Daily Reflector, August 15, 1983


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I he l)ail\ Kellector. (ireenxille. N.tvmnaav. August ij. 1.)

091

Business Services

ATTEMTIOH LADIES: Let Moore Meid Service meke your life easier I

all S4 0247.

093 OPPORTUNITY

FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE

business tor sale. Complete farm :stablished 21 years.

OwfSlr deceased, family has' other ts. Call.......

interests. Call 75 Q7Q2

FOUR SEASONS RESTAURANT for sale by ovner Downtown Greenville. 7S seat restaurant, 30

seat cocktail loimge, fully equipped, large screen TV, all AEfC permits, some owner financing. Call Gary Quintard 7SI 51S6 after3._

1ST OR BUY your business with   - ^1

. J Harris & Co., Inc. Financial & Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States. Greenville, N C 757 0001, nights 753 4015

TO BUY OR SELL a business. Appraisals. Financino. Contact SNOWDEN ASSOCIATES, Licensed Brokers, 401 W First Street. 753

3SL_

095

PROFESSIONAL

CHIMNEY SWEEP Gid Holloman. North Carolina s original chimney sweep. 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Can day or night, 753-3503, Farmville.

100 REAL ESTATE

102 Commercial Property

?ANK OF NC for lease downtown, all Carl. Darden Realty 758 1983, nights and weekends 758 230.-

COAAMERCIAL OFFICE SPACE for rent available in Industrial Park Staton Court. Building has 9000

square feet with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month lease re

quired. Call Clark-Branch, Real tors, 756 6334 or Ray Holloman 753 5147.    _

106 Farms For Sale

FOR SALE: 8,000 140 pounds tobacco allotment. Atwood 4 Mor rill Company Inc. will be accepting .......  lofment

sealed bids for fobacco allotmen unfil August 31, 1983. Bids will be opened September I, 1983. Mark outside envelope "Sealed Bid". Send bid to Atwood 8> Morrill

Company Inc., PO Box 490, Washington, NC 27889 Attention: Don Baird. For further information

contact Don Baird at 946 7763 Atwood 8i Morrill Company Inc.

reserves the right to accept or        llT)i    

reject any and all bids

100 ACRE FARM 1 mile form Sunshine Garden Center. Suited for

farm or development. 756 5891 or 752 3318

64 ACRES: 50 cleared, 14 wooded, 200 feet road frontage; no allot ments; $80,000.    752-0398    (day),

756 5708 (night)._

109

Houses For Sale

BARGAIN HOUSE Partially burned to be moved (1,500 square feet). $2500. 752-5f42or 752-6852.

BRICK RANCH featuring foral rooms, den, three bedrooms, two

baths, vfenced back yard and great conditidn. RIVERHILLS $64,S(.00.

TWO STORY In CLUB PINES Great room, formal dining, modern kitchen, four bedrooms, two and a half baths plus double garage. $89,900.00.

CAREFREE LIVING in Windy Ridge. Two bedrooms, Vh baths, large living and dining room. $45^400.00

OWNERS HAVE reduced price (or quick sale! Custom bull) 3 bedroom home with all formal areas. Den with fireplace, 2 car garage. Large master bedroom, tastefully deco rated and ready to move into. $79,900.00.

Jeannette Cox Agency Inc. 756-1322

BY OWNER Nearly 2,000 square feet. Garage, living room, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 700 square foot

greatroom with 18' pool table, dishwasher, newly carpeted, cable

TV, 8 years old. Located 3 miles east of Greenville. Priced for quick

sale in the $50'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 grooms, 2 baths.

fireplace, lot size negotiable. By ointment, R H McLawhorn,

75r2750pr?75jm

BY OWNER 3 bedroom brick, 2 baths, kitchen, dining room, den, living room, foyer, 1 car garage, separate 1500 square foot garage or I'/j acre lots 2 miles from Greenville. Call 758 6321

BY OWNER 3 bedroom brick house for sale. Folly carpeted and closed-in garage. Days 746-4091, niohts 746 4783, Ayden

BY OWNER Assumable 8Vj% loan Living room with fireplace, dining room, 3 bedrooms, screened porch, garage, low$60's. 756-4987

BY OWNER Nice 3 bedroom home, large fenced back yard. Conveniently located, nice starter home. Assumable 7% loan. Call 355-4157 or 756 5544 days, 756 4856 or 756 4078 niohts

COUNTRY HOME, NC 33 East. 1740 square feet living area, plus 440 garage, double lot. Too many extras to listll $74,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615.    _

100 Houses For Sie

FHA 235 LOAN usumptlon to qualified buyer Contemporary ranch honre offers 3 bedrooms. 3 baths, iivirra room, eat-in kitchen.

iarge outside storage with electrici

ty and iovely lawn. $54,900. Call ^vis ButH Realty, 758 0655 or Shirley Morrlton. 758 5463.

IMMACULATE three bedroom home on large corner lot for only $49,900, fully carpeted, one-car garage, deck, outside storage build-ing. Possible 8% assumable loan. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058, niohts 752 364for 758 4476.

JUST REDUCEDI Owner is anx ious to sell this charming brick home. Conveniently located near shopping districts and schools this home features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.

living and dining rooms, eat in kitchen, den with fireplace and carport with storage. Now only

$61,500. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655,'or Elaine Troiano, 756 $436.

NEW LISTING on three bedroom home In country on l'/j acres; beautiful landscaped lot, detached

storage building. Located _eight miles from mall. Estate Rwlty

iiiifva iiwiii mail, i^aiaiv

Company, 752 5058; Billy Wilson, 758 4474

NEW LISTINGS

Rams Horn    1523.    Live    in

the country in this three bedroom and bath ranch home. Living room, dining area, carport, celllno fan, wood stove, outside storage. $43.500

RED BANKS ROAD

Appealing contemporary with possible loan assumption. Three bedrooms. Two baths. Foyer, Dining room. Great room with fireplace. Very Nice. $73,500.

CLUB PINES A really pretty Williamsburg with three bedrooms and 2Vi oaths

Foyer, living room, formal dining room, family room with fireplace. Nicely decorated interior. $89,500.

DUFFUS REALTY INC. 7M-53t5

OWNER WILLING TO make a

sacrifice and has reduced this home $2,000! Immaculate contemporary offers FHA loan assumption with no and features 3 bedrooms,

baths, great room with fireplace and paddle fan, dining room, gal jey

kitchen, laundry room ana outsiqi storage. Beautifully landscaped lot lust minutes from howifal am doctor's park. $54,500. Call Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0455 or Jane Butts, 756 285V

PRICED SLASHED FOR quick sale Conveniently located house armville witnin walking dista

In

Farmville within walking distance of downtown and all schools; 1948

square feet with extra large den/recreatlon room (over 27'

long); 3 bedrooms and iv. baths; fully carpeted with central heat and 2 fireplaces. For confidential showing, call Real Estate Brokers, 752 4348 or 757 1798._

STRATFORD SUBDIVISION

Immaculate brick ranch features 3 bedrooms, IVa baths, work kitchen,

den with fireplace and sliding glass doors to patio, all formis and carport with storage. $52,000. Call

Mavis Butts Realty, 758 0655

111 Investment Property

APARTMENTS OFFICE for sale Owner will finance with little down.

Call Carl tor details. Darden

758-1983, nights and weekends 75

2230^

113

Land For Sale

FIRST CLASS 2Vj acres In private area. Call Carl. Darden

758-1983, nights and weekends 75

2m

NORTH CAROLINA

Take over mountalntop homesite near Asheville. No. down payment

Pay two payments of $50 each and assume oafance due of $3,300.00.

Call Nancy collect 704 584 3237./

W(X>DED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank. Serious inquiries only. 746-4669

5 ACRES

Greenville

p.m.

D LAND east of

all 756 7884 after 6

115

Lots For Sale

EVANSWOOD. - RESIgENTI/^l

lots from $9,000 $12,500. w-. Blount a. Associates, 756-3000.

LOTS FOR SALE 3/4 acre lots located on Road 1517 3 miles

northeast of Greenville. Call after 8 752 5567.    _

pm.

ONE OF THE last lots In Candlewick. Vj acre, heavily wooded, near pool. 752 5986

PARTLY WOODED LOTS 30 m Gr(

minutes from Greenville. 200 yards from Pamlico Sound. $10,000 each. Financing at 10% 746 6394 or 752 5167._.

THE PINES In Ayden. 130 x 180 celh

corner lot. Excellent location Paved streets, curb and gutter.

Paved streets, curb and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746-2166 for full details

WATERFRONT LOT for sale. 1 acre cleared lot on Pamlico River priced for quick sale. 946 0159

WATERFRONT LOT for sale. 1 acre cleared lot on Pamlico River priced for quick sale. 946-0159.

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

SPECIAL Executive Desks

115

Lots For Sale

WOODED LOTS, water tius and septic tank permits. Approximately 130x190. Westwood, 2 miles east of

130x190. Westwood, 2 miles east o< Ayden. $8,000. Financing at 10% 746 6394 or 752 5167 '_

1.07 ACRES, septic tank and well 330.13' frontage State Road 1765, 1766 Loop Road off Brick Kiln Road Reduced to $10,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752 2615._

117 Resort Property For Sale

RIVER COTTAGE on wooded

water front lot on the Pamlico River. 1 mile from Washington. NC

^iet, established neighborhood Call 758 0702days. 752 OJlO niohts

WATERFRONT YEAR ROUND

beautiful 3 bedroom home Full basement. Between Washington and

Bath on Dyck Creek with quality furniture. By owner. $75,000. 923

ZZfiL

120

RENTALS

LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Cafl

zjiil"    "    '

1:4413 between 8 and 5.

NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon day Friday9 5.Caliys6^

121 Apartmants For Rent

A SPACIOUS 1 bedroom, 1 bath handicapped apai etflclent: $250. 752 a

60' 30' beautiful walnut finish. Ideal lor home or office

Reg. Price S259.00

Special Price

$-17900 TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT

569 S Evans St. 752-2175

BANK

ADJUSTER

PLANTERS NATIONAL BANK has a challenging opportunity for the right candidate in our growth-oriented Greenville office. Qualified individual will adjust accounts in Consumer Loan Department.

Some college training required and prior collection experience desirable. Competitive salary and excellent benefits. For an interview appointment, call;

Mr. Edmondson

(919) 752-7173

Qreenville, N.C.

An Equal

Opportunltv

EmptoyarM/F

I Planters I Bank

COST

ACCOUNTANT

ExoDllDfit opportunity ior an individual with a BS or BBA with an accountiniB major plus 2 years coat and budgot experience In a manufacturing environment.

WIH eetablleh and maintain current cost data with detailed review and anaiyaii. Devaiops forecasts, budgets and annual piana to meet (nanagement objectlvea.

Send resume with salary requirements to:LARRY HAMBY EATON CORPORATION INDUSTRIAL TRUCK niVISIONROUTE 11, BOX 287 GreenvHIa, N.C. 27834An Equal Opportunity Eieployer

AZALEAGARDENS

Greenville's -newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom apartments.

All energy efficient designed.

Queen size beds and studio couches.

Washers and dryers optional

Free water and sewer and yard maintenance.

All apartments on ground floor with porches.

Frost-free refrigerators.

Located In Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown

by appointment only. Couples or sin'

ingles. No pets.

Contact J T or Tommy Williams _756    7815_

Cherry Court

Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IVa baths. Also 1 bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.

compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557

121 Apartments For Rent

BRAND NEW tastefully (tecorated townhouse. 2 bedrooms. ivi baths, washer/dryer hook ups, heat pump No pets. 75t 2040or 756 8904.

LARGE 3 BEDROOM duplex All appliances. $280 756 5389._

LOVE TREES?

Experience the unique in apartment vmg with nature outside your

living

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    1-5    Sunday

Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.

756-5067

LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS

are less than rent for your own condominium or townhome. An affordable alternative to renting available with our financing Call Iris Cannon at 758 6050 or 746 2639. Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 75^1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756 0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029

MOORE &SAUTER

110 South Evans 758-6050

NEW TOWNHOUSE Available September -2 Bedrooms, )'j baths. Private sun deck. $325 monthly Security. Call 752 4883

121 Apartments For Rent

TAR RIVER ESTATES

1, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups. cable TV. pool, clu house, playground. Near ECU

hook ups. cable TV,

Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex '

140) Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow

752-4225

TWIN OAKS tbwnhomes 2 bedrooms. I' j bths. carpet, range.

refrigerator, dishwasher, hook ups $315 >fo pets 756 7480

VILLAGE EAST

2 bedroom. I' j bath townhouses Available now. $295/month.

9 to 5 Monday Friday

756-7755

1 AND 2 bedroom apartments, carpeted and appliances $210 and $275. Call 758 33IT

1 BEDROOM EFFICIENCY Close to campus Furnished Phone 756 4364 after 7. ask for Donnie

2 BEDROOM apartment Kitchen applianes furnished, totally electric. $325 month. Call 756 7647.

2 BEDROOM TOWNHOUSE Heat pump, dishwasher, refrigerator, stove, carpeted. 1'} baths. Avalla ble September 15 $295 per month. No pets Call 756 3563

3 BEDROOM DUPLEX on Stancill Drive near ECU $270. No pets. 756 7480

4 BEDROOM DUPLEX in town 2

133 Mobile Homes For Rent

12x65, 2 baths, air condition, new carpet, ice maker 746 6575

2 AND 3 BEDROOM, washer.

dryer, air, carpet, completely furnished Nooets 756 0792

3 BEDROOM TRAILER 758 0779 or 752 1623

2 BEDROOM, air conditioner, washer, dryer, electric heat pn private lot $165. Students only. Call evenino 756 3491

2 BEDROOMS, furnished, air.

vyasher. ^qod [ixation No pets No

children 758 4857

135 Office Space For Rent

OFFICES FOR LEASE Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815

5,000 SQUARE FEET office build ing on 264 Bypass. Plenty of park inq Call 758 2300days_

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 busi llh. 756 5667.

nessman, $125 per mont

143    Roommate Wanted

FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share 3 bedroom house Prefer professional or grad student $125 month 752 2495____

WANTED: AAALE roommate Grad studeaifiqiprolessional $200 month includerail but long distance calls. D^sit required Call 355 6897 alter * WP m___

$300 MONTHLY includes every thing except tood and long distance phone calls 752 4178 after ?p m

144

Wanted To Buy

2-5 ACRES OF LAND suitable tor house and garden within 10 miles of Greenville between Highway 11 South and NC 33 East Call Real Estate Brokers. 752 4348 between 9 a.m and6o.m _

TWO FURNISHED rooms tor rent. Full hoOse privUeges $125 month. Female only. 922 East 14th Street.

2 R(X)MS for rent in doublewide trailer near Belvoir. $75 per room. 13 utilities 758 4991._

142 Roommate Wanted

bedroom apartment in country.  ......-.24

746 3284 or 524 3180.

122 Business Rentals

NEW 2 STORY 2 bedroom, 1>'j bath with fireplace, deck, central air and heat tor lease. $375 per month plus security deposit. 102A Eric Court, Greenville. 752 1863._

NICE QUIET DUPLEX, hookups, appliances, nice yard, trees, 756 2671 or 758 1543._

EASTBR(X)K . AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS

327 one, two and three bedroom

?iarden and townhouse apartments, eaturing Cable TV, modern appli anees, central heat and air condl tioning, clean laundry facilities, three swimming pools.

Office 204 Eastbrook Drive

752-5100

EFFICIENCIES 1 or 2 beds, maid service, cable, pool, weekly rates. Call 756-5555. Heritage Inn Motel.

GreeneWay

Large 2 bedroom garden apart-menfs, carpefed, dfsh

washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical

abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adiacent to Greenville Country Club. 756 6869

KINGS ROW APARTMENTS

One and two bedroom garden apartments. Carpeted, range, re frigerator, dishwasher, disposal and cable TV Conveniently located to shopping center and schools. Located lustotf 10th Street.

Call 752-3519

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

fVE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS

C.L. Lupton Co.

OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS

Two bedroom townhouse apart " Dish

ments. 1212 Redbanks Road washer, refrigerator, range, dis posal Included. We also have Cable Tv Very convenient to Pitt Plaza and University. Also some furnished apartments available.

756-4151

ONE BEDROOM, furnished apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J T or Tommy Williams. 756 7815.__

RENT FURNITURE: Living, din

ing, _^dj^qqm_cpmplete. _$79J[)0 ^r

month. Option to buy. U-REN 756 3862._

SEEKING TWO persons to share 2 bedroon            -

Deposit Availab 5086. 752 7948

^droom apartment in Greenville

.. and 1 months rent required

Available September 1. Call 756

STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS

The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV

Office hours 10a.m. to5p.m. Monday through Friday

Call us 24 Hours a day at

756-

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MAINTENANCE

MECHANIC

Perdue. Inc. of Robersonville has an im-madiate opening lor a person with general maintananca background lo work in our protein processing plant. Job duties ior this position include operating and adjusting processing equipment, repairing gaars. replacing bearings and shafts and other general maintenance duties.

Applications will be accepted Monday through Friday at the Williamston Job Service otiice between the hours ol 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.

Equal Opportunity Employer

BUILDING FOR RENT 50'xl00', 15' high, $300 month. In city limits. Call 758 1723 anytime.

FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or

Office space. Arlington Boulevard. 3.000            -        ----

square feet. Only $3,60 per s toot. For more information, eal Estate Brokers 752 4348

FOR RENT 10,000 square foot building. Ideally located on ghway 33 in Chocowinity Call innie Smith at 946 5887._

6,000 SQUARE FEET Upstairs downtown Greenville. 5th Street entrance. Call 756 5007

125 Condominiums For Rent

CONDOMINIUM, Windy Rid, 3 bedrooms, 2' 7 baths Call 756 9273

127

Houses For Rent

LARGE 8 ROOM house. 1': bath between Ayden and Griffon. 524 5507_

2 AND 3 BEDROOM houses in Griffon. Phone 524 4147, nights 524 4007

Looking for an apartment? You'll find a wide range of available units listed inthe Classified columns of to day's paper.

CLASbiFlED DiSPLAY

WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING

C.L. Lupton, Co.

7.S2 6Uf>

EDLERLY LADY in good health would like a suitable person to share home and expenses 355-2334 or 756 6089

female roommate wanted tor 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge Pool, tennis courts and sauna. Call 756 9491 __

CLASSiFiED DiSPLAY

ROOFING

STORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS

C.L. Lupton. Co.

FOR A

TRAVEL

CAREER

Next Classes Begin

September 12

Course Includes Computer Training LUCAS TRAVIL SCHOOL

N. Hills Office Mall Suite 205. Raleigh. NC 27609

(919) 781-4777

Licensed State of NG

CABINETMAKIRS

Experience In High Quality Architectural Woodwork or Millwork required. Apply AtOur Facility on Highway 258N. or Call Ike Terrell at 823-1681.

General Woodwork, Inc.

P.O. Box 278, Tarboro, N.C.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

xatemen

For Sole

The Caiolina Olds Network dealers hove marked down over 3000 cars during their Excitement Sale.

From August 17 through the 20th you hove over 3000 spethoUy priced cars to choose trom ot your local Carolina Olds Network dealer And that's something to get excited about These aren't just cars these are Oldsmobiles A big selection o Cutlasses, Cieros, Firenzas, 88's and 98's, and more Each one speaoUy priced tor the Excitement Sale It's more than just a sale it's the opportunity lor you to get your new Oldsmobile at an incredibly low price Excitement tor sale. We've got it at your local Carolina Olds Network dealer,    '

U

HOLT OLDSMOBILE

101 Hooker Rd.

Greenville, N.C.

756-3115

Carolina Okls

network

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

148

Wanted To Rent

CHRISTIAN FAMILY r>ed& 34

bedroom house to rent possibly with option to buy 756 8907 or 756 4477

DESPERATE 1 or 2 bedroom un furnished apartment by September

1 for professional woman and 1 Call 756 4445 after 6 p m.;

child 752 5611 anytime

MOVING-TO Greenville area Oe sire furnished 2 or 3 bedroom

dwelling September 1 References, PO Brfx 416, (Jcracoke, NC 27960

34 BEDROOM HOME

Pines or Lynndale. 3228 <

in Club

____756    8677

evenings. 756 3228 days

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

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

MANAGER

Eastern N.C. division of Fortune 500 company needs a Manager for

PURCHASING AND STORES

Reply in confidence to:

MANAGER

P.O. Box 1967 GREENVILLE, N.C. 27835

FOR SAIE

LIKE NEW HOME APPLIANCES

Also Yard Equipment From Our Home HOTPOINT UPRIGHT FREEZER    $250

17 Cubic Feet, White

KELVINATOR 6 CYCLE WASHER    $250

Heavy Duty, White

GENERAL ELECTRIC 6 CYCLE DRYER $150

Heavy Duty, White

PENNCRAFT 25 RIDING MOWER    $350

7 H.P., Electric StaVter

SELF PROPELLED MOWFR ^ H P .22    $75

20 MOWER 3 H P    $50

WOVEN HEMP RUG 9x12, uke New    $50

Can Be Seen At 907 South Memorial Drive T.l. WAGNER    PHONE    756-1215

THE

REAL

ESTATE

CORNER

FOR SALE

FERTILIZER MANUFACTURING PLANTAND SALES FACILITY

Highest annual tonnage to data-3500 tons. Seven ton Johnson batch mixer w/accompanying tank farm; 4,000 square foot warehouse storage: 640 square foot office space; 60 foot truck scales, located on approximately 11 acres of land in Grimesland, NC.

If interested, please contact Harveys Realty & Auction Kinston, NC 523-9090

HOMES FOR SALE

264 By-pass West

Living room, large kitchen with eating area, den, 2 bedrooms, tVjbaths, screened porch, utility room, garage Lot 125 x 210. *50,000

LOT FOR SALE

82'x130 lot on corner of 13th and Greene Streets. $7500.

LOT FOR SALE

lit E. 11th Street 75x85. Price $8000 00.

NEED HOUSES AND

FARMS TO SALE

TURNAGE

REAL ESTATE AND

INSURANCE AGENCY

Gel More With Les Home 756-1179

752-2715

llj 30 Years REALT0I4* Experience

HOMES FOR SALE

SEVERAL NICE LOTS & TRACTS OF LAND TO BUY, SELL OR RENT

CONTACT

D.D. Garrett Agency

752-4476    752-7756    752-1764

ATTENTION INVESTORS

We have 3 lots left for townhouses on Lind-beth Drive. Call for prices of total package as well as single lots.

752-4883

FOR SALE

3 Bedroom, house 2 full baths, Utility room, Dining room, kitchen with built-in appliances, large living room, Den with fireplace, large screened porch, 2 carport, tool room. Outside storage building. Private drive off side stret. Large shaded lot with Azalea Garden. Located at 2810 S. Evans Street in Lakewood Pines. Low 80s.

Other Brokers Welcome Call evenings for appointment 756-3491 R.R. Hall, Ownerafc

)





Broadway Hit Tried On Television

JAZZ GENIUS - Miles Davis, considered one of the greatest jazz musicians of all time, is known for his originality and his personal air of mystery. A Davis biographer, Ian Carr, describes the jazzmans music as utterly

contemporary in concept, rhythm and execution, and yet it contains the essence of his great past. Carr says that Davis has set new directions in jazz time and time again. (AP Laserphoto)

ByTOMJORY

Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK (AP) -"Pump Boys & Dinettes on Television is based on the successfui Broadway country-rock musical, and that means theres not much of a story to follow, unless you count the guys search for a calendar girl to promote their gas station.

Actually, the hunt for a "Pump Girl of the Year doesnt go much past the Double Cupp Diner, and the two sisters who run that place, Rhetta and Prudie Cupp.

The plot is important only in light of NBCs plan, presumably discarded, to make a series of Pump Boys & Dinettes on TV. That consideration aside, the hour-long video takeoff of the stage play, to be broadcast tonight, is pure diversion in the Hee-Haw style.

Producer Ernest Chambers assembled four members of the Broadway cast -John Foley, Mark Hardwick, Debra Monk and Cass

'Everything Ended' For Lauren When 'Father Knows Best' Died

By WAYNE SLATER

Associated Press Writer

DENVER (AP) - The little pigtailed daughter on TVs "Father Knows Best says she fell from grace in real life - from celebrity to drugs, welfare, even prison - before she found faith and the courage to teach others by example.

For 6'2 years until 1960 Lauren Chapin played Kathy Anderson, the most innocent adolescent character on the series about American suburban iife in the Innocent 1950s.

"When Father Knows

PARK ONLY! JTAILWARr.

RETRM OF THE JEDI

SHOWS MON.-FRI 7:00 & 9:20

STEWART 4 EVERETT THEATRES

ENDS THUR!

^ Cfixix

SHOWS 3:00-7:10-9:00

1756-00881j

PIIT PIAZ* SHOPPING CINTH

ENDSTHUR!

MICHAEL DOUGLAS

CMMBER

SHOWS 3:00-7:00-9:00

N-O-W

A worid light-yeon beyond our imagination

Best finished, everything finished, she recalled recently. I couldnt get a job, Id been typecast as Kathy Anderson. The more I didnt work, the more my mother drank and the more belligerent I became. I started running away from home. I became an incorrigible child.

Drugs followed, and casual lovers, Haight-Ashbury, fast company, eight miscarriages, welfare, declining health, a mental hospital, prison.

She telis this story brightly, in detail, with a preachers lift of voice. Because at 38, Lauren Chapin is on the gospel circuit.

Millions of people grew up with Kathy Anderson. She represented something they didnt have in their own home. For men, I was a girl friend. For women, I was their perfect little sister. And when they hear my story, when they hear a part of me went down to the bottom, they realize that Lauren Chapin is not Kathy Anderson.

The pressure to live up to her character, she says, did its share of damage.

"My mother always made me dress like Kathy Anderson. She would never let me look like Lauren Chapin, she said. "Shed always put those pigtails on and bobby socks. Id take off my socks and roll up my jeans. Id say I want to be me. but my mom would say, How could you shame me like that? You cant be you. Youve got to be Kathy Anderson.

After "Father Knows Best, she said, her relations with her parents worsened.

She ran away, quit high school and married a classmate. She withdrew several thousand dollars from a savings account and blew it in eight months. The marriage ended.

I slept with many, many people trying to find love, to find self-worth, she said. "And the more people I slept with the less self-worth I had.

- Ms. Chapin worked a series of jobs, never for long. She began taking Benzedrine, then morphine, then heroin.

When things would become so ugly, so perverse, I made them into a movie in

my mind, she said. Eventually, after selling

drugs in San Francisco, she headed for Hollywood where she tried to forge a payroll check - and was arrested.

That was the beginning of several years in and out of jail, she said.

On a recent ni^t, the Lauren Chapin Ministries arrived at Faith Temple in a borrowed motor home with a bad muffler. Her two children, aged 5 and 10, are traveling with her.

The ministry began two years ago, some time after

she was "bom again at a Pentecostal service.

All my life Ive wanted to be loved, she said. Gods love is the most complete love, and I think thats what I was looking for.

Ms. Chapin invited Jane Wyatt, her TV mother, to her ordination, but she didnt come. Billy Gray, who played brother Bud, lives near Los Angeles and she still sees him from time to time. Elinor Donahue - sister Betty - is still acting. Ms. Chapin says she doesnt see Robert Young, the father, anymore.

Ms. Chapin went down in front at Faith Temple with a brass kettle. Many in the audience of 75 came forward. Some gave money, some asked for autographs.

Among them was a very thin little man who handed her a $50 bill.

I want you to have this, he said. Ive been praying for your family ever since you were a little girl.

Repayment By Broken Promise

ARBCXI

X

X

HOMEMADE

PEKIN, 111. (AP) - Comedian Richard Pryor says he answered a former employers call for help by loaning him $50,000, but his only repayment has been a broken promise that the money would be used to bail the mans son out of jail.

In court documents in a recent lawsuit by Pryor, the 42-year-old comic said he made an oral agreement with Henry Nesbit to loan the money only for bond for Nesbits son, who was jailed on a still-pending murder charge.

The suit, filed in Pekin, contends that Nesbit, for whom Pryor once worked in his hometown of Peoria, used $20,000 to pay attorneys fees and court costs, rather than bail.

A hearing today will decide

whether an injunction will be granted preventing Nesbit and his son from spending the remaining $30,000. The suit also asks for $20,000 in damages.

Nesbit declined to comment on the suit.

Well Enough To Return To TV

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -Gov. John Y. Brown Jr., who underwent open-heart surgery nearly two months ago, is well enough to go on national TV later this week, and a producer says he hopes Brown will talk about his whole experience.

Brown, 49, will appear Friday on ABCs Good Morning America.

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Morgan - along with guest stars Tanya Tucker and Ron Carey, for the comedy pilot, which has a polished, stage-play look to it. Miss Tucker is there as herself, and Carey plays Hugo, a New Yorker whose car breaks down near the boys station.

The Broadway run ended in June after 573 performances.

The gas station and the diner are on Highway 57, near Frog Level, N.C., and all of the action takes place there. Jackson, played by Foley, keeps the show going - We live life... in the slow lane, he says - and

TV Log

For complete TV programming Information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from SuiKfays Daily Reflector.

WNCT-TV-Ch.9

MONDAY

7:00 Jokers Wild

7 :30 Tic Tac

8 :00 Square Pegs 8:30 Diner

9:00 T. Witch 10:00 Cagney and 11:00 News9 11:30 Movie 2:00 NIghtwatch TUESDAY 2:00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bakker 6:00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play 11:00 Price is Right

WITN-TV-Ch.7

MONDAY 7:00 Jeftersons 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 Little House 9 :00 Pump Boys 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2.30 News

TUESDAY

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 Diff. Strokes

WCTI-TV-Ch.12

MONDAY

7 :00 Sanford &

7:30 B, Miller 8:00 Baseball 11:00 Action News 11:30 NIghtline 12:30 StarskySi 1:30 Mission 2:30 Early Edition TUESDAY 6:00 AG Day 6:30 News 7:00 Good Morning 6:13 Action News 6:55 Action News 7:25 Action News 8:25 Action News 9:00 Phil Donahue 10:00 Happening 10:30 Sanford 11:00 TooClose

11:30 Loving 12:00 Family Feud 12:30 Ryan's Hope 1:00 My Children 2:00 One Life 3:00 Gen. Hospital 4:00 Carnival 4:30 Wonder W. 5:30 People's 6:00 Action News 6:30 ABC News 7:00 Sanford! 7:30 B. Miller 8:00 Happy Days 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 Starskv!

WUNK.TV-Ch.25

MONDAY

7:00 Report 7:30 N C People 8:00 Shock 9:00 Performances 10:00 Dance

11:00 Monty Python rfin

11:30 Doctorfi 12 00 Sign Off

TUESDAY

3:00 Programming 3:30,Reading R

4 :00 Sesame Street 5:00 Mr Rogers 5:30 Reading R. 6:00 Dr. Who 6:30 Wildlife 7:00 Report 7:30 Old House 8:00 Nova 9:00 Lifeline 10:00 Ascents of 11:00 Monty Python 11:30 Doctor in 12:00 Sign Oft

Has 50,000 Baseball Cords

LEXINGTON, N.C. (AP) - Chandy Greenholt bought his first baseball cards at age 7. Now he has 50,000 different cards in his private collection and nearly 500,000 in a specialty shop he and his wife opened about two years ago.

Greenholt, 31, says The Season Ticket shop, which also deals in sports memorabilia and souvenirs, may be the first full-time operation of its kind in the state. His customers come from North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia.

Sixty percent of his customers are youngsters, but 75 percent of his sales are to adults, he said.

Greenholt said be first started collecting cards because he had been advanced from the first to the third grade and wanted to make friends with his older classmates.

everyone, including Rddie, whose guitar does the talking, has a chance to perform.

nie theatrical version was created by Miss Morgan, the dark-haired Rhetta, and her husband, Jim Wann, in the summer of 80, while he and Hardwick, a pianist, were playing country music at a Greenwich Village restaurant.

It was the kind of place, Wann recalls, inhere wed get reprimanded if we played too loud and distracted the customers from drinking as much as possible. So to amuse ourselves, we started wearing gas station uniforms.

And I started writinG songs about life at the gas station, he says. That began thePump Boys.

Miss Cass was working,

coincidentally, with Miss Monk on a cabaret revue about two sisters who ran a diner.

The cooperative effort probably was inevitable.

The format for Pump Boys & Dinettes on TV is music interspersed with brief segments of comedy. Foley does Jerry Lee Lewis Great Balls of Fire in estimable style, and Miss Tucker sings Feel Right solo and Wishin and Hopin with Prudie - Miss Monk-and Rhetta.

Now back to the search for a Pump Girl of the Year:

Mona, at the drugstore, wont pose for the calendar, but thats not too bad. Hearing Mona say no is like hearing most women say yes, the boys agree.

M.L., Hardwicks

character, suggests Dolly Parton. Boys, I tried, he says later, but Dolly told me ^e dont do no calendar work.

There are other applicants, like Marion from the May-zone dee Byou-tay. I still think we ou^t to put on a woman, L.M. says.

Eddie, with the guitar, promises the honor to both Prudie and Rhetta, but the Pump Boys like Dominique instead. Shes Hugos girlfriend, from New York.

In a week, Rhetta tells her disappointed sister as they go back to work in the diner, we went from pin-ups to clean-ups.

Pump Boys & Dinettes on TV is fun for awhile, but week after week?

GOREN BRIDGE

Bust Stolen At Houdin's Grove

12:00 News9 12:30 YoungOi 1:30 As the World 2:30 Capitol 3:00 Guiding Lt. 4:00 Waltons 5:00 Hillbillies 5:30 A. Griffith 6:00 News9 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 TicTacDougf 8 :00 On the Road 8:30 Our Times 9:00 Movie 11:00 News9 11:30 Late Movie 2:00 Nightwatch

BY CHARLES GOBEN AND OMAR 8HAR1F

1963 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc.

ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ

10:30 Sale of the 11:00 Wheel of 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 Shadows 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Jefferson 7:30 Family Feud 8:00 A Team 9:00 Rem. Steele 10:00 St. Elsewhere 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight Show 12:30 Letterman 1:30 Overnight 2:30 News

Q.l-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:

46 <7KQ853 OAKJ952 47

Partner opens the bidding with one spade. What do you respond?    '    ,

A.-You should be cautious because of a potential misfit. If you respond two diamonds, you might never complete the description of your hand - the auction might get too high. Respond one heart. That way, you should have no problem getting to bid diamonds twice at a comfortable level.

1 4 Pass Pass ?

What do you bid now?

A.-We are about to give you a piece of advice which you should cherish - it will be worth a lot of points to you over the years. In the balancing seat, you start showing all good hands with a double. This is a good hand. It is important that you first convince partner you have sound values and are not just reopening to prevent the opponents from buying the contract at a low level.

Q.2-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

495 ^QJ10875 0 7 4AJ83

The bidding has proceeded: North East    South    West

1 4 Pass    1 NT    Pass

2 4 Pass    ?

What action do you take? A.Partner's rebid has improved your hand considerably. However, dont raise clubs just yet. If you have a game, hearts is the most likely spot. Try it out by jumping to three hearts now, and see how partner reacts.

Q.6-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: 4AQJ10'i>K108 0AK654K2 Partner opens the bidding with one club. What do you respond?

A.-You have too good a hand not to make a jump shifk, so it is simply a ques-tion'of which suit should you choose? You would like to have a five-card suit for a jump shift, for partner might raise with a three-card holding. That is why it is dangerous to jump shift in spades. We would opt for two diamonds.

NEW YORK (AP) - Detectives are searching for the thieves who stole a plastic bust of Harry Houdini from the cemetery where the famous magician is buried.

The bust disappeared from Houdinis gravesite in the Machpelah Cemetery in Queens sometime over the weekend, police said. The theft was discovered at 11 a.m. Sunday by a cemetery employee.

The life-size plastic bust, which weighed about five pounds, was placed atop a monument at Houdinis grave in 1975 by the Society of American Magicians, after vandals had broken a white marble bust that had been there,- according to Steve Konzen, secretary of the organization.

A third bust, made of bronze, is in the Museum of the City of New York, said j Konzen.

Houdini, president of the magicians society from 1919 to 1925, had the bronze bust made before he died, Konzen said. The missing plastic bust was a copy.

The cemetery employee, who declined to give his name, said Machpelah Cemetery gets visitors all the time who want to see the grave of Houdini, buried there in 1926.

Q.3-As South, vulnerable, you hold:

4AJ94 <^95 OA843 4QJ4

The bidding has proceeded: North East South West Pass Pass 1 4 Pass 3 4 Pass ?

What action do you take?

(BHaDULTS $2.00 TIL 5:30 SlUi)

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__________J

1-3-5-7-9

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, 20 NATIONAL >2LAMP4NS

1:10-3:10-5:10-7:10-9:10

A.-While your opening bid certainly has gotten partner excited, you have as little as the law allows for an opening bid, and partner did pass originally. Pass - you are as high as you want to be.

Q.4-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

4A109'?K72 0A1095 4QJ9 The bidding has proceeded: West North Est South 3 4    Pass Pass ?

What action do you take? A.If you are the type who passes this kind of holding, your opponents are stealing you blind! Partner must have a fair hand on this auction, and it is up to you to protect his holding. Bid three no trump.

Q.5-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:

4Q8^104 0AKQJ64AK82 The bidding has proceeded: West North East South

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SCOREBOARD

R*c Basketball

Tournameit Semifinals

Franchise...............24    35-59

B.T. Express............32    40-72

Leading scorers: F-Albert Brown 17, Rickey Brandon 13; BTDennis Pitt 23, Moses Gamer 10.

Sizzlers ....... 30    29-59

Overhill Gang...........32    52-84

Leading scorers: S-Donald House 25, Jasper Gaskins 14; OGPaul Taylor 22, James Dupree 17.

Baseball Standings

By The Anodated Pren NATIONAL LEAGUE

412 IS .393 17

EAST DIVISION

Philadelphia PiUslMireh Montreal St. Louis Chicago New York

Atlanta Los Angeles Houston San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati

W

60 60 58 5S 52 48

WEST DIVISION 71    47

64    51

60    55

57    60

55    62

54

L

52

55

56 60 64 68

Pet.

.536

522

509

478

448

414

.602

.557

.522

.487

470

Saturday'tGamei

.458 17

Piltsburgh2, MonI Houston 4 San Francisco I Cincinnati 3. San Diego 1 St. Louise, Philadelpnia2 New York 5, Chicago I Atlanta 8. Los Angeles 7

Sunday's Games Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 3 ' New York 5, Chicago 2 Philadelphia 5, St Louis I Los Angeles 5, Atlanta 4 San Diego 10. Cincinnati 9,10 innings San Francisco 5. Houston 2 Mondays Games Philadelphia (Carlton 1111) at Chicago (Trout .9-91 New York (Torrez 6-13) at Pittsburgh (DeLeon2-2), (n)

Houston (Knepper 4-11) at Cincinnati (Berenyi6-ll), (ni San Diego (Dravecky 13-8) ai Atlanta (McMurtry 12-7), (n)

Montreal (Lea 98) at St Louis (LaPoint 9-7), (n)

San Francisco (Breining 6-9) at Los Angeles (Hooton 8-6), (n)

Tuesday s Games New York at Pittsburgh Philadelphia at Chicago San Diego at Atlanta Houston at Cincinnati, (n)

Montreal at St. Louis, (n)

San Francisco at Los Angeles, (n)

AMERICANLEAGUE EAST DIVISION

W L Pet. GB Baltimore    64    49    566    -

Detroit    65    50    565    -

New York    64    50    .561    'k

Milwaukee    64    51    557    1

Toronto    64    52    . 552    P-

Boston    58    57

aeveland    49    67

WEST DIVISION Chicago    62    53

Kansas City    55    57

Texas    56    59

California    56    61

Oakland    57    62

Minnesota    49    70

SeatUe    46    71

Saturday's Games Kansas City 5-3, Boston 4-12 Toronto 3, Milwaukee I Minnesota 7. Oakland 3 , Detroit 6, New York 3 Baltimore 5, Chicago 2 Texas 4, Cleveland 3 California 10. Seattle 5

Sunday's Games Boston 4-3, Kansas City 3-6 New York 4, Detroit r Toronto 4, Milwaukee 3 Baltimore 2, Chicago 1 California 7, Seattle 2 Oakland 6, M innesota 0 Clevelands Texas0

Mondays Games Toronto iGott 6 10) at Cleveland (Sorensen 6-9), (n)

Chicago (Bums 6-6) at New York (Righetti 13-3), (n)

Boston (Hurst 98) at Milwaukee (Haas 10-2), (n)

Baltimore (Boddicker 88) at Texas (Smithson 7-11), (n)

Detroit (Pashnick I I) at Kansas City (Gura914), (n)

Minnesota (Viola 5-10) at Seattle (Abbott 4-3), (n)

California (Zahn 8-7) at Oakland (Heimuellerl-3), (n)

Tuesdays Games Boston at M ilwaukee. 2, (t-n)

Toronto at Cleveland, 2, (t-n)

Chicago at New York, (n)

Baltimore at Texas, (ni Detroit at Kansas City, (n i Minnesota at Seattle, (n)

California at Oakland, (n)

Leogue Leaders

By The Associated Press AMERICANLEAGUE

BATTING (280 at bats); Boggs, Boston, .379: Carew, California. 369; Griffey, New York, .335; Brett, Kansas City, .333; McRae, Kansas City, .325.

RUNS: Murray, Baltimore, 78; Molitor, Milwaukee, 78; Ripken, Baltimore, 77; Cooper. Milwaukee. 76; Boggs. Boston. 74; Henderson, Oakland, T4; Yount, Milwaukee, 74.

RBI: Cooper, Milwaukee. 100, Winfield. New York, 93. Parrish. Detroit, 80; Rice, Boston, 80, Simmons, Milwaukee, 77.

HITS: Boggs, Boston, 164; Whitaker, Detroit, 147; Co(^r, Milwaukee. 143; McRae, Kansas City, 139; Ward, Min nesota, 139.

DOUBLES: Boggs, Boston, 37; McRae, Kansas City, 34; Ripken, Baltimore, 33; Hrbek, Minnesota, fc; Parrish, Detroit, 32; Yount. Milwaukee. 32.

TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 8; Winfield, New York, 8; Boggs, Boston, 7; Ganlner, Milwaukee, 7; Herndon, Detroit, 7; Gibson, Detroit, 7; Yount, Milwaukee, 7.

HOME RUNS: Armas, Boston, 25; Cooper, Milwaukee, 25; Rice, Boston, 25; Winfield, New York, 25; Kittle, Chicago, 24.

504    7    STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakland.

422    16'j    71; R Uw, Chicago, 54; J Cruz,

Chicago, 47, Wilson, Kansas City, 45. 539    Sample,    Texas.    36

r" PITCHING (10 decisions): Haas, Si    7    Milwaukee. 10-2, 833, 3 56; Righetti, New

York, 13-3, 813, 3 40; Rozema, Detroit, 8 2. 800. 3.11: Gossage. New York, 10-3, .769, 2 08, McGregor, Baltimore, 15-5, ,750.3.10.

STRIKEOUTS Moms, Detroit, 165; Stieb. Toronto. 137; Righetti, New York, 126; Bannister, Chicago. 119: Blyleven, Cleveland. 116 SAVES Quisenberiy. Kansas City, 31; Caudill, Seattle, 22; Stanley, Boston, 22; Davis, Minnesota, 20. Lopez, Detroit. 16.

NA'nONALiAGUE

BATTING (280 at bats): Madlock. Pittsburgh, 332. L Smith, St. Louis .327: Herr, St. Louis, .323; Hendrick. St Louis, .321, Dawson, Montreal. .316.

RUNS; Murphy, Atlanta, 102; Raines, Montreal, 86; (Jarvey, San Diego, 76; Evans, San Francisco, 75, Horner, Atlanta. 75 RBI Dawson, Montreal, 87, Murp^, Atlanta, 83; Schmidt, Philadelphia, 79; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 73; Hendrick, St. Louis, 70.

HITS: Dawson. Montreal. 143; Oliver, Montreal, 140; Thon Houston, 138, Ramirez, Atlanta, 135; Buckner, Chicago, 132

DOUBLES: Buckner. Chicago. 30; Knight, Houston, 28; Hendrick, Sf. Louis, 27; Ray, Pittsburgh, 27; Oliver, Montreal, 27; Wallach, Montreal, 27.

TRIPLES Butler, Atlanta, 11; Moreno, Houston, II; Cruz. Houston, 8; Dawson. Montreal, 7; Green, St. Louis, 7; Raines, Montreal. 7.

HOME RUNS: Schmidt. Philadelphia. 26, Dawson, Montreal, 25, Murphy, Atlanta. 25, Evans, San Francisco, 23; Guerrero, Los Angeles. 23 STOLEN BASES Raines, Montreal, 51; Wilson, New York, 40; S. Sax, Los Angeles. 35; LeMaster, San Francisco. 34, Redus, Cincinnati, 32 PITCHING (10 decisions): Perez, Atlanta, 13-4, .765, 3.21; Montefusco, San Diego, 9-3,    .750, 3 51; Denny,

Philadelphia, 13-5, .722, 2.44; Ryan. Houston. 12-5, .706. 2.18 ; 5 are tied with .667.

STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, Philadelphia, 192; Soto Cincinnati, 180; McWilliams, Pittsburgh, 146; Valenzuela, Los Angeles, 132, Ryan, Houston, 125 SA\^S: Le. Smith, Chicago, 18; Reardon, Montreal, 17, Beorosian, Atlanta, 16; Lavelle, San Francisco, 14; TekulvC, Pittsburgh. 14.

NFL Exhibition Glance

By The Associated Press American Conference East

W L T Pet. PF PA Baltimore 2    0    0    1.000 25    7

N Y JeU

Buffalo

Miami

New England

Cleveland

Pittsburgh

Cincinnati

Houston

Denver Kansas City L A Raiders Seattle San Diego

1    1    0    500    36    40

0    2    0    000    27    54

0    2    0    000    34    39

0    2    0    000    31    44-

Central

2    0    0    I.OOO    48    30

2        0    667    67    52

0    2    0    000    30    51

0    2    0    000    17    38

West

200 1.000 31    17

1    1    0    .    500    37    24

I    1    0    500    43    43

1    1    0    500    45    31

0    2    0    000    40    55

The Daily Reflector, Greenville. V.( .Monday, August 15. 19K31|

TANK M<^NAMA11A    by    Jeff    Millar    &    Bill    Hinds

l%IT'iiJMtlWWC(3C)rifkTi(>0S y

San Francisco 1    1

New Orleans

Natlooal Conference East

N Y GianU    2    0    0    1 000    45    29

Philadelphia    2    0    0    1 000    42    37

Dallas    1    0    0    1.000    20    17

St. Louis    1    1    0    500    37    52

Washington    1    1    0    .500    37    36

Central

Tampa Bay    2    0    0    1 000    43    27

Chicago    1    1    0    500    51    44

Detroit    1    1    0    . 500    34    34

Minnesota    1    l    0    .500    35    20

Green Bay    0    2    0    .000    41    59

West

L A. Rams    1    0    0    1 000    34    20

Atlanta    1    I    0    500    23    31

0    500    40    41

I    2    0    .333    50    64

Friday's Games Washington 27, Cincinnati 23 New York Giants 22, Pittsburgh 13 Seattle 38. Green Bay 21

Saturdiws Games Cleveland 27. Buffalo 10 New York Jets 20, Los Angeles Raiders

17

New Orleans 19, Miami 17 St. Louis 27, Chicago 24, OT Detroit 17, Kansas City 13 Baltimore 10, Minnesota 7 Denver 21. Atlanta 10 Philadelphia 21, San Diego 20 Tampa Bay 23, Houston 17 Sunday's Game San Francisco 17. New England 15 Monday's Game Dallas at Los Angeles Rams Thursday, Aug. 18 New York Jets at Cincinnati Friday, Aug. 19 Miami at Washington Minnesota at Seattle

Saturday, Aug.20 Philadelphia at Green Bay Buffalo at Detroit Houston at New Orleans Atlanta at Tampa Bay Baltimore at New York Giants St Louis at Kansas City Pittsburgh at Dallas ClevelaiM at Denver San Francisco at San Diego New England at Los Angeles Rams Chicago at Los Angeles Raiders

Golf Scores

V

HIGH POINT, N.C (AP) - Final scores and money winnings Sunday In the $180,000 Henredon Classic at the 6,191-yard, par 72 Willow Creek Golf Oub cours:

Patty Shhn, $27,000    65-70    71-66    -    272

JoAnneCamer. 17,640    69    71-66    70-    276

Kathy Whitworth 12,600 Judy Clark. 8.100 Donna White. 8,100 Vicki Fergon, 5,760 Ayako Okamoto, 5,760 C Montgomery, 5,760 Lauren Howe. 4,860

Pat Bradley. 4,140 Kathy Postlewail, 4.140 Janet Coles, 4,140 Juli Inkster. 2,984 Patti Rizzo. 2,984 Cathy Hanlon, 2,984 Donna Caponi, 2.984 Amy Benz, 2,984 Debbie Massey, 2,244 Catherine Panton, 2,244 Valerie Skinner, 2,244 Sue Ertl, 1,953 Gail Hirata. 1,953 Lynn Adams, 1,728 Myra Van Hoose, 1,728 Barb Bunkowski. 1,728 Beverley Davis. 1,728 Martha Nause, 1,476 Jane Lock. 1,476 Julie Pyne. 1,476 JaneCTafter, 1,182 Joan Joyce. 1,182 SBertolaccini. 1.182 M Floyd-DeArmn, 1,1,82 Vicki'Tabor, 1,182 Laura Hurlbut, 1,182 Cathy Sherk, 903 Mary Dwyer, 903 Vicki Singleton. 903 Hollis Stacy. 903 LeAnn Cassaday, 903 Barbra Mizrahie, 702 Amy Alcolt, 702 Dot Germain. 702 Judv Ellis. 702

70-67 71 73- 281 68-74 72 70 - 284 7168-72-73-284 75 717169- 286 7062-7569-286

68-72 75-71-286 73-68-73-73- 287

71 74 69-74 - 288

72 69-73 74 - 288

69-72 71 76- 288 75-72 76-66 - 289 7269-78 70-289 7368-76-72-289 75-70-71 73- 289 7068 75-76-289 73-71 75 71-290

73 70-71 76 - 290

71 71-72 76- 290 73-72 72-74 - 291

70-73 74 74- 291

74 75-74 6 9 292 74 72 74-72 - 292

72 74-74 72 - 292 73-69-76 74 - 292 74 72-75-72-293

70-73 76-74-293

72-71-74 76 - 293 75-72 76 71-294

73-73-75-73-294 71 74-76-73-294 75-70-74-75- 294

74-71-74-75-294

73-71-75-75-294

74-74-75-72-295 74 72-77-72- 295

71-77-74-73-295 71 78-70-76-295 74-73-72-76-295 78 70-73-75-296 78-71-71-76- 296

73-74-73-76- 296

74-7T-75-76- 296

Chris Johnson. 702 MJ Smith. 702 Sandra Palmer. 549 Terri Luckhurst, 549 Colleen Walker, 549 Sue Fogleman, 549 Marlene Hagge, 549 Anne Mane Palli, 549 Man McDougall, 549 Penny Pulz, 459 Kathy Martin. 459 Susie McAllister, 459 I/enore Muraoka. 414 Marty Dickerson, 396 Sydney Cunningham, 246 Alice Ritzman. 246 Beth Solomon, 246 Mindy Moore '

Cindy Lincoln Karen Permezel Marga Stubblefield JaneGeddes Jerilyn Britz Vivian Brownlee Deedee Lasker Dale Eggeling

75-72-72-77-296 74 73-71 78 - 296

73-7061 73-297

74-73-76-74- 297

75-73-'?4-75-297 73-74 74-76- 297

72-73-75-77-297

70-74-75-78- 297

71-76-77-74- 297

73-73-78 74 - 296

76-73-74-75- 298 7969-75-75-298 6976-78-76-299 75-71-78 76- 300

75-73 78-75-301 707361 77-301

76-73-74-78- 301 73 75-79 75- 302 77 72-73-80-302 73 74-77-79 - 303

74-746076-304 73-74-7978-304

75-71-7980-305 70-77 7662-305

73-76-78-WD 71 77 79-WD

GRAND BLANC. Mich (AP) - Sunday's final scores and money winnings In the $350,000 Bulck Omo at toe 7,001-yard, l^ar 72 Warwick H^ Golf h Country

Wayne l,evi, $63,000 Calvin Peete, $30,800 Isao Aoki, $30,800 John Cook. $16,800 LannyWadkins. $13,300 Frank Conner, $13,300 Craig Stadler. $9,829 FreifCouples, $9,829 Brad Faxon, $9,829 David Graham, $9,829 Forrest Fezler, $9,829 Peter Jacobsen, $9,829 Steve Melnyk, $7.350 Tom Purtzer, $6,650 Dave Barr, $5,775 Tom Kite, $5,775 Tom Jenkins, 15,775

Country

7264-7165-272 66 797067-273 6866-7069-273 67697068-274 706768-70-275 736765-70-275 7068-7167-276 67-71-7068-276 69-716769-276 70676 970-276 726767 70-276 706867-71-276 71696869-277

7265-71-70-278 7166-71-71-279 6868-73-70-279 70726968-279

Ed Fiori. $5,775 Buddy Gardner. $4,550 D A Weibring, $4550 DonPooley, 550 George Burns. $3,500 Mark McCumber, $3,500 Lariy Rinker, $3,500 Chi Oil Rodriguz. $3,500 Jim Simons. $2,538 Mark Lye. $2,538 Mark McNulty, $2.538 Urry Ziegler. $2,538 Ronnie Black. $2,538 Joe Inman. $2.538 David Peoples, $1,778 Jack Renner, $1,778 Payne Stewart, $1,778 George Cadle, $1,778 Bruce Fleisher, $1,778 Rex Caldwell. $1,778 Roger Maltbie, $1,778 John Mahaffey, $1,778 Gary McCord, $1,778 Antonio Cerda. $1,778 Curt Byrum, $1,330 Mark Pfeil, $1,330 Beau Baugh. $1.120 LouGraham, $1,120 I.enny Clements. $1,120 Larry Mize, $1,120 Tony Sills. $880 Allen Miller. $880 Un Hinkle, $880 Bill Britton. $880 Jeff Mitchell. $880 Keith Fergus, $880 Mark O'Meara. $809 Jeff Sluman, $809 Mark Coward, $791 Jody Mudd. $791 TomWeiskopf. $791

Jimmy Roy, $^

! Eichelberge Lindy Miller, ru

Dave!

ier,$763

Michael Brannan. $763 John Fought. $763    ,

Dave Hill. $739 Bill Calfee, $739 Mark Calcavecchia. $721

71 797068-279 69716971-280 66-7972-72-280 68 797972-280

71-7167 72 - 281 70 7368-70- 281 72697268- 281

67 72^7972-281

68 74-68 72 - 282

72 72 7266- 282 79797468- 282

72-71 7069- 282 6971 72 70 - 282 70-746 7 71-282 70 706 9 74 - 283 67696978-283

72 7165-75-283

70 72-7368-283

6971 72-71 283

6972 71-71-283

70-72 7 971-283 7566-71 71-283 71697973-283 6970-7974^283 736970 72-284

71-716973- 284 74-70-7368 - 285 68-74-7469- 285 746971 71-285 71-726973-285 71-797669-286 716973-73-286 696974 74-286 69726976-286 71-72 70-73 - 286 716972 74-286 69757469-287 68-72-75-72-287 77 67-73-71-288

71-71-74-72-288

6971 71-77-288

71 72-7970-289

73 71 72-73- 289 70-71 74 74-289

6972 74 74 - 289

72 71 7976-289

73-71 71 75 - 290

72-7971 77-290 70-7977 74 - 291

Howard Twitty, $721 JohnMazza, $^t John Adams, $704 Rik Massengale, $704 Steve Liebler, $693 l>on Nielsen. $686 Mike Gove $679

Transactions

By The Associated Press BASEBAa

Amerlcsn League

BOSTON RED SOX-llaced Dwight Evans, outfielder on the 15-day disabled list

National League

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES-Released Ed Farmer j)itcher

armerj)itche

FOOTBALL

National Football League

BUFFALO BILLS Trade? Lou Pic cone, wide receiver, and an undiscloaed draft choice to the ,San Diego Chargers tor Mike Williams, cornerbacR

N.C.Scoreboard

Carolina League

Charlotte 4 Orlando I Kinston 6. Salem 4 Durham 4, Alexandria 3

South Atlantic League

Greensboro 2, Gastonia 0

Save UpTo400 OnALLIS-CHALMERS LAWN MOWERS

Memorial Dr. 752-4122

Athletes Find Woys To Deal With Problems At Pan Am

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) Steve McCrory, the world amateur boxing champion at 112 pounds, grew up in one of the less-privileged neighborhoods of Detroit. But McCrory says it was nothing compared to the athletes village at the Pan American Games.

Its worse than living in the ghetto in New York or Detroit, says McCrory, whose brother Milt won the World Boxing Council welterweight title on Saturday. You cant drink the water, youre scared to take a shower and its dirty.

McCrory isnt the only athlete complaining about the village, which was still being completed when the first residents moved in last week.

Rooms are cramped, with as many as 10 athletes sleeping in bunk beds in small three-room suites. Dust from last-minute construction covers the floors, some rooms lack doors and windows, water pressure is low, and in some cases showers and toilets dont work.

On Friday, both power and water were out in the village most of the morning, and most athletes there had to walk several hundred yards just to use the bathroom or brush their teeth.

In fact, even as athletes were moving in, workmen were toiling round-the-clock to finish their quarters, which is causing another problem.

Were ^ad theyre working, but it interferes with the athletes sleep, says William Wall, chairman of the U.S. Amateur Basketball Federation.

The reactions among athletes vary. There is anger, like McCrorys; there is resignation; there is humor; there is good old American -well, Canadian - enterprise.

Michel Pietracupa, a Cana

dian weig:htlifter, sat on his bed pointing proudly at the clean cement floor, in the room he shares with six teammates. Its clean because I just scrubbed it myself, he said.

A group of Canadian women volleyball players, awakened by the scurrying of cockroaches, decided to dub their dormitory the Cucaracha Hilton. And Pernell Whitaker, a teammate of McCrorys on the American boxing team, has yet another solution to the conditions.

I just plug in my Walkman,' lie back, and float away to sleep, he says.

The reaction of officials also varies. William E. Simon, president of the United States Olympic Commitee, said after inspecting the facilities: Its not a real hardship.

You recognize that the countries in Latin America function at a different tempo' from the United States, he said. So you accept these conditions and the fact that construction isnt quite completed.

But a group of American men softball players moved into a downtown hotel and there was talk among USOC officials of moving athletes to the comparatively plush hotel rooms on the eve of their competitions.

Loftin-Taft Win Putting

Jake Loftin and Jeff Taft took a four-stroke lead with a 16-under par first round, which proved to be enough as they held off two other teams to win the Sunday Night Bestball Tournament at Put-t-Putt Golf and Games.

Henry Beacham and Ray Taft came in second, with Allen Elder and Mike Garris third.

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< DIET V .CENTER;

CALL TODAY!

756-8545

103 Oakmont Plaza

.....

'mJ.iIi/

i'

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Mortgage

Source

FIRST FEDERAL INTRODUCES

THE NEWEST MEMBER OF OUR MORTGAGE DEPARTMENT

When you need money to buy, build, or improve, come to First Federal, your MORTGAGE SOURCE and meet Frank Lawrence, Vice President, Mortgage Lending.

Frank has been in the Mortgage Lending business for over 18 years and is experienced in professional and knowledgeable service.

t'Judl Housing lendif

Frank Lawrence Vice President Mortgage Lending

We welcome Frank to First Federal and hope you will come by the Downtown Office and talk with Frank about your mortgage need.

FIRST FEDERAL SAVMGS

First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Pitt County

Greenville, Farmville, Grifton, Ayden

I 'f'.,i|

Equal Oopofiu''''r Ero'Dioye'





W etherington-J ones Vows Are Solemnized

The wedding of Ruby W. Jones of Greenville and Leon Thomas Wetherington of Stella was solemnized Sunday afternoon at three oclock in the Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church. The double ring ceremony was conducted by Dr. Cedric Pierce Jr.

The bride is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. W.T. Wiggins of Vanceboro. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Pennie Wetherington of Stella and the late Bill Wetherington.

A program of wedding music was presented by Mrs. Della Dixon, organist, and Mrs. Mattie Link, soloist.

The bride wore a formal gown of pink polyester with a chiffon capelet with a decor of beads and pearls. She carried a Bible adorned with a corsage of pink and white flowers. She was escorted by her son.

She was given in marriage by her children, William H. Galloway of Springs, N.Y. and Ellen Marie Wiggins of Houma, La.

The daughter of the bride was honor attendant and wore a formal gown of baby blue with'smocked decor and puffed elbow length sleeves.

Annette Morris of Vanceboro, aunt of the bride, wore a formal gown of mint green and the mother of the bridegroom selected a two-piece gown of skipper blue.

Thomas Edward Wetherington, son of the bridegroom, was best man and ushers were John Wiggins of Houma, La., son-in-law of the bride, and Gary Melvin of Stella, nephew of the bridegroom.

A reception was held in the Cherry Fellowship hall after the ceremony. Mary Lou Galloway of Springs, N.Y., daughter-in-law of the bride, and Tara Galloway of Charlotte, granddaughter of the bride, presided at the bridal register.

Cake was served by Mrs. Edna Mills of Black and Mrs. Attie Wiggins of Kinston poured punch.

The couple will live in Greenville after their wedding trip.

Wedding

Invitation

Mrs. Lula Moore Foster requests the honor of your presence at the marriage of her daughter, Cora Delese, to James Gray Adams on Aug. 20 at 6 p.m. at York Memorial AME Zion Church and afterwards at the American Legion Post No. 39. No invitations w ere mailed locally.

MRS. LEON THOMAS WETHERINGTON

Tips On Removing Ice Cream Stains

NEW YORK (UPl) -Coffee ice cream stains are harder to remove than chocolate, and even vanilla can be a problem, says Dmitry Gagarine.

The fabrics expert says coffee and chocolate ice cream stains are especially difficult to remove because they contain proteins in both their milk content and their coloring matter, and the protein components stick to the fabric.

Gagarine is an independent consultant and former research director of Milliken & Co., a fabrics manufacturer.

He said vanilla and strawberry ice cream stains lack the proteins, so are easier to clean.

Gagarine recommends a three-step process for removing ice cream and frozen yogurt from washable clothing. It uses the most effective ingredients for washing and dry cleaning -a good detergent and a solvent.

First, soak the stain in soap and lukewarm water as quickly as possible after it appears.

Next, touch it up, or prespot, with a spotting solvent

sold in drug and hardware stores.

Then, wash the garment in the washing machine with a good detergent. It should come out spotless.

Gagarine said a detergent and a solvent are needed because Detergents cant take out the fatty content of the ice cream but they can remove the coloring and milk solids. Dry cleaning solvents can remove butterfat but not coloring and milk solids.

As for wool garments, he said the best method is dry cleaning. And be sure to point out the stains to the dry cleaner to they can be prespotted.

Gagarine said ice cream stains are especially hard to remove from cotton and wool because of their natural wax content.

Because like sticks to like, he said, cotton and wool attract the butterfat in ice cream.

Fibers that are water-loving and lack a waxy component - rayons, polyesters and acrylics, for example - encourage water to follow their surface even in the areas of oily stains.

Duplicate

Winners

Grand National Pairs winners were named Saturday afternoon in the duplicate bridge game played at Planters Bank.

Winners included North-South, Section A: Nellie Alford and Virginia Mattocks, first with .610 percent; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Patterson, second; Barbara Wright and Elizabeth Roque third.

East-West; Mabel Edmondson and Betty Wilkins, first with .610 percent; Sally Kirkwood and Richard Moore, second; Lee Johnson and Cliff Horton, third.

Section B, North-South: Lillian Horton and Dave Proctor, first with .586 percent; Katherine Denny and Gerald Batts, second; Sara Bradbury and Dr. Charles Duffy, third.

Section B, East-West: Lee Hastings and Ray Neeland, first with .577 percent; Mr. and Mrs. Andrew de-Sherbinin, second; Chris Langley and Ed Yauck, third.

Wednesday afternoon winners, North-South were: Dot McKemie and Ray Gunderson, first with .678 percent; Susan Powers and Lee Hastings, second; Mrs. J.W.H. Roberts and Mrs. Lacy Harrell, third; Mrs. Robert Powell and Mrs. David Stevens, fourth.

East-West: Mrs. Jeff McAllister and Dave Proctor, first with .585 percent; Mrs. Effie Williams and Mrs. Harold Forbes, second; tied for third were Mrs. John Tayloe and Mrs. Clifton Toler with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew deSherbinin.

Wednesday morning winners, North-South included: Maxine Fraade and Dorothy Eck, first with .571 percent; Mrs. Charles Mitchell and Mrs. David Stevens, second; Mrs. Jeff McAllister and George Martin, third.

East-West: Mrs. Eloise Gabbert and Mrs. Beverly Maxon, first with .634 percent; Mrs. Robert Bright and Mrs. Herbie Carson, second; Mr. and Mrs, Everett Pittman, third.

The water goes in between the fibers and the stain and, with only the help of a detergent, pushes the oily stain away from the fabric.

Plain frozen yogurt is 50 percent less staining than ice cream, Gagarine said, because it contains less fat. Even so, he said, the three-step cleaning process is still necessary to completely remove stains.

Eastern

Electrolysis

133 0AKM0NTDRIV.SUITE6 PHONE 756-4034, GREENVILLE, NC PERMANENT HAIR REMOVAL CERTIFIED ELECTROLOGIST

MAYTAG

With the busy fall season fast approaching, now is the time to start making ornaments for charity bazaars and then for your own tree Use only the simplest of needlepoint stitches, 3- and 4-inch plastic canvas pre- cut circles, lO-mesh colored canvas and small amounts of yam to create these clever, quick and easy ornaments.

To obtain directions for making the Frosted Christmas Circles, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-0814 with $1 and a long, stamped, self- addressed envelope to: Pat Trexler, P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.

Or you may order Kit No: N-0814 by sending a check or money order for $11.50 to Pat Trexler at the same address. The kit price includes the shipping charges and all materials and instructions needed to make two of each ornament shown.

One of the cardinal rules in needlepoint of any kind is that you should always secure loose yarn ends under previously worked stitches and then clip the remaining ends immediately. Regular readers know that I am not one for giving a lot of unbreakable rules for any craft, but this is one that should always be observed to keep those loose ends from tangling, knotting or working their way to the front of the work.

Thats all well and good and good when you have some adjacent, previously worked stitches through which to secure the excess yarn on the wrong side. But what do you do with the beginning strand of yam of thread when you are starting with a blank piece of canvas?

Ill always be grateful to Marion Scoular of Clemson, S.C., who taught me the waste-knot trick many years ago.

The first step - after knot anyway. Now, insert the

threaded needle from the right side to the wrong side of the canvas so that the knot (A) will be at least a couple of inches away from the pont where you will take your first stitch. It should be placed in the direction in which you will be stitching so that the strand of yam that runs from the knot to the first stitch will be covered as you work.

Now, bring the needle up at B and take it down at C to work your first stitch. Then, work a couple stitches moving toward the knot. When you have done so, you will see that the strand of yarn running from the knot is on the wrong side of your work and is being covered (and thus secured) by the stitches.

When you come close to the knot, just snip it away. Thats all there is to it - a simple trick but an invaluable one.

With most projects, you will only do this once - at the very beginning. However, when you are working on a colored canvas, working scattered stitches or groups of stitches, you should use it each time you start in a new area so that there wont be strands of yarn running from one area to another and showing throgh the areas of unworked canvas.

While I have illustrated this with a simple continental stitch, it can be used with any stitch. If you have been needlepointing for years without being aware of this, youre sure to wonder - as I did - "Why didnt I think of that before?

(Pats Pointers: The Needlepoint Handbook by Pat Trexler is devoted to needlepoint and includes sec-threading your needle, of course - is to make a knot in the end of your yam. This is breaking another unbreakable needlepoint rule, which states that you never, ever use knots while stitching.

But go ahead and make the

CHRISTMAS ORNAMENTS...using simple needlepoint stitches should be started now.

tions on counted cross-stitch and aids for the handicapped who wish to participate in needlepoint activities. This 200- page book will guide the needleworker from the basics to detailed instructions. To order, send $8.95 plus $1 postage and handling to Pats Pointers, incare of this newspaper, 4400 Johnson Drie, Fairway, Kan. 66205. Please make checks payable to Universal Press Syndicate.)

We Will Be Closed Aug. 19-21 & Will Reopen Aug. 22

All American Grooming Contest In Chicago

't/mage Groomer

752-0151

Mattress Sale

BRING IN AO FOR EXTRA S5.00 OFF SET

51*31'

Haavy Duly Bed Frame 13.95

We Are Overstocked On Quality Bedding All Sets Below Half Price

77

Double Mattress And Foundation

(Single Pieces Available In All Sizes)

Now In Two Locations 521 East 10th St.

924 Dickinson Ave.

Shop-Eze Foodland West End Shopping Center (Only) Double Savings Days With

Double Coupon Value

Tuesday And Wednesday August 16 & 17,1983

Clip The Manufacturers Cents Off Coupons From The Mail, Magazines Or Newspaper Then Bring Them To Shop-Eze Foodland

Double Savings With

Double Coupons

Value

On Tuesday and Wednesday. August 16 & 17. 1983 only.    i    Example

Shop-Eze Foodland, West End Shopping Center. Greenville.

N.C. will redeem National Manufacturers Cents Off Coupons up to 50', only for double Iheir value with purchase of the product in size specified. (Foodland or other food retailer coupons not accepted.) Expired coupons will not be accepted. Coupons for free merchandise excluded from this offer. When the coupon value exceeds 50' this offer limited to St.00 if double the value of a coupon exceeds the retail amount of the item, this offer is limited to retail value. Limil one coffee or cigarette coupon per customer. Limit one dou ble value coupon for any particular item. All others at face

MFC's

Coupon

MFC Cents Oft

Shop-Eze

Foodland

Adds

Total

Coupon

Coupon A

as

25

50

Coupon B

15

15

30

Coupon C

50

50

|0.

Coupon 0

70

30

|00

Offer Limited On $10.00 Or More Purchase





We Reserve The Right to Limit Quantities None Soljd to Dealers or Restaurants we accept Food stamps & wic vouchers

Discount on Eve;rything but Quality

SUPER MARKETS, INC.

'Where Shopping is A Pleasure"

Boon in e Locanom

M00NLICH1!

MADNESS

SALE !

. I

/

r ;

V coldklst

Grade A Whole

lb

This is t!

The Saie of All Grocery Sales..

EFFECTIVE TUESDAY AUCUST16,1985 FR0M7PM TO 11 PM ONLY

*4 BiC HOURS ONLY*

Upon

Rib Eyes

lb

$2.99

10-12 LB. AVERAGE

Cut Into Steaks & Roast Free i

Red or White

Potatoes

79c 5 lb. bag

f

Country

Ice Cream

all flavors 99.

mamarn

Fresh Mountain Crown

Vi gallon

Sir,

SAVE 40C

Harris

Bread

IV2 lb. King size loaf

Tomatoes

Mt. Oiive Salad cube

Pickles

12 oz. jars

A'

Grade A Small

2/S1.00

SAVE 78C

Eggs

WB

nwDS

n

Generic

Towelsl

Jumbo roll

57*1.00

SAVE50C limits

(ISPCRU^

Partyl

TotinosParty Pizzasl

Rinso

lall varieties

12 oz.    SAVE70C

Detergent

giant size box

Banquet

14 ozCream Pies

] [Banquet

Choc. - Lemon - Coco - Banaiia

42-OZ.

SAVE 51C3/*1.00

SAVE $1.07 UMIT6

2 Litre

s Pepsi Colas

With This Coupon*4.99

Case

$5.89 Without Coupon Or 99* Each. Limit One Coupon Per Family.

Dukes

Mayonnaise".79c

Southern Biscuit Self Rising

Flour

5 lb. bag

nr

quart

SAVE 20c

SAVE 40C

J

1

f





n-The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.t-Monday, Au|{uil 15.

CroBSWOrd By Eugene Sheffer

ACROSS

1-Dashan

(Ethiopian

peak)

4 Togas counterpart 9 Wheel tooth

12 Binding phrase

13 Armstrwig

14 Lawyers org.

15 Household snare

17 Surpass

18 Word with name or peeve

19 Emulates 21 Mind ones

manners

24 Confidence game

25 Exist

26 Work unit 28 Drum type 31 Hostelries 33 U.S.S.R.

region

35 Assam silkworm

36 Medieval mendicant, often

38 Pikelike fish

40 Ninny

41 Love god 43 Small finch 45 Actress

Lauren

47 The-of Reason

48 Kind

49 King Richard 1

54 New Guinea port

55 Official decree

56 Soap ingredient

57 Josh

58 Takes out

59 You-Your Life

DOWN

1 Edge

2 Much-About Nothing

3 Old French coin

4 Place to wear

one's heart?

5 Walks unsteadily

6 -Town

7 Fibbers

8 Jellied dishes

mm GifSdC!

Qis [asms (EssiD

QSS 9QQ

nmw (QBS ODSS

d iii

1UK15J

8-15

Answer to Saturdays puzzle.

TT

9 Twin-hulled vessel

10 Ancient Greek coin

11 Breaches

16 Zingy spring

20 Weathercodc

21 Lade

22 Sea eagle

23 Dominated by a wife

27 Musicians job: colloq.

29 Ascend

30Down-

(Maine)

32 Antitoxins

34 Scale

37 Rotated

39 Sets in order

42 Playground feature

44 Society page word

45 Defraud

46 Jai-

50 Squeak stopper

51 Priests vestment

52 Bread order

53 Vietnam festival

CRYPTOQUIP

8-15

MIUWDPBZUA QJNLCWUI XUJU ABXI SI QCU AMWDL ANSPz!

Saturdays Cryptoquip THE WAY MANY LIFEGUARDS HAVE GOTTEN WEALTHY - FROM SAVING THOUSANDS.

Todays Cryptoquip clue: U equals E.

The Cryptoquip is a simfde substitution cipher in which eadi 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.

e 1W3 King FMturts Syndkttt, Inc

Application Filed To Abandon Track

By The Associated Press

Seaboard Systems Railroad has filed applications to discard more than 200 miles of tracks that community leaders say are essential for industrial growth.

If the federal government approves the move, dozens of firms across eastern North Carolina and the central Piedmont could go out of business, businessmen say.

Seaboards 16,000 miles of track, including some 1,578 miles in North Carolina, make it the largest rail carier east of the .Mi-sissippi.

The company has filed papers with the Interstate Commerce Commission seeking abandonment of four spur fines ranging from 11 to 89 miles long.

Seaboard already received approval to discard a 2'-rmile spur in Sanford in Lee County, although that line has been taken over by a small private company, and has plans to file for abandonment of three more lines totaling 59 miles.

"In my case, it would probably put me out of business, said Willis Barrett, president of Barrett Woodyards Inc. that.

Seaboard also has filed applications to abandon lines including:

- Wilmington to New Bern, 89 miles, serves some 21 shippers including several major lumber and paper companies, a construction company, a milling operation and the Camp Lejeune Marine Base near .iacksonville.

- Scotland Neck to Halifax in Halifax County, 19 miles, serving a fertlizer plant and a lumber company.

- Henderson in Vance County to Creedmore in Granville County, 27 miles. Major shippers include a seed operation and two woodyards.

- In addition, the company plans to file applications to abandon two 12-mile spurs in Robeson County and a 35-mile stretch between

Norlina in Warren County to Roanoke Rapids in Halifax County.

The state Department of Transportation and the Marine Corps have filed protests to the proposed abandonment with the ICC, seeking a formal investigation that will keep the line open until the review is completed.

NORTH CAROLI COUNTY OF PITT The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the estate of CHARLES VERNON MORGAN, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons

having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administrator at 211 W. Mh Street, P.O.

Box 2126, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, on or before January 26, 1984 or this Notice will be plead In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make payment to the undersigned Administrator.

This 20th day of July, 1983.

JACK P MORGAN ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF

CHARLES VERNON MORGAN DECEASED Gaylord, Singleton, McNally & Strickland P.O. Box 545 Greenville, NC 27834 July 25, August 1.8, 15, 1983

NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY The undersigned having qualified as Adminlstratlx of the estate of Burnie W. Haddock, deceased, this Is to notify all persons, firms, and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned or Its attorneys, Williamson, Herrin, Stokes & Hef felfin'ger, on or betore February 1, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded In

PUBLIC NOTICES

days from publication. Upon your failure to do so, the party seeking service against you will apply ti court for me relief sought.

This the 28th day of July, 1983

service against you will apply to the

Gwynett Hilburn Attorney for Plalni 113W.T^ird Street P O Box 5063 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 August 1,8,15, 1983

COURT

IVISION

FILE^:.|3CyO101S IN THE G.

PITTCOUNTY SUEC JOHNSON VS

ROBERTA JOHN

TO: Robert A. Johnson TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action The nature of the relief being sought Is as follows:

Absolute divorce, alimony and an equitable distribution of marital pro perty.

You are required to make defesne

to such pleading not later than itember 11, 1983, and upon yout ure to do the party seeking ser

September

and u

your

vice against you will apply fb Court tor the relief sought.

This the 29th day of July, 1983 WILLIAMSON, HERRIN, STOKES8.HEFFELFINGER ANNHEFFELFINGER BARNHILL

210 S WASHINGTON STREET PO BOX 552 GREENVILLE, NC 27834 TEL: (919) 752-3104 August 1,8, 15, 1983

STATE OF north CAROLINA COUNTYOF PITT Under and by virtue ot the power of sale contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed by Paul L. Cano, to James O. Buchanan Trustee, dated the 16th day of June, 1980, and recorded in Book B-49, Page 671, In the Office of the Register of Deeds for Pitt County, North Carolina, default having been made In the pay ment of the Indebtedness thereby secured and the said Deed of Trust being thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said in debtedness, and the Clerk of the Court granting permission for the foreclosure, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse Door in Greenville, North Carolina, at 12:00 Noon, on the 22nd day of August, 1983, the land, as improved, con veyed In said Deed of Trust, the me lying and being in Winterville jwnship, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being more par

ill

ticularly described as follows Lying and being sifuafe in Winter vllle Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and being Lot No. 43, In

flock E, of Weatningfon Heights ubdivlsion. Section 11T as shown on map thereof made by Stroud Engineering 8. Land Surveying Co. dated November, 1978, and recorded In Map Book 28, at Page 20 and 20A, ot the Pitt County Registry, to which reference is made for a more com plete and accurate description.

SUBJECT, however, to taxes for the year 1983.

cei ,    .

est bid must be deposited

Five percent (5%) ot the amount high!

with the Trustee pending confirma

of the I

tion of the sale.

Dated this 27th day of July, 1983. THURMAN E BURNETTE, Trustee, substituted by that Instrument recorded in Book I 51. Page 135, Pitt County Registry, North Carolina. August!, 15, 1983

IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION TATE OF NORTH CAROLINA JOUNTYOFPITT BE RNA WILSON CLOPTON Plaintiff

CARLF CLOPTON Defendant.

NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PI^ESS BY PUBLICATION TOCARLF CLOPTON, DEFEN DANT:

TAKE NOTICE that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed In the above entitled action.

wherein the plalntift is seeking an absolute divorce based on the grounds of a one year separation.

You are regulred to make detense to such pleading not later than forty (40) days following Monday, August 8, 1983, and upon your failure to do

itlff .......

 _ ef sougl

NELSON B CRISP

M, the pjainilff will apply to the

lourt for the relief sought.

Attorney for the Plaintiff 119 West Third Street P.O. Drawer 7146 Greenville, NC 27834 Telephone: (919) 752 6161 August 8, 15, 22, 1983

FILE NO 82 CRS 16300 FILM NO INTHEGENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION NORTH CAROLINA PITT COUNTY

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Plaintiff

RNEST BRUCE SMITH,

Defendant NOTICE OF SALE OF TRUCK Under and by virtue ot the Order entered In the above captioned cause by His Honor James D

Llewellyn, Judge Presiding at the Pitt County Superior Court r 25th day of April, 1983. and pui to Section 2o-l4l.3 ot the General

on the rsuant

Statutes of North Carolina, the undersigned Sheriff of Pitt County will on the 23rd day of August, 1983, at 11 :(M o'clock A AA , at the door of the Courthouse of Pitt County, In the City of (Greenville, North Caro tina, sell to the highest bidder for cash at public auction all the right, title and Interest which the said ERNEST BRUCE SMITH has in and to a 1977 Chevrolet Truck, identification Number CCL147B109060, bearing North Car ollna License Number 6441.

The aforesaid vehicle Is available for Inspection by contacting the Sheriff's Department of Pitt County prior to the sale.

This the lOth day of August, 1983 RALPHL TYSON,

Sheriff of Pitt County W H Watson County Attorney Speight, Watson and Brewer P O Drawer 99 Greenville, North Carolina 27835 0099 919 758 1161 August 15.1983

NOTICE

endered tor tiling with the Federal Communications

There was tend

Commission in Washington. D C on August 2, 1983 the application for consent to assignment of the con structlonpermit for UHF Television Channel T4, Greenville, North Caro lina Inc. The Construction permit authorizes operation on Channel 14 (470-476 mHz) with power ot 5000 kilowatts, unlimited time and an antenna height above average ter rain of 1475 feet from a transmitter sit located 2.4 miles southeast ot Hanrahan on the northeast corner of State Road 1110 and State Road 1904.

Officers, directors and 10% or greater stockholders of Elcom, Inc. are Charles E Franklin, Elizabeth S Franklin. Robert K Smith, Esquire, Edgar G Gallagher, Jr. and Charles Eric Franklin, Jr.

(Dfficers and directors of ACTS of

Eastern North Carolina, Inc. are Tommy Payn^ Jessie Cowan, Wlllara FIncn, Troy Bennett, John Cave, Homer Hobgood, Joe S Larrimore, Robert L AAartin, E T Vinson and Vernon E White.

A copy of the application and related documents are on file for

bar of their recovery. All persons In debted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the

un<tersigned This the 28 day 0 Koma Hardee Haddock

! 28 day of July, 1983.

Administratrix of the Estate of Burnie W. Haddock, Deceased Rt. 2, Box 584

Ayden, NC 28513 :key A. t

Mickey A. Herrin Williamson, Herrin, Stokes 8, Heffelflnger Attorneys at Law P O. Box 552 Greenville, NC 27834 August I, 8, 15,22,1983

IVISION

_______________^VOIOOS

Rosalinda Segovia AAoreno Garcia vs.

Juan Francisco Garcia Defendant

To: Juan Francisco Garcia TAKE NOTICE THAT a pleading seeking relief has been filed against you In the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought Is as follows:

1. An absolute divorce based on one year of separation.

You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than Sept. 13, 1983 said date being forty (40)

public inspection during regular business hgours at the offices of Edwin Gray, CPA, 212 W Fifth Street, Greenville, North Carolina 27834.

Aug. II. 12, 15, 16. 1983

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

The public will take notice that the Board of Aldermen of the Town of Winterville will hold a public hearing at the regular scheduled meeting September 12, 1983 at 7:00 p.m. In the Board Room of the unicipal Building to amend Town

of Winterville Zoning Ordinance

sfi

_______   _    IQI

Residential (AR) B Conditional

Article V, Zoning District Regula tions. Section 13-11 Agricultural

Uses to Include number ten (10) Fraternal Organization.

Both written and verbal com ments will be received and con

ments V sidered.

El wood Nobles Town Clerk August 15. 22.1983

vumi

ADS

752-6166

on

Autos For Sale

SELL YOUR CAR the National Autofinders Way! Authorized Dealer in Pitt County. Hastings Ford Cali 758 0114.__

1975 OPEL, good running condition, 4 cyiinder, $475. Also *973 Dodge pickup, air, automatic. $800. Call 756 4933

012

AAAC

1967 AMBASSADOR RAMBLER, 2

door, V 6, clean, best offer. Call

013

Buick

eve* vthy*^^^0()^'^ 63m{^ Power

1979 BUICK REGAL Silver AM/FM stereo, cruise, power win dows. 1 owner. Good condition. High mileaoe. Make otter. 756-8539._

015

Chevrolet

1973 MALIBU Sports Coupe. Drives ver^ good good body. $575. 752

1977 CHEVROLET Suburban . Good equipment and mileage. $4,(XX). 355 6057__

1978 MONTE CARLO Landau, black, air; power windows, steering and brakes; tilt wheel, AM/FM stereo. 756 8279 after 5.__

016

Chrysler

1977 CORDOBA Loaded with all potions New paint. $2200. 752 5888.

018

Ford

1975 PINTO RUNABOUT Runs good, 3 new tires, clean. $995. 756 1523.    ____ __

1978 FORD FUTURA Good condl tIon. Fully equipped. $2695. 756 1523.

1979 FORD LTD with air, $3,200. Also 1979 Ford Mustang with air, $3.000. 758 5299

1979 FORD Fairmont Futura sports edition. Moon roof, power steering, air, AM/FM stereo Excellent condition. 55,000 miles. Clean. 757 3292 after 5:30 p.m

1981 FORD ECONOLINE

Automatic, power steering, 36,000 miles. $5,500. 758 0729

1982 EXP FORD for sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck. 757-0451, ask for Mr. Carrawav.

021

Oldsmobile

1968 OLDSMOBILE, still runs, 4 door, oood tires. Call 756 5815

1977 OLDSMOBILE CUSTOM Cruiser Stationwagon for sale. Fully equipped. Call 756 8948 after

IF THERE'S something you want to rent, buy, trade or sell, check the classified columns. Call 752-6166 to place your ad.

024

Foreign

DATSUN 280ZX - 2 + 2, 1979. Blue, 58,000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package. Excellent condition. $8200 Calf 756 6336 or 756-1549

Diabts.

DATSUN 280-Z    1976.    Excellent

condition. Loaded. 752 5986.__

IMPORTED CAR PARTS, 105 Trade Street, beside Todd's Stereo, 756 7114

MERCEDES 240-D 1981. 4 speed, sunroof, new tires, cream. Excellent condition. $14,800. Call 756-6336 days. Ask for Lorelle. Nights or weekends call 756 1549.

SILVER 240 Z Very good condition. 756 6787 after 5:30.__

VOLKSWAGEN CONVERTIBLE,

1972. Rebuilt engine, good paint, new tires and battery. Runs great.

$3,000.355 6347.

1969 VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE

gine rebuilt, new tires. Call 7527457._ _    _

1970 OPEL, runs good, $500. 756

6365.

1970 TOYOTA Good body, rebuilt engine. Inspected. Radio. $750. 75^1927.___

1971 MGB Runs good. $1950. 758 0471 or 752 0151.

1971 PORSCHE 914. Low mileage, very good running condition. Needs painting. Serious inquiries only. 52800. 758 7820 after S. :_

1 9 73 MG New brakes, transmission, and 2 new tires. Runs good. $1700 Call 758 2300 da vs.

1974 MAZDA RX4, 49.000 actual miles, Michelin tires, air, mags. Interior in excellent condition. $1200.756 3241

1975 TOYOTA Corolla, 5 speed, very good condition. $1.000. Cair752-9076.

1977 PORSCHE 924, 51,000 miles, air. AM/FM. 4 soe^. Call 756-6891.

1979 HONDA CIVIC WAGON 4 speed, air, AM/FM, stereo and cassette, excellent condition. Uses

ular gas. 28 to 30 miles per    752    3835    after    5    p.m.

regulai

gailoa.

1979 TOYOTA COROLLA -

Excellent condition. Only 17,500 miles, 2 door, 4 speed, dark brown, 1 owner. $5,000. Call 975 2153.

1981 TOYOTA TERCEL 4 speed, 39 miles per gallon, 34,000 miles, AM/FM cassette Must sell! Call

029 Auto Parts & Service

TOYOTA SERVICE 4 cylinder tune special, $20. 4 cylinder valve ad justment, $14. 5 years experience Toyota East. Bell's Fork Garage,

756 3796.

032 Boats For Sale

SAILBOARD, brand new, never used, must sell. Call Bob, 756-7684.

15'/3' BASS BOAT 60 horsepower Evinrude. Lots ot extras. $1800. 752 5986.

15' MFG Super Bass, new 70 horsepower Johnson, completely outtitfed. $2400. Call 756 8696.

18' GLASPAR, 115 Evinrude, excellent condition, $2200. 746 3530 or 746 4203,

1973 STARCRAFT 16' Bass Boat with trailer, 45 horsepower Chrysler motor. $1500 negotiable. Call 757-1755.

1977 29' COLUMBIA, 8.7 diesel, engine, top condition, many extras. Near Belhaven. $28,500. Call Gene, 964 4385.

21' WINCHESTER 1977,    235

Evinrude 1982; galvanized trailer. Call 756 6595.    __

034 Campers For Sale

TRUCK COVERS All sizes, colors Leer Fiberglass and ^i

-Ibergle tops. 250 units Raleloh. N C t

ortsman in stock. O'Brlants. 834 2774.

1971 23' SWINGER motor home. Needs some work. $2,000. 756 4833. ask for Bob. _

1978 21' Wilderness. Like new. Only used few times. Sleeps 8. Roof air, awning, fully self contained $5300 negotiable. 756-8539._

036

Cycles For Sale

MOPED, like new. Top of the line Motobecane. $399. Call 355 2160, leave message.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of WALTER HERMAN NOBLES, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, the undersigned hereby authorizes all persons having claims against said Estate to pres

ent them to the undersigned, whose mailing address is ITOO Myrtle Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina. 27834, on or before the 15th day of February, 1984, or this Notice vklil be pleaded In bar of their recover

,_______  _    ;overy.

All persons indebted to said Estate will please make Immediate pay ment to the undersigned This the 11th day of August, 1983. Betty P Nobles I8(X) Myrtle Avenue Sreenvllle, N C 27834

Michael A Colombo JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH 8. BLOUNT Attorneys at Law Post Omce Drawer 15 Greenville, North Carolina 27834 Aug. 15. 22. 29, Sect. 5.1913-

1976 HONDA 360T, low mileage,

good condition. $400 752 6083.

1979 YAMAHA, 750 CC Call week lavs after 5 om 756 7521.,_

1981 YAMAHA 65I Maxim, 13,800 miles, with cover. $1700.758 7034.

039 Trucks For Sale

CHEVY, 1967 % ton. 307 4 barrel, rebuilt engine and front end, chrome rims. $950.or best offer. Call 757 3040after6:30D.m

1975 DATSUN longbed pickup. 1 owner. Clean. Low mileage. Good tires. $1850. Call 758 4574 after 5; 17514569

1976 JEEP CJ7 for sale with hardtop. $3800 Call 758-1199

1978 EL CAMINO Power steering

1979 CHEVROLET Silverado, loaded, extra clean. $4500. Call

756 8696.

1979 JEEP CHEROKEE Chief. Power steering and brakes, tilt wheel, air, AM/FM stereo. Good condition. Cell 756 9061 after 7jm.

040

Child Care

COME SWING WITH US Secoj^ and third shifts available. Lullaby Day Care, 355 2056._

children in my home. I love little people.,C!l75??29ft

MOTHERLAND DAY CARE

Infants to 13 years. Nourishing meals and snacks. Pre-school learning environnsent. $25 for 1 child. $45 for 2. Phone 752 2743

jr yours. References re

NEED

to care

home or you oulred. 756-24p7.

WOULD LIKE SOMEONE to take care of infant In my home. Call 756 7197 after 5

WOULD LIKE to keep children in my home in the Industrial Park area. Dial 757 3513._

046

PETS

ZI(^5oCKER"pPPEr'Tck

and white, black, and buff. Call Z38 2124

AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER Pups Wormed and checked by vet. Males, $125 Females, $10Q. 793:3222,

COLLIE PUPS AKC r

male sables, champion bt led.

 _______  ^    _     line,

shots and dewormed. $135. After 6. 756 9280

FERRET FOR SALE.$45. 758 4857. GERMAN SHORT Haired Pointer for sale. AKC registered, 14 months old, ready to train. $150 Call 752 5213 or 752 1611 after 6 pm

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

UNREGISTERED Golden Retriev er puppies. Call after 6 p.m., 757 524 __

051

Help Wanted

ADMINISTRATIVE assistant. Preter someone with real estate experience and NC real estate license. Call Mary, 756-6666

ATTENTION

Exciting Career Opportunity No experience necessary

An exciting travel position available with one of the nations largest family portrait companies. We need 2 energetic, aggressive career minded individuals to travel extreme Eastern North Carolina and parts of Virginia In the sales and photographic field. Sales ability a must. Extensive on the |ob paid training. Great advancement potential. Good company benefits. Salary plus expenses. Car allowance and mileage. Must have de-pendendable. economical car. Only serious career minded persons should apply. For appointment for Interview please call Mrs. Henline at Olan Mills Studio. 756 9024, Tuesday and Wednesday, August 16 n_d_17, between 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.

E/M/F

AUTO SALESPERSON No lot

competition. Send resume with references to P O Box 1967,

Greenville. N C____

BACKHOE OPERATOR to operate a John Deere 690. Must have experience in pipe laying. Also a bulldozer operator, experience only. Immediate openings. We are located on State Road 1534, behind Carolina Qprv House, 758-1955.

COMMERCIAL ARTIST/Layout Person. Part or full fime. Experience in negative stripping is needed. Send resume and reference list to P O Box 928, Greenville, N C 27834

CRACKER JACK Legal Secretary. High pressure job! Experience preferred in Real Estate packages. Excellent benefits. Send resume to Legal Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville.

DENTAL HYGIENIST, full time. Call Dr. Bert Warren, Farmville, 753 5516 for Interview.

_NERGETIC l-NDIVIDUAL needed ior part time mornings and Saturdays. Apply in person at Leather 8, Wood, Carolina East Mall. No phone calls please.

EXCITING SALES opportunity. Want out of your rut? Convert sales background Into cash with growing company. Be where the action is. Call Jamie, Heritage Personnel Service, 355 2020

FULL TIME legal secretary needed. Send resume or letter of experience to Full Time, PO Box 1967, Greenville. NC 27834.

GREENVILLE VILLA Nursing Home is presently seeking highly motivated, caring RN'S and LPN's to work in long term care setting. We are a in bed skilled and intermediate care facility associated with the ECU School of

Nursing and Medicine as a teaching nursing home. Our goal is to become a role model _Tn the long

term care field. Competitive salaries and excellent benefit packages are offered. Apply to Rebecca Hastings, Direcfor of Nursing, 758-4121

IMMEDIATE OPENING for full time dental hygienist. Send resume to Dental Hygienist, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC27834._

INDUSTRIAL RENTAL Laundry

needs salesperson with sales experience. Guaranteed base plus commission. Sales bonuses and car

allowance. Fringe benefits include vacations, medical and dental, profit sharing. Call for interview, 758-2187. Monday Friday. 9 to 5.

INTERIOR DESIGNER or

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

JERRY'S SWEET SHOP, Pitt Plaza Is taking applications for cheerful and ener^flc full time counter person. Apply in person Jerry's, Pitt Plaza._

LEGAL SECRETARY Minimum 2 years experience. Lanier word processing experience required, bend resumes to Secretary, PO Box 1967. Greenville. NC 27834.

LENS GRINDER NEEDED for

Optical lab. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Will train the right (oerson. Call 752-4018 between 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., and ask for Billy or call 758 6856 on Saturdays and Sundays after 7 p.m., ask for Billy.

LICENSED HAIRDRESSER needed. Prefer experience. Call days 355 2076, nlohts 756 6544

MATURE RESPONSIBLE person wanted for part time office work and in store sales. Potential for full time position Send resume to Store PO Box 1206, Greenville, NC 27835 1206.

MECHAN 1C AND SALESPERSON NEEDED

Due to the Increase in service business and a future move to the By pass, we are in need of an experienced mechanic and an experienced Mlesper^.^Excellmt

_      .    _ ling at

Brown-Wood, Inc., 1205 Dickinson

ilan and benefits. Apply Irown or Robert Starlino

Ave.

MOBILE HOME SALESPERSON

needed. Business is booming! Must be willing to work hard for $30,000 or more per year. See manager, Tradewind Family Housing, 705 West Greenville Boulevard.

NEED EXPERIENCED brick masons to work at Ch(

Jim

 _ ______ _    cherry    Point.

Top pay plus. Work available for 5 monfhs starting now. Call Jgnf$, 447%921.

NEEDED ONE PERSON to help with hog operation. Must have 1

OFFSET PRESSMAN Inexperl enced need not apply. Send resume and reference list to P O Box 928, QrwnvllltiN <; ?734,

PART TIME WORK available. Ex oerlence In retail sales is helpful Seeking Industrious and creative

worker. Send resume and reference list to P (5 Box 928, Greenville, N C_2?g34,

PARt TIME Mathematics,

Chemistry, English, Spanish, and Psychology Instructors for the fall, September 6 through Novermber 21. 18 hours graduate level work In discipline required. Contact Or. Frank Gaines, Dean of College Transfer, Coasfal Carolina Community College, 444 Western Boulevard, Jacksonville, NC 28540, 444-1221. Equal Opportunity Employer

PERSON EXPERIENCED In

hanging and finishing sheetrock and spraying ceilings. At least 4 or S years experience. Call 756 00S3._

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

FURNITURE STRIPPING

Pjml and varmsh remcved irom wood and meldi Equipment'oimef ly ol Dip And Sl'ip All items 'etufn ed within days

TAR ROAD ANTIQUES

Call For F'ee tslimaie 756-9123 Days. 756-1 107 Nights

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

odufs Wood - tove .pi'i

TAR ROAD ENTERPRISES

7S6-9123 7:ih-l - ' Niqf't-

I

051

Help Wanted

PERSON WITH 6 months experi ence installing carpet. Will consider

full time or part time. Am>ly in person at Azalea AAoblle Homes. See JT 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 va

riety of diagnosis within our outi tient department. Phone 763-6271 appointment. EOE/Handicapped.

PHYSICAL THERAPIST needed to work with developmental and physical handicaps in developmental

evaluation

caps 1n developmen' clinic, school systems

and child development centers. Requires graduation from an ac school of Physical therapy sad as a physical therapist .1 Carolina. Salary com mensrate with experience Submit

credited scl and license

partment, East Carolina Universi ty, Greenville, NC 27834, 757 6352. Equal Opportunity Employer throuoh Affirmative Action._

REED'S JEWELERS is now ac cepting applications for qualified, experienced sales person only. Applications accepted through Tuesday. None will be accepted after Tuesday. Apply in person at Reed's Jewelers, Carolina East Melt:. No Phone calls please._

SALESOPPORTUNITY

Salesperson needed Auto sales ex perlence preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:

EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC 756-4267

_For Appointment_

SECRETARY - For small chain ot preschools. Apply In person at 313 East 10th Street. No phone calls please

. ETARY FOR 5 counselors at itt Community College. AAS secretarial science degree plus 3 to 5 years expereince required. Salary based on institutional formula. Contact Personnel Department, Pitt Community College, 756-3130, extension 289 by August 24, 1983.

AA/EQEmpioyy

THE PITT COUNTY BOARD of Education is accepting applications for an interim full time Graphic Arts teacher. Work experience may qualify you for this position. If interesfed, please contact Mr. Carl Toot, Vocational Director at 752-6106, extension 233.

 EXPERIENCED service

writer. Must be neat in appearance. Must be able to work well with others. Experience necessary. Apply to Service Writer, PO Box my. Greenville, NC 27834._

WANTED MATURE Individual to babysit in my home for 7 month old. References required. 756 8314 or 758 1314,

WANTED RESPONSIBLE good driver to pick up child from St. Peter's School at 2:30 and take to

Winterville. No child care Involved. $15 per week. 756-9099 after 5 and w9tKgn<l$-

WANTED; EXPERIENCED lamlnators and boat builders. Apply at E mploymenf Security Office.

059 Work Wanted

ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE

red. Trim

ig a

estimates. J P S^lancll. 752 6331

Licensed and fully Insured. .. ming, cuffing and removai. Free

ANY TYPE ROOFING repair. Call 758 4576

CERTIFIED CHIMNEY SWEEP 25 years experience working with chimneys and fireplaces. Call Gid Holloman, 753-3503 day or night.

Licensed. Any age, 758-59

CHIMNEY SWEEPING Fireplaces and wood stoves need cleaning after a hard winters use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wood stove specialist. Tar Road En terprises. 756 9123 day, 756-1007 night.

CONSTRUCTION Superintendent desires move to Greenville area. 27 years experience. All phases. Steel, wood or concrete. PO Box 416, Ocracoke, NC 27960._

FURNITURE STRIPPING Paint and varnish removed from wood

items returned

and metal. Equipment formally of Dip and Sfrip. All items returned within 7 days. Tar Road Antiques. Call for free estimate. Days 756

9123, NIoht 756-1007.

GRASS CUTTING, trim around sidewalks and driveways. Call 752 7341.

LAWN AAAINTENANCE Service. Residential and commercial. Free estimates. 757 3424

LONG BROTHERS ROOFING All

types of roofing - commercial and residential. 25 years experience. Free estimates. Call 355-6924.

MORTAR SAND, field sand and ro|ck. Also Dragline Service.

Davenporfs Hauling Service

756-5247

PAINTING - Interior and exterior. Free estimates. References, work guaranteed. 13 years experience. 756-6873 after 6 p.m. _

SEWING ORDERS Taking ladies maternity, infants and children. Also'smocking and pleating orders. 758 7032

WANTED: PECANS to crack. We have an automatic pecan cracker. 204 per pound. Billy Wilson 102 Leon Drive, 758 4476.    _

060

FOR SALE

061

Antiques

JO-LE'S & 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 cleaning. 752-3758.

064

Fuel, Wood, Coal

AAA ALL TYPES of firewood for sale.J P Standi, 752 6331._

065 Farm Equipment

TOBACCO harvester parts Cutter head bearings $5.09 each (5 or more); Scavenger shaft bearings $4.99 each (5 or more); foam rollers $4.19 each (30 or more); conveyor chain 18" $4.04 per toot (50' roll); 20" $4.28 per foot (50' roll). Many other supplies in stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752-3999.--

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

065 Farm Equipment

LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR, 317 John Deere with 48" mower deck - new motor. Call 756-6100.

2 ROW ROANOKE toeco har vester with both heads Ready to go in field 758 0702 days, 752 0310

nights.

066

FURNITURE

BEDDING &WATERBEDS

Shop now during Factory Mattress ana Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one half. Next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626

6 PIECE library unit, Ethan Allen, solid oak, $1500 or reasonable offer. 100% wool Morroccan rug, 4'x6', $350. Call 756 9273_

072

Livestock

Stabllv^HS*^37.'*''^^ Jarman

074 Miscellaneous

BEDROOM SET: bookcase, double bed, 2 large chests. Good condition. $225. Call 756 6588

BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL Tables. Cash discounts. Delivery and Installation. 919-763-9734.

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

CAR STEREO Sony XR 70B preamp-$275; Sony XME7 equalizer-amp-$l50, Altec Lansing 6x9 speakers-$75. Also Realistic AM/FM tuner, $100. Call anytime 752 1694. Keep trying. Ask for Steve

grJeave messo.9.

CRIB AND MATTRESS for sale Standard size crib and mattress for sale; both tor only $75. Call 752-4348 between9a.m. and6p.m

FOR SALE: 2 10,000 BTU Kerosene heaters. Call 756 8363 between 6 p.m. and iQp.m

HATTERAS HAAMAOCK, surfers wet suit, a Realistic stereo. Call David at 758 4357.

ICEMAKERS Sale 40% off Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memo-rlal Drive. 756-6417._

KOMFORT KUSHION A unique new vibrating pillow. Portable and cordless. Soothes tired, aching muscles and helps relieve tension and stress with its massaging action. Call 355 2183 after 7 p.m

LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, tot cleaning, backhoe also available. 756-474Tafter 6 p.m., Jim Hudson

LARGE OFFICE DESK, $160. 746 6626._

^GNAVOX 25" color console. Two speakers, excellent reception. $400. 752 7686._

CLEARANCE SALE on Snapper Movers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue

ONE STEP car seat, excellent condition. Used only a couple months. 756-8314 or 758 ^14.

PORTABLE DISHWASHER, $160. 756-6377 anytime.

RCA 25" COLOR TV, Solid State. Perfect condition. Beautiful color. $250. 756 2691

REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE

golden- hzirvest colored Hotpoint, runs like new, looks very good; (size Is 63'/4"x28"x25"). Priced to move fast at just $195. Call 752 4348 between 9a.m. and6 p.m._

WHY STORE THINGS you never use? Sell them for cash with a Classified Ad.

SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shamjpooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.

SHARP, SONY 81 GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue. Prices start at 5488

SINGLE GARAGE door, $50. You take down and remove. Call 752-6074 and leave name and number

SMALL REFRIGERATOR for s4le - Perfect for office or dormitory room, (18"xl9Vj"x20"), reduced to only $79. Call 752-4348 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m

SMITH CORONA TP-1 letter quail ty printer. 5 months old. Used 1 month. In mint condition. $550. 752 3980 from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m

USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re frigerators, freezers, sfoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb Ing, and electrical service. 752 9333.

USED DESK FOR SALE Priced from $75 to $150. Call 752 4348 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.

WELDING GENERATOR Hobart 225 amp for sale or trade. 756 3628. WINDOW UNIT air conditioner for sale. Rotary TV antenna. 752-0287.

1 10 SPEED BIKE, $50. 1 3 speed bike, $50. Double size mattress and box springs, $150. Call 758-6894

11,000 BTU COLDSPOT air condl tioner, four years old, $200. In excellent condition. 758-1570 anytime.___

Sell your used television the

Classified way. Call 752-6166.

280 GALLON GALVANIZED oil drum with metal stand. 5 years old, like new, price negotiable. 758 2894 anytime

3M COPIER One owner. Good condition. $495. Can Be Seen at Holt Olds-Datsun, 101 Hooker Rd., 756 3115.    __

5 SHELF contemporary glass and chrome Etigere. $50. 8 place setting of contemporary Block China with 4 matching placemats. $40. 2 con temporary glass top end tables and matching sofa table, excellent con ditjom $325. 460 antique bricks, $75. St "

.all 355 2136 anytime.

.85 CARAT DIAMOND Retail $3,000, sell $2,000. Call 752 8984 after 5:30p.m._

075 Mobile Homes For Sale

NEW Mobile Home Listing Service

*S M H will list your home. Advertise It, sell it,

and finance the transaction.

All at low cost to you.

Call for further details.

And FREE NADA appraisal of your home.

Siking Mobile Homes

Route 11 Highway Bypass, next to Rex Smith Chevrolet, PO Box 495, Ayden NC 28513.

746-2078

CLASSIFIED DISPLAY

075 AAoblle Homes For Sale

GOOD --at Azalea 90 day warranty Williams. 756-7815

am7.'Sn5S.S5

f warranty. See T

homes

down,

ommy

MUST SEE TO appreciate. 1983 Oak wood, 70x14, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, set up on shady lot. equity negotiable. Take over payments $287 month. 758-MI 2 after 5:30.

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house type siding, shingle roof, total of les

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CROSSLAND HOMES

630 West Greenville Boulevard 756-0191

NO MONEY DOWN VA financing. Two day delivery. Call Conner Homes, 756 0333.

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Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE

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TRADEWIND FAAAILY HOUSING 705 West Greenville Boulevard REPO 10 X 14. Save $4,000. 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths. Pay $495 down and assume loan. See John Moore, Azalea Mobile Homes. 756-7815.    _

USED CONNER Mobile Home. $295 down and take over payments. Call 756-7138.

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

12.75% FINANCING on selected homes. Call Conner Homes, 756-

0332.

12X52 HATTRESS, fully furnished, excellent condition. 752 7233.

14 WIDES for as low as $170 per month. Call or come by Art Dellano Hgmes, 756 9841,

1973 ROYAL ENGLISH, 12x65, 2 bedrooms, ivj baths, partially furnished. Call 756 2882 after 6.

1974 ARGO - 12x52. Fully carpeted, total electric. 757-1007._

1979 CONNER No equity. Take over payments - $l08/month. 2 bedrooms, on lot. One owner. 756-0333.___

1979 TAYLOR 14 x 70, 2 bedroom, central air. New carpet, new furniture. 757-0451._

1979 14 X 60 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, furnished with washer and dryer. On private lot 1 mile South of Ayden. $8,000. Lot rent, $50 a month. 758-4476.__

1979 14x60, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, some equity and assume payments of $155. Call Lawrence a) Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841._

1980 14x52. $600 down. Assume payments. Furniture and air In-cluded. Call 758-7195._

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 doublewlde. Microwave, stereo, paddle fan, fireplace, garden fub, storm windows, masonite and shingle roof with 5 year warranty. $25,995. Call Lawrence or Frank at Art Dellano Homes. 756 9841.    _

24X52 USED doublwlde. 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 !Willlams at Azalea Mobile Homes. 756 7815._

07 Mobile Home Insurance

MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance ' - the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752-2211    .

077 Musical Instruments

USED PIANOS buy and sale. Plane 8. Organ Distributors. 355 6002.

ICHARD PIANO TUNING

Xpert piano tuning and repair. Phone 752 1224.    _

080 INSTRUCTION

MEN AND WOMEN 17-62 TRAIN NOW FOR CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS

No High School Necessary Positions Start As High As

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Williamston-792-7533 Chocowinity 946-5639





mGLOBAL HARVEST CUT

Cutback in U.S. crop production has put a dent in global harvest prospects for some major commodities, according to Agriculture Dept. (Page 7)CHILEAN UNREST

Fear of uncontrollable cycle of political violence hangs over Chileans after months of increasing unrest against Pres. Pinochet. (Pagtj 6)DECKER WINS SECOND

Mary Decker kicked by Soviet Zamira Zaitseva to take her second gold medal at the World Track and Field Championships. (Page 9).THE DAILY REFLECTOR

102NDYEAR NO. 176

TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION

GREENVILLE, N.C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 15, 1983

20 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 25 CENTS

Latin Americans Assail U.S. Military Pressure

By PETER EISNER Associated Press Writer

El Salvadors Roman Catholic archbishop denounced external intervention in Central America and

U.S. milita^ officials said maneuvers in Honduras will block what they claim are Nicaraguan supply routes to Salvadoran rebels.

President Reagan on

Sunday discussed Central America with Mexicos President Miguel de la Madrid. Mexico rejects the Reagan contention that Nicaragua supplies arms to the

Salvadoran leftists in their fight against the U.S.-backed rightist government.

There were statements of friendship during Reagans seven-hour visit to La Paz,

Six Members Of ECU Board Sworn In Sunday

By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer

Three new members and three reappointed members of the East Carolina University Board of Trustees were sworn in during a meeting of the board which opened early Sunday morning in Mendenhall Center Center.

No action was taken by the board at the opening session. Board members were due to attend a series of workshops during the day.

Officers of the board elected at Sundays meeting are C. Ralph Kinsey, Jr. of Charlotte, chairman; James H. Maynard of Raleigh, vice-chairman; and Dr. Roy D. Flood of Murfreesboro, secretary. These elections are for a one year term. Kinsey has also served as chairman since Dec. 4,1982 when then chairman Ashley Futrell resigned.

New members are: UNC Board of Governors appointees William R. Roberson, III of Washington and Samuel J. Womom, III of Sanford, and Governor Hunts appointee Louis Singleton of Greenville. The three members reappointed are Kinsey, Harrey E. Beach of Kinston, both board of governors reappointees, and James M. Dixon, Jr. of Greensboro, reappointed by Hunt. All are . appointed or reappointed for four year terms.

Other members of the board of trustees are: Thomas A. Bennett and John F. Minges, II, both of Greenville, Clifton H. Moore of Point Harbor, and Mrs. Katie 0. Morgan of Lillington.

Paul W. Naso, president of the Student Government Association, serves as an ex officio member.

Chairman Kinsey announced that each board member will serve on two of eight committees of the board. The committees are: executive, athletic, student affairs, building and grounds, academic affairs, finance, medical affairs, and development.

Dr. Stanley Riggs of the ECU Geology Department presented a special report on the ongoing programs of research being carried out by faculty, graduate and undergraduate students of ECU as well as with faculty and students of other colleges and universities taking part in the program in inter-related roles.

The research, Riggs explained, is being conducted along the Middle Atlantic Continental Shelf off the coast of North Carolina and other areas of the Eastern Seaboard aboard the Resarch Vessel Cape Hatteras, with primary emphasis on the location and study of underwater phosphate resources.

Other phases of the program touched on by Riggs include the publication of findings, including a cover story for Americas leading scientific magazine, Science. The program is currently being considered for a third renewal grant. Also, ECU will figure prominently in an upcoming internatienal geological conference.

ECU is one of five institution members of a greater UNC consortium which also includes Duke, UNC-Chapel Hill, N.C. State University, and UNC-Wilmington.

Riggs proffered, and the board accepted, an invitation for the board to hold a meeting at the Marine Laboratory in Beaufort to include a voyage to sea aboard the Cape Hatteras during 1984. A date for this meeting will be announced later.

Lebanese Factions Continuing Exchange Shells In Mountains

ByFAROUKNASSAR Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Christian and Druse militiamen shelled each others positions in the central mountains early today, and police said at least three people were killed and six wounded.

Shells hit towns and villages in the Druse sections of the Aley and Chouf mountains as well as Christian areas including those on Beiruts outskirts, causing heavy property damage, police said.

The warring militias accused each other of starting the shooting in the latest round of hostilities that erupted Saturday night and persisted until a new ceasefire took hold today.

On Sunday, security forces accused Syrian gunners in

the central mountains of joining the Druse barrage that sent shells slamming into Beiruts Christian areas, including those where the presidential palace and U.S. ambassadors residence are located. Neither gas reported hit and there were no casualties.

That shelling came hours after U.S. presidential envoy Robert C. McFarlane said in a radio broadcast that the United States would stand by Lebanon in seeking to rid the country of foreign forces because it is the right thing todo.

McFarlanes remarks followed two meetings with Foreign Minister Elie Salem in which the discussions were said to focus on the battles between government troqps and Druse fighters.

In Israel, Prime Minister

L.D. FAMILIES PLEASE CONTACT William and Rosemary Colt have asked Hotline to appeal to families of children with learning disabilities to contact them. The purpose of this communication, they said, is to discuss both city and county school attitudes toward the education of children with special learning problems. Their phone number is 7S6-B291.

Menachem Begin accused Syria on Sunday of blocking withdrawal of all foreign armies from Lebanon by refusing to accept the Lebanese-Israeli troop-withdrawal agreement reached three months ago but never implemented. Syria claims the agrment threatens its security by allowing Israeli forces to patrol southern Lebanon.

Syrian President Hafez Assad, in an interview printed Sunday in the Washington Post, restated his countrys claim that it will never honor the agreement and that Israeli forces must withdraw unconditionally.

It is a mistake for anyone to believe or to think that we will ever leave Lebanon as a morsel which is easy for the Israelis to swallow, he was quoted as saying.

Israel has an estimated 28,000 soldiers in Lebanon, Syria has 50,000 and the Palestine Liberation Organization a 12,000-15,000-strong force. The Israelis invaded in June 1982 to rout the PLO, and Syria has been in the country since the end of the 1975-76 civil war.

Druse artillery fire from the mountains southeast of the capital has kept Beiruts airport closed since last Wednesday, and Druse leader Walid Jumblatt has said his gunners will keep shelling the facility unless the government meets the demands of his Progressive Socialist Party.

The Druse have been fighting, ri^t-wing Christian militias in the central mountains since November Among Jumblatts main conditions to allow the Lebanese army into the area

is total puUout of all Christian militiamen from the region, which is home to most of the countrys 200,000 Druse.

Barred By Fair

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -J.R. Kirk, barred from the Ohio State Fair for taking home too many stuffed animals, figures hell just have to grow a beard to continue his winhing ways.

Kirks proficiency at everything from throwing darts to tossing balls into milk containers has earned him 50 toy critters this year, leading game (^rators to ban him from the fair for the second straight year.

Kirk says he spent about $200 Wednesday and Thursday to win animals which he values at $1,000 to $2,000.

Can I tell you something? This is going to sound kind of vain, he said. I can do anything. I dont get beat. Because operators wont let him play anymore, he said, Im going to let my beard grow for three or four days and try again, incognito.

Kirk says he uses his own darts, and if game operators object, I stand back four feet farther.

Two prizes, a giant white buffalo and a brown teddy bear, will. go to Kirks children, ages 12 and 13. He said he plans to donate the rest to playnwms and patients at a childrens hospital.

Mexico, but no indication the presidents softened their opposing viewpoints. De la Madrid opposes the U.S.-Honduran maneuvers.

In El Salvador,* Archbishop Arturo Rivera y Damas denounced factional violence that has killed 44 civilians in the last two weeks.

The interminable list of captured and missing people is truly painful, the archbishop said in one of his stbongest condemnations of violence in the Salvadoran civil war that began in October 1979 and has claimed an estimated 43,000 lives.

So many missing people. What are they accused of? Where are they?, Rivera y Damas asked 1,000 worshippers who crammed San Salvadors Metropolitan Cathedral for a Sunday sermon.

The archbishop also said there are clear symptoms of external intervention in the internal affairs of Central America, and that one example is the U.S. war games scheduled to start in Honduras later this month.

U.S. military sources, closely involved in the American aid program to the Salvadoran government, said the U.S. exercises will cut off what they claim is a prime arms infiltration corridor from Nicaragua to El Salvador by placing thousands troops in the southwest comer of Honduras.

Apparently the way theyve been operating on the land route is to send squad-size units across, seven men or so, said a high-ranking U.S. intelligence officer who requested anonymity. They may be transporting arms, messages, other supplies.

Congressional and Latin American critics of Reagans Central American policies say they doubt Nicaragua is sending substantial supplies to Salvadoran rebels by these alleged routes.

From what we can tell, the principal supply comes by way of the black market or the capture of weapons from the Salvadoran army, said a senior Mexican diplomat, who participated in the Reagan-de la Madrid summit.

Reagans meeting with the Mexican president in La Paz, , a resort city in southern Baja "ISqlifomia, included strong staements about Central America.

No nation can impose its own image on others, de la Madrid told Reagan.

Central American nations should be able to determine their own solutions, and that is why we have responded to the call for help from our Latin American neighbors, Reagan replied.

We will consider it a beautiful day in the history of that region when all foreign elements, including our own, may be safely withdrawn, Reagan said.

Mexico has criticized the U.S. maneuvers and naval exercises off Central Americas coasts, claiming they intensify tension instead of reduce rt.

About 100 U.S. Army personnel will be arriving daily for the next two weeks in Honduras for the joint military exercises. At their hei^t in November and December, about 5,000 Americans and 6,000 Hondurans willbepartic^ating.

U.S. Hercules C-130 transports, jet-powered C-141 Starlifters and C-5A Galaxies are crowding the airways around the city of San Pedro Sula, 100 miles northwest of Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital.

DROWNING ... N.C. Wildlife Re- the Seine Beach at Grimesland this sources Commission Officer K.J. morning. (ReflectorPhoto).

Dunn covers a drowning victim near

Body Of Drowned Man Is Recovered

By SUE HINSON Reflector Staff Writer

The body of a 28-year-old Winterville man was found in the Tar River this morning about 8:30 after officers of the Pitt County Sheriffs Department had been searching since late Saturday afternoon.

Freddy McKeels body was spotted this morning near the Grimesland Seine Beach by Jimmy Corey of Route 3, Greenville, who had volunteered to help the Sheriffs Department search for the body. Members of the Greenville, Farmville, Falkland, Eastern Pines, Winterville and Grifton rescue squads assisted with the search. Corey had no previous experience in rescue operations.

1 found the body ... right past the bridge and went and got the wildlife officer to get

some help, Corey said.

Sheriffs deputies and members of Greemille Fire and Rescue had been searching for the body since approximately ,5:30 p.m. Saturday just after they received a call reporting the drowning.

The drowning took place about 200 yards west of the Grimesland draw bridge, Pitt County Sheriff Ralph L. Tyson said.

He was supposed to have been skiing, but fell off his skis about 50 yards after he had started and went down. After circling, the people in the boat jumped out and grabbed McKeel, but he slipped out of someones hand and they could not get McKeel back up, Tyson said.

According to Tyson, McKeel was wearing a life-jacket, but slipped out of it.

Disturbed Over Amoun't Of Stabilization Sales

By The Associated Press North Carolina tobacco leaders and powers are upset that a third of the leaf brought to auctions in the l ive flue-cured tobacco states has gone under loan since I narkets opened in late July.

"Its disappointing, said F'red G. Bond, executive director of the Flue-Cured Tobacco Cooperative Sitabilization Corp. Wed m uch prefer to see it lower than a third.

More than 41 million founds of leaf have gone to the cooperative, which borrows money from the government to guarantee a minimum 'price for most grades of tobacco. When tobacco fails to bring one oeint above the support price, SUibilization buys it.

Although the practice biri ngs stability to the states big gest money crop, it leaves tbie cooperative with millions of pounds of tobacco to sell laU *r when market conditions imj irove. The leaf is piling up in 5 itabilizations warehouses - more than 600 million pou nds from several seasons.

Last season. Stabilization received a quarter of the fliK Kured cn^ - 260 million po I inds - the largest amount of t .obacco ever purchased by th<?: cooperative.

lilond said no one knows ho'w long Stabilization can abisorb that much tobacco am j continue to operate at a pn )fit.

'How much can we stand? Th ats an unknown, Bond sai d. But we dont want to re ich the point where we ha veto find out.

" fhis week some Old Belt wi irehouses open in R( ickingham, Surry, Forsyth an d other Piedmont cooties.

Since Congress approved the no-net-cost tobacco program in the summer of 1982, leaf growers have paid an assessment to Stabilization for each pound of tobacco they sell.

Stabilization uses the assessment, which started at 3 cents and rose this season to 7 cents, to offset interest payments on the loans the cooperativ gets from the governments Commodity Credit Corp.

But as Stabilizations tobacco stores increase, the cost of handling that tobacco also grows. When costs rise so does the assessment, which was established to make sure farmers, not the government, bear the cost of the federal support program

With the leasing price ,s we pay, we couldnt sta nd

Awakened, Just Before S'mking

KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP) - A se ven-man fishing crew almFjs'i slept through it when tiieir 50-foot boat began ta.King on water, and they a.woke just seconds before the anchored vessel sank in 120 feet of water, killJig three of the men, the sk.ippersaid.

Everyone was so tired from working, they were sound asleep 'and when I woke up it was much too late to tell what caused us to take water, skipper Martin B. Freeman, 31, of Bellin^am, Wa^., said Sunday.

another increase. 'aid Otis Green, who grows t .obacco in Guilford and Rjckinf^ham counties. We co> jidnt stand 7 cents. If it get up 'nigher, we might just f we'd not be working out he';e.

If Stabiliz ation winds up with 150 to 2P /O miilion pounds this year, v^e could be looking at a r lo-not-cost assessment ran'ging^ up in the double digib John Cyrus, chief of. th'e tobacco affairs section, of the state Department' of/agriculture.

Y oull then be at a point whe ,re you are skimming all ihf J Drofit from the grower, Cyrs said. Stabilization) -Amply canjiot continue to take these large amounts of tobacco.

WEATHER

Fair tonight, low in low 60s; partly ckrady Tuesday with high in the upper Nb.

Looking Ahead

Partly clou^ Wednesday through F^y with bi^ near 90 aloog coast and hi the 80s inland. Lows wUlbeineOsinlanl

Inside Reading

Page 5-Area items Page 8-Obttuariet Page 12-Laurens lite





Wedding Vows Said Sunday

GRIFTON - Uke Benjamin here was the setting for the Sunday afternoon wedding ceremony of Rhonda Lveme Hudson and Wilton Steven Jordan. Parents of the bride are Mrs. Janet W. Rhodes of Grifton and Ronald Lee itadson of Vanceboro. The bpdegroom is the son of Mr^ddie Cray of Kinston and Wilton G. Jordan of Ayden.

The double ring ceremony was performed by Julian Scott of Kinston.

James Gilliam of Grifton played the organ. Patricia Edwards of Ormondsville and Gilliam sang You and I. She also sang Evergreen and he sang Love Me Tender.

The bride was escorted by her stepfather, Rusty Rhodes, and given in marriage by her parents. Cynthia Warren of Grifton was matron of honor for her sister and Dawn Jordan of Charlotte, sister of the bride, was bridesmaid.

Jennifer Bone of Nashville, cousin of the bride, was flower girl and Jeremy Bone of Nashville, also cousin of the bride, was ring bearer.

The father of the bridegroom was best man while the usher included Ronald Lee Hudson Jr. of Vanceboro, brother of the bride.

The bride wore a formal gown of sheer organza and alencon lace and seed pearls. It was designed with an empire waist, lace covered bodice and Queen Anne

neckline with scalloped lace border accented with seed pearls. The full sheer bishop sleeves wre designed with scattered alencon floral lace motifs and bordered with matching lace cuffs. The full A-line sheer organza skirt with V-front alencon lace panel was trimmed with pearls and bordered with lace that flowed into a cha^l train. She wore a widebrim horsehair hat with organza and satih ribbon and pencil-edged rosette with pearl centers. Attacheld was a double tier of illusion. The bride carried a silk cascade of white and lavender orchids with springs of stephanotis and daisies, lavender babys breath, morning glories, ivy and fern.

The honor attendant wore a formal gown of orchid tissue taffeta with off-shoulder bodice designed with multiple shoulder bows. The full skirt featured rows of gathered taffeta flounces. She carried a white parasol with orchid ribbons. The attendants were dressed like the honor attendant.

The flower girl was dressed in an orchid gown with a stand-up neckline with point despirit lace trim and carried a basket of daisies.

The brides mother wore an orchid lustreglo and chiffon gown styled with a V-neckline enhanced by a chiffon cape. The mother of the bridegroom selected a rose chiffon and lustreglo dress with a V-neckline and

MRS. WILTON STEVE JORDAN

sheer bishop sleeves.

The couple will live at Route 2, Grifton, after a wedding trip to unannounced points.

Service For Women Travelers

By JANET DENEFE Associated Press Writer Women business travelers used to have the same complaint as comedian Rodney Dangerfield - they didnt get any respect.

But now that women make up the fastest growing segment of the travel industry, hotels are trying to cater to their female guests. At the same time, women travelers say theyre not so shy any more about demanding service.

Women have been patsies for a bad room and a bad table, said Priscilla Moorman, president of a travel agency with three offices in Detroit. Im trying to educate women that their money is just as good as anybody elses, and by George, if theyre not happy with a room, not to settle for it.

Meanwhile, some Michigan t'otel officials say theyre tr ving to figure out how to b -t appeal to women traveler ^

1 dont feel women want to be singled out, said Tom Appel, an executive assistant managv at the Hyatt Regency in' Flint-Womin weve talked to say |hey dont want phone cails to th eir room to make sure theyi 'C tucked in, he said, adding that the Hyatt usedi'o maki^ welcome calls to its fe male gi'jests.

Were tryi ng to break down the' attitu. de of putting the woman at th e proverbial table by the kitche 'n door. Nearly one-thii *d of all business teavebers are women, up frt>m 16 percent in 1978 to 30 percent in 1980, said Jeanette Pollac cia, a sales representative k'or a Ramada worldwide' sale s office in Dearborn. BamiJda, which operates 12 hotels in Michigan, carried out 0 yet ir of research on women ihusi ness travelers, she said.

As a result, the hotel cham has scheduled seminars for employees aimed at raising their consciousness - for instance, instructing desk clerks not to call the womans room number out loud.

Ramada also distributes a brochure called The Traveling Woman, which includes a bill of rights for women guests.

You have a right not to be

addressed as sweetie or honey by employees, according to the booklet, which also advises women that bartenders will never serve them an unrequested drink.

The plush Hotel St. Regis in Detroit, which includes hair dryers and packets of liquid detergent in each room, makes one concession just for women - each gets a fresh red rose at night, says manager Michael C. Kahler. .

We treat all our guests very specially, said Melissa Werder, a spokesman for the Westin Hotel in Detroit. Things like complimentary shampoo and express check-in for business travelers are applicable for both men and women.

Officials at hotels contacted around Michigan say that skirt hangers, shower caps, and items like shampoo and skin cream are now standard, while hair dryers and irons can be provided upon request.

The Harley hotels in Lansing and Grand Rapids include a clothesline in the bathtub, full-length mirrors so a woman can check the hem of her skirt and magnifying makeup mirrors.

And the Grand Traverse Resort in Traverse City says it has changed its menu in recent years to appeal to a woman's lighter appetite, including items like spinach and fruit salads.

Weve also stepped up our entire security, which grew out of an awareness of the single female traveler, hotel manager Jim Gemhofersaid.

Other Michigan hotels report that premium-priced floors designed for corporate executives have been a hit with women.

At the Am way Grand Plaza Hotel in Grand Rapids, an additional $20 per night gets the guest into Tower Club accommodations. One

of the pluses is that a woman guest can use a private lounge to entertain a client so she can avoid meeting him in her room or the hotel bar, said spokeswoman Liz Amante.

The Kalamazoo Center Hilton Inn last year opened a similar floor for its corporate guests with good results.

Women love it because they feel very secure, said Gary Rossman, director of sales and catering. They can sit up here and relax. Its not a pickup situation.

By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor

FRESH LIME SUGAR COOKIES

cup butter, at room temperature or cut into thin pats cup sugar ^teaspoon salt 4'^ teas)oons fresh lime juice

l/2 cups sifted all-purpose flour

2 table^ns sugar mixed with 2 teaspoons grated lime rind

In a medium bowl with an electric beater, cream butter and sugar; beat in salt and lime juice. Add flour; with a wooden spoon stir until blended. Chill, covered tightly, until firm enough to handle.

Shape into two 4-inch long rolls; wrap in saran; chill until

The bride graduated from , Ayden-Grifton Hi^ School, Mitchells Hairstyling Academy and Pitt Community College. She work at Texfi in Kinston. The bridegroom graduated from Ayden-Grifton High School and Avorks at Hatteras Yatchs in New Bern.

A reception was given by the brides parents at Lake Benjamin. Cassie Whiteford of Raleigh, aunt of the bride, served cake and Henrietta Glover of Black Creek, aunt of the bridegroom, poured punch. Jewel Jordan, sister of the bridegroom, presided at the register.

Vivian Coleman of Jacksonville, aunt of the bride, directed the wedding.

A rehearsal dinner was helid at the Holiday Inn in Kinston given by Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Cray and Mr. and Mrs. Wilton G. Jordan.

firm enough to slice. Remove one roll from refrigerator; cut crosswise into thin (about h- inch) slices; with a wide metal sp atula place about an inch apart oh ungreased cookie sheets. Sprinkle with sugar and lime-ri nd mixture. Repeat with second mil.

Bake in a preheated 37Wegree o\/e;n until bottoms of cookies are gol den - 6 to 8 minutes. With a . wide metal spatula remove to a V/ire rack to cool completely.

. Makes about 5 dozen.

Mrs. Hardy Honored

A birthday party-dinner honoring Mrs. Esther Hardy o!f Greenville was given by her children, Pegjgy Ham-n.iond, Hattie Williams and Ruth Ruffin recently.

Guests included other rela-(tivesand friends.

Take A Ride And Pick Up Gifts

By Abigail Van Buren

1983 by UniverMi Prn Syrxticate

DEAR ABBY: I just got a telephone call from a relative (I wont say how close) who lives less than five miles from me. She said, in a very huffy tone' When are you coming to pick up your Christmas presents? (This is the third time shes called about this.)

Abby, correct me if I am wrong, but arent people supposed to deliver their own Christmas presents?

I might add, this relative has a car and is not handicapped in any way, shape or form.

I am so angry I can hardly write this. How should I handle it?

BOILING OVER

DEAR BOILING: You are obviously too intimidated to ask this relative to please deliver them, so before the hot summer ends, take a ride, cool off, and pick up your Christmas presents.

DEAR ABBY: This has been bugging me for years. Its the way people always greet you with, How are you? Then they zdom right by without even waiting for an answer. If they arent interested in how a person is, why do they ask? not just say Hello?

There have been times when I would like to tell somebody how I really am, but I never get the chance because nobody waits for an answer.

I work in an office, and this morning when I came to work, a man yelled from across the room, Hi, Lea, how are you? Did he actually expect me to yell across the room, Well, not too good; my hemorrhoids are killing me!

I hope you dont think Im a fool for bringing this up, but I feel better getting it off my chest. Am I alone in this annoyance, or are there others out there who feel as I do?

LEA (MY REAL NAME)

DEAR LEA: Face it, when most people ask, How are you? they dont want an organ recital. A Fine, thanks, will suffice. And sit on the facts until you see your physician.

DEAR ABBY: For over 15 years I was married to a wonderful man. He was an excellent provider (I would not have had to work, but I Chose to), a good father to our children and a good Christian. I always had free rein with our funds, no questions asked. His only fault was that he was a dud in the bedroom.

I met a very attractive man about my age. We became intimately involved, and I found him to be excellent in bed. I became convinced that I couldnt live without him, so I divorced my husband and married him.

After five years I realized that the bedroom was the

only place where the bum was any good. He was inconsiderate, selfish, downgraded my children and me and had a roving eye. Now I have to work in order to feed and clothe my children properly. I have bought nothing for myself in the last five years, but this man has plenty of money for whatever he wants.

I finally got my head straight, and now Im waiting for my second divorce to become final.

My advice to a woman whose only gripe about her husband is his performance in bed is: Please see a mw-riage counselor or even a sex therapist, but dont get involved with another man!

I dropped the pot of gold to chase the rainbow.

FOOUSH BEYOND WORDS

DEAR FOOLISH: Theres nothing so clear as 20-20 hindsight. Well, ladies, theres a million dollars worth of advice for the price of a newspaper.

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Editorials

Narrow Terrain

Thanks to a federal jury in Kansas City the dust has been settled in TV anchorwoman Christine Crafts discrimination

suit. '

Too bad the basic issue was beclouded by extraneous matters.

Craft won her point: she was neither too old, unattractive and not deferential enough to men.

As to the last, Craft said I will defer to Clare Boothe Luce or Eric Sevareid ... but I will not defer to someone just because he or she happens to be better at basic hair spray.

Her pictures argued against the other two criticisms.

The station director denied under oath of having made the comment; and Craft, under oath, said he did. Her quality of credibility made an impact; his did not.

The fact remains, television news is a highly competitive field and very mobile. People are forever moving up the ladder, and if they do not, their otherwise sterling qualities raise doubts.

Theres reason to think the verdict will not have much effect on the industry. Stations will hire and fire on the basis of criteria that loom largest in their opinion; and except in rare instances, new faces and voices emerge as others leave the scene.

The war-of-words in Kansas City was waged on a narrow terrain which Christine Craft saw advantageous to her case. Nothing else was really settled.

Good Business

Once upon a time when a great war raged the United States government created something called a war bond.

The bonds were safe, paid interest and the public bought them in bunches to support the war effort.

The war ended and the bonds became known as defense bonds and people still purchased them because they were safe and paid a reasonable return.

Then something happened. Other investments paid more return and were reasonably safe, so the governments bond program designed for small investors fell into disuse.

Then the government changed the bonds and introduced one which was more sensitive to return being paid by other investments.

Bond sales rose. They are up 20 percent in North Carolina during the second quarter of this'year. In the nation sales are up 37 for the first six months of the year.

The lesson is that keeping a product current with the hiarket is always good business even for the U.S. government.

Paul T. O'Connor-

Japan Important Ally Of Tar Heel Trade

John Cunniff

Trapped Man

NEW YORK (AP) - At the pinnacle of success, having saved a company his less-daring peers had declared un-sidvageable, a company whose bankers wouldnt lend it a penny without government backing, Lee lacocca is *a trapped man.

That assessment, by Michigan State University prdfessor Eugene Jennings, is based on a study of options open to the Chrysler Corp. chairman, who rebuilt his company frbm the wreckage of billion-dollar losses to record profits in this years second quarter.

lacocca seemed freed rather than trapped last Friday as he repaid the la^t $800 million in government-secured loans that kept the company going in the darkest of days, when many corporate analysts thought him irresp^ible.

During that time he had^wcome what almost no business executive before him had achieved, the status of folk hero, a chesty leader in the mold of Gen. George Patton, a takecharge guy who, because he didnt know how to quit, was left no alternative but to win.

But now, said Jennings, lacocca really doesnt have alternatives. It is all but impossible, said the professor, to leap from one pinnacle to another. And yet, he suggested, this is what is expected of lacocca, maybe even by himself.

"Whatever opportunities he has in the future will not allow him to sustain the high image as an exceptional leader, declared Jennings, who has spent his adult life studying corporations and top executives, and who is a confidential adviser to many of them.The Daily Reflector

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Paul OConnor traveled to Japan this spring as a guest of the Japan Institute for Social and Economic Affairs. This is the first in a series of columns on economic ties between North Carolina andJapan.

Three decades ago, the Japan Tobacco and Salt Public Corp. opened a small office in Raleigh. Japan, still rebuilding after World War II, was not a great world trader at the time but the Japanese had always been great smokers and they wanted to buy some good North Carolina tobacco. So, JTS came to North Carolina and became one of Japans first American investments following the war.

JTS only bought $5 million worth of leaf in its first year here but that was the start of an economic relationship between North Carolina and Japan that would blossom over the next three decades.

Today, Japan is probably North Carolinas single most important foreign economic partner. Speaking before the

Japan-Southeast U.S. Associations October 1980 meeting at Pinehurst, Gov. Jim Hunt said as much: In North Carolina, we believe Japan is the most important country in the world for the future of our states economy.

Consider a few facts about the economic ties between the state and Japan.

The Japanese buy $300 million worth of American leaf each year. About two-thirds of it comes from this state. Theyve traditionally paid very high prices for their leaf, preferring to buy the best tobacco available.

Japanese firms are coming to North Carolina in droves. This summer alone, three major Japanese companies -Sumitomo Electric, Mitsubishi and American Honda - announced plans to build major plants here. Counting those three, 30 Japanese firms now operate in North Carolina. Not counting American Honda, the Japanese have scheduled $156 million in industrial investment in North Carolina just since 1980.

'The Japanese use our ports. The most

recent figures available cover 1979 when goods shipped to Japan from North Carolina totaled $204 million and goods shipped to North Carolina from Japan totaled $67 million.

Since March 1982, North Carolina has operated an office in Tokyo. (A bit of trivia: Its located in the Dai Ichi Building near the Imperial Palace, the building from which Gen. Douglas McArthur directed the military occupation immediately after the war.) Ichiro Iwao, 60, who spent a lifetime in the shipping industry and who spent three years in the United States, represents North Carolina interests in Japan.

The office was originally assigned to ports business. Now, Iwao explains, it is also working on industrial development and tourism. Walter Johnson, an industrial recruiter in the N.C. Department of Commerce and an expert on Japanese business after living in the country for 12 years, is assigned exclusively to Japan and visits the country quite regularly.

Not all is rosy between Japan and the

United States. The United States says the Japanese market is closed to American products. Cigarettes make a good point. Although American cigarettes are about the best in the world, they take only 1.5 percent of the Japanese domestic market.

There are still hard feelings in North Carolina also, about the loss years ago of textile jobs to the lower-paid Japanese. The pendulum has swung on the Japanese now, however, as many of their textiles jobs have moved to Taiwan, Korea, Singapore and Hong Kong. Ironically, many American textile companies are now using Japanese automation to keep their companies in North Carolina, although with fewer jobs.

The Japanese have also pretty much ignored our furniture in the past. It was too big for their small homes. But N.C. fumiture-makers are finding, Iwao says, that smaller, high quality products being produced for American condominiums are catching the interest of the Japanese.

lacocca had' a perfect marriage with his job, said Jennings.

To begin with, the company was too far gone to have used the talents of any but an automobile man such as laccoca, who understood the industry from bumper to bumper and who knew where to find the best executive talent.

Moreover, said Jennings, a professor of business administration, lacocca not ony was a seasoned operating manager but had an overwhelming desire to prove himself.

In short, he needed Chrysler; Chrysler needed him. It was a situation not often repeated in the business world.

But now, says Jeimings, the skills needed by Chrysler have changed. The total realignment, at which lacocca was so successful, has been completed. Now comes the job of rebuilding. It requires other skills.

Few executives of lacoccas talents stay long enou^i to rebuild the company they have saved from disaster, he observes. The reason is that the perfect match in a crisis becomes a poor match for rebuilding.

The skills that were so effective before become so overly heavy they wear out or wear down management, said Jennings, who has written many books on executive behavior, including Anatomy of Leadership.

Already, there are signs'that some Chrysler managers are losing their patience and commitment, he said. If lacocca were smart, he says, he would either get a good operating manager between him and his team or withdraw to long-range leadership responsibilities.

Or, he suggested, leave at the summit of his heroism.

Chrysler, Jennings believes, is not yet out of trouble. They have merely taken off the oxygen mask. There is going to be a very trying and debilitating two years before the company can be taken out of intensive care.

If lacocca can stay out of the operating management and assume the role of long-range business leadership, he and Chrysler mi^it continue to prosper, the professor says. But it would be difficult; the match no longer is there.

Lee lacocca has few opportunities within Chrysler, Jennings declares. And he disagrees with those who believe lacocca can transfer his powers to politics. His talents are not in that area, he said.

He could retire, of course, but he is only 59. In 30 years of advising business leaders I^iave never seen a person of his type coiM down from the summit and idle awa:n>^time, said Jennings.

The hero worship he has gotten and will get usually is addictive, he explained. More often than not a person such as laccoca sets his sights on^ becoming even bigger than his present image.    t

Few challenges or accomplishments can satisfy that urge. Perhaps, said Jennings, the urge can be assuaged only by taking a run at the U.S. presidency or by building a new worldwide car company.

/sa> fiusrffrc.

Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

State Department Chose Passivity

WASHINGTON - The McFarlane mission was made inevitable by State Department illusion that a pliant Syria would do Americas bidding and withdraw from Lebanon, folowed by a second State Department illusion that Israel favors a strong, centralized Lebanon over a Lebanon partitioned between Israel and Syria.

Viewing these illusions as dangerously naive, the White House seized control of policy and sent its only available agent -deputy national security assistant Robert McFarlane - on its mission to the Mideast. National security adviser William P. Qark made the decision despite unhappiness in Foggy Bottom. He acted after delivery of a late-June letter to President Reagan from King Fahd of Saudi Arabia warning that American failure to follow through on its pledge to restore a strong central government in Lebanon would have calamitous repercussions for the United States.

Clarks dominant role as Reagans Middle East policymaker is a direct result of a full year of State Department lassitude and illusion. Fearful of the power of the pro-Israeli lobby, particularly in the shadow of the 1984 presidential campaign. States policymakers chose diplomatic passivity to avoid political punishment. Clarks decision to take over showed Oval Oof fice i disagreement that playing Israels game for 1984 political leverage is the proper Reagan posture. Clark and the president believe that 1984 demands progress, not stalemate, even if Israel is asked to accept a small push or two from the U.S.

That means continuing or rising pressures on Israel to withdraw from

Lebanon. Once the State Department decided that, yes, Israel truly wanted to get out and was not playing games for future p^ition and permanent occupation of Southern Lebanon, U.S. pressure could be relaxed; Israel and the U.S. had the same oblective.

White House reidists, including Clark, are not so naive. They doubt that U.S.-Israeli goals in Lebanon are similar.

With Clarks enthusiastic support. Prince Bandar, the newly named Saudi ambassador here, traveled to Damascus before Clark sent McFarlane there last weekend. Bandar explained to Syrian

president Hafez al-Assad that Reagans special emissary was not coming to Damascus to look at the waterfalls. Bandar spent four and a half hours explaining to Assad that McFarlane was coming to talk business.

It was also Bandar, a confidant of Clark far more than he is of Secretary of State George Schultz, who delivered the letter from King Fahd to President Reagan six weeks ago. That letter spelled out in surprising detail Saudi Arabias view that if the U.S. was patient and played the conflicting pressures on Lebanon of Israel and Syria more or less

Elisha Douglass

Strength For Today

Why do so many people find it hard to believe in the persistence of life after death.

We get on the right track in our thinking on this subject when we remind ourselves that the universe in which we are placed is a living universe. We do not know whether any of the other planets are inhabited or not, but we do know that the planet on which we live teems with life, and the revealed word of God assures us that life is not confined to this world.

God is a living God. Jesus Christ has ascended into heaven, there to continue a living existence.

If life thus extends throughout the world and. seemingly throughout the universe why do we doubt that personality, the highest thing we know, continues to exist when our physical careers end? Life persists which means that we can assume that growth and glorification persist through all ages.

even-handedly, Assads present mood of intransigence would cease.

But the White House decision to send its own envoy to Damascus in place of retired ambassador Philip Habib did not please the State Department. Almost before he left, leak sniffers in the White House smelled an effort by State to blame Reagans selection of McFarlane on a Clark-McFarlane policy split over arms control. Nothing could be further from the truth.

It is true that McFarlane is inexperienced in Mideast diplomacy. When then-Secretary of State Alexander Haig sent him to Jerusalem to seek a concession from Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Begin treated him like an errand boy.

But McFarlanes close contact with the White House, and his removal from the tragically flawed performance of Schultz and his aides, are regarded as assets. No one here expects a quick end to Reagans failure to deliver on his promise, repeated over and over, to free Lebanon of its Israeli invaders. Its Syrian peacekeepers and its PLO guerrillas. Contrary to some published reports, however, the White House does not believe that with pressure properly applied, the promise may be redeemed before the 1984 campaign starts in earnest.

Even that may be too late. Egypt is moving pell-mell back into the Arab world as Israels occupation of Lebanon stretches into its 15th month. As Reagans Sept. 1, 1982,' peace plan has shriveled, the U.S. has paid a price. But that price will be dwarfed by the cost of lost credibility if Israel is permitted non-stop occupation of Southern Lebanon.

Tim Ahern

AWACs Draw Attention Easily

WASHINGTON (AP) - For a small Qeet of unarmed airplanes, the AWACs radar craft certainly have a knack for drawing attention.

The planK burst into piiblic view two years ago as the subject of a bitter congressional strug^e that ensued after the Reagan administration sought approval to sell five AWACs planes to Saudi Arabia.

Most recently, two radar planes were di^atched to help Chad. Their cteploy-ment in the Sudan immediately seemed to raise the stakes in Africa for the United Stat^.

AWACs are among the militarys most sophisticated surveillance planes.

The Airborne Warning and Control System planes are flying war rooms, packed with sophisticated radar and monitoring equipment that permits them to watch dozens of enemy planes at once and direct attacks by friendly fighters and missiles.

The converted Boeing 707s were subject of an intense d^te when the administration said it would sell five of the $129 million planes to Saudi Arabia, a proposal that touched off q>positi(i from Israel because of the possibility that the planes might be used against Israeli air force jets.

In October 1981, the Senate, bowing to a heavy lobbying campaign by President

Reagan, rejected 5248 a resolution that would have vetoed the Saudi deal.

The first AWACS are scheduled to be delivered to the Saudis in 1985. In the meantime, four U.S. AWACS have been temporarily sent to Riyadh.

Those four are part of the 28 AWACS in the Air Force, all of ^Aliich are assigned to Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma. Besides the pair in the Sudan and the four in Saudi Arabia, two more have been deployed to Cairo to take part in joint exercises with Egyptian forces, another pair are flying out of Kadoia air base in J^>an, and two more are at Keflavik air base in Iceland.

Besides the U.S. planes and KKe

bought by the Saudis, NATO has received two of the 18 AWACS it plans to purchase for monitoring Warsaw Pact moves. No other nation than Saudi Arabia has been permitted to purchase the planes, al-thou^ France has been considering such a request.

The key to the planes effectiveness is a sq[>histicated look down radar system which can separate planes from background clutter, meaning enemy planes cant hide by flying at treetqp level below the limits of normal radar.

The AWACS are able to pick up planes moving as slow as 80 mph, meaning they can spot planes rolling akmg enemy runways.





Sports

E DAILY REFLECTOR

MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 15, 1983Decker's Second Gold Aids U.S. Victory

HELSINKI, Finland (AP) It was supposed to be a fun run for Mary Decker, but it turned into one of the most difficult and rewarding races of her brilliant career.

Decker, the heroine of the United States team that won the medals race in the inaugural, week-long World Track and Field Championships, had entered the womens 1,500-meter event for fun and for experience.

She already had won the 3,000 in frontrunning fashion, destroying the myth that Europeans, particularly the Soviet Union runners, had the best womens middle-distance competitors in the world.

Now, she was after her second gold medal, and as usual, she went right to the front.

After sonie 1,330 meters, she was still there, but suddenly, the Soviets Zamira Zaitseva, who had run on her shoulder until then, surged in front.

It was different today, it was a different feeling, Decker said.

As they came around the final turn, Zaitseva cut off Decker, and the 25-year-old American appeared in trouble.

She moved in on me and I had to let her go by, explained Decker.

That maneuever deeply concerned Decker.

Down the stretch. I was getting

worried because I couldnt get my momentum back, she said.

But she summoned up a final bit of strength and pounded past Zaitseva in the closing meters to win in 4 minutes, 00.90 seconds.

Deckers withering kick so stunned the Soviet runner that she fell across the finish line in a heap, a beaten second in 4:01.19.

Soviet runners also finished third and fourth, but Decker had shown them they no longer ruled the world.

Help^ by Deckers scintillating victory, a 1-2 finish by Calvin Smith and Elliott Quow in the mens 200, a second by Steve Scott in the mens 1,500 and a

third by Carol Lewis in the womens lon^ jump, the Americans finished with a total, of 24 medals, including eight golds, nine silvers and seven bronzes.

The Soviet Union was a close second with 23 medals (6-6-11), and East Germany, the gold medal leader with 10, was right behind in total medals with 22, including seven silvers and five bronzes.

No other country was in double figures in total medals, while Czechoslovakia was the only other nation to collect more than two gold medals, winning four.

Decker had come to the World Championships intent on winning the 3,000. She did that convincingly.

If she would win the 1,500, it would be a bonus, she figured.

Only after winning the 3,000 did I start thinking about the 1,500, she said.

The petite American has ^ome a serious threat for a gold medal In the 1984 Olympic Games at Los Angeles.

No American woman has won a medal - no less a gold - in the womens 1,500 since the event was introduced into the Summer Games in 1972. The 3,000 will be run for the first time next year.

Decker said she has not decided

whether she will compete in one event or two in the 1984 Olympics.

While Decker was the backbone of the womens team, which earned two gold medals, one silver and three bronzes, the often overlooked Smith was a key to the mens squad produced six golds, eight silvers and four bronzes.

He earned three medals - for his victory in the 200 ( 20.14), another gold for running on the 400-meter relay team that set a world record of 38.76 last Wednesday night, and a silver for finishing second behind teammate Carl Lewis in the 100.

It was a great week for me, said Smith, the Americans "other sprinter after Lewis, who anchored the relay team and won the long jump.

Quows second-place finish in the 200 was a surprise.

He had been named to the team late, after Lewis decided not to run the 200. But the lightly regarded Quow earned the silver medal with a clocking of 20.41, Ideating 1980 Olympic champion Pietro Mennea of Italy (20.51) and 1980 Olympic !lOO-meter champion Allan Wells of Scotland (20.52).

While Quow had to be elated with his runnerup finish, Scott was downcast after being No. 2 in the mens 1,500, behind Britains Steve Cram in a slowly paced race.

"Im disappointed because I came here to win a gold medal, said Scott, who had dominated the 1,500 this year.

Cram finished in 3:41.58 to Scotts 3:41.87. Moroccos Said Aouita was third, beating world record holder Steve Ovett of Britain for the bronze medal.

Although only two world records were broken during the Championships (in the mens 400 relay and by Czechoslovakias Jarmila Kratochvilova. with 47.99 in the womens 400), the meet produced many outstanding performances and served as an excellent preview for the Los Angeles Olympics.

Attendance was 422,402, including sellouts of 54,700 for four of the seven afternoon sessions, including the last three.

In all, 1,572 athletes from 157 countries - more than for any major sports competition in history - participated in the meet.

Sheehan Charges Past Carner, Whitworth For Henredon Title

After The Fall

Edwin Moses consoles teammate Willie Smith of the United States after he tripped and fell in the finals of the 4 X 400 relay of the World Track and

Field Championships at Helsinki Stadium Sunday. The Americans finished in sixth place, while the Russians took the gold. (AP Laserphoto)

By TOM FOREMAN Jr.

AP Sports Writer HIGH POINT, N.C. - The old guard and the youngsters were face-to-face in the final round of the $180,000 Henredon Classic and Patty Sheehans youth served her quite well.

Sheehan was in the final threesome with LPGA Hall of Fame members JoAnne Carner and Kathy Whitworth. After a temporary setback on . the opening hole, Sheehan steamrolled to a four-shot victory over Carner and first place in the LPGA money list

ahead of Carner.

Opening the tournament with a 65, Slieehan closed with a 6-under par 66 for a 16-under-par' 272. Thats one shot less than Hollis Stacy's four-day record total in the Rail Charity Classic in 1977.

Its probably one of the most satisfy ing wins Ive had besides the LPGA Championship, Sheehan said of her third victory this season. Playing wir.h the two most famous and the best women golfers in the whole world right now. It was really an

Bucs Return Favor With Series Sweep

By The Associated Press

The Pittsburgh Pirates were feeling embarrassed last weekend after being swept out of first place at home by the Montreal Expos. So they headed up to Canada and returned the favor.

The Pirates entered a three-game series with the Expos on Aug. 5 with a half-game lead in the National League East, then were blasted each time by Montreal to drop to third. But the Bucs began a resurgence in Montreal this weekend, where they completed their own sweep in hostile territory with a 5-3 decision Sunday.

That kept Pittsburgh Vk games behind first-place Philadelphia in the division. The Phillies beat St. Louis 5-1 Sunday. Montreal is third, three games out.

Elsewhere, it was Los Angeles 5, Atlanta 4; the New York Mets 5, the Chicago Cubs 1; San Diego 10, Cincinnati 9 in 10 innings, and San Francisco 5, Houston 2.

Dave Parker was Sundays hero for Pittsburgh, lining a two-run, bases loaded single in the seventh inning. Parker had not hit the ball out of the infield in three previous at bats before connecting on the first pitch by reliever DanSchatzeder.

You dont forget something like that easily, Parker said of the sweep in Pit

tsburgh at the hands of the Expos. We averaged over 30,000 last weekend in Pittsburgh, and they beat us.

These three games on the weekend were televised back to Pittsburgh, so we wanted to do well and show the fans we could sweep them, too.

Added reliever Kent Tekulve, who got the final out for his 14th save; Its nice to be able to turn it around after being swept last weekend. Baseball is a game that goes in cycles,, especially when you have two even-matched teams.

Expos right fielder Warren Cromartie was annoyed at his teams inconsistency.

Im tired of that yo-yo stuff, he said. It has to stop.

Phillies 5, Cardinals 1 John Denny, 13-5 with the third-best National League ERA at 2.44, scattered 10 hits, struck out seven batters and did not give up a walk in eight innings. He also had a single, laid down a perfect sacrifice bunt and scored on Gregg Gross third-inning triple.

I try to take the philosophy to give as much as I can for as long as I can, whether its batting, pitching or running the bases, said Denny, a former Cardinal.This is a good game ifor me personally. The Cardinals have

always been tough on me. Theyre a very aggressive hitting team.

Denny struggled only in the fifth, when the Cardinals loaded the bases with one out. But he got out of that jam and cruised to his seventh straight victory. Reliever A1 Holland fanned three Cardinals in the ninth.

Dodgers 5, Braves 4 The top two teams in the West have met in four series and the Dodgers have taken two-of-three games each time. Still, they trail the Braves by 5>/i games.The Braves have 44 games remaining, while Los Angeles has 47.

Dusty Baker cracked a two-run homer and Steve Sax added four singles and scored twice for visiting LA. Atlantas Bob Homer slugged a two-run homer off Fernando Valenzuela to make it close.

Were satisfied. Theres still time to go, said Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda. Were hoping now we can start gaining some ground.

Braves Manager Joe Torre wasnt disturbed by the weekends results.

I felt if we won one game, we couldnt get hurt, he explained. Its not as good as I wanted, but it could have been worse.

Mets 5, Cubs 2 In New York, George Fosters 10th career grand slam homer and the strong pitching of

Ed Lynch carried the Mets i:o a three-game sweep of Chicago. New York ilias won six in a row over the Cubs.

You cant make up for the past, said Foster, who hit into a double play in his previous at bat. Im just trj'ing to focus on the positive.

Lynch who had lost his last three starts, struck out three and walked one in eight innings before needing help from Jesse Orosco, who earned his 13th sav e.

Padres 10, Reds'.}

Terry Kennedy drove in three runs with a double, a homer, and a lOtli inning single which won the game. The Padres scored the winning run off Tom Hume, who walked pinch-hitter Sixto Lezcano with one out. Pinch runner Luis Salazar then stole second and came home on Kennedys single; to center.

Johnny Bench ripped a two-run homer and Paul Householder added a thr ee-run shot for host Cincinnati. Padres starter Tim Lollar hit his first homer of the season.

Giants 5, Astros 2 Jeff Leonard had a home run, triple and single and drove in two iruns for San Francisco. Mark Davis struck out three and walked four in six inning, surrendering only four hits. Gary Lavelle pitched the final three innings to earn his 13th save.

honor and a thrill to be able to beat em.

Sheehan and Carner were tied at 10-under-par opening the final round. Carner gained the upper hand with a 12-foot birdie putt at the first green. Disaster followed almost immediately when Carner hit her tee shot on No. 2 into a cedar tree. After a two-shot penalty, Carner struggled to a bogey 5 while Sheehan regained the tie by making par.

All three golfers made birdie on the par 3, third hole, but Sheehan continued the habit at the fourth, sixth and seventh holes. She was within birdie range on the other three holes as well and went out in 4-under-par 32.

Meanwhile, Carner three-putted on the ninth hole and started the back nine with another bogey. Whitworth bogeyed two holes on the front nine and two more on the back nine. The chase was essentially over.

This is the first time Ive led from start to finish, Sheehan said of her achievement. Its nice to know I can do it.

As for the awesome presence of Carner and Whitworth, Sheehan said there was no room for concern

"1 didnt worry because I kept saying Patty, you cant

go for par. You have to go for birdies,Sheehan said.

It was that aggressive play that made the 1981 LPGA rookie of the year hard to catch, Carner noted.

Normally, 1 play good short irons and 1 hope the putter gets hot. (Sheehan) was hot and there was nothing I could do about it.

Carner, who revealed Saturday that someone had bent the shaft on her putter and wedge, finished second at 12-under-par 276, while Whitworth was third at 7-underpar281.

Judy Clark, an early challenger for the lead, and Donna White, a North Carolina native who skipped the tour in 1981 after giving birth to a daughter, tied for fourth at284.

Charlotte Montgomery, who was 101st on the LPGA money list entering the Henredon, almost doubled her earnings by finishing in a three-way tie for sixth place at 286. It was her best finish to date. Also at 286 were Vicki Fergon and Ayako Okamoto.

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Montana, 49ers Sharp In 17*15 Win

BUI McDonald 7526680

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Joe Montanas passing was sharp, Fred Dean was devastating on pass rushes, and for a while the San Francisco 49ers were playing like it was

1981 again.

I dont( feel super. But I would if this had been a regular season game. This one doesnt count, Dean said after the 49ers pulled out their first 1983 exhibition victory, 17-15, on Ray Werschings 33-yard field goal with 24 seconds remaining Sunday.

The kick wiped out the lead New England claimed on a John Smith field goal, also from 33 yards, with 1:57 left.

Call it a confidence builder for the 49ers, vdw were Super Bowl champions two years ago but went 3^ in the short

1982 National Football League season.

In the first half, we demonstrated that we can be a very good football team, but we have a long way to go,. Coach BUI Walsh said.

The 49ers put things toother in the second period, when all healthy front-line players were still in. Dean had two of his three sacks then, Montana completed 10 of 12 passes for 147 yards, including

an 11-yard touchdown strike to Freddie Solomon, and the team burst to a 14-7 lead.

The Patriots, although 0-2 in pre-season play, also found encouraging si^ in the game which drew 50,043 fans to Candlestick Park.

I felt very comfortable out there today. I have a very good feeling about this game. Weve made some offensive changes that | really like, said Steve Grogan, who got the Patriots off to a 7-0 lead with a 45-yard touchdown pass to Stanley Morgan in the first period.

Grogan and rookie Tony Eason combined for 200 yards passing, and Robert Weathers had 98 of the teams 183 yards rushing.

The Patriots came out of the game with no serious injuries, v^Ue the 49ers lost safety Carlton Williamson, who broke a bone in his left leg and seems sure to miss the first few gaines of the regular NFL season.

The weekends action concludes toni^t with the Los Angeles Rams hosting DaUas. Coach Tom Landry said his starting quarterback wUl be Gary Hogaboom, who fUled in admirably for the injured Danny l^te in last years

NFC championship until a couple of late interceptions did him in. White wUl play the second and fourth quarters.

In other Saturday games, it was Denver 21, Atlanta 10; Baltimore 10, Minnesota 7; Cleveland 27, Buffalo 10; New York Jets 20, Los Angeles Raiders 17; New Orleans 19, Miami 17;St. Louis 27, Chicago 24 in overtime; De

troit 17, Kansas City 13; Philadelphia 21, San Diego 20 and Tampa Bay 23, Houston 17.

In last Friday nights games, Washington topped Cincinnati 27-23, the New York Giants beat Pittsburgh 22-13 and Seattle defeated Green Bay 38-21.

Veteran Steve DeBerg, trying to beat out rookie John

01 A Men Top Wilmington

Elway for the starting quarterback job at Denver, connected on six of eight passes for 101 yards and two touchdowns in the Broncos win over Atlanta. Elway, the NFLs No. 1 draft pick, took over when a strained groin muscle forced DeBerg from the contest early in the second quarter. Elway connected on 10 of 17 attempts for 137 yards and one TD.

Denver is 2-0 in exhibition play, while Atlanta is 1-1.

Brian Sipe tossed touchdown* passes of 6 yards to Boyce Green and 32 l.o Rocky Belk and Green added a71-yard TD run as Cleveland boosted its record to 2-0 and dropped Buffalo to 0-2.

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WILMINGTON - The Greenville Tennis Association Men defeated Wilmington 6-3 Sunday, while the GTA women lost 2-1.

The association will have its members only tournament beginning Thursday at the River Birch Tennis Center.

WomeB

Shelia Brewingtoo (W) d. Vivian Vines, 7-5, M.

Brenda Jones iG) d. Debra Smith, H M.

Carey GordaiFCberyl Bradford IW) d. Vickie Woolard-Jcoes, -3, S-3.

Men

Levem Marshall <W) d. Ben Johnson, f6,6-1,7-5.

Bobby Short IG) d. Leonard Brown, 7-5, M,6-2.

Leon Johnson iG) d. Clarence Smith, 2-6, H 6-3.

Marvin Hardy (G) d. Joe Jenkins, 6-2, 6-3.

Lou Bowden (W) d. Robert Johnson, H 6-2,44.

Graylin Johnson (Gi d. Earl Stallings. 6-1,2-6,64,

Marshall-Jenkins (W) d. Short B Johnson, 7-5,34.6-3,

R. Johnson-L Johnson iG) d. Smith-Brown, 1-6,7-5,7-5.

G. Johnson-Hardy iG) d. Herbert Brown-Andy McDonald, 6-1,7-6

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LaRussa Steals Third, Orioles Get Game

By The Associated Press

Manager Tony LaRussa of the Chicago White Sox stole a base, but the Baltimore Orioles stole the game.

After a heated argument with the umpires during which he uprooted third base and heaved it into the dugout, LaRussa remained on the bench for an inning after he was ejected, prompting, the Orioles to play Sundays game under protest.

It all became moot when reliever Tim Stoddard pitched out of a bases-loaded, none-out jam in the bottom of the ninth and preserved the Orioles 2-1 triumph over the Chicago White Sox.

The controversy started in the fifth

inning with the White Sox leading 1-0 when Rudy Law walked and Carlton Fisk hit what appeared to be a home run into the first row of the left-field seats. Third base umpire Greg Kosc gave the home run sign, but Orioles Manager Joe Altobelli claimed fan interference and home plate umpire Jim Evans, the crew chief, overruled Kosc and called It a ground-rule double.

In our judgment, a fan reached onto the playing field and touched the ball, which would have hit the fence had it not been touched, said Evans.

Thats when LaRussa, a practicing lawyer during the off-season, went into his rebuttal. All it got him was a

contempt of court charge, although he claimed he didnt know he was ejected. In the bottom of the sixth, Evans went into the dugout and talked to LaRussa, who finally left.

I didnt think 1 was thrown out of the game," LaRussa said. Then he ripped into the Orioles, which should make for an interesting series if the two teams meet in the American League playoffs. All the Orioles do is cry and moan over every call and pretty soon the calls dont go against them. Thats a pretty good edge.

The victory was their second in a row after a seven-game losing streak and vaiolted the Orioles back into first place

Levi Charges By Aoki To Take One-Stroke Buick Open Win

GRAND BLANC, Mich. <AP) -Most golfers on the PGA Tour believe the more they practice, the luckier they get. Wayne Levi, however, is different.

Levi doesnt especially like to play golf; he would rather hang around his upstate New York home with his wife and daughter. He has played in just 15 tournaments this year.

Sunday, however, Levi charged from three strokes off the pace to grab a 1-stroke victory over Isao Aoki and Calvin Peete in the $350,000 Buick Open - earning a check for $63,000 and use of a new car for a year.

I just sat around the house this summer, Levi said. I do very little practicing. When I come out, its my job, and then I work hard at it.

Levi, 30, can back up his brash talk with cold, hard facts. Since joining the tour in 1977, Levi has won six tournaments, including two last year. His victory at the Buick increased Levis career earnings to $787,175.

Levi, who started the day at 9-under-par 207, shot a 7-under 65 in the final round to claim the title with a 16-under 272 - breaking the old tournament record of 273 set last year by Lanny Wadkins over the 7,001-yard, par-72 Warwick Hills Golf & Country Club.

Levi carded a pair of birdies on the front side and started the back nine with a string of three more birdies to go quickly to 14-under, then birdied 16 and 17 to go to 16-under. He saved par on the 461-yard, par-4 finishing hole

with a clutch pitch from deep rough to within eight feet of the cup.

Peete, falling just $595 short of loecoming the first black man to win $1 million on the tour, had birdied the 598-yard, par-516th to get to 15-under andthenparredl7.

I knew Levi birdied 17, Peete said. When youve got to make the shot, theres pressure. But thats what this game is ail about.

However, Peete left his second shot 43 feet short of the cup at No. 18, then let his putt slide by on the right side to finish with a 67 for the day.

Aoki, playing in the final threesome, knew how Levi and Peete had finished as he surveyed his 12-foot putt on the par-3 17th. Aoki ran the ball firmly into the hole for a birdie.

in the AL East, one percentage point ahead of Detroit (the Tigers lost to New York 4-1), one-half game in front of the Yankees, one ahead of Milwaukee (the Brewers lost to Toronto 4-3) and iVi in front of the Blue Jays.

In other games, the Kansas City Royals dropped the opener of their doubleheader to the Boston Red Sox 4-3 but took the nightcap 6-3, the Cleveland Indians blanked the Texas Rangers 3-0, the Oakland As whipped the Minnesota Twins 6-0 and the California Angels trounced the Seattle Mariners 7-2.

With the Orioles and White Sox knotted 1-1 - Chicago failed to score after Fisks home run became a double -Baltimores John Lowenstein drew a one-out walk off Richard Dotson in the top of the ninth. Pinch runner John Shelby stole second and scored on Joe Nolans single. In the bottom of the ninth, Stoddard struck out Fisk and Tom Paciorek and got Greg Luzinski on a grounder to preserve Scott McGregors 15th victory.

Yankees 4, Tigers 1

At Detroit, Dave Winfield doubled home the go-ahead run in the eighth inning and Ken Griffey followed with a two-run homer. Juan Berenguer held the Yankees to a pair of singles until the

ei^th when Roy Smalley led off with a triple. One out later, Winfield collected his 23rd RBI in his last 13 games and his 19V game-winner of the season. Griffey then greeted Howard Bailey with his homer. Shane Rawley and Rich Gossage checked the Tigers on seven hits, including Larry hemdons homer.

Blue Jays 4, Brewers 3

At Toronto, pinch runner Garth lorg scored the tying run from second base on a wild pitch in the eighth inning and Lloyd Moseby homered on the next pitch from reliever Peter Ladd, giving the Blue Jays their third consecutive triumph over Milwaukee. Ladd came on after Damaso Garcia opened the inning with a double off Tom Tellmann and then gave way to lorg. Mosebys 16th homer made a winner of Dave Stieb, who checked the Brewers on four hits through eight innings. Milwaukee led 3-0 after 2^ innings.

in the ninth inning. Bob Stanley notched his 22nd save by retiring the last four batters.

As 6, Twins 0 At Oakland, Steve McCatty hurled a three-hitter for his first shutout since Sept. 8, 1981, and Davey Lopes hit a fourth-inning two-run homer. McCatty, who won his first game since July 9, walked three and struck out three in his first complete game of the season. Mike Davis had a two-run triple, while Dwayne Murphy drove in the other two with a grounder and sacrifice fly.

Angels?, Mariners 2 At Anaheim, Rick Burleson scored three runs and drove in another and Fred Lynn hit a two-run homer to back Tommy Johns four-hit pitching. John lost his shutout bid when Richie Zisk homered in the seventh inning. Dave Henderson connected in the eighth. Indians 3, Rangers 0 At Arlington, rookie Neal Heaton pitched a four-hitter for his first major league shutout and Andre Thornton had three hits. Heaton walked one, struck out

Red Sox 4-3, Royals 3-6

At Boston, George Brett and Amos Otis three and retired 13 in a row before drove in two luns apiece, Leon Roberts Larry Parrishs seventh-inning double, homered and Royals relief ace Dan The 23-year-oid left-hander, who didnt Quisenberry notched his 31st save with become a starter until late last month, three scoreless innings in the nightcap, has not allowed an earned run in his last The Red Sox won the opener 4-3 on Rick 18 innings. Loser Rick Honeycutt, 14-8, Millers tie-breaking bases-loaded single gave up 10 singles in 51-3 innings.

Teamwork Moves Auistralia II To Semifinal Win Over Azzurra

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Australia lls revolutionary keel is often credited for its outstanding performance in the Americas Cup trials this

Drug Charges Haunt Teams

By JOE RESNICK Associated Press Writer

It has become an uncomfortable routine in the daily itinerary of a National Football League head coach. First the game questions , then the drug questions...then the denials.

Coach Bill Walsh of the San Francisco 49ers couldnt rehash his teams 17-15 victory with the media Sunday without acknowledging comments attributed to unnamed NFL sources in a published report that as many as 50 percent of NFL players were using cocaine.

Walsh labied the copyright story in Sundays New York Daily News as pure unadulterated sensationalism following the game with the New England Patriots at Candlestick Park.

The Daily News story quoted league sources as saying that the 50 percent use cocaine on social occasions and that 20 percent are chemically dependent on the drug.

If theres any NFL employee involved (as a source for the allegations).

hes a disgrace to himself and to the league, said Walsh, whose team was cited by the published report as one of the leagues worst offenders, along with the Dallas Cowboys.

The Daily News also reported that NFL security was aware of 34 cases of drug use on the Cowboys. The 49ers may have even a higher number, the story said, citing its sources.

I dont believe those statements, Coach Tom Landry said at the Cowboys Thousand Oaks, Calif., training facility during preparations for tonights preseason game at Los Angeles with the Rams.

Five of Landrys star players - Tony Dorsett, Tony Hill, Harvey Martin, Ron Springs and Larry Bethea -have been connected with an ongoing federal-drug investigation.

Of course, we have a problem, as does the rest of society, Landry pointed out. "We have a more responsible position to clean out house and regain the confidence of the nation that we are clean.

The common s(.atistic is that 10 percent of the population are chemically abusive, noted Mike Lynn, general manager of the Minnesota Vikings. Were cerUinly part of that and probably higher but nowhere near f0 percent. It doesnt surprise* me that someone would say it because of all that has come to the publics attention.

A host of drug-nilated football stories have C'ome to the publics attention in recent weeks. Last month four players Ross Bi*owner and Pete Johnson of the; Cincinnati Bengals, E.J. Junior of the St. Louis Cardinals and Greg Stemrick of the N ew Orleans Saints - were suspended through the first four regular season games by Commissioner Pete Rozelle for involvement with c ocaine.

Last Wednesday comerback Tony Peters of the defending Super Bowl champion Washington Redskins was charged with conspiring to distribute cocaine in a $115,000 deal.

Other players mentioned in recent non-related drug stories included Rich Up

church of the Denver Broncos, Clarence Harmon of the Washington Redskins and recently-retired Lemar Parrish. Last year, revelations surfaced regarding admitted coacine use by George Rogers and former NFL player Don Reese.

Then came Sundays newspaper story. It was impossible for those whose livelihood depends on the growing popularity of pro football to ignore the allegations.

Theres been so much publicity about the subject, it doesnt surprise me tha'. someone would say it. But I dont believe it, Lynn said. Weve done extensive work for the past five years on our team and the percentages are nowhere near that.

Quoting one unnamed source, the Daily News reported, On the average, there are about 10 players on a team that are hardcore. The numbers are higher than many people would ever imagine.

Cleveland Browns owner Arthur Modell said he didnt know how extensive cocaine use is in the NFL, but added.

I do know it is a problem. 1 do share the belief that it is more widespread than people thought.

Bobby Beathard, general manager of the Redskins, said of the report: That surprises me. I wouldnt think that would be true of our players. I dont know who knows anything anymore. Of course, we were surprised about Tony Peters.

Jay Benoit, spokesman for the NFL Players Association, said he was very surprised at the figures in the story. But he said the NFLPA would have no immediate comment on the report.

Last week when Gene Upshaw, executive director of the players union, was asked in an interview what percentage of players were involved with cocaine, said, I dont think anyone knows that.

He said, however, players were concerned about the problem. I get calls all the time from players about what can be done about it.

summer. But it took some old fashioned team work for the Aussie boat to top Azzurra in a semifinal race.

About 10 nttnutes before the start of the race Sunday, a $20,000 carbon fiber boom -which controls the bottom of the main sail - snapped on the Australia II. Skipper John Bertrand had an extra boom on board the Aussie spectator boat, and his veteran crew went to work.

Nine and one-half minutes later, the booms were exchanged, the new boom was installed and Australia II was ready the sail. Aftter a 24.3 mile race, it finished three minutes, 20 seconds ahead of the Italian boat and improved its record to 2-0 in the foreign semifinal series.

After all of our drills and practice for ths sort of thing, luck takes on a minor importance, said Bertrand, who has won 38 of 42 foreign races overall this summer. Eighty percent of our crew has been to Newport before, so they knew what to do.

Bertrand said Victory 83, the British boat he sails against today, also has an experienced crew that gives it an advantage over new crewmen aboard the other foreign 12-meter yachts.

Victory 83 also improved its semifinal record to 2-6 Sunday after its opponent, Canada 1, withdrew due to a rudder

hialfunction. The British were ahead by 29 seconds after the second mark of the race.

Canada 1 and Azzurra, both 0:2, sail against one another today in the other semifinal race.

The two foreign boats with the best record will enter the final round, where the victorious boat will be named the official foreign challenger and will race against a U.S. defender for the Cup.

The three U.S. boats begin their final series Tuesday. The

Aycock Grid Meeting Set

Students planning to try out for the E.B. Aycock Junior High School football team are asked to meet Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the school cafeteria.

Coach Wilson McDowell asks that the players bring their birth certificate to the meeting.

New York Yacht Club will pick one of the boats -Liberty, Defender or Courageous - to defend the Cup. The final best-of-seven series begins Sept. 13 on Rhode Island Sound.

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Lendl Breezes Past Jarryd For Third Player's International Win

MONTREAL (AP) - For Ivan Lendl, ^vinning the Players International tennis tournament evoked a sense of deja vu in more ways than one.

The second-seeded Lendl beat Anders Jarryd of Sweden, ranked 83rd in the world, 6-2, 6-2 to win his third tournament championship Sunday.

Lendl, a native of Czechoslovakia, won the tournament in 1980 and 1981 and was runner-up last year. He first gained North American prominence with a strong

UNCs Hunter Breaks Foot

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - North Carolina basketball player Curtis Hunter broke a bone in his left foot Sunday and will undergo surgery Monday at North Carolina Memorial Hospital, team officials said.

Hunter, a rising sophomore at UNC, injured his foot while playing in a pickup basketball game. Doctors said Hunter broke the fifth metatarsel in his foot.

Hunter, a 6-foot-4 guard from Durham, suffered a similar injui7 in the same foot during his freshman season, causing him to miss 11 games. In the 25 games he did play in. Hunter averaged 4.3 points per game.

Dwtors said it will take about eight weeks for the injury to heal.

showing in the 1979 event.

In 1979, when I was only ranked about 40th or 50th in the world I reached the semifinals of this tournament, that was my first big success, said Lendl, now ranked No. 2 in the world. Since then I have always done well not only in Canada, but in North America in general.

Lendl, using a booming serve and superb ground strokes, overpowered Jarryd, who may some day reflect on his performance here as a catapult for his own career.

Jarryd had to play qualifying matches to earn a spot on the 56-man draw. But he beat ninth-seeded Eliot Teltscher in the second round, seventh-seeded Vitas Gerulaitis in the round of 16, then stunned top-seeded John McEnroe in straight sets in

the semifinals to advance to the final.

Lendl, who beat third-seeded Jimmy Connors in the other semifinal, said he knew Jarryd was a strong clay-court player bu t had never seen him play on hard courts before.

The big thin|{ he needs to work on now is consistency, said Lendl. If he can play well all the time., he^s going to be ranked very much higher.

Consistently missing with his first serve contributed hugely to Jarryds loss to Lendl. He lost smice, in the first game of the: first set, the first of six breaks Lendl racked up in iJie 68-minute match.

I wasnt nei*vous, I dont know why my first service didnt fall in more, said Jarryd, who had become a

crowd favorite by the end of the week - he received two standing ovations during his straight-sets victory over McEnroe.

Lendls serve was devastating when he needed it. After breaking Jarryd to go up 2-1 in the first set, he drilled three aces past his opp()nent to win game four in two minutes.

Lendl received $61,200 for his efforts, while Jarryd earned $30,600 for finishing second.

In the doubles final, Ferdi Taygan and Sandy Mayer beat another American pair, Tim and Tom Gullikson 6-3,6-4.

Galen Treble cruised past Gary McDaniel for the mens open singles title, and unseeded Nelson Staton upset top-seeded Jimmy Rogers in the mens 35-and-over in the finals of the annual Roanoke League Tournament played at the River Birch Tennis Center Sunday.

Treble, playing >tpr the Baywood Racquet ClyBlBlt^t McDaniel 6-1,6;2,i^mle Sharon of the Gretville 'Tennis Associatiori smiad needed a 6-3, 3-6, H rally to defeat Rogers of Ta

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Dental Advisory Committee To Meet

A 12-member Dental Advisory Committee of the

Greenville-based Eastern Area Health Education Center will meet Sept. 8 to consider potential continuing education program topics for area dentists.

Members of the committee chaired by D.H. Taylor of Greenville are A.D. Warren of Greenville, Danny Harris of Ayden, Jack Harrell of Kinston, Fred Howdy and William Kidd of Washington, Jim Zealy of Goldsboro, John Schmorr and Leslie Ipock of New Bern, Abner Riggs of Elizabeth City, Harry Worden of Newport, and Robert Niles of Jacksonville,

Farm Scene

By LEROY JAMES County Extension Chainnan

A wheat program along the guidelines announced recently announced by U.S. Agriculture Secretary John Block could raise rather than lower production in 1984. Analysts for U.S. Wheat Associates said the tentative plan outlined by Block would reduce the budget outlays considerably below those of the 1983 program. Observers largely believe such a program would attract minimum participation, and to the contrary, fuel maximum bushels.

Under the guidelines announced in a press release by Block, the Department of Agriculture would cut payment-in-kind entitlements, loan rates, storage payments and freeze the target price for 1984 at the 1983 level. Producers would be asked to set aside 20-30 percent of their acreage without compensation, take another 20-25 percent out and receive 70-80 percent of their ASCS yield for payment-in-kind.

their ASCS yield for payment-in-kind and had to set aside only 15 percent of their acreage without compensation.

Block has not announced the final details of the 1984 wheat program because a proposal that is expected to be one of its primary features has been tied up in Congress. The proposed legislation would allow Block to freeze the target price for 1984 and 1985 at 1983 levels of $4.20 per bushel. The target was scheduled to raise $4.45 in 1984 and $4.65 in 1985.

The secretary has also indicated he will exercise his authority to reduce the commodity credit corporation loan from the current $3.65 by ten percent to $3.30 per bushel.

In contrast, farmers who signed up for the 1983 program received a five percent paid diversion, 95 percent of

REVIVAL FARMVILLE - A Holy Ghost soul-saving revival will be held Tuesday through Friday night at 7:30 p.m. at Christ Victory Deliverance Church on S. Main Street here.

The speaker will be Evangelist Erma Daniels of Greenville.

Nationa^/eather^rvi^

30-DAY OUTLOOK - The National Weather Service forecast of precipitation and weather for the next thirty days is shown in this two-graphic combo. (AP Laserphoto)

Views On Dental

Health

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

HIGH SPEED TO THE RESCUE

Tremendous im-provcments have been made in the efficiency of dental services. An example is the equipment used to prepare the teeth for fillings and crowns. For years dentists have used rotary tools (drills) for this purpose. These cutting instruments rotated at a top speedy of 5,000 rpm's. Discomfort was often felt from the vibration, pressure and heat that developed in the use of these instruments.

Today, improvements in the drill motors and the use of the turbine principle permit speeds of up to

300,000 revolutions per minute. Only a very light touch is required to cut enamel and dentin at these high speeds. The rotations are so rapid that the sense of vibration is eliminated. Of course heat is generated by such rapid cutting, but the instruments are devised so that a spray of water and air is directed at the area being prepared, keeping the temperature comfortable.

The advent of the high speed drill and new types of superior cutting tools add up to less drilling tim and more comfort in dental procedures.

Prepared as a public service to promote better dental health. From the offices of. Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.P A. Evans St., Phone. 752-5126.

GieenvUle 752-S126    Vanceboro 244-1179

In The Area-

Summer Readina Picnic Club Set

The annual Sheppard Memorial Library summer reading

Cadet Named To Dean's List

Cadet James Monroe Campbell Sr. of Greenville has been named to the deans list for the 1982-83 academic year at The Citadel, the military college of South Carolina.

He is the son of Mr., and Mrs. James M. Campbell Sr. of Route 3, Greenville.

Dr. Cohen Attends Symposium

Dr. Steven 1. Cohen, chiropractic physician, recently attended a two-day symposium of the American Thermographic Association.

At the meeting. Dr. Cohen was nominated for the board of directors of the American Thermography Association.

beginning Aug. 27 from 9-10 a.m.

A rebroadcast will be carried by the station each Monday and Thursday from 5:30-7 p.m. The course will provide three quarter hours of college credit for general psychology I. Tuition is $12.75 for in-state residents.

Registration and orientation will be held Tuesday from 6-7 p.m. in room 209 Humber on the PCC campus. Late registration will be held Sept. 1 in 207 Humber f^m 6-8 p. m.

For additional information call Tom Marsh or John Hutchins at PCC, 756-3130.    -

club picnic will be held Tuesday at 6 p.m. at Green Springs Park

The picnic is open to all children and families who took part in the Adventures A to Z reading program or the Community Schools Summer Media Program

Conley Student Schedules Ready

Student schedules for D.H. Conley High School are now ready, according to Principal Bob Carraway and can be picked up at the schools main office between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday-Friday.

Those schedules not picked up by Friday will be mailed Aug. 22, said Carraway.

Tar River Civitan Club To Meet

The Tar River Civitan will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of Hester Latham, 301 S. Library Street, for a pot luck supper.

Ingrid Wright of the ECU University Department of Drama will demonstrate techniques of reconstructive theatrical makeup which are useful in everyday makeup. For information on the club or this meeting, call Raye Troutman, 756-3871.    '

Course Offered On Cable Television

A course entitled Understanding Human Behavior will be offered by Pitt Community College on Greenville Cable TV

Evangelist To Begin Services

BETHEL-Clifford Britton, evangelist of the independent Christian Churches and Churches of Christ, will begin Bible School and worship services at the Woodmen Hall here.

The opening services will be held Aug. 21 starting at 9:45 a.m. Establishing a permanent congregation in the Bethel community is Brittons objective.

Britton is a graduate of Bear Graf"' High School and Roanoke Bible College in Elizabeth. He served in the U.S. Navy and retired from the U.S. Air Force. He has served as a fill-in preacher for several congregations in eastern North Carolina and held a full-time resident ministry in Hamilton from 1978-82.

Britton, his wife, Ada, and daughter, Renee, live at Route 4, Williamston:'

CLIFFORD BRITTON

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Mental

Health

Perspectives

Respite Care

What does respite'' mean'? Webster's Dictionary defines it' as "an interval of rest oY relief". In Pitt County the Mental Health. Mental Retardation. Substance Abuse Center operates a program which provides residential care for up to 30 days at a time for a retarded individual whose family is in need of relief from care-giving responsibilities. They may need a vacation, they may be in need of medical care for themselves, or they may simply need some-rest. The Pitt County Respite Care Program serves 33 counties, therefore, scheduling ahead of time is most important If you are in need of this type of service, or you know someone who is. contact Carl Rothrock at 758-0413, or Debbie Conklin at 752-0118.

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Stock And Market Reports

Hogs

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP (NCDA) - The trend on the North Carolina hog market today was mostly 25 cents to

1.00 higher. Kinston 49.25, Clinton, Elizabethtown, Fayetteville, Dunn, Pink Hill, Chadboum, Ayden, Pine Level, Laurinburg and Benson 48.25, Wilson 49.00, Salisbury 47.50, Rowland

48.00, Spiveys Comer 47.50. Sows: all weights 500 pounds up; Wilson 35.00, Fayetteville

35.00, Whiteville 37.00, Wallace 37.00, Spiveys Corner 37.00, Rowland 37.00, Durham 36.00.

Poultry

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) (NCDA) - The North Carolina i.o.b. dock quoted price on broilers for this weeks trading was 51.75 cents, based on full truck toad lots of ice pack USDA Grade A sized 2'/2 to 3 pound birds. 92 percent of the loads offered have been confirmed with a final weighted average of 49.57 cents f.o.b. dock or equivalent. The market is steady and the live supply is moderate for a tight to moderate demand. Weights light to desirab'e, mostly desirable. Estimated slaughter of broilers and fryers in North Carolina Monday was

1.786.000, compared to

1.791.000 last Monday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market ran up a strong gain today amid hopes that upward pressure on interest rates might be easing.

The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials climbed 16.05 to 1,198.88 by noontime.

Gainers held a 4-1 lead over losers among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.

Late Friday the Federal Reserve issued weekly statistics showing a WOO million increase in the money supply for the latest reporting week.

That came in well below advance estimates on Wall Street, which called for a rise of $1 billion to W billion.

The news was greeted with a sharp rally late Friday in the bond market. Bond prices gave up some of those gains today, but analysts said fears of further substantial increase in interest rates had abated.

The stock market also got a lift late last week from word that the producer price index of finished goods rose just 0.1 percent in July.

Duke Power led the active list, up at 22>^ in trading

that included several large blocks.

Energy stocks were strong on projections of stable oil prices. Halliburton gained to 44^4; Mobil % to 31; Gulf Oil '/4 to 39'/4, and Exxon ^to37'/4.

The NYSEs composite index gained 1.12 to.94.96. At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index was up 2.42 at 232.15.

Volume on the Big Board totaled 41.07 million shares at noontime, against 28.48 million at the same point Friday.

NEW YORK lAP) -Midday stocks;

High Low Last 3P,    30\    31'

48    47'i    48

AMR Corp AbbtUbs Allis Chaim Am Baker AmBrands Amer Can Am Cyan AmKamily Am Motors AmStand Amer T4T Beat Food ' Beth Steel Boeing Boise Cased Borden Burlngt Ind CSX Com CaroPwLt Celanese Cent Sova Champ Int Chrysler CocaCola Colg Palm Comw Edis ConAgra Conti Group DeltaAIrl DowChem duPont Duke Pow EastnAirL East K(^ak EatonCp Esmark s Exxon Firestone FlaPowLt FlaProgress FordMot Fuqua s GTE Corp GnDynam GenlElect s Gen Food Gen Milts Gen Motors Gen Tire GenuParts GaPacil Goodrich Goodyear Grace Co GtNor Nek Greyhound Gulf Oil Herculesinc Honeywell HosplCp s Rand

16'-..    16S.

IkS, 18'>

39

52 21'4

16\ W\ 50S.    50'4

39^4    39.

51-S,    51H.

21'4

21

8    7.    8

32'-.    32A,    32'S.

65 V    65 V

26V    26'.4    26V

20    20 V    20.

41'-4    41'    41'

37V    37V    37'.

53V

54

39V    39'/4

70'v    70V    70 V

21.    21V    21V

67.    66V    67 V

14.    14 V    14 V

23'-4    23    23'v

26 V    25V    26 V

49.    49'i    49V

21V    21V

26    25.

28

26.

40'4

31'.4 33'4

27'.4    27'-,

39 V    40'4

32    32.

49-4    48V    48.

22'.4    22    22'4

67V    67V    67V

40',    40V    40V

70'-4    70'-, . 70V

37V    37'4    "

19V    19

37 V 19 V

37V    37V    37V

19V

57'

32'

19'4

57

44V    44'4

54

31V    32'4

44 V

50

44 V 44

54V    54.

49V    50

51'

69V 68' 31V    31'4

44V

51'    51V

44'

25

44'.

69'

31V

44'

45'

48.

Ing

IBM

5 30 p m. - Greenville TOPS Club meets at Planters Bank 6:30 p. m. - Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m. - Host Lions Club meets at Tom's Restaurant 6:30 p.m - Optimist Club meets at Three Steers 7 30 p.m. - Sweet Adelines. Eastern Chapter meets at The Memorial Baptist Church 7:30 p.m - Woodmen of the World, Simpson Lodge meets at community bldg.

7 30 p.m - Greenville Barber Shop Chorus meets at Jaycee Park Bldg

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

TUESDAY 7 00 a m. - Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 6:30 p m. - Greenville Claims Association meets at Three Steers 7 00 p m. - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7 00 p.m. - Post No. 39 of American Legion meets at Post Home

7 30 p m. - Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church

7:30 p.m - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at HON. Warren St.

7:30 p.m - Toughlove parents support group at St Paul's Episcopal Church 8:00 p.m. - Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg., Farmvillenwy.

8:00 p.m. - Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church

Inll Harv

Inl Paper

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Int TAT

KaisrAlum

KanebSvc

KrogerCo

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IxKkhed wi

Masonite n

McDnnInt n

McKesson

Mead Corp

MinnMM

Mobil

Monsanto

NCNB Cjp

NabiscoBrd

Nat Distill

NorOkSou

OlinCp

Owenslll

Penney JC

PepsiCo

Phelps Dod

PhilipMorr

PhillpsPet

Polaroid

ProctGamb s

Quaker Oat

RCA

RalstnPur RepubAir Republic Stl Revlon Reynldlnd Rockwl s Roy Crown StRegisCp Scott Paper SealdPwr s SearsRoeb Shaklee s Skyline Cp

Sperry Cp sfdOiICal StdOillnd StdOilOh Slevens JP TRW Inc Texaco Inc TexEastn CMC Ind Un Camp IJn Carbide Uniroyal US Steel Unocal Wachov Cp WalMart s WeslPtPep Weslgh in Weyerhsr WinnDix Woolworth Wrigley Xerox C>

24V    24,

35 V    35V    35 V

29V    29',    29 V

45    45'

48V    48

23 V    23'    23 V

39',    37    39V

35 V    35',    35',

119    118V    118 V

47V 47V    47'4

52V    52V    52 V

119 V    119 V    119 V

9V    9V    9',

52    53

53.

36',    35V

44'

18'

19V    19V    19V

40V    40    40V

119V 118', 118', 40    40    40

39V    39'    39V

22V    22V    22V

43 V    43V    43V

32',    32    32V

78    78',    78',.

31V    30V    30

106. 106V 106V 26V    26'i

35V 43.    43

18V    18'

37

26 26', 58V    58

29V    28

32 56V

26 V 36V    36.

26. 58V

32V    32V

55 V 56

34 V    34V    34'

28',    28 V    28 V

60 V    60V    60'

36V    36    36

27',    27'    27 V

54 V    53 V    53 V

44'    44V    44V

27V    27 V    27 V

22V    23

4V

23 4V

22', 22' 32',    32

51.

31'

231.

4',

22V

32'

51

31

23V

51

30.

23',

30V    30-V    39V

26 V    26 V    26'

26'-.    26 V    26',

39 V    39    39

25'    24V    25'

22.

22V    22V

13'-

13',    13 V

15'    15    15V

44V    44'    44'

37 V    37'    37 V

51.    51V    51V

55'    54V    54V

19    19    19

79V    70    70V

36'    35    35.

62

61 62 15.

15,    15,

70.    70.    70

624    62 V    62 V

15V    14

26'    25'-

33    32V    32V

49V    40V    40V

43'    43    43V

44'    44

45

15V

25

44 V

45W

45V 34'

54

37 V    36V    37'

49    47V    47V

46    45V    454

33    34

53'    54

Followiiig are selected market quotations Ashland prC Burroughs

Carolina Power k Light

Collins A Aikman

Conner

Duke

Eaton

Eckerds

Exxon

Fleldcrest

Halteras

Hilton

Jefferson

Deere    ,

Lowes

McDonald's

McGraw

Piedmont

Piua Inin

PAG

TRW, Inc United Tel Dominion Resources Wachovia    t

OVER THE COUNTER Aviation Branch LitUeMint Planters Bank

MASONIC NOTICE Bright Star Lodge No. 385 will hold a regular communication Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.

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Atmn-iike $eres Of Traffic Mishaps Reported

Autumn-like weather ddigbted Pitt Countiaos this weekend. The weekend was sinny yet mUd.

Temperatures here Saturday varied from 63 to 83; Sunday frdm 53 to 84. There was no preciptation. The river level was 3.2 to 3.7 feet above sea level, as measured by Greoiville Utilities here.

tl Million Fish Caught

SEATTLE (AP) - Two anglers cast their lines into Puget Sound and pulled out a fortune - specially ta^ed salmon worth $500,000 apiece in an auto parts companys Million Dollar Fish Derby.

Larry Pease, 65, of Seattle, and Phil A. Reilly, 67, of Bainbridge Island each caught the valuable fish Sunday in the derby sponsored by Schucks auto parts. They will split the $1 million prize.

Five tagged salmon had been released in Puget Sound for the 12-hour derby, the third year for the event.

Pease caught his 3-pound salmon a little more than an hour after the derby opened at 6 a.m., and Reilly caught his shortly after noon.

"My God, Mardi, its got a green tag on it Pease recalled telling his wife when he pulled the salmon from water near the Ballard area of Seattle. He is a retired Boeing engineer.

Reilly, a retired advertising executive, was fishing with his brother-in-law, Wally Reid, when he caught a 4-pound salmon near the Vashon Island ferry pier.

Reilly said Reid told him it had a tag.

I said, It cant, and he said, Take a look for yourself, and sure enough the tag said Schucks, Reilly said.

Pease said winning the fish left him with a "twisted tongue momentarily. He had no immediate plans for spending his winnings.

To qualify for the derby, fishermen paid a $12 entry fee, $4 of which went to the Easter Seal Society.

Approximately $5,275 in probity damages resulted from traffic accidents this weekend, according to reports of the Greenville Police Department.

In an accident that occurred Saturday, a vehicle driven by Tamar Faiga Rosenfeld of 230 Winder Road backed into a parked car at Darryls parking lot off 10th Street, according to police reports.

Damage to the Rosenfeld vehicle was $25, while damage to the parked vehicle was placed at $500.

Approximately $1,950 damage resulted in an ac-cient Friday on Gooden Place when the vehicle of Edward Earl Smith of 612-A Howell St. collided with two parked vehicles and caused another to be damaged.

Smith was charged with hit and run-property damage, police reported. Damage to

Will Ask Probe Of Non-Rescue

FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Rep. Charlie Rose, D-N.C., will seek an in-, vestigation into the Coast Guards failure to rescue four fishermen who ^nt 13 hours clinging to their sunken boat off Wrightsville Beach.

The four Fayetteville residents were rescued Friday morning by a family friend who began searching for them in his own boat.

Albert McCauley, 43, his son John, 16, and two of Johns friends, Watson Caviness, 18, and Joe Quigg Jr., 17, hung onto the bow of their 21-foot motorboat after it capsized about Thursday afternoon, about 3 miles off the coast.

The Wrightsville Beach Coast Guard station sent three boats and a helicopter in search of the foursome, but iey were rescued by Reese Robertson of Wilmington.

Rose, a family friend of the McCauleys, said he would ask Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C., chairman of the House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee, to investigate.

Fire At Hotel Is 'Suspicious' Solar Fraction

his vehicle was placed at $1,000, whUe damage to the parked vehicles totaled $%0.

In an accident that occurred Friday on Cherry Street, the vehicle of Lorraine Delores Maltby of Chesapeake, Va., collided with a vehicle driven by Paul Bridges Jr. of Oakwood Acres.

Estimated damage to the Maltby vehicle was $50 and damage to the Bridges vehicle was $300. No charges were made.

In another accident Friday, a car driven by Lillie White Smith of 1604 Henry St. collided on Evans Street with a vehicle driven by Joseph Foster Bennett of 106 Prince Place.

Damage to both vehicles was placed at $200. No charges were filed.

Robert Clifton Moore of Bath was injured Sunday in a singlcKiar accident on lOth Street. Moore was taken to Pitt County Memorial Hospital for treatment. Hospital officals could not be reached for information on his condition.

According to police reports, Moores vehicle struck a curb, then a utility pole -cutting it in half - and then slid up to gas pumps owned by the Taylor Oil Company and hit the guard rail around the pumps.

Damages to Moores car were listed at $2,500.

Volunteers Aid Tax Passage

' DALLAS (AP)-A heavy volunteer effort inDallas and its suburbs led to voter approval of a l-cent sales tax to fund construction of Texas first rail mass transit system, backers said.

Results from 21 communities Saturday showed voters favored the Dallas Area Rapid Transit by a margin of 58.2 percent to 41.8 percent. The $8.75 billion DART,will create a 160-mile rail network over the next 27 years and will double bus service.

Voters recognized a need to ease Dallas growing traffic congestion and reliance on cars, said DART board member Sid Stahl. "They realized that DART represented a thoughtful and sensible solution.

DALLAS (AP) - A suspicious fire that raced through one wing of a hotel, injuring three people, came 24 hours after another fire at the hotpl and was followed by a blaze at an apartment complex next door, fire officials said.

The blaze at the Dunfey Dallas Hotel, which damaged 81 rooms and took two hours to extinguish, broke out in a linen room Sunday. I think somebody started it, fire Capt. Don Howard said.

Volunteers among the guests helped organize evacuation of the fully occupied hotel wing. One guest suffered bums.

Greenvilles solar fraction calculated by the department of physics of East Carolina University was 63 Sunday, which means that a solar water heater could have procidS 81 percent of your hot water.

ALPINE TOLL

SION, Switzerland (AP) -Four mountain climbers were killed in weekend accidents in the Alps, raising the death toll of the Swiss climbing season to 22, including 10 killed on the Matterhorn, police say.

SHOP-EZE

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Phone 756^960

Tuesday Luncheon Special Roast Pork

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51

214

41'-

24',

22'

49S.

264

374

33

154

554

33'

40

274

574

35'

344

144

53

70'

23

21',

404

16'-16', 23'-234 -!' 19'-I94,

The Greenville Chapter of the Full Gospel Business Mens Fellowship Is happy to Invite you and your friends to hear

BARRY E. TAYLOR

MONDAY, AUGUST 15,1983

RAMADA INN

264 BY-PASS 7:00 p.m. Dinner 7:30 p.m. Meeting

Barry E Taylor has been involvecJ in active ministry since 1977 He is currently affiliated with Norvel Hayes Ministries in Cleveland. TN At present he is serving as the Assistant Director of New Life Bible School and as Pastor of New Life Bible Chun:h. His past experience in ministry includes 4 years as a pastor, along with being instrumental in the founding of two cunently active and growing works: New Life Mission in Morristo&n, TN and Praise Fellowship in Spencer, Iowa Barry was horn in Latroh. PA and reared in Warren, Ohio Aher high school, he and his wife Linda moved to Richmond. VA where they owned an aluminum siding company and became heavily involved in the local drug culture At the age of 22. Barry was born-again when the hand of God literally manifested itself through the wall of his living room as he sat in the middle of the floor wearing stereo headphones.

Barry's special areas of ministry include Spintual Warfare. Dehverance. Gifts of the Spirit. Fruit of the Spirit. Faith, Ministry of Angels and Healing of the Broken Hearted Highlights of his ministry include: appearing on several television broadcasts, touring to Belfast, Northern Ireland with Norvel Hayes to win souls to Jess: as well as ministering in various serv'iccs with Lester Sumrall. Norvel Hayes. T L' Osborne. Bobbie Jo Hamilton and Kenneth Copeland

Mens Prayer Breakfast FarmviUe, Every Saturday, 7:00 a.m.. Bonnies Cafe, Main St.

MENS PRAYER BREAKFAST - EVERY TUESDAY AT 6:30 A.M. TOMS RESTAURANT - WEST END CIRCLE

""nRTwomia^^ of all ages Invited. Ramada Inn Restaurant Meal 15.00 per person.

Obituaries

Bundy

FARMVILLE-Mrs. Irma Heath Bundy, 66, died Sunday in Farmvllle. The funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Church Street Chapel of Farmville Funeral Home, with Rev. Joseph Lehmann officiating. Interment will be in Hollywood Cemetery, Farmville.

Mrs. Bundy was a member of the Farmville United Methodist Church.

She is survived by one son, Charles Glenn Bundy of Wadesboro; a brother, Kinsey Heath, Jr. of Asheville; and two grandchildren.

The family will repeive friends at the funeral home from 7 to 9 tonight, and at other times at the home of Mrs. Ruby Bundy, 202 Waverly. Street, Farmville.

Goitam

FALKLAND - Mr. Paul Gorham died Sunday in Pitt County Memorial Hospital.

His funeral service will be held Wednesday at 3 p.m. at St. John Baptist Church here. Burial will be in the Art Willow Church Cemetery.

Surviving him are theee sisters, Mrs. Martha Peaden and Miss Christine Gorham, both of the home, and Mrs. Violet Meadows of Washington, D.C.

The body will be taken from Hemby Funeral Home to St. John Church Tuesday at 7:45 p.m. The family will receive friends at the church , Tuesday from 8 to 9 p.m.

P6d(6Q

Mr. Guy V. Peaden, 68, of Route 5, Box 250, Greenville, died Sunday night at Pitt Memorial Hospital. The funeral service will be held at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by Rev. Larry R. Stevens. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park.

Mr. Peaden, a native of Pitt County, spent most of his life in the Greenville area and was a veteran of World

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War II, having served in the United States Army. He was employed with Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company for a number of years and for the past 26 years had owned and operated Peadens Grill. He attended Parkers Chapel F.W.B. Church.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Flossie Warren Peaden; a daughter, Mrs. Mable P. Windham of Route 10, Greenville; three sons, Walter V., Billy Ray, and Terry Wayne Peaden, all of Greenville; a sister, Mrs. Lucy P. Johnson of Tarboro; two brothers, Ed and Roy

Peaden, both of Belvoir; eight grandchildren; and one great-granchlld.

The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7 to 9 tonight.

Williams FARMVILLE - Mr. Haywood (June) Williams of Rt. 1, Farmville died Saturday in Pitt Memorial Hospital after a lingering illness. He was the father of Frazier Williams of Rt. 1, Farmville. Funeral arrangments are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home in Ayden.

UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOR

A

Credit Television Course Offered By Pitt Community College

REGISTRATION/ORIENTATION will be held 17 August, 6-7 PM in room 209 Humber building. Late registration, Sept. 1 room 207 Humber building, 6-7 PM.

This course will provide credit for General Psychology I, Psychology 150, a 3 quarter-hour college course.

For Information Call

Pin COMMUNITY COlLEliE

756-3130

John Hutchens, Ext. 219 Tom Marsh, Ext. 291 8 am 3 pm

m

m

Real Estate Investors Take Note!

Kingston Place is a 96-unit condominium development being built to help alleviate the acute housing shortage around East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C. Because the University can house only 5,800 of its 13,500 students, the demand for off-campus housing is extremely high.

Kingston Place is ideal for individuals seeking a highly leveraged investment which offers the taxable benefits of investment property and a reasonable expectation of rental income. Current levels of year-round occupancy in Greenville are running close to 98%!

Among the features of Kingston Phce:

2-bedroom, 2 or 2 V2 bath, fully furnished and accessorized apartments.

Convenient to campus.

Private pool, clubhouse, on-site management and laundry facilities.

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Violence Overshadows Chilean Political Debate

By RICHARD BOUDREAUX Associated Press Writer

SANTIAGO. Che (AP) -After three months of increasing popular unrest against President Augusto Pinochet, Chileans are

alarmed by the prospect of an uncontrollable cycle of political violence and deadly repression.

For the first time since the armed forces^ coup against an elected Marxist president

a decade ago, there is serious discussion by government, opposition aril church leaders of the need to avert bloody conflicts like that which plague El Salvador and Guatemala.

At least 24 people were killed Thursday and Friday when anti-government demonstrators defied a military curfew in Santiago and the port of Valparaiso, drawing gunfire from riot

US Officials Pressing Effort To Hear Soviet DiplomaPi Son

WASHINGTON (AP) -Reagan administration officials say their attempts to talk with a Soviet diplomats son who may want to defect has created a very difficult diplomatic standoff, but insist its a question of human rights.

I think thats a perfectly appropriate demand, United Nations Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick said Sunday of U.S. attempts to talk with 16-year-old Andrei

Berezhkov about a letter he allegedly wrote to President Reagan seeking to stay in the United States.

Asked if too much was being made of the case, Mrs. Kirkpatrick said: I dont think one makes too much out of the freedom and well-being of a person, and I think thats true of the sons of Soviet diplomats in the United States or of American diplomats anyplace else.

Attempts to interview the

Going To Hunt Pirates' Gold

BOSTON (AP) - John F. Kennedy Jr., son of the late president, is headed from a search for pirate gold to an underdeveloped Indian village to learn about problems in the Third World,

Kennedy, 22, has spent much of the summer aboard the research vessel Vast Explorer II anchored in 20 feet of water off Wellfleet, Mass., looking for the booty of legendary buccaneer Black Sam Bellamy.

Eighteenth century accounts say the ship, which sank in 1717, was carrying the modem equivalent of up

to $200 million.

As part of a 15-person crew hunting for the treasure, Kennedy has been sleeping over many nights in a cramped four-bunk room in the research ship. But he asks in this weeks issue of People magazine, How often do you get to do something like dive a shipwreck?

He says he will leave the expedition this fall to take up study of Third World problems at the University of New Delhi, and later hell work in an underdeveloped Indian village.

Big Reception By Hometown

SEABOARD, N.C. (AP) -Philadelphia mayoral candidate W. Wilson Goode got a big reception on a return to his hometown, where he marched in a parade and entertained the crowd by playing Three Blind Mice on a xylophone-like instrument.

Goode, the Democratic nominee, hopes to be elected

Philadelphias first black mayor in November.

He frequently stepped out of the line of a welcomeback parade Saturday to greet the 400 people who turned out in this northeastern North Carolina town of 687. His rendition of Three Blind Mice was on an instrument he called the bells.

son of Soviet Embassy First Secretary Valentin Berezhkov have been rebuffed by Soviet officials, who last weekend said, We regard this attempt of the American authorities as unprecedented and a gross violation of international law. We are waiting for permission ofthe State De-)artment for the family to eave the country, an embassy official who refused to identify himself said Sunday.

It is a very difficult situation, presidential counselor Edwin Meese III said Sunday. It is a diplomatic situation, but it is also a very human situation ... I think it is just one of those things that we are just following at the present time trying to see what the next move will be, Meese said.

Meese said officials want to determine the real intentions of the teen-ager, who reportedly sent Reagan a letter last week stating: I hate my country and its rules and I love your country. I want to stay here.

On Sunday, FBI agents continued to watch vehicles entering and leaving the Soviet compound in Northwest Washington and at the sub-urban Bethesda, Md., apartment complex where the Berezhkov family lives, according to a U.S. official who spoke only on condition he not be further identified.

The U.S. official said, however, that the FBI stakeout was less obtrusive than on Saturday, when agents peered into the windows of automobiles.

We have no power to go into the embassy property and interview him. I think if they try to move him out of the country, then we would see about what could be done, Meese said. The

ri^t people are watching this and we just have to leave it in their hands.

Although the teen-agers whereabouts have not been disclosed, Meese and Larry Speakes, deputy White House press secretai7, said U.S. officials have accepted Soviet statements that young Berezhkov is still in the United States. ,,

Meese, appealing on ABC-TVs This Week with David Brinkley, was asked how long the stalemate could continue.

It remains to be seen, he replied. It is a delicate and sensitive situation, as you can imagine. We are trying to handle it. Our State Department, the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the other agencies are trying to handle it in the best way possible.

Speakes said the United States has been perfectly legitimate in its actions regarding the youth, whose father also serves as liaison to a Soviet think-tank, the Institute for the United States and Canada.

We are continuing to pursue it with contacts with the Soviets, Speakes said aboard Air Force One as Reagan was flying to La Paz, Mexico, to meet with Mexican President Miguel de la Madrid.

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police and army soldiers. The death toll tripled that of previous days of National Protest.

Chileans are increasingly disturbed by the monthly ritual of bloodshed not only because most take pride in orderliness but because nobody knows where its leading. They worry about polarization and an uneasy standoff - between a military strongman unlikely to be toppled by civilian unrest and a protest movement unlikely to be stamped out by his army.

Pinochets key concession, offered Sunday by his interior minister, Sergio Onofre Jarpa, is a congressional election much sooner than the 1990 date set in the regimes constitution. The political opposition insists there can be no peace without dialogue of equals on all issues, including Pinochets tenure in office, due to expire in 1989.

On Friday, Roman Catholic bishops repeated a month-old apical by Pope John Paul II for reconciliation in this mostly Catholic nation, with a new warning that only a prompt democratic opening can avoid a tragedy of vast proportions.

The next day Jarpa, a civilian sworn into the top Cabinet post last Wednesday, met with church leaders and

HITJACKPOT RIO DE JANEIRO, BrazU (AP) - A desperate farm owner bet the familys last $50 on Brazils lottery game and won the top ($1.6 million) prize, according to news reports.

said afterward: I hope we all have enough awareness of what civil war means and will do all we can to settle things in peace.

Throughout this three^lay weekend, marked by todays Catholic Feast of Assumption, tens of thousands of pilgrims prayed at the Lourdes Basilica in Santiago under a banner reading Dialogue for Peace - Urgency of our Time.

Many pilgrims walked from the slums of Santiago, scene of nearly all the recent shooting deaths. The

Inflation

MEXICO CITY (AP) -The government begins distributing newly minted 50 centavo coins today, equal to half of one peso, worth about three-tentns of a cent and able to buy practically nothing.

The Bank of Mexico, the countrys central bank, says they are made of stainless steel and will last much longer than the copper-nickel alloy coins currently in circulation.

Congress ordered them minted by a law passed Dec. 21, 1961, when 50 centavos would buy a box of matches or a piece of flavored candy. Now, with 100 percent annual inflation and succesive devaluations, a box of matches costs five pesos and a piece of candy 1.50 pesos

After a severe recession that began last year because of falling oil prices, the pesos value dropped from 26 to around 150 to the dollar.

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two-year-old recession that spawned the massive protest movement has put more than half the million or so adults living there out of work.

The hardship of these pmple is itself a form of violence, said Monsignor Olivier dArgoulles, the pastor at Lourdes. For the adults, there is also a feeling of utter defenselessness against a repression far out of proportion to the threat.

The young, however, feel a need to strike back. Few teen-agers remember the arming of Presideni Salvador Allendes militant supporters against the anticipated coi^ of 1973 and the futility of the violent re-sistence to it that cost at least 3,000 lives.

In this climate they are learning nothing but violent behavior, the pastor said. I fear for their future, if they live.

Priests living in the slums say the Communists, openly committed to Pinochets violent overthrow, seem to decide jointly, with other left-wing militants at a citywide level, when the demonstrations will start and stop, but dont control all the action.

The national protest

called by the democratic opposition for only last Thursday ended up lasting two days in the slums. The second days protests were extensive but far smaller.

The churchs contact with organized slum groups has helped moderate the protest movement, priests say. Even so, the Rev. Ronaldo Munoz, a respected theologian, was surprised at the negative reaction by many youth leaders to a document he distributed in June urging Gandhi-style discipline and non-violence.

In an analysis of anti-[overnment violence, the atholic magazine Solidarity concluded: It is promoted by small groups. It is unknown to what extent they are spontaneous reactions of anguished slum dweller, anti-social elements taking advantage of the situation, or deliberate actions of extremist groups of the right or left. There is probably some of ^ch.

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PUBLIC NOTICE

Pursuant to North Carolina GS160A-267, The Pitt County Board of Education has authorized the Transportation Director to dispose of the following vehicles by sealed bids.

Vehicle Number Year & Make

12

13

14 16

17

18

19

20 21 50 62 M-5 M-8

1970-Ford Custom

1969-Chevrolet Chevelle

1970-Chevrolet Bel Air 1970-Ford Custom 1970-Chevrolet Bel Air 1969-Chevrolet Chevelle 1969-Plymouth Fury 1968-Chevrolet Bel Air ,1 1968-Chevrolet Bel Air

1968-Chevrolet Townsman Station Wagon

1969-Chevrolet Chevelle 1966-Chevrolet (Cab & Chassis) 1 Ton 1963-Chevrolet (Cab & Chassis) 1 Ton

All vehicles may be inspected from 8:00 am until 5:00 pm, Monday through Friday, at The Pitt County School Bus Garage on US 264 Bypass. Anyone interested in purchasing one of the above vehicles should have their sealed bid into Rodney Bullock at The Pitt County School Bus Garage, Rt. 1, Box 760, Greenville, NC by 12:00 pm on August 23, 1983 and all envelopes should be marked "Sealed Bid. No sale will be finalized until ten (10) days after this notice is published. All vehicles are to be sold in their present condition with no stated or implied warranty or promise of performance. Any and all bids may be rejected by The Pitt County Board of Education.

Aug. 14,15,1983

11

'ontn tiler ol ilu' IvrnnikL' l-Lvtric    I \\ inwsral .1 kuoi our nu'inlx'i's

nutiu'Vitw'r iliL' wmis .AulI I w k.irni\l (h,it whi'ii you innkuan inwsrniL'n of anv kiiiLl. \'ou shoiikl L'lu'L'k II out. .AnJ Ix'Iiowmiil', I clu'ckuLl ttut IVi-lIuc wit caivtullv Ix'litiv huikliUL: inv hroiler Ixtux'. I oilk'J hank'- .iixl L'xchaiyyv lIuHs in hoth MaiTlauLl aiui North (kirolina, touiwl rei\liu's laL'ilitiL's, talkc^l to throwers... 1 thoroughly ivsuaivlu\l the L'oiiipanv anti l'\l'i-\ report that 1 pot wa.s nl'IT faxoraMc.

PefLlik' uiulerstanJs tliL' iinportauLV ot kcvpinp up with ttvhnolopT' ^ ^ktn't think thev i'L' tlu' onlv ones w ho lIo, hut thi'v at\ wrtainly inotv propivs,si\v than    i

most [xtiiltiT L'ompaniL's. So when tlu'Vsuppest that wl'growers iake an iiii'    J

prowment, vou ean Ixt itkpttmp to pavtifl for us. Aftc'rall, any eom[xtnv th.its    m

Ixvn in the Inisiik'ss for (>2 waisaiiLl iLismaclea jsrofit ewry year must know    m

what tiu'v're cktinp.

Px'skk's mv posiiuMl w ith tiu' L'kvtrie eo-op atul my lVt\lue house, 1 also    K

proweorn, tohaet'it aikl pe.iiuit'>. Aixl tlx'lx'st crop 1 haw is my IVt\lue ehiek' K ens. }\Malmost c'ipht \'ears Io'c'nii T'-'-! <Pi^ulkI steaclv income fi\tm my hroik'r K house. AtuI with unec'rtaintk's in Ltther eomnxklitie^.iiul row crop farmiiyp, I K woiikl reeomiik'ULl l\'i\lik'.is a haMC steaLlv inettme fttr anylxxly who wants to remain in .11'ural .ire.i .iiilI i\Miiain in t.irminp, 1 kiun\' 111 spend a pleasant retirement in the eoiintr\, thanks to mv Perdue ehiekens.    K

Its A Circat Time to Crow with Perdue, Perdue is into Line thinp -ehiekL'iis, I hats w hv our pLUiltrv {X'OLlucts outsell all the Lithers in the northeastL'rn sufxa in.irkL'ts. I lie Llemand is ineivasinp for our prod- K nets, so we ikvlI iiioil' proLlikvi's. Start prowinp with a pfLiwinp eompany. K CAll hSOO'(\S2'S7A^'or sL'ikl in tlu'eLHipon helow, / w%r9%w%w"r I    K

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Phone-  jMail to: Perdue, RO* Box 428, Robersonville,NC 27871 |





U. s. Cutbacks Dent Prospects For Global Harvest

By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) The sharp cutback in U.S. crop production has put a dent in ^obal harvest prospects for some major commodities this year, particularly 'ain and cotton, according to Agriculture Department analysts.

Last week, USDA estimated 1983 cont production at 5.24 billion bushels, down 38 percent from last falls record harvest of 8.4 billion bushels. Soybeans were indicated at 1.84 billion bushels, down 19 percent; and cotton at 7.81 million bales, down 35 percent.

Wheat production also is smaller this year, down 14 percent from last years record to 2.42 billion bushels. However, that would still be one of the largest U.S. wheat crops on record and enough to add to the growing stockpile.

In terms of metric tons - the unit favored in world trade -total U.S. grain output this year is expected to be about 238 million metric tons. That includes about 71.5 million metric tons of food grains, mostly wheat, and467 million metric tons of feed grains, mostly cobn.

A metric ton is about 2,205 pounds and is equal to 36.7 bushels of wheat or soybeans, or 39.4 bushels of com.

According to USDAs outlook experts, the world grain crop in 1983-84 now is expected to produce less than 1.62 billion metric tons, down 2 ^rcent from prospects a month ago, and 4 percent less than the record of almost 1.68 billion tons in 1982-83.

.Hot, dry weather has significantly reduced U.S. crop prospects the past month, while crop conditions have improved in Canada, the report said. Estimates for Western Europe and India have been raised slightly since last month. The ^viet grain crop forecast remains at 200 million

tons, with a winter grain crop estimate of 55 million and a spring grain estimate of 145 million.

Looking at oilseeds, the report said world production is forecast at 172.1 million metric tons, down 2 percent from last months prospects and 5 percent below last years level.

Most of the global decline is due to the reduced U.S. output, mostly soybeans, which now is estimated at 56.7 million tons, compared to 70.8 million tons produced last year.

A slight rise in production for the rest of the world is indicated this month, largely because of a larger cottonseed crop, the report said.

World cotton production in 1983-84 was revised upward slightly to 66.3 million bales from 65.9 million indicated in July, despite reduced prospects for the U.S. harvest - which was estimated at 7.81 million bales, down from 12 million last year and one of the smallest harvests in many years.

Improved prospects in other countries, including record

cotton production in China, more than offset the decline m me U.S. crops.THOMAS MOBILE HOME SALES, INC.

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Trying 4 In Vote Fraud

STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Jury selection is expected to begin Tuesday in the vote-fraud trial of four Alexander County residents, including two sheriffs department employees and a deputy clerk of court.

Indictments filed July 7 by a federal grand jury in Asheville allege that the four fraudulently used the names of Taylorsville rest home residxents on absentee ballots last November.

Those facing trial are Mark Odom, 21, a sheriffs deputy: John Lackey, 52, a sheriffs department dispatcher; Joyce Beach, 43, a deputy clerk of court and Benny Dyson, 50, a furniture worker. Each has been charged with 28 counts of casting fraudulent ballots, one count of conspiracy to vote more than once and one count of voting more than once.

The 28 absentee ballot counts are each punishable by up to a $1,000 fine, five years in prison or both. The other two counts carry maximum penalties of $10,000 fines, five years in prison, or both.

Donna Wike, a 21-year-old notary public indicted July 8, has made a plea agreement with federal prosecutors and may testify in the trial.

Food Dollar

Share Declines

For the third year in a row the farmers share of the food dollar has declined according to James Galloway, president of the Pitt County Farm Bureau.

For several years now, said Galloway, statistics have shown that farmers get an average of 32 cents out of. every dollar spent in the supermarket or restaurant. That was bad enough.

But now, he added, recent government data indicates that the 32 cents has dropped to 28 cents.

In calling attention to the Pitt County Farm Bureaus current membership drive, Galloway said the farm organization at local, state and national levels is continually working to protect farmers financial interests.

The Pitt County Farm Bureau has set a membership goal of 500 members for the current membership campaign.

Unfortunately, the farmer, who has contributed so much to our improved standard does not share proportionately in the fruits of his labor, Galloway said.

The county Farm Bureaus membershiup drive affords farmers the opportunity to join an action organization that is committed to improving the incomes and general welfare of all farm- ers.

Tour Planned

For Wednesday

A soybean insect and iden-tification tour will be sponsored by the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Service Wednesday beginning at the county offices at 3 p.m.

The tour will cover p^t insect identification, scouting for insects and chemical control. Dealers, commercial applicators and aerial and research demonstrators will be offered one and one-half hours of recertification credit by the tour.

The t)up will meet in the county offices parting lot.

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FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, AUGUST 16.1983

GENERAL TENDENCIES: A very good day to prepare yourself for the various and sundry conditions through which you can expand and extend your interests and horizons to new or distant matters.

ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Think out just how to add to present activities so that your earning power will be greater. Your perceptions are keen.

TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Improve your relationships with those in business and get better results in the future. Ask for advice you need.

GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Know what a close associate desires of you and try to please so that the relationship will be more harmonious.

MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Be more deliberate in handling your work and approach it in an efficient manner. Socialize tonight.

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Get that work done early so that you can enjoy the recreations you desire later. Follow through on a loved ones idea.

VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Listen to what kin have to say and try to be of more assistance to them. Don't do any entertaining at home now.

LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Get correspondence handled that can bring you the right results, especially out of town letters. Visit friends tonight.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Finances are very much on your mind now, but study your newspaper for information you need, the stock market, etc.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Study your situation well and make any changes that you feel are necessary in order to advance yourself.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) You like to deliberate a good deal but this is a day for quick decisions and quick action for good results,

AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Good day to be your gregarious self, but do less talking and more listening for right results to follow.

PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Plan how to make those changes in your career work so that you have greater benefits accrue. Gain needed assistance.

IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she wiU be very articulate, but be sure to teach early to think before speaking and not to be so vehement in expressing ideas. Teach to be well informed before making utterances. Provide a good education.

The Stars impel, they do hot compel. What you make of your life is largely up to you!

1983, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.

A Railroad Links Two Coasts

On this date in 1870. construetion workers laid the piece of track that completed the first transcontinental railroad in North America. According to engineers diaries, the historic rail was laid d.sl^ feet east of the Union Pacific depot building at Strashurg. Colorado. The railroad was actually completed 4tn this date, but the formal anniversary is celebrated on May 10. It commemorates "the driving of tbeOolden Spike at Promontory, Utah, in I SfiO. That ceremony marked the meeting of the Union Pacific and Central Pacific railroads and the completion of continuous tracks between Omaha and Sacramento. The United States had four more transcontinental railroads by 1900.

DO YOU KNOW - Who was the man who drove the Golden Spike'.'

FRIDAYS ANSWER - Los Angeles will host the 1984 Summer Olympics.

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Ten People Die In Weekend Traffic

Price Drops Said Coming

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -North Carolina motorists wont see a decline in the price of gasoline until after Labor Day, despite recent predictions that the cost of gas would soon fall across the nation, an industry official says.

Prices appear to be declining right now, but it only looks to be a cent or two per gallon, said Quentin G. Anderson Jr. of the Carolina Motor Club, an affliate of the American Automobile Association.

Anderson said that after Labor Day state motorists can expect significant price drops similar to those in late 1982 and early 1983 when prices reached about a $1 [^r gallon at many self-service pumps and a low average of $1.20 per gallon overall.

If anything, prices by the end of this year will probably be lower than last year, but it will be a gradual and moderate drop, he said.'

Anderson predicted that self-service prices could drop to $1 per gallon by the end of 1983.

Four major oil companies reduced prices from a half cent to one cent per gallon in parts of the West and Midwest Friday.

A report by industry analyst Dan Lundberg of Los

Angeles said a world oil glut and lower-than-expected summer gas usage in the U.S. has forced companies to lower prices. Lundberg said prices would continue to decline moderately through Labor Day.

Planning Install Nuclear Alarms

CHARLOnE, N.C. (AP) - Duke Power Co. will put 340 tone-alert emergency radios in hospitals, prisons, day-care centers and large businesses and industries near its three nuclear power plants in September, company officials say.

The radios will tune in only the Emergency Broadcast System and will automatically relay emergency messages in the event of a nuclear accident.

By The Associated Press

Ten people, including a Pitt County pedestrian killed in a hit-and-run accident, died during the weekend in North Carolina traffic accidents, the state Highway Patrol reported Monday.

Robert Montgomery Dawson, 45, of Ayden, was struck by a car on a rural road just north of Grifton at 5 a.m. Saturday.

Early Sunday, Dannie Merrell Combs, 24, of Ronda was killed when his car sped off N.C. 268 in the Wilkes County town of Ronda, went down an embankment and hit a tree.

Sally Elizabeth Waller, 19, of Greensboro, was killed at 7:30 p.m. Saturday when the car in which she was a passenger sped off a rural road east of Greensboro, overturned and threw her from it.

Robert Clyde Howe, 25, of Gibsonia, Pa., died at 7:20 p.m. Saturday when his car was struck by another vehicle that lost control on N.C. 12 north of Rodanthe in Dare County.

Wilson Deese, 32, of Rowland died later on Saturday night when his speeding motorcycle hit a traffic island on U.S. 301 south of his hometown.

Mable Robinson Rhymer, 51, of Asheville was killed

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when the car she was driving w^s hit by another car that crossed the center line on U.S. 19 east of Mars Hill, troopers said. The accident occurred at 11:15 a.m. Saturday.

On Friday night. Mac Anthony McKinney, 20, of Bakersville was killed when the car he was driving at high speed crossed the center line of N.C. 226 north of Spruce Pine and hit another car head-on.

Douglas Scott Thompson, 22, of New London, died Friday night when he lost control of his car and hit another car, troopers said. The accident occurred at 10:40 p.m. south of Rockwell in Rowan County.

Troopers said two men were ' killed early Friday night in Wilson County when they lost control of their car and hit another car head-on on N.C. 58, a mile north of Stantonsburg.

The victims were William G. Ondrus, 24, of Bayside, N.Y., and Gregory Pozenel, 25, of Magnetic Springs, Ohio. Troopers said Ondrus was driving during the accident, which occurred at 7:10 p.m.

The deaths raised the yearly traffic fatality toll to 728, compared to 751 at the same time last year.

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Title
Daily Reflector, August 15, 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.) - 30543
Date
August 15, 1983
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
NC Microfilms
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
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