.

The mother of the bride wore a dress of rose organza. She wore a white corsage. The mother of the bridegroom chose a formal gown of polyester knit and a white corsage. The grandmothers of the bride and bridegroom were remembered with white

Ellen Tyson, sister of the bridegroom, poured punch Judy Gay, cousin of the bride, served cake.

The bride was honored with a buffet dinner and shower by former classmates and a miscellaneous shower was given by the mother and sister of the. bride. Aunts of the bride, Louvenia Ford and Lucille

Farmville Central High School and will attend Pitt Community College iri the fall The bridegroom Is a graduate of Farmville Central High School and is employed by Sterling Radiator Division of Reed National Corp in Farmville After a wedding trip to unannounced points, the couple will reside in Greenville

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The wedding was directed by Louvenia Ford, aunt of tlie bride, and Donita Moore. Leslie Lee and Sheila Dupree attended the gift table and Annette Moore presided at the guest register.

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Shiny pots and pans of aluminum, copper and zinc are a pretty sight hanging in the kitchen, but are they all safe for cooking?

There is no evidence that aluminum, steel, stainless steel, tin, nickle or silver utensils are harmful. Glass and cookware with non-stick coatings are also safe, says Dr. Nadine Tope, extension specialist-in-charge of foods and nutrition. North Carolina State University.

Copper-covered cookware is harmless as long as the copper does not come in contact with the food. If the utensil is solid copper, special precautions must be taken.

Copper is an extremely good conductor of heat, which makes it a favored metal among chefs. But it interacts with everything it touches. The moisture in the air gives it a greenish surface film. This protects the metal underneath, but it is poisonous when it comes in contact with food. Solid copper vessels must be kept scrupulously clean and require constant polishing if they are to be completely safe to use, Dr. Tope warns.

The solid copper container is also corroded by salt water and salted foods. When it touches the salt, a chloride is formed. Because of this reaction, food cooked in a copper pan may take on a metallic taste, even if it doesnt seem to be corroded, the extension specialist says.

Most copper pots are lined with tin, silver or stainless

Consumers may also want to avoid containers galvanized with zinc. When zinc comes into contact with acidic foods, toxic concentrations of zinc salts may form. Zinc also contains cadmium, lead and arsenic, which are also harmful.

Tinned molds can also cause a problem in the kitchen. Be sure you are cooking only with pots which were intended for that purpose. If a recipe directs you to carmelize sugar in a mold, dont do it unless you know the mold is heatproof.

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Editorials

Sharing The Benefits

Rep. Walter Jones is sponsoring legislation that would make oil exploration programs off North Carolinas coast more attractive, and more logical. The North Carolina Democrat, in a bill backed so far by 105 other congressmen, would create a state-federal-local sharing system for money obtained from federal drilling leases.

Under Jones bill. North Carolina would receive nearly $8 million from the $13 million bid recently by oil companies for the right to explore offshore tracts along the states coast. His proposal calls for the state to then turn over 35 percent of that share to the local governments.

Jones bill would set up a federal fund from oil leases to help finance the National Sea Grant College Program, maintaining coastal maintenance programs that the Reagan Administration has scheduled for abandonment.

The administration contends the coastal programs are no longer needed. We tend to agree with Jones, who says it is irrational to accelerate the 6ffshore exploration without developing and maintaining the coastal areas.

Debate on Jones bill and a companion measure in the Senate is scheduled this fall. By that time the impact of Interior Secretary James Watts decision to open up the coastal waters to drilling should be known even better.

And that will make Jones bill look even more appealing. If the states must accept the drilling along their coasts, they and their local governments should' be allowed to share the benefits.

Loyal Opposition

We are reminded (over and over again) that presidents are the targets-of-choice for the Loyal Opposition, single-issue guerrillas, several hundred office-holders who firmly believe they could do a better job than the White House incumbent, and last (but not least) members of the Fourth Estate who delight in underlining misadventures and missteps in the presidency.

Our memory goes back quite a way; and not one of the presidents we recall escaped the slings and arrows of outrageous carping. Obviously it goes with the territory.

Even so, the picture is somewhat depressing.

Maybe the process is really all for the best. It keeps incumbents on their toes, and chills some fourth-raters from aspiring beyond their capabilities.

James KHpafrlck

What's Puzzling About Draft Law

WASHINGTON - The headline in The New York Times read, Colleges Perplexed by New Draft Law, and the story dealt with the teddible, teddible burden over which college presidents are agonizing this summer. The poor dears dont know what to do about young men who woi\t register under Selective Service law. It's so awkward, said one gentleman.

Well, what is so awkward? The legal situation could not possibly be more clear. An act of Congress requires all young men between the ages of 18 and 21 to register for a possible draft. Another act of Congress, passed last November by overwhelming votes in both houses, denies guarant^ student loans or other aid to men who have failed or refused to register.

In Minnesola, six little parasites (John Doe, Richard Roe, Paul Poe, and so on) untook to challenge the law. Behind the shield of their pseudonyms, they acknowledged that they had refused to register. They would not do even that much to serve their country and their

government. But they very much wanted their country and their government to do things for them: They wanted Pell grants or guaranteed loans to help them attend the University of Minnesota. They are all takers and no givers, these kids.

In March, U.S. District Judge Donald D. Alsop lectured the plaintiffs on good citizenship, but he felt compelled to grant the injunction they sought. Subsequently he enlarged his order to cover collies and universities throughout the nation, and he directed the Department of Education to sec that college officials were made aware that draft registration could not be made a condition for granting student financial aid. On June 29, without a dissenting vote, the U.S. Supreme Court suspended Judge Alsops order. The governments appeal will be argued before the court in the fall.

That is where the matter stands. For the life of me, I see nothing that is puzzling, perplexing, awkward or especially burdensome. No student is compelled to apply for a Pell grant or other public funds. Private forms of student aid are

available. Banks have money to lend. Needy students can work their way through college, though evidently that alternative had no apj^ for the Minnesota Six.

But 1 see nothing wrong, and a ^eat deal that is right, in linking registration to subsidy. Why in the world should the American taxpayer subsidize those who willfully violate the law? It makes no sense.

Its an outrage to ask colleges to play cops for the Selective Service, said Joseph S. Murphy, chancellor of the City University of,New York. Why dont you apply the same logic to people who dont pay alimony? Sentence them to 90 days in jail and no financial aid if they go to college.

For so eminent an educator to equate a failure to pay alimony with a failure to register for the draft is to demonstrate the hi^er education is no guarantee against making stupid equations. Many of us would see nothing outrageous at all in asking the nations collegs and universities, who benefit so richly from federal grants and subsidies, to abide by federal law.

The Times story cited the pathetic example of Andre Gingerich, a 2l-year-(rfd student at Swarthmore who has receivqid $4,000 a year in federal grants and loans for tbe past three years. He is a Men-nonite and has refused to register because registration would constitute participation in preparation for war. With deference to the young gentlemans religious convictions, this is piffle. All he is required to do at this stage is to register. If a draft ever should be^ activated, and if his number should be called up, he would have abundant time to establish his claim for exemption as a conscientious objector.

Of the 100,000 who are thought to have willfully refused to register, only a small fraction have refused on religious grounds. The rest are just generally opposed to even a remote risk to their precious hides. They hate war but they love money. The Selective Service System knows who these deadbeats are. They ought to be indicted and brought to trial.

Copyright 1983 Universal Press Syndicate

Don McLeodElection Issue

Paul T. O'Connor

WASHINGTON (AP) - Economic recovery is shaping up as a lively issue for the 1984 elections. Those in power say recovery is in bloom. Those seeking the power ask what recovery? But a better question may be what is a recovery?

There is little question that the national economy is rebounding after the severe recession of 1981-82. Most of the economic indicators are up, and unemployment is slowly falling.

. The recession ended officially last November and since then the economy has been expanding at a surprising pace. The economy grew at a startling rate of 8.7 percent in the second quarter of 1983 after years of languor,

Retail sales are up. Consumer spending is showing enthusiasm again. New car sales give the greatest hope, up 37.1 percent in the last 10 days of July, which translates into a 7.5 million-car year.

A number of economists have said the recovery is unusually strong for the rebound phase of a business cycle. The growth is so dramatic that some people wonder if it can be real.

However, some of the signs of improvement point also to lingering problems.*

In December joblessness reached 10.8 percent, the highest since the end of the Great Depression. In July it broke below double digits for the first time in 10 months.

But the 9,5 percent unemployment for July translates into 10.6 million people still without work. And as PresidentThe Daily Reflector

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Reagan has been hearing lately, that leaves a lot of people, who ordinarily would be self sustaining, at the mercy of government services.

State and local officials have been complaining for more than a year that, even if the recession is gone, the effects are not.

High unemployment rates, particularly long-term unemployment, shortages of low income housing, reductions in federal expenditures for social services programs, accelerated review of Social Security disability benefits and deinstitutionalization (from mental hospitals), have exacerbated the problems of the poor, the nations governors said in a resolution adopted at their convention in Portland, Maine, last week.

We still have over 600,000 people unemployed, Go\. James Blanchard of Michigan said in response to a preconvention survey by The Associated Press. He said it will be years before the structural damage to his states economy is repaired.

The governors also said over 12 million children live in poverty and The homeless, those adults, families and children without a regular place of residence are increasing in number, and homelessness is becoming a national crisis.

Witnesses at congressional hearings have claimed that there are as many as 2 million Americans whose only homes are locally maintained shelters or temporary quarters provided by private charities.

Nobody knows just how many people go to bed hungry every night, but the General Accounting Office has found the number of Americans seeking food assistance from government and private sources is rising sharply. Acknowledging he was perplexed to learn the hunger problem was so bad, Reagan appointed a special task force last week to recommend solutions.

Every public interest group that has met so far this year - from governors to mayors to county commissioners - has called for special recession relief, citing human needs they cannot meet because their own resources have been depleted by the recession.

At least 32 states have raised taxes and cut services, or both, over the past two years because of falling revenues.

The recession, which just about everybody agrees turned the tide of inflation beyond the most optimistic dreams, also created the other problems when it created large-scale unemployment.

Unemployment did two things to govr emment revenues at every level. People with no jobs, and therefore with no salaries, paid no income taxes. Living off welfare or the kindness of friends and relatives, they also bought little and paid little sales tax. Governments dependent on these taxes were going broke just when the greatest demands were being made on their services. ^

Now comes the recovery. But is it a recovery - just yet?

RALEIGH - For the past century. North Carolina has approached industrial development with the Bring em back alive mentality of zookeepers. Zoos dont stock their cages with local breeds and North Carolina has never sought to develop economically with local resources. Industrial development in this state has always meant industrial recruitment.

During the 1983 session, the General Assembly made a small, almost unnoticed shift in that pattern. On the day it adjourned, the Le^slature funded a $1 million start-up program to encourage grassroots high technology and biotechnology develi^ment in the state. The program is designed to take advantage of all the genuises currently laboring away in the research industries and universities of the state. The program is designed to make it easier for those geniuses to get into business for themselves.

These people lack the industrial structure that will facilitate and support the small business spin-off from all the research we do in this state, says Dr. Quentin Lindsay, Gov. Jim Hunts science adviser.

What Lindsays saying is that a lot of people have good ideas about a product that will sell on the market but they have no idea of how to raise the money to get started, how to produce the product and then sell it.

After someone gets an idea and wants to start a company, he needs interaction with engineers to see if this can be

Starting At Home Is Best

formed into a working idea. Then he needs to talk with the business school types to see if theres a market. Then he talks with the managerial types whod show him how to set up the company.

All this can take one to three years and that costs money and he needs the facilities to support all of that, Lindsay explained. i

So the state is setting aside $1 million

to try to help people with just those problems. The money is likely to go into incubator facilities near the states universities. People hoping to get a company off the ground can rent space in the facility and have access to all the brainy types they need to solve these start-up problems. Also available will be the experts needed to help these people raise the financial backing theyll need to

E/isha Douglass

Strength For Today

The story is told of an absent-minded professor who, taking a trip by train, suddenly awoke to the realization that he could not remember where he was going. He alighted at a station and, calling his wife by phone, said, My dear, where am I going?And her reply was, Look at your ticket.

One of the characteristics of our age is that although people travel at tremendous speed, many do not seem to know where they are going. In other words, none of us today seems to be

over-endowed with a sense of direction.

Well the remedy for us as for the absent-minded professor is that we take a look at our ticket.

This means, in the first place, look at your conscience. Look back also over your past experience it is always helpful.

But for every man an(| woman of religious faith, the only wholly satisfying guide is the Word of God. Look at it, for therein is guidance for everyone who has the faith to see and act.

get the companies going.

Developing grassroots industries is a lot more complicated than recruiting industry from out of state. You have to take an idea from scratch and build it into a company. When you recruit from the outside, the company already exiists, they know how to make their product, how to raise the money they need.

The rewards tor the state are much greater, however, when amew industry is formed here. First of all, smll business creates a great many more new jobs than does big business. Second, the jobs are of a more enduring nature, Lindsay said.

Labor Commissioner John Brooks, speaking to the North Carolina 2000 Commission last year, argued the same thing. He said the state had overemphasized industrial recruitment and forsaken the development of indigenous industries. If we develop our own businesses, Brooks said at the time, then the profits from that company stay in our state and North Carolina people end up running the businesses that are located here.

There was a day, when Andrew Carnegie and Thomas Edison were young, when incubator facilities werent needed to get an industry growing. Lindsay says that, for the most part, the world' is too complex today to start on your own. North Carolina is following the lead of other states in pursuing the genius of our own people. California did it a few years ago and they ended up leading the world in microelectronics.

Chet Currier

Saving Slumps As Consumers Spend

NEW YORK (AP) - If any rainy days lie ahead for the economy, American consumers apparently arent saving for them.

Just a few months out of a long recession, they are spending far more and saving much less than most economists expected.

The savings rate, as calculated by the Commerce Department, fell in the second quarter of this year to its lowest level in more than 30 years. At the same time, personal consumption increased sharply.

Whether you view this behavior as heartening or worrisome depends on your point of view. It is, some say, an impressive sign of confidence in the future, as well as a welcome stimulus to' the economy. But it also raises some troubling questions.

What has become of efforts to increase the savings rate in this country, in order to marshal funds for capital investment, research and development, imrovemends in oroductivitv and future growth?

President Reagans economic programs have stressed this objective. It was thought that extending eligibility for Individual Retirement Accounts to all working people in this country would be a major step in that direction.

It may yet prove to be. But a recent survey of more than 1,000 adults by R.H. Biruskin Associates, a New Brunswick, N.J., market research firm, found that just 15 percent had opened. IRAs for 1982. That leaves a large proiwrtion of the population who shrugged off a powerful tax incentive to saving.

Deposits into IRAs of up to $2,000 a year per individual can be deducted on current tax returns. Thus, for someone in the 33 percent tax bracket, the government is effectively chipping in $1 for every $2 the individual saves.

And dividends or interest earned on IRAs accumulate tax free until the account-holder withdraws money, typi-callv after retirement.

A second nagging question: How long can consumers keep their spending up? At the recently,depressed level of the savings rate, it seems unlikely the consumer will dip further into savings to support spending, says Carol Brock Kenney, chief economist at the investment firm of Shearson-American Express.

If the savings rate stabilizes or rises, then the recovery in consumer spending will be completely dependent on the outlook for disposable income, observes Edward Yardeni at Prudential-Bache Securities. We think that consumer sentiment has peaked for a while and that the savings rate is more likely to rise than fall. We expect a less robust consumer recovery in th second half of the year.^

A case can be made that the economy needs some extra saving, rather than spending, right now to help sustain the recoverjL The money is needed in the

bond markets, the reasoning goes, to help meet the heavy borrowing demands of the government to cover its bud^t deficit.

If the money is not there, interest rates would presumably have to keep rising until they reach levels high enough to attract it. High rates, in return, could slow or even reverse the economys recent progress toward health.

A few years back, there was a handy explanation for consumers penchant for spending. They were well aware of rapid inflation, and knew that it made sense to buy before the next price increase.

Inflation is down now, however, and many of the experts say they are confident it has been subdued. That brings us to one more question about consumer spending - do consumers, by continuing the spending pattern of recent inflationary times, know or sense something about future inflation trends that the experts have missed?.





Gems From Old Mine

CLOSEUP VIEW - Danny Boutwell, an amateur mineralogist from Jasper, Ind., examines a stone found at the abandoned Herbb Mine. The old mica mine, abandoned in 1944, is iocated on a 170-acre farm owned by

ten friends and used for deer hunting. Members of rock and gem clubs are sometimes invited to spend a day or two looking for unique finds. (AP Laserphoto)

LABORS REWARD - An amateur miner-aiogist holds several minerals found in an abandoned mine in Powhatan. Rewards for the backbreaking digging are seidom finan

cial. Seekers like to remember, though, the largest piece of topaz found in North America, wei^iing 8.95 pounds, came from the old mine. (AP Laserphoto)

Ira Informers Risk Death 'Penalty

\    '    r' W

TWO LEVELS OF INTEREST - Don Richardson, part owner of the Herbb Mine near Powhatan, Va., works in a hole he opened with a screwdriver while his brother Dan, left, and Bill Riddell, also part owners, examine a rock with Davids son John and Dons son Jamie, both seven. Don Richardson, who works the mine seven days a week, says his rewards arent financial. He keeps most of the rocks for his collection, trades some to collectors and loans to museums. (AP Laserphoto)

By ED BLANCHE Associated Press Writer

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) - Christopher Black sent 22 of his former IRA comrades to prison for sentences ranging from three years to life rather than go back behind bars himself.

To Enforce Bathers Ban

WILSONVILLE, N.C. (AP) - No swimming regulations may be more strictly enforced at Jordan Lakeas where a Wake County man apparently was struck by a boat propeller as he swam near a boat ramp.

Barry Donald Cash, 20, of Apex, was listed in serious condition Monday night at North Carolina Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill, a spokesman said.

No charges have been filed in the accident, which is under investigation by the state Wildlife Resources Commission. A commission spokesman said the boats operator has not been clearly identified.

Cash suffered severe head injuries, officials said.

The incident occurred six miles north of Wilsonville in Chatham County where two sets of boat ramps are located. The site also has become a popular swimming spot.

No swimming is allowed in the area because it is a public access area controlled by the commission. Lake Jordan has no official swimming beach, although the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is building a beach that is not expected to be completed for two months.

In the future, it looks like were going to have to get strict, even if we make a few people mad, Randy Hobbs, area sergeant with the commission, said Monday.

He is one of 31 guerrillas -20 Roman Catholics and 11 Protestants - who have become police informers and fingered nearly 300 suspects in the past 18 months Their betrayals have punched big holes in the mainly Roman Catholic Irish Republican Armys Provisional wing, the

Marxist Irish National Liberation Army and the Protestant Ulster Volunteer Force.

Black faces a different kind of sentences now - a lifetime of looking over his shoulder for IRA assassins who have vowed to kill him.

In the last 15 months, the

Wandering Macaw Is Back In Its Cage

MOORESVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Popeye themacaw, a bird on the lam since she winged away from her owners shoulder 16 months ago, was back in custody Monday.

Were just so excited, said Ruth Goodrum, 31, who with her husband Freddie owns the parrot, which measures 3 feet from head to tail. We just cant believe she made it, out of captivity, for 16 months.

The $1,200 blue and gold ^ macaw was safely plucked - with much squawk and flutter - from a wild cherry tree after a neighbor spotted suspicious activity and heard unusual sounds in a tree Sunday.

Shes now doing time in the slammer. And in a fowl mood as she waits for her wings to be clipped.

She was mad, Goodrum said. Shes completely wild again. We finally got her to eat peanuts out of our hands. She seems to recognize us. Startled by a slamming gate, the macaw took to the sky last year while being taken from the Goodrums pet shop to their home next door. He disappeared until Sunday.

I was just sitting there on the porch about 7 oclock '' reading my Sunday school lesson, said Bill Young, a friend who lives a few blocks from the Goodrums. And I heard this unusual noise and I knew it wasnt a neighborhood bird. It

sounded a lot like a peafowl or something like that.

A look around the corner revealed the bird in a neighbors cherry tree. The Goodrums were summoned. They called the Mooresville Fire Department, which turned out with hoses to knock the bird from the tree and wet her wings to prevent further flights.

Instead, she fled, landing high in a massive oak a block away. Popeye was so high the Goodrums gave up and went home.

IRA and INLA have executed eight alleged defectors. Four other informers have retracted their evidence, two following threats to their families, but 13 are either testifying or waiting under police guard in hideouts in England to talk in court.

Guerrilla violence has fallen off in the last 18 months while the factions regroup to weed out suspected informers.

Informed sources said every IRA member picked up by police for questioning is interrogated by guerrillas after his release to determine if he let anything slip.

Anyone who so much as comments on the weather to interrogators faces disciplinary action, one source said.

The guerrilla groups have developed a new tactic to try to silence the collaborators - kidnapping their relatives.

The INLA last week snatched the stepfather and 13-year-old sister of informer Harry Kirkpatrick,, the groups one-time operations director. They seized his wife

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Green Defense Fund Launched

By The Associated Press FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - A Fayetteville attorney and former state legislator has begun a fund to help pay the cost of defending Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green against stale bribery charges.

Sneed High said Green did not ask for the fund and knew nothing about it until Thursday.

It was my idea, in col-,, laboration with some other people, High said. Its something that has been done in the past; its a way for those who participate in it to show their support for the lieutenant governor.

Sneed said he has no goal for the fund and hasnt kept track of the number of contributions.

Green was indicted in June by a Wake County grand jury on charges of conspiring to accept bribes.

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Elizabeth, 24, in May.

The organization warned that if he testified against 18 accused guerrillas, it will result in the immediate execution of all these captives. But police sources said Kirkpatrick, 25, has not retracted his testimony.

We are engaged in a war of liberation against the Crown forces, said the INLA. Those who inform betray this struggle and those who fight for freedom.

If the only way that pressure can be put on these informers is by putting pressure on their families, so be it.

Kirkpatrick was sentenced to jife imprisonment in June for killing five soldiers and policemen and for eight attempted murders. But official sources said he is expected to get generous parole after a few years. Raymond Gilmour, 23, is testifying against 21 alleged guerrillas even though the Provos are holding his

61-year-old father. Patrick. When he took the witness stand last Friday, a man in the public gallery yelled, Your dads going to die.

Police suspect that Patrick Gilmour may be a willing hostage. He said in a television interview two days before.he was taken fromihis Londonderry home last November, "Im ashamed of my son.

But Gilmours sister, Dympna, said, The IRA says theyll kill my father, I dont think theyll go back on their word.    *

Black, 29, his wife, Kathleen, and four children have been smuggled abroad with new identities by British authorities. A senior police officer in Belfast said the IRA will be going flat out to find him. and theres no doubt in anybodys mind what theyll do if they ever catch up with him.

Chris is as good as dead, said Blacks 62-year-old mother after her sons evi

dence put top IRA gunmen behind bars.

He turned states evidence in return for immunity from prosecution after he was arrested Nov. 21, 1981, and was threatened with a 10-year sentence for carrying a gun.

Released after a five-year stretch in Belfasts Maze prison 11 months earlier, he admitted. "I couldnt face going inside again.

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In The AreaNo Significant Local Effect ByWebb Wins Clemson Scholarship

David Webb of Ayden bas been awarded an Alumni Presidential Scholarship at Clemson University for the 1983-84 school year. He is a graduate of Ayden-Grifton High School and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gavan ONeal and Laura Webb.Physicians Join ECU Department

' Nicholas H. Benson and Suzanne M. Shepherd have joineH^^partment of emergency medicine at the East Carolina ufrtversifySchool of Medicine.

Both are specialists iiilnnergency medicine and will serve as physicians in the emer^cy department at Pitt County Memorial Ho^ital.

Benson recently completed'^idency training in emergency medicine at the Universn)ko[ Illinois Affiliated Hospitals. He received his undergraduate degree^ froiff the University of South Dakota.

Dr., Shepherd completed her residency training at Georgetown and George Washington universites in a joint emergency medicine program. She received undergraduate degrees from both Goucher College and Georgetown University and her medical degree from Georgetown.

DR. NICHOLAS H. BENSONGenealogy Workshop Scheduled

Applications are still being accepted on a last-minute basis for the a genealogy workshop to be held at Peace Colige in Raleigh Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

A fee of $85 ($70 for members of the N.C. Genealogical Society) covers workshop registration, the Friday evening reception, lunch Saturday and Sunday and the Saturday night banquet. Fee for the workshop is $30 ($20 to society members), and the banquet only is $10.

For more details and for registration reservation, call 847-1311 or 876-3407.

Chorus To Sponsor Bus Trip

The Gospel Chorus of Arthur Chapel will sponsor a bus trip to Asheville Sept. 30-Oct. 2. For more information call 758-0276.

Chamber To Publish Map

The Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Commerce has announced that it will publish a new updated Greenville-Pitt County map, which will be reviewed and revised by the citys planning department.

The chamber said that 20,000 of the maps will be made available to banks. Realtors, motels, newcomers to the area, and the general public.

Any chamber member wishing to advertise in the map presentation should contact Pat Burnette at 752^101.

Toastmasters To Meet Wednesday

Greenville Toastmasters Club K2595 will meet Wednesday at Archies Steak House. Dinner will be at 6 p.m. and the program will begin at 7 p.m.

The program will feature four prepared speeches presented by Carol Byrd, Betty Topper, Lloyd Flanagan and Tom Houston. John Lee Stokes will serve as Toastmaster of the evening and Carol Lunney will be the table topics master.

The Greenville Toastmasters meet the second and fourth Wednesday evening of each month. For more information about the Toastmasters development program, call 756-8171.

Collision Causes $2,800 Damage

Cars driven by Lea Layne Hinson of 707 East Second St. and Willie Ray Morris of Dudley collided about 9:41 a.m. Monday at the intersection of Stantonsburg Road and Johns Hopkins Drive.    '

Police, who charged Ms. Hinson with following too closely,

Says Apes Are

Model Parents

By JEFF MAYERS Associated Prss Writer

EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) - A primatologist says he monkeys around with his two children, while giving them lots of attention and affection, in an attempt to raise happier offspring by imitating the great apes.

Terry Maple, a comparative psychologist at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, said he developed his unusual theory of child rearing after 10 years of research into how zoos can provide happier surroundings for their orangutans, orillas and chimpanzees.^

Imitating apes, which Maple calls natural parenting, could provide a biological model for monitoring behavior and solving parenting problems. he told a news conference at the annual meeting of the Ameri-can Society of Primatologists.

I think it would ... make people happier, he said Monday. The meeting at Michigan State University continues through Wednesday.

Maple, 36, said he and his wife hav used the method on their two daughters, ages 1 and 3, and it has worked "marvelously.

As an'example, he said parents can develop independence in children not by forcing youngsters to depend on themselves but by showering them with care in the first three years of life.

Apes nurture very close bonds with their offspring resulting in a confident and secure animal. Maple said.

A monkey in a secure environment is a monkey that explores, he said, explaining that his theory applied to humans as well. "The confident, secure individual is one that explores and does things.

When his children had problems, he said, he and his wife tried to think of ourselves as primates.

He said that when he noticed his older daughter was "fussy when stationary .. . I thought a primate needs to be moved around. So he put her in a harness and carried her around with him.

The problem was solved.^hesaid.

estimated damage at $2,500 to the Hinson car and $300 to the Morris vehicle.

Prime Rate Hike, Opine BankersPlumbing, Heating Exams Set

The State Board of Examiners of Plumbing and Heating Contractors will hold certification examinations Oct. 3-5.

Examinations on Oct. 3 will include heating, group 3, classes I and II, and heating, group 2. Class I plumbing examinations will be on Oct. 4, while examinations on Oct. 5 ^will include plumbing, class II and Heating, group 1, class I and II.

Applications should be filed with the board at P.O. Box 110, Raleigh, N.C. 27602, no later than midnight Sept. 5.,Arrest Made In Forgery Case

mville police have arrested Gregory Maurice Williiigham of Washington on two counts of forgery and utterin^ollowing investigation of incidents on July 18 a) Food Lioma^d Kroger Save-On.

Chief GlemhQannon said Willimgham, 21, alleg forged checks for$75 at each of the stores.

BySTUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer

Local bankers today said. they dont feel the increase in the prime rate Monday, from

10.5 percent to 11 piercent, will have a significant effect fie local economy.

prime rate is the base which banks compute Brest charges on short-business loans. Con-ler loans are not directly tfected by changes in the irime rate. However, the Aprime is an indicator of the trend in interest rates.

The prime has been de

clining since it reacfietM?-percent in February 1982. Mondays hike was the first increase since the prime reached 10.5 in February of this year.

I dont think the advance suprised too many people, Reid Hooper of Wachovia Bank said. The general cause was the enormous amount of money the U.S. government is borrowing ... creating pressure on the money supply. The Fed, Hooper said, "is worried about inflation and throughDiamond RingFtepoHed Stolen

Police today were investigating the theft of a ring valued at $5,000 from the home of Dorothy S. Bowen at 401 Rotary Ave, Chief Glenn Cannon said the diamond ring was reported missing Friday.

DMV Prepares

Safe Reported Taken From Home

Register Voters

DR. SUZANNE M. SHEPHERD

Greenville police today were investigating the Sunday night theft of a safe from the home of Alton Ray Thomas at 407 Meade St.

Chief Glenn Cannon said Thomas received a call Sunday night that said his son had been involved in a traffic accident and was at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. The chief said when Thomas arrived at the hospital, he was told that his son was not there. When he returned home, about 11:30 p.m., he found his house had been entered and the safe removed from the bedroom.

Cannon said the safe contained $3,900 in cash, including 25, $100 bills, four silver dollars, 10 fifty-cent pieces and a .38 caliber pistol.Adventists Hear Visitor

James G. Fulfer, from Port-au-Prince, Haiti, was guest speaker Saturday at The Greenville Seventh-day Adventist Church. His topic was How Can I Be Sure I Am Ready For Heaven?

Formerly of Pitt County, Fulfer has spent 14 years in overseas mission service and is director of Seventh-day Adventist World Service in Haiti. His wife is the former Olive Tyson of Ballards Cross Roads. She is director of community health for SAWS.

They are visiting relatives in this area before returning to Haiti later this month.

The 1983 General Assembly ratified a public bill authorizing drivers license examiners to register voters and accept    changes of

address, and    appropriated

almost $1 million per year to the Division of Motor Vehicles to implement the program.

A summary of elections legislation compiled by the Institute of    Government

noted that the bill stipulates that only citizens renewing licenses or having other driver license business will be able to use the examiner for voter registration.

desired and instructional sessions for the examiners would be necessary, he said.

Brock, who said he did not look for the rules and regulations to be written in the next two or three weeks, said there is a possibility the registration program could be implemented as a pilot project in two or three areas of the state. It will take some time to implement, he said.

Alex Brock, executive sec-retary-director of the State Board of Elections, said the measure proposes that people who go to renew their drivers licenses would be able to register at the same time. He said, It is not proposed as another registering place.

The' spokesman said it would be up to DMV to purchase what they consider to be the necessary sophistications to existing computer equipment in order to handle the project.

their actions, tried to put a damper on too much money in circulation, which fuels inflation.

Hooper said he feels the rate increase will not adversely affect economic recovery unless the prime rate continues to increase. Then Ill begin to worry. If it goes to 12 or 13 percent, weve got a problem.

Hooper said the primes effect on the economy is "really a state of mind. People worry about it and dont turn loose their money. They dont want to go into debt.

"Hopefully we wont see another increase in the prime for the balance of the year, he said.

I dont think it will have a whole lot of effect, Bill Glidewell of First State Bank said. All other rates are up anyway. The prime is just falling into line.

Planters National Banks Ray Boleman said, I think the prime rate certainly has an effect. But since the increase was only one-half a point, I dont think it will have any significant impact on borrowing; There is still a good, strong demand.

We see the economy remaining strong for the balance of the year.

Larry Mallard of NCNB said the increase in the prime rate will have its effect in attitude as much as anything. I think business people have expected the prime rate to go up because of the money market rate

increases over the past several weeks.

People will be more cautious, especially in cqn-struction... auto sales: Mallard added that, We think the rate increase wl be short lived. We think and hope it will be temporary. Branch Banking and Trusts Jerry Powell said, the cost of money has been going up week after week, and su^ested that the increase in prime was inevitable. I thou^t it would go up more than it did.

Powell continued, I dont think the increase in the prime rate will have much effect on business locally. But he said the increase in mortgage rates will have a pretty dramatic effect on construction if it continues. With the cost of njoney increasing over the past several weeks, the prime had

to go,Powell suggested.

I hope it will go down.

Most see it as a short trni situation. I hope it will go back in the reasonably near future, but your guess is as* good as mine, Powell said.

Generally, conventional mortgage rates dipped below the 13 percent mark in May, before starting to climb back up. Monday conventional rates generally ranged from 14 to 14.5 percent at most lenders.

The rate on loans guaranteed or insured by the Federal Housing Administrtation and the Veterans Administration Monday was

13.5 percent.

Brock said the bill seemed to be supported by the current administration and the elections board made it one of its recommendations.

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Kidney Unit Sets Boundaries

The Eastern Carolina chapter of the North Carolina Kidney Foundation has set its boundaries to include Pitt, Washington, Martin, Lenoir, Beaufort, Greene, Craven and Edgecomb counties.

The chapter provides research, public education, patient services, encurgement for the organ donor program and legislative awareness about kidney programs. The next meeting will be Sept. 1.

According to Brock, rules and regulations regarding the new program will have to be written by the state elections board, which will be authorized to appoint whatever number of examiners in whatever offices as deemed appropriate as registration commissioners. Print forms will have to be

Solar Fraction

the solar fraction for this area Monday, as computed by the East Carolina University Department of Physics, was 84. This means that a solar water heater could have provided 84 percent of your hot water needs.

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Boat Mishap

TAR HEEL, N.C. (AP) -The bodies of three men were pulled from the Cape Fear River Monday, 30 hours after the boat they were riding in capsized in turbulent waters below W.O. Huske Lock and Dam No. 3.

The victims were identified as Dalis Locklear, 36, and Tasley Locklear, 47, both of Maxton, and David Waite of Laurinburg, sheriffs officials said.

Officials said the boat apparently was caught in the spillway currents moments before it ran against the dam, filled with water and capsized.

Bladen County Sheriff Earl Storms said the bodies surfaced about 3:20 p.m., just before a large-scale search to include a rough water diving team from Ft. Bragg.

H.B. McKenzie, a wildlife enforcement officer, said 16-foot fiberglass boat was found standing straight up in the water, with about two feet of bow showing. Several lifejackets were found floating in the river and under the cabin of the boat.

He said No. 3 is the most dangerous of the thre locks on the river, McKenzie said.

It would have been a helpless situation even if youd seen them go down. You still couldnt do anything to help them, McKenzie said.

mm

Maple admitted that it might be difficult for a working couple to institute the system because of the time and effort required. But he said anyone could buy into it in whole or part, and suggested that a couple pick a day-care center that promotes high contact and not one where one person manages 30 babies.

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Air Conditioning Costs

WASHINGTON (AP) - The nations air conditioning bill was an estimated 22 percent above normal during the last three weeks of July as a sweltering heat wave spread oppressive humidity the Rocky Mountains to the East Coast, weather experts say.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Monday that Americans spent rou^ly $377 million more than normal for air conditioning to escape the summer heat wave that has been blamed for many deaths.    ^

The heat wave, which has regained its momentum in some regions, began in the Rocky Mountain region July 5 and spread eastward to the Atlantic coast by July 11.

Between July 11 and July 30, a total of about $2,053 billion was spent to run electric air conditioners, the weather agency reported. So far this year, the nations air conditioning bill is estimated at $5.17 billion, still 3 percent below normal because of cool spring weather.

The current heat gave is not as severe as others, including a 1980 hot spell that raised electric bills an estimated $1.5 billion above normal, the agency said.

The calculation is determined through a formula based on temperatures, not on electric usage.

The East North Central states had the hottest weather as the regions air conditioning bill was 66 percent - or $433 million - above normal. The region includes Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin.

Approximate cooling costs in other regions for the three weeks were estimated as:

-New En^and, $92 million, 34 percent above normal. Includes Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rlwde Island.

-Mid-Atlantic, $340 million, 26 percent above normal. Includes New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

-West North Central, $193 million, 39 percent above normal. Includes Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska and the Dakotas.

-South Atlantic, $389 million, 17 percent above normal. Includes Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, the Carolinas, Virginia and West Virginia.

-East South Central, $157 million, 15 percent above normal. Includes Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee.

-West South Central, $286 million, 4 percent below normal. Includes Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas.

-Mountain, $70 million, 1 percent below normal, includes Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, Montana, Idaho, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming.

-Pacific, $85 million, 10 percent below normal. Includes California, Oregon and Washington.

Cooling costs are estimated by comparing the average daily temperatures at 198 weather stations to the normal temperature, based on historical records. The difference between the two is then used to calculate electrical costs throui a formula that allows for population and electric rate disparities.

Monsoon-Like Winds Send Surf Crashing Against Caiif, Coast

A Few Members Of Congress Take A Chance Against Odds

ByJIMDRINKARD

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - A few members of Congress are sticking their necks out over an issue that their most influential colleagues say is political suicide; cutting the annual inflation increases in Social Security and other federal benefit programs.

The proposal is taking several forms, but most versions would trim the annual cos-"t-oMiving increases, now pegged to the Consumer . Price Index, to the amount of increase in the CPI minus 2 "or 3 percent.

The idea is that because of ^small errors in the formula, -the growth in government ^pension checks each year ^actually runs somewhat ''ahead of the actual inflation rate. With federal deficits < expected to grow by another

$1 trillion over the next five years, the reasoning goes, something in the federal budget has to give.

Im convinced were facing an economic Dunkirk in 19M or 1985 unless we can get these deficits down, said Rep. Jim Slattery, a freshman Democrat and real estate man from Topeka, Kan.

Slattery, who believes growing interest rates are already within 1 percentage point of shutting down the housing industry, says Deficits are going to absolutely destroy us economically.

If both future benefit increases in non-welfar pension programs and future income tax cuts are held to 3 percent below the CPI, deficits would be reduced $117 billion by 1988, proponents say.

Jury Deliberating...

:: (Continued from Pagel) dercover agents that if they would look after his friend Williamson he would play ball with them.

McCullough described Williamson as a bitter man because he hadnt received a dime for many of his hours of public service.

Williamson had made up his mind he was going to get his, McCullough said.

He said Soles also was worried about keeping Riggins happy because Riggins could turn out the black vote that kept electing Soles to the General Assembly. But McCullough accused Soles of misleading and using Riggins without a thought of how Riggins might be hurt by the scheme.

Riggins was convicted earlier this year of one count of mail fraud in connection with the referendum. He had faced a maximum of five years in prison and a $1,000 fine.

Prosecutors recommended a probationary sentence because of his willin^ess to testify and help with the probe. McCullough said in court Tuesday that Riggins allowed prosecutors to tap his phone conversations with people named during testimony in Soles trial, and Fox praised him for cooperating.

McCullough said Monday it was clear that phrases used in the tapes by Williamson and Soles-taking care of people and keeping them happy - meant giving people money. He noted that Riggins testified that Soles gave him money just before elections in 1978 and 1982 and argued there was no evidence Soles believed things would be any different with the referendum.

McCullough argued that Soles ego, boosted by the admiration of local citizens, caused him to believe he was above the law.

Somewhere along the way ... he has decided these laws really dont apply to him, McCullough said. The lawmaker is charged with a tremendous amount of power by the public. It has always been the belief of many people that theyre supposed to obey the law. If they (legislators) are in fact above the laws, none of the rest of the system is worth saving.

McCullough said the un

dercover agents had no effect on Soles, they merely observed him doing businesis as usual.

All the undercover agents did in this investigation was to allow people to conduct their affairs as they had conducted them all along, he said.

But defense attorneys portrayed Soles as a champion of the needs of poor people, both black and white, who was tricked by FBI agents into a situation he never would have entered on his own.

The methods used in this case in getting that gentleman (Soles) to the place he is now not only are sordid but are absolutely bizarre, said Soles attorney Edward L. Williamson.

Williamson said Soles obviously was the target of the investigation and he was set up by the agents and the government officials to whom they answered.

Williamson portrayed Ed Walton Williamson as a poor, unattractive man who had not been involved in crime until he met the agents. He said the agents practically forced Williamson to take money although he defended Williamsons right to accept the cash as long as he didnt use his office to get it.

Williamson and another defense attorney, Joe Cheshire V, said Soles only wanted to keep his supporters happy in the sense that Soles didnt want to go against their wishes.

F^information on the services provided by the City Public , Works Department, call 752-4137.

One key to selling the idea to the public and to nervous congressional colleagues, says Slattery, is that the idea not be perceived as a cut in benefits. Instead, he says it should be seen as a way for everyone to contribute to long-term economic recovery, either through slightly higher taxes or slightly lower pension checks.

Im not asking people to do with less, he says. Im just saying, Can you do with what youve got?

Slattery is one of about a dozen or so House members, including Budget Committee Chairman Jim Jones, D-Okla., who hope concern about rising interest rates will quicken their colleagues interest in the idea during Congress August recess.

When the House returns in September, Slattery and Rep. Brian J. Donnelly, D-Mass., hope to form an ad hoc committee to refine the idea and promote it.

In the Senate, the proposal is being marketed by Sens. John Danforth, R-Mo., and David Boren, D-Okla.

Critics of the idea, however, are blunt |in their assessment.

Its not going to happen, Sen. Robert J. Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over Danforths proposal. Its a great idea, but maybe in three or four years itd be a better idea. Its a responsible effort, but politically its stillborn.

The reason. Dole says, is that most of the $60 billion in savings from holding down benefit checks - some $48 billion - would come from Social Security.

Members of Congress remember the fallout from the effort in 1981 to cut the Social Security minimum benefit, and they remember how it took every ounce of statesmanship Capitol Hill and the White House could muster to pass a Social Security reform measure

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You would have absolutely no credibility if you told senior citizens youve got it repaired now, and then said were going to go back and fix it again even though it aint broke, Dole said.

' The president wouldnt touch it with a 10-foot pole, Dole said. And Claude Pepper would probably collapse if you trotted that out on him, he said of the 82-year-old House Rules Committee chairman and congressional advocate of the elderly.

Rep. Barber Conable, R-N.Y., ranking minority member of the House Ways and Means Committee, went farther, calling the effort a waste of time and a phony promotion.

We are not going to revisit Social Security, Conable says. If these people think that in the middle of a presidential campaign were going to cut Social Security, then they arent living in a real political world.

ByDEANFOSDICK Associated Press Writer A cool front headed for the Northeast today, as monsoon-like winds sent surf crashing into over 100 homes in Southern California, including 90 in the exclusive Malibu Colony. Thunderstorms rolled through Texas, causing a highway accident that killed three people.

Thunderstorms today continued along the Gulf Coast from eastern Texas across Florida and were widely scattered from Utah across southern Nevada through southern Arizona.

Record-breaking heat seared the East on Monday, with a 96-degree high in Boston that broke the record of 95 set in 1949. But early morning storms today doused New England and parts of New York state.

Wind-driven surf plagued Malibu, where 90 homes, including one owned by singeb Barbra Streisand, were damaged late Monday, said Los Angeles fire Capt. Richard Kauffman.

I was in Barbra Streisands home, and the waves were coming into the front room, Kauffman said today.

Two women and a man were injured in Monday nights storms, he said. All three were in one Malibu home when a giant wave came in over the patio and broke through the plate glass window,* Kauffman said. One person, a security guard, caught a woman as she was floating by.

In San Diego, 10-foot surf pounding the shoreline kocked down a 20-foot section of the Oceanside Pier, which had been closed since last winter because of earlier storm damage.

In Texas, where heavy rains prompted flash flood warnings in three counties, three people died Monday after a tractor-trailer truck jack-knifed on a rain-slick road and plowed into two cars.

In New York City, Consolidated Edison officials reported record demand for electricity as the mercury

rose to 94 on Monday.

It was the I3th straight day of temperatures over 90 in Washington, D.C., short of the 20 consecutive days recorded during the heat wave of 1980. Similar temperatures have been recorded on 27 of the past 38 days.

A lingering series of heat waves has claimed at least 183 lives in 15 states since early July, officials said. In Missouri, one heat death occurred Thursday and two on Friday to bring that states total to 46.

In Baltimore, which has recorded highs over 90 on 27 of the past 39 days, the National Weather Service said this years heat wave was the worst in 28 years.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration meanwhile reported that Americans spent about $2.055 billion, or $377 million more than normal, for air conditioning in the last three weeks of July. It blamed unually hot and humid conditions.

The trend continued at Bradley International Airport, near Hartford, Conn., where a record high for the date of 96 was re ported Monday, surpassing by 2 degrees the old record set in 1916.

High winds accompanying thunderstorms cooled things down as they moved into Nw England late in the day, uprooting trees and downing power lines. A church steeple was toppled by gusts at Troy, N.Y., about five miles east of Albany, officials said.

A storm dropped hail as big as ping-pong balls Mon* day night in northern Vermont, where residents in Colchester, Westford and Underhill reported seeing twisters tear up trees. Power lines were knocked down but no serious injuries were reported.

There were hundred-foot trees dropping all over, said

Lois Mosley of Colchester 1 saw two trees pulled up by their roots.

In Florida, high winds whipped through a mobile home park in Palm Beach County, destroying three. trailers, damaging 10 others and injuring two people, authorities said. The winds also cut telephone service and power. A plane was overturned and another landed atop a third Monday as winds gusting to more than 70 mph ripped through the St. Augustine Airport, the highway patrol said.

Humane Society officia closed North Miami Beach pet store in sweltering heat and without food or water were rescued during the weekend.

We got a locksmith and opened the store and upon going 'inside 1 found deplorable conditions, said Lyle Benjamin, an administrative aide with the Humane Society of Greater Miami. The store owner was charged with cruelty to animals, Benjamin said.

A man whose dog had to escape from a hot car by crashing through its window Sunday was placed on probation in Baltimore for cruelty to the animal. He also agreed Monday to give $1,000 to the humane society.

A freak thunderstorm and high surf combined with muggy heat in Southern California, where one house damaged by surf had to be condemned and a sandbagging operation mounted at Capistrano Beach.

At Blue Lagoon, in the unincorporated community of South Laguna, 16 homes were evacuated before the

biggest breakers rolled in Monday, with 11 of the structures suffering light to moderate water damage, said Judy Alderfer, spokeswoman for the Orange County Fire Department.

The waves, were anywhere from 4 to 8 feet, breaking in front of the sea wall and the spray was coming up over two-story houses. Ms. Alderfer said.

We have high pressure over the central Rockies, spinning clockwise, that pulls the air across Mexico and into Southern California, Don Gales, a National Weather Service forecaster with the Los Angeles office, said about the unusually high tides. "Its like the monsoon; we get it every summer.

George OMalley of Bostons Metro(K)lilan District Commission, which maintains nine beaches, said attendance has increased 10 percent to 15 percent over last year as city dwellers try to cool off.

Theyre crowded one on top of another, said Mary Novak, a 71-year-old bathhouse attendant at Bostons Revere Beach.

In Texas, meanwhile, some Austin residents were forced to leave their homes briefly as a line of heavy thunderstorms moved through the central part of the state, dumping over 4 inches of rain on some co.nmunities and stranding vehicles in high water.

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r

*-The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, August 9,1963

Stock And Market Reports

Rebel,Leader Sees Madness In Pursuing A Hostile Policy

Obituaries

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 50 cents to 75 cents higher. Kinston 47.50, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadbourn, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 46.25, Wilson 48.00, Salisbury unreported. Rowland 46.50, Spiveys Corner 46.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 35.00, Fayetteville

35.00, Whiteville 34.50, Wallace 35.00, Spiveys Corner 36.00, Rowland 35.00. 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 51.00 cents. The final weighted average was 52.98 cents f o b. dock or equivalent. The market tone for next weeks trading is steady to steady-weak and the live supply is light to moderate for a mostly moderate demand. Weights light to desirable, mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Tuesday was

1.837.000, compared to 1,778,000 last Tuesday.

Hens

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina hen market was 1 cent higher. Supplies adequate. Demand good. Prices paid per pound for hens over 7 pounds at farm for Monday and Tuesday slaughter was 21 cents.

NEW YORK (AP)-Stock prices were mostly lower in morning trading tciday as the market struggled to rally from its steep slide of the previous session.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, halving tumbled 20.23 points Monday to a four-month low, recovered 2.71 points to 1,165.77 after the first two hours of trading. It had been up more than four points shortly after the opening bell.

The Dow Jones utility average rose a fraction, but its transportation measure edged lower.

Overall, declines held a 7-5 lead over advances on the New York Stock Exchange, yet the NYSEs composite index inched up 0.03 to 92.22.

Big Board volume totaled 35.48 million shares at noon EDT. compared with 29.80 million at that hour Monday.

Stocks nosedived Monday after major U.S. banks raised their prime lending rates to 11 percent from 10.5 percent - the first industrywide increase in 18 months.

Among the rebounding blue chips were American Telephone & Telegraph 1 to 64^(, General Motors 1 to 67, General Electric 4 to 47 and American Express h to 63^4.

At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index slipped 0.65 to 226.89.

NEW YORK (API

-Midday stocks

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AMR Corp

29".

30

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47

46".

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Allis Chaim

16

15.

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Alcoa

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38".

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17

17

17

AmBrands

SO'.

50

50

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39".

39".

Am Cyan

48

47',

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21".

21".

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7'-..

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31

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64"

63".

64

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25 "v

25'.

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Beth Steel

21'.

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21

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40'.

40

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35'.

34".

35'.

Borden

53.

53'-.

53.

Burlngt Ind CSX Coro CaroPwLl

36'.

35".

15".

67'-.

67'.

67',

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20.

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63.

63".

63.

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14'-.

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Following are selected 11 a m market quotations:

AshlandprC Burrougfis

Carolina Power k light Collins It Aikman Conner Duke Eaton Eckerds Exxon Fieldcrest Halteras Hilton Jefferson Deere Lowe's McDonalds McGraw Piedmont Pizza Inn PItG

TRW. Inc United Tel

Dominion Resources Wachovia

OVER THE COUNTER Aviation    15',-16

Branch    23',-23',

Little Mint    ,-i'4

Planters Bank    19',-19',

24. 48', 20's 25. 26', 39', 29. 32 45", 22'-, 7, 69', 40', 73'-, 36 18. 37', 19', 54S 32', 43', 51's 47", 43 s 50', 66', 30', 41", 22. 34", 29S 44', 48', 22s

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38

50,

21",

37>.4

24',

22",

40',

25,

36 34

15",

'51',

32',

38",

24-",

57',

34",

34',

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51,

69",

22",

21',

39",

By GEORGE GEDDA Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) ^ A Salvadoran rebel leader says his movement wants and needs friendly relations with the United States, declaring it would be "madness for it to pursue a policy of hostility.

Guillermo Ungo, Head of the Democratic Revoluiionary Front, says the insurgent alliance seeks "friends, not enemies or masters. He commented in an article appearing in the fall issue of Foreign Policy magazine.

The Reagan administration maintains that a rebel victory in El Salvador would inevitably lead to the establishment of a Marxist government hostile to U.S. interests in the region.

But Ungo, whose FDR is the political arm of the Farabundo Marti Liberation Front guerrilla fighters, wrote that for reasons of survival the insurgent movement wants and needs to establish and to maintain dignified and collaborative relations with the United States.

The alliance is well aware of how difficuld it has been to mobilize the country to oppose the oligarchy, he said. It would be madness to add to this problem an absolute barrier, the hostility of the first superpower in the world.

He said the FDR-FMLN is not a communist movement seeking support only from Cuba but rather has sought broad-based support to guarantee its non-aligned position.

The FDR-FMLN understands that very well that to reconstruct El Salvador, aid from many sources will be required, especially from the Western world, Ungo said. FDR-FMLN non-alignment is, consequently, a position of principle, of necessity, and of political convenience.

The administrations position on El Salvador was outlined in a separate Foreign Policy magazine article written by Nestor Sanchez, deputy assistant secretary of defense for inter-American affairs.

El Salvador, he said, is the prime target of communist expansion today. Arguing against proposals for a guerrilla role in the Salvadoran government, Sanchez wrote that history shows thatonce their foot is in the door, communists inevitably consolidate po wer rather than apportion it.

The Salvadoran Marxists would be no more likely to break this pattern than were their counterparts in Nicaragua, he said.

Meanwhile, the new Army chief of staff, Gen. John Wickham, said Monday he now sees no potential for expanded U.S. military involvement in Central America. But a top Nicaraguan diplomat, Saul Arana, told a news conference here he believes it is just a matter of time before American combat troops are sent to the region.

Wickham, holding his first extensive meeting with reporters since assuming his duties in late June, said that although he foresees no need at present for wider U.S. military involvement in the region, I dont know what the scenario might be in the future.

Repeating President Reagans remark in June, Wickham said he would never say never.

Earlier, Arana told a news conference at the Nicaraguan

May See Drop In Assessment

By The Associated Press

Tobacco fanners could see a 2-cents-a-pound drop in their annual assessment to support the federal tobacco loan program under a federal projection released Monday. but a tobacco expert called the forecast premature.

The projection came in a status report by U.S. agriculture department of' ficials to the Board of Directors of the Commodity Credit Corp. last week. It suggests that the farmers

By The Associated Press The following are preliminary gross sales figures for N.C. flue-cured tobacco reported by the Federal-State Tobacco Market News Service for Monday:

Eastern Belt

Market    Daily    Daily    Daily

Site    Pounds    Value    Avg.

Ahoskie............................................ no    sale

Clinton......................  391,734    612,866    156.45

Dunn.......................... 355,441    531,682    149.58

Farmville..................... 449,756    718,839    159.83

Gldsboro..................  740,239    1,185,627    160.17

Greenvl.................... ...1,185,083    1,864,633    157.34

Kinston.............  1,152,188    1,906,361    165.46

Robrsnvl..............   v........ no sale

RockyMt................  527,476    790,099    149.79

Smithfield.................  3%,531    640,926    161.63

Tarboro ..............   no    sale

Wallace.........................   no    sale

Washngtn...............   no    sale

Wendell....................... 164,574    250,226    152.04

Williamston................... 305,540    476,048    155.81

Wilson  ........  1,586,056    2,547,029    160.59

Windsor .................. 406,230    592,163    145.77

Total ................7,660,848    12,116,499    158.16

Season Totals .............21,141,968    32,253,726    152.56

StabUization................. .3,099,457    40.4%

Average for the day of $158.05 was up $8.88 from the previous sale.

TUESDAY

7:00 pm - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center

7 30 p m Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church

7:30 pm Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at 1 ION Warren St

WEDNESDAY

9:30 a m - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 1:30 p m - Duplicate bridge at Planters Bank 6:30p.m - KiwaiisClubmeets 6:30 p m - AaL Crisis Intervention meets ^

7:00 p m. - Winterville Jaycees meet at Jaycee Hut 8:00 p.m - Greenville White Shrjne meet at Masonic Temple 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Al Anon Group meets at AA BIdg on Farmville hwy 8:00 p.m. - John Ivey Smith Council No 6600. Knights of Col umbus meet al St Peter's Catholic Church

8 00 p.m - Pitt County Ala Teen Group meiets at AA Bldg on Farmville hwy %

Cargo Ship Fall Kills A Sailor

NEWPORT NEWS. Va. (AP) - The Navy says one .sailor died and another was critically injured when they fell 80 feet into the hold of a cargo ship during a training operation at a supply depot.

Chief Austin Kent identified the dead sailor as Boatswain Mate 1st Class Kurt H. Jaeger, 34, of Massapequa Park, N.Y. The injured man was identified as Boatswain Mate 2nd Class Michael K. Brumfield, 21, of Forrest City, N.C.

Brumfield was taken to Riverside Hospital, where he was listed in critical condition.

Both men were attached to the cargo handling group at Cheatham Annex, the only Navy unit that includes stevedores, I^nt said.

Embassy that the dispatch of U.S. warships to the Central American region and the holding of military maneuvers there reflects the failure of CIA-supported efforts to threaten the Sandinista government.

This, he said, means that sooner or later American troops will be involved in the Central America region. Its a very dangerous game.

He also said the establishment of the Kissinger commission is part of a U.S. strategy to stall for time while the administration seeks to oust the Sandinista government.

Despite administration statements to the contrary, the U.S. has no real desire for dialogue, Arana said.

In related developments, the new Nicaraguan ambassador, Antonio Jarquin, said he met with Kissinger last week. He said Kissinger, who requested the meeting, told him the commission wants to visit Nicaragua and Jarquin assured him he would be welcome.

Jarquin said Kissinger stressed the commission would not be involved in negotiations, but would focus on long-range policy. ,

At the White House, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said members of Kissingers panel would be sworn in Wednesday and would receive a series of classified briefings from government officials during the next three days.

fee could be reduced from 7 cents to 5 cents a pound.

However, the projection assumes that 100 million pounds of this years flue-cured crop will be brought under government loan. The projection, made six months ago, does not reflect the current market trend, which so far has sent about a third of the 1983 leaf under loan.

It is absolutely premature to make any kind of projection what the assessment next year will be, said Fred Bond, manager of the Raleigh-based Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative Stabilization Corp.

Bond said with markets just opening, it would be months before the cooperative knows how much tobacco will go under loan.

Last year we projected 60 million pounds and we got 260 million, he said.

Bond said he didnt know the USDA had made the projection for future assessment.

According to the report, the 1982 crop faces a $90 million loss that will have to be covered by the assessments collected each year. The report also said that if just 100 million pounds of the 1983 crop goes under loan, farmers would be hit with a $30 million loss to be covered by the fees.    ^

If Stabilization acquires more than 100 million pounds - as it could under current market conditions - the cost of the tobacco program would be greater to farmers.

Stabilizations buys tobacco that fails to attract at least a penny a pound above the the government support price and holds the tobacco under loan for resale when market conditions improve.

Automotive M.'COine Shop Foeign-Domeslic Engines RebuiM

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School Bd.....

(Continued from Pagel) check into reasons that have resulted in the increase of bakery products this year over last and to provide her findings to the school board.

Approval was given to the draft copy of a 49-page document with 19 pages of appendices governing the performance appraisal system in the Greenville City Schools. The draft has been compiled to provide an interpretation of the underlying philosophy, definition of terms, the rating system, step-by-step guidance to appraisal procedures, and annual review of an appraisal system which has been mandated by the state effective with the coming school year.

The comprehensive, complex document details procedures for topics such as career/non-career evaluations; pre-observation; formal observation; informal observation; observation reports; post-observation conference; performance improvement plan; sum-mative appraisal conference; summative conference appraisal instruments; re^nse to evaluation; full cycle procedures; job description form; time table and performance appraisal cycle flow chart.

Another action pertaining to a guidance document was approval on second reading of a 3!-page document covering a number of topics in personnel policies. Individual personnel topics dealt with in the document include goals and objectives; budget planning involvement; staff involvement in decision making; professional development; complaints and grievances; staff-community relations; political activities; gifts; personnel records; health examinations; certified time schedules; certified staff work load; leaves and absences and compensation guides and contracts.

First reading approval was

given for a recruitment policy for the city schools. This will receive a second reading at a later meeting.

Director of Secondary Education Rebecca Oats presen ted a report on alternatives for the program at Agnes Fullilove School. The report outlines pros and cons for leaving the program at its present site; for moving it to Rose and Aycock as a daytime program; for moving it entirely to Rose and to operate the program as an afternoon-Zevening one; for moving the program to a school now housing K-3,; and for dividing the program - staff, students and resources along grade lines.

No action was taken on the report. Blinson has recommended that following the opening of school, another public hearing be held, with the board to consider action by the end of the calendar school year. He remarked that the merger study due from Research Triangle Park would be a factor to tie to whatevr decision is made on future use of Agnes Fullilove.

An older building, A^es Fullilove has been authorized by members of the citys building inspection team for use only during the upcoming school year unless extensive repair work is carried out.

Budget Amendment No. 2 of the current expense fund, amounting to an increase of $34,808,was approved. The amendment basically reflects changes in revenue in the state math-science program.

District Judge Is Appointed

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Gov. Jim Hunt on Monday named Quentin T. Sumner of Rocky Mount as District Court judge for Nash, Edgecombe and Wilson counties.

A 1975 graduate of North Carolina Central School of

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Close

Mr. Alan B. Close, 80, a retired sales representative of 1401 E. Second St., died at his home Tuesday. A funeral mass will be conducted at 11 a.m. Thursday at St. Peters Catholic Church by the Rev. Michael Clay. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. A prayer service will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chajwl.

Mr. Close was a native of New York and lived in New Jersey and New Orleans before moving to Greenville five years ago. He was a member of St. Peters Catholic Church.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eleanor Close; a son, Albert B. Close of Panama; a sister, Mrs. Virginia Troy of Pompton Lakes, N.J.; eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Dead Couple Is Identified

GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - Police have identified a couple killed in an apparent murder-suicide Sunday and said the slain woman had sought the arrest of the man last week.

The couple was identified as Jane Elizabeth Hoover Mastin, 28, and John Edward Hooker Jr., 32, both of Greensboro.

Police said Mastin signed a warrant against Hooker on Aug. 1, charging him with communicating threats to her, but the warrant had not been served.

Police Capt. W.L. Henderson said that when such a warrant is signed by a citizen there is usually several days delay before it is served.

The bodies were found shortly after 4 p.m. Sunday in the living room of a southwest Greensboro residence. Both died of gunshot wounds, a county medical examiner said.

Police said Ms. Mastins 12-year-old niece, who was not identified, witnessed the shooting. She ran to a neighbors home to summon help, police said.

Along with the bodies, police said a pistol was found in the living room.

Police listed Ms. Mastin as an employee of College Cleaners at Guilford College and Hooker as an employee of a hardware firm. Little else was known about the couple, police said.

I hired John in 1977, and he was a real good employee, Terry Stout, personnel manager of Genuine Hardware Fq.. where Hooker worked.

Law, Sumner succeeds Judge Jim Ezzell, who recently resigned to enter private business.

Sumner, 32, who has been in private practice since 1975, is expected to take the oath of office within the next two weeks.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday.

Hardee

Mr. Willie V. Hardee, 56, died Tuesday morning at his home in the Stokestown community. Funeral ar-rangments will be announced by the Wilkerson Funeral Home of Greenville.

Maxwell

AUGUSTA, Ga. - Mr. Grover Cleveland Maxwell, 95, died Monday at his residence, 2353 McDowell St. His funeral service will be conducted at St. John United Methodist Church Wednesday at 11 a.m. by the Rev. William G. Edwards. Interment will be in Westover Memorial Park, Augusta.

Mr, Maxwell was the owner of Maxwell Brothers Furniture Co., which includes 36 retail stores in North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, including one in Greenville, N.C. He was an organizer of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Augusta, and a director of the First of Georgia Fire and Casualty Insurance Co., the Augusta Bedding Co., the Atlas Finance Co. of Atlanta, now part of the Transamerica Corp., and Southern Finance Corp.

A veteran of World War I, he was a member of St. John United Methodist Church of Augusta, the Presidents Advisory Council of the Medical College of Georgia, the Chamber of Commerce of Augusta, the Augusta National Golf Club, the YMCA, the Pinnacle Club and the Augusta Country Club, and was chairman of the Augusta College Foundation, a life member of the Presidents Club of Augusta College, chairman emeritus of the First Railroad and Banking Co. of Georgia, the Georgia Railroad Bank and Trust Co. and the Georgia Railroad and Banking Co., and a founder of Junior Achievement of Augusta.

He was the major benefactor Of the Greenville (N.C.) Museum of Art throu^ the Rachel Maxwell Moore Foundation established by^his. late sister.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Corrie Ann Meares Maxwell of Augusta; two sons, Grover C. Maxwell Jr. of Greenville, N.C., and the Rev. George M. Maxwell of Savannah, Ga.; eight grandchildren, and one brother, Gilbert Morgan Maxwell of Seven Springs, N.C.

Arrangements are being handled by Elliott Sons Funeral Home in Augusta. Memorial contributions may be made to the Rachel Maxwell Moore Fund of the Greenville Museum of Art.

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BETHEL - Mrs. Dorothy Weaver of Bethel died Monday in Wake County Memorial Hospital, Raleigh. Funeral arrangements will be announced by Flanagans Funeral Home of Greenville.

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THE DAILY REFLECTORTUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 9, 1983

Winfield's Hitting Helps Yankees Sweep Pair From Blue Jays

By The Associated Press ^ It seems now that the Toronto Blue Jays may be an endangered species.

We were out for a little bit of revenge because of how we were treated in Toronto and we got it tonight, said Dave Winfield, whose hitting helped the New York Yankees to a doubleheader sweep of the faltering Blue Jays, 8-3 and 11-3 Monday night.

The sweep in Yankee Stadium not only extended the Blue Jays current losing streak to six games and dropped them Zh games back in fifth place in the American League East, but avenged a bad time in Canada last week. The Yankees lost three of four games to the Blue Jays and

were further humiliated by Winfields arrest for killing a bird.

Winfield became a cause celebre when a ball he threw between innings struck and killed a seagull. He was charged with cruelty to animals - sea^lls are a protected species in Canada -and had to post a $300 bond. However, the charge was dropped the next day, and an official for the Toronto police came to New York to apologize for the incident.

In other AL action, Cleveland beat Baltimore 9-4, Texas stopped Boston 12-7, Chicago tripped Detroit 5-4 in the opener of a doubleheader before losing the nightcap 7-2, Kansas City split with

Milwaukee, winning the first game 5-4 and losing the second 8-5, Minnesota stopped California 4-2 and Oakland edged Seattle 2-1.

Winfield had two singes, a double and two RBI in the opener and hit a solo homer in the nightcap. The homer-happy Yankees also got shots from Oscar Gamble in the opener and a grand slam homer by Ken Griffey and solo blast by Don Baylor in the nightcap.

When you initiate the offense and have the other team down, you can play your game, said Winfield.. They took it to us in Toronto, and we tried to do it in our home park. Fortunately, we were able to take the first couple of

Official Duty

Paul Godfrey, Metropolitan Chairman of Toronto, shakes hands with Dave Winfield of the New York Yankees between games of a

doubleheader at Yankee Stadium. Godfrey apologized for the treatment Winfield received in Toronto after the recent seagull incident. (AP Laserphoto)

Official

Apology

NEW YORK (AP) - New York Yankees outfielder Dave Winfield, who was arrested last week after a ball he threw struck and killed a seagull in Toronto, received an apology Monday night from Metro Toronto Chairman Paul V. Godfrey.

Charges were dropped following the incident in Toronto which Winfield explained was an accident and he had no intention of hurting the bird. Seagulls are an endangered species in Canada.

Between games of the Yankees doubleheader with the Blue Jays here, Godfrey spoke with Winfield who hit the bird with a throw meant for the batboy as the teams

were changing sides during a game in Exhibition Stadium.

We were both mutually sorry for what happened in Toronto and were very distressed with the way things unfolded, he said. "We, were also sorry for how he was treated.

Dave is a gentleman, he is sincere in his concern about this incident and we want to make sure that everything has been resolved between him and the Toronto government.

I dont think this did us a lot of good. It brought us a lot of bad publicity. Its a day in the life of Toronto sports that wed like to forget.

Godfrey, who is in New York on vacation, did not say it was an official apology.

Tar Wars II: W^en To Play Those Four Outs

NEW YORK (AP) - Imagine this scenario:

Its the last day of the regular season and the Kansas City Royals win at Oakland to climb within a half-game of the White Sox for the American League West title. Or, the New York Yankees lose at j Baltimore to fall a half-game behind the Orioles, Brewers, Tigers orilue Jays for the AL East flag.

But. wait. Theres one more game on the schedule or four more outs to be precise -at Yankee Stadium where the Yankees and Royals would complete their July 24 game suspended because of a controversial home run by George Brett.

Bretts pine tar-ladened bat, center of a furor 10 weeks earlier, indirectly would de-# cide one or even two division

titles the day after the season and one day before the scheduled start of the League Championship Series. The ensuing logistics problem created by a completion of the game on Oct. 3 would create another sticky situation for American League President Lee MacPhail.

He hopes it never comes to that. MacPhail, who earlier ordered the game be resumed from the point of the controversy, has asked the teams to do it Aug. 18.

Pliers on both clubs apparently would have to

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approve that date because it would fill an off-day and force the Yankees to play on 31 consecutive days and the Royals on 37 straight. The players contract says teams can play no more than 19 days in a row.

Thou^ the Yankees said they wanted to resume the game after the season, owner George Steinbrenner already has said he would raUier take the loss than have his players lose their day off in the middle of a pennant race.

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games.

Toronto rookie Matt Williams was one of the prime victims of the Yankees payback. Williams failed to retire a batter in the second game as both Griffeys slam and Baylors blast established a 5-1 lead for the Yankees in the first inning.

He made some comments about some guys on our club - Winfield, (Graig) Nettles and myself, Baylor said, noting that all three homered off him in Toronto although Williams and the Blue Jays won the game.

Indians 9, Orioles 4 In Baltimore, Broderick Perkins and George Vukovich drove in two runs apiece as Cleveland scored six times in the third inning to beat the Orioles.

Winner Rick Sutcliffe, 13-7, ending a three-game losing streak, allowed five hits, including a grand slam homer in the fourth by Joe Nolan Sutcliffe struck out seven and walked five.

Storm Davis, 10-5, was the loser.

'     Rangers 12, Red Sox 7

In Boston, Pete OBriens single broke a 7-7 tie in a five-run ninth in which Boston Manager Ralph Houk and pitcher Bob Stanley were ejected as Texas rallied for a victory over the Red Sox.

Houk and Stanley were thrown out for protesting a play at third on which Mickey Ri.vers, who had doubled, had moved up a base on a bunt. Mark Clear relieved Stanley and allowed OBriens tie-breaking single. After Jim Sundberg walked to load the bases, Larry Biittner hit a two-run double. The last two runs scored on a sacrifice fly by Bud'^y Bell and an error by catcher Gary Allenson.

That finish was a little out of the ordinary, said Texas Manager Doug Rader. U was unfortunate to see Stanley lose it like that. You cant let yourself go like that.

White Sox 5-2, Tigers 4-7 In Detroit, Tom Paciorek belted a three-run homer to lead Chicago over Detroit in the first game of their doubleheader. Pacioreks homer hi^lighted a four-run Chicago third.    ,

Larry Herndons three-run homer backed the five-hit pitching of Jack Morris as the Tigers won the nightcap.

Royals 5-5, Brewers 4-8 In Kansas City, U.L. Washington singled home the go-ahead run in the seventh inning to lead the Royals to a comeback victory over Milwaukee in the opener of a doubleheader.

Roy Howell collected four hits to pace a 16-hit attack that carried the Brewers to victory in the second game.

Twins 4, Angels 2 In Anaheim, Gary Gaetti and Tom Brunansky led off the the fifth inning with homers to spark Minnesota over California.

Gaetti, who initiated a triple play in the fourth inning, and Brunansky picked on consecutive pitches by Tommy John, 8-9, to erase Californias 2-0 lead. It was the 16th homer for each.

Ron Washington and Tim Laudner then singled before Darrell Brown bounced into a double play as Washington scored the tie-breaking run.

As 2, Mariners 1 In Seattle, Dwayne Murphy and Garry Hancock homered in the fourth inning off Jim Beattie to lead Oakland over the Mariners.

Tim Conroy, 5-4, pitched seven innings and notched his third straight victory. The surprising As won for the 11th time in their last 15 games and moved into fourth place in the AL West, passing the Angels.

They both hit sinkers that didnt sink - until they went over the fence, said Beattie, 8-8.

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Up and Over

Boston catcher Gary Allenson is upended, but manages to hang onto the ball, as Texas Rangers Wayne Tolleson slides hard into home plate during

fourth inning action at Fenway Park in Boston Monday night. Tolleson was out on the throw by Rick Miller. (AP Laserphoto)

Two Return To Steelers

By The Associated Press Despite winning their first two preseason games, the Pittsburgh Steelers have looked like a shell of their former selves on paper this summer.

Most of the household names from the four Super Bowl teams are gone and only nine players remain to try to transmit that championship feeling and winning attitude to the newer players.

Two of those steel curtain rods, safety Donnie Shell and wide receiver John Stallworth, m^inUin Qai the glory days might not yet be over. They reinforced that belief Monday by ending their three-week

holdouts and signing multiyear contracts.

When I go to camp. Im going to play, said Shell. If the Steelers dont play me, theyve wasted a lot of money.

Im happy to be back, said Stallworth, the second leading receiver in Steelers history. Whats done is done. Ive really missed those three weeks in training camp. Steelers President Dan Rooney, who would not elaborate on the terms of the contracts, noted that neither Shell nor Stallworth had been in training camp since the veterans July 15 reporting deadline. Thats not been good. But thats behind us

Hu Na Loses In Pro Debut

MANHATTAN BEAtH, Calif. (AP) - Hu Na, whose defection last year created tension between China and the United States, hopes someday to be known more for her tennis.

In the beginning, everyone was paying more atteniton to my circumstances, but now I hope they start paying attention to my tennis, Hu, formerly Chinas top-ranked woman player, said Monday night after her American pro debut.

She lost 6-4, 6-3 to Barbara Hallquist in the $150,000 Virginia Slims of Los Angeles as the tournaments opening matches also included Kate Lathams 3-6,7-6, 6-3 upset of fourth-seeded Sylvia Hanika of West Germany.

Hu, 20, appwred to play tentatively against Hallquist, the worlds 75th-ranked woman player.

This is my first match as a professional and my opponent was very tough, Hu, speaking through an interpreter, said after the night match played before a sparse crowd of some 1,700 at Manhattan Country Club.

I was nervous before the start; Ive got to play more tournaments to overcome that,

Hu defected from her national team that was visiting the United States for the

Federation Cup matches in Santa Clara, Calif., last July. After she was granted asylum, Chinas government protested strongly and cut back some cultural exchanges with the United States.

Hallquist, a former womens collegiate champion at Southern Cal, knew Hu before she defected.

I met her when the Chinese Federation cup team was practicing in Claremont (Calif.) last year, Hallquist said. She was very outgoing in comparison to the other Chinese girls who were there.

She is a good athlete. It was not an easy match.

Following their match, Latham battled back from match point for the victory over Hanika, who is ranked sixth internationally. Latham, rated 108th in the world, fell behind 6-3 in the second-set tiebreaker but then scored five consecutive points to win it. In the third set, she took command when she broke Hanikas service in the sixth game for a 4-2 lead.

Martina Navratilova is the tournaments top 'seed and Chris Evert Lloyd is seeded second. Both were scheduled to begin play today.

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now, Rooney said.

The other guys will probably beat on us a while, Stallworth said. But Im happy to have the family back together again. The family is back together now and we can proceed with business.

Both players said they expected to play some in the Steelers third preseason game Friday night against the New York Giants at Three Rivers Stadium.

Vernon Perry wont play at all for the Houston Oilers next Saturday against Tampa Bay. The strong safety, charged during the offseason with possession of cocaine, was among five players cut by the Oilers.

I dont think I was given a chance to prove myself, Perry said. I was knocked down from first-to third-team, so I felt it was best to go to Eddie (Biles, the Oilers head coach) and tell him to put me on waivers so Ill have a chance to catch on with another team.

If Perry is claimed by another NFL club, he still faces a possible suspension by Commissioner Pete Rozelle.

The Los Angeles Raiders also cut five players, including former Rams wide receiver Billy Waddy. In addition, the Raiders announced that starting offensive guard Curt Marsh would miss at least the next three months after un

dergoing surgery for the removal of an inflajmed disc. Marsh had left training camp 10 days ago.

At the Eagles camp, veteran left tackle Stan Walters retired after deciding he had lost his motivation to play.

I just dont have it anymore, the 35-year-old Walters said. After 12 years, my value system has changed and winning a football game is just not that top priority .

DillohuntTo Miss This Year

East Carolina University football recruit Ellis Dillahunt of Jacksonville has been lost for the season due to an injury he received in last weeks East-West all-^r game in Greensboro.

Ellis will not enroll at East Carolina until January of 1984, Pirate coach Ed Emory said Monday. An injury he received with a very hard hit last week has been diagnosed as two cracked vertebrate, resulting in Ellis not being cleared for eight to 12 weeks to participate in football.

Dillahunt, a 6-foot, 183-pound running back, rushed for 909 yards and scored 16 touchdowns during his senior year for Jacksonville High, which won the state 4-A championship last fall.

Coastal Stars Lose To 'Bama

VIENNA, Va. - Bill Glovar ripped a three-run homer and Albert Arnold threw a three-hitter to lead South Alabama past the Coastal Plains 16-year-old All Stars in the Regional Babe Ruth League Baseball Tournament Monday.

Glovar, Brad Hildreth and Jeff Money each had two hits for South Alabama, while no one had more than one for Coastal Plains.

Lee Wilson led off the bottom of the sixth by reaching first on an error, and Hildreth followed with a single. Glovar then yanked the ()-2 offering from Coastal pitcher Billy Michel over the fence for a 3-0

Souin Aiaoama edge. After two outs, Arnold doubled, and Jeff Money singled for the fourth run of the night.

Coastal Plains South drops to the losers bracket to play North Alabama at 4 p.m., while South Alabama advances to face Florida at 7 p.m. in the winners bracket. Coastal Coach Charles Cobum indicated Brian Alligood would be the starting pitcher for this afternoons game.

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Injuries Plague Helsinki Track

Americans Out Front

Three American sprinters - Carl Lewis, Emmitt King (both in background) and Calvin Smith (foreground) pass the finish line of the mens 100-meter final Monday even

ing to capture all three medals in the World Track and Field Championships. Lewis took the gold, Smith the silver and King the bronze. (AP Laserphoto)

Baseball Rookies Adjust To Life In Big Leagues

By JOHN NELSON AP Sports Writer At this, point of the season, rookie probably is a misnomer. More than 100 games have been played, and some of these raw, wide-eyed kids of April have become the veterans of August.

Take the example of Ron Kittle of the Chicago White Sox, who seems to have sewn up Rookie of the Year honors in the American Lea^e.

Hes made the adjustment; at least he talks like it.

On advice from veterans: 1 usually ask them where the best restaurants are on the road.

On his favorite foods: Youve got to remember. Im not a connoiseur; I'm a con-sumptioneur.

On playing minor league ball in Edmonton: 1 like Edmonton. Its a nice town, but my parents never got to see me play there. You cant get there. It takes two donkeys and a ski boat to get there.

On how he liked his first trip to New York: OK. but 1 had trouble enjoying a $20 omelette.

On his All-Star appearance: When I run out there Wednesday, Id better be wearing rubber pants.

On his first major league slump in mid-May: My weaknesses fluctuate.

Right now, his weaknesses are fluctuating again. His home run in the second game of Mondays twi-night doubleheader at Detroit was only his first since July 27. He has just five RBI since July 23, coming off a month of July in which he hit only .234. He still has 24 homers and 68 RBI, though, with a batting average of .253, and thats probably good enough to win him the ALs rookie honors.

Julio Franco. Clevelands rookie shortstop, would have had a shot if he hadnt made 21 errors in 106 games. Still, he hit .275 with 60 RBI in that span.

The rookie race in the National League is a little closer, although Atlanta Braves right-handed pitcher Craig McMurtry, with an-earned run average of 3.19 and a 12-6 record, could wrap it up with good months in August and September. McMurtry won seven of his first eight decisions and is 5-5 since, losing four in a row at one stretch.

The competition in the NL is Darryl Come Lately Strawberry. the New York Mets right fielder who was hitting only .161 with three homers on June 5. Strawberry, a 6-foot-6 left-hander who started the season in the minors, had the average up to '.228 with 15 homers and 44 RBI after 77 games; starting the surge with three homers and eight RBI in two games beginning June 26.

In his last 37 games, he has 11 homers and 27 RBI. including one off the Coke sign in deep right-center at Shea Stadium and another deep into the seats in straight

away center at Wrigley Field.

A look at some of the others: American League

Kittle has a teammate that, in another year, might have stolen the honor. He is Greg Walker, a first baseman who hit .267 with 45 RBI and seven homers in 79 games.

There are a couple more good rookies in the AL West, Kansas Citys Pat Sheridan and Californias Daryl Sconiers. Sheridan, an outfielder, had a .275 average in 56 games, and Sconiers was batting .256 in 69 games.

The Yankees have two players who entered the race too late. Don Mattingly, a first baseman, had a batting average of .331, but that was in only 41 games, and left-handed pitcher Ray Fontenot was 4-1 with a 2.55 ERA in seven appearances.

Another rookie aspirant was John Shelby, Baltimores part-time centerfielder, who hit .280 in 75 games.

National League

Greg Brock of Los Angeles was the early tout. In the limelight as Steve Garveys replacement at first base. Brock got off to a fast start before tailing off to a .211 average with 14 homers and 46 RBI through 97 games. In fact, he came close to being sent to the minors in midseason.

Another early frontrunner was Cincinnati outfielder Gary Redus, who hit a home run in his first game this season. But hes stuck at 13 homers and his average has dropped to .237 in 86 games. He had 34 RBI.

Billy Doran hasnt been getting much attention down in Houston, partially because of a .250 batting average, but the rookie second baseman has played in all but four of the Astros games this season with only 10 errors. Hes also driven in 27 runs and hit five homers.

HELSINKI. Finland (AP) -Evelyn Ashford, the world record holder in the womens 100-meter dash, crumpled to the track, grabbing her right hamstring and writhing in pain.

She was the latest victim in a series of injuries that have robbed the inaugural World Track and Field Championships of some of their expwted heroes and heroines.

With only two days of competition completed in the meet that ends Sunday, the growing injury list already contains some impressive names.

Ashford, who had reached a peak in her brilliant career last m.onth by taking the world record (10.79 seconds) from her heated rival, Marlies Gohr of East Germany, broke down Monday in the 100-meter final.

"Im very disappointed, but I will be back next year, Ashford promised after learning that she had suffered a tom hamstring muscle and her recovery period would be 8-10 weeks.

I have a few scores to settle, she added.

One of the scores will be against Gohr. The former world record holder, capitalizing on Ashfords frightening fall, won the 100 in 10.97, leading a 1-2 East German sweep.

She was not very sympathetic after capturing the gold medal.

That is her problem, not mine, that she couldnt make it, Gohr said about Ashfords injury.

I know how to beat Ashford now, she added. I let Ashford win yesterday (in Sundays second-round heats).

The injury to Ashford overshadowed a 1-2-3 American sweep in the mens 100, led by Carl Lewis, and a surprising victory by Zozislaw Hoffman of Poland in the triple jump.

Lewis, after a slow start, zipped past Calvin Sfnith near the 60-meter mark and went on to win in 10.07 seconds.

Smith, the world record holder, was second in 10.21 and Emmit King was third in 10.24, just ahead of 1980 Olympic champion Allan Wells of Scotland (10.27).

The little-known Hoffman equalled the eighth best jump in history, soaring 17.42 meters (57 feet, 2 inches). Willie Banks of the United States and Ajayi Agbebaku of Nigeria tied for second at 17.18 (56-44), but the popular American was awarded the silver medal on the basis of a better second jump.

Marita Koch of East Germany and Diane Williams of the United States won the days other medals, placing second and third respectively, in the womens 100 in 11.02 and 11.06.

ByWILLGRIMSLEY AP Special Correspondent LOS ANGELES - You can buy a canary but you cant make it sing. The tenor may refuse to exercise his lungs at the opera but whats to prevent you from burning down the opera house?

This is the rationale that is running through established tennis minds these days as the once grand old English lawn game is threatening to choke on its own success.

"If something isnt done -and done quickly - exhibitions will be the ruination of tennis. Jack Kramer dolefully predicted after watching one of the countrys most prestigious tournaments humiliated over the weekend.

"1 am dismayed over what happened to the National Clay Court Championships at Indianapolis. This is a tournament that always ranked second only to the French as an important clay court event.

All the great champions have played in it. Indianapolis built a new multi-million-dollar, 10,000-seat stadium. Promoters signed a network TV contract with CBS.

And what happens? Not one of the top six players in either the mens or womens divisions showed up. Most of them were off playing exhibitions.

"It is a shame.

A big clump of the top men players were competing instead in a $300,0000 eight-man exhibition series at nearby Newport Beach, promoted by a man named Bill Stamps.

The field was headed by Jimmy Connors and Ivan Lendl and also included Wo-jtek Fibak, Tim Mayotte.

Yannick Noah, Mats Wilander, Kevin Curren and Elliott Telscher.

The irony was that Wilander and Noah were the 1982 and 1983 winners, respectively, of the French title and would have been excellent drawing cards in the Indianapolis tournament.

The countrys - and the worlds - best woman player, Martina Navratilova, and highly rated Andrea Jaeger skipped the National Clay Court also to play an exhibition.

"Imagine how CBS must feel, said Kramer. CBS is one of the most faithful sponsors in tennis yet they were forced to put on an inferior product just because of the selfishness of the players.

No one seems to care about giving anything back to the game that feeds them. No one worries that they may be gradually killing the goose that lays the golden eggs.

Jack Kramer is virtually the father of professional tennis, although Cash and Carry Pyle, Big Bill Tilden and later Bobby Riggs promoted one night stands around the country dating back to the 1920s.

Kramer was the king.

U. S. and Wimbledon champion, Kramer became the impresario of the touring pros after World War II, later promoted his own tournament in Los Angeles and, after the game went open in 1968, emerged as the architect of the Grand Prix tour.

Many thought he should been elevated as the czar of tennis - a benevolent despot - to save the game from its

Afterward, Williams put the meet inper^tive.

"This World Championship has been a very sad one, she said, reflecting on the injuries.

Ashfords breakdown followed by one day injuries to Cubas Alberto Juantorena and Italys Sara Simeoni, both Olympic gold medalists and former world record holders.

Juantorena, winner of the 400 and 800 meters in the 1976 Summer Games, underwent surgery Monday after suffering tom ligaments and a broken bone in his ri^t foot as he fell while crossing the finish line in an 800 heat.

Simeoni, the 1980 Olympic champion in the womens high jump, suffered a pulled leg muscle during Mondays qualifying and had to be carried off on a stretcher.

Britains Keith Connor, the heavy favorite for the triple^ ' jump gold medal, also failed to get through the qualifying because of a heel injury. ^

Also Monday, Udo Beyer of East Germany, the world record holder in the mens shot put, wound up only sixth in the final after competing with a thigh bruise, and Julie Brown of the United States withdrew from the womens marathon about five miles from the finish Sunday after severely injuring her right Achilles tendon. At the time. Brown was just behind the eventual winner, Grete Waitz of Norway.

In addition, Britains Sebastian Coe, the 1980 Olympic 1,500-meter champion and world record holder in the 800 and 1,000 meters, is out of the World Championships with a glandular ailment; Pam Spencer, former American record holder in the womens high jump, withdrew after suffering a torn Achilles tendon, and American sprinter Chandra

Cheeseborough pulled out of the womens 100 and 200 because of a groin injury.

Another ailing star is Alberto Salazar of the United States. Salazar, the fastest

Ashford Exits

Evelyn Ashford, world record holder in the 100-meter dash, is helped from Helsinkis Olympic Stadium Monday evening after she fell and injured her leg int he finals of the womens 100-meter dash at the World Track and Fiel Championships. (AP Laserphoto)

marathoner in history, has been slowed by a severe case of bronchitis and barely survived the heats of the 10,000 meters, earning the last place in the final.

Ashford was running about even with Gohr when her dreams for a gold medal in the 100 ended.

She felt it (the injury to the hamstring) at 60 meters and she felt it pop, said Dr. Tony Daly, the physician for the American team. She was aware of it, but she wanted to try it anyway.

Meanwhile, Lewis triumph in the mens 100 put him on his way toward his goal of three gold medals.

He also is the overwhelming favorite in the long jump and is to anchor the United States 400-meter relay team that also is a prohibitive favorite.

I am not pleased with my time (in the 100), but it was the best I could do at the Helsinki Stadium, said Lewis, owner of the worlds fastest 100- meter clocking at sea level (9.97).

I dont feel bad about losing to a runner like Carl, said Smith, who set the world record of 9.93 last month. But I have to admit I am, after all, slightly disappointed.

Banks also had to be disappointed in finishing second in the Mle jump after being the leader throu^ the fourth of six rounds. ii But he didnt show it. He warmly embraced Hoffman when it was determined that the Pole was the champion before the winners final jump of the competition, and he con^atulated him again when the jumping ended.

Then, he got Hoffman and Agbebaku together to wave to the appreciative crowd of about 25,000 and pose for pictures.

New Duke Coach Looks For Less Yardage, But Similar Outcome

Absence Of 'Big Names' Hurts U.S. Clay Tourney

wild ambitions and unbridled indiscretions, but unfortunately it never came to pass.

Now the game is stewing in its own grease, alienating promoters, discouraging TV networks and suffering an image crisis as a bunch of arrogant, self-centered players who behave abominably on court, answer to no authority and frequently throw matches when its to their best interest to do so.

Critics have come to look upon the game as not far removed from pro wrestling pure theatre with a diminishing competitive aspect.

It is getting worse every day, said Kramer. Unless the players themselves see the danger and agree to regulation the sport is in real danger.

The players and their agents control the game, and a few are running amok.

Kramer, an avid golfer, cited the structural differences in the companion sports.

Golfers grew up with the system - the USGA and PGA, he said. They have progressed in a quiet, orderly manner. Open tennis exploded so suddenly it flew off in all directions.

Kramer suggested that with all the prize money and TV revenues available it should be easy to schedule two simultanenous tours of 30 weeks, leaving 22 weeks for exhibitions and private pursuits, but committed to at least 15.

Promoters must be guaranteed certain top players for a representative field, he said

By TOM FOREMAN Jr., AP Sports Writer

FOXFIRE VILLAGE, N.C. - New Duke football coach Steve Sloan says the Blue Devil offense this year may not be as productive as last season, even with a quarterback like Ben Bennett.

But he hopes to offset any lost offense with an improved defense.

Offensively, we still should be pretty productive. Not necessarily like Duke was last year. I dont see any way we can make that many yards. I dont know if we can average that many points, Sloan said. We still should have a good offensive team.

Duke scored 307 points and gained 4,990 yards, with Bennett passing for 3,033 yards, 20 touchdowns and 12 interceptions.

In three years, Bennett has passed for 6,528 yards and needs 3,009 more to set an NCAA record. A hindrance could be an offensive line that returns only center Philip Ebinger from 1982s starters.

Bennett can still rely on senior Mark Militello as one of his wide receivers. Replacing speedster Chris Castor will be either Glenn Tillery or Chuck

Herring.

Ted Million looks to be one of the better candidates at quick tackle, while three others line up for the strong tackle position. Mike and Mark Higginbotham are trying to become a brother act at the guard spots, although Mark Miller is listed number one at strong guard.

Three players - Scott Russell, Raymond Trice and Rick Reed - are aiming for Carl Franks vacated tight end spot.

We are very concerned about the offensive line. Weve worked hard on it initially and hopefully we can put something together prior to the first game, Sloan said.

With Greg Boone running for the Tampa Bay Bandits in the United States Football League, senior tailback Mike Grayson now has to help balance the Duke offense. Grayson was Dukes leading

rusher in 1982 with 693 yards and five touchdowns.

Hard-nosed Joel Blunk is. a leading candidate at fullback after 367 yards and seven scores last year.

Sloan said he would like to improve the defense that allowed about as many yards and points as the offense gained - 4,623 yards and 290 points.

We feel like were going to be better than 420 yards per game, he said. We dont feel like were going to take a quantum leap defensively to the top of the conference, but we feel like well be categorized as a pretty good defensive team.

Eight starters are back from the 1982 defense, led by junior cornerback Johnny Hill. He picked off four enemy passes.

Brian Walter, Jerome Ley and Murray Youmans are

candidates at the tackle slots, while four lettermen are fighting for the defensive end assignments. Bill Smith ^lit time at nose guard and defensive tackle last year and now seems to be set as the anchor of the line.

Ralph Alderman leads the linebacking corps with help from sophomore Pete Stubbs. Glen Bamer and Marty Hen-inger provide relief.

With Hill in the second^ are Mark Moseley, third leading tackier Joby Branion and newcomer Darryl Brunson, whos apparently nosed out Bill Obremsky at strong safety.

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Mefs Continue Tear, Ease Past Expos

MONTREAL (AP) - Even in defeat, Montreal Expos Manager Bill Virdon conceded he had watched a good baseball game,

It was an exceptional game; its too bad we had to come out of it on the losing end. said Virdon after the Expos bowed 6-5 in 10 innings to the New York Mets, who have won eight of their last nine games.

The defeat, which snapped Montreals four-game winning streak and dropi^ the second place Expos two games behind Philadelphia - 14-5

winners over Pittsburgh in the only other National League game Monday night - in The East Division, was not among the easier ones for Virdon to handle.

The Expos trailed 5-1 after a five-run sixth inning by New York, but rallied to tie the score in the seventh.

In the 10th, Mets rookie Darryl Strawberry hit a one-out triple.

Montreal reliever Jeff Reardon. 5-6, threw a couple of pitchouts in case Bob Bailor, the next batter, planned to squeeze home

Strawberry from third. He finally issued Bailor an intentional walk, which promptly played a prominent role in the outcome.

After making one attempt to pick Bailor off first, Reardon tried it again and fired the ball past first baseman A1 Oliver, allowing Strawberry to score the winning run.

1 was really surprised he threw over to first, said Strawberry. But you cant underestimate Bobby Bailor; hes a good base stealer, and youve got to hold him close, which is what Jeff was trying

todo.

Reardon declined to discuss the play because he said he didnt see it clearly. He referred reporters to Oliver, who said; The ball was low and it bounced into the runners leg as he headed back into first base. But that one play didnt lose the game for us.

You cant put the blame on one player. When you lose, you lose as a team.

Jesse Orosco, 10-5, got the victory with three innings of relief. He has five victories and two saves in the last eight

days and hasnt allowed an earned run in the last 19 1-3 innings.

1 don/know how to explain it, saicf Orosco. Its never happened to me before, but I may as well lap it up while its happening.

Another highlight for the Mets was a pinch-hit, RBI single by Rusty Staub in the five-run inning. It was his 18th this season, beating the team record held by Ed Kranepool.

Pinch hitting is all thats available for me right now, so Id better do it good, said Staub.

Tim Wallachs 15th home run in the fifth had provided the Expos with a 1-0 lead. But George Foster tied it in the sixth with the Mets third straight single off starter Ray Burris.

A walk by Strawberry loaded the bases and Bailor drove in a run with a fielders choice. Staub then ripped his run-scoring single, scoring Foster. Bailor also scored when center fielder Andre Dawsons throw went past third base for a ,two-base error.

- Jose Oquendo, pinch running for Staub, who took third on the error, scored on a suicide squeeze by starting pitcher Tom Seaver

The Expos tied the score in the seventh Gary Carter singled behind Warren Cromarties double off Seaver to drive in the first run. .After Wallach singled and pinch-hitter Terry Crowley moved the runners up with a groun-dout, pinch-hitter Mike Stenhouse scored Carter with another groundout.

Tim Raines was safe on an error by second baseman

Bailor that allowed Wallach to score. Raines, after stealing both second and third, made it 5-5 by scoring on Bryan Littles bloop single to left.

Phillies 14, Pirates 5 In Philadelphia. Mike Schmidt was a one-man wrecking crew, hitting two home runs, driving in five runs and scoring four.Schmidt, who moved into 25th place on the all-time home run list with 375. also took over the NL lead in homers with 26, one more than Dawson The Phillies overcame a three-run deficit with five runs in both the fourth and fifth innings.

Britton

'Practice' Fight Can Only Help Jones Win It

U    B    Rrittnn    IaH    '    hncf    nf    niUc

Schmidt Delivers

Philadelphia Phillies Mike Schmidt is congratulated by third base coach Dave Bristol after hitting a two-run homer in the fourth inning

TANK HFNAMAKA

against the Pittsburgh Pmates during their National League game in Philadelphia Monday night. (AP Laserphoto)

by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds

'Riyp,Wa6lOIG!?5WUR "i 01.Y GAK3K10NJ' __

By The Associated Press The practice for the vacant World Boxing Council welterweight champiqn is just what Colin Jones needed.

At least thats opinion of Eddie Thomas, a cool Welshman, who knew how to fight and knows how to handle fighters.

Jones, also a Welshman, lost at least the first five rounds against lanky Milton McCrory of Detroit last March 19 at Reno, Nev., then battled back to gain a 12-round draw in a fight for the title left vacant when Sugar Ray Leonard retired last November.

Now he knows how being a champion feels ... or being a half champion, said Thomas of the 24-year-old Jones, who will fight McCrory in a title rematch in the desert heat of Las Vegas, Nev., the kind of heat that has made good fighters blow their cool.

Thomas feels that the 12 rounds against McCrory in March can only help Jones'.

Hes stopped so many fighters so quickly, said Thomas. He needed a couple fights over the course (before the first match against McCrory). But now hes had 12 rounds.

Jones has scored 21 knockouts in winning 24 fights - his only loss was on a disqualiiication and between his knocking out Sakrai

Ve in the second round at London Sept. 14, 1982, and his March fight against McCrory, he fought less than two rounds.

On Nov. 6, Jones, already the British welterweight champion, won the European title by knocking out Henrik Palm of Denmark in Round 2 at Copenhagen in a fight that had been postponed when Jones came down with appendicitis.

So, Thomas figures the 12 rounds in March can only help Jones. Those 12 rounds certainly showed McCrory that the Welshman can hit hard and that he doesnt discour: age.

But what about 12 rounds in 90-100 degree heat. McCrory is an Emanuel Steward fighter and is used to training in the hell-like heat of the Kronk Gym in Detroit, which can get pretty hot at times outside, too. Wales and England, however, are not exactly hot-weather countries.

Thomas feels Jones has prepared for the heat, and even the gods who oversee Welsh weather have done their part.

It was very hot in Wales (while Jones was training there) - 85-92, which is abnormal - and I had him running every day, said Thomas. A lot o that running was uphill, and hill in Wales is

Bonneau Shows Some Character

ahillwithcaptialH

Then fbr two weeks in Reno we trained in the open near the swimming pool every day at 2 p.m., said Thomas. The ternperature was near 100 and it was 107 one day.

So, Jones appears ready to handle the heat, and Thomas feels he can handle McCrory, too. with a few changes.

Colin's going to be up there jabbing with him, said Thomas, who also thinks Jones will go to the body more early in the,fight than he did in the first bout.

As for the 21-year-old McCrory, who at 6-foot-l holds a five-inch height advantage but only a W reach advantage over Jones, Thomas feels hell jab and move from the outset. He says he can come forward and back Colin up, and I hope he tries.-

Johnston Wins BV Tourney

Elaine Johnston defeated Karen Smith for the championship of the Brook Valley Ladies Tennis Tournament Saturday.

Martha Moye finished third ahead of Betty Jane Mister.

Officers selected for the coming year are; Martha Moye, president; Elaine Johnston, vice president; Earlene Lawrence, secretary and Page Watson, treasurer. Members of the tournament committee are Karen Collier, Betty Jane Mister and Karen Smith.

The ladies tennis association will meet Aug. 16 at 7:30.

NEW BERN - Elizabeth Britton led a host of other Greenville winners as she captured the top womens title at the -Third .Annual Cystic Fibrosis Racquetball Tournament held at Courts Plus in New Bern.

John Harrison of Greenville look second place in the women's A division, and Sherry Dendy of Ayden took third place as local players swept that division.

Tom Marzilli took second place in the mens open division and John Hunt won the open consolation title. Wayne Barrow captured the consolation title of the mens Super A division and David Evanovich won the mens A division.

Bill Carson captured the mens B consolation crown. Other Greenville participants were Chuck Clodfelter and Mac Dunlap.

SCOREBOARD

MONTREAL (AP) -Canadian Stephane Bonneau, doesnt figure to make it past his second-round opponent, second-seeded Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia, but he certainly showed some character under the most annoying of conditions to advance beyond the first round of the Players International tennis tournament.

The Quebec City natives 6-2, 7-6 victory Monday over

fellow Canadian Dale Power of Ottawa was accomplished in the final match of the day, which was plagued by rain, wind and a power outage.

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Rec Sonball    Milwaukee (Sutton 7-i) at Kansas City

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WintervUle Women s League    Minnesota iLysander 3-9i at California

keels Wharehouse...............6    (SteirerO-Oi, <n

Auto Specialty....................5    ( Abbott 4-3) at Oakland (Me-

' Leading hitters: K-Cindy Brown ^^^ wlnesday'sGames i, Kathy Vemelson 2;    AS-Gay    Toronto at New York

Hines 3, T. Davenport 3.    Seattle    at Oakland

Chicago at t>etroit, (^n)

   ifi    Cleveland at Baltimore, (n)

Coca-Cola ....................    16    ^exas at Boston, (n)

Dixon Builders...................2    MilwaukeeatKansasCity.    in)

Leading    hitters;    CC-Angie    MinnesoU at California, in)

Stewart 3, Pam Manning 3, Lex-    wATiniuAi    i    PAmiF

anne Keeter 3, DB-Lauren

Parnhill2.    W    L    Pet.    GB

c    Philadelphia    57 , 50    ,533    -

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'Conger Plumbing    p    ,h^    St Louif    53    56    it    5

- Leading hitters: TR-Cathy    Chicago    50    60    .455

frazier3;CP-TrellanyBoyd2.    New 9ork    '>5    ^

- Atlanta    68    44    ,607    -

Bat Rflckatliall    Los Angeles    61    48    560    5W

Kec BqiKeTPqil    Houston    56    M    .514    lOW

Adult Summer League    San Diego    m    m    4    12^

n.,rhi)i Pona    W    IfiAA    San Francisco    M    58    .477    14'/i

SverhlllGang    W    16 K    Cin^,^ati    50    62    .446    18

franchise ..........29    2756    Monday's    Games

- Leading    scorers:    OGPaul    New York6, Montreal5, lOinnings

Taylor 17; F-Albert Brown 22.    Philadelphia 14 Pittsburgh 5

   Only games scheduled

Soul Train    47    53100    st Louis^'*(Porech    7-9i at Chicago

Takers.................28    41 69 (Raineyll-8)

Leading scorers: ST-Dennis New York (Lynch 7-6) at Montreal (Lea

^Bradley JMy Hams    *p,uUurgi (Rhoden    8-9) at

T.Lindsey Blount 24, James Ward Philadelphia ni>ennyi2-5i, (ni 22    Los Angeles (Valeniuela 11-6)    at

.    Cincinnati (Soto 12-9), (n)

Omega won by forfeit over

Alumni.    San Diego (Lollar 4-10) at Houston    (J.

-    _ Niekro9-9), (n)

Basobflll Standings    si LouisaLaS^* ****

:^Nrw'?o^;s?rMrfn)

rStion    ' Pittsburg at Philadelphia, (n)

EAST DIVISION    Los Angeles at CincinnaU, (n)

'Baltimore    62    45 %    San Diego at Houston, (n)

Detroit    63    47    . 573     -

..Milwaukee    62    47    569    I    I Aanua LAflders

.New York    61    47    .565    14    lOOgUM    LeOOerS

Toronto    60    50    545 34    ByTbeAaaodatedPrca

-Boston    '    54    55    495 9    AMERICAN    LEAGUE

Cleveland    46    65    414    18 BATTING (265 at bats): Bog, Boston,

WEST DIVISION    .372; Carew, Calilornia, .370; Brett,

Chicago    59    51    536    -    Kansas City. 341. Whitaker, DetroiL

'Texas    54    56    491    5    329; McRae^^Kansas City,    328

Kansas City    52    54    491    5    RJNS: E.Murray, Baltimore, 78;

Oakland    54    59    478    64    Molitor, Milwaukee, 74; Ripken.

..California    53    59    473    7    Baltimore. 74; R Henderson. Oakland,

Minnesota    46    67    .414    144    73; Upshaw, Toronto, 72; Yount.

Seattle    44    68    393    16    Milwaukee, 72

.    Mondays    Games    rbI: Cooper. Milwaukee, 95; Winfield.

- Chicago 5-2. Detroit 4-7    New York, 84, L N Parrish. Detroit, 76;

> New York 8-n, Toronto 3-3    Simmons. Milwaukee. 75; E Murray,

- Kansas City 5-5, Milwaukee 4-8    Baltimore, 73, Rice, Boston, 73.

i    Cleveland f Baltimore 4    HITS    Bog. Bocton, 151; Whitaker,

'    Texas 12, Boston 7    Detroit.    wnileRae, Kansas City, 133;

   Minnesota 4, California 2    Cooper,    Milwaukee. 131; Simmons,

- Oakland 2, SeatUe l    Milwaukee, 131, WardJilnnesoU, 131

TueadayiGaowi    DOUBLES: Bogg& Bocton, 35; McRae,

^    Chica (Dotson 12-6) at Detroit Kansas    City, S4;Trbek. MinnesoU, 31;

i,(Pashnickl-l).(n)    .    L.N.Parrish, Detroit, 31; Ripken,

. Cleveland (Heaton Ml at BalUmore BalUmore,30.

, I McGregor 14-4), (n)    TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Win-

. Texas (Honeycutt 14-6) at Boston field. New York. I; Herndon, Detroit. 7;

.1

HOME RUNS: Cooper, Milwaukee, 24; Kiltie, Chicago, 24; Armas, Boston, 23; LuzinskijChicago, 23; Rice, Boston, 23 STOLEN BASES: R Henderson, Oakland, 70; R Uw, Chicago, M; J.Cruz, Chicago, 46; W Wilson, Kansas City, 45; Sample, Texas, 35 PlTCklNG (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, BalUmore, 14-4. .778, 3.13; Gossage, New York, 9-3, .750, 2.24.

STRIKEOUTS: Morris, Detroit, IM; Stieb, Toronto, 130; Righetti, New York, 119; Blyleven, Qeveland, 116; Sutcliffe, Cleveland, 114    

SAVES: Quisenberry, Kansas City, 29; Caudill, Seattle, 21; Stanley, Boston, 21; R Davis, MinnesoU, 19; Lopez. Detroit, 16.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTING (265 at bats): Hendrick. St.Louis, .331; Madlock, Pittsburgh, .327; Herr, St.Louis, 323; Knight, Houston, .323; Lo Smith.St.Louis, "

Montreal. 69: Horner, AUanU, 69.

RBI Dawson, Montreal. 86; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 79; Murphy. AUanta, 76; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 69; Chambliss, Atlanta, 68; Hendrick, St.Louis, 68.

HITS: Dawson, Montreal, 140; Oliver, Montreal, 133; Thon, Houston, 13t; Buckner, Chicago, 126; R.Ramirez. AUanta, 126.    ^    

DOUBLES: Buckner. Chicago, 28; Oliver, Montreal, 27; Hendrick, St.Louis, 26; Knight, Houston, 26; J.Ray, Pittsburgh, a, Wallach, Montreal, 25 TRiPLeS: Butler, AUanU, 11; Moreno, Houston, 11; Cruz, Houston, 7; Dawson,

Montreal, 7; Raines, Monlre^7

HOME RUNS: Schmidt, Philadelphu, 26; Dawson, Montreal, 25; Murphy, AtlanU. 23; Evans, San Francisco, 21; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 21 STOLEN BASES: Raines. Montreal, 51; Wilson, New York, 37: LeMaster, San Francisco, 34; SSax, Los Anles, 34; Butler, AlianU. 30; Moreno, Houston, 30; Redus, CincinnaU, 30.

PITtHING (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; Hudson, PhiladelMiia, 7-3, .700, 3.28; Rogers, Montreal, 14-6,700,2.86.

STRlKfeOUTS: Carlton. Philadelphia. 182, Soto, CincinnaU, 170; McWUlums, Pittsburgh, 145: Ryan, Houston, IJO; Valenzuefa, Los Angeles, 119.

SAVES: Le.Smith, Chicago, 17; Bedrosian, Atlanta. 16, Reardon, Montreal, 16; Minton. San Francisco, 13; -............ Los

FOOTBALL National Football League

BUFFALO BILLS-Announced that Scott LaFond and Joe Nett, offensive guards, left camp

CINCINNATI BENGALS-Cut John Christopher, punter, Mike Haffey and Gilbert SmiUi, wide receivers, and Chuck Gannon, tackle.

DENVER BRONCOS-Cul Jay Kroeker, punter, John Oyer, placekicker, Roy Smally and Rod Pegues, running backs, Pat McCool, tight end, and Tony Sartor, offensive lineman.

DETROIT LIONS-Cut Clarence McNatt,defensive end, Dan Faraday, quarterback and Jim Duncan, wide receiver

HOUSTON OILERS-Cut Vernon Perry and Donald Cook, safeties, James Hamilton defensive tackle. Bobby Strogen, linebacker and Bryan Bailey, punter

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS-Acquired Sherman Smith, running back, from Seattle for an undisclosed draft choice Waived Arthur Woods, punier, John Walsh, wide receiver, Bonji Bonner, safely, Darrin McClelland, running back Brian Christensen and Alfred Mohammed, tackles, Bob Kardoes. linebacker and Roberio Sroka. placekicker.

LOS ANGELES RAIDERS-Cut Billy Waddy and David Dorn, wide receivers, Robert Williams, running back. Ron Hale, defensive end and Joe Murray, guard

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES--<I Announced retirement of Stan Walters, offensive tackle.

PITTSBURGH STEELERS-Signed John SUllworth, wide receiver, and Donnie Shell, safety, to multi-year contracts.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Cut Art Kuehn, center, David Graham, defensive end, Wayde Stephens, punter, Forrest Pellum. defensive back, and Joe Scott, safety. Announced that Jim Beautrow, tight end, left camp

United States Football League

CHICAGO BLITZ-Named Don Pollard defensive coach.

OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS-Signed John Odom, Davey Lewis, John Lindsay and Ernest Newby, defensive backs. Rod Chaney and Anthony Lyons defensive tackles. Mickey Collins and Billy Lynn, running backs, Gary Nicoson, center and John Harvey, linebacker

N.C. Scoreboord

By The Aiaocialed Prea Carolina League

Winston-Salem 3, Durham 2 Southsni League

Knoxville 7, Charlotte 3

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Greenboro 10. Spartanburg 4

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12-The Daily Renector, Greenville, N.L'.-lsday, August 9.13

TV Executives Are Concerned Over Spoflighf

By The Associated Press The $500,000 jury award to Christine Craft, the former Kansas City anchorwoman who claimed she was demoted because of her age, her looks and her sex, drew cries of "Bravo! from female newscasters - and worried comments from TV executives.

"Bravo to the jury and to ,Ms. Craft for having the guts to have her image dissected and defended, said Carol .Martin of WCBS-TV in New York City. "It is a consciousness-raising decision for viewers, for TV management and for women behind and in front of the camera.

But ABC News president Roone Arledge said the national spotlight on Ms. Crafts trial is bad news for the business.

"The thing that really troubles me is that it is a condemnation of our industry, that people have to be judged by standards other than pure journalism, Arledge said.

"It is a fact of life that exists, he said. "The criteria are different in television, as long as your face ic out there as your byline and you are judged by all the cosmetic things that go with that.

Reuven Frank, president of NBC News, said: "I think what will happen is that the legal departments will instruct news executives on what to say. They will have little seminars all over the country. That will be the chief result.

Ms. Craft, former anchorwoman for KMBC-TV in Kansas City, was awarded $375,000 in compensatory and $125,000 in punitive damages by federal jurors who found the stations former owner, Metromedia Inc., guilty of fraud because they told Ms^ Craft she was hired solely for her journalistic skills.

The jury also recommended that a judge find Metromedia sexually discriminated against the 38-year-old Ms. Craft, but ruled Metromedia did not violate equal-pay laws when it paid her less than her male co-anchor at the station.

.Metromedia lawyers said Ms. Craft was demoted after studies showed she drew a negative reaction from viewers. She claimed she was ousted because management felt she was too old. too unattractive and not deferential enough to men.

, "A station must have the right to let somebody go, said Robert Bennett, president of Metromedia Broadcasting and Production. "Now we may have to make decisions in a different way, but we all still have to decide, based on the reaction these people have to the viewers.

Anchorwomen generally applauded the verdict, but some were cynical about its possible effect on their jobs.

"1 think its fantastic, said Pat Miles, an an-' chorwoman at WCCO-TV in Minneapolis-St. Paul. "I think its going to have implications for women in broadcasting that ultimately will be very good. The substance of the job is going to be placed above cosmetics. "Im happy for her, said Terri Murphy, anchorwoman at KNXT-TV in Los Angeles. "I dont know what it means to the rest of us older women. The public will always have a preoccupation with the way a woman looks and dresses. Jane Pauley of NBCs Today program said she was surprised but "pleased by the legal victory, adding that Ms. Craft also won a moral victory, because her case was so persuasive.

Ms. Craft herself, now an anchorwoman at KEYT-TV in Santa Barbara, was jubilant but wary after the verdict.

I have no illusions, shall we say, that this is going to make a huge difference in TV news, but ... if it keeps one news director at one station someplace, somewhere. from doing the same thing, I hope it does that, she said.

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Cameras Revisiting The Loud Family

By SCOTT KRAFT

Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) - A decade ago, all America peeped over a transom at the William C. Loud family. - well-to^do southern Californians living the American dream.

But then the family shattered -'on televisioa,sets in millions of living rooms. The cameras show^ Pat Loud ordering her husband out of the house. When eldest son Lances homosexuality became apparent, the cameras rolled.

Those cameras moved in with the Louds for sgven months and the series turned them into the most criticized, most talked about family in the country in 1973.

And now the cameras are trained again on the Louds. The result is "American Family Revisited: The Louds Ten Years Later, an hour-long documentary to be broadcast on Home Box Office several times this month

It includes interviews with the Louds and snippets from

TV Log

For complete TV programming information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sunday's Dally Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

TUESDAY

7';00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dougt fl OO On the Road 8 30 Our Times 9:00 Movie II 00 News9 11:30 Late Movie 2:00 Nightwatch WEDNESDAY 2:00 Nightwatch . 5.00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8 00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10 30 Child's Play 11:00 Price Is

WITN-TV-Ch.7

TUESDAY 7:00 Jetterson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Baseball 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 WorldTrack 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News WEDNESDAY 5:30 Lie Detector 6:00 Almanac 7 :00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 Today 9:00 R. Simmons 9:30 All in the 10:00 DItt. Strokes 10:30 Saleotthe 11:00 Wheel of

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

TUESDAY

7 :00 Sanford &

7 :30 B. Millar 8:00 TBA 8:30 Joanie Loves 9:00 3's Company 9:30 9to5 10 :00 Hart to Hart 11:00 Action News 11:30 Nightline 12 30 Starskyi 1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Edition WEDNESDAY 5 00 Bewitched 5:30 J Swaggart 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 GoodMornIm 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7 :25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9 00 Phil Donahue

WUNK-TV-Ch.25

TUESDAY 7 00 Report 7 :30 Old House 8:00 Nova 9:00 Lifeline 10:00 Ascentsof

4:00

5:00

5:30

6:00

6:30

'7:00

11 00 Monty Python II 30 Doctor in 12:00 SignOff

WEDNESDAY

3 00 Teaching 3 :30 Reading R.

8:00

9:00

10:00

11:00

11:30

12:00

the original l2-hour public telefision program. It also takes a look at the series aftermath, when columnists criticized the Louds and the Louds fought back.

The whole affair turned the Santa Barbara, Calif., family into celebrities. They appeared on talk shows and magazine covers. Mother Pat wrote a book on divorce. Daughter Delilah appeared on The Dating Game. Four of the children started a rock band.

After some wild years, the Louds appear to have settled down.

Bill Loud, the father, still lives in Santa Barbara, and has remarried, settling down to a good, sedate life, he says. Pat Loud, the mother, is still single - 1 just havent met the right person, she says - and shes a literary agent in New York City.

Their five children, aged 13 to 20 when the series was broadcast, have entered the

working world. The long hair of those years is gone and the trials of their adolesence, which the nation witnessed, are over. None has married.

Lance, who says hes interested in filmmaking, recently moved from New York to Los Angeles. Grant, a singer and actor, lives in Los Angeles. Delilah is with an advertising agency in Los Angeles. Kevin is a finance manager for a petroleum company in Houston. Michele works as a pat-

Chevy Chase Comedy Is New Box Office Leader

12:00 News9 12:30 Young and 1:30 As The World 2:30 Capitol 3 00 Guiding Light 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 Andy Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 News 7:00 Joker's Wild 7:30 TIcTacDougl 8:00 Archie 8:30 Gloria 9:00 Movie 11.00 News 9 11:30 AAovIe 2:00 Nightwatch

12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1:00 Days Of Our 2:00 Another WId. 3:00 Fantasy 4:00 Whitney the 4:30 Little House 5:30 Dark Shadow 6:00 Newt 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Real People 9:00 Facts of Life 9:30 Buffalo Bill 10:00 News Is New: 10:30 TakI 11:00 News 11:30 TonlghfShow 12:30 WorldTrack 1:30 Overnighf 2:30 News

10:00 Happening 10:30 Sanford & 11:00 TooClote 11:30 Loving 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Lite 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Cartoons 4 :30 W. Women 5:30 People's 6 :00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Sanford & 7:30 B. Miller 8:00 Fall Guy 9:00 Hamptons 10:00 Dynasty 11:00 Action News 11:30 ABC News 12:30 SlarskyS. 1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Editior

Sesame St.

Mr Rogers Reading R Dr. Who Wildlife Report Old House AAagic of Princess Crowns Monty Python Doctor in Sign Off

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two Warner Bros, films were among the three top-grossing movies in the nations theaters over the weekend, led by the Chevy Chase spoof, National Lampoons Vacation.

National Lampoons Vacation grossed $7.2 million in 1,230 theaters iii the United States and Canada Friday through Monday.

Second place went to Return of the Jedi, 20th-Century-Foxs third episode in George Lucas Star Wars saga. It returned $4.5 million last weekend in 1,764 theaters.

Risky Business, Warner Bros. third-place grosser, a tale of teen-age seduction, made $4.3 million in 670

Claims More Than A Voice

LONDON (AP) - Pop singer Barry Manilow thinks its more than his voice and songwriting ability that makes him so popular.

Its his looks and manner, Manilow told a London-based magazine in an interview published today.

Women are impressed with his non-threatening image and unsexy clothes, the 37-year-oid singer told Woman magazine. They know that if I took them out to dinner, it would be a glass of wine in front of the fireplace afterwards, he said.

Manilow, who had such hits as Mandy and I Write The Songs, said he doesnt consider himself a very good singer or a terrific performer. He attributes his wide British following largely to luck. He noted that he rarely drinks and views himself the opposite of the rough show business type.

There seems to be space for these simple little songs that people are relating to, he said.

Manilow is putting on an open-air concert August 27 at Blenheim Palace near Oxford, one of Englands best known mansions and the birthplace of wartime leader Sir Winston Churchill.

The Duke of Marlborough is renting out part of the 11,500-acre estate to help pay annual upkeep bills estimated at $74,000.

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theaters during the same period.    '

However, Jedi, is still the top summer money winner with a return of $209.6 million over 11 weeks.

Jaws 3-D, the third in a series about a great white sharks bloody appetite, did a weekend total of $3.9 million in 1,241 theaters. In slightly over two weeks the Universal film has taken in $35.1 million.

Staying Alive, Para-mounts sequel to Saturday Night Fever, had a weekend total of $3.7 million ifi 1,380 theaters. In 24 days the movie has grossed $45.3 million.

Another newcomer, Columbias Krull, amassed $3.3 million last weekend in 1,287 theaters, for a 10-day total of $11.3 million.

Bette Midler Back On Stage

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Singer Bette Midler, returning to the concert stage after an unscheduled nine-day rest, dryly told appreciative fans, Yeah, I showed up.

The Divine Miss M appeared Friday and Saturday nights in Denver and had a Monday night show in Salt Lake City.

Miss Midler had canceled appearances in Minneapolis, St. Louis and Kansas City after collapsing off-stage during a performance in Detroit on July 26.

The raucous singer known for her campy sense of humor spent two days in a Detroit hospital for exhaustion and a gastrointestinal disorder, a spokesman said. She then rested at an undisclosed location until her Denver appearances.

It was mostly just being tired, her spokesman in Los Angeles, Ramon Hervey, said Monday night.

Compares Taxis, Shuttle

NEW YORK (AP) -Astronaut Sally Ride is one of few people who can accurately compare a Big Apple cab ride to a ride in space, and she says a space trip is smoother.

A space shuttle is nothing compared to a New York taxicab, said Americas first woman in space.

Ms. Ride and her four crewmates on the flight of the space shuttle Challenger were honored Monday by Mayor Edward Koch.

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Trading Places from Paramount pulled in $2.7 million on 945 screens. The comedys 61-day total is $68.5 million.

Universals Private School, had a weekend take of $2.4 million in 983 theaters, for a 10-day total of $9.1 million.

Foxs Star Chamber, which opened Friday, took in $1.9 million on 7% screens. Two other Fox features didnt fare as well. Mr. Mom, pulled in $942,109 in 159 theaters and Porkys II-The Next Day, grossed $730,357 in 587 theaters.

Two MGM-UA pictures, WarGames, and Octopussy, held up well at the box office. WartJames pulled in $1.8 million on 862 screens for a total of $58.2 million in 10 weeks. Octopussy had a weekend take of $1.5 million in 912 theaters and its nine-week total rose to $57.4 million.

Paramounts Flashdance attracted $1.5 million on 677 screens, for a 16-week total of $71.2 million.

Class from Orion took in $1.9 million in 789 theaters, for a 17-day total of $13.6 million.

Walt Disneys Snow White and the Seven Dawarfs, in its sixth release since 1937, did a weekend business of $1.2 million in 1,012 theaters. The animated classic has taken in $23 million since the latest opening July 15.

Superman III from Warner Bros, was down to $794,301 for the weekend in 613 theaters. US' seven-week total is $59.9 million.

Woody Allens Zelig, from Warners did $123,457 for a three-week total of $647,612.

tern-maker in New York Citys garment district.

But they are still confused about the series that changed their lives.

1 cant begin to tell you how embarrassing it was. says Mrs. Loud, whose long black hair has become short and brown in the past decade.

Later, however, she says shes had a wonderful time and developed the contacts necessary to launch her career because of the series. And now 1 can say, for the first time. Yes. Im glad I did it. she says.

It brings back a variety of emotions that none of us have been able to really articulate or dispell because as a phenomenon it is unequaled in anybodys life, Grant says.

Delilah adds; 1 think we all learned a lot more about each other, and the series created a strong family unit.

At one point Bill Loud calls the original American Family series an earthquake in the family. Later, he says it was a great big fun experience.

The Louds clearly feel at ease with the producers of this documentary, Susan and Alan Raymond, who did most of the film work on the original. But that is not mentioned and the Raymonds off-camera questions as well as the Louds references to the film crew by name are jarring.

The original series was conceived and produced by Craig Gilbert, who theorized that if a camera stayed with any one family long enough something important would

be revealed about why men and women were having such a difficult time in America during the early 1970s.

Gilbert has no hand in the HBO program; he and the^ Raymonds have not been on speaking terms since the original series was broadcast.

"Revisited does not attempt to evaluate the original series. It is a human story, a story about television and how it can alter peoples lives, and a story about what a decade can heal and what a lifetime probably will not heal.

Everyone still had all these intense feelings about the series after 10 years, and we did, too, Susan Raymond said in an Interview. As a filmmaker, it is strange and unusual and rare to be able to go back.

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CfOBSWOtd By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS 1 He sought Moby Dick S A tide 9 Cereal grain

12 Go on horseback

13 - cadabra

14 The gums

15 Faints

17 Faucet

18 Dash

19 Famous cow 21 Puss in

24 Dill plant

25 Burden

26 Literate

30 Behave

31 Wise men

32 Food fish

33 Kinship

35 Washer cycle

36 Biblical name

37 Ill-tempered

38 Fake gem 40 Bridge

42 Picnic pest

43 Becomes exhausted

48 Fish delicacy

49 Harrows rival

50 Merit

51 Small child

52 Sunrise

53 Brief comic sketch

DOWN

1 French sculptor

2 Hawk parrot

3 Ctxnmercial notices

4 Harasses SSpaceorg.

6 Black

7 Resort island; abbr.

8 Inventors seek them

9 Surpasses

10 Jai-

11 Record 16 They loop

the Loop 20 Marvin or Majors

Answer to yesterdays puzzle.

21WUdpig

22 Fairy tale starter

23 Endured

24 Solar disk

26 Animals retreat

27 Personality

28 Improve the copy

29 Gainsay

31Soakedin

liquid

34 ABA member '

35 Feels

37 Sailor

38 Role

39WUdox

40 Pack

41 British statesman

44 Greek letter

45-Ridge, Tennessee

46 Swiss canton

47 High explosive

33c

38

42

48

22

39

18

23

34

13

43    44

26

49

52

27

40

24

37

20

35

10 11

32

50

53

45

28

46

29

47

CRYPTOQUIP    8-9

AYX YEA AYEA NR ZNFXQ WL AYTRX

RFEAXJR: E JTZZXJ QXJWL.

Yesterdays Cryptoquip THE SAILING MAN HAS HINDSIGHT - HES A REAR ADMIRAL.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: Y equals H.

The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short words, and words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating vowels. Solution is accomplished by trial and error.

H        19M    King    Features    Syndict,    Inc

GOREN BRIDGE

BY CHARLES GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF

1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc;

THEY COULDNT HOLD THEIR HEARTS

Both vulnerable. South deals

NORTH

AK ^A542 OAQJ74

J9

WEST    EAST

865    42

^97    <^ 10863

0 632    OK98

AQ643     108752

SOUTH

QJ109743 ^KQJ

0 105

K The bidding:

South West North East

t) t Friend and Foe

turiou.sly, a molecule that i.s essential to all life on earth al.so has been blamed for many of the world's air pollution problems. Discovered in 1^<40 by chemist Christian Friedri'ch .Schoenhein, the molecule's chemical symbol is O , It is made up of'i oxygen atoms joined firihly 'together with a third oxygen atom loosely attached. A layer of O.i molecules lo miles above the F.arths surface shields the F.arth from much of the sun's ultraviolet light. .Scientists agree that, without this shield, living things on Karth could not survive. On the other hand, 0;) reacts with, hydrocarbons from motor vehicle.s and some factories to create the polluting substances found in smog. In concentrated form, 0:i can kill plants and irritate a person's eyes and nose.

DO YOU KNOWWhat is the chemical name for 0:,'.

MONDAY'S ANSWERBenjamin Franklin showed the connection between lightning and electricity.

S.9 S.I    \'K('.    Inc    iss:i

FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10,1983

dummy and three hearts and the ten of diamonds in his hand.

Among his last four cards West had had to keep the queen of clubs to protect against the table's jack. East had to guard against the ten of diamonds, so he had to let go a heart. Now declarer simply cashed two high hearts, then overtook the jack of hearts with dummy's ace, and dummy's fourth heart was the fulfilling trick.

GENERAL TENDENCIES: Lota of activity in the little things of everyday life is very good. You would be wise to concentrate upon the details of whatever you are interested in.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Handle your work more efficiently now so that you can gain more income and feel more secure in the days ahead.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Get your personal appearance improved and look and feel more magnetic. Then you can make a better impression on others.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Fine day for getting your home just as you want it to be. and doing whatever will please kin, also. Socialize with friends.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) A fine day for communicating and corresponding with others and getting shopping, errands done also.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Stop being so impulsive and find the best way of handling financial affairs. Study any property for possible improvements.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Take those treatments you may need for better health and improve your appearance also. Buy new clothes.    '

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) You have secret maneuver-ings to handle and should get an early start on them to get right results. Persevere.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Ideal day to see good friends and renew acquaintanceships and deepening relationships. Enjoy personal amusements.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Get into your vocational work and be most efficient at it. See that influential person about your ideas.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Get those ideas in motion now that you have been procrastinating about and be more successful in the future.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Although your mind is on friends, it is best to stick to business at hand and get much done and also set up a new budget.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Best time to confer with partners and exchange ideas for greater success in the future. Come to a meeting of the minds.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will be very good at organizational work and carrying through with plans in a most precise and accurate way. Teach early not to take so much time for unnecessary details that the big 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.

Pass    Pass

2    Pass

4    Pass

6    Pass

1 0 Pass 3 Pass 5 Pass Pass Pass

GEORGE JONES IN CONCERT

Opening lead: Ace of .

At the beginning of June, Jay Feigus of New York sat down to play in the Reisinger Pairs Championship, the premier event of the Eastern States Regional Champion ships. That is not remarkable In itself, were it not for the fact that Jay has played in every Reisinger event since it was first played in 1929! At 90, he is planning to win the event next year, for Jay is still a pretty shrewd bridge player.

Jay has won the Vander bilt Team Championship and many regional titles. This hand is from the Von Zedwitz Gold Cup Pairs Championship of 1948.

The iuction might not measure up to todays scientific scrutiny, but it was cer & tainly effective. North judged that his top spade honors were worth a slam try, and Feigus liked his honors in partners second suit enough to venture on.

; West led the ace of clubs and shifted to the six of diamonds. Declarer decided that it was from top of nothing and that the finesse was doomed to failure. So he rose with the ace of diamonds and ran all his trumps, coming down to four hearts in

With The Jones Boys' Band

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14-The OaUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.-Tuesday, August 9,1963

District

Report

Court

Gregory Carl Suggs, Ayden,

speeding, 30 days jail suspended on payment of (30 and

Judge E, Burt Aycock and Judge W, Lee Lumpkin 111 disposed of the following cases during the July 25-29 term of District Court in Pitt County.

Andrew Graham Baird, Virginia, costs exceeding safe speed. ,5 days jail Daniel Elmer Rouse Jr , Ayden, suspended on payment of $5 and assault on a female, 60 days jail costs    *    suspended    on payment of $25 and

Jessie Ray Blount, Winterville, costs larceny 12 counts), 12 months jail i^nard Ward Gurganus, East

$5. pay .5 pending tickets at ECU within'sdays Elizabeth Gasperini, ECU, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

Jerry Earl Midgette, Washington, following too close, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $9 and

SUSj

cosi restitution.

costs, surrender operators license Reginald M Williams. Fox Run Circle, worthless check, 10 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check

James Ray Wooten, Rocky Mount, speeding. 5 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and

costs.

James Ray Carmon, Ayden, assault with a deadly weapon, 24 months jail suspended on payment of costs and $100 attorney's fees James Thomas Reids, Emmas Place, assault on a female. 6 months jail suspended, probation 1 year, pay costs and and costs Teel Robinson Winneberger, Ayden, fail to wehr safety helmet, costs.

Willie Wooten Sr., Farmville, non-support, 6 months jail sus pended on payment of costs and $35 per week for support James Ray Staton Jr.. Oakdale Road, damage to real property. 15

tary dismissal

Gregory Leon Brown, Clark Street, trespass, 30 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs, p^ $6.25 restitution.

Roy P. Hopkins. Calvin Way, damage to real property. 60 days jail suspended on payment of $25 and costs.

Todd Sheldon Levey, Durham, stop sign violation, 10 days jail suspended on payment of costs.

David Reese, West 4th Street, assault with acid, no probable cause found.

Clifton Venable, Bancroft, communicating threats, not guilty.

Jimmy King, Mumford Road, trespass, not guilty.

Hertford Douglas Davis, Latham Street, larceny, breaking, entering and larceny, no probable cause found.

James Jerome Davis, Legion Street, larceny, breaking, entering and larceny, no probable cause found.

Terry Glisson, Route 2.

I

pended for 4 years, pay $100 and Wright Road, careless and reckless days jail su^nded on'payme'nt of    mai"nta^^^^^    dvd/

Is, probation 4 years, pay $.500 and expired registration plate. 60 costs.

spend 1 weekend

per

month in jail and all other $i()0 and costs

expired registration plate days jail suspended on payment of

weekends doing community service Tony Gray Barber, Route 1, work for the next 6 months.    Greenville, exceeding safe speed,

Kenneth Banks, Ayden, trespass, lo days jail suspended on payment 20 days jail suspended on payment of $20 and costs of costs.    Hubert Justin Bean, Forbes

Catherine Stocks Boyd, Ayden. street, expired registration, 5 days fail to yield right of way at stop sign jail suspended on payment of $5 and and no financial violation, 30 days costs.

jail suspended on payment of $25 will Daniels Jr, Bradley Street, and costs and restitution for dam- trespass, voluntary dismissal;

assault. 30 days jail suspended on Cynthia Brock, Grifton, shoplif- payment of costs ing(2ndoffensei,30daysjail    Jennifer Layne Dunn, Wilson

Bruce Wayne Coward, Texas, Acres, driving in excess of .10 speeding, 10 days jail suspended on percent blood alcohol content, 60 payment of $20 and costs    days jail suspended on payment of

Christopher Wilson Croom, $ioo and costs, surrender operators Stantonsburg, exceeding safe license, attend alcohol school and speed, 5 days jail suspended on pay $100 fee payment of $5 and costs    Jimmy Ray Jenkins, North

James W Godley, Ayden, worth- Washington Street, injury to less check i2 counts), 10 days jail personal property, 6 months jail suspended on payment of costs and suspended on payment of $15 and check In each case.    costs, pay $50 restitution; injury to

Roland Goff Jr., Grifton, damage real property, not guilty to personal property and trespass, 6 Peggy Stokes Knight, Route 3, months jail, assault on officer, 12 Greenville, drive left of center, months jail    voluntary    dismissal.

Cathy Cobb Hertzber, Rocky Sheila Wilson Manning, Win-Mount, exceeding safe speed, 5 terville, expired registration plate, days iail suspended on payment of 5days jail suspended on payment of $5 and costs.    $5 and costs

Paul Honeycutt. Ayden, trespass,    April Smith Moore, Charles

voluntary dismissal.    Boulevard, no city tag, voluntary

Richard Lee Manning, Grifton, dismissal careless and reckless driving. 10 James Robin McDowell, Oxford, days jail suspended on payment of restriction code violation, pay $25 and costs    costs.

Ronald Dean Payne, Lewis William Nobles, Henry Street, Street, expired registration plate, assault, voluntary dismissal, pay costs.    Billy Eugene Pate, Maury, ex-

Johnnie Lee Pitt, Staffordshire ceeding safe speed, 10 days jail Road, exceeding safe speed, 5 days suspended on payment of $20 and jail suspended on payment of $5 and costs

costs    Ronnie    Darnell Pratt, Bethel,

Melvin Randall Sugg, Ayden, assault by pointing a gun, 6 months improper passing, not guilty    jail suspended on payment of costs:

Jennis Edward Wainwright, communicating threats, 90 days jail Grifton, fail to yield right of way, suspended on payment of costs, voluntary dismissal    Ronald Parrott Rouse, Grifton,

James S Wills. Grifton. disorder- safe movement violation, voluntary ly conduct. 30 days ja|l suspended dismissal, on payment of $5 and costs;    Ronnie Eugene Tkylor, Ayden,

resisting arrest. 30 days jail sus- driving in excess of 10 percent pended on payment of $10 and blood alcohol content, 60 days jail costs; assault on officer, 90 days suspended on payment of $100 and jail suspended on payment of $20 costs, surrender operators license, and costs, driving under the influ- attend alcohol school and pay $100 ence. voluntary dismissal; careless fee; transport alcohol with seal and reckless. 60 days jail suspended broken, voluntary dismissal on payment of $100 and costs    Charles    Edward Blklage, East

Nathaniel Willoughby. West 3rd Rock Spring Road, no city tag. Street, reckless driving, 60 days jail voluntary dismissal suspended on payment of $100 and    Lester C. Blount, Ayden, worth-

costs    less check, 10 days jail suspended

Bobby Ray Wilson, Route 3, on payment of costs and check. Greenville, driving under the influ- Jimmy Ray Jenkins, Howell ence, 90 days jaU; speeding to elude Street, assault on a female, 6 arrest, 90 days jail.    months jail suspended on payment

John Paul Bland, Route 5, of $15 and costs.

Greenville, exceeding safe speed, 5    David Lee Jones, Washington

Vance Frederick Moore, Washington, exceeding safe speed, pay costs Phillip Jenson Broadhurst, Crown Point Road, driving under the influence, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $150 and costs, surrender operators license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee; fail to change address on license, volun-

ing for sale of controlled substance, no probable cause found.

William Eugene Hall, Kinston, assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, shooting into occupied dwelling, no probably cause found

Reedie Earl Johnson, Kinston, worthless check, 5 days jail sus pended on payment of costs and check.

Prime Rate Up AtN.C. Banks

days

ail suspended    on    payment    of    Street, reckless driving, 60    days jail

$5 and costs    suspended on payment of    $100 and

Judith Hansen Goosby, Morehead costs, attend aicohol school and pay City, exceeding safe speed, 5 days $ioofee, jail suspended on payment of $5 and    Jesse Ray Davis, Route 7,

costs.    Greenville, fail to drive    on right

Peggy S. Hardy, Red    Barn Trail-    half of highway, 5 days    jail sus-

er Park, worthless check, 10 days pended on payment of costs, jail suspended on payment of costs    joey Rodger Tripp, Route 1,

and check.

Joyce Ann Harris, Shady Knoll, violation of learners permit, 10

Greenville, resist arrest, dismissed.

Vivian Dixon Harris, Winterville,

exceeding safe speed, 5 days ispended on payment of $5 >sts

jail

and

5 day

suspended on payment of $f cos'

James Donovan Johns Jr, Rawl Road, exceeding safe speed, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and costs

Brenda Langley, Hardees Funeral Home, worthless check, voluntary dismissal.

David Steve Lawson 111, Route 2, Greenville, exceeding safe speed, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and costs

costs.

Alma Carter, Lakeview Terrace Apartments, worthless check, 10 days jail suspended on payment of costs and check.

Robert Ellis Corbitt, Rocky Mount, exceeding safe speed. 5

days iail suspended on payment of $5 ana (

I costs.

Jimmy F Jenkins, Grimesland, expired registration plate, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $5 and

costs.

Dennis Joseph Mayer, Ayden, speeding and expired registration

Charlie Mills Jr, Grimesland. no m license. vol.a dis- X'r?Pineiops. Pnir. Ms-Rr.Ho PoHor Piscle, driviog uodor tho influence, volun-

Petra McBride, Cedar Circle, inspection violation, voluntary dismissal.

Robert Shelton Olrogge, Route 9, Greenville, driving under the influ-

tary dismissal.

James Ray Murphy, Davenport Street, financial violation, voluntary dismissal.

ence. 60 days jail suspended on c

of^OO and costs, surren-    *'8^^    violation,    volun

payment

der operators license, attend alcohol school and pay $100 fee.

Julius Sneed Jr., Sheppard Street, non-support, 6 months jail suspended on payment of $35 per week for support.

Trevor Marshall Swindell, Bethel, overcrowded car, voluntary dismissal William Phillip Worthington, Ayden, exceeding safe spe^, 5 days jail suspended on payment of costs

Donna G Fleming, Cedar Court, unregistered vehicle, voluntary dismissal Jonathan McRae, Littleton, unregistered vehicle, 10 days jail suspended on payment of costs and

tary dismissal.

Ashley Solo Paige, Myrtle Avenue, larceny, voluntary dismissal.

Lonnie Dean Setzer, Stokes, safe movement violation, 5 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and

costs

Marvin Earl Shingleton, Route 1, Greenville, improper equipment, pay costs.

Kink William Stroud, Whites Park, no operators license, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $10 and costs.

Billy Ray Suggs, Tarboro, no registration plate and inspection violation, 10 days jail suspended on payment of $15 and costs

By The Associated Press

At least four North Carolina banks followed the national lead Monday, raising their prime lending rate from 10.5 percent to 11 percent.

Spokesmen for Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. of Winston-Salem, NCNB Corp.' of Charlotte, First Union National Bank of Charlotte and The Northwestern Bank of Wilkesboro also announced they were boosting the rate effective Monday.

The increase is the first hike in the key business borrowing rate in a year and a half, and was spurred by increases in other interest rates that pushed up the cost of funds for banks.

The prime rate increase was widely held to be overdue, economists and bank analysts said, pointing out that other short-term interest rates have risen a point and a half since May.

For example, the interest rate on three-month certificates of deposit in minimum denominations of $100,000, a key source of funds for banks, climbed above 10 percent on Monday compared with 8.3 percent in early May.

The industrywide increase was the first such rise in the prime since it reached 17 percent in February 1982. It had declined since then, reaching 10.5 percent in February of this year, its lowest level since 1978.

In Washington, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the increase brought the prime rate in line with the recent climb in money-market interest rates.

We would be hopeful ... that this does not indicate a trend, that interest rates once again will begin to go down. We have forecast that they will by the end of the year and theres no change from that forecast, Speakes said.

But financial markets were again disrupted by rising interest rates.

The dollar continued its climb into uncharted heights, reaching new records Monday in Europe against the French franc and Italian lira and rising to another 9-year high against the West German mark and Dutch gilder. Later in U.S. trading, the dollar turned lower as investors cashed in on the dollars recent gains.

There Oughta Be A Law

WIPE SPENDS HOURS ANJ ELEGANT GOURMET MAL FR HER ERlEGi CUJ0---

AND WHAT FOR DINNER

VOU GET

LEFTOVERS/

MMM, THAT . 6MEUS 6RSAT, HONEV/

IT SHOULD/ ITIS SPECIAL FOR

GIRLS-

FOR

HEV, DIDN'T WE HAVE THI$ ON MONDAV AND TUESUAV ?

mi, i've\

BEEN 100 BUSV TO '

COOK.

UM. smF^.]fHUJ/lMML,NV. - EC^PF'S UW' R)0D/SOF^ mtmT.

L

Rising interest rates in the United States have made returns on dollar-denominated investments more attractive, creating added demand for dollars.

Meanwhile, prices tumbled on Wall Street as interest rates rose.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 20.23 points to 1,163.06. Rising interest rates have been a main factor in a skid by the stock markets best-known indicator from its record close of 1,248.30 on June 16.

The prime rate is the base upon which banks compute interest charges on shortterm business loans. Such loans are negotiated, however, and a banks biggest, most credit-worthy customers often borrow at below the prime rate. Smaller businesses typically borrow at rates of 1 percentage point or more above the prime rate.

Consumer loans, which tend to average 4 years, are not directly affected by changes in the prime or other short-term rates, however, the primes level is an indicator of an overall inter-est-rate climate.

The prime rate reached a record high 21.5 percent in December 1980.

Hunting 4 In Gun Death

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - South Carolina authorities say they are seeking a 14-year-oId Charlotte boy and three Charlotte men in connection with the shooting death of a store owner last week.

The York County Sheriffs Department signed warrants for the four over the weekend, but officials were withholding their identities Monday until they are arrested.

Richard Kimbrell, 37, owner of Kimbrells Variety Store near Rock Hill, S.C., was shot about 1:30 a.m. last Thursday while he was investigating a noise in the store, deputies said.

Kimbrell, armed with a shotgun, shouted at four intruders and fired three shots. Deputies said his assailants fired back. Kimbrell was shot four times with a .357-magnum. Deputies found him lying outside his store.

Charlotte police said Monday Kimbrells shots apparently hit two of the would-be thieves.

Police said a 14-year-old Charlotte boy was treated at Charlottes Mercy Hospital about 2 a.m. Thursday for shotgun wounds to his eyes and released. About two hours later, a 32-year-old Charlotte man was treated at Presbyterian Hospital for sotgun wounds.

Police said the man ran from the hi^pital after being treated. >

RUNNING BATTLE BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Drug warlord Khun Sas opium army, after a defeat by the Burmese army on Thursday, ambushed Thai troops near the border the next day and killed at least two soldiers, Deputy Prime Minister Prachuab Soon-taramgsald Monday.

\

YOUR AD COUID BE WORKING FOR YOU IN THIS

SPACE

ADVERTISE WITH THE CLASSIFIED

PUBLIC

NOTICES

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of HENRY VERNON BARNHILL, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned

hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate to pre

sent them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is 2803 Jefferson Drive, Greenville, North Carolina,

27834, on or before the 19th day of ary, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. AM

persons indebted to said Estate will lease make immediate payment to e undersigned

This the 14th day of July, 1983. Mrs. Pauline L Barnhill

2805 Jefferson Drive Greenville, N.C. 27834 Michael A. Colombo JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH. BLOUNT

Attorneys at Law Post Office Drawer 15

Greenville, North Carolina 27834 July 19, 26, August 2, 9,1983

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

IRTH CAROLINA FT COUNTY Havlnoqualltled as Administrator of the Estate of Walter Monroe Glisson, late of Pitt County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administrator within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the underslgn-

thls the 15th day of July, 1983. RICHARD F GLISSON, JR Route 10, Box 192 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 OWENS, ROUSE & NELSON Attorneys at Law P.O. Box 302

Greenville, North Carolina 27834

Telephone: 758 4276

July 19, 26, August 2, 9, 1983

DE

;.J._QFrHECT

ITY

OF

CLARINGITSiNTENT

TO

WHEREAS, the City Council has received a petition that a portion of

tends to close the aforesaid portion

of Taylor Street in accordance with the provisions of G.S. 160A-299;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUN CIL that it Is the intent of the City Council to close the following described portion of Taylor Street located in the West Meadowbrook

Project Area 81 ON 37-0057 beginn  ------    of    /Xo

ing with the right-of-way of Moore Street a distance of 240 plus or minus

feet, said portion being more par follows

ticularly described as _

Beginning at a point at the southeastern Intersection of the right of ways of Taylor Street and Moore Street, thence with the present right-ot way of Taylor Street S20 33' 24' W a distance of 244.92 feet to a point; thence N69 26' 36" W a distance of 40.00 feet to a point, thence N20 33' 24"E a distance of 236 13 feet to a point located at the southwestern intersection of the right of ways of Taylor Street and Moore Street; thence with the southern right-ot way of Moore Street S81 50' 14 "E a distance of 40.95 feet to the point of beginning.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a public hearing will.be held In the Council Chamber, Municipal Building. Greenville, North Carolina, on August 11, 1983 at 7:30 P.M., to consider the advisability of closing the aforesaid portion of Taylor Street. At such public hear

ing, all objections and suggestions will        

be duly considered

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this resolution be published once a week tor tour (4) successive weeks in The Daily Reflector; that a copy of this resolu tion be sent by certified mail to the owners of property adjoining the aforesaid portion of Taylor Street as shown on the County tax records; and that copy of this resolution be -rominently posted in at least two .2) places along the aforesaid portion of Taylor Street.

Duly adopted this 14th day of July, 1983.

PERCYR COX, MAYOR LOISD WORTHINGTON,

CITY CLERK

July 19. 26, August 2, 9, 1983

NORTH CAROLINA

pittcojunty

The undersigned, having qualified as Executrix of the Esfate of B.

Frank Jackson, deceased, late of

Pitt County, this is to notify all per sons having claims against said

Estate to present them to the under

signed on or before the 19th day of January, 1984, or this notice will be

January, 19B4, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said E^state will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.

This the nth day of July, 1983 LULAW JACKSON 1509 Broad Street Greenville, NC 27834 HOWARD, BROWNING,

SAMS & POOLE Attorneys at Law BY; Stanley M. Sams P.O. Box 895

Greenville, NC 27835 0859 July 19. 26; Aug. 2. 9, 1983

GASOLINE ANDOtL BOARD Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the North Carolina Gasoline and Oil Board on Tuesday, August 30,1983 at 10:00 a.m. in the Board Room, 3rd Floor, Agriculture Building, 1 West Edenton Street, Raleigh. ^.C. tor the purpose of amending the rules and regulations of the North Carolina Gasoline and Oil Board as follows:

1) amending 2 NCAC 42 .0100 to up

date definitions, and delete references to Model Ad ministrative Procedures tor rule making and hearirra.

2) amending 2 NCAC 42 .0200 to reflect new standards involving

the use of oxygenates such as alcohols as blending agents in

miles, *200. Also 4 new tires -Reynolds *25 each. Call 752 2046

gasoline, vapor pressure and vapor liquid ratio, ohosphorus and lead content, and other stan dards and specifications for motor fuel,

3) amending 2 NCAC 42 .0400 to adopt standards requiring the clear identifications of pro ducts, and

4) amending 2 NCAC 42 .0500 to amend registration and branding requirements and to pro vide for supprtive documentation' for registration and bran ding.    1

G.S. n9 26 and G.S. 119 27    J

Interested pK^^s may prestpt

their views either orally

writirK) at these hearings or prior to these hearings by mail addressed to Mr. David Smith, North Carolina

_,    'I*

Department of Agriculture, P.O. Box 26056. Raleigh, N.C 27611. The proposed effective date for these rules Is October 1. W83.

Copies of the proposed rules can obtained        "

. ____ n    request    by    writing

the Secretary of the Gasoline & Oil

be

Board at the above address August 9,1983

007 SPECIAL NOTICES

WE PAY CASH for diamonds. Floyd G Robinson Jewelers. 407 Evans Mall. Downtown Greenville.

010

AUTOAAOTIVE

Oil

Autos For Sale

BEFORE YOU SELL or trade your 79 82 model car, call 7...... ~

756 1877, Grant Buick. We will pay top dollar

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford. Call 758-0114~_

012

AMC

AMC GREMLIN, 1976. Automatic, low mileage, air, runs good. *1600. 758-0794._ _ _

013

BuIck

1969 LeSABRE Excellent condition. *1,000. Call 752 6185

1977 BUICK SKYLARK 2 door, V6, air, tut wheel, AM/FM radio, fresh oil change. Clean Inside and out. Call 756 3191 after 7 p.m

BUICK REGAL

M Stereo, cruise, powi

dows. 1 owner. Good condition. High

1979

AM/F

Silver, er wln-

mlleaoe. Make offer. 756 8539.

015

Chevrolet

1974 MONTE CARLO *400. Call 758314?

1976 CHEVETTE AM/FM, 4 speed. *1, 7^-4333. nlght*75?-ii95.

85.000 miles. 000. Days

1977 CAPRICE

Good condition.

1982 CHEVETTE,,4 speed, AM/FM, iditlor

air, excellent cohditlon. *6,250 756 3988

ig and'br^'kel^AS/^'^ cassette, extended sound range

1983 CAAAARO power steering and brakes,

stereo system, tilt steering. Under warranty. Call 74-4665 after 6 p.m.

016

Chrysler

1977 CORDOBA Loaded with all option*. Newpolpt. 752-5888,

018

Ford

1971 AAAVERICK 4 door, new tires, runs good. *795.756-1188 or 756-8833.

1972 PINTO, air, 28 miles per gallon. Rebuilt transmission. *495. Call 756 3974._

1974 FORD WINDOW VAN 6

cylinder, automatic. *1,000 cash. *all 758 4363 after 6 D.m

1975 FORD GRANADA One owner. Air, excellent condition. 746 2*24 Oftor5p.m.

1978 FORD VAN 12 passenger

Excellent condition. Hign mileage. *4700 negotiable. Call 746 6774.

1978 FORD FAIRMONT 2 door, V 8. *1200 negotiable. Needs work erTSI

355 2858 after T, Shirley.

1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757 0451. ask for Mr. Carrawav.

020

AAercury

TWO 1982 MERCURY ZEPHYRS 4

door sedan. Like new. Automatic, 6 cylinder. Call Leo Venters AAotors in Avden. 746 6171

1979 MERCURY CAPRI, blue, good condition, *3200. Call Mac, 756^219

days

021

Oldsmobile

1969 CUTLASS With alot of new part*. Co. 757 1293 gnjrtlnns..-

022

Plymouth

1977 VOLARE Air, power steering, automatic transmission. Excellent condition. 756 0494.    _

023

Pontiac

1979 GRAND PRIX Dark blue, V6. Good condition. Asking *2800. Call Abdulla, 752 6586._

024

Foreign

DATSUN 280ZX - 2-1-2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition. *8200. Cair 756 6336 or 756 1549 nlohts.

IMPORTED CAR PARTS, 105 Trade Street, beside Todd's Stereo,

Z561U,.

MERCEDES 240-D 19f1. 4 speed, sunroof, new tires, cream. Excellent condition. *14,800. Call 756-6336 days. Ask for Lorelle. Nlohts or weekends call 756-1549

SILVER UO Z Very good condition. i^.L39.

756 6787 at

OYOTA COROLLA, 1971. 011756-4933:.

*650.

TOYOTA SERVICE 4 cylinder tune special. *20. 4 cylinder valve adjustment, *14. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage. 756 3796

1967 MERCEDES 230. Classic. 4 door, sunroof, new paint, AM/FM, *1750. 1-524-5368.

fog lamps, 4 speed.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE Gall ?55 8354afty6p.m

1 972 TOYOTA CORONA Stationwagon. Runs good body/interior in good condition. Air, 4 speed. *800 7S2Ss78

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. 756 3241

1974 VOLKSWAGEN SUPER

Beetle. Good condition. Newly painted *1650 795 3924 or 795 4663.

1977 DATSUN 710 WAGON C<ill 7520144

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA AM/FM 8 track, air, *3200 negotia-ble. 752 6855 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 GL1S00, dark blue, air, AM/FM cassatta. rack, cruise, excellent condition. *3,950. 758 (84.__

CLASSIFIED ADS will go to work for you to find cash buyers for your unused Items. To place your ad, phone 752^166

1981 TOYOTA TERCEL 4 speed, 39 miles per gallon, 34,000 mile*, AM/FM cassette. Must sell! Call 75? 8809 y wttktPd*

1982 NISSAN SENTRA 5 seats, 55

miles per gallon (highway), 25,000 I, needs

miles, 'needs 2 tires. *800 and take ments or boy for *4500

over payments o firm. (Tan 746-6774.

1982 PRELUDE Excellant condl tion. AM/FM stereo, sunroof, *7500 negotiable. 756 7991 days, ask for Richard, 756 1114 after 9 p.m._

032

Boats For Sale

SAILBOARD, ^ar^ new. nev used, must sell. Call Bob. 7S6-7684.

14' FIBERGLASS BOAT, 50 horse power /Mercury motor and frailar. ^I5808ggtl8bl8. 753jj9iL

14' TERRY BASS BOAT 50 horse power Evlnrude,_ Cox trailer. Good

condition *1195. Call 746-4415.

16' CREEK BOAT 9.5 hors>ower Johnson motor and trailer. 756-2352 after 6 p.m

1976 AQUA CAT sailboat Complete with frailer and accessories.

Kinston. 523 9209 after 5

1976 CATA/MARAN with trailer and accessories. 523 92Q9

1976 20' GLASSTRON Deep Vee Excellent condition. Low hours.

lue and white, full canvas, stereo, ^    302    Ford    V8    Mercruiser,    full

egut^ent. tandem trailer. *6,000.

1978 DIXIE, combination runabout and Bass boat. Walk thru windshield, open bow with cushions. Front and rear removable pedestals and swivel seats with 24 volt Johnson trolling motor. Built In RPM meter, speiidometer, depth gauge, compass. 115 horsepower /Mercury motor with power trim and tilt. Float on trailer. Excellent very low hours usage.

condition and very low hours usa( Price *4950. Call 758 5705 anytime.

19T9 14Vj' PISCES tri hull, 28 hp Mariner, electric foot control motor. Pedestal seat. Galvanized trailer Good condition. *1800. Days, 746 6452. Nights, 746 3848

1981 RINKER BUILT 19'/i', 170 horsepower inboard/outboard Mercruiser, Cox drive on trailer, stainless steel    depth    finder.

fully equipped, *8100 or best 7S6^or ^7121. ask tor Gilbert

offer.

1981 14' HOBIE TURBO Lots of extras. Excellent condition. 756 9730._

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors. Leer Fiberglass and Sportsman iBs In stock. O'Briants,

tops. 250 unF_ ____

Raleloh. N C 834 2774.

1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self-contained. *5300 nMQti^bl*. 7$6 8539:_

5TH WHEELER and truck 28' Coachman, self contained, *5995. 1977 Cub Cab Truck, *2995. 756 7337 Of 756 3984,_

036

Cycles For Sale

HONDA GL 1000, Goldwlng. wind jammer with sound, custom king and queen seat, new tires, tune up. 12,000 miles. *2200. 758 6914, if no answer 758 1857, ask for Scott

1981 YAMAHA 650 Maxim, 13,800 miles, with cover. *1700.758 7034.

)981250ATC3whligr.748?833

1982 YAAAAHA AAAXIM 650. Shaft drive, full fairing, 4,250 miles, no damage. *1950 owed choice of 2 Plans. Call 746-6774

1983 HONDA 650 CUSTOM CX V Twin. Black and gold, water cooled, drive shaft, cruise control, mat

wheels, white leather fires. Only miles. Still under waranty. Includes 2 helments and Honda cover. Showroom Condition. *1995 firm.

748 3824,_

039

Trucks For Sale

1971 FORD pickup, new paint job, new brakes, camper top and good

tires, *850, 752-820Tafter6p,m._

1973 DATSUN PICKUP Good con

d|tl9n.$l7W. 7j7.l.!?3.flft8r8P-ro

1973 INTERNATIONAL School Bus. Would make nice camper. *1500.

Water fred kloa tTw, $i5f 758-9549. 1976 FORD PICKUP, radio, dual

tanks, new rubber, new tires. 6 cylinder, *1200. 1980 GMC pjckup,

automatic, 6 cylinder, radio. Sierra, *3200. 1981 Ford pickup F100 with overdrive, new rubber, *3600. 946-5175 day*.

1978 EL CAMINO Power steering

and brahct, air. LU32W- 752-5888-

1978 FORD VAN 12 passenger.

Excellent condition. High mileage. *4700 negotiable. Call 74g-6774.

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE Chief. Power steering and brakes, tilt wheel, air, A/M/FM stereo. Good

wnditlgn, vaM a8r 7 p.rp,

040

Child Care

MOTHER OF 4 year old with EMT degr -    

rea. school setting, *30 a week Located between Ayden and Grifton. 746-4764.

MOTHER WANTS to keep 1 or 2

children In my home near Industri

al 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. Reply to Child Care, PO Box 1967, Greenville,

WANTED SOMEONE to keep 10 month old Infant In my home with possibility of rooming In. Refer-^ce* required. 752_.!.9p5.

Want to sail livestock? ^un Classified ad for quick response.

046

PETS

AKC___

and white, 238 2124

COCKER

vhite, Dl

... PUPPIES Black Jack, and buff. Call

AKC DOBERAAAN

weeksold. 757 1653.

PUPPIES 6

AKC REGISTERED Doberman

puppies for sale. 5 males, I red and 4 black/

ibTack/tan.*iQ0eflch,752 5369.

FERRET FOR SALE, *45 758 4857 PITT BULL BOXER puppies Brindle color, 7 weeks old. Females. *60. 758 3276 or 758-0041.

GIVE US A call soon. We'd like to help you place a classified ad in this newspaper today. Call 752 6166.

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 tne willing ness to work hard and earn top commissions. Excellent benefits,

working conditions and bonus plan.

Ian Pecheles in person only a.m. 12 noon, Monday-Friday. Jo

Pecheles Volkswagen.

AUTOMOTIVE MECHANIC We are in need of an experienced mechanic due to an Increase in business. Must have tool_s and

business. /Must nave tools ana willingness to work hard. Contact

Steve Briley . Service Manager at Joe Pecheles Volkswagen at 756-

my

AVON TOBUYORSELL!

Earn up to one half of everything sell Call 752-7006.

yggj

BOBCAT OPERATOR Begin work immediately. 3-4 years experience desired. Call 756 4565._

Call LeeW Weaver, 1 527-4155 Equal OoDortunltv Company M/F

CLERICAL Challenging position with local company. Need perm who enjoys various responsibilities. Must be accurate typist - speed of 50-55 words par minute. Good pay and excellenfbenatits. Call 752-2111, extension 252, 9-4 for appointment. All replies confidential

CLERK Challenging and versatile position in engineering department. Must have mathematical skills

and type 50-55 words per minute accurately. By appointment only. Contact Grady White Boats, 752 2111, extension 252 between 9 a.m. 4

p.m.

WHY STORE THINGS vou never caw with a

use? Sell them for Classified Ad.

CRACKER JACK Legal Secretary. High pressure job.' Experience preferred in Real Estate packages.

preferred in Keai b state packages Excellent benefits. Send resume to

Legal Secretary, Greenville.

PO Box 1967,

Drive The Big Rigs

SeeClassltled080 (Instruction). DRYWALL FINISHERS and hanoers. Experience only. 527-2285

ENERGETIC INDIVIDUAL needed (or part time hours. Must be able to work 2 to 3 mornings a week and Saturdays. Apply in person at Leather 8, Wood, Carolina East Mall. No phone calls please!

EQUIPMENT _______

General land moving equipment. Call 747 3471. 758 4769, or 3-9094

between 8 and 5.

an ap

EXPERIEN(:ED word Processors needed on Wang, Lanier and IBM Displaywriter. Call for pointmant.

Manpower Temporary Services

118 Reade Street

757-3300

EXPERIENCEDTRUCK TIRE SERVICEMAN

Needed. Apply In person White's Tire Service. 36i2 S ^morlal Dr

^NERAL OFFICE^ RKeptlpnjst insurance Ability to

ture, experienced, dependable, ited

le oriented. Skills In secretarial

 insurance Ability to answer

and Interpret telephone calls, resume to Generi Sffice, PO 1967. Greenville. NC

051

_Help    Wanted

GREATOPPORTUNITY

for ambitious person who wants a

sales career with management potential in Greenville area. Tl

be

right person will receive expense paid training. Must be 21 or over, nave car. be bondable. ambHiou*

and sporfsminded. Call for appointment and personal interview Linda AAakI 804-282-0700

HOMI/WWVEMENT SALESPERSON

Represent one of world's largest retailers. Position available covering Eastern Carolinas. Com mfs!

mfssiononly with draw account. In

hornean ing experTence helpfuj bt^ notnecessary Must be self starter

and have own transportal ion. Earningpotential: *25,000 to *5Q.OO^ Training program, leads furnisheq. Career position. Contact Al Pierce: 1-800-22-55H or send resume to P O Box 725, Concord. N C 28025. '

INTERIOR DESIGNER

salesperson. Experience preferred. Salary plus    ^    .

salary plus commission. Send resume with references to Interior Designer, PO Box 1967, Greenville,

NCI__

LINEMAN SECOND CLASS, minimum 5 years experience in the construction, maintenance and re pair of Electric Power Lines. Sala ry negotiable. Applications taken at the Town Hair Ayden, nC An Equal Opportunity Employer.

LOOKING FOR A NEW CAREER?

Do you ha>

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

Service 355 2020.

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 expe^ rienced salesperson. Excellent pay Ian and benefits Apply to: Boo rown or Robert

Ian and benefits Apply

.    ____t Starling at

rown-Wood. Inc., 1205 Dickinson

MEDICAL OFFICE AAANAGER Immediate opening 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 NeurologicaJ Assoc., 425 Stantonsburg Road.

MOTHER'S HELPER Experienced in toddler care. Preferably with some education in child aevelooment. 756-1945.

NEED ROOFERS with experience. Call 758 5278.__

NEEDED - ONE PERSON to hel^

with hog operation. Must have year experience. 753 2029.

PAINTER

energetic and must en

clean, dependable.

 .      nust    enjoy    the    |

Ing profession, must have_ own

paint-

trns^tation. Call Bucky Davis,

mzi

PART TIME SECRETARY needed. Must have a NC Real Estate

license. Will need to work aporoxl mately 20 hours per week. Salary

commensurate with experience. For your confidential Interview,

yo _    ________

call Mary Chapin at CENTURY 21 Bass Realty. 758-6666.

PERSON EXPERIENCED in

hanging and finishing sheetrock and spraying ceilings. At least 4 or 5

YSflttfijuzfidfinoLfiflMTsifigsi,

PERSON WITH 6 months experf ence Installing carpet. Will consider

full time or part time. Apply In person at Azalea Mobile Homes'. J T Williams.

PHYSICAL THERAPIST-Immediate opening in long term care facility for LPT with a minimum of 2 years experience. Hours Monday Friday, 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Opportunity for variety of diagnosis within our outpa tleni department. Phone 763 6271 for appointment. EOE/Handlcapped.

PHYSICAL THERAPY AssJstaiV needed by skilled nursing facility. NC license required. Hours AAon-day-Frlday, 7:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m.

ly, 7:30 a.m. 4:30 p.m. ity for variety of diagnosis within our outpatient department. Phone 763-6271 for appointment

EOJ/Hanqiooppoo

ROOM AT THE TOP

Due to promotions in the local area, 3 openings exist now for

^    ,      _    young

minded persons In the local branch of a large organization. If selected you will be given two weeks of classroom training locally at our expense. We provide complete company benefits, major medical.

dental plan, profit sharing, and

Ion '        

optional pension plan second to none. Guaranteed commissioned income to start. All promotions are based on merit not seniority.

To be accepted you need a pleasant personality, be ambitious, and

eager to get ahead, have grade 12 or better, and be free to start work

Immediately.

We are particularly interested in those with leadership ability who

are looking for a genuine career opportunity. Phone now to arrange an appointment for a personal interview. Call between 10 AM ;

PM Monday through Friday.

i and 6

757-0686

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed. Auto sales ex perience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA = LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC 756-4267

_For    Appointment_

Help fight Inflation by buying and I ling through the ClassifledT ads. Ill 752 6166.

Call

SECRETARY - For small chair of

reschools. Apply in person at 313

.    iIj

ast 10th Street. No phone cal please

WANTED EXPERIENCED_COQK T Bo

Make application to Cook, PO Box 2606, Greenville. _

WANTED EXPERIENCED service writer. Must be neat in appearance. Must be able to work well with others. Experience necessary Apply to Service Writer, PO Box 967. Greenville. NC 27834.

WANTED SECRETARY part tim

3 mornings per \week. Leading, full tirhe position January 1984. Call

from 9 to 11 a.m. weekday*. 756 612.

WANTED; AAechanical engineering student or retired mechanical

engineer to work part tirhe for Inaustrial manufacturing facility. Familiarity with computers and NC

machining desired. Plese submit

resume to: Ahechanical Englnter ing, PO Box 548, Greenvllfe, NC

Ing, 1 2Z!34.

WENDY'S IS NOW seeking mature individuals to work at lunch. Approximately 10 to 15 hours per

week. Pick up applications between 2 and 5 p.m. at idth Street location

No phone calls please.

piqyr __    _    _______

at Heritage Personnel Service of Greenville. "Plan your tomorrow by using Heritage today!!" 103 Oakmont Drive or phone 35* 2020.

059

Work Wanted

ALL TYPES -TREE SERVICE Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal. Free estimates. J P Stancil, 752 6331.

ANY TYPE ROOFING repair. Call

BRICK AND BLOCK work, r^airs

or additions. II years experience Call 825 6591 after?    ^

'p m.

CERTIFIED CHIMNEY SWEE 25 years experience working wi chimneys and fireplaces. Call G Holloman. 753 3503 day or nioht

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplacci

and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard wiiiters use. Elimlnaje

creosote and musty odors. Wope stove specialist. Tar Road E terprlses. 756 9123 day, 756 1; nioht.

terprlses. 756 9123 day, 756

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint arra varnish removed from wood and metal. Equipment formally of Dip ar*d Strip. All items returned /MhitJ T days. Tar Road Antiques Call for free estimate Days 7*6 9123. Nioht 756 1(107 _^    -

CUTTING, trim ari^d driveways. Call 752-7341,    _

mortar SAND, Meld sand aAd rixk. Also DrMline Service

Davenport s Hauling Servici

-Z-247_^

I WILL 00 ODD job services Yj^d work, window cioaning, etc^ Cftli

792 4942.





Tbe Dally Reflector, GteenvUle, N C.-Tuesday, Augint >, 190-1S

0

Work Wanted

long brothers roofing All

typMof rooting commercial and rwidonf al. 25 j^rs eimariance Free wtlmatat. Call 355 69^

REGISTERED NURSE desires private duty at home 7sa 634

525. 12" table tan, 57. All excellent condition 751 1570 anvtlnw

060

FOR SALE

17' MARKER ISLAND BOAT with 50 horsepower Evinrude motor, lots of extras, 5500. Regular size ping pong table. 550 violin, 5150. Call 752 3927

061

Antiques

17.2 CUBIC FOOT frost free refrig erafor, Hotpoint, like new, almond, burner whirlpool elecfric range.

ANTIQUE DINING ROOM suif wifh 5 Chairs. 5250 New air maftress. t57.6ll7S2*32.

white, smoke glass door. Home made Gatlin type woodstove. fully fire bricked lined. 757 0195 after 6

X>-LE'S a SCOTT'S ANTIQUES 1312 Dickinson Avenue. Greenville. NC 10 to 5. Monday through Friday. Good selection of Oak furniture and much more!_

063 Building Supplies

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

5 SHELF contemporary glass and chrome Etigere, 550. 8 place setting of contemporary Block China with 4 matching placemats. 540. 2 con temporary glass top end tables and matching sofa table, excellent con ditlon, 5325. 460 antique bricks. 575 Cail 355 2136 anytime_

85^ARAT DIAMOND Retail 53,000; sell 52,000 Call 752 8984 after S:30p.m._

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

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

065 Farm Equipment

GOOD SELECTION of used homes Azalea Mobile Homes 5495 down, .. day warranty See Tommy Williams, 756 7815_

ATTENTION CORN FARMERSI Gathering chain, (prices for 8 or more), fo fit: John Deere and Internajtional 522 95, Massey Ferguson 522.49. Allis Chalmers: Low profile 523.49 Quick sMtch $23.95. All 1977 1979 $26.49. Others in stock. We also carry the Hutchinson line of augers Agri Supply, Greenville. NC. 752 3W.

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR, 317 John Deere with 48" mower deck new motor. Call 756-6100.

2 ROW ROANOKE tobacco har vester with both heads Ready to go in field. 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights

8 X 16 ALL STEEL dual axle trailer ith loading ramps. Like new. IZJiZl_1_

066 FURNITURE

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Shop now during Factory Mattress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one halt. NexttoPittPlaza. 355 2626.

NEW 14 WIDE - low down payment. Payment, under $150 per month. Only at Azalea Mobile Homes, 756 7815._

COUCH, 5150 Love seat, 5100 Chair, 550. 3 tables. 5100 Pictures. 355 2175 after 6:30 p.m

EARLY AMERICAN Herculon couch and loveseat, rust print color, good condition, 5350. Very at tractive floral couch and chair set, excellent condition, green, gold and brown colors, set $250 . 756 2220 or 752 8968 after 6

KING SIZE mattress. Excellent condition. Box springs and frame. $150.752 6758

NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing

New double wide 3 bedroom. 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $245 per month. Also FHA and conven-ional financing availablel.

CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard _756-0191_

MUST SELL walnut contemporary dining room set wifh 5 chairs. Good starter set. Some lamps and chairs left. Call after 5 weekdays, 752-1365.

NO MONEY DOWN VA financing. Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes. 7^ 0333.    _

SOFA AND CHAIR, matching set, rust, gray, beige stripped. Herculon fabric $100. 355 2900._

6 PIECE library unit, Ethan Allen, solid oak. 51500 or reasonable offer. 100% wool Morroccan rug, 4'x6', 5350. Call 756 9273._

067 Garage-Yard Sale

INDOOR/OUTDOOR yard sale everyday at Old Fairground, Mon day-Friday from 9 to 6, Saturday, 7 until,_

072

Livestock

JORSEBACK RIDING Jarman tables. 752 5237._

073    Fruits and Vegetables

ONLY 2 MONTHS OLD Oakwood Montebello, 70x14, 2 bedrooms, 2 bath, $2200 down, assume payments. Set up in Birchwood Sands. 758 6312 after 5.30 p.m

PEACHESII Excellent for freezing and canning. You pick! Finch Nursery and Peach Orchard. 3 miles North of Bailey, Highway 581 North Open 7 a.m. to 8 pm. Monday through Saturday, 235-4664. FIELD PEAS, 54.50 bushel B & B You Pick, 795-4646 Hassel._

074 Miscellaneous

ALL GLASS 6' display cases, like new, lighted with locks, 5260 each. 746 6394 01- 752 5167

BLUE PLUSH wall to wall carpet, 18 X 21. 2 years old. Excellent tgndltign 756 7l54atty5.

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. 5150. Call 756-7703

DUNE BUGGY, Sandrail', VW engine and trans axle, 6 bolt system, VW tires In front and 50s in rear. Camaro bucket seats. Runs oood. 5350. 746 3624

GEORGE SUMERLIN Furniture Shop. Stripping. Repairing & Re finishing. (Formerly of Eastern Carolina Vocational Center) Located next to John Deere Equipment Company on Pactolus Highway. Call 752 3509

GIBSON FROST FREE refrigerator, large freezer com partment. Good condition. $175 in

g$e npw. 7^0867, --

HOUSE PVVINT 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 3456 after 5 p.m

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% oft Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memo rial Drive. 756 6417

KEROSUN RADIANT 10 heater. LJsed 1 month. Sold tor $198, Price 5125. 756 7887 after 6

-LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-4742 after 6 p.m., Jim Hudson.__

LARGE OFFICE DESK, 5160 746-6626._

LIVING ROOM and bedroom carpet. Rust and royal blue. 355-739.    _

MADAME ALEXANDER DOLL. Large dark hair pussycat. 590. Call 756 8274._

MEN'S 10 SPEED bike, $90; Schwinn 5 speed bike, 565. 756 3420

/MOVIE CAMERA, BeM & Howell, Super 8, projector, screen and light, tullv automatic. 5150. 756-7178

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

RCA 25" COLOR TV Solid state, perfect condition, beautiful color, $300. 7M 2691

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shampooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company

SHARP, SONY & GE Ooseout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at

SHOES, size 4 to 4'/'!, like new. Call 752 7B5 after 5.

offer and you remove. Call 752 2901 days. 753 4065 nights.

STEREO SPEAKERS (BES), 200 -watts. 355 6192

TWO TWIN BEDS, maHress and ]?i;^s. 570 both sets. Call 752 3804 USED AIR CONDITIONER Also 2 year old male bulldoo. Call 756-7408.

USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re frigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb inq, and electrical service. 752 9333

USED COPYING MACHINES Xerox 3100 LDC, IBM II, Savin 770 - Bruce Wells, 756 6167.

WASHING MACHINE, 5200. Cail 9557

WHITE WESTINGHOUSE electric stove for sale. 575 or best otter 749-6421.___

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

074

Miscellaneous

11,000 BTU COLDSPOT air condi tloner, 5225. Reversible window fan.

, UTILITY TRAILERS $175 each all 752 6185.

NEW

LOCATION!

SIKING Mobile Homes

LOWEST PRICES ANYWHERE! Stop - Shop - Save

NO MONEY DOWN

VA, FHA and Conventional Financ ing Available.

FREE! FREE! FREE!

Central air with every purchase of a new home.

Siking Mobile Homes

Route 11 Highway Bypass, next to Rex Smith Chevrolet. Ayden NC

746-2076

NO MONEY DOWN

August Special Only

SINGLE WIDE....$8z495 DOUBLE WIDE..$17,995

(Loaded)

Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

CALL NOW! 756-4833

TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING

705 West Greenville Boulevard

REPO - 10 X 14. Save 54.000. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Pay 5495 down and assume loan. See John Moore, Azalea Mobile Homes, 756 7815.___

USED CONNER Mobile Home. 5295 down and take over payments. Call 756 7138._ _

USED MOBILE HOMES As low as 5295 down Assume payments. Call 756 4687, ask tor Lenn

10x50 ALAN 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,

fartially furnished. 10 years old. 1600. 756 9589 or 756 9737 after 6.

12.75% FINANCING on selected homes. Call Conner Homes, 756-0333

14 WIDES for as low as 5170 per month. Call or come by Art Oellano H0tnx7ifc9&tl

1969 COBURN, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, excellent condition, new carpet and furniture. Low down payment and payments under 5130.    756-9874,

Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264

1971 CHAMPION, 12x65, 3 bedroom, dishwasher, new carpet and furniture, low down payment Payments under 5135 month, 756 9874, Country Squire Mobile Homes. 264 Bypass

1971 STYLEAAAR, 12x65, new carpet and furniture, excellent condition, 2

bedrooms, 1 bath. Can be yours for a low down payment. Payments under $160 per month. 756-9874,

Country Squire Mobile Homes, 264 ByP65S

1978 12x60 Parkwood mobile home, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, built-in bar and bookcase, partly furnished. 758 7097. __

1973, 12x73 near hospital. 51,000 down and take over payments of 5152.12 month for 3 years. 752 6359, if no answer 756 6444. _

1979 CONNER No equity Take over payments 5108/month. 2 bedrooms, on lot. One owner. 756 0333

1979 14x60, 2 bedroom. I bath, some equity and assume payments of 5155. Call Lawrence at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841.

1980 KNOX mobile home, 14x60, 2 bedrooms, iVj baths, like new, $9,500. Call Greg 8 to 5, 757 7227 747 2052 after 5

078

Sporting Goods

RUGER S * W COLT lund guns, 10% to 30% Oft. AAarlin Ruger S & W. Remirgton Ithaca long guns 20% to 40% off We discount Browning also. Tar Heel Gun Shop. ISM W Vernon Ave . Kinston, Tuesday and Thursday nights, 6 pm to 9 pm., Saturday 9 am to 5 pm_

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

It you are ready to STEP UP call toll tree I 800 532 0476, Ext 109

082 LOST AND FOUND

FOUND SAAALL SHAGGY male dog near Aycock School. Call 756-69.    _

093 OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business tor sale Complete farm supply. Established 21 years. Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758 0702

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT tor sale by owner. Downtown Greenville. 75 seat restaurant, 30 seal cocktail lounge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all ABC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 758 5156 after 5._

LIST OR BUY your business with C J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial 4 Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015._

TO BUY OR SELL a business Appraisals Financing Contact _NOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers. 401 W First Street 752 3575    _

095 PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep. 25 years experience wor' '

_..eep. ,____,    ,    .    _____

on chimneys and fireplaces . day or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

100 REAL ESTATE

INCOME PRODUCING apartment and office complex. 20% down with assumable loan and owner tinanc ing Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 2230^_

102 Commercial Property

COAAMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE .for 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

109

Houses For Sale

COUNTRY HOME by owner Wooded lot, 3 bedroom^, 1'/i baths, lace with Cr, yard, work!

fireplace with Craft stove, fenced in backyard, workshop. By mentonly. Call 756 0552

appoint

EXCEPTIONALLY NICE Brick. 3 bedroom ranch, cathedral ceiling, exposed beams, hardwood floors St9.WO.OO

OWNER TRANSFEREO and ready for occupying, recently painted. 3 bedroom, all formal areas, large family room plus game room located in Gub Pines and its excellently priced at $69,900.00

DON'T MISS THIS CEDAR 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 $67,000.00. Owner needs and wants to sell and will negotiate.

DON'T LET THIS ONE 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. 560,900.60.

EVERYTHING YOU COULDASK For Brick rambler features three bedrooms. 2 baths, formal rooms, family room with fireplace, fenced backyard all in mint condition 564,500.00.

TIREDOF PAYING RENT

Then move Into your own condo with 2 bedrooms. I'-} baths, large living room and dining room. Summer will be special because of the tennis courts and pool 545,400 00

Jeannette Cox Agency Inc. 756-1322 Anytime

NEAR THE WATER I 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and dining combination. 1 bath On lorge lot location: Hickorv Point. NC 322 5298 anytime.

New Construction Financing

10.15%

FIXED RATE Realty World CLARK BRANCH. INC REALTORS

75-6336

NEW LISTING Chestnut Street For Investment as a duplex or to live in. Four bedrooms. Three baths. Living room with fireplace. Family room with fir^lace. jiatio. playhouse. 547,000. Ouftus Realty Inc. 756 5395._'

NEW OFFERING by owner lege Court. Over 2.00 squar An formal areas Den with

by ( ,0(W

Col uare feet

fireplace, large playroom, 3 bedrooms, 2V] baths, large eat in

kitchen with pantry. Large fenced in backyard with storage building. 571,500. Skip Bright. 758 4228 or

752 6186.

tors, 756 6336 or Ray Holloman 753 5147___

INCOME PRODUCING apartment and office complex. 20% down with assumable loan and owner tinanc ing. Call Carl at Darden Realty, 758 1983; nights and weekends

z.5a?m_

106 Farms For Sale

FOR SALE: 8,000 - 140 pounds tobacco allotment. Atwood A Mor rill Company Inc. will be accepting sealed bids tor tobacco allotment until August 31. 1983. Bids will be opened September 1, 1983 Mark outside envelope "Sealed Bid". Send bid to Atwood & Morrill Company Inc., PO Box 490, Washington, NC 27889 Attention: Don Baird. For further information contact Don Baird at 946-7763. Atwood & Morrill Company Inc. reserves the right to accept or reject any and all bids

64 ACRES: 50 cleared, 14 wooded. 200 feet road frontage; no allotments; $80,000.    752    0398 (day),

756 5708 (nioht). _

109 Houses For Sale

BARGAIN HOUSE Partially burned - to be moved (1,500 square feet). 52500. 752 5242 or 752 6852

BEAUTIFUL THREE bedroom, 2 bath home on Sunset Drive in Farmville. 2 fireplaces, hardwood floors, 9 ft. celling den, breakfast area. 2 car garage, flagstone patio. Priced in the 90 s. Call Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500. Dick Evans, Realtor. 758 1119

BY OWNER Assumable 8Vi% loan 1,550 square feet, 3 bedrooms, IVi baths, double oarage. Low 560's North Overlook Drive. 756 4987

BY OWNER Nearly 2.000 square feet. Garage, living rpom, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 700 square toot

reatroom with 18' pool table, ishwasher. newly carpeted, cable TV, 8 years old Located 3 miles east of Greenville. Priced tor quick sale in the 550's 758 0144 or 752 7663

BY OWNER 2 bedroom. 1 bath house on corner lot in Twin Oaks. 756 7755 or 758 3124._

BY OWNER New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R H AAcLawhorn, 75T2750 or 975 2688._

BY OWNER 3 bedroom brick, 2 baths, kitchen, dining room, den, living room, foyer, 1 car garage

separate 1500 square toot garage ( 1'/j acre lots 2 miles fro Greenville. Call 758 6321.

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 752-6068.

1984 REDMAN doublewide: Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden tub, storm windows. masonite and shingle roof with 5 year warranty. 525,995. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841.    _

2 AND 3 BEDROOM mobile homes. Excellent condition. Will sell seoerateor together. 756^173

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

60x24 REPO 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Low down payment and assume loan. See J T williams at Azalea Mobile Homes. 756 7815._

076 AAobile Home Insurance

AAOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage tor less money. Smith insurance and Pealty, 752

22M

077 Musical Instruments

CONN DELUXE Spinet Organ, in dividual tone oscillators, tuned percussion, toy counter, Leslie speaker, automatic rhythm, walnut cabinet, 53,695 when new, must sell 52,000. Call 827 5137

CLUB PINES Excellent opportunity to be in one of Greenville's leading areas in this 2 story, 4 bedroom, home. Double arage and its priced at only

FOUR BEDR(X>MCONDO

with all the amenities. 69,900.00.

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 for 594,900.00.

THEN SEE THIS and go overboard with job. Rigged from Stem to Stern tor fun, sun, and enjoyment. 5140,000.00

REDUCEDI Owners say reduce the price for quick sale because of relocat ing.l3Vj% per annum assumption Excellent neighborhood and corner lot. 579,900.00.

WINTERVtLLE

3 bedrooms birck ranch with family room and formal dining room for 542,500.00

Jeannette Cox Agency Inc. 756-1322 Anytime

UNIVERSITY AREA Well shaded, corner lot is the setting for this nice brick starter home. Features hardwood floors, 3 bedrooms, iVj baths, eat-in kitchen, fenced backyard for tots. Loan assumption to qualified buyer. $44.900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Jane Butts. 756 2851

VA LOAN ASSUMPTION and possible owner financing on part of equity in this nice starter home in Ayden. Features living and dining rooms, eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, fenced backyard. Many extras writfren oft at this price. $36,900. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655 or Elaine Troiano. 756 6346.

Ill    I nvestment Property

1',^ ACRES with 3 bedroom mobile home Good location tor devel opment or private use. 756-0173

24 UNIT 1 bedroom Multi-family lot. 1'^2 miles from Pitt Tech. $1,650 per unit. 539.2()0. 756 1307.

113

Land For Sale

121 Apartments For Rent

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed. (3ueen size beds and studio couches Washers and dryers optional Free water and sewer and yard maintenarKe

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost tree 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 1'i baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers, compactors, patio, tree cable TV. washer dryer hook ups. laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and PCX)L. 752 1557

EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom garden and townhouse apartments, featuring Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air conditioning, clean laundry tacilities, three swimming pools

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCIES I or 2 beds, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates Call 756 5555 Heritage Inn Motet

ENERGY EFFICIENT 2 bedroom townhouse in wooded area Washer/dryer hookups $295    756

6295     .

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re trigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools Located (usfoft 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

LARGE 1 BEDROOM apartment Ideal tor ! or 2 pecple Recently refurbished air condition. 607 West 4th Street. Lease and deposit re quired No pets. 5225 a month. Call 355 2544    ___

LARGE 2 BEDROOM duplex All aoDlidnces 5280 756 5389'

LARGE 4 BEDROOM apartment 1310 Myrtle Avenue. Lease and deposit required. No pets. 5320 a month. Call 355 2544 or 7^ 0489.

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, thermopane windows, extra insulation.

Office Open 9 5 Weekdays

9-5 Saturday    15    Sunday

Merry Lane Oft Arlington Blvd.

756-5067 _

WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank Serious Inauirlesonlv. 746 4669.

5 ACRES

Greenville p.m._

LAND east of all 756 7884 after 6

115

Lots For Sale

BLUE BANKS ESTATE 5 wooded acres surrounding a lake, rolling

jVAtf6tr*XAGENCY, l

756 1322,

HOLLY HILLS Exclusive location, IV: acres on lake, wooded roling terrain. Call JEANNETTE COX AGENCY. INC 756 1322_

LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS

are less than rent tor your own condominium cr jwnhome. An

affordable alternative to renting ivailable with our financing. Can Iris Cannon at 758 6050 or 746 2639,

121 Apartmants For Rent

ONE BEDROOM apartment Near campus No pets. 5215 a month. W3

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes tor rent Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815._

ONE BEDROOM apartment, heat artd hot water furnished. 201 North Woodlavm. 5215. 756 0545or 758 0635

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din ing, bedroom complete 579 00 per month Option to buy U REN CO. 756 3862

FOR RENT 10.000 square toot building Ideally located on Highway 33 in Chocowinity Call Donnie Smith at 946 5887_

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The    

Office hours 10a.m to5p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 hours a day at

75-;

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2. and 3 bedroorns. washer dryer pool, club house, playground. Near ECU

hook ups, cable TV,

Our Reputation Says It All -"A Community Complex"

1401 Willow Street Office Corner EIm 4 Willow

752-4225

TWIN OAKS townhomes 2 bedrooms, IVz bths, carpet, range, refrigerator, dishwasher, hook ups 5315. No pets 756 7480

TWO BEDROOM townhouse, 4< i miles west of new hospital. Avalla ble September I 756 8996 or 756 5780

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom, I'/j bath townhouses Available now. 5295/month 9 to5Monday Friday

5 Monday i-r

756-7711

WEDGE WOOD ARMS

2 bedroom, IVj bath townhouses Excellent location. Carrier heat pumps. Whirlpool kitchen, washer/dryer hookups, pool, tennis court.

756-0987

122 Business Rentals

BUILDING FOR RENT 50 xlOO . 15 high. 5300 nrtonth. In city limits. Call 7Sl I723anvtlnr>e. _

FOR LEASE. PRIME RETAIL or office space Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 square feet Only 53 60 per square foot. For more information. coll Real Estate Brokers 752 4348

125 Condominiums For Rent

CONDOMINIUM, Windy Ridge. 3 beOrggmy 2' i tfjihj. Cflll 756 9f ? .

127 Houses For Rent

CENTRALLY LOCATED 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, central air fenced backyard. Available Sep tember 1, 5350 a month Lease and deposit. 756 1067

EXCEPTIONAL HOME for excep tional people 2 bedrooms, enclosed front ana back porches 2 car garage, workshop, large wooded lot In quiet neighborhood, 5300 per month Mr Byrd, 758 0198 or 757 6961.___

135 Office Space For Rent

5.000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass Plenty of park ing Call 758 2Wdavs _

137 Resort Property For Rent

ATLANTIC BEACH 1 bedroom

condominium, oceanfront, families only 756 4207 or 726 3869

138 Rooms For Rent

SINGLE FURNISHED room in nice home near Pitt Plaza for discreet male student or young bust nessman. S12S per month S667

TWO FURNISHED rooms for rent Full house privileges $125 month Femaleonly 922 East Uth Street

142    Roommate Wanted

CLEAN, RESPONSIBLE student 2 bedroom apartment. 590 a month plus utilities Call 752 3966 Ask tor udv

FEMALE ROOAAMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom furnished apart ment 756 7509

TWO BEDROOM. 1 bath home near University Marrieds only No pets

5275 month 752 3804.__

3 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Griffon Phone 524 4147. nights 524 4007

2 BEDROOM, 1 bath home near university Marrieds only no pets 5295 a month Call 756 9076__

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

12X60. 3 bedroom, with air, 5160 2 bedroom with air, 5135 Students

Preferred No pets, no children Call 58 0745 or 756 ^491

2 BEDROOM TRAILER 758 0779 or 752 1623__

3 BEDROOM AAOBILE home for rent. Furnished 5160 a month No pets. Located 6 miles out on New lern Highway. 756 0975

3 BEDROOM trailer lor rent 2 miles east of Grimesland, 5135 a month. No children, no pets 758 3046    _

135 Office Space For Rent

1 AND 2 bedroom apartments, carpeted and appliances. 5210 and 5275. Call 758 3311._

1 BEDROOM APARTMENT Fully furnished full utilities. 752 4363 after 5._

2 BEDROOM apartment. Kitchen applianes furnished, totally efectrlc, 5325 month Call 756 7647

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove, carpeted, 1V] baths. Available September 15. $285 per month. Call 756 3563

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Stancill Drive near ECU 5270. No pets. 756 7480._

4 BEDROOM DUPLEX in town. 2 bedroom apartment in country. 746 3284 or 54 3180._

It's still the garage sale season and people are really buying this year! Get yours together soon and adver tise it with a Classified Ad. Call 752 6166

122

Business Rentals

2100 SQUARE FEET ol retail space tor lease in small strip shopping center. Contact Aldridge &

Southerland Realty, 756 3500, nights Don Southerland 756 5260._

6,000 SQUARE FEET Upstairs downtown Greenville 5th Street entrance. Call 756 5007_

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

EVANSWOOD RESIDENTIAL lots from 59,000 512.500. Call W G Blount a. Associates, 756 3000.

Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029.

MOORE & SAUTER 110 South Evans 758-6050

PARTLY WOODED LOTS 30

minutes from Greenville 200 yards from Pamlico Sound. 510,000 each Financing at 10% 746 6394 or 752 5167_

REDUCED 20% to sell at 59800 in Westhaven Darden Realty, 758 1983; niohts and weekends 758 2230.

THE PINES In Ayden 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location

Paved streets, curb and gutter,

$10,.'"

ley '

746 2166 tor full details

erestigious neighborhood, all Moseley Ma

1,500.

lOseley Marcus Realty at

WOODED LOTS, wafer taps and septic tank permits. Approximately 136x190. Westwood, 2 miles east of Ayden 58,000. Financing at 10% 746 6394 or 752 5167    _

2 LARGE LOTS on Sfantonsburg Road. Call 758 5920_

117 Resort Property For Sale

lAAMACULATE TWO BEDROOM

trailer and lot at Portside near Whichard's Beach - only 30 minutes away. Like new condition, com pletely furnished, covered deck, storage building - ready to move in Only $28,000. Estate Realty Com ^an^4 752 5058, nights 758 4476 or

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758 4413 between 8 and 5

NEED STORAGE? We have an^

igton Self Storai '    '    

day Friday 9-5. Call,

size to meet your storage need. Arlington Self Stpra^ O^n Mon

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton, Co

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart ments. 1212 Redbanks Road. Dish washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal Included We also have Cable TV Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University Also some furnished apartments available

/56 4151

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE BUY USED CARS lOHNSON MOTOR CO.

Across From Wachovia Computer Center Memorial Dr    756-6721

CRAFTED SERVICES

Quality furnlturt Rtllniahing and repairs. Superior ceding tor all type cheira, larger selection of custom picturs framing, aurvsy stakaaany length, ell types of psilflts, laleclsd tramad reproductlona.

EASTERN CAROLINA VOCATIONAL CENTER

Industrial Park, Hwy. 13 758-4188 8AklM:30PM Graanvllla, N.C.

FOR RENT 2500 square feet Suitable for office space or com merclal 604 Arlington Boulevard 756 8111__

OFFICESFOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams, 756 7815

FEAAALE R(X)AAMATE WANTED

Non smoker, studious $142 50 moothly plus ' i utilities 355 4795

Looking tor an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed in the Classified columns ol today's paper

MALE OR FEMALE working person or grad student fo share a furnished two bedroom apartment near University One half rent and utilities Will need your own bedroom furniture Call 757 6611 or after 5,'752 1825

MALE ROOAAMATE NEEDED to

share nice 3 bedroom house to help split $425 rent and - utilities Scott AAoorhead. Camelot Inn, 756 1150

MALE ROOMMATE to share Eastbrook apartment $130 month,

&lus '2 utilities Need to lurnish ed 1 443 1212

WANTED: MALE roommate Grad student or professional Deposit required Call 355 6897 after 6 30 pm

$200 MONTHLY

includes every thing except food and long distance phone calls. 752 4178 after 5om

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

YOU CAN SAVE money by shopping' for bargains In the Classified Ads

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING

C.L. l.upton. Co.

7'i2 hi Iti

Prepshirt Is Now Accepting

Applications For

EXPERIENCE SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS

SINGLE, DOUBLE, OVERLOCK, SERGING AND BLIND HEMMING OPERATORS Good benefits. Apply in person at

PREPSHIRI MANUFACTURING

North Greene Street

6

_

-J

\

SF>ECIAL

Safe

Model S-1 Special Price

$12250

Reg. Price $177 00

TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S. Evans St.

752-2175

AUGUST SPECIAL

Indian Trails Country Club

Beautiful 18 Hole Course    I

%GUST GREENS FEE SPECIAL

Weekdays $4.00 - 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.

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 obe hour.

Cyril Edwards, Jr. President Phone 633-3121

New Bern, NC 28560

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.

Larry Lewis

919-355-2711

Regional Office

Greenville, N.C.

An Equal Opportunity Company

USED PIANOS buy and sale. Pianp a, Oroan Distrlbutpf:

pan Distrlbutpfs. 355-6002 WURLITZER PIANO Like new CPCidiliPO. 5800. 756 5630._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

WE REPAIR SCREENS&DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

BOYD

ASSOCIATES

INCORPORATED

P.O. BOX 1705. GREENVnUE. Norm CAM0UWA17134 GENERAL CONIRACTORS    75M184

METAL BUILDINGS

MLT

nSIDICAL LABORATORY TECHNOLOGY

A

BE PART OF THE DYNAMIC HEALTH CARE TEAM AS A MEDICAL TECWIOLOGI ST. OPENINGS NOV AVAILABLE FOR A 21 MONTH ASSOCIATE DEGREE CURRICULUM. BROAD, EXCITING JOB OPPORTUNITIES.

CALL 946-6194 NOW BEAUFORT COUNTY COUNITY COLLEGE

WASHINGTON, NORTH CAROLINA 27889

LIQUIDATION SALE

JEWELRY, ANTIQUES AND ART OBJECTS MONDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 15, 7:30 P.M. HOLIDAY INN

Inter. US 70 By-Pass & US 258 Kinston, N.C.

. Viewing 1 Hour Prior Selling tor owners, heirs and attorneyt. Exclusive collactiont of gold, anti-qiw and diamond jewelry. Coina, starling, fine dacorator furniture, oriental objects d'srt and signed bronzes. Hmmalt, Dresden, Royal Doutton. hand-mada orlenlal ruga, quality gtsu, ivory and jade, military ilams, IHbographs and prints.

Matter Card and Visa welcome No Buyers Premium For More Information Contact    ,

BARROW-KENNEOY AUCTION COMPANY

900 N. Herritage Street

Kinston, N.C. 20S01    i

(910)527-8464

N.C. Licenso No. 143

R 8 S ESTATE LIQUIOATIONS Box 205

Newton Ceidre. MA 02159 (617)244-6616 ,

N.C. Licenae No. 1745

Opening Soon

GOLDEN CORRAL

Family Steak House

109 East Greenville Blvd.

Interviewing for the following positions:

I *Meat Cutter*PrepUtiIlty*Cooks*Fry Cooks*Line [Servers *Hostess*Cashier and Waitresses We will train talented individuals to be successful in our restaurant. We pay excellent

wages. Total BENEFIT PACKAGE available. Experience not necessary, but will be considered.

APPLY IN PERSON TO Greenville Job Service 3101 Bismarck Street Interview Schedule

August 10 Wednesday August 11 Thursday '    August    l2    -    Friday

Equal Opportunity Employer

THE

REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

For Sale By Owner

CHARMING HOME

3 Bedrooms, 2 baths 6-10 acre wooded and landscaped corner lot Fireplace with wood stove Palio, hobby room. 9 X 10 storage area could be converied to ofhce Large great room with built ms Detached country workshop Williamsburg accents, crown molding, chair railing, many extras.

$63,500 Telephone 752-4162

PRICE REDUCED

606 Eleanor Street

$78,000 Cherry Oaks. Price reduced and owner says sell. Contemporary ranch with sunken great room with fireplace, spacious kitchen with eating area, 3 large bedrooms including master suite, well-landscaped, fenced. Hurry!

Aldruljic ^ Southerland Realtors

756-3500

I

I





Anal/sts Predict Borrowing Costs May Go Higher

By The Associated Press Analysts predicted the cost of borrowing could go even higher after banks raised the prime interest rate for the first time in 18 months, sending a shudder through Wall Street and the dollar soaring against other currencies.

The nations banks announced Monday they have increased the prime rate, the short-term interest rates for preferred corporate customers, to 11 percent from 10.5 percent.

Although the boost had been widely anticipated, it still forced bond prices down and the dollar up to record heists on foreign exchange markets in Europe before retreating in U.S. trading.    

The jump in the prffne jame the same day that industry

publications reported h^fhy gains in car and home sales, (^skd concern that rising interest

but economists have ex rates could put a squeeze on the recovery.

Deadline Is Met At Dump Sites Cleanup

RAEFORD, N.C. (AP) -Clean-up efforts at four lead-contaminated dump sites in Hoke County have been completed, meeting Mondays state-imposed deadline, officials said.

Meanwhile, blood tests were scheduled to begin Monday for residents living in the Ashley Heights area where three of the four sites are located, Hoke County health director Lloyd Horne said.

The tests will look for evidence of high lead levels in their blood, particularly in children who might have

played at the sites during the four to five years that contaminated materials were dumped there.

Horne said officials today will take soil samples at the sites to determine if a high lead content remains.

PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, and hazardous levels of lead were found there last spring.

Woody Wilson of Goldsboro, the man who officials said contaminated the areas through his transformer salvage business, also hired an independent laboratory to conduct additional

tests for lead.

The health director said Wilson removed more than half a million pounds of lead-contaminated ashes from the sites, at least 35, 16-foot truckloads of battery casings, and other quantities of scrap metal.

In June, state laboratory tests determined that one of the dumps contained a lead content 60 times higher than the level considered hazardous. The PCBs found at the dumps were not of toxic levels and probably were removed with the ashes and battery casings, Horne said.

If laboratory results show remaining hi^ lead levels, Wilson will be ordered to perform additional clean-up .work, possibly removing the soil to hazardous waste landfills in South Carolina or Alabama.

I think weve been pretty happy with his cooperation. Now well have to see what the samples tell us, said Kathy Neal, public affairs officer for the states hazardous waste program.

Wilson was ordered to clean up the contaminated material or fcD9 fines u to $40,000 a day.

Thomas Thomson, an economist at Crocker National Bank in San Francisco, suggested the prime rate maynise hi^r to keep pace with increases in other interest rates.

But White House spokesman Larry Speakes said, We would be iK^ful that this does not indicate a trend, that interest rates once again will 4egin to go down. We have forecast that they will by the end of the year and theres no change from that forecast.

'I like the way (the banks) wait until Congress goes off to the beaches before announcing the higher rate, said George Salem, bank specialist at A.G. Becker Paribas Inc. ^ Salem said he expected incremental increases in the prime, saying the banks kept Kfondays boost to half a percentage point because the shock value of a ISrger change would be too great

The higl^er cost of credit is due to the Federal Reserves tightened monetary control, a possible increase in the publics inflationary expectations and an emerging clash between public and private demand for credit in the nations expandiflgeconomy*

The industrywide increase in the prime ratearas the first rise since February 1982, when it was at 17 percent. It had dropp^ to 10.5 percent by February of this year, the lowest level since 1978.

The prime is a benchmark used by commercial banks to calculate interest charges on short-term loans to corporations. Some companies pay more than the prime rate, and others pay less, depending on such things as their credit standing.

Consumer loans, which tend to average four years, are not directly affected by changes in the prime. However, the prime rates level is an indicator of an overall interest rate climate.    <

The rise in the prime came the same day the government

announced an increase in the average rate of l(mg-term, . fixed-rate home mortgages. The average jumped to 13.24 percent in July from 12.98 percent in Juhe, the first monthly increase in a year.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks feU 20.23 points to 1,163.06 Monday - its lowest level in neariy four months. The key average fell 36 points in the past six trading sessions.

But^avid M. Polwi, president of David Polen

Securiues, said he expected the selloff to end once investors begin to focus on the strong earnings gains now being reported by most corporations.

Bond prices also fell and on foreign exchange markets, while the value of the dollar surged to record heights in relation to the French franc and the Italian lira during Eurq)eantrading. Later, in U.S. trading, the dollar retreated on a wave of profit taking.

Currency traders attributed the dollars new surge in part to increases in U.S. interest rates, which make dollar investments more attractive.

In other economic news:

-F.W. Dodge, a business information firm that tracks the construction industry, said new housing starts jumped 69 percent in the second quarter from the same period last year.

-Wards Automotive Reports, an industry journal, said U.S. auto companies had a 48-day supply of cars, or 1.1 million vehicles, at the end of July - the lowest inventory level in 11 years.

-As a result of the governments latest auction of three-and six-month Treasu^ bills, the top interest rate that banks and savings institutions may pay on six-month savings certificates rises today to 9.95 percent from 9.81 percent.

The maximum rate on three-month savings certificates goes up to 9.57 percent from 9.36 percent.

Copyright 1903 Kroger Sav-on

None Sold To Dealers.

Quantity Rights Reserved

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Each 0 these advertised items is required to be readily available tor sale in each Kroger Sav on, except as specifically noted m this ad It we do run out of an item we will offer you your choice of a comparable item when available, reflecting the same savings or a rainchecK which will entitle you to purchase the advertised item at the advertised pnce withm 30 days

wi ciaoir

WIlCOMf

FEOfML IFOOO STAMPS!

Your Food Stamps Go Further .

At Kroger Sav on

THIS OFFER

EFFECTIVE ON WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1983, IN PUR GREENVILLE STORE ONLY.OouWe YourThis Wednesday, August 10.Clip the Manufacturer's cents off Coupons from Your Mail, Newspapers and Magazines... Then Bring Them to Kroger Sav-on

This Wednesday, August 10, we will redeem all national manufacturers cents off coupons up to 50' for double their value. Offer good on national manufacturers coupons only. (Food retailer coupons not accepted.) customer must purchase coupon product in specified size. Expired coupons will not be honored, coupons for free merchandise excluded from this offer. Offer does not apply to Kroger or other store coupons whether manufacturer is mentioned or not. When the value of the coupon exceeds 50' this offer is limited to $1.00. if double the value of a coupon exceeds the value of the item, this offer is limited to the retail price. Limit one cigarette and coffee copon per customer. Limit one coupon for any one particular item, if you, for example have two coupons for 15' off on Miracle whip and intend to purchase two jars of Miracle Whip - only one of these coupons will be doubled. You may use the second coupon but its face value remains at face value.

DOUBLE COUPON SAVINGS At Kroger Sav-on

MANUFACTURERS'

MFC

CENTS

YOU SAVE AT

COUPON

OFF

KROGER

Coupon A.

20

40

Coupon B

39

78

Coupon C

50

1.00

Coupon D

75

*1.00

T:,C0PEN 8 AM TO MIDNIGHT ran

Phone 756-7031





back to school sale

Go\'i^odl

18 /i"37%a5'

Tops And Pants For Active Boys And Girls

$

$

Our Reg. 7.96. Oirls Comfortable Activeweor Tops For Foil

With band-bottom styling, pouch pocket. Pdyester/cotton. 7-14. $ ^ Our Reg. 8.57-9.96. Olrls Rugged RusNei Blue Denim Jeans m    Fashion jeans designed for good looks, good wear. Cotton. 4-14.

Our Reg. 8.97. Boys Handsome Shor^sleeve Velour Shirts With striped chest trim, V-neck with collar. Of ocryllc/cotton.

Our Reg. 11.97 Ea. Boys Oood-looking Belted Twill Slacks Tailored for rugged wear. Polyester/cotton. Choice of solid colors. Our Reg. 7.97. Boys Foshion-colkir Knit Shlrtsjfor School Interlock knit pdyester/cotton blend in choice of solid cdors.

Our Reg. 6.96. Girts Sweaters With The Classic Look Fashion favorites in machine-washable acrylic knit. 7-14. Save. Our Reg. B.96. Tailored Oxford-look Shirts For Girls Cotton/pdyester In fashion stripes with artists bow. 7-14. Save. Our Reg. 10.96. Belted-style Twill Fashion Pants For Girls School pants with an A+ look. Polyester/cotton in fall colors. 7-14. IA(4-5eil-12)

*5

*5

*7

*8

Im A GreatLAYAWAYBargain!

t

kf. s 3

WEAR

DATED

Monsanto

VISA





back to school sale

Im AGreol

LAYAWAY

Bargain!

1^,

x,-'i

%

iilt

fA-.

WEAR

DATED

t~A

2-2 (4-6 & 12)





20% OFF

Casual Fashions For Men

Our 14.97 Ea. Steeplechase"* Our 14.96 Ea. Comfort Ac- Our 16.97. Sweaters of Bi-v-necks of Orion acrylic in tion slacks of carefree loft acrylic chenille in great fall colors. 11.97 Dacron* polyester. 11.96 fashion colors. 13.57

*Du Pont Reo IM

jtavo2.97

Our Reg. 6.97 Ea.

Knit Sport Shirts For Junior Soys

Good-looking shirts of comfortable 'n carefree polyester/cotton In sizes 4-7.

I Your Choice Our 7.97-8.97

toys* Plold Sport Shirts Or Denim Jeans

Polyester/cotton shirt with pocket; sturdy cotton/polyester/rayon jeans. Save.

Casual Knit Shirts For Men On The Go

Spirited jersey with pouch pocket or handsome s|x>rt shirt In great stripes.

iMOf Hie lOQiH Foeket T-thMs

Ckisilc crew-nedc'tees of soft, natural cotton m great ^oolors. For men.

4A(4612)





Save 3.^

Men, Junior

Mens jeans eons include EQ. Of cotton stret^

colp-

Reg. 15.96-17.97

^iOenlmJo<*n*_

ikets, m indigo

tgsid^ss;.i

kSSi-

Ltattoied 'JiJtrel*

Cetooe*e ^,^e.

po*^

S^X

/

25%OFF

Zingy Designer Coordinates

Our Reg. Low 11.99-1.99

For your active lifestyle, sportswear with aesigner distinction. Choose tops or pants with name designer signatures, in polyester/cotton thermal weave or knit or warm acrylic fleece. All in coordinating fashion colors for fall and winter

-.'

5r 1

Save 3.96

Our Reg. 13.96

felt

orela$tk>leg Polyetter.

i

.on

&

18.88

Sole Price

$0

Oirii* ZIp-off Sleeve Ski Joekett

It war ^e^s4-14.

Many styles, some with chest warmers. Nylon vwth polyester

Our Reg. 9.96-10.96 Misses Layered-look Fashion Tops

New soft knits with layered look. In argyle plaids or heart design. Cotton/polyester.

50^7-10)





laoh ^

M ioek To School

'fdp4md Ohd shoutdsr-itrap tlylot wSh SM pockot. hoyon canvoi, nym 0r#.M7.eiuleliQot .......lo.S.07

2.9>

Sole Price

your poor.

u

cy-

Ouf Rea 2.97

'All

^ *    4

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Title
Daily Reflector, August 9, 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.) - 30537
Date
August 09, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/95447
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