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Chilean Regime Relaxing Some Of Iron-Fist Rules
By RICHARD BOUDREAUX Associated Press Writer SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -For the first time since he seized power a decade ago, President Augusto Pinochet is letting prominent exiles come home and dissidents march in the streets.
When more than 1,000 )arty faithful staged wmecoming rallies over the weekend for two prominent Christian Democratic exiles, police let the crowds march down Santiagos main boulevard shouting anti-
Pinochet slogans.
A similar number of Socialists and Communists placed red carnations and heard anti-government speeches Sunday during a rally at the cemetery where Marxist President Salvador Allende was buried after Pinochet deposed him in the bloody coup of Sept. 11,1973.
Oiilean television, closely supervised by the military government, is showing these demonstrations. At least three weekly political forums have been revived by
Drought To Hit Autumn Color
By The Associated Press
Record-setting heat and dry weather that are expected to cause crop insurance payoffs of at least $66 million in North Carolina will deprive the state of it normal autumn colorfulness, officials say.
The estimate of crop insurance indemnity payments was made by R.T. Forrest, director of the Federal Crop Insurance Corp. regional office in Virginia.
FCIC payments will be an estimated $35 million on tobacco, $10 million on soybeans, $4 million on corn and $2 million on peanuts, he said.
"We expect federal crop-insurance payouts this year to exceed those of 1977 or 1980, both of which were years of very severe drought in North Carolina," said Forrest.
Flue-cured tobacco was hit hardest by heat and dryness in the Piedmont counties north and west of ^^aleigh, in northern counti. along the Virginia bordf, and in the coastal plain counties of Martin, Bertie and Hertford.
Burley leaf in the mountains also suffered, as did the soybean crop "in all areas of the state." Peanut growers are having a disastrous year, Forrest said.
Federal crop insurance
protection this year on all North Carolina crops amounts to about $750 million, he said. Additional protection of about $225 million is provided by companies whose contracts are reinsured by the government.
James McGraw, an N.C. State University forest resources specialist, said the drought has cause several varieties of trees across the state 1o shed their foliage prematurely.
Instead of changing from green to brilliant shades of red and orange, some leaves simply are turning brown and falling.
The soil is extremely dry, and these trees are unable to take water up to the leaves, so they dry our and fall," said McGraw.
The phenomenon is especially evident in shallow-rooted trees such as dogwoods, sourwoods, maples and birches. But even maples and yellow poplars are showing signs of stress.
In some instances, said McGraw, the loss of leaves might help trees survive this second consecutive dry season, because the trees will have no leaves to absorb valuable moisture that could be used by other more vital parts of the plant.
By The Associated Press A sweeping crackdown on drunken drivers which takes effect Oct. 1 will disappoint those who expect it to be a cure-all, say members of the North Carolina legal community "The general public ^st doesnt understand," /4ys Guilford County Chief District Judge Robert Cecil, They think by passing all these new laws, theyre going to get all the drunks off the road."
The Safe Roads Act, passed by the Legislature this year, creates a new "driving white impaired" offense and eliminates plea ' bargaining. It raises the drinking age to 19 and sets guidelines for sentencing, requiring jail for flagrant violators.
The laws biggest flaw it its failure to deal effectively with alcoholics, who often are repeat offenders, says Guilford District Judge William Daisy.
"Alcoholism is not a disease which can be treated against the will of the patient, he said. "You can give somebody who has stepped on a nail a tetanus shot, but you cant treat an alcoholic who doesnt want to take control of his disease. Some people convicted of drunken driving may seek treatment to avoid jail, while those who go to prison may be no better off when they get out, Daisy said,
"Now, when someone gets out of prison, if hes a man, the first things he wants are a bottle and a woman, said Bennie K. Phillips, former administrator of Guilford Countys Crawford Treatment Center for alcoholism.
Observers say the law, passed by the Legislature this year, may have its greatest impact by hitting drunken drivers in the pocketbook Theyll be fined as much as ^ $3,000 and will pay attorneys ' fees, higher insurance pfe-miums, court costs and tuition for alcohol-education classes.
Santiago radio stations, broadcasting debate on the central issue of whether Pinochet ought to resign.
Many Chueans are hailing the changes as signs of a political thaw but they wonder how long it will last.
Four massive once-a-month protests that cost 34 lives have prompted the 67-year-old army commander to start talks, through his interior minister, with an opposition Democratic Alliance on how to restore civilian rule.
Since the first meeting Aug. 25, the military government has lifted a state of
emergency, sped up an amnesty pn^m to let 2,300 exiles return and eased press censorship. It is working on a decree to legalize political parties and hints at congressional elections long before the scheduled date of 1990.
Even the secret police have relaxed. In the last full week of August, not a single kidnap-stylei^ arrest by its plainclothed agents, who allegedly have tortured thousands of prisoners in secret jails, was reported to the Roman Catholic human rights agency.
Pinochets determination
to continue a dial(^ with his critics survived last weeks terrorist assassination of the governor of Santiago - the kind of event that used to provoke a crackdown on Pinochets democratic as well as extremist foes.
The relaxation is welcomed by a broad spectrum of Chileans, who say they are weary of authoritarian rule, battered by a 2-year-old recession that brought 30 percent unemployment and eager to rebuild what had been one of Latin Americas strongest . democracies. But the political scene remains tense.
This is like Pirfand in the early days (rf Solidarity, said a young opposition activist. We are being allowed our little spring. But there is a feeling that when the monster is pushed toofar,itwill trite back.
The Democratic Alliance, which groups the Christian Democrats and four smaller non-Marxist parties, is seeking further concessions, including an abbreviation of Pinochets term, which has six years to go. It is testing the new political climate by calling a fifth Day of National Protest for Thursday.
Interior Minister Sergio
Onofre Jarpa is expected to iftet with Alliance leaders Monday in h(^ of averting the ^^t, but the leaders say unrest over unemployment and repressiwi of the previous demonstrations make it impossible to call off.
Pinochet, who looks angry when he talks about the protests, seems determined to make whatever concessions are needed to preserve his presidential tenure under a 1980 copstitution. As he prepares to outline his vision of the next six years, in a spe^h next Sunday marking his 10th anniversary
in power, he appears to enjoy solid support in the army and nurtures hopes of a gradual economic recovery.
But he added to the tension last week by denouncing the massive clanging of cooking pots and erection of flaming street barricades by the hundrec^ of thousands of protesters as a crime.
Without specifying how the wlice would react this time, le warned, I have power. Absolute power. If things get out of hand and they push me and push me, losing all caution, then we will go back to a state of siege, tougher than before.
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Convicted impaired drivers also face lost wages and loss of driving privileges.
Because the new law does away with plea bargaining, people will be more likely to go to trial, said Martin Bernholz, a Chapel Hill attorney. As a result, attorney fees in DWI cases may jump from an average of $250 to as much as $2,000, he said.
Daisy and Cecil disagree over the General Assemblys intentions on jailing drunken drivers.
I am not persuaded that the General Assembly wants me to incarcerate a person for as long as possible, said Daisy.
Cecil, however, said its not possible to "reason with these people. You dont talk someone out of drinking. The only answer for these people with six, eight, 10 convictions is incarceration.
SBI Asked To Aid In Slaying
CHARLOHE, N.C. (AP) - The State Bureau of Investigation has been asked to aid Rutherford County authorities in investigating the slaying Sunday of a 12-year-old girl.
Bobby Lewis Sheppard, 21, was charged Sunday with first-degree murder and burglary, assault with a deadly weapon inflicting injury and taking indecent liberties with a child, authorities say. He is being held without bond at Rutherford County Jail.
Cynthia Sue Wilson was found dead in her aunts apartment early Sunday morning
Her aunt, Janice Dyer, 23, was stabbed around the throat and was listed in stable condition in the Rutherford Hospital intensive care unit, authorities said.
Three other children, also Dyers nieces and nephews, were in the apartment at the time but werent harmed, authorities said.
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Evelyn Lorraine Griggs Marries Anthony D. Key
BETHEL-The Church of God in Christ here was the scene of the Saturday afternoon wedding ceremony of Evelyn Lorraine Griggs and Anthony Donard Key. The double ring ceremony was performed at three oclock by the Rev. Joseph Armstrong.
Mrs. Ida M. Griggs of Bethel is the mother of the bride. Her father was the late Sammy Griggs. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Key Sr. of Akron, Ohio.
The bride was given in marriage by her brother, James E. Griggs Sr. Her sister, Shirley Griggs of Bethel, was honor attendant. Bridesmaids included Beverly Gibson and Belinda Key of Akron, Ohio, sisters of the bridegroom, Darlene Griggs of Miami, Fla., sister-in-law of the bride, Jackie Griggs of
Rfei^, sister of the bride, Belinda Griggs of New Bern, sister-in-law aTthe bride, and Shelia Butler of Washington,^ D.C.,niec of the bride.
C a4b y B u 11 e r .0 f Washington, niece of the bride, and Tamica Key of Akron, Ohio, niece of the bridegroom, were flower girls.
, Travis Griggs of Beiel, nephew of the bride, was ring bearer. The father of the bridegroom was best man and ushers included Calvin Battle of Greenville, Michael Key of Barberton, Ohio, Timothy Key of Akron, Ohio and Sammy Key Jr. of Greenville, S.C., brothers of the bridegroom, Samuel Griggs Jr. of Richmond, Va. and Larry Griggs of New Bern, brothers of the bride.
Juanita Johnson was organist. Alice Francis, cousin of the bride, sang You
MRS. ANTHONY DONARD KEY
Accessories Change Mood Of Outfit
CHARLOHE - Todays woman can extend and personalize her wardrobe by remembering one often overlooked aspect of dress -accessories. -
Thats a tip from veteran fashion consultant Pauline Lavitt, one of the many wardrobe and beauty experts who will be on hand for the Southern Womens Show Oct. 6-9 at the Charlotte Civic Center.
Clothes are too expensive to throw them out each season, says Ms. Lavitt, owner of her own clothing shop and consulting business for 11 years in Hickory. The countless variations you can create with accessories can change the mood of what youre wearing. We encourage women to take what they already own and update it by adding a belt, scarf, etc., she says.
Tbis fall, Lavitt looks for fedora hats, colored gloves and hose and scarves to be popular accessories. We are seeing beautiful colored hose in jewel tones such as garnet and amethyst, she says.
Overall, fashion and beauty represents only one of eight categories at the four-day event. Experts on food, fitness, business, finance, travel and leisure, art and merchandise directed toward women will be among the shows more than 200 exhibits. The show is de-
Burgess...
(Continued from Page 2)
carried a white silk mum with a yellow bow and streamers.
The couple will live near Greenville after a wedding trip to unannounced points.
Tea Timers
NEW YORK (AP) - Tea Timers, an association of tea buffs, tea lovers and tea aficionados, has been organized here by Marv Rubinstein, who plans to publish a Tea Timers bulletin q u a, r t 0 r 1 y .
signed for the homemaker, career woman, student and parent.
Show hours are from 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Oct. 6-8 and noonto6p.m; Oct. 9.
Needed Mie, Truly, Evergreen and The Lords Prayer.
nie miniatiu*e bride was Tajuana Somers of Ayden, niece of tb l^lide. Junior attendants were Camille and Tammy Powqell of Lan-dover, Md., nieces of the bride.
The bride wore a floor lei^th gown of white knit chiffon with Venise and re-embroidered lace and schiffli embroidery with a high neckline and bishop sleeves. A satin border encircled the skirt and chapel length train. Her matching headpiece and veil was of white satin accented with seed pearls. She carried a bouquet of pink and white roses with pink satin streamers.
The honor attendant wore a formal frost rose gown with a laced stand-up collar with yokes of point desprit lace. She carried a bouquet of pink and white roses with pink satin streamers.
Each attendant was dressed identically and carried a single long-stemmed pink rose with greenery and matching pink streamers. The flower girls were also dressed identically and carried a white lace t^sket filled with pink petals.
The miniature bride wore a formal white gown trimmed with ruffles and carried a single long-stemmed pink rose with greenery and matching streamers which was also carried by the junior attendants. They were dressed similar of the miniature bride.
The wedding was directed by Velma R. Farmer of Bethel.
Assisting at the reception were sisters of the bride, Louise Butler and Marjorie Powell. The refreshment table was centered with arrangements of pink roses and greenery. A champagne fountain was used for the punch. A cookout was given after the reception by the brides brother.
The honor attendant gave a rehearsal dinner. Several showers were given in honor of the couple as well as a bachelor party for the bridegroom.
The couple will live in Long Beach, Calif, after a wedding trip to Catalina Islands.
'Ilie bride is a graduate of North Pitt High School and received a B.S. in civil engineering from N.C. State University. She is presently employed by the Long Beach Naval Shipyard as a naval architect. The bridegroom is a sergeant in the U.S. Marine Corps stationed in El Toro, Calif.
ing the same purse with yarn. For either, please specify your choice of champagne or red.
Looking for the perfect gift for the woman who has everything? This elegant woven ribbon clutch bag would be just the thing! Make it in creamy champagne beige for evening or dress wear year-round or Christmas red for the holidays. The bag is worked in simple brick stitch with double-faced satin ribbon on 7-mesh plastic canvas. This unique needlepoint creation, designed by one of my assistants, Chris Harrelson, gets rave notices from everyone who sees it. An everyday version can be made with yarn replacing the ribbon.
To obtain directions for making the Ribbon Purse, send your request for Leaflet No. NL-0904 with .$1 and a long, stamped, self-addressed enve ope to: Pat Trexler (The Daily Reflector), P.O. Box 810, North Myrtle Beach, S.C. 29597.
Or you may order Kit N-0904R, containing all necessary materials and instructions for making the Ribbon Purse, by sending a check or money order for $23, or send $10 for Kit N-0904M, for mak-
Have you ever tried combining needlepoint and beadwork on plastic canvas? Some rea ly exciting effects can be achieved with a little imagination. In the pattern stitch illustrated today, you can substitute glass beads or pearls for the Smyrna stitches, represented by the large Xs on the main chart.
In my opinion, this is best done on lO-mesh canvas, with multiple strands of a fine prn used for the needlepoint stitches. You may decide whether to use a variety of colors in the yarn and beads, a single color yarn and multi-color beads or a monchromatic color scheme.
The lines and spaces on the graph charts represent the canvas ribs and holes. The bold black lines denote the straight stitches. Some of the stitches are charted as arrows to get you started. When this is the case, bring the needle up at the base of an ar-rpw and take it down at the tip of the arrow. As the overall pattern develops, you will see that actual stitch direction is not that important in this pattern stitch. To make the chart easier to read, therefore, some of the stitches are just shown as straight lines.
The easiest way to be sure that your pattern is centered is to make a Smyrna stitch in the exact
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
center of your canvas (or sew a bead in that space) and then work the surrounding straight stitches.
How would you use this beaded pattern? It is particularly striking for little decorator boxes for counter or dresser tops.
How about one done in 6ff-white with pearls and lined in white satin, for example? Ill bet that would bring a' pretty penny at a charity bazaar. Or why not try Christmas ornaments, eyeglass or cigarette cases, evening bags or almost anything that strikes your fancy.
Once your imagination gets in high gear, youll probably find many other pattern stitches that will be even more exciting with beadwork.
(Pats Pointers: The Needlepoint Handbook by Pat Trexler has organized needlework instructions for easy crafting by beginners and veterans alike, with a host of patterns to please every needlework enthusiast. To order this 200-page book, send $8.95 plus $l postage and handling to Pat's Pointers, in care of this newspaper, 4400 Johnson Drive, Fairway, Kan.
66205. Please make checks payable-to Universal Press Syndicate.)
Monday Septembers. 1983 3
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14 The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C
Monday. September 5.1983
Croaswofd By EugtM Sheffer
ACROSS 35 Man or 1 Wine vessels Wight 5 New Guinea 31 Greek island
-seaport 37 Italian
8 Prejudice astronomer
12 Eternal 40 Haggard
14 French river novel
15 American 41 Hale or Alda
Indian 42 Florida
16 Rave wildly Indian
17 Footed vase
18 Defender of Troy
20 Indian
lodge
23 Ancient maritime city
24 Ice-skaters maneuver
25 West coast Indian
28 Trouble
29 He created Cijptam Nemo
30 Meadow sound
32 A Philippine native
34 (harged atoms
47 Force
48 Figurative
49 Harem rooms
50 Droop
51 Moslem magistrate
DOWN
1 Luzon native
2 Russian community
31 love:
Latin
4 Upshot
5 Actor Ames
6 Lay Dying"
7 Attempting
8 Island of the Malay Archipelago
9 Dies-
10 -Karenina
11 Hardens 13 Entice
19 Sea eagle
20 Chinese
Answer to Saturdays puzzle.
21 Theater sign
22 Chinese wax
23 Apang
25 Casals, etal.
26 Slender woodwind
27 German
, philosopher
29 Huge
'31 An enzyme
33 National League team
34 Peaceful
36 Small fragment
37 Part of a pedestal
38 Fetid
39 Zola novel
40 Polluted air
43 Epoch
44 Wood sorrel
45 Young boy
46 Wallach or Whitney
CRYPTOQUIP 9-5
tOXSAMSUV UGSQA MNO SQX VXJJXO:
S CSGA ONJJ?
Saturdays Cryptoquip OUR POOR MIXED-UP KID EXPLAINED,! ALWAYS SIEEPWALK AND DAYDREAM. Todays Cryptoquip clue: J equals L.
The Cryptoquip is a simple substitution cipher in which each letter used stands for another. If you think that X equals 0, it will equal 0 throughout the puzzle. Single letters, short wor^, ;,nil words using an apostrophe can give you clues to locating ,(;yels Solution is accomplished by trial and error.
g) 19*3 King Features Syndicate. Inc
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All kinds of interesting things are advertised in classified everyday. Drop/ in and browse a bit in classified-just for fun.
Reflector
Classified
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Public Notices
CONSUMER FINANCE NOTICE
James S Currie, Commissioner of Banks, P O Box 951, Raleigh ?7602, approved on August 26, 1983, the Application of Safeway Finance Corporation of North Carolina for a license to do business under the North Carolina Consumer Finance Act at Store No 6, Carolina East Center. Greenville, N C September 5, 1983
DEPARTMENTOF THE TREASURY
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION Under the authority in Internal Revenue Code section 6331, the property described below has been sri/ed tor nonpayment of internal enue taxes due from Harry / Letchworth, Route 1, Box Snow Hill, NC 28580 The P'operfy will be Sold at public auction as provided by Internal Revenue Code section 6335 and related regulations Date of Sale: September 16, 1983 TimeotSale: 10 00a m Place of Sale Pitt County Trans porfation Department, Hwy 264 By Pass, Greenville, N.C Title Ottered: Only the right, title, and interest of Harry Drew Let chworth in and to the property will be ottered tor sale. If requested, the Internal Revenue Service will, furnish information about possible enoumbrances, Which may be useful in cietermining the value of Ihe interest being sola rv .-rription of Property One trail an hy to ft Innp
ji consisting ot several grooving and edging tools, saws, and miscellaneous hand tools, all located inside fool box One lot consisting ot shovels, hoes, ax, (rakes, brooms, (with and with'out handles) heavy duty extei^ion cords, 4 ft. aluminum step
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stationwag Sll9Sj Cali:
moCHEVROLET MONZA. 4 new
tires, 40,000 miles, A 1 shape $3400. 758 4281 affer 5
1981 CHEVROLET Chevette, low mileage, automatic, air. $4500. 756 7915
1982 CORVETTE Collectors Edi lion All options $17,800 New Bern, I 637 9636, 1 638 8640 after 6 p m
1982 Z28 CAMARO, T top, cruise control, air, AM/FM stereo, great condition Call Cindy, 355 2362 after 7 30 p m
016
Chrysler
1973 CHRYSLER, 79,000 actual miles. $500 Good condition. Clean 758 4217
018
Ford
FAIRMONT SQUIRE WAGON.
1979 Fully loaded, new tires. Excellent condition. Low mileage $4200 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights
1976 MUSTANG II. High mileage, but runs good Great gas mileage, new radials. needs paint job $850 Call 758 9951 after 6p m
1982 EXP FORD tor sale or will trade for late model Pickup truck 757 0451, ask for Mr. Carraway
020
Mercury
1965 MERCURY COMET 4 door, 289, automatic, power steering, new radial tires, new inspection, one owner, $850 Must see to appreciate 757 3762 anytime
021
Oldsmobile-
OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME, 1975 2 door Excellent condition New steel belted radial tires. AM FM stereo cassette, car well maintained $1995 756 2723
1 978 OLDSMOBILE Cutlass Supreme Excellent condition 758 0778 days, nights 756 8604
1982 CUTLASS Supreme Brougham, 4 door, power steering and brakes, air, cruise, stereo, automatic, 22,500 miles $7.975 Kinston, days 527 4186 nights 522 4183
022
Plymouth
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY III. Air, power steering and brakes, good tires Runs good AM FM radio with cassette $600 firm 756 2785
1910 PLYMOUTH Volare Sta tionwagon, automatic, air, AM FM, custom inferior, 42.000 miles, extra clean 756 7839after 6p m
023
Pontiac
PONTIAC, 1976 LaMans Safari 3 seat stationwagon Body in excellent condition Uses regular gas $2300 firm 756 8737
024
Foreign
TSUN 280ZX -2 * 2, 1979 Blue, 58 000 miles, 4 speed with deluxe trim package Excellent condition $7700 Call 756 6336 days or 756 1549 nights
IMPORTED CAR PARTS, 105
Trade Street Check our end ot summer sale Call 756 7114
MGB-GT, 1974. Black, 43,000 miles, AM FM, new upholstery, clean Good condition Phone 758 8662
SAAB. 1973 New engine, tires and intericr Must sell 412 West Fourth Street, 756 4645
TOYOTA SERVICE. 4 cylinder tune special, $20 4 cylinder valve ad lustment, $14 5 years experience Toyota East Bell's Fork Garage. 756 3796
1971 PORSCHE 914, very good condition Serious inquiries only $2600 Call 758 7820after 5
1971 240Z, serious inquiries only Call 756 8283
1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUS with camper windows, told down bed seat, and table Good condition Asking $1295 or best offer 752 1037
1974 FIAT 124 Special 65,000 miles, 4 door, runs good, best otter. 756 3384 after 6 p.m
ladder, handles, rope, chain, plastic, used tires, key stakes, wire ties, hand tamper, water cooler, 4 hard hats, 2 squares, all located inside trailer
Property may be Inspected at By appointment
Payment Terms Full payment required on acceptance of highest bid
Form ot Payment All payments must be by cash, certified check, cashier's or treasurer's checker by a United Stales postal, bank, express, or telegraph money order Make check or money order pay able to the Internal Revenue Service
Vernette A Dean Revenue Officer Internal Revenue Service,
101 W First St ,
Greenville, N C 27834 752 6218
September 5, 1983
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
Having qualified as Executrix of Ihe Estate ot 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 1800 Myrtle Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina, 27834, on or before the 15fh day of February, 1984, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar ot their recovery All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate pay meni to the undersigned.
f I- :c. n-.f, 1: n, of August, 1983
/wunuo Greenville, N.C. 27834,
Michael A Colombo
JAMES, HITE, CAVENDISH
8, BLOUNT
Attorneys at Law
Post Office Drawer 15
Greenville, North Carolina 27834'
Aug 15, 22, 29, Sept . 5, 1983
1974 VOLKSWAGEN VAN. 7 pas
senger, clean, runs great, one owner, must sell, make offer Con sider trade for truck or El Camino 756 7417
1976 Datsun 710 Wagon, automatic, AM, FM, new motor and radials, excellent condition $2200 752 0144
1977 DATSUN B 210, 5 speed, air, AM FM, 1 owner, $2200 Call after 6 p m , 752 8927
1977 HONDA ACCORD, 2 speed automatic, $995 firm Call after 5 pm, 752 1255
1979 MG MIDGET. 17,000 miles Asking $3250. 752 6924 or 568 3025.
1979 TOYOTA COROLLA, am/fm f track, air, $2950 or best otter 752 6855
1980 VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
Excellent condition Air and sun roof, 37,000 miles $3800 756 6266 days, 756 9867 nights
1982 PORSCHE 924. Turbo ac cessories, fully loaded: Great buy Only $17,000 1 527 5952
1982 RABBIT DIESEL LS. Air
conditioner, AM/FM stereo, re dining front seats, 46 miles in city, 56 miles on highway 14,500 miles $7500 negotiable Call after 6. 752 8817
032
Boats For Sale
JOHNSON electric trolling motor 12 or 24 volt foot control, 31 pound thrust, like new $225 746 3474
VENTURE 22' SAILBOAT, motor and trailer, 3 sails, many extras, captain boat house. $4100 Washington, 946 3211.
10' SPEED BOAT, motor and trail er included, $525 Call 758 4161.
034 Campers For Sale
036
Cycles For Sale
HONDA 450. Good condition. AAust sell! $300negotiable. 756 7694.
197 .KAWASAKI KE 175 Like branci new - on and off road. 500 mile*. Must see to appreciate. 752 5002.
mi HONDA 400 CM. 5.000 miles. Excellent condition $1250. 746 3335 nights.
1981 HONDA XL 105. Only 2500 miles. Excellent tor student com muters. $700. 758 7676 between 8 5.
039 Trucks For Sale
1973 44 TON PICKUP truck 6 cylinder, straight shift. Good con dition. 758 5779.
1973 DATSUN pickup. Good condi tion $1495. Call 757 1173
1974 JEEP CJ5 Bronze with black trim. 62,000 miles. 4, 1 year old A T Tracker Tires, white rims, fog lights, 258 6 cylinder engine Nice stereo $2600. Call 752 9150.
1980 DATSUN pickup, metallic blue, 5 speed, camper top, am/fm cassette, trailer hitch Excellent condition $4500 757 3184.
1981 CHEVROLET Luv Lonq bed Sport package. Air, AM FM, automatic. Extra clean. 758 4704
1983 CHEVY VAN 20. 6,500 miles, factory customized. Captains' chairs, sofa, cooler. $13,900 752
4151.
040
Child Care
SOMEONE TO CARE tor infant in your home Monday through Friday, 7 a m to 6 p.m Call 758 7383 between 6 and 7 p.m. References required.
WINTERVILLE MOTHER desires to care for 2 children over 18 months old in her home. 756 5872.
046
PETS
AKC DOBERMAN PUPS. 7 weeks, shots and wormed, excellent con firmation and marks. $100 $125. 524 3116.
AKC REGISTERED COLLIES,
$100. Call 1 946 3981
BASIC DOG OBEDIENCE.
Thursday, 6:30 fo 7:15 eight weeks. $25. Begins September 8. Call 756 1348 evenings
BEAUTIFUL AKC Registered Col lie puppies. $100 to $125. Sable, white, and tri color 756 3135.
DOBERMAN WARLOCK, 11 month old female. Completely trained $200. 752 4954
FERRETS FOR SALE. 8 weeks old Male and female. Sable and Albino. $45 each. 758 4857
SIBERIAN HUSKY puppies, AKC Blue eyes, black and gray markings parents on premises $125. 756 6747 or 752 2916
3 MONTH OLD female Pekingese, AKC registered. Call 758 5974 after 6 pm
8 WEEK OLD male Simese kittens 756 2658.
051
Help Wanted
A SIDE COMPETENT Real Estate broker to solicit listings ot com mercial, industrial, and agricultur al property. Ideal opportunity for the sharp individual who doesn't want to settle for less Call Gloria at Heritage Personnel, 355 2020
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Position now open in the radio field. Now accepting applications Call Mon day or Tuesday between 10 a m and 12 p m. or between 3:30 and 5:30pm Phone 752 8998
BABYSITTER needed in Win terville after school and some weekends 355 6144
CAMP COUNSELORS
3 immediate openings in Newport, N C Challenging career op portunities in child care. Live in positions at year round wilderness camps working with problemed youth, taking extended canoe, backpack, and raft trips. Camping experience and two years college preferred tor entry into rewarding profession that otters continual in service training, direct staff sup port, and supervisory feedback Competitive salary/ benefit package Call Art Rosenberg al 919 726 9058 on Tuesday and Wed nesday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. or send resume to Eckerd Foundation, PO Box 31122, Charlotte, NC 28 2 3 1. Equal Opportunity Employer
051
Help Wanted
JOIN OUR NEW COMPANYI
CENTURY 21 Tipton & Associates hTs openings for licensed NC Real Estate brokers. Enthusiasm and drive is a must. Call Rod Tugwell today, at 756 6810.
LEGAL SECRETARY. Experience desired, heavy typing Send resume to Legal Secretary, PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC 27834.
MUST HAVE PLEASANT
telephone personality. Hours noon to9p.m Call 758 2141
FART TIME
SERVICE ROUTE SALES
7 9 days per month servicing rental equipment in supermarkets and drug store accounts. Must have van and storage. Commission and vehicle allowance. Reply to: Area Manager, Household Research In stitute, 165 Blue Bell Road, Greensboro, NC 27406. EOE M F.
PRESCHOOL DIRECTOR needed in the Tarboro area. Apply in person at 313 East lOth Street.
PRIOR AIR FORCE
If you have been honora^ dis charged within the last 5 years, and are qualified with a minimum AFSC Skill Level ot 5, the Air Force is looking tor you! Openings available tor Munitions, Inte grated Electronics, Intelligence, Aircraft Maintenance also, selected Electronics Weather op portunities from other services. Call today! MSGT Ben Grady or TSGT Bruce Barry at 756 2194
RECREATION DIRECTOR
The Greene County Parks and Recreation Commission is accept ing applications for the position ot Recreation Director. The position is a department head position, and is responsible tor the planning, or ganizing, ot a county program ot indoor and outdoor public recre ational and social activities. The position recruits and supervises part time employees and a network ot volunteers in providing inslruc tion, athletic programs, and special activities. The position requires a thorough knowledge of the princi pies, practices and methods of recreational facilities planning and development, as well as knowledge ot all phases of recreational work and its administration. Graduation from a tour year college or univer sity with a degree in recreation or physical education, or an equivalent combination of experience and training is required.
Salary range $15,720 $19,824 Re sumes should be sent to the Greene County Parks and Recreation Commission, 229 Kingold Blvd., Snow Hill, N.C. 28580 and will be accepted through September 30, 1983 Greene County is an Equal cipportunify Employer
RN's AND LPN's Pungo District Hospital needs you. Contact Barbara McDonald, RN, Director of Nursing, 943 2111.
SALESOPPORTUNITY
Salesperson needed. Auto sales ex perience preferred. Excellent company benefits. Call:
EAST CAROLINA LINCOLN-MERCURY-GMC
756 4267 For Appointment
SARAH COVENTRY
Needs 5 ladies with phone and car for part time 946 6650 or 527 6026.
SHARP INDIVIDUAL to train as keyboard salesman. Largest dealer in NC. Hard worker with expansion potential Excellent income Piano & Organ Distributors, 329 Arlington Boulevard, Greenville 355 6002.
SOCIAL WORKER BSW and 1
years experience preferred working in ICF MR residentiaj facility Sal ary commensurate with ability and experience Send resume to Mr. Jan Harper, Corporate Personnel Director, Howell's Child Care Center, Inc . PO Box 607, La Grange, NC 28551.
SOMEONE TO LIVE In with elderly couple Call 756 6828
TEMPORARY PART TIME help for office and clerical work Please apply in person to Greenville TV and Appliance, Greenville Boulevard
CAREER OPPORTUNITY tor
homemakers Nation's number I toy gift party company now hiring demonstrators Set your own hours now thru December Absolutely no investment No collecting No de livermg Call 753 2534 or 756 6610
COFFEE SHOP MANAGER
Young progressive coffee shop chain is taking applications tor manager Attractive starting sala ry insurance program, paid vaca tions are some of the benefits we otter Relocation is necessary If you are an agressive, experienced person in food service manage ment, seeking rapid advancements; contact John Carter, 9 a m to 4 p m , Wednesday, September 7 at the Employment Security Com mission, Bismarck Street, Greenville, NC
CONTROLLER CREDIT Manager Must have good accounting and collections skills At least 2 years experience required. Apply to P O 1037, Greenville, NC 27835.
DENTAL ASSISTANT wanted Ex perience required X ray certifica tion Call 756 5911
DOZER OPERATOR NEEDED.
Only experienced need apply Call (919) 398 3772 days, nights 398 4405, 398 5273.
ENTER THE EXCITING LIFE ot
becoming a licensed mixologist. All this done by mail in the privacy of your home For tree information write fo Buccaneer Bartending, PO Box 265, Ayden, NC 28513.
19' MFG CAPRICE, 1977 200 Johnson, tilt and trim, tandum galvanized trailer, CB, depth find er, top and side curtains, all in excellent condition $6500 758 2300 days
1977 CRUISE BOAT 19 toot, with Johnson 115 Horsepower outboard engine. Includes life preservers, 2 fuel tanks, depth finder, CB radio. New convertible root, setting on a 19 toot galvanized trailer with electric wench. One owner, Extra Nice! Price negotiable Call 758 0114.
APACHE POP TOP camper trailer. All canvas. Good condition Asking 52S0nr best otter /".ill 7S7 ifnt
K : K CO Vr HS , i , ,
Leer Fiberglass and Sporlsmar. tops. 250 units in stock. O'Briants, Raleigh, N C. 834 2774
Exceptional
Opportunity
WILL YOU EARN
$15,000 fo $20,000 this year, and more in future years?
International company in 54th year of growth needs 3 sales respresen tafive: in this area
ARE YOU:
Sportsminded
21 years ot age or over
Aggressive
Ambitious
In good health
High School graduate or better
Bondable with good references
IF YOU QUALIFY YOU WILL BE GUARANTEED:
Guaranteed income to start
2 weeks expense paid training
Hospitalization and profit sharing
Unlimited advancement opportuni ty, no seniority. Opportunity to advance into management as rapid ly as your ability warrants. Act today for a secure tomorrow. Call for appointment to set up personal interview CALL TUES., WED. OR THURS from 9a.m. to 1 p.m.
Ask tor Mr. Gaskins
V2758-3401
An Equal Opportunity Company M/F
WANTED
REPRESENTATIVE
Sales person needed by Jim Walter Homes for this area. This is an opportunity to get in on the ground floor with a large national home building organization. Straight commission or salary plus com mission positions availa ble Excellent advancement op portunities for those wishing to move into management Fringe benefits for salaried employees include profit sharing program, stock purchase investment pro gram, life and hospitalization in surance Must have honest character, good personality, be ready and willing to follow up leads and seek out and talk to home building prospects Apply by application, Jim Walter Homes, Highway 301 South, Rocky Mount An Equal Opportunity Employer
WANTED
CARPENTERS LABORERS FRAMING CREWS MASONARY CONTRACTORS
For construct.on of SENIOR VILLAGE OF GREENVILLE,
located across street from Alcohol Rehabilitation Center, North Caro lina, Highway 43 North
Phone 752-2240
Mid-South Construction Company
WANTED experienced plumbers and HBAC installers. Call tor an appointment, Snow Hill Plumbing 8, Heating, 758 8450 or 747 3408. Expe riencecl only need to apply
WANTED PART TIME child care in afternoon Approximately 10 to 15 hours week. Must be reliable and able to transport children from school 752 6314
EXPERIENCED MANAGERS,
Assistant Managers, and Watch Makers wanted by Reed's Jewelers an expanding guild jewelry chain in North and South Carolina tor its Mall locations Retail jewelry sales
experience is required Excellent
Y .
health insurance and paid vacation
salary, profit sharing, life and
Please send resume in confidence to Jim Payne, Senior Vice President, Reed's Jewelers Associates, 414 Chestnut Street Suite 308, Wilmington. NC 28401
FINANCE MANAGER for furniture store Need at least 1 year experi ence with finance company or other furniture store Salary $15,000 year plus profit sharing Reply to Fi nance Manager. PO Box 1967, Greenville, NC or call 752 2366
1 982 2 3 1/2' WILDERNESS.
Completely self contained, sleeps 6, air* conditioning, fW awning
fir been pulled $8700 758 1946 een 10and6.
FULL TIME SALESPERSON
wanted tor ladies shoe department.
I < utf. c-i<-h!nns,
depfid.ion; and mature apply Brody's, Pitl .Plaza
fIJTTti/Teand stereo
salesman 2 years experience. Sala r^ of $300 a week plus commission.
059
Work Wanted
GUITAR LESSONS. For more In formation, call 746 3567.
WANTED: EXPERIENCED
Roofers Call 758 5278.
WE HAVE AN IMMEDIATE
opening for 1 sales associate on our staff. Must have NC real estate license For a confidential interview contact Bob Barker, Sales Manag er, W G Blount 8, Associates. 756 3000, evenings call 975 3179
ALL TYPES TREE SERVICE.
Licensed and fully insured. Trim ming, cutting and removal. Free estimates J.P Stancil, 752 6331.
DOMESTIC WORK WANTED. Ask
tor Alice al 757 3273.
FURNITURE REFINISHING by
Wayne Jones. High quality work. Guaranteed. 4 years experience. 825 1079 after 5pm
GRASS CUTTING at reasonable prices. All size yards. Call 752 5583.
I WANT TO SIT with elderly lady from 8 until 5. Call 752 3887.
LONG BROTHERS ROOFING. All
types ot roofing commercial and residential. 25 years experience. Free estimates. Call 355 6924.
PAINTING Inferior and exterior. Free estimates. References, work guaranteed 13 years experience. 756 6873 after 6p m
PAINTING
At reasonable prices, free estimates, no job too small. Call anytime, 756 4967 or 758 0966
PROFESSIONAL TYPING Service. 15 years experience. IBM typewriter. 756 3660 or 756 7296
TONY BROWN'S Lawn and Tree Service. Professional year round experts fully insured 756 6735.
WILL DO COMPLETE house plans guaranteed, lowest price around! Call I 946 0609
OM
FOR SALE
Auctions
feply to Furniture Salesman, PO Box 1967. Greenvtlle. NC
FARM MACHINERY AUCTION
Sale Tuesday, Septembef-6 9- 10 a.m. 150 tractors, 500 Implements. We buy and sell used equipment dally. Wayne Imiplement Auction Corporation, PO Box 233, Highway Ilf South, Goldsboro, NC 275%. NC itl|8. Phone 734 4234.
OM FmL Wood, Coal
AAA ALL TYPES ot firewood tor sale. J.P. Stancil. 752-6331.
COMPLETE LINE Of woodsloves, chimney pipe and accessories at Tar Road Antiques, WInterville. 756 9123, nights 756 1007.
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD. Call US before you buy! 752-1359 or 758 5590.
065 Farm Equipment
GET READY FOR FALL fishing with AgrI Supply. Life vest with pockets $20.49. Hip boots $28.95. Chestwaders $35.49. Poly boat seats $12.49. Floating fish attractor light $11.95. AAany other supplies In stock. Agri Supply, Greenville, NC 752
2 - 10,000 BUSHEL grain bins for sale or rent. Located approximately 4 miles West ot WInterville. Call 756 5097 or 756 9315.
2 ROW ROANOKE tobacco har vester with both heads Ready to go in field. 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights.
OM
FURNITURE
BEDDIN68WATERBEDS
Shop now during Factory Mattress and Waterbed Outlet's Summer Clearance Sale. Save over one half. Next to Pitt Plaza. 355 2626
BRAND NEW Loose Back Pillow sofa and matching chair by Thom asville. Navy blue, rust floral de sign. In shipping plastic. Antique dresser . 752 5002.
DINING ROOM suite, Williamsburg Queen Anne, table and 6 chairs, buffet, and server. $4000. New, $7000 Make otter. 756 7297, if no answer 756 3613
072
Livestock
HORSEBACK RIDING. Jarman Stables, 752 5237.
073 Fruits and Vegetables
BUTTER BEANS $6.00 bushel B 8. B Garden, Hassell, 1 795 4646
074
Miscellaneous
APPROXIMATELY 2,000 Silas Lucas handmade bricks, 756 5097 or 756 9315
lom
End Of Season Close Out CLARK .COMPANY
Of Greenville, Inc.
756 2557
BRUNSWICK SLATE POOL
Tables. Cash discounts Delivery and installation, 919 763 9734
BURROUGHS B 800 Computer System 55 megabites ot disc storage, 144 K ot Memory. Call 752 5000 between 8 and 5:30, ask tor Judy
INSTANT CASH
TV's, Air Conditioners, Stereos, guns, gold 8, silver, diamonds, cameras and equipment, typewrit ers, kerosene heaters, refrigerators (dorm size only), video games & cartridges, power fools, musical instruments, microwave ovens video recorders, bicycles We also loan $$ on above items. Southern Pawn Shop, located 405 Evans St., downtown. 752 2464.
CALL CHARLES TICE, 758 3013, for small loads ot sand, topsoil and stone Also driveway work.
CARPET, CARPET, CARPETI 2
rooms full ot carpet off white. Price negotiable. 758 3005
zm
From the oldest, most reliable buyer of gold, silver and any items ot value
COIN&RING MAN
On The Corner
CASH REGISTER, Gary sate. ton trash compacter, miscellaenous hospital equipment. 756 7247.
CONSOLE STEREO with turntable, radio combination, attached 8 track tape player 752 5002
ELECTRIC MINNKOTA - 16
pounds thrust, 4 speed, used 3 times, comes with instructions. Flounder light, both for best offer Call 752 9252after 6p.m
ENCYCLOPEDIA New The
Books of Knowledge. $275 Unique cofte table, new Top 62" x 25", handcut crystal, +4' th(ck wood frame, $325 House bar cabinet, $25 Call 758 2)80
EXCELLENT DORMITORY size refrigerator. $75. Call 746 3474
FIREPLACE WOOD BURNING
stove. Belter n Ben's Used 2 seasons, like new. Radiant heat. New $699, your cost $285. Call 756 2544.
FISHERMAN NEEDLEPOINT
19x23, Queen bed spread drapes. Custom made Exceptional items. 1 527 5952
FIVE BRICK ATLANTIC gas heat er . $50. Call 746 3474.
GOCART FRAME, good tires and seat. Mini bike, excellent condition, motor 1 month old. New GE 8,000 air conditioner, used only 7 weeks. 3 speeds with energy saver. Couch and matching chair, good condition. 758 4576.
GOLF CLUBS, new bag, good beginners set, 6 irons, 2 woods and putter, $60 752 8028
HITACHI 19" COLOR TV remote control. Excellent condition $370. 758 6715.
ICEMAKERS. Sale 40% oft Barkers Refrigeration, 2227 Memo rial Drive, 756 6417
TTffli:
Chain Saws
Selling Chain Saws Since 1963
CLARK .COMPANY
Of Greenville, Inc.
756 2557
LARGE GE MICROWAVE oven Like new. Was $400, now $260. 753 5526
LARGE LOADS of sand and top soil, lot cleaning, backhoe also available 756 4742 affer 6 p m., Jim Hudson.
MAGNAVOX 25" color TV twin speakers. $275. 752 7686
MAHOGANY DRESSING table with mirror, $85 752 0404 or 752
1577.
METAL DETECTORS: An exciting hobby. We have in stock the White's Pliodo underwater detector. For tree catalog. Baker's Sports Equipment, PO Box 3106,756 8840
MOVING, MUST SELLI Living room outfit, formal dining room seL stereo, lamps, typewriter, odds and :herokee Drive,
ends 2613 C>i
, 756 3909.
CLEARANCE SALE on
Mowers. Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avenue
ROLEX SUBMARINER. Call 758 6679, leave message.
FOR
Electric typewriters, stereo com ponents, cameras, guitars, old clocks, lamps, portable tape players, bicycles, voillns, dolls, depression glass, carnival glass, china, crystal and an tiques ...anything of vallue.
COIN & RING MAN
On The Corner
SEARS KENMORE self cleaning electric range. All the extras. Like new. Used only 9 months. $300. (less than Vj current retail price). Phone 756 3691 after 5 p.m.
SHAMPOO YOUR RUGI Rent shamjpooers and vacuums at Rental Tool Company.
SHARP, SONY A GE closeout sale now at Goodyear Tire Center, West End Shopping Center And Dickinson Avcnut Prices st,iri ,-it $69.88.
074
Miscellantous
SNAPPER
End Of Season Close Ouf CLARK .COMPANY
Of Greenville, Inc. 756-2557
SPECIALS: We have some unusu ally good buys In handpainted dinnerware, glassware, crystal, and a hardrock maple hutch and dinette set. W L Dunn & Sons, PInetops, NC
TRUE TEMPER CORDLESS
Weedeater with charger. $25. Call 746 3474.
UPRIGHT PIANO. $300; sofa, $75. and Kenmore dishwasher, like new, $275 756 7693.
USED APPLIANCES for sale. Re frigerators, freezers, stoves, washers, and dryers. $75 and up. Heating, air conditioning, plumb ing, and electrical service. 752 9333.
USED BACKHOE, reasonable price, needs bearing. 1 used Whirlpool countertop stove. 1 electric baseboard heater. 1 fireplace set. 758 5974 after 6 p.m.
USED RESTAURANT Equipment. Walk in cooler, refrigerator, mix ers, deep tat fryers, chairs, ice machines, etc Call 758 7042.
WE HAVE A LARGE stock Kirsch and Graber rods. Try us before you order Also in stock grass cloth wallpaper and carpet samples Andalusia Interiors.
WOOD WORKING TOOL - Shop Smith Mark V with band saw jointer and extras. 1 year old. Excellent condition. $1900. 355 2165
1 OT DELUXE WEIGHT bench with 1 set of 110 pounds bar bell weights, $75. 756 3982
22,500 BTU natural gas heater Cheap Call 758 6339after 5 p.m.
25" RCA COLOR TV, $60 or best offer. Call after 5 p m., 752 1255.
5 PIECE Colonial Maple bedroom suite, double bed, dresser with mirror, chest on chest and night table. Excellent condition. $300. 756 8958.
50,000 BTU GAS HEATER -
Automatic fan, $75 or best otter. Set of Child Craft Encyclopedia, 16 book set, $50. Call 825 0257.
6 CUBIC FOOT refrigerator, $100. Call 752 9586 after 6
075 Mobile Homes For Sale
BY OWNER - 12x70 mobile home with 12x26 add on. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, den, dining room, living room, 2 full baths, 10x30 cement porch with awning. Approximately 1 acre of (and, chain length fence all the way around, city water, gas, and central air. 758 0609.
GOOD SELECTION of used homes at Azalea Mobile Homes. $495 down, 90 day warranty. See Tommy Williams, 756 7815.
MUST SELL, 1980, Lanier Deluxe, 14x70, 2 bedrooms, all electric appliances, dishwasher, washer dryer and air conditioner Low equity and assume loan No reason able offer refused. Call 752 9593 anytime
NO MONEY DOWN VA100% Financing
New double wide 3 bedroom, 2 bath, house type siding, shingle roof, total electric. Payments of less than $245 per month Also FHA and conven tional financing availablel.
CROSSLAND HOMES
630 West Greenville Boulevard 756 0191
NO MONEY DOWN. VA financing Two day delivery Call Conner Homes, 756 0333
SET UP IN Pender Park, located near Morehead on sound side. Call 758 5974 affer 6 p.m
USED 12X60, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, front kitchen, $135 58 month Ask for Frank or Glenn at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841
USED 14X60, 2 bedrooms. 1 bath, front kitchen, $160 month Ask for Frank or Glenn at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.
We Love America Special NO MONEY DOWN!
SINGLE WIDE $8,495
DOUBLE WIDE...$17,995
(Loaded)
Anything of Value In Trade Boats, Horses, Monkeys Sorry No In laws OVER 30 FINANCE PLANS AVAILABLE
CALL NOW! 756-4833
TRADEWIND FAMILY HOUSING
705 West Greenville Boulevard
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE REPAIR SCREENS & DOORS
C.L. Lupton Co.
SMITH CORONA TPO
ty printer. 5 months oWUs^ t month. In mint 752 3980from9a.m.to5:30p.m.
12.75% FINANCING 00
Jiomes. Call Conner Homes, 756 0333. __
lliwai r Mr. - W - - 1
1*71 RltZCRAFT, 12x65~ bedrooms, bath, laundry room, furnished, stove and refrigerat^ step* and anchorjincluded Must m moved. First $4,000 takes it! 752-
1974 Conner Mobile Home. Take over payments of $110.00 per month. Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333.
1976 24x70 DOUBLEWIOE. 2 full baths, 4 bedrooms Must sell building home. Sacrifice $19,000. 1 238 3251
074
MIscBllanMus
1971 NATIONAL, good condition, must sell. Call 752 4778 after 6 p.m
1971 12x60 MONARCH. $4500 758 0646
1974 FLEETWOOD, 12x70 with Extando on den. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, central air Unfurnished Stove, refrigerator, air conditioner, cement steps and anchors included. Call 744 4977 after 5 p.m
1979 BRIGADER. 12x65, 2 bedrooms, totally electric, partially furnished, nice lot Small equity and assume payments of $177 per month. 75 4491 or 355 6683 after 5
1979 CONNER Mobile Home. 65'x 12'. Take over payments of $199.16 per month. Call Conner Mobile Homes, 756 0333
1979 TAYLOR 14 x 70, 2 bedroom, central air. New carpet, new furniture. 757-0451.
1983 14' WIDE HOMES. Payments as low as $148.91. At Greenville* volume dealer Thomas Mobile Home Sales, North Memorial Drive across from airport. Phone 752 6068
1914 2 bedrooms, I bath, front kitchen, $700 down, $154.87 month. Ask for Frank or Glenn at Art Dellano Homes, 756 9841.
2 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, 12x60, set up in convenient park. Excellent condition. Stove, refrigerator, window unit $5900 Call Mary days 752 3000, nights 756 1997
076 Mobile Home Insurance
MOBILE HOMEOWNER Insurance the best coverage for less money. Smith Insurance and Realty, 752 2754.
077 Musical Instruments
PIANO & ORGAN Distributors All major brands at discounted prices. 329 Arlington Boulevard 355 6002.
PIANO - Yamaha Upright Very good condition. $12(XI. 355-6192.
TRUMPET, Selma DeVllle Silver Excellent condition Washington, 1 946 0080.
078
Sporting Goods
BEAR POLAR compound bow New.$100 Call 746 3474.
082 LOST AND FOUND
LOST; SMALL BEAGLE mixed dog, female Should have tags, answers to the name of Jenny Vicinity of Highway 30 outside of Bethel Reward! 825 0886
093
OPPORTUNITY
FERTILIZER AND HARDWARE
business for sale. Complete farm supply. Established 21 years Owner deceased, family has other interests. Call 758 0702.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
WE INSTALL ALUMINUM AND VINYLSIDING
C.I.. l.iipton. Co
The chimney comet flril. then Ihe fireplace, woodtlove. heallna tytlema. etc My experience and knowledge comet from 25 yeart of working on chlmneyt and fireplacet Thit knowled^ It an attel to our butlnett ThIt It no tidellne or moonlighting )ob tor ut Cleaning chimney, inttalling tcreent and capt and tolving chimney problemt It our only butlnett. Our reputation lor prompt and profettlonal tervlce wat made over Ihe yeart (rom talltfled cutlomert Juti atk your neighbor or friendt. We are intured and our work It guaranteed. Call:
Gid Holloman
North Carolina' Original Chimney Sweep 753-3503 Day Or Night
EXPERIENCED AUTOMOTIVE MECHANIC
Due to increased Service Business, we are in need of an ambitious Automotive Mechanics. Must have tools and experience. Excellent commission schedule and benefit package. See Steve Briley, Service Manager 756-1135.
loe Pedias Volkswagen. Inc.
CONVENIENCE STORE MANAGER
For Bethel Area
Must be willing to take polygraph test. APPLY BETWEEN 1 AND 4 P.M.
Blount Petroleum Corp.
615 West 14th Street NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
SIZE 12 satin beaded pearl wedding gown and vFII, Ivory. Size 12 blue evening gown. Electrolux scrubber and waxer. Bride and groom glasses, cake knife. 14 carat I'/'z dust wedding ring and band. Exerciser. All new. 7M 99. 7
Hatdek
We are now Interviewing tor the following positions:
Shift Leaders Assistant Managers Managers
This it sn excellent opportunity for anyone who has a lot of drive and wants to grow with a dynamic company.
We offer the following benefit package: life insurance, medical insurance, paid vacation, sick leave and a Profit Sharing program.
Those who qualify for a Managers position have the opportunity for up to $7,000 par year In bonuses.
Contact Ken Willoughby al Hardaai of Washington, (910) 965-3776 on Monday, Saptembar 5th and Tuesday, Saptambar 6th, Or John Keenan, Hardee's of Raleigh, 401 North Boulevard, (919) 832-8073, on Monday, Saptambar 5th and Tuesday, Saptambar 6th.
EOEWFF
'nmme smmsam
tr
The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
MondHf, September 5.1983
MRS.KENNETH MARTIN BROWN
Notch-Year Babies Have To Tighten Belts
By Abigail Van Buren
1983 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: If you want to do a good deed, please print the following message:
If you are drawing Social Security and were born in 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920 or 1921 (called the notch years), you are being unjustly penalized by receiving lower benefits than those born prior to and after the above-mentioned years. For example, if you worked until you were 65 before starting to draw Social Security, you are receiving about $100 less in your monthly check than those born before 1917 or after 1921.
A bill in Congress to correct this unfair situation (HR-5469) failed to make the committee and died at the end of the 1982 session.
If you are in this age group, write to your congressman requesting that this bill be reintroduced, or a new bill be introduced to correct this unfair situation.
NOTCH YEAR BABY
DEAR BABY: Thank you for an important message. I checked your facts, and they are accurate. Readers who do not know in which district they reside, or who their representative is, should look in their telephone directory under U.S. Government. Listed there will be Congress. Any congressional office will be able to tell you who your congressman is and how to write to him.
Your congressman is your elected representative. Let him know that you want this inequity corrected.
DEAR ABBY. I have just inherited some beautiful furs a mink coat, a leopard jacket and a silver fox muff and hat. They are gorgeous! My husband is an animal lover and cant stand the sight of fur garments. He says it
"GreenvUles finest bakery for 63 years.
815 Dickinson Ave.
A Variety Of Breads Baked Fresh Daily
French, Cheese, Raisin, German Rye. Whole Wheat & Butter Top.
752-5251
.New Jobs III Health Field
WASHINGTON (AP) -Job prospects in health care are bright for the next decade, according to projections released by the National Council of Health Centers.
There will be a jump of more than 40 percent in demand for nurses aides and nurses, and a 21 percent increase for jobs in the nursing home industry alone, the report said.
Views On Dental
Health
Kenneth T. Perkins, D.D.S.PA ^
DRY SOCKET
I
Normally, following the extraction of a tooth, the wound in the jaw usually heals within a few days without complications. However, in every life, there is always an exception, One of those rare complications that can follow an extraction is known as a dry socket.
As the name (dry socket) implies, the clot that normally forms shortly after tooth removal, fails to develop or is. lost. This leaves a bare and unprotected socket exposed to bacteria, saliva and food debris. The lining of the socket is sensitive and
when bared to this irritating environment, a great deal of pain can develop.
About all that can be done is to keep the area as clean as possible and the patient as comfortable as possible with medication and place an anesthetic dressing into the open socket until nature develops a protective covering for the exposed socket.
The reason why a dry socket forrrts is not fully known. Some believe it results from a rapid bacterial action, others because of a fault in the blood clotting mechanism.
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
GweiwUU 752-5126 Vancebofo244-1179
Couple Marries On Sunday Afternoon
Patricia Hudson Angle and Kenneth Martin Brown were united in marriage Sunday afternoon at three oclock in the University Church of Christ. The Rev. John R. Brick performed the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Christine Rogerson of Greenville and William Earl Hudson of Wilmington. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Jean Brown of Olaton, Ky. and the late M. Charles Brown.
Given in marriage by her children, Christy and Terry Angle, and escorted by her father, the bride wore a street length dress of beige qiana. The bodice featured a Victorian neckline trimmed in lace and a chiffonette ruffle with long sheer sleeves and a full skirt. She wore baby's breath in her hair and carried a bouquet of silk orchids, daisies and stephanotis.
Serving as maid of honor was Christy Angle, daughter of the bride. She wore a street length dress of pale blue voile over taffeta. The bodice featured a Victorian neckline trimmed in white lace with long sleeves of matching lace. The skirt was full and featured a sash in back.
Bridesmaids were Michele
Hudson of Wilmington, niece of the bride, and Jimmie Jean Medlin of Grimesland. They wore dresses identical to the honor attendant and each wore silk flowers and baby's breath in their, hair. Each carried a longstemmed mum tied with blue and yellow streamers.
The mother of the bride wore a street length dress of pale blue polyknit. Both the mother and stepmother of the bride wore corsages of white daisies.
A program of wedding music was presented by Don Greene of Bethel. He sang I.O.U. and The Lords Prayer. Donnie Harris of Greenville sang Welcome to My World."
Yvonne Hudson, sister-in-law of the bride, presided at the register and rice bags were distributed by Tina and Craig Hudson, niece and nephew of the bride.
An after-rehearsal party was given by the brides parents at the Tar River Estates Clubhouse Friday evening.
The bride is employed with Pitt County Schools as secretary at Pactolus Elementary. The bridegroom is finance manager at Brown-Wood Iric.
After a wedding trip to the coast, the couple will reside in Greenville.
makes him both sad and furious when he thinks of the way the animals died.
Should I wear them anyway, or give them away?
TORN
DEAR TORN: Sell the furs and give the proceeds to your local animal shelter. And consider yourself lucky to have such a caring, sensitive husband.
DEAR ABBY: To The Children, whose father has inoperable cancer and his wife refuses to tell him:
Our family was in exactly the same situation years ago. Mom refused to tell Dad, and we reluctantly went along with it. I will always regret that decision.
As a result, we all acted like nothing was seriously wrong with Dad. Meanwhile, he grew sicker and sicker. We created a false atmosphere of hope and optimism that was more painful than the real one.
No honest or meaningful conversations ever took place because no one admitted that there was anything wrong. Im sure Dad knew he was dying, but he held back so as to prolong Moms avoidance of reality.
What a terrible, terrible loss! We could have comforted each other, cried and hugged and spoken what was in our hearts and minds, but we didnt.
Im glad you advise people to be honest with each other in such situations. Its the only way.
TOO LATE FOR US
SEPTEMBER SAVINGS
SALE!
KEROiUN
PORTABLE HEATERS
NEW LOW PRICES NOW IN EFFECT!
1982 Suggettod Model: List Pries: Now:
Sunstream:.......$289.95.........$ 218.95
Director .........$274.95.........$ 194.94
Radiant 10;.......$229.95.........$ 129 95
Radiant 36........$232.95.........49.95
Radiants:........$183.95.........$119.95
Omni 105........$264.95.........$ 159^95
Omni 85 .........$239.95.........$ ] 37^95
Omni 15..........$152.95.........$ 91 ^95
Moonlighter .....$169.95.........$ 119*95
Kero-Sun Portable Heaters are available in 9 safety tested and U.L. listed models that are rated from 7,600 to 19,500 BTUs an hour. All models feature: 99.9% fuel-efllciency, odorless ond smokeless operation, battery-poviered iomtlon, automatic safety shutott, and they do not require a chimney.
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY THE KERO-SUN'^ PORTABLE HEATER YOU WANT.. JkND SAVE!
Prices good Hmlted time only, while quantities lost.
DRUG STORES, inc.
911 Dickinson Ave....................... 752-7105
6lh Street & Memorial Dr.............................758-4104
Parkview Commons.................................757-1076
Bridal Policy
printed through the first week with a five by sevw picture. During the second week with a wallet size picture and write-up giviZ less description and after the second week, just as an announcement.
Wedding forms and pictures should be returned to The DaUy Reflector one week prior to the date of the wedding. All information should be typed or written neatly.
.\ back and white glossy five by sei-en phi^ograph is requeued for engagement announcements in The Daily Reflector For publication in a Sunday edition, the information must be submitted by 12 noon on the preceding Wednesday Engagement pictures must be released at least three weeks prior to the wedding date .After three week, only an announcement w ill be printed Wedding write-ups will be
DO-IT YOURSELF & 48 HOUR CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING .
606 Arlington Blvd. Telephone 756-7454'
0PENT0NITEUNTIL9P M j
NEED WHEELS? Call Rent A Wreck!
Rent yesterdays cars at yesterdays prices and save!
120 Ficklen St. Greenville
752-CARS or 752-2277
MRS. JACK LAWRENCE BURGESS
Biirgess-Chauncey Vows Solenmized
Kathy Lynette Chauncey and Jack Lawrence Burgess were united in marriage Saturday evening at eight oclock in a double ring ceremony. Thomas Newman performed the ceremony in Tranters Creek Church of God.
The bride, daughter of Harold Bryan Chauncey of Route 5. Greenville, was given in marriage by her father. Mrs. James Frank Ja.mes of Oklahoma, aunt of the bride, was honor attendant.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Guthrie of Jacksonville. The best man was Other Clark of Goldsboro,
Gail Crisp was pianist for the ceremony.
The bride wore a gown of white chiffon over taffeta styled with a high neckline encircled w i t h i' e -embroidered alencon lace beaded with pearls. Matching beaded lace outlined the sheer scooped yoke and flared butterfly sleeves. The gown had a modified empire
waistline and ruffle chiffon hemline with a sweep train. Her chapel length veil was edged in rosepoint chantilly lace and was attached to a Camelot headpiece. She carried a bouquet of white daisies, yellow rosebuds, boxwood with a white bow and streamers.
The honor attendant wore a yellow polyester dress and
(Please turn to 3)
To Make A Fuss
Youre Only 39 Plus Happy Birthday
Stevie, Donovan, Donna, Kelvin
Dixie Queen Seafood Restaurant
Winterville 756-2333 We Now Have Banquet Facilities
c- Monday, Tuesday ^ Wednesday, & Thursday $
Popcorn Shrimp .... .....
If you like the Calabash Style,
Youll love the DIXIE QUEEN Style!
We Now Have Plenty Of Parking 4:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. Closed Sunday
POOMANg
Shop-Eze Foodland West End Shopping Center (Only) Double Savings Days With
Double Coupon Value
Tuesday And Wednesday
September 6 & 7,1983
Clip The Manufacturers Cents Off Coupons From The Mail, Magazines Or Newspaper Then Bring Them To Shop-Eze Foodland
On Tuesday and Wednesday, September 6 & 7, 1983 only. Shop-Eze Foodland, West End Shopping Center, Greenvme, N.C. will redeem National Manufacturers *0 50C, only for double their Size specified, 'etailer coupons not accepted.',
T accepted. Coupons for free
merchandise excluded from this offer When the
ruNrr,,""?si.o^
of the Item, this offer is limited to retail value. Limit one coffee or cigarette coupon per customer. Limit one double value coupon for any particular item. All others 'ace value. cib
Double Savings With Double Coupons
Value
Example
MFC Cents Of(
Shop-Eze
Foodland
Adds
Total
Coupon
25
25
50
15
15
30
50
50
1 00
70
30
|00
Offer Limited On $10.00 Or More Purchase
POHA
MAHKSTS
4 The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N C
Monday, September 5.1983
Ediforials
Time For Concern
On this Labor Day the nation pauses to pay tribute to all who work at myriad jobs and, in sum total, make this country go.
It is fitting that we do. For most of us, we are paying tribute to ourselves for there are few who do not contribute something of their efforts. It may be in a factory, or office or hospital. It can be in volunteer labor or even in the home.
This year Labor Day is also a time for concern for the rather large number who are unemployed and, indeed, those who may become unemployed because of breath-taking changes in technology.
Our greatest concern today should be in finding the new jobs needed for those who want to work but cannot find positions and for those who may be displaced.
N.C. Commissioner of Labor John C. Brooks said, Our state must not forget the suffering of the long-term unemployed and must use all available resources to ensure that all those people who want to work have the required training to take advantage of newly developed jobs. Our state has a good track record of responding to economic growth challenges, and North Carolinas work force is the primary reason why our state is so highly valued as a location for industry
We trust North Carolina is on top of the problem. Certainly if answers are to be found our state will find them.
A Better Way
Last weeks ordeal endured by many hundreds of people lined up for that food giveaway at the Pitt County Office Building wont be repeated, were sure.
Once was enough for Extension Service Chairman Leroy James, too.
Weve wondered why, after perhaps a score or so of uncomplicated, orderly food distributions, this particular one should have gotten out of control; and the only reason we can come up with is the unprecedented quantities of food to be issued drew an unprecedented number of qualified recipients.
The list included cheese, butter, flour, cornmeal, rice, milk and honey.
It was suggested that people should bring boxes and some means of transporting their goods.
The result was a totally unexpected turnout.
At any rate, whether it is accomplished by spreading out the distribution days by categorizing recipients for specific days ... as suggested by a critic in ^Hotline... or by another system, there will be a better way when the next distribution date rolls around.
You can count on it.
James Kilpatrick
Gender Gap Was Overblown Story
WASHINGTON August normally is the dullest month in our town. The Congress has gone home; the Supreme Court is shut down; the president is off on vacation and, by our parochial standards, absolutely nothing usually goes on.
When nothing is going on. something must be made to go on. And this August, what we contrived was: the Gender Gap!
The summers most overblown story, in my own view, is the story of Ronald Reagan and the gender gap. By some regrettable foul-up in White House logistics, several bus loads of visiting women were turned away from the White Houuse. The president apologized profusely, but some of the women didnt like his apology. Then a 35-year-old aide in the Justice Department, Barbara Honegger by name, leaped into print with charges that Mr. Reagans efforts to rid the
federal code of discriminatory statutes were a sham.
Since then it has been downhill all the way. A three-day battle erupted in the loCal press over when and where, and under what circumstances, Ms. Honegger had worn a bunny suit. I kid you not. At the Justice Department, press chief Tom DeCair recklessly described Ms. Honegger as a low-level mun-, chkin, and so passed another day and night in solemn discourse upon the meaning of munchkin. At the White House, acting press secretary Larry Speakes was questioned about the ^rception of a gender gap; I think we have to articulate the agenda, Speakes replied. All the reporters wrote this on their slates.
Pfui! I see no reason to doubt the raw figures published by the pollsters. The data show that fewer
women than men voted for Reagan in 1980, and there is some indication that the gap is growing. But I have not seen a poll limited to women who actually voted for Reagan in 1980, and this I would like to see. How many such women have firmly changed their minds? I suspect the number is exceedingly few. Whatever the reasons may have been that motivated large numbers of women to oppose Reagan in 1980, those reasons still exist. The president still regards the Eqiial Rights Amendment as unwise; the president still believes in upgrading our national defenses; the president still believes that billions of dollars can be cut from entitlement programs without significant harm to the poor.
What offended the impatient Ms. Honegjger was that nothing had been done in the 98th Congress toward
Paul O'Connor
Waste Disposal Could Be Issue
Don Waters-
Electronic Spying
WASHINGTON i AFi A sophisticated electronic eavesdropping network enabled Secretary of State George P. Shultz to quote directly from conversations Thursday between Russian ground command and the Soviet fighter pilot who allegedly shot down an off-course South Korean jetliner.
Shultzs disclosures of details of the attack over Soviet territory north of Japan spotlighted a vital and shadowy arm of intelligence-gathering, one that involves powerful antennae, radars and space satellites rather than trench-coated spies.
If Shultzs account of the conversations and actions are accurate, they demon strated the detail that electronic data collection can obtain While officials do not discuss the workings of this network openly, it is widely assumed that the .Soviets are aware of the eavesdropping and actively engage in it themselves The result is that it is nearly impossible to hide aircraft movements or communications anywhere in the world. But the United States and the Soviet Union regularly test each others detection capabilities, such as when .Soviet
The Daily Reflector
INCORPORATED
zot Colanch* SirMt. Oraanvllla. N C 27834
EilabHshed 1882 /
PutHlatiad Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning
DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD Chairman of lha Board JOHN S WHICHARD-DAVID J WHICHARD Publlahors SKond Clata Postage Paid at Qreenvllle. N.C.
(USPS 14S-400)
SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable In AdvaiKe Home Deltvery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly 84.00 MAIL RATES (Prlees Includa ua wtiara lepllceblei PI11 And AdlofnIng Counties 84.00 Per Month
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warplanes heading for Cuba occasionally penetrate U.S. airspace along the East Coast and prompt^ a scramble by interceptors
In the case of the Korean Air Lines plane, officials said, some material was provided by a U.S. Air Force electronic security unit on Japans northernmost island of Hokkaido. But they said a listening post operated separately there by the Japanese Self-Defense Forces was the source for a significant amount of the intelligence that made its way to Washington.
Alluding to this. .Shultzs assistant secretary for European affairs. Richard Hurt, said the material was "not just U S technical information " and had to be obtained and translated after the fact.
Two former top intelligence officials said Shultz may have revealed too much about U.S. monitoring abilities when he detailed the Soviet actions.
Stansfield Turner, former Central Intelligence Agency director, said he "was shocked by the amount of detail" that Shultz provided. This, he said, "certainly gave the Soviets a clear readout on just what those (intelligencei capabilities are in that particular area of the world
Bobby Inman, a former National .Security Agency director, also expressed some unease. But he said he was "pleased that the decision was made to announce what had occurred rather than letting the word leak out.
"My experience has been that when the leaks are the source, the damage to sources and methods usually is even worse," Inman told ABC News.
The U S listening post in Hokkaido is one of a worldwide network - once estimated at more than 4,000 - developed after World War II and maintained by the military services and the National Security Agency, a super-secret intelligence operation based at Fort Meade, Md.
In recent years, the ground stations have been bolstered by surveillance .satellites that are able to pick up and relay communications traffic and radar signals as they circle the globe The radio communications and other data are routinely tape-recorded by monitors and examined by NSA analysts to ^ if they have military significance.
Some of the U.S. listening posts, such as the one on Hokkaido, are near Soviet territory. One operated in Iran until Islamic militants overthrew the shahs regime in 1978, and others are in place in Turkey, another Soviet neighbor.
But officials have said that radar signals also can ^ detected from thousands of miles away.
RALEIGH - In Times Beach, Mo., in Love Canal, N.Y.. in hundreds of towns and cities across the country, the problems associated with improperly disposed hazardous wastes have come back to roost. People get sick, people have to sell their houses, voters get angry.
And, in hundreds of other communities, where problems have not yet arisen, people are scared. Scared that what happened in l^ve Canal and Times Beach might happen in heir communities.
North Carolinians have shown the same concerns. In Warren County, the state faced massive civil disobedience as PCB-laden soil was dumped in a landfill. Anson County residents went up in arms when a private firm considered opening a hazardous waste disposal facility.
As the 1984 election campaigns get under way, the environment looms as an issue which might surprise some politicians in this state, I.ook at the polls the candidates are conducting and youll hardly ever find the environment as the single most important issue facing a candidate. That spot invariably goes to either jobs or schools. But. if the candidates ask for the top four or five issues, the environment is almost always there
A staffer for one Democratic candidate
said that their polls show hazardous wastes as the sleeper issue of the coming year, "Its not just an aesthetic issue anymore. Its become a public health issue. And people get scared. Just look at where the issue has been raised. When the issue is raised, it really gets a response. Its a killer, the staffer said.
In the 1984 election, one statewide candidate stands to suffer the most from his stands on the environment. Sen. Harold Hardison, D-Lenoir, is one of the most powerful members of the Legisalature and a candidate for lieutenant governor. He is the architect of the "Hardison amendment, which prohibits the state from writing environmental regulations tougher than those promulgated by the federal government.
He is also the man blamed for the Legislatures failure this year to pass a conprehensive plan for handling hazardous wastes in North Carolina. The N.C. Conservation Council unaffec-tionately refers to him as "Hazardous Hardison
To understand the problem the environment poses for Hardison, one has to understand the kind of campaign well have for lieutenant governor. In a year when North Carolina makes national history with its U.S. Senate race and when almost a dozen cat\didates are-running for governor, the lieutenant
John Cunniff
governor's race will be struggling to get notice. With voters sifting through all the issues raised in other campaigns, the lieutenant governors race could easily become a one-issue race. Manipulated correctly, hazardous wastes could be the issue with which to attack Hardison.
The issue also carries with it a good number of activists who would be willing to work for Hardison's opponents. With all 'nose other races soaking up political workers, the prospects of several hundred or even a thousand committed environmentalists joining the (^dmps of Hardisons two opponents. Bob Jordan' and Carl Stewart, must be disturbing to Hardison,
Hardison says hes not worried. He says an objective assessment of his record would show he's taken responsible stands and that he is for a safe environment. The Conservation Council has a grudge aganst him that grows out of his opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment, he says. When it comes time to vote in 1984, Hardison says, few people will listen to the council.
The danger for Hardison is not that the 600 members of the conservation council get worked up on election day. The danger is that the council and the others candidates tap that underlying public concern about hazardous wastes and wrap it around Hardison's neck.
Directors Are Question Marks
NEW YORK (AF) Where was the board of directors when all the financial troubles began - at Braniff, Wickes, Penn Square, AM International and Washington Public Power? At Chrysler, International Harvester and...
Since boards exist to protect shareholders assets, questions are rising again - as they did in the 1930s and 1970s and in between, too - about the caliber of jobs they can do, or whether they can do their jobs at all.
In fact, says Prof. Eugene Jennings, Michigan State University professor and adviser to directors and managements, there are doubts that boards even have sufficient information with which to do their assigned tasks.
One of the problems, says Jennings, revolves around the subjective term "best judgment," which boards are entrusted to use in whatever actions they take.
Judgment, he observes, depends upon experience, meaning past policies and practices of an industry that offer guidance. But, he maintains, in many industries in these turbulent times there are no landmarks." ^
Where, he asks, were the landmarks for Braniffs board when airlines were faced with the brand new experience of deregulation? And when public utilities were faced with outside restraints from environmentalists and others?
Boards function best in a steady-state economy that presents *few twists, turns and surprises, he comments. But
today there is no such consistency."
Lett without landmarks, boards are further hamstrung by a heritage that prohibits moving against poor managements until it becomes obvious that shareholder assets are in jeopardy or about to be jeopardized.
Based on observations over three decades, Jennings believes that "unless 'the chief executive officer cannot be dealt with at all, most boards bend over backward to make sure management has their support.
In some instances, it seems, their hesitancy to act might be based on an information lack. Good judgment, says Jennings, requires not only experience but good information, and information is more than just data;
Data are facts, but information is data that are relevant, which suggests some kind of end use, purpose or objective, he explains.
Unless boards are privy to the actual goals and objectives of management, they can have lots of data and little information, And some managements, he has found, may have disquised their goals from the board.
Even if the agenda is clear, and corporate goals are open and understood, there still might be confusion about the board's role, What is a weak board, what is a strong board? 'he asks. We havent yet defined it. '
One weakness the professor has observed is inherent in the b(oards group
structure. It is called levelling," a process of compromise and consensus in which a group produces a decision less wise than its individuals could make.
But however difficult it is for a board to function, says Jennings, it probably can do a better job if it becomes privy to the data used in strategical planning, which many companies now use to reduce uncertainty about the future.
If boards are to have the necessary wisdom to change management before a situation becomes desperate they must have more than the data that most boards get a day or week before the board meeting, he says.
Even then, he believes, .wise investors know that you cannot look to the board of directors to determine if shareholders assets are being protected. You look for the quality of management rather than board quality, he says.
Does this mean that most boards are failures?
> I am not an apologist for boards, said the professor, who has helped managers pick boards and boards pick managers. I am trying to place them in the proper perspective.
No matter how well constructed, and despite guidelines from the Securities and Exchange Commission, he said, boards cannot be relieved of the dilemma of seeking wisdom in uncertainty.
There is, he said, little wisdom to guide ther m^oagements or boards in this decade of radical change."
repeal or amendment of discriminatory statues now on the books. But something had been done At the administrations request, Sen Bob Dole of Kansas introduced a bili to deal with roughly lOo such statutes. The bill has been languishing in a subc(mimittee of the Judiciary Committee, but you can bet your best bunny suit that it will be homing toward the floor this month
This is the kind of thing the bill wili correct: More than a hundred years ago, Congress passed a law dealing with the ^uthern Ute Indians. These Indians could be removed from their tribal lands with consent of (he majority of the adult male tribal members. The computers of the Justice Department searched and found that offending word, male, and thus the discriminatory statute was kicked out for review. The Dole bill would repeal that law.
Now this may come as a terrible blow to the Barbara Honeggers of this world, but honestly, maam, the possibility should be considered that the president of the United States and the chairman of Senate Finance have had more important issues on their minds these past six months than the disfranchisement of female Utes a century ago. It is hard to conceive that possibility, I know, but let us try.
Public
Forum
To the editor:
As I write this letter, I am outraged, as I believe every citizen of the civilized world should be. The news is still filtering in of the shocking premeditated murder of 269 innocent people, including a United States congressman and a number of other Americans, by the Soviet Union.
The hideous, barbaric act of blasting an unarmed civilian passenger airliner out of the sky must serve as a reminder to some and a warning to all that the Soviet communists are evil, deceitful and godless. They will not hesitate to use violence when it suits their purpose. It is obvious that the decision to commit this savage unwarranted attack came from high in the Soviet government, as do the flagrant lies with regard to the events that occurred.
No doubt, the apologists for the Soviet Union will come up with all manner of excuses and the liberals will continue to soft-pedal that communists are merely of a different philosophy and not really dangerous to the people or sovereignty of th^Unfted States.
The so-called Greenville Peace Committee and others of that ilk who seek to weaken this nations defenses should carefully consider their objectives in the light of this international lawlessness on the part of the Soviets. I am sure they mean well, but they should ask themselves what kind of peace can be made with such a regime.
As I hear the news that Japanese ships heading toward the crash site on search and rescue missions were turned away by Soviet warships and think of these helpless victims and the families they leave behind, I am just sickened. If this horrible tragedy causes the American people to recognize the Soviet Union for what it really is, these people will not have died in vain.
Hal McKinney Greenville
Elisha Douglass
Strength For Today
In a slave market centuries ago stood a sullen group of war captives being sold into slavery. Conspicuous among them were certain blond youths with fair skin.
A monk paused before the unfortunate group and inquired about their race and former abode. They replied they were Angles.
Not Angles, but angels, said the monk, for they have the faces of angels and should be co-heirs with the angels of heaven.
For the years the memory of these people remained in the monks mind. Finally, when the monk became Pope Gregory I, he sent missionaries to Germany where the Angles and their neighboring tribe, the Saxons, were located. They were converted to Christianity and, after the fall of the Roman Empire, emigrated to Britain.
Whenever we question the value of Christian missions we should remember that the English-speaking people of today are the descendents of those primitive tribesmen who received their religion from missionaries.
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THE DAILY REFLECTORMONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 5, 1983
Kush Finally Wins First Game With Colts
By The Associated Press
While five National Football League rookie coaches made successful debuts over the weekend, it was a long time coming and more for second-year coach Frank Kush.
Kush, whose Colts finished a dismal 0-8-1 last season, earned his first NFL victory Sunday as Baltimore had to go into overtime to defeat the New England Patriots 29-23.
Linebacker Johnie Cooks went 52 yards down the left sideline for the winning touchdown after the Patriots Tony Collins fumbled on the third play of overtime. It was the Colts first victory since defeating the Patriots 23-21 on Dec. 20,1981 and only tte second in their last 25 games.
First-year head coaches posting victories were the New York Jets Joe Walton (41-29 over San Diego), Atlantas Dan Henning (20-17 over Chicago), the Los Angeles Rams John Robinson (16-6 over the New York Giants), Philadelphias Marion Campbell (22-17 over San Francisco) and Kansas Citys John Mackovic (17-13 over Seattle).
Two other rookie coaches watched their teams go down to defeat - the New York Giants Bill Parcells (to the Rams) and Buffalos Kay Stephenson (12-0 to Miami).
Elsewhere in the NFL, Green Bay turned back Houston 41-38 in overtime, Denver edged Pittsburgh 14-10, Detroit topped Tampa Bay 11-0, the Los Angeles Raiders trimmed Cincinnati 20-10 and Minnesota defeated Cleveland 27-21.
The Super Bowl champion Washington Redskins entertain the Dallas Cowboys Monctey night. '
This was a great team effort, Kush said. We came back and showed a little poise. We had a lot of opportunities to collapse.
The Colts sent the game into overtime tied 23-23 on Raul Allegros third field goal of the game, a 33-yarder with no time left. New England had forged ahead 23-20 on Robert Weathers 9-yard touchdown run with 1:09 remaining in the fourth period.
Mike Pagel connected on TD passes of 5 yards and 16 yards to Bernard Henry to complete Baltimores scoring.
Steve Grogan fired touchdown passes of 73 yards to rookie Stephen Starring and 50 to Stanley Morgan to give the Pats a 13-3 lead in the second quarter and John Smith kicked a 39-yard field goal in the third period for a 16-13 advantage.
Jets 41, Chargers 29
Running back Freeman McNeil rushed for 120 yards and two touchdowns, including the decisive TD on an 18-yard pass from Richard Todd with 6:43 to go in the game, to lead the Jets.
A TV timeout nullified a kickoff to the Jets before McNeils TD reception. On the second kick, the Jets Kirk Springs returned it 64 yards.
Skins Host Dallas For Packed House
NBC producer Larry Cirillo said the play was started over because the referee allowed the kickoff before the network gave approval following a commercial break.
New York put the game out of reach with two minutes remaining when cornerback Johnny Lynn picked off a Dan Fouts pass at the San Diego 23. Mike Augustyniak scored the insurance TD on a 1-yard run.
Todd, who completed 17 of 29 passes for 160 yards, also had a 26-yard touchdown pass to Wesley Walker. The Jets other scoring came on Dwayne Crutchfields l-yard run and field goals of 32 and 27 yards by Pat Leahy.
Fouts completed 20 of 36 passes for 356 yards and was intercepted twice. He had two fourth-quarter touchdown passes 29 yards to Bobby Duckworth and 33 to Charlie Joiner. Chuck Muncie, gaining 55 yards on 14 carries, scored on TD runs of 1 and 2 yards.
Falcons 20, Bears 17
Steve Bartkowskis 21-yard scoring pass to Alfred Jenkins in the fourth quarter lifted the Falcons to victory. The nine-year veteran quaterback, who completed 14 of 23 passes for 201 yards, also had a 23-yard TD pass to William Andrews in the first quarter.
The Bears had takn a 17-13 lead late in the third period on Anthony Hutchinsons 2-yard run. Atlanta came right back as ^Bartkowski moved the Falcons 81 yards on seven plays, cappd by JenkinsTD catch.
Chicago had rallied in the second quarter to move ahead
10-6 on Jim McMahons 8-yard TD pass to Ken Mangerum and Bob Thomas29-^rd field goal.
Rams 16. Giants 6
Mike Barber caught seven passes from Vince Ferragamo for 93 yards, two going for touchdowns, and the Rams defense put a stranglehold on the Giants offense"in gaining the victory.
Ferragamo finished with 279 passing yards on 17 completions in 28 attempts and rookie running back Eric Dickerson, a first-round draft choice out of Southern Methodist, contributed wiht 91 yards on 31 carries for the Rams.
New York quarterback Scott Brunner had a long afternoon, with five sacks and three interceptions. The only bright spot for the Giants was the running of Rob Carpenter, who had 113 yards on 17 carries, including a 4-yard TD run that gave New York a 6-3 lead in the second quarter.
Chiefs 17, Seahawks 13
Coach Chuck Knoxs debut with Seattle was spoiled as Bill Kenney keyed the Chiefs with 19 of 32 {wssing for 247 yards, including a 9-yard scoring pass in the first quarter to Henry Marshall.
Kansas City also scored on running backs Jewerl Thomas 18-yard pass to Carlos Carson in the third quarter and Nick Lowerys 19-yard field goal in the final period.
The Seahawks took a 3-0 lead on Norm Johnsons 35-yard field goal in the first period. Johnson added a 48-yarder in the
third period and Jim Zorn completed an 18-yard TD pass to Curt Warner with 3:16 to play in the game.
Packers 41, Oilers 38
Jan Steneruds 42-yard field goal with 9:05 left in overtime lifted Green Bay. Quarterback Lynn Dickey sparked for the Packers, completing a club-record 18 straight passes at the start of the game, and finishing with 27 completions in 31 attempts for 333 yards and five touchdowns.
Dickeys performance overshawdowed that of Houstons Earl Campbell, who scored three touchdowns and rushed for 123 yards. Both players went to the sidelines late in the game, Dickey with back s^sms and Campbell, a bruised knee.
Broncos 14, Steelers 10
Rookie quarterback John Elway got a rough reception by the Steelers, but veteran Seve DeBerg came to the rescue for Denver. Elway connected on only one of eight passes, was sacked four times for 26 yards and was intercepted once in the first quarter before going to the bench with a bruised right elbow.
DeBergs 2-yard TD pass to Ron Egloff with 2:54 to play provided the winning margin. The Broncos other points came on Sammy Winders 1-yard run in the second quarter for a 7-0 lead.
Pittsburgh tied the game 7-7 at the half when Franco Harris scored from 4 yards out on a sweep and went ahead in the
I Please turn to page 111
WASHINGTON (AP) - It will be an early-season showdown as the Super Bowl champion Washington Redskins host the Dallas Cowboys tonight before a standing-room-only crowd at Robert F. Kennedy Stadium and a nationwide television audience.
The game will be a rematch of last Januarys NFC Championship, won by Washington 31-17.
John Riggins, who rushed 36 times for 140 yards and one touchdown will start for Washington along with quarterback Joe Theismann.
Redskin running back Joe Washington, sidelined last year with bad knees, is back and will split duty with Riggins in Washingtons single-back offense.
The key to beating the Dallas Cowboys is to gain three or four yards on first down and not getting third-and-long, said Theismann.
Theismann, who was sacked seven times and intercepted three times by the Cowboys in a regular-season loss to Dallas, came back in the
playoffs to lead^his team to victory.
They did things in the first game that they had never done before in a regular season like blitzing nine guys at once, said Redskin guard Mark May. We changed things for the second game (in the playoffs). If they ever do it again we will be ready.
Tonight, the Redskins will be missing four starters from the team that stopped Dallas last year and then went on to beat Miami in Super Bowl XVII.
Guard Fred Dean has jumped to the United States Football League, defensive end Mat Mendenhall left camp this summer for personal reasons, cornerback Jeris White is unsigned and safety Tony Peters has been suspended by the league while he awaits sentencing on a drug charge.
May has moved into Deans spot on the offensive line. Todd Liebenstein, who pushed Mendenhall during the summer, has taken over at left end.
Braves Victory Cuts Game Off L.A. Lead
By The .Associated Press The Atlanta Braves just havent been the same since third baseman Bob Horner broke his wrist against the San Diego Padres on Aug. 15. It obviously hasnt affected Dale Murphy of late, though.
Murphy, who usually bats in front of Horner, isnt seeing the best pitches since the Braves slugger has been out of the lineup - but it hasnt stopped him from one of his hottest hitting binges of the season in the past week.
Murphy knocked in four runs with his 27th and 28th homers of the year, giving him 13 hits in his last 19 at-bats, to pace the Braves to a big 6-5 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates Sunday. The RBIs gave Murphy 13 in his last 14 games.
The victory, the Braves sixth in 20 games since Homer was injured, snapped a six-game losing streak for Atlanta, which moved within 2*2 games of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League West. The Dodgers dropped a 3-2 decision to the Montreal Expos in 12innings.
Ive just been trying not to be a burden with Horner out, said Murphy. This isnt any time to give up.
In other National League action, Chicago outscored Houston 9-7; St. Louis nipped Cincinnati 5-4; San Francisco whipped Philadelphia 10-4 and
San Diego turned back New York7-5.
Murphys fourth- and sixth-inning home runs, driving in Claudell Washington each time, knocked out Jose DeLeon and handed starter Craig McMurtry a 4-1 lead that he and Gene Garber promptly dissipated.
Johnny Rays third single of the game, a two-run job, highlghted a four-run seventh inning that put the Pirates ahead 5-4 before the Braves rallied for their winning runs in the eighth. Murphy triggered the rally with a single and scored on Chris Chambliss double, and the winning run came home on an error by first baseman Lee Mazzilli.
Terry Forster, 3-2, got the victory with relief help from Steve Bedrosian, who posted his 19th save. Jim Bibby, 4-11, was the loser.
Expos 3, Dodgers 2
In Montreal, Tim Raines hit an RBI-single with none out in the 12th inning to lift the Expos over the Dodgers. Chris Speier led off the 12th with a double off Pat Zachry, 5-1, before scoring the winning run.
Gary Carter had tied the game in the eighth for Montreal with a two-out RBI-single. Reliever Dan Schatzeder, 5-2, pitched three innings of no-hit ball to earn the victory.
Helping Hand
Umpire AI Conway (27) grabs the jersey of Houston Oilers running back Earl Campbell (34) to protect himself, and in doing so, helps safety
Maurice Harvey (23) of the Green Bay Packers bring Campbell down after an 11-yard run for a first down Sunday during the second quarter at the Astrodome. (AP Laserphoto)
Pirates-NCSU Broadcast Slated For WTBS System
Boxer Dies Of Head Injuries
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Kiko Bejines, a young boxer who captivated Southern California crowds with his aggressive ring style and boyish appearance, has died of head injuries suffered in a title fight.
Already a veteran of 41 pro fights, he was only 20.
Friends and relatives had kept a hopeful vigil at Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center since Bejines was knocked out by Albert Davila in^he 12th round of their Boxing Council ban-tamwet^Mlgnipionship fight Thursday night. But Bejines,
Sports Calendar
Editors Note: Schedules are supplied by schools or sponsoring agencies and are subject to change without notice.
Todays Sports Soccer
Rose at Wilson Tournament ' Football
Rose at Jacksonville (7 ;30 p.m.) Williamston at Farmville Central (7;30p.m.)
Tuesdays Sports Tennis Tarboro at Roanoke Roanoke Rapids at Washington Rose at Hunt (3;30p.m.)
Greene Central at East Duplin Soccer
Rose at Wilson Tournament Pfeiffer at East Carolina (3 p.m.)
the eldest of three boxing brothers from Guadalajara, Mexico, never regained consciousness.
He died Sunday morning of massive cerebral contusions, said medical center spokesman Tony Tripi.
On the same day. Bejines wife, Rosario, went into a hospital in Guadalajara, where she was expected to give birth to the couples first child.
Bejines, who carried a 37-3 record and the WBCs No.3 ranking into the bout for the vacant 118-pound cham-)ionship, had undergone lours of surgery on Friday, during which a team of surgeons removed a small portion of the frontal lobe of his brain and part of his skull.
The fighter had been hooked up to a respirator, but his heart was beating on its own until he died, Tripi said.
Bejines becomes the third fighter to die from injuries suffered in a championship bout in this decade and the second to die after a fight at the Olympic Auditorium in the past three year^
Ironically, Bejines and Davila were fighting for the title vacated by Lupe Pintor of Mexico. Pintor had fatally injured Welshman Johnny Owen in the 12th round of their championship bout in 1980. Owen died 44 days after he sustained head injuries in the bout.
The other filter to die recently of injuries suffered in
Take a look at
a title bout was South Koreas Duk Koo Kim, who died Nov. 17,1982, four days after being knocked out by Ray Mancini in a light heavyweight championship match in Las Vegas, Nev.
According to Ring Magazine, Bejines death was the 341st due to fight injuries since 1945.
Bejines had seemed to have the upper hand in the fight against Davila, a 29-year-old veteran from Pomona, Calif., who was the top-ranked contender with a 51-7 record. Bejines was actually ahead on points on two judges cards and even on the other going into the 12th round, the final 'ound scheduled.
Neither boxer, however, had
been able to land any telling blows, until Davila, known more for his skill than power, opened the 12th with a flurry of punches.
A sharp left jab followed by ' a hard right seemed to do the most damage, as Bejines stumbled backward and into the lower rope. The young fighter, looking dazed, attempted to regain his feet but sunk again to the canvas and referee Wildemar Schmidt called it off just 33 seconds into the round.
East Carolina Universitys annual showdown against North Carolina State will be telecast nationally on WTBS-TV, it was announced Sunday.
Kickoff time has been switched to 8:12 p.m. to facilitate the broadcast, which will cover the 50 states, Canada, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
The telecast will be the most extensive coverajge of a Pirate football conte^ccording to Ken Smith, A^stant Athletic Director for Pu^ Relations.
The announcement came from Atlanta office of Ted Turners "Suj^rStation and followed the Pirates 47-46 loss to Florida State.
An additional 500 tickets to the East C'^ a r o 1 i n a University-N.C. State football
game to be played this Saturday at Carter-Finley Stadium will go on sale Tuesday at 8 a.m. at the Athletic Ticket Office in Minges Coliseum.
The tickets are for the grassy banks in the end zone and are $12. All reserved seats for the game have been sold.
The Quarterback Club will meet Tuesday at 5:30-6:45 in the Pirate Club Building.
There will be a charge of $3 per person for heavy hors doeuvres and beverages. Head coach Ed Emory will speak from 6:15-6:45.
Thats a big game for us and not just because the two teams ahead of us lost, said Raines. We came from behind and its important for us to win that type of ballgame.
Its a good sign, a sign that were starting to play well. Getting a big hit at the right time sometimes is all you need to get you going again."
Cubs 9, .Astros 7 In Chicago, Carmelo Martinez hit a two-out. three-run homer in the eighth inning to lead the Cubs to a comeback victory over Houston,
Bill Doran had driven in four runs, three with a homer, to help the Astros take a 7-5 lead going into the eighth. But with one out, Dave Smith walked Keith Moreland and then gave up a single to Dan Rohn, before yielding to Bill Dawley, the third Astros pitcher.
Dawley, 6-6, struck out Jody Davis to gain the second out, but gave up an RBI-single to Jay Johnstone before grooving a 1-1 delivery to Martinez.
Warren Brusstar, 3-1, who worked 2 2-3 innings before Lee Smith came on in the ninth, gained the victory. The save was the league-leading 24th for Smith.
Cardinals 5, Reds 4 In St. Louis, Willie McGee singled home Lonnie Smith from second base in the ninth inning to lead the Cardinals over Cincinnati.
McGees hit came off Cincinnati reliever Ben Hayes. 2-6, giving the victory to Jeff Lahti. 3-1. Smith opened the inning with a double, his second hit, and Hayes afterward walked Ozzie Smith intentionally to set up the game-winning blow.
Cincinnatis Johnny Bench, honored by fans during pregame ceremonies, slugged a three-run homer in a pinch-hit role to give Cincinnati a 4-4 tie in the eighth inning. The blow. Benchs 388th career homer, came off Cardinals relief ace Bruce Sutter.
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The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N C
Researchers Say Test Can Reveal Depression
CHICAGO (AP) - De->ression can be caused by ow levels of an amphetamine-like chemical in me brain and the absence of that chemical can be discovered through a urine test, doctors say.
Depression, which can be masked by such disor^rs as alc(rfM)lism, loss of sex drive, marital discord, chronic pain or other behavioral problems, could be better de
tected in a urine test being s t u d i e d a t Rush-Presbyterian-St. Lukes Medical Center, I^ysicianssaid.
We think this is a reliable test for deiM-ession that can lead to better diagnosis and better treatment, said Dr. Hector C, Sabelli, director of Rushs psychobiology laboratory.
Sabelli and his colleagues
Widow Suinb For Royalties
MICHELOB CVP WINNER - A crew member ol Never Mowe jubilantly holds up the sailboat s entry number as the finish line is crossed. Never Moore, captained by Andy
Denmark of Raleigh, finished the race from Oriental to New Bern in approximately six hours beating out 154 competitors. (Reflector Photo hy Mary Schulken)
Paying Homage To Sen. Jackson
EVERETT, Wash. (AP) -Dignitaries who knew him well joined admirers who knew only what he had dpne as thousands of mourners gathered to say goodbye to U.S.I Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington.
About 2,000 people visited Solie Funeral Home in Everett as Jacksons closed casket was displayed for the public Sunday, the first of three days set aside for public viewing.
I think its important for our children to be here, said Kathleen Giyan, who had never met Jackson but paid respects to the veteran lawmaker with her husband and two sons.
Its important for them to know about this man. I just feel so badly for his family and for the whole country, too.
He was a hometown boy, you know, said Ann Gaston, a spokeswoman for Solie Funeral Home. Most of the mourners were from the Everett area, she said.
The 71-year-old Democrat died at an Everett hospital Thursday night after suffering a heart attack in bed at his nearby home.
A public memorial service was scheduled for the Everett Civic Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, because it would be impossible to accommodate all who wished to attend a Wednesday noon service for the family and dignitaries, family members said.
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) - The widow of a Wake Forest University law professor has sued a publishing company for royalities on a book her husband wrote but was later revised by someone else.
Alice J. Webster of Winston-Salem, widow of James A. Webster Jr., is asking for damages in excess of $10,000 from The Michie Co. of Charlottesville, Va., for breach of the contract her husband had with the publishing company.
Webster, a law professor at Wake Forest for almost 25
years, died at the age of 51 in October 1978.
According to the suit, filed in early August, royalty payments to Mrs. Webster stopped in 1981, apparently because of a contract provision that the author would not receive royalties on any future editions of the book not prepared by him.
Greenville is a growing City! Population - 36,803; Area of City -16.159 square miles; 1983-84 Tax Rate 53.5( per $100 property valuation.
some years ago linked depression with low levels of phenylethylamine (PEA) in the brain. Tests on hundreds of people have shown that 70 percent of the depressed patients had markedly lower levels of PEA than healthy individuals, Sabelli said.
He said PEA levels in depressed patients increase toward normal ranges as medical treatment brings them out of their depression.
PEA is a substance that is constantly made and almost immediately broken down by the brain. PEA appears to trigger or sustain wakefulness, alertness, excitement and pleasure.
Sabelli said abnormally low amounts of PEA causes a lack of interest and concentration, loss of pleasure, forgetfulness, withdrawal from other people and other symptoms characteristic of depression.
Rush researchers hqve developed a way of tracing PEA by measuring a key
Monday. September 5.1983 5
breakdown product called phenyl acetate (PAA), which is excreted in the urine.
These results suggest that low PAA urinary excretion may be a reliable ... marker for the diagnosis of some forms of unipolar major depressive disorders, said Sabelli.
The PAA urine test may not only be helpful in monitoring patient recovery from depression, but also in disgnosing people whose depression is camouflaged by anotheMroblem, he said.
Many these people are not being appropriately treated because their underlying depression has not been recognized," he said. They may be getting sex therapy, marital counseling or long psychotherapy without getting better.
Researchers at Rush have recently found that certain dietary supplements may be able to increase brain PEA levels in some patients, Sabello said.
Preliminary findings from a study involving 40 severely depressed patients showed that in 10 of them, depression lifted after they took dosages of phenylalanine, an arnino acid, and vitamin B6, he sai""
Vice President George Bush will attend the service Wednesday as personal representative of President Reagan and as a longtime friend of the senator. Bushs office said.
Bush planned to fly from Washington to Seattle aboard Air Force Two Wednesday morning, and members of Congress and other dignitaries probably will be on the plane, the announcement said.
Another mourner who viewed Jacksons casket Sunday was Fe Macadog, whose stepbrother immigrated to the United States from the Philippines with the senators help.
My stepfather wrote Sen. Jackson when his son was having trouble immigrating, she recalled.
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Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer. PeT order, please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good during regular breakfast menu hours through September 14,1983.
SGEG COI- OJ COUPON SAUSAGE BISC
A MUSHROOM H'SWISS" BURGER,REGUUUI FRIES AND MEDIUM SOFT DRINK SI J9
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering. One coupon per customer. Per order please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers.
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours through September 14,1983.
MUSH. REG FRY. MED OK . MEAL DEAL MUSH
:1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc
: 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc
TWO HUI Biscuns $1.29
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good during regular breakfast menu hours September 15 - 21,1983.
2 HAM BISC ? LESS HAM BiSC
IWOBKDBini
BnGRS$L29
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order, please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours September 15 - 21,1983.
2, DELUXE. 2/LESS. DELUXE
: 1983 Hardees Food Systems. Inc
: 1983 Hardees Food Systems. Inc
A BACON & EGG BISCUIl COFFEE AND FIORIDAORANGE IUKE$I.19
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order, please Customermustpay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good during regular breakfast menu hours September 22 - 28,1983.
BCEG COF OJ COUPON, BACON BISC
UNO MUSHROOM'ir SWISS BURGERS SI29
Offer good at participating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per dfder. please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours September 22 - 28,1983.
2. MUSH. 2/LESS. MUSH
; 1983 Hardees Food Systems Inc
c 1983 Hardees Food Systems. Inc
ASAUSMEftESG
BISCMf69*
Offer good at participating Hardeesj-estaurantsyPlease present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order, please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good during regular breakfast menu hours September 29 October 5,1983.
SGEG REDUCED SAUSAGE BISC
AlUWON CHEESEBURGER, REGULAR FRIES AND MEDIUM S0FTDRINKSL99
Offer good at patlicipating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordering One coupon per customer, per order please Customer must pay any sales tax due Coupon not good in combination with any other offers
Offer good after regular breakfast menu hours September 29 October 5,1983.
B CB. REG FRY. MED DK , MEAL DEAL. B CB
c 1983 Hardees Food Systems, Inc
: 1983 Hardees Food Systems. Inc
093 OPPORTUNITY
H^R SEASONS RESTAURANT
srji:rN.r
cocktail
Oointard 7M-515* aft^S.
ULF SEkVIC StTiN Iri
Washington, NX. tor (ei3 if
109 HouiMForSale
FARMER'S HOME assumption in Aydtn. Call Darrell Hignite for more details at Aldridge A Southerland, 7S 3S00, nights 355-2S56
FlkST NOME RUYERSI Excellent
5''*^* * ^ Streets, Highway 17 Call Durham SM-8240, ask for C^rll# Jones and Tom Lindley betwen i am and 5 pm
LIST OR bur your business with C-J Harris A Co., Inc. Financial A
Marketing Consultants. Serving the Southeastern United States ^eenvllle, N.C. 757 0001,
nights
RESTAURANT for sale.
operation
l^ated leM than 10 minutes from 0310 75 0702
W5 professional
SWEEP GId Holloman. North Carolina's original chimney sweep 25 years experience working on chimneys and fireplaces. Call day or night, 753 3^03, Farmvllle.
100
REAL ESTATE
102 ComiTxrcial Property DhUHi
COMMERCtAL OFFICE SPACE
tor rent available In Industrial Park on Staton Court Building has 9000 square tect with 5400 carpeted for office space. 12 month lease required. Call Clark-Branch, Real-753*5147***^ or Ray Holloman
first home with assumable FHA 235 loan. Payments are adjusted to your income! Call Darrell Hignite for more details at Aldridge A Southerland. 756-3500, nights 355 2556
Rome reduced $3S00. Owner
113
Land For Salt
WOODED LANDSCAPED lot near Ayden with well and septic tank. Serious inquiries only. 746 4669
11s
Lots For Sale
121 Apartmanh For Rant
EXTRA LARGE ONE BEDROOM
Completely furnished, next
to
AYDEN COUNTRY CLUE.
REDUC
must selly Well established neighborhood. Winterville school district. Brick veneer ranch - 3 bedrooms, IW baths, central heat and air, wooded lot. $53,500 Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904 756 1997.
NEW LISTING Lynndale. Lovely beautiful and spacious. A four bedroom and 2*'2 bath ranch home with foyer, living room and dining room, all with hardwood floors family room with fireplace breakfast area, solarium, double garage or playroom, walk up stairs to attic. Separate storage building. ....... Duffus Realty Inc., 756
$130,500 5395
NEW LISTING. Wooded corner lot quiet neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, 1 baths, family room, neat kitchen living room, porch. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, Lyle 756 2904, 756 1997
NEW LISTING. Exclusive Davis Realty. Doll house - country brick veneer ranch. Large lot, almost like new, 6 miles from Greenville Cheerful kitchen, tastefully deco rated in earth tones, 3 bedrooms, baths. Assume FmHA plus equity to qualified buyeC. Low $40's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, Lyle
Davis at night 756-2904 or Rhesa
1M
Farms For Sale
too ACRE FARM - 1 mile from Sunshine Garden Center. Suited for farm or development. 756 5891 or 752 3318.
7 ACRES - 26 cleared, 1983 allotments, 4,018 pounds tobacco, 3,838 peanuts. On Paved Road 1517, approximately 1 mile off NC 903. Stokes Area. Call 758 2734 after 7.
IM
Houses For Sale
ASSUME 1044% FmHA LOAN plus equity Almost like new Brick veneer ranch 2 large bedrooms. 1 bath, large family room, handy kitchen and utility. Winterville school district. Only $39,900. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 1997, 756 2904.
ASSUME 9Vj% LOAN assumption $428.60 PITI. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath, den with formal areas, fenced in backyard, carport. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 1997, 756 2904.
ASSUME 9Vi% LOAN assumption $428.60 PITI. Immaculate 3 bedroom, 2 bath, den with formal areas, fenced in backyard, carport. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 1997, 756 2904.
ATTRACTIVE BRICK v4neer ranch. Beautiful landscaped corner lot, trees, immaculate 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, neat kitchen. Low $50's Call Davis Realty 752 3000, Lyle 756 2904,756 1997
ATTRACTIVE MODULAR HOME
on brick foundation. Over 1,400 square feet. Spacious kitchen, kitchen island and breakfast area. 3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, good size den, all appliances remain. Low $40's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
Tucker 355 2:
ighi
574
NO MONEY DOWN
That's right! We will build on your lot. Plenty of mortgage money, red tape. Call 758 3171 for Darrell
PRETTY AS A PICTURE! :
bedrooms. Hit baths, carport, slid ing glass doors with large deck Lots of extras. Farmers Home Assumption Shamrock Terrace Call The Evans Company 752-2814, nights Listing Broker, Faye Bowen 756-5258 or Winnie Evans 752 4224
QUALITY can be easily detected in this well decorated 3 bedroom, bath home. Large corner wooded
lot, provides attractive setting for the bay window in kitchen, a beautiful greatroom with fireplace, woodstove. Price reduced to $68,500. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
SITUATED ON CORNER LOT. 3
bedrooms, I'/j baths, large kitchen, family room with fireplace, heat pump, huge attic, patio, garage
epiac
afio.
wired for 220. Needs some love and tender care. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
SITUATED on a beautiful wooded lot in country. Good neighborhood Almost like new. 1 story home with 1,500 square feet. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large den with fireplace, dining area, heat pump. $65,900. Call Davis Really 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997.
STARTER HOME. Assume loan, no credit check. Payments less than $400 a month. Possibility of some owner financing Will possibly rent with option fo buy. 3 bedrooms, central heat, deck, good size lot. Low $30's. Call Davis Realty 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997.
BRICK VENEER DUPLEX.
Positive cash flow. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, utility, family room, heat pump. $48,000 Call Davis Really 752 3000, 756 2904, 756 1997
BY OWNER. New log home near Ayden on quiet country road. 1900 square feet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, lot size negotiable. By appointment, R H. McLawhorn, 756 2750 or 975 2688
BY OWNER. FmHA loan assumption 3 bedrooms, P2 baths. Weathington Heights 756 3968, 752 4661, 756 3134
BY OWNER. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, laundry room, kitchen, dining
li ......
room, living room with fireplace.
garage workshop $46,000 2603 East 4th Street. Call 758 7997 aHer 6 p.m
BY OWNER. Extra nice with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room and fireplace, fenced yard 832 East AAain Street, Winterville. $56,500. Appointments only 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. 756 7777 No Realtors
CHERRY OAKS $10,000 cash, assume 1st and 2nd mortgages, 3 bedroom, 2Vibath - Owner. 756-8073. ELMHURST
Assume 8'/ii FHA loan, 3 bedroom brick ranch, large kitchen, formal areas, fireplace, heat pump, garage Low $60's 756 4987
EXCELLENT LOAN assumption in Lake Glenwood. Graduated pay ments make this ah attractive buy!
>uy!
Call Darrell Hignite lor more de
tails at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500. nights 355 2556 EXCELLENT
BUY, owner must sell! Reduced Low $60's. Almost 1,600 square feet Assume 9' j% FHA loan plus equity. Payments approximately $446.77 PITI. 3 large bedrooms, kitchen with fireplace, large fenced in backyard, excellent neighborhood. Call Davis Realty 752 3000 or Lyle Davis at night 756 2904
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT!
Brick veneer ranch good slarter home. 3 bedrooms, I' j baths, living room, dining room, kitchen. Assume 8'/]% loan tor approximately $10,000. Payments approximately $219.34 PITI. Call Davis Realty 752 3000 or Lyle Davis at night 756 2904.
TWO FIREPLACES and four bedrooms for less than $100,000. Only $79,900 in Cherry Oaks Call Darrell Hignite for more details at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights 355 2556.
VETERANS; Points and closing costs will be paid by the seller on this ranch located outside town on a corner lot! $48,500. Call Darrell Hignite for more details at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500, nights 355 2556
WOOD BURNINGoil fired furnace with this lovely new cedar siding home! Points paid by builder! Only $54,900. Call Darrell Hignite for more details at Aldridge & Southerland, 756 3500. nights 355 2556.
212 ARLINGTON
bedrooms, 1 bath, vestment or couple b Reduced to $29,500 Real Estate, 752 2615.
CIRCLE, 3
excellent in ginners home. Bill Williams
111 Investment Property
FOR SALE: 5 chair hair salon. Good location. Send all inquires to Hair Salon. PO Box 340, Greenville, NC 27834
113
Land For Sale
Vi ACRE plus wooded lot and house on paved road in Grimesland $5,500 756 1795 after 5 p.m BEAUTIFUL LOT tor sale 5 acres.
4'/4 acres wooded and ^4 acres
cleared. Land use permit issued by Health Department. Ready to build
on. 300 teet road fronta^ from Greenville on Highway
jge. 12 miles Highway 43 South. Priced for quick sale at $11,000 Only $1,000 down. Owner will provide financing of balance, with approved credit. Call 756 2682 or 757 1191
Want
Class
to Mil llvMtock? Run
lassified ad tor quick response.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
3 acre
lot for sale on end of cul-de sac. $6,000. Call W. G. Blount A Associates, 756 3000. Evenings Bob Barker, 975 3179.
BROOK VALLEY
Beautifwl 120' wide lot with lots of trees bordering the lake on Windsor Read. 756-7654 days; 752-6913 nights.
HANRAHAN MEADOWS. 100' x 200'. On State Road 1110 between Ayden and Griffon. Septic tank permits. Sale price $4000. $500 down payment, with payments of $92.16 a month, based on a 48 month term at 12APR Annual Percentage Rate. Call 756 2682 for further information.
LOT FOR MOBILE HOME,
approximately 1 acre in Winterville School District, I
leveled and cleared. Call 756 7097 or 757 1898 days, 756 8764 after 6. ask for Bill or Pat.
THE PINES In Ayden. 130 x 180 corner lot. Excellent location. Paved streets, curb, and gutter, prestigious neighborhood. $10,500. Call Moseley Marcus Realty at 746 2166 for full details
1.07 ACRES, septic tank and well. 320 13' frontage. State Road 1765, 1766 Loop Koad 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. Quiet, established neighborhood. Call 758 0702 days, 752 0310 nights.
120
RENTALS
LOTS FOR RENT Also 2 and 3 bedroom mobile homes. Security deposits required, no pets. Call 758-4413 between 8 and 5.
NEED STORAGE? We have any size to meet your storage need. Call
Arlington Self Storage, Open Mon Friday 9 5. Call 756 9933
day
121 Apartments For Rent
AZALEA GARDENS
Greenville's newest and most uniquely furnished one bedroom aparf ments.
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 wifh porches.
Frost free refrigerators.
campus. Central vacuum, individu al air and heat, low utilities. (This
is unexpected and unusual vacancy.) Will be freshly done, painted, etc. Scottish Manor Apartments, available September 3. $215 per month. Call Hugh Mc(3owan now.
752-2*91
Only responsible persons need ly
apply
FOR RENT; New 2 bedroom duplex. Central heat and air. Appli anees furnished. No pets. Married couples only. $325 per month. 756 7537 or 946 5082.
GreeneWay
Large 2 bedroom garden apart ments, carpeted, dish washer, cable TV, laundry rooms, balconies, spacious grounds with abundant parking, economical utilities and POOL. Adjacent to Greenville Country Club. 756-6869
121 Apartments For Rent
.ONE BEDROOM, furnisneo apartments or mobile homes for rent. Contact J. T. or Tommy Williams, 756 7815
ONE BEDROOM. Just completed and convenient location. No pets $220 per month. 756 7417.
RENT FURNITURE:
Living, din ing, bedroom complete. $79.00 per month. Option to buy. U REN CO, 756 3862
STRATFORD ARMS APARTMENTS
The Happy Place To Live CABLE TV
Office hours 10a m to 5 p m Monday through Friday
Call us 24 hours a day at
756-4800
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 just off 10th Street.
Call 752 3519
LOOK BEFORE
YOU LEASE!!!
At our affordable alternative to renting. Enjoy the privacy of your own condominium or townhome with payments lower than monthly rent. Call Iris Cannon al 758 6050 or 746-2639, Owen Norvell at 758 6050 or 756 1498, Wil Reid at 758 6050 or 756-0446 or Jane Warren at 758 6050 or 758 7029.
MOORE &SAUTER
110 South Evans 758-6050
LOVE TREES?
Experience the unique in apartment living with nature outside your door.
Located in Azalea Gardens near Brook Valley Country Club. Shown by appointment only. Couples or singles. No pets.
Contact J.T. or Tommy Williams 756 7815
BRAND NEW tastefully decorated townhouse, 2 bedrooms, I'-z baths, washer dryer hookups, heat pump, no pets. $310 per month. 752 2040 or 756 8904.
Cherry Court
Spacious 2 bedroom townhouses with IV2 baths. Also I bedroom apartments. Carpet, dishwashers.
compactors, patio, free cable TV, washer dryer
hook ups, laundry room, sauna, tennis court, club house and POOL. 752 1557
DUPLEX APARTMENT on 1 acre wooded lot at Frog Level. 2 bedrooms, t bath, kitchen and living room, no pets allowed. $265 per month. 756 4624.
EASTBROOK AND VILLAGE GREEN APARTMENTS
327 one, two and three bedroom larden 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
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
SPECIAL
Executive Desks
Reg. Price $259.00
Special Price
$17900 TAFF OFFICE EQUIPMENT
569 S Ewans St.
757-2175
COURTNEY SQUARE APARTMENTS
Quality construction, fireplaces.
heat pumps (heating costs 50 per less th;
cent less than comparable units), dfshwasher, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV.wall to wall carpet, thermopane windows, extra insula lion.
Office Open 9 5 Weekdays
9 5 Saturday ) 5 Sunday
Merry Lane Off Arlington Blvd.
756 5067
OAKMONT SQUARE
APARTMENTS
Two bedroom townhouse apart
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
JMWEK
ESTATES
I, 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer dryer hook ups, cable TV, pool, club house, playground. Near ECU
Our Reputation Says It All "A Community Complex."
1401 Willow Street Office Corner Elm & Willow
752-4225
1 AND 2 BEDROOM duplexes located in Ayden. Available imme diately. Appliances furnished, has heat pump, in excellent condition Couples preferred, no pets. Call Judy, 756 6336 between 9 and 5, Monday through Friday
2 BEDROOM apartment Kitchen applianes turnished, totally electric. $325 month Call 756 7647
122
Business Rentals
FOR LEASE, PRIME RETAIL or
office space Arlington Boulevard, 3,000 sauare feet Only $3 60 per square foot For more information, call Real Estate Brokers 752 4348
WAREHOUSE SPACE available Small or large areas. Centrally located. Call 756 5097or 756 9315
6,000 SQUARE FEET - Upstairs downtown Greenville 5th Street entrance. Call 756 5007
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N C Monday. Septembers. 1983 15
127
Houses For Rent
LARGE 3 BEDROOM house 105 Fletcher Twin Oaks Fireplace, 2 full baths. Available immediately $400 Call 355 6060
LARGE 8 room house 1'j bath. Between Ayden and Gritton. 524 5507
SPACIOUS 3 BEDROOM. 2 bath home in quality neighborhood Formal dining, breakfast nook Call
756 6490 after 6 p m
3 BEDROOM HOUSE near Greenville, electric heal, air, couple preferred No pets 756 0264 after 5
3 BEDROOM BRICK home lor rent 1,400 square teet, 1', baths, air condition, stove and refrigerator furnished, fenced in yard No pels S3M per month. Deposit required 5 miles on Stantonsburg Highway 756 4506
3-4 BEDROOMS, 2 baths Large yard quiet neighborhood $350 monthly Call 756 8160
133 Mobile Homes For Rent
FOR RENT 2 bedroom frailer Located two miles behind Pitt Community College Call 756 8273
2 BEDROOMS, private lot. washer dryer, air, no children, no pets. Couples preferred 756 3523
2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent Located on private lot 8 miles east of Greenville 758 4155 after 5pm
135 Office Space For Rent
LAW OFFICE for rent across the street from the Courthouse Three rooms Call 752 1 138
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 2300 days
138
Rooms For Rent
CONVENIENT HOUSE 3 blocks from ECU Room available with full priviledges Air conditioning, garage for storage, clean, good
study atmosphere $140 per month, tie
share of utilities 758 7026
140
WANTED
142 Roommate Wanted
127
Houses For Rent
FURNISHED 2 bedroom brick country home. Carport, large yard Available immediately. $225 month. Deposit required. 9 miles west of Greenville. Highway 13. 753 3141.
HARDEE ACRES, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, air conditioned, large fenced yard, closed garage. Couples only. Shown by appointment, call 752 2632 evenings.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom townhouse at Windy Ridge Pool, tennis courts and sauna Call 756 9491
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOFING
S'^ORM WINDOWS DOORS & AWNINGS
C.L. Lupton. Co.
752 6116
Business Expanding
SHOWROOM PERSON NEEDED
Experience in design and decorating preferred. Must be mature, responsible adult. Selling experience a must.
Call 756-5097 or 756-9315
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FURNITURE STRIPPING
Paint and varnish removed Irom wood and metal Equipment lormer-ly ol Dip And Strip All items returned within 7 days
TAR ROAD ANTIQUES
Call For Free Estimate 756-9123 Days, 756-1007 Nights
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
FOR LEASE - 2500 SQUARE FEET PRIME RETAIL OR OFFICE SPACE ON ARLINGTON BOULEVARD CALL 756-8111
6UVIN0
HOUSEHOLD
FURHIITUI1E
Anything of Value FREE APPRAISALS
752-1400
UTILIZATION
ANALYST (R.N.)
Highly motivated R.N. wanted to develop and coordinate hospital utilization review and quality assurance programs. Successful candidate will receive special training in working in a O.R.G. base payment system. Position requires excellent com munication and analytical skill and will involve extensive work with the hospital medical staff. Send confidential resume to:
Pearl Smith, Director of Personnel ROCKY MOUNT SANITARIUM 103 NoellLane Rocky Mount, N.C. 27801 EOE
RIGHT NOW WERE
KNOWN AS THE NEWEST MOBILE HOME DEALER IN CHOCOWINITY....
...IN90 DAYS WELL BE KNOWN AS THE BEST!
Itll take 90 days...for enough people to shop our inventory...for enough people to buy our homes...for enough people to experience our uneqauled service...for word to get around.
1. Courteous, experienced personnel
2. Open until 7:00 p.m. Monday thru Saturday.
3. Full time, experienced service department.
CALVARY MOBILE HOMES
NOW READY TO SERVE YOU
Hwy. 17 Across From The Town Hall
Owned and operated by Lawrence and Patty flllanning.
Phone: 946-0929
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ATTENTION
VETERANS
V FINANCING
Now Available On The New Home Of Your Choice ~~
No down payment No advance payments
24 Hour delivery available (with approved credit)
Over 25 new homes to select from
Interest rates are at an all time low
Visit CONNER HOMES Today!
WHY BUY FROM CONNER?
25 years in the Mobile Home Business, 20 Years in Mobile Home Manufacturing, Conner Financed, Conner Service, Conner Insurance. Free Delivery and Set Up.
Greenville. N.C.
(Open Weeknighfs Until 10 P.M.) (Week-Ends Until 8 P.M.)
J
call 756-03331
M
FREE STEPS
T
616 W. Greenville Blvd.
FREE SKIRTING Greenville, N.C.
1 ' ^
142 Roommate Wanted
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED
in Washington $1(X) a piece includes all! 1 975 3140after 7 p m
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 3 bedroom house in Edwards Acres 7 3556
LOOKING FOR MATURE male student to share room m nice home, shared bathroom 2 blocks from campus Call Kyle, 758 4708 between 6and 7 p m only
148
Wanted To Rent
10X20 OR LARGER room for band to practice in Call 758 1101 after 2 pm
Sell
C
Sell your used television
Classified way. Call 752 6166
the
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
ROOMMATE WANTED to share 2 bedroom townhouse, '? expenses Call 758 8534between 12p m 6p m
ROOMMATE wanted to share 2 bedroom trailer $130 month covers everything but food and long dis tance calls Call 756 7265
ROOMMATE: Separate bedrooms, living room, and bath, share kitch en, laundry facilities and garage; unfurnished, $100 deposit, $200 per month includes utilities 756 0433 after 6pm
144
Wanted To Buy
GOOD USED ciar(net Phone 355 6476
RESPONSIBLE ADULT would like to rent or buy console oiano 752 5324 ^
VVANT TO BUY pine and hardwood timber Pamlico Timber Company, Inc 756 8615
Searching for the right townhouse? Watch Classified every day
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
CHIMNEY SWEEPING
Fireplaces and woodstoves need clean ing before a hard winter's use. Eliminate creosote and musty odors. Wonri stove specialist
TAR ROAD ENTERPRISES
756-9123 756-1007 Nights
SPECIAL
SKILLS
NEEDED!
WORD PROCESSORS TRANSCRIBERS SWITCH BOARD SENIOR TYPISTS BOOKKEEPERS
Work when you like...Days, weeks, months, assignments in Raleigh, and nearby cities. Vacation, holidays, accident and cash bonus plans. Weekly pay. Call us for an appointment.
MANPOWER
TEMPORARY
SERVICES
757-3300 118 Reade
WANTED IMMEDIATELY
HEAD SEWING ROOM SUPERVISOR
OR
STITCHING ROOM FOREMAN
Nationally known company, maker of ladies blouses and men's shirts, is in search of a hands on type of person that can motivate people and instruct people with their sewing problems.
This individual should know how fo perform all operations on the above garments with emphasis on quality and production. This This individual will also be responsible for scheduling and keeping the entire sewing room in balance.
Those that qualify to the above should send resume stating work history and salary requirements to:
P.O. Box 303 Greenville, N.C. 27834
Company offers excellent salary and benefits package. All resumes held in strict confidence.
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HOMES FOR SALE
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264 By-pass West
Living room, large kitchen with eating area. den. 2 bedrooms. iVzbaths, screened porch, utility room, garage Lot 125 x 210 $50.000
909 Forbes Street
3 bedrooms, hying room, dinmg room, kitchen iron! and back porch central gas hea! and ai condition S27 500
LOT FOR SALE
82 x130' lot on corner of 13th and Greene Streets. $7500,
LOT FOR SALE
111 E. 11th Street. 75x85. $8000.00. '
Price
NEED HOUSES AND FARMS TO SALE
TURNARE
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY
Get More With Les Home 756-1179
mm
REALTOR*
30 Years Experience
HOMES FOR SALE
SEVERAL NICE LOTS & TRACTS OF LAND TO BUY, SELL OR RENT CONTACT
0.0. Garrett Agency
752-4476 752-7756 752-1764
Heritage Village
YOUVE NEVER MET ANYPLACE LIKE THIS BEFORE
37,900
The place is Heritage Village and it s your own home with spacious rooms including a great room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace and a fully equipped kitchen. Great up to now. But there's more... a superb location oft 14th Street near Red Banks Road, and a price of only $37,900 that can't be topped. Come see and believe!
ball & lane
(4)0-3 & 7-8)
K mart COUPONS ARE NOT REQUIRED AT K mart STORES IN ILLINOIS
^2 The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C
Monday, September 5,1983
A Number Of New Programs Due To Debut On Saturdays
By JUUANNE HASTINGS UPITVRqwrter
NEW YORK (PI) - Mr. T, Charlie Brown, Rubiks Cube and Tex Toadwalker, the Lou Grant of Fog-gybottora Swamp, all will make their debuts on Saturday morning television in September in the networks bid for the small-fry vote.
CBS is rolling out a total of five new shows for Saturday morning (the same number of new shows the network has slotted for its entire prime time schedule), NBC will introduce two new pro-
TV Log
For complete TV programming information, consult your weekly TV SHOWTIME from Sundays Daily Reflector.
WNCT-TV-Ch.9
MONDAY
7 00 Jokers Wild
7 30 Tic Tac
8 00 Square Pegs
8 30 Best of
9 00 MASH
9 30 Newhart
10 00 Cagney 11:00 News 9
11 30 Tennis 2:00 Nightwatch
TUESDAY
2 00 Nightwatch 5:00 Jim Bahker 6 00 Carolina 8:00 Morning 10:00 Pyramid 10:30 Childs Play
WITN-TV-Ch.7
MONDAY
7 00 Jeftersons
7 30 Family Feud
8 00 Little House
9 00 Movie II 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 - 25 Ne*s
7 30 Today
8 25 News
8 30 today
9 00 R Simmons 9 3C All in (he
WCTI-TV-Ch.12
grams, and ABC will have ttiree new series and three new short-form spots, which will air between the regular programs.
CBS The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show will be the Charles Schulz cartoon characters first-ever TV series, although they first appeared on television 25 years ago in an automobile commercial and then went on to do 23 prime-time specials.
Also making the Saturday morning scene gill be those immortal chipmunks, Alvin, Simon and Theodore, who will return to television on NBC Saturday mornings.
Sam Ewing, NBC director of Childrens Programs, said he was particularly happy to ^have Alvin and the Chipmunks on the network because of producers Ross Bagdasarian and his wife Janice Karmans "commitment to nonviolent entertainment.
The characters first were created by Bagdasarians father, Ross Sr., 25 years ago and were stars of The Alvin Show that ran in the early 1960s. Ross Sr. died in 1972 and Ross Jr. has been working on the characters re-emergence as "quality childrens characters ever V since.
For a man whos so happy about a new non-violent show on NBC, it might seem strange that Ewing is also delighted with Mr. Ts Saturday morning debut. But NBC, from Chairman Grant Tinker on down, will always insist that there is no real violence on Mr. Ts popular prime-time show, "The A
Team, and that its all just a silty caricature.
Besides, the Saturday
morning Mr. T will be a , yn n m gymnastlcs coach, not a
1 30 Overniqht r , a- j /
2 30 News fugitive from justice, and for
11 00 Price is Right
12 00 News 9 12 30 Young &
1 30 As the World
2 30 Capitol
3 00 Guiding Lt
4 00 Waltons
5 00 Hillbillies
5 30 A. Griffith
6 00 News 9
6 30 CBS News 7:00 Jokers Wild 7:30 Tic Tac Dough
8 OO Special
9 00 Movie 11:00 News 9
11 30 Tennis
12 00 Movie 2-00 Nightwatch
10 00 out Strokes
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 OO 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 Baseball 11 00 News
11 30 Tonight Show
12 30 Letterman
most of the show he will be an animated character whose teena^ team members get^ involved in mysteries.
The real-life Mr. T will introduce the program and then appear at the conclusion to point out the lessons that could be learned by watching the program.
CBS will have an hour-long program beginning at 8:30 a.m. ET Saturday that turned to popular videogames for its character ideas.
"Saturday Supercade will feature "Donkey Kong, Frogger, Donkey Kong Jr. and Pitfall and Q-bert who will be presented on alternate weeks.
"This is not an hour-long commercial because the elements have only a thinly connected line to video games themselves, said Michael Brockman, vice president of Daytime and Childrens Programs, CBS Entertainment.
The Frogger segment will star CBS newest Saturday-morning ace in-vestigative-reporter working on mysteries along with other employees of the Swamp Gazette, Fanny Frog, Turtle Shellshock, the photographer who has a darkroom in his shell, and Tex.
ABC last year began airing network TVs first video character-turned-cartoon character, Pac-Man.
Ewing said NBC decided to leave the video games to ABC and CBS. Most of the things on their schedules we looked at and passed on them, he said.
When ABC put Pac-Man up against NBCs Smurfs, Ewing said, the little rascal initially edged us out (in the ratings), but then it fell
apart. Smurfs is still the No. 1 show, he said of the little blue characters who air for a whole Vk hours Saturdays.
Among the new short-form spots that will pepper ABCs Saturday morning entertainment will be 4-minute segments featuring Menudo, a popular Spanish rock group whose young members give bilingual lessons for learning English and Spanish.
Im tremendously excited about our short-form programs because I believe we have maintained our competitive edge but infused some enriching educational values that are even higher than those weve been known for in the past, said an obviously "tremendously excited Squire Rushnell, vice president of long-range planning and childrens TV at ABC.
Another of the spots will star Capn O.G. Read-more, whom ABC describes as a tap-dancing cat, an educated purrson with an inexhaustible enthusiasm for books and reading.
He lives in an alley outside a library, Rushnell said, and his message to kids is read a book and watch TV in your head.
The third new spot is Zack of All Trades, a disc-jockey who introduces young people to a variety of careers.
As for the new full-length shows, Rushnell seemed proudest of The Littles, an animated show about little pople who live in the walls of big peopleshomes.
The Littles is probably going to be the most openly educational series that has been on Saturday morning for a long time, Rushnell said. Certainly there have
MONDAY
OC 3 5 Company
7 3C Alice
8 0 incnedible
9 00 Footbai
12 OC Actior News 2 3C Nighthne ' OC Thicne of
TUESDAY
5 00 TBA
5 30 J Swaggai-t
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 Pbil Donahue
10 00 TBA
10 30 TBA
n OC Too Close 1; 30 Loving 12 00 Family Feud 12 30 Ryan s Hope
1 00 My Children
2 00 One Lite
3 OC Gen Hospital
4 00 Carnival
4 30 BJ LOBO
5 30 People s
6 OC Action News
6 30 ABC News
7 00 3 s Company
7 30 Alice
8 00 Preview
8 30 ^appy Days
9 00 3 s Company 9 30 9 to 5
10 00 Hart to Hart
11 00 Action News
11 30 Nightline
12 30 Thickp nt
Bikini-Ripping Prompts Fights On Calif. Beach
WUNK-TV-Ch.25
MONDAY
7 00 Report
7 30 N C People
8 00 Shock
9 00 Performances
10 00 When the 11.00 Monty Python
11 30 Doctor in
12 00 Sion Ott TUESDAY
3 00 TBA 3,30 Educational
4 00 Sesame Street 5:00 Mr Rogers
5 30 Dr Who
6 00 News Hour
7 00 Report
7 30 Folkways
8 00 Nova a
9 00 Lifeline
10 00 Ascents of 11,00 Monty Python
11 30 Doctor in
12 00 Sign Ott
HUNTI.NGTON BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Several men ripped bikini tops off women, prompting fist fights as things got out of hand" after a beachfront swimsuit competition, police said.
"There was a little street
Watch Eddie Knox.
at
Hear Hb Views About Jobs In North Carolina.
Watch This Week On WNCT-TV Channel 9
At 7:55 a.m. following Carolina Today" Monday, Wednesday, Friday
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SURGERY - Taping of the "Alice" television show will be delayed for a month while actor Vic Tayback. who plays Mel, recovers from triple bypass heart surgery that he had Saturday. (AP Laserphoto)
justice, Huntington Beach police dispatcher Judy Young said today, explaining how the men who ripped the bikini tops from the scantily clad contestants were in turn attacked by other men Sunday afternoon.
The fist fights involved up to 200 people, but many of them were unrelated to the bikini-ripping incidents, she said.
Just about everybody down there had been drinking." Officer Brian Gerald said.
Reinforcements from seven nearby law enforcement agencies helped local authorities quell the melee among some of the 200,000 visitors who jammed the beach, police said.
'Against World'
MANAMA, Bahrain (,AP) Throngs of Iranian pilgrims surged through the streets of the Saudi holy city of Medina on Sunday shouting Death to America, Death to the Soviet Union, and Death to criminal Israel, witnesses reported.
They were blaring death slogans against the whole world, observed one local resildent in a telephone interview. Saudi police watched the protesters but did not intervene, a witness said.
Having problems with dogs in your neighborhood? Call Animal Control at 752-3342.
For two hours, more than 100 police tried to keep things calm after the bikini contest ended and probably 15,000 people left at the same time from a very confused area, Sgt. Val Birkett said.
"People started getting excited. Things got out of hand," he said.
Police arrested six people for public drunkenness, Ms. Young said. No injuries were reported, Birkett said.
The crowds were drawn by the annual Ocean Pacific Pro-Surf championship and a street carnival as wel as the bikini contest.
WITHDRAWALS -Actress Eileen Brennan, who was struck by a car 11 months ago, said she became dependent on pain-killing drugs and went through withdrawals when doses were cut. (AP Laserphoto)
MOVIE IN A CAVE - Production workers for the film Secrets Of The Phantom Caverns work on a set in the Ten Acre Ro(n, a section of Cumberland Caverns near
McMinnville, Tennessee. Equipment for the set had to be hauled one-fourth of a mile underground to be assemMed. (AP Laserphoto)
been some in the past.
And they failed miserably because they looked too much like school and we found kids dont want to go to school on Saturdays.
Rushnell said the Littles are morally upright little characters with tails and pointed ears who use the cast-offs of big people for their living environment -bunkbeds are made out of sardine cans, bottlecaps become bike wheels.
The Littles will deal with topics similar to those dalt with for junior high school viewers on ABCs After School Sp^ials, Rushnell said, sibling rivalry, peer pressure or parent-child, child-elder relations.
Youre going to find that The Littles is going to be one of the more significant TV shows that is talked about this year But it also is intended to be very competitive.
ABCs Rubik, The Amazing Cube, will star a little cube with head and feet who has genie-like powers, and there also will be The Monchhichis, a new tribe of little creatures who live on the tops of trees and are based on another commercial product, Happiness Dolls.
Other new CBS shows include two animated dog stories: "The Biskitts, pint-sized pups who after the death of the good king must save their days-of-yore kingdom from his evil brother Max, and Benji, the popular canine who in this new series links up with a 10-year-old alien prince, Yubi, and his C3P0-like robot Zax.
Concert Planned
The Stars of York Memorial A.M.E. Zion Church will present Rudy and Cynthia McCrae 'Tyson in concert Sunday at 3 p.m. at the church.
Rudy is visiting artist at Bladen Technical Institute. A Greenville native, he studied at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and has done graduate work at North Carolina Central University. As a composer, he has performed with several groups, including Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes, Willie Pickett and Shashi Mousso. His latest composition, Something Special has been released by United Artists.
Cynthia has been singing since age six. She is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington and studied under Mary Lou Williams at Duke University. 'They have two daughters, Kenya and Kimberly.
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- CBS also will air a half-hour animated series based on a popular board game, Dungeons and Dragons, which will present viewers with puzzles and clues to help its five young stars get out of the fantasy world they become lost in when they take an amusement park ride.
All of the networks are quick to remind that childrens programming runs throughout their schedules, including regular prime-time programs and specials.
On prime-time CBS, Charlie Brown will go to computer camp; therell be an animated version of the stage musical Youre a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Garfield the Cat will go -on the town, and Bugs Bunny, Dr. Seuss, Rudolph and Frosty will do holiday specials.
NBC will air Kidstown USA, a series of six specials honoring real kids across the country involved in real prdjects. The programs will be created by the five NBC television stations and the networks affiliates across
the nation.
NBC also will air the 1st Annual Yummy Awards, Sept. 16 from 8-9 p.m. EDT, a take-off on the Emmys which will honor the networks Saturday morning programs and be hosted by Ricky Schrodef of NBCs prime time series Silver Spoons.
ABC has a primetime, animated special coming up Sept. 4, The Flight of Dragons, featuring the voices of John (Threes Company)
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The network also will begin airing Sept. 10 a series of 30-second programs on young people who have made extraordinary contributions to-their communities, a project also developed with the aid of ABC affiliates nationwide.
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The Daily Retlectof. Greenville, N C_____Monday. September 5 1933 jj
I meArpnu'veken TAKIN6 GOLF LESSONS
''he 5AIP I 5M0ULP ^
TEE IT UP 5L0U)E^
ANSWERS TO BRIDGE QUIZ
Q.l-As South, vulnerable, you hold:
A983 ^J106 05 ASTBS
The bidding has proceeded: Weat Nertli Eaat Soith 10 19 Paaa' ?
What do you bid now?
as
Q.2-Bcth vulnerable. South you hold:
098 96 OAK10752 Q73 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West
1 Pass 10 19
2 0 Pass ?
What do you bid now?
A.-By making a free raise, partner has shown a hand which, for some reason, is better than minimum. (He could have passed with a bare 13 points.) You must upgrade your queen in partner's suit, and your singleton in the enemy suit is a golden asset. We would leap to five diamonds.
Q.3 -As South, vulnerable, you holBl
9854 9Q105 0 7432 ^82
Aim Effort At Dropouts
GREENSBORO, N.C.(AP) - A pilot prt^am designed to keep potential dropouts in school has started in 32 middle and junior high schools across North Carolina, officials say.
The program will give seventh-^de students remedial instruction in basic academic subjects and also introduce them to a variety of vocational prc^rams, including business and office skills, auto mechanics, carpentry, brick laying and plumbing.
Past experience has
shown that if you give the
kids something they enjoy rather than making them study just English or ancient history, theyll stay in school, said Tom Davis, spokesman for the N.C. De-[rtment of Public Instruction.
Davis said statistics also show that school systems with strong vocational systems have fewer dropouts.
We have high hopes for it, Davis said. If it keeps just a handful in school to graduate, it will be worth it.
The General Assembly allocated about $1 million for the project. Each school will receive about $31,000 for supplies, equipment, miscellaneous expenses and a part-time teacher.
Students selected for the program have either failed one or more courses, are too old for their grade level or are unable to do the work required for their grade level.
The students will remain in the program through the eight grade. After that, each student will develi^ an individual academic plan for comirieting high school.
The bidding has proceeded: Wett North Et Sooth
1 0 Dble Pass 1
Pasa 3 9 Pass ?
What action do you take?
-In support of hearts, our hand is worth the equivalent of an opening bid, and partner must have a fair hand for his vulnerable overcall. We incline to a jump to four hearts, but we would not fault you if, because you have only three trumps, you chose the conservative jump to three hearts. If you bid only two hearts, we would bet that you still own the first dollar you ever made.
A.You dont have much, but consider partner's bidding. His double and jump in a new suit suggests a hand that can take almost nine tricks on its own. You have two trump honors and a ruffing value for him, so it would be cowarBly not to raise him to game.
Q.4-Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:
AQ5 9AKQJ6 0 873 AJ The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1 ^ Pass 1 Pass ?
What do you bid now?
A.-If you had a fourth spade, the answer would be easy - you would jump to game in spades. Now you cant be sure of the best spot to play the hand, so you should jump to three clubs to create a game force. Should partner either take preference to hearts, rebid spades or bid diamonds, your next action is easy. If he raises clubs, you can correct to four hearts.
Q.5-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:
AQ83 9Q1054 01072 ^84 Partner opens the bidding with one club. What do you respond?
A.-We often find that players tend to respond on their stronger four-card suit. That is wrong! Bid four-card suits up the line. If you respond one spade you run the risk of losing a 4-4 heart fit should partner now rebid one no trump. ,
GENERAL TENDENCIES: Today it the waning Moon and it brings you the opportunity to wind up matters which have been begun ere this and especially those which have been intermittent in their nsture artd design.
ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Get work problems nicely solved and pay attention to details that are important and conclude them wisely.
TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Take those treatments you need tbatwlH. make you look more charming and feel better,^en take time to complete work.
. Gemini (May 21 to June 21) Study your home and sgbigrfwt^ -
tteeds to be done to make it more operative and charrmr5gi|v^Al^ as well. Try to please kin more.
MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You can get letters written, and shopping done with relative ease today, so get started early on them.
LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Handle those details connected with practical affairs and complete them today. Especially get into your accounts.
VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Good day to finish personal matters that you have started and gain the right benefits from them. Contact neglected friends.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Personal matters require your attention so get at them and use that knack you have for fine finish and neatness.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Fine day for repaying social debts, especially in the evening. Do only that work which is necessary and dont neglect to pay your bills.
SAGITTARIUS (No\r. 22 to Dec. 21) Get at those tasks of a career nature that are important and gain approval of higher-ups. Complete public work you started.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Get that added data you need so that you can put some new venture in operation wisely. A newcomer can give good advice.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Concentrate on business affairs and get good results, especially with those you have neglected of late.
PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) Much conversation with your partners brings good results and make the future brighter with them. Dont be deterred by outside affairs.
IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will be one of those charming young people who easily will understand detail and plans of magnitude but may have a rather lazy way of doing things, so be sure that the diet is right and the surroundings are cheerful in order to snap out of this.
NUBBIN
BLONDIE
Q.6-Both vulnerable, as South you hold:
K9 9A7 OAKJ965 ^033 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 10 Pass 2 NT Pass 7
What do you bid now?
A.-We vote for the practical action of a jump to six no trump. Your hand contains no tenaces, so there is no advantage in having the lead come up to it. Partners hand probably has several tenace positions, and your side might gain a trick by having the lead come up to his hand. You have a balanc ed hand, and there is no reason why a diamond contract should play better than no trump.
Taa sglling a
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Soviet Official Denies Missile Fired At Jumbo
By STEVEN R. HURST Associated Press Writer MOSCOW (AP) - A U.S. congressman said a Foreign Ministry official here flatly denied today that a Soviet fighter shot down a Korean Air Lines jetliner with a missile and insisted the Soviets dont know what happened to the jumbo jet and its269issengers.
"It is my opinion after listening to Mr. (Sergei) Chetverikov, who gave the official line of the government, that that line is simply unbelievable, said Rep. William Grey. D-Pa.
Grey, in a meeting with Chetverikov, deputy director of the Foreign Ministry U.S. Department, said he specifically asked if the Soviet fighter which intercepted the Korean plane last Thursday fired a heat-seeking missile.
Grey said Chetverikov told him that was not true.
A Soviet source said earlier that top Soviet military officials ordered a jet fighter to shoot down the airliner with a heat-seeking missile near the Soviet island of Sakhalin, north of Japan. The source, who insisted on anonymity, said the order was given without consultation with President Yuri V. Andropov.
The official news agency Tass published an account by Col. (^n. Semyon Romanov, chief of the Soviet antiaircraft defense force, in which he said the fighters pilot thought the Korean plane looked like a U.S. spy plane.
The Soviet Union has acknowledged only that it fired warning shots at the airliner and charged that it was on a spy mission.
Grey said he expressed doubts in his meeting with Chetverikov that a trained fighter pilot would be able to mistake a civilian plane for a U.S. reconnaisance aircraft and that he told the official he did not believe Soviet radar could not distinguish between the two types of planes.
Chetverikov gave no answer, Grey said. I asked, Did you make a mistake? Grey said. But Chetverikov also did not answer that question.
The Soviet source told Jhe Associated Press that Andropov returned to the capital on Friday to deaP with the growing world furor over the attack.
The source, familiar with the chain of command, said the decision to fire was made because the military truly believed the plane was on a spy mission. He said the military had proof the plane was spying, but did not say what the proof was.
The source said the plane was not shot down until it was about to leave Soviet air space, after about two hours, because the military at first
TLESDAY 7:00 a m. - Greenville Breakfast Lions Club meets at Three Steers 10:00 a m - Kiwanis Golden K Club meets at Masonic Hall 7:00 p.m. - Family Support Group at Family Practice Center 7:30 p.m. Tar River Civitan Club meets at First Presbyterian Church
7:30 pm. - Greenville Choral Society rehearsal at Immanuel Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. - Vernon Howard Success Without Stress study group at 110 N. Warren St.
7:30 p.m. - Toughlove parents support group meets at St. Pauls Episcopal Church 8:00 p m. - Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous at AA Bldg , Farmville nwy.
8:00 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous meeting at Jarvis Memorial United Methodist Church
believed it could convince the airliners pilot to land and thus retrieve whatever intelligence it might have gathered.
The Sunday Times of London quoted unidentified U.S. intelligence sources as saying they believed the attack order was given by army Gen. Vladimir Govorov, 59, a member of the Communist Party Central Committee and commander of the Soviet Far East region, after getting clearance from by deputy defense minister and marshal of aviation Alexander I. Koldunov, 59.
In the Tass report, Romanov said Sqiiday the fighter pilot Waved his planes wings, blinked the lights and tried to make radio contact with the South Korean plane before he fired warning shots.
He reiterated Soviet claims that the plane flew without navigational lights and did not respond to all actions by our interceptor-fighter, whose pilot undertook for a long period repeated attempts to lead the intruder plane to the closest Soviet airfield.
Romanov, who gave the most detailed Soviet account yet of the encounter over the Soviet Far East, said the pilot thought the plane looked like a U.S, intelligence aircraft,
Romanov said the pilot was following rules that allow interceptors to fire "issued weapons parallel to the course of an intruder.
Romanov said the planes "outlines resemble much those of the American reconnaissance plane RS-135. Our interceptor pilot made warning shots with tracer shells along the course of the intruder plane.
Romanov apparently was referring to an RC-135, a modified Boeing 707 used by the U.S. Air Force for reconnaissance. The Reagan administration Sunday disclosed that a reconnaissance plane flew through the same area as the South Korean airliner, but was 1,000 miles away when the attack took place.
City Schools Lunch Menu
The lunch menus for the Greenville City Schools for this week are:
Tuesday - Pepper steak, baked potato/butter, lima beans, tossed salad, roll, citrus fruit cup, milk.
Wednesday - Fish sticks, hash browns, coleslaw/carrots, fresh apple, cornbread, milk.
Thursday - Assorted sandwiches, tossed salad,
-pickle strips, chilled peaches, milk.
Friday - Baked pork chop, glazed sweet potatoes, seasoned greens, buttered mixed vegetables, won-derbar, cornbread, milk.
Women's Club Meets Friday
The Greenville Womens Club will meet Friday at 10 a.m. Following a coffee hour, Mrs. Florence Holt will report on the 81st annual North Carolina Federated Womens Clubs Convention held in Raleigh. The meeting will be held at the Club Building located on Greensprings Drive.
M.ASOMC NOTICE Grimesland Masonic Lodge 475 AF & AM will hold a stated communication at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Supper will be served at 6:45 p.m. All Master Masons are invited to attend.
ft-
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Experienced TV Repair Person for established television and appliance firm. Excellent opportunity and good benefits.
Call 756-3240 For Interview
Obituary Column
TRIP OFF - Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromykos planned visit to Paris, scheduled^to begin on Monday afternoon, was abruptly postponed, according to a French foreign ministry official. The trip is expected to take place later in the week. Thee was no explanation for the postponement. (APLaserphoto)
Youth
Drowned
Sunday
An 18-year old youth identified as Anthony Barnhill drowned while swimming in a farm pond early Sunday afternoon.
A spokesman from the Pitt County Sheriffs office said the drowning occurred in a pond near the intersection of U.S. 264 and Old Creek Road about three miles north of Greenville. Friends swimming with Barnhill said he apparently stepped into a deep hole. A call for assistance was received at 2:45 p.m., with The Greenville Rescue Squad reporting to the site. The spokesman said the body was retrieved within about 20 minutes.
The victim is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Barnhill of Rt, 1, Greenville.
Jim Hunt Book Being Prepared
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -The first volume of Gov. Jim Hunts collected papers is expected to be released before the end of 1983, aides say.
Some 7,500 volumes of the 900-page Addresses and Public Papers of James Baxter Hunt Jr., Governor of North Carolina, Volume 1 -1977-1981 have been printed at a cost of $48,000.
Stokes
AYDEN - Mrs. Minnie Stokes Cox, 72, died Saturday. Funeral services were held today at 2 p.m. at the Farmer Funeral Chapel, Ayden. Rev. Gilbert Mister officiated. Burial followed in Ayden Cemetary.
Surviving are one son, Buren Cox of Greenville; one daughter, Mrs. Maynerd (Mildred) Porter of Greenville; one brother, Lester Stokes of Portsmouth, Va.; two sisters, Mrs. Larry Davis and Mrs. Lallah Basden, both of Ayden; three grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren.
The family asks that contributions be made to the First Baptist Church of Ayden.
Stox
ROXBORO - Mrs. Carla Baker Stox, formerly of Greenville, died Friday. The funeral service was held Sunday in Westwood Baptist Church in Roxboro.
She is survived by her husband, Robert Stox, Jr.;
Civitan Club To Meet
The Tar River Civitan Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the fellowship hall of the First Presbyterian Church.
Charles E. Kavanaugh, board member of the Pitt County Action coalition for Teens, will speak to the club about the coalitions first project.
President Patrice Alexander announces that the Tar River Civitan Club has received an honor club award and that former club president, Vicky Wang, was recognized as a distingushed president at the North Carolina Civitan District East Convention in Greensboro Aug. 27. Former lieutenant governor, Harold Hones, will present a plaque to Wang at the Tuesday meeting.
Visitors are invited to attend. For more information, call Raye Troutman at 756-3871.
Women To Meet
The Pitt County Republican Womens Club will hold a luncheon meeting Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. at Sweet Carolines Restaurant. Visitors interested in attending may contact Alice Mancini, 756-8917.
Two Accidents Reported
Officers of the Greenville Police Department reported relatively few collisions Saturday and Sunday, despite predictions for heavy holiday traffic and accidents.
David Sherril Wells of Rt. 3, Greenville, was charged with having improper equipment on a vehicle he was driving Saturday after his car struck a section of a Fresh Way store. According to police reports, the brakes on Wells vehicle failed. Damages to the Wells vehicle have been estimated at $600 and $1,000 to Fresh Way building, merchandise and store equipment.
Alan James Grier of Farmville was charged with following too closely Saturday as a result of an accident that occurred on Dickinson Avenue that also involved a vehicle driven by Ernest Lee Sutton of 2105 S. Village Dr.
Damages to the Sutton car were estimated at $700 and $250 to Griers car.
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two sons, Bobby Stox of the home and Carlos Lee Stox of Raleigh; a daughter, Mrs, Richard White of Raleigh; two sisters, Mrs. Vera Adkins of Kinston and Mrs. Geraldine Alexander of Bethel;.and one brother, H. C. Baker of Tampa, Fla.
Chapman
GRIFTON,- Clyde Chapman of the Urban Estates and Dupont Community of Lenoir County, Rt. 3, Grifton, died Sunday at North Carolina Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. He was the husband of Mrs. Geraldine Willia^ms Chapman of the home. Funeral arrangments are incomplete at Norcott and Company Funeral Home in Ayden.
Shirley
FARMVILLE - Mr. Carl Shirley, Jr., 60, of Rt. 1, Farmville died Sunday. The funeral service was conducted at 3:30 p.m. today at the Church Street Chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by Revs. Walter Reynolds, A. C. Morgan, and Johnnie Vernelson. Interment followed in the Walstonburg Cemetery.
Mr. Shirley was a retired farmer and a member of Friendship F.W.B. Church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Doris Beamon Shirley of the home; four daughters, Mrs. Vickie Davis and Mrs. Mary Brown, both of Farmville, Mrs. Ellen Lanier of Greenville, and Miss Helen Shirley of Lantana, Fla.; four sons, Jeffrey Shirley of Walstonburg, Rickey Shirley and Brian Shirley, both of Farmville, and Terry Shirley of the home; one sister, Mrs. Elsie Morgan of Sanford; one brother, Bill Shirley of Snow Hill; and seven grandchildren.
Harrison Mr. W. Albert Harrison, Sr., 68, died Saturday at Pitt Memorial Hospital. He was a resident of Riverview Estates.
The funeral service will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by Rev. Fred Lockwood, j^stor of Grace F.W.B Church, and Rev. Bobby Parker, pastor of Temple F.W.B Church. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetary.
Mr. Harrison, a native of Martin County, had lived in Greenville most of his life. He was employed for many years at Carolina Dairy. He was a veteran of World War II and a member of the DAV. He had also been employed for a number of years at Union Carbide, and had recently been employed as a security guard for MacKenzie Security Company.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Mary Hendrix Harrison; a son, William A. Harrison, Jr. of Lynchburg Va; a daughter, Mrs. Gwendolyn Harrison Bibbs of Black Jack; his mother, Mrs. Lillie Harrison of
Williamston; one brother, Thomas H. Harrison of Hampton, Va.; six sisters; Mrs. Nellie H. Rogerson, Mrs. Annie H. Cratt, Mrs. Mertie H. Coltrain, Mrs. Mary H. Lee, all of Williamston, Mrs. Lina H. Jackson of Plymouth, and Mrs. Lillian H. Thompson of Robersonville; one foster brother, Vernon W. Harrison of Williamston; and one grandchild.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
Barnhill
Anthony Lewis Barnhill, 18, of Rt. 1, Greenville, died Sunday as the result of a drowning accident. He was the. son of James and Pearline Barnhill.
Arrangements will be announced later by Flanagans Funeral Home.
Drake
COMO - Mrs. Zola Mae
Edwards Drake, 77, died Saturday at Pitt County Memorial Hospital. Funeral services were held today at 2 p.m. at Buckhom Baptist Church in Como. Burial followed in the Church Cemetary.
Surviving are three sons, James Drake of Como, Edmond Drake of Creeksville, Dr. Claude W. Drake, Jr., of Chapel Hill; two sisters, Mrs. Hazel Vaughn of Murfeesboro, Mrs. Fannie Bell Howell of Como; three brothers, Sam Edwards and Marvin Edwards both of Como, Norman Edwards of Franklin, Va.; seven grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren.
Services were conducted by Garrett Funeral Home of Como.
Tune-Ups Brake Jobs General Repairs
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758-1131
ATTENTION Kmart SHOPPERS
OPEN LABOR DAY UNTIL
9 P.M.
Pitt Community College 1
Pall Quarter 1983^**^^^^^1
7 You can enroll now B
Quarter
Registration Is Open Throu^ Wednesday, September 7
Tuition: 4.25 per credit hour. 51.00 maximum tuition in Late Registration Fee Of $5.00 Beginning Tuesday, September 6, 1983
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Tuition For Non-Resident of N.C. Approximately 5 Times Resident Cost.
Activity Fee: $6.00
Students May Register For As Many or As Few Courses As They Wish.
Technical and Vocational Courses Curriculum Courses Approved For V.A. Benefits
Laboratory Fee of $2.50 Per Lab Hour For Each EDP Course Requiring A Lab Evening counseling is available for both present and future students to assist them in course selection and career planning on Monday and Thursday evenings from 5:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. For
more information call Pitt Community College, 756-3130. ext. 212.____
inrr.r.l.Mll.rihaV.la1Hrfcld!l:TIi1:MAI
MMUNITY COLLEGE PROGRAMS PERMIT AN INDIVIDUAL TO Enroll in Selected Short Courses
Enroll in a combination ot regular length coursdsland selected sfiort courses
Enroll in a program that can result in a reduced course load m the guaders that folloiv
Enroll in a course to remove a deficiency that would prevent you from enlerting .i toiir yeai college
You can enroll now by contacting the Admissions Counselors Pitt Community College P.O. Drawer 7007 Hwy. 11, South Greenville, NC 27834 . Phone: 756-3130
ACT NOWl
(OPENINGS ARE AVAILABLE) to enroll in either the course of your choice or any one of the following programs:
VOCATIONAL
Welding
Surveying
Teacher Assistant
Electronic Servicing
Electrical Installation and Maintenance
Masonry
Machinist
Farm Machinery Mechanics*.
*Speciat Dealer-Sponsored Scholarship Available Cosmetology
Air Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Carpentry and Cabinetmaking Automotive Mechanics Industrial Maintenance: Electro-Mechanical
TECHNICAL
Accounting
Agricultural Business Technology
Agricultural Chemicals Technology
Agricultural Science
Air and Water Resources Technology
Architectural Technology
Business Administration
Commercial Art and Graphic Design
Correctional Science
Human Services Technology
Industrial Maintenance Technology
Industrial Management Technology
Medical Secretary
Paralegal
Police Science
Secretarial Science
Vet Fann Coop Program
General Office Technology
COLLEGE TRANSFER
Pre-Business Administration Pre-Education (Secondary)
Pre-Liberal Arts
EVENING PROGRAMS
Course
No.
Title
Cost
Hours
Day
ACT 150
Prin of Acct
17.00
7-9:30
TuiTh
ACT 151
Prin of Acct
17.00
7-9:30
M&W
ACT 152
Prin o1 Acct
17.00
7-9:30
TiTh
AGR 254
Plant Propagation
17.00
5-10
Tu
AGR 290
Soil & Water Conserv
17.00
5-10
Th
BUS 102
Begin Type
12.75
7:30-9:30
M&W
BUS 128
Basic Acct 1
12.75
7-10
W
BUS 165
Intro to Business
21.25
7-9:30
T&Th
BUS 164M
Term & Vocab: Med 1
12.75
MO
M
BUS 229
Taxes
17.00
7-9:30
M&W
BUS 272
Prin of Supervision
12.75
7-10
W
CHM 101
Chemistry
21.25
7-10
T&Th
CIV 101
Surveying
17.00
7-10
M&W
DFT104
BIprt Read-Mech
12.75
MO
M
DFT 236
Const Estimating & Field Inspect
17.00
MO
M&W
ELN 215
Fund, of Digital Elec.
17.00
MO
M&W
EDP 114
Intro to Comp Cone.
12.75
7-10
Th
EDU 202
Discipline Strat
12.75
MO
W
ELC112
Alt & Direct Current
17.00
6-10
M&W
ENG 100G
Basic Grammar
12.75
7-10
M
ENG 101
Grammar
12.75
MO
M
ENG 102
Composition
12.75
MO
M
ENG 105
Effective Read
12.75
7-10
M
ENG 204
Oral Commun
12.75
MO
Tu
HSA 100
Basic Hea Sci
12.75
MO
Tu
ISC 232
Labor Heiaiions
17.00 6:30-10:30
Th
MAT 110 '
Business Math
21.25
7-9:30
M&W
MAT 100
Rev of Fund Math
21.25
7-9:30
T&Th
MEC101
Mach Processes
17.00
MO
T&Th
PSY 102
Psychology
12.75
MO
M
SOC102
Sociology
12.75
MO
Th
SOC103
Social Problems
12.75
MO
W
WL01120A
Oxy-Acat Weld
12.75
6-10,6-9
M&W
WLD1121B
Arc Weld
12.75
6-10,6-9
Tu&Th
WLD1123
Inert Gas Weld
6.50
6-10
Tu
WLD1124B
Pipe Weld
12.75
6-10,6-9
Tu&Th
PH0116A
Photography
(Darkroom)
8.50
6-10
MorTuorTh
COLLEGE TRANSFER (EVENING)
For Further Information concerning Evening Course Offeringt call PCC 756-3130, Ext. 266 or 238.
Remember to bring your Social Security Number and fees
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ruiyet and promotion of faculty and ataH, ar)d the operation gl any of Its programa and actlvltlea, aa apeclfled by Federal Laws
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9/8(1-12)
lO The Daily Raflector, Graenville, N.C. Monday, September S. 1983
Woody
Peele
The 1983 football season opened with a bang Saturday, although there were also a few fizzles.
Among the surprises were Duke beating Virginia, Appalachian State downing Wake Forest and Memphis State topping Mississippi.
And one of the near surprises was East Carolina over Florida State. The Pirates came so close and in many ways outplayed their nationally ranked opponent.
There will be those, in the coming days, who will argue that Florida State was not up for the game, but was looking ahead to a meeting with Louisiana State next weekend. They will point to the two previous scores between the two schools.
Whether that is true or not remains to be seen, but we do feel that the Pirates should be given their due. They went up against a team that was very much favored and had the opportunity to come away Avith one of the major upsets of the year on the very first day of the season.
Breakdowns in a couple of areas meant the difference. Twice Jeff Heath had kicks blocked, once on an extra point and again on a field goal. That meant the difference in four points for the Pirates, and could have meant the game. Hopefully the area that broke down will be brought back to standard by this weekend.
The other key play came late in the game when Kevin Ingram ripped off good yardage down inside the Florida State 40 only to fumble when he was tackled. That turnover sealed the win for the Seminles. Time remained for the Pirates to move the ball either in or to give Heath another shot at a field goal and that would have been the game, we are sure.
The biggest question to be answered by both teams remains; were the offenses that good, or the defenses that bad.
The 46 points by the Pirates, by the way, was just three under the NCAA record for the most points in a losing effort.
The defense if that is indeed where the problem is must be shored up by Saturday when the Pirates play N.C. State. Then, if the offense is still in the same gear it was Saturday night, things could get a little warm for the Wolfpack.
One thing the State team will probably want to do is. keep the ball away from junior college transfer Henry Williams. The diminutive Williams ran back both a punt and a kickoff return for touchdowns against FSU and after that they kicked away from him. Williams, who does flips in the end zone after each score, proved a valuable weapon in the Pirate arsenal.
Despite the loss, it was still a good beginning, one which promises much to come in the weeks ahead.
Lindsey's Victory Leads To Decision
ENDICOTT, N Y. (AP) - Pat Lindsey had a tough decision to make. His wife, newborn daughter and final-round 68 in the B.C. Open made it a lot easier.
Lindsey blitzed the par-71 En-Joie Golf Club course with rounds of 71,64,65 and 68 to regist ' a 16-under-par 268 and a 3-stroke victory Sunday over Gil Morgan in the $300.000 tournament.
I have to admit Ive had some doubts about staying as a professional golfer, said Lindsey, who was struggling to support his family on winnings of $8,700 through the end of June
Now I think Ill stick with golf. he said after collecting $54,000 for his victory. Lindsey, who was 96th on the money-winnings list last year with $45,979, had won a total of $76,513 since joining the tour in 1979.
Morgan, the B.C. Open champion in 1977, combined seven birdies with three bogeys to close with a 67 for second place, four strokes behind Lindsey.
He played awful steady, Morgan said of Lindsey. He deserved everything he got today.
One stroke back were Wayne Levi and John Adams, who had final rounds of 64 and 68, respectively. Don Pooley, the 1981 B.C. Open champion, and Mike Reid each shot 69 to tie at 10-under-par for the tournament.
Pat McGowan shaved-four strokes from par in the final round to stand alone at 9-under for the tournament.
Lindsey, 31, of Palm Harbor, Fla., had never finished higher than a seventh-place tie on the tour - anti said after Saturdays third round that he was playing the best golf of my life.
Lindseys top finish this year - an eighth-place tie at the Western Open - earned him about $10,000, which he said went to pay the hospital bills for his newborn daughter.
Morgan, one of the tours most consistent performers, moved into fourth place on the money list with his second-place finish. He has two victories this year, the Joe Garagiola-Tucson Open and Glen Campbell-Los Angeles Open.
Peterson Takes One-Stroke Lead
SPRINGFIELD, 111. (AP) -With her putting game in gwr, tour rookie Lauri ^raon took aim at her first
round of the $150 ooo \ pt.a
RailCharityCuS The 23-vear-old Phoenix ^z., resident used three late birdies in Sundays secorS round to move one stroke ahead of a pack of tour veterans in the 54-hote tournament. She wound un with a 2-under-par 70 in that round and a 6-under-par 139 overall.
Seeded Players Fall As Field Narrows
NEW YORK (AP) - The seeded players cakewalk through the United States Open Tennis Championship ended abruptly Sunuay with three of them - Vitas Genuaitis, Steve Denton and Wendy Turnbull - tumbling out of the tournament.
Gerulaitis, No. 15 in the mens draw, bowed to 16-year-old Aaron Krickstein, 3-6, 3-6, 6-4,
6-3,6-4. Denton, No. 13, fell to Andres Gomez of Ecuador, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. Australias Turnbull, sixth-seeded among the women, lost to Andrea Leand7-5,4-6,6-2.
The other favorites prevailed on the sixth day of the $2 million tournament.
Top-seeded John McEnroe remained on his best behavior and eliminated Vince Van Patten 6-1,6-2,6-1. Second-seeed Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia continued his methodical march through the field with a third straight three-set victory, 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 over Jonny Levine.
Fourth-seeded Yannick Noah of France advanced with a 5-7, 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 victory over Eric Korita; No. 5 Mats Wilander of Sweden downed Ricardo Acuna of Chile 6-4, 7-5, 6-1; No. 9 Jimmy Arais eliminated Gianni Ocleppo of Italy 7-6, 6-1,6-2; and No. 12 Johan Kriek fought off a two-set deficit and three match points to defeat Roscoe Tanner 6-7,3-6,7-6,7-6,
7-6 in a match that went to tiebreakers in four of the five sets and lasted 3 hours, 43 minutes.
Among the women, No. 2 Chris Evert Lloyd had an easy time eliminating Manuela Maleeva of Bulgaria 6-4, 6-0; No. 8 Hana Mandlikova of Czechoslovakia whipped Kathleen Cummings 6-0,6-1 in 38 minutes; No. 10 Zina Garrison defeated Carling Bassett of Canada 6-4, 6-3; No. 14 Jo Durie of Britain defeated Terry Phelps 6-4, 3-6, 6-2; and No. 16 Kathy Jordan beat Terry Holladay 6-4,3-6,6-3.
Krickstein sprung the biggest shocker of the tournament, recovering from a two-set deficit to overthrow Geruilaitis, who began playing in the Open when the youngster from Grosse Pointe, Mich, was 4-years-old.
In the first two sets, I was thinking too
much about who I was playing. There was such a big crowd. I never thought it would happen, Krickstein said.
In the third set, he took a 4-0 lead arxl thats when he thought he mi^t be able to win, despite the dream he had Saturday night. I dreamt I lost, he said. Straight sete. Krickstein had only to think about his first-roimd experience in the Open to know that a two-set lead is hardly a lock. He was two-up on Stefan Edberg of Sweden but needed a fifth set tiebreaker to win.
Gerulaitis contributed to his own downfall with five double faults, the last one breaking his service and putting Krickstein in position to serve for the match.
I was playing pretty good, the teen-ager said. He sort of gave me a lot of double faults at the end. I had a few chances to break him and I was returning serve pretty well, too. Next, Krickstein faces Noah, whose game seems to be improving as the tournament continues. This is the best Ive played so far, the French Open champ said after defeating Korita. Im pleased with the way I played.
So was Leand, who sent Turnbull home.
It was sort of a surprise and totally unexpected, said the 19-year-old, who advanced to the round of 16 for the third straight year.
I think now it means more to me because I know what prices you have to pay in order to do well. I know if I want to do well, I have to do the hard work. Now it means more.
Next for Leand is Ivanna Madruga-Osses of Argentina, who defeated Pam Teeguarden 4-6, 6-1,6-1.
Lloyd struggled in the first set against Maleeva. I was tentative and she was dictating the points, she said.
But Lloyd took charge in the second set. It was a question of getting used to her game. Today, Lloyd was to meet Jordan, who defeated her at Wimbledon earlier this summer.
Jumping For Joy
Aaron Krickstein jumps after his upset victory over 15th-seeded Vitas Gerulaitis in the third round of the
U.S. Open Sunday. The IH-year old rallied from two sets down to win 3-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-4 and advance. (/>P Laserphoto)
Washburn Picks Pack
Groh Knows What Paterno Experienced
By TOM FOREMAN Jr.
AP Sports Writer Wake Forest football coach A1 Groh figures he and Penn State coach Joe Paterno have one thing in common. Theyve both suffered disappointing losses in season openers.
Paterno is leading the defending national champions, however, while Groh is in search of his first winning season in Winston-Salem. Appalachian State made Grohs quest even more difficult this weekend when it took a 27-25 victory over the Demon Deacons as senior linebacker Joel Carter re-jiurned two intercepted passes for touchdowns.
Elsewhere in the Atlantic Coast Conference, No. 11 North Carolina marched to a 24-8 victory over arch-rival South Carolina. Quarterback Scott Stankavage completed 12 of 14 passes for 145 yards and one touchdown, while tailback Ethan Horton rushed 29 times for 114 yards.
Duke and Virginia hooked up in an early league clash and the Cavaliers awakened their offense for a surprising 38-30 victory over Duke in Charlottesville. Clemson, in its first game under ACC and NCAA probation, crushed Western Carolina 44-10 as Mike Eppley threw three touchdown passes.
Wake Forest had taken a 7-0 lead in the first quarter on Duane Owens 25-yard run. Carters first interception return, in the second quarter, covered 48 yards and came after Groh yanked his first offense in place of the No. 2 unit. On the Deacons first
possession of the second half. Carter caught a Gary Schofield attempt and went 30 yards untouched.
Add two Billy Van Aman field goals and a 12-yard run by Cliff Reid and Groh came down with the same feeling Pqterno had - or so he thought.
Ive always wondered how coaches like Joe Paterno felt.
I think he and I had similar experiences this week, Groh said, "I dont know how he felt Jan. 2, but I know how he feels now.
Feeling understandably better was Mountaineer coach Mack Brown, in his first game as a head coach.
To stay in the game, we felt like we needed to be excellent in the kicking game and keep from beating ourselves, Brown said. We did not turn the ball over and that kept them on the other end of the field.
Stankavage completed seven straight passes en route to North Carolinas victory, but coach Dick Crum ap-
Sports Club To Hear Walden
Quarterback Johnny Walden of the USFL Boston Breakers will be the guest speaker for the Greenville Sports Cluh Tuesday at the Ramada Inn at noon.
Walden had played in the National Football League before signing with the Breakers.
peared more impressed with his defense, which didnt allow a first down until midway through the second quarter.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -Chris Washburn, a 6-foot-ll, 250-pound center who was one of the heaviest recruited high school basketball players in the country, announced Sunday he will attend North Carolina State.
Washburn, a concensus high school All-America, spurned offers from more than 250 colleges and universities in deciding to attend N.C. State next fall. N.C. State is the defending NCAA champions.
Washburn, a native of Hickory, picked the Atlantic Coast Conference school over Ken
tucky and Louisville and Maryland, Virginia and Clemson of the ACC.
N.C. State head coach Jim Valvano said he was extremely pleased that Washburn selected the Wolfpack.
There have been three great moments in my athletic life to this point, Valvano said: Getting the job at State, of course, is one of them, and then winning the national championship last season.
Now, with Chris joining the Wolfpack, that makes three,
Valvano said. I think Chris is among the all-time big men coming out of high school. He can dominate as few have done.
Washburn averaged 19 points and 11 rebounds last season to lead Fork Union Military Academy in Virginia to a 22-5 record.
Save Up To *400 OnALLIS-CHALMERS LAWN MOWERS
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Tm going to give it my best shot, said Peterson. My putter feels good and I made a few good putts to save par and it really kept me going.
After saving par with tough putts on several holes, Peterson reeled off three birdies in four holes on the back nine of the 6,281-yard, par-72 Rail Country Club.
She bogied the 18th hole, niissing a 6-foot putt for par after (tepositing her approach *it just short of the green.
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Plastic Surgeon Attacks Injection Wrinkle 'Cure'
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - A drug used to erase skin scars and wrinkles works only a short time and may be harmful, says a plastic surgeon. but the maker of the liquid collagen says Dr. Erie
Peacock Jr. is overreacting.
Peacock, of Chapel Hill, said he was astounded the federal Food and Drug Administration approved the substance in 1981, saying some studies indicate col
lagens effects may last no more than four months and may trigger the immune system to act abnormally.
Peacock said research has shown that collagen injections in rats produced a
No Navy Carriers Now On Persian Gulf Duty
WASHINGTON (AP) -For the first time since the Iranian hostage crisis prompted a U,S. naval buildup in the Persian Giilf, the Navy does not have an aircraft carrier patrolling waters near the oil-rich region.
With the carrier Vinsons departure from the Indian Ocean in the last few days. U.S. naval power in the Arabian Sea-Persian Gulf region consists of a relatively ' weak force of two frigates and a destroyer, according to Navy sources.
Navy advocates say the 'thinness" of the U.S. carrier fleet forced the Pentagon to leave the vital oii-producing region uncovered by carrier-based air power while the United States is flexing its naval muscle in the waters off Uentral America.
U.S. naval strength is being shifted to allow for a show of force along the Pacific and Caribbean coasts of Central America, Navy officials acknowledged Saturday.
While three carriers - the Coral Sea. the Independence and the Kennedy - have bf-en assigned to participate in naval exercises off Central America, four others are in dry dock for overhauls or repairs.
The Forrestal. the Midway and the Constellation are lieing overhauled and the recently modernized Saratoga is having its leaky i.Kjilers repaired before it can return to active service this fall.
Of the remaining U.S. carriers, the Eisenhower is stationed off Lebanon to support U.S. Marines who have been attacked while performing peacekeeping duty. The Ranger, which recently ended a cruise off Nicaragua, is in the western Pacific and four others are
patrolling U.S. waters, two in the Atlantic and two in the Pacific. Another carrier, the Lexington is only rated fit for flight training.
Even though several carriers now in dry dock are expected to rejoin the active fleet this fall, the Coral Sea is due to return to Norfolk, Va. for a 15-month overhaul, probably later this month.
Before the Shah of Irans pro-American government was toppled in 1979, President Carter had favored making the Indian Ocean a neutral zone that would be free of naval fleets operated by the big powers. But the policy was scuttled in November of that year when
Iranian revolutionaries mobbed the U.S. embassy in Tehran and took Americans hostage.
The U.S. naval buildup in the Persian Gulf region began later that month when Carter assigned the carrier Kitty Hawk to the Indian Ocean. The Soviet Unions invasion of Afghanistan in late 1979 prompted a two-year show of force to deter Soviet military action in the region.
Two carrier battle groups were stationed outside the Persian Gulf until the Reagan administration citing budgetary constraints - cut the force to a single battle group in 1981.
JCs 'Frustrated' By State Publicity
GREENSBORO. N.C. (AP) - Leaders of .North Carolina Jaycees say they're ready to put 'Jarnscam behind them, but not without some parting complaints about the way the media and state officials handled the scandal.
Jamscam erupted in 1980 when it was learned that charitable funds raised through grape jelly sales had been misused to create fictitious Jaycee chapters.
Last week, the case ended with the dismissal of ail charges against two former club officials and the sentencing of two others to six-month prison terms. Another former Jaycee is appealing his conviction.
"Three years weve put up with this nonsense, said Jim Godfrey of Southern Pines, current N.C. Jaycees president.
Godfrey complains that the
state attorney generals office allowed needless delays in prosecuting the case, while the media gave front-page coverage to accounts of fund misuse but paid little attention to the repayment.
Theyve dragged us through the mud, Godfrey said. I dont know why the attorney general did what he did. 1 dont know why the media did what they did. Its totally frustrating.
Jay Eaker, press secretary for Attorney General Rufus Edmisten, said delays were tied to requirements of the investigation and said his office "acted properly and responsibly at every turn.
Jamscam began over three years ago, when some Jaycees began questioning financial records kept by Executive Director Maurice Wilson. At the time, the state Jaycees were pushing a native son - J, Harold Herring of Mount Olive - for national president.
Herring was running unopposed, backed by hundreds of new chapters of 20 Jaycees each. As it turned out, most of those chapters were fakes, their national dues gleaned from jelly sale funds diverted from the N.C. Jaycee Burn Center in Chapel Hill.
Felony charges were filed against Wilson, Herring, and former Jaycee officials Thomas Alsop, and Johnny Lee Fletcher, Wilson and Herring made plea bargains with the state, while a jury convicted Fletcher on one count. Charges against Alsop were dropped.
Jerry Wall, the clubs executive director who replaced one of the men indicted on felony charges, says hes "just glad its over.
disuse similar to human rheumatoid arthritis and that both rabbits and rats produce antibodies in response to collagen.
No one has measured the anti-collagen antibodies in human beings and there is no proof that injections will hurt, he said, adding that Duke University Medical Center and the University of Michigan are studying whether patients face similar problems. Results of the study are expected in about a year. Peacock said.
Collagen Corp., manufacturer of the substance, says the liquid forms a "woven lattic-work that lends struc-tural'support to the skin and fosters the ingrowth of surrounding cells.
Peacock said many studies, including his own, have shown that solid collagen temporarily can perform that function, but that liquid collagen is rapidly digested and remains in the body no longer than three or four months.
Collagen Vice President Bruce Pharris, however, said tissue biopsies evaluated by the corpwation and several universities show that patients cells grow on the injected liquid. He said the corporations product is a unique form of collagen unfamiliar to Peacock.
Dr. Sheldon Pollack, a Duke physician who treats patients with the corporations product, said, The fate of liquid collagen is still not known and is being investigated. It does go away after several months, but seem to temporarily restore something in the skin. Maureen E. Brunner, director of consumer marketing for Collagen Corp., said the firm does not hide the fact that the substance is biodegradable. People generally choose to have a touch-up from six to 24 months after initial treatment,
Pharris said there was little need for concern over the treatment, which has been used on about 200 patients at Duke since July 1981 at a cost ranging from $600 to $1,000.
He said studies show Only 3*2 percent of people injected with liquid collagen had adverse reactions including mild rashes or itching at the point of injection.
Responding to Peacocks charges that liquid collagen costs 6,000 times what the company spends to produce it, Pharris said it was costly to market.
Our product must be pure, sterile, manufactured in a consistent way and meet ' exact specificiations, he said. The fibrous nature of this product must be correct or else the cells will not invade and take up residence on it. This step is key and very time-consuming.
While Peacock refuses to treat his own patients with collagen, many who have received the injections are pleased with the results.
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DADDY! - Mei Osaka, 8, foreground, and Mai Osaka, 11, throw flowers Sunday into the sea near suspected crash site of a Korean Airlines jumbo believed shot down by a Soviet fighter plan. Their father, Tokyuki Osaka, was one of 269 people aboard. Japanese from 14 families with relatives aboard the KAL airliner bid farewell to their relatives from a ferry near the Sea of Japan area where the plane is thought to have been downed. (AP Laserphoto)
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Perspectives
Are Hangovers Healthy?
By Porter Shaw, Substance Abuse Program Director
Hangovers, according to researchers, may not be all bad. Recently a study of a thousand people demonstrated that those who dont have hangovers after heavy drinking appear more likely to become problem drinkers than those who do. The study at the University of New York, Buffalo, N.Y., states that about half of those categorized as heavy drinkers, or recovering alcoholics, reported that
they did have hangovers in their recent drinking years. Some 23% indicated they never had a hangover.
While the study does not directly state that all heavy drinkers who fail to have hangovers will become alcoholics, the findings do suggest that those who do not have hangovers may be at greater risk for developing patterns which are associated with problem drinking.
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CLEARING A RIDGE Larry James, right, clears away dried brush as fellow inmates work to clear the top of a ridge at a firebreak in the San Dimas Experimental Forest recently. James is
one of about 2,500 California prisoners who work off their time as part of the prisons conservation corps. (AP Laserphoto)
California Prison Inmates Are Assisting In Natural Disasters
ByCAROLYNSKORNECK Associated Press Writer MALIBU, Calif, (AP) - When entertainer Barbra Streisands exclusive Malibu Colony home was ravaged by storms last month, prison inmates quickly surrounded it.
They werent looting the place, just piling sandbags to protect it and other nearby celebrity-owned structures from further damage.
The inmates werent allowed inside, said Capt. Clifford Dysart of the Los Angeles County Fire Department. They were outside sandbagging the houses.
And this summer, when fires burned thousands of acres throughout Southern California, inmates helped cut the fire lines.
About 2,500 of the states 37,000 prisoners serve as emergency crews in disasters. And while other states use prisoners for community projects, California has the most extensive program using inmates to fight calamities, said Hardy Rauch of the American Correctional Association.
The work is tough and can be risky.
It is the most difficult part of firefighting, said Howard OBrien, the California Detriment of Forestrys coordinator of the conservation camp program, referring to cutting fire lines. Its usually the steepest terrain that bulldozers cant navigate.
The state has 32 camps, 29 in rural areas separate from prison institutions, and 60 women inmates were included in the program this summer, said Phil Guthrie of the California Department of Corrections. Rainbow Camp in San Diego County, currently used for men, will be occupied by women in October, he said.
During the day, the inmates are assigned to the California Department of Forestry or the Los Angeles Ck)unty Fire Department. At night, the CDC resumes responsibility.
The only inmates we dont take are arsonists, naturally, and sex offenders, said Lt. Bill Dieball, who heads the Prado Conservation Camp located next to the California Institution for Men at Chino. The sex offenders ban basically has to do with the community and the fact that they work essentially without supervision.
Billy Fonville, 37, of Bakersfield, was convicted of first-degree murder when he was 24. He spent time in San Quentin, Soledad and Folsom prisons before moving to Francisquito Conservation Clamp near Saugus and then Prado, wh^re he is awaiting parole in September.
You really cant compare (camps to prisons), said Fonville.
Theres a lot of violence inside the institutions, he said. Everybody gets along (at Prado) exceptionally well. Soledad has a lot of riots. Here, there are none.
The camps best feature is just being able to walk outside, to walk around the grounds, Fonville said. To me its kind
Twelve Die In Holiday Traffic
By The Associated Press
Labor Day weekend traffic accidents on North Carolina highways had killed a dozen )eople by this morning, )ringing the years death toll to 801 compared with 822 on the same date in 1982, the state Highway Patrol reported.
The holiday weekend runs from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Monday. Last Labor Day weekend, 14 died in state hi^way accidents.
Dan Andrew Jenkins Jr. and Ronald Dale Shipman, both 19 of Arden Park, were killed when a car driven by Jenkins struck a tree 8 miles south of Asheville, leaving two other injured.
On Saturday, Thomas Shaw Brannon, 33, and his daughter, Jennifer Rebecca Brannon, 13, both of Ralei^, died in a head-on collision with a state courier van after it sideswiped another v^i-cle, the patrol said. The crash occurred on U.S. 64 in Chatham County, 12 miles eastofPittsboro.
In another double fatality Saturday, Daniel Steven Vinyerd and Tony Franklin Sink, both of Conway, S.C., died when a car driven by Sink sped from N.C. ISO in Davidson County and struck
a tree.
Earlier Saturday, Phillip Wayne Norwood, 32, of Townsville, died in a three-vehicle crash in Vance County that left four people injured. Troopers said the car driven by Norwood struck another vehicle while trying to pass, then deflected into a head-on collision.
Anthony Tyrone Manns, 6, of Walnut Cove died Saturday when he stepped into the path of an oncoming vehicle in Stokes County after leaving a car.
Martha Jill McKeUar, 18, of Como, was killed Saturday when the car she was driving left the road at a high sped in Hertford County near Murfreesboro and struck a tree.
Also killed Saturday were Maiy Jane Cartrett, 18, of Whiteville, whose car struck a tree and overturned in Columbus County, Duard Bellma Bradley, 53, of Marion, a pedestrian struck down in McDowell County and Grady Brown Parsons Jr., 49, of Elkin, a pedestrian killed in Wilkes County.
Help keep Greenville clean! Call the Right-Of-Way Office at 752*4137 for more information.
of an orientation to the streets. You can go to an officer here. Here youre treated like a human being. Inside, youre not.
The public also benefits, state officials say.
While inmates live in a dorm instead of a small cell, the public has emergency crews on call 24 hours a day. They clean parks and clear fire breaks when there are no emergencies.
Dick Friend, a Los Angeles County Fire Department spokesman, said it would cost the county $16 milliwi to duplicate the services provided by GDC prisoners in the countys four conservation camps, $15.8 million more than the county now pays.
Camp inmates receive $1.35 to $3.75 a day, depending on their jobs, plus 75 cents an hour for emergency fire and flood work, officials said.
There has been some apprehension about the program, especially after a Chino HillSs couple and two children were killed in June. Kevin Cooper, an escaped inmate from the California Institute fur Men, not Prado Camp, has been charged in the murders.
To ease the feeling in the community ... we didnt work anybody in the Chino Valley for awhile, Dieball said. Were now requiring that we have more supervision as well.
Some camp inmates do escape. In 1982, there were 71 escap^ statewide and virtually all were recaptured, Guthrie said. The all-time high was in 1972, when 179 escaped, and the low was 1975, when 40 escaped, he said.
The trick in this is to pick people who would do no harm if they do get out, Guthrie said.
Both behavior and ability are scrutinized.
Everybody goes first to the Sierra Conservation Clenter in Jamestown (Calif.), Dieball said. Thats where they go through training for about five weeks. Theyve already been reviewed by three or four levels before they get there.
They all hav" to be able to work 12 hours fighting fires, said Ca^. Don Kanallakan, superintendent of the Los Angeles County xamp near Malibu. Were getting the cream (rf the crop. Theyl fight fires for eight hours and come back here and lift weights.
Farm Scene
By SAM UZZELL Associate Agriculture Extenson Agent
The black turpentine beetle is a frequent pest of pine trees east of the Mississippi River. The turpentine beetle most often attacks unhealthy loblolly or slash pines. It can infest healthy pines, but pines under stress are preferred. Freshly cut stumps, often serve as a breeding site for the beetles.
The black turpentine beetle is the insect referred to as a pine borer. The beetles usually attack the lower piH*-tions of the trunk. Sometimes the attacks occur as high up as 12 feet. Infested trees are characterized by large reddish to whitish pitch tubes on the bark surface. From a distance, pitch tubes may look like popcorn stuck on the bark of the tree.
The turpentine beetle in Eastern North Carolina finds acceptable trees to attack around new home construction sites. The reason why so many pines are killed after the atack of beetles is because the roots nearby are disturbed by heavy construction equipment first. Sometimes roots are removed directly by the heavy machinery, sometimes roots are crushed, or the soil is compacted near the tree. Trees that have lost portions of their root system are stressed and as a result, are much more susceptible to beetle invasion. Healthy trees are often able to pitch out pine beetles because they have a strong flow of sap in the tree. V^re the pitch tubes are clear or white in color, the tree is bolding its own against the turpen
tine beetle.
When the pitch tubes take on a reddish color or have bits of sawdust in them, then the tree is in trouble. Where pitch tubes are noticed, sprays with the insectitide lindane may help. The lower portions of the trunk can be sprayed whenever pitch tubes are first noticed.
Merely spM'aying the trees is often not khi^. It must be assumed that the tree is under stress due to other causes. Drought, flood, lightning, construciton damage, diseiase or lac*^: space
between trees lu rnate a
tree more suicepilble to insect attack. If crowding of pines is the ,.<^iem, then thinning pines to allow more room is an obvious solution. Where there has been a loss of root system, then fertilization may increase root (rowth. Ligthning is usually atal to pines.
To stimulate new roots, fertilizers that are relatively low in nitrogen and higher in' phosphorus and potash should be used. Such fertilizers as 0-10-20,34)-18,5-10-10 are better than using 10-10*10 as a source of nitrogen such as soda.
Black turpentine beetles are active through most of the warm parts of the year. They only affect pine tres, especially loblolly and slash lines and will not affect iroadleaved trees. Where evidence of these beetles is seen at work, there is a good possibility that the affected tree is under stress and depending upon the severity of attack, may need rentoval.
SCOREBOARD
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE EASTDIVUION
W L Pet. GB Baltimore 80 S3 603
NwYork 76 S8 .587 44
77 5 .566 44
Milwaukee 76 SO 563 5
Toronto 75 64 .540 8
Boston 66 71 .482 16
Oe*tand 61 76 .445 21
^ WEST DIVISION
Oticago 77 5# .566 -
lnaasCity 71 .478 12
Oskland tt 73 .475 124
Texas 64 74 <464 14
California 63 73 .463 14
MinnesoU 58 80 .420 20
Seattle 51 ffi .375 26
Satarday't Garnet Detroit 7, Toronto 4 BaHimore 13, Minnesota 0 Chicago 9. Boston 6 Clevetond 13, Oakland 6 Kansas aty 5-1, Texas 06 Milwaukee 4j^Califomia 3 New York 5, battle 3
Saadayt Games Toronto 6, Detroit 3,10 innings Boston 6, Chicago 2 Baltimore 9, Minnesota 6 California 5, Milwaukee 3 Cleveland 9, Oakland 2 New York 4, Seattle 3 Texas 3. Kansas City 2
Monday's Games Oakland (Conroy 6-7) at Chicago (Bannister 13-10)
New York (Rawley 14-10) at Milwaukee (Candiotti 3-0)
Boston (Ojeda 7-7) at Baltimore (Bod-dicker 126)
California (Zahn 8-10) at Toronto (Gott 7-13), (n)
Detroil (Morris 186) at Cleveland (Blyleven7-9). (n)
Seattle (Beattie 8-12) at Kansas City (Gura 10-16), (n)
MinnesoU (Lysander 4-11) at Texas (Butcher 5-5), (n)
Tnesdays Games California at Toronto, (n)
Boston at Baltimore, (n)
Detroit at Oeveland, (n)
Oakland at Chicago, (n)
New York at Milwaukee, in)
MinnesoU at Texas, (n)
Seattle at Kansas City, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE EAST DIVISION
W L Pet. GB Baltimore 80 53 602 -
New York 76 58 .567 44
Detroit 77 59 . 566 4 4
Milwaukee 76 SO .563 5
Toronto 75 64 540 8
Boston 71 .482 16
Cleveland 61 76 .445 21
WEST DIVISION Chicago 77 59 566 -
Kansas City 71 478 12
Oakland 66 73 475 12>1i
Texas 64 74 464 14
California 63 73 463 14
MinnesoU 58 80 420 20
Seattle 51 85 375 26
Saturday's Games Detroit 7, Toronto 4 Baltimore 13, MinnesoU 0 Chicago 9, Boston 6 CleveUnd 13, Oakland 6 Kansas City 5-1, Texas 06 Milwaukee 4, California 3 New York 5, Seattle 3
Sunday's Games Toronto 6, Detroit 3,10 innings Boston 6, Chicago 2 Baltimore 9, MinnesoU 6 California 5, Milwaukee 3 Cleveland 9, Oakland 2 New York 4, Seattle 3 Texas 3, Kansas City 2
Monday's Games Oakland (Conroy 6-7) at Chicago (Bannister 1310)
New York (Rawley 14-10) at Milwaukee (Candiotti 36)
Boston (Ojeda 7-7) at Baltimore (Bod-dicker 126)
California (Zahn 310) at Toronto (Gott 7-13), (n)
Detroit (Morris 186) at Oeveland
(B^k^76), (n)
-^ttle (Beattie 312) at Kanau Oty (Gura 1316), (n)
MinnesoU (Lysander 311) at Texas (Butcher 56), (n)
Ta^y'sGaaMS j
CahfomU at Toronto, (n)
Boston at Baltimore, (n)
Detnit at Cleveland, (n)
Oaklandat Chicago, (n)
New York atMilwiukee,(n)
MinnesoU at Texas, (n)
Seattle at Kansas City,(n)
League Leaders
By HwAssociatod Press AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (340 at baU): Bogtt, Boston,. .3; Cdrew, California, .oH^mmell, Detroit, .328- Moaeby, Toronto, .321; Sinunons, Milwaukee, .317; Whitaker, Detroit,.317.
RUNS: Murray, Baltimore 97; Ripken, Baltimore, 96; idoaeby. foronto,nil; Boggs, Boston, 88; R. Henderson, Oakbnd,88.
RBI: Cooper, Milwaukee, 109; Rice, Boston, KB: Parrish, Detroit, 9; Win-fieldjfcw York, 96; Armas, Boston, 97.
HI^: Boggs, Boston, 180; WhiUker, Detroit, 170; (JoopCTTMilwaukee, 168; Ripken, Baltimore, 164; McRae, Kaiuas Ciu 159: Rice,Bostonj59.
DUBLES: Boggs, Boston, 43; Ripken, Baltimore, 38; Parrish, Detroit, 37; McRae, Kansas City, 37; Hrbek, Min-MSOL36.
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 9; Franco, Cleveland, 8; Gantner, Milwaukee, 8; Winfield, iW York, 8; 5 are tied with 1 HOM RUNS: Bice, Boston, 34; Armas, Boston, 31; Kittle, Chicago, 30; Murray, Baltimore, 2^ Cooper, Milwaukee, 26: Luzinski, Chicago, 26; WinfieldJiewVork,26.
STOLEN BASES: R. Henderson, Oakland, 93; R. Law, Chicago, 63; J. Cruz, Chicago, 49; Wilson, Kaisas Qty, 47i^Sample, Texas, 38.
PITCHING (13 decisions): Haas, Milwaukee, 12-3, .800, 3.3^ McGr^or, Baltimore, 17-5, .773, 2.95; liighetti. New York, 135, .737, 3.11; Heaton, CleveUnd, 134, .714, 3.42; Davis, Baltimore, 12-5,
^^RllOUTS: Morris, Detroit, 194; Stieb, Toronto, 166; Righetti, New York, 158; Bannister, Chicago, 152; Sutcliffe, CleveUnd, 140.
SAVES: (^senberty, Kansas City, 36; Davis, MinnesoU, 26; SUnley, Boston, 26; Caudill, Seattle, 22; (Ussage, New York, 17, Ladd, Mwaukee, 17; Ltjpez, Detroit, 17.
NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (340 at bate): Madlock, PitUbur^, .323; Cruz, Houston, .320; Hendrick, St. Louis, 320; Dawson,Montreal, .317; Puhl, Houston, .314.
RUNS: Murphy AtUnU, 112; Raines, Montreal, 104' Dawson, Montreal, 92; Evans, San Francisco, 87; Schmidt,
RBI: Bawson, Montreal. 99; Murphy, AtUnU, 97; Schmidt, PhiladelphU, 92; Guerrero, Los Angeles, 88; Kennedy, San Diego, 82.
HTrS: Dawson, Montreal, 167, Cruz, Houston, 161; Oliver Montreal, 158;, Thon, Houston,158; Ramirez, AtUnU, 155.
DOUBLES: Buckner, Chicago, 35; Knight. Houston. 32; Dawson, Rtontreal, 31; Oliver, Montreal, 31; Carter, MontreaIJO; Ray, PitUburgh,.
TRIPLfeS: Butler, AtUnU, 12; Thon, Houston, 9; Cruz, Houston, 8; Green, St. Louis, 8; Washington, AtUnta, 8.
HOME RUNS: Schmidt, niiUdelphU, 32; Dawson, Montreal, , Evans, San Francisco, 28: Murphy, AtUnU, 28; Guerrero,Los Angeles, X.
STOLEN BASES: Raines, Montreal, ; Wiggins, San Diego, 49; S. Sax, Los Angeles, 44; Wilson, New York, 42; LeMaster,San Francisco, 39.
PITCHING (13 decisions): Orosco, New York, 12-5, 706, 1.22, Denny,
PhiUdelphia, 136, .684,2.50; HicWilliams, Pittsburgh, 13-6, .684, 3.01; Perez, AtUnU, 136, .684, 3.78; Ryan, Houston, 136, 684.2.36.
' STRIKEOUTS: Carlton, PhUadetahU, 234: Soto CUdnaati, 206; McwSm, Pidsburgh. 164; VaUimiMa, Los Aides, 150;I^HaustonJ.
SAm; taitolcago, 14: Reardon, Montreal, 10; BedroSn, Aanto, II; HolUad, PhiUdelBbia. 18; Minh san FrancUco, 18; Tekulve, Pidsburgh. U.
NFL Standings
By IhcAiseeUted Press AawrfcaaCsalerceee East
W L TPeL PF PA Baltimore 1 0 0 l.OOO 29 23
MUmi 1 0 0 1.000 12 0
N.Y.JeU 1 0 0 1.000 41 29
BuHaU 0 1 0 .000 0 12
NewEiUnd 0 1 0 .000 23 29
Central 0 1 0
Jackaon St. 21, AUbama St. 0
McNeS^. 18, fiW Louisiana 13
Mississippi CM. to SE LouisUna 10 MUaissippiSt. 14,11iUiie9 Morris Brown 13, Fayette^ St. 10 NichoHs St. 21, Lamar 14 N. Carolina 24, S. (Urolina 8 N.C. Central 21, Livingstone 17
TANK MCNAMARA
niTTP^TTTT
The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C. Monday, Septembers, 1983 I'J
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
__a^MeTa4*wese
Pittsburah 13, Tennessee 3 St. Pauim Bowie S
Cincinnati
CSeveUnd
Houston
Pittsburgh
Denver Kansas aty L.A.Raiders San Diego SeatUe
.000 10 20
0 1 0 .000 21 27
0 1 0 .000 38 41
0 1 0 .000 10 14
West
1 0 0 1.000 14 10
1 0 0 1.000 17 13
1 0 0 1.000 20 10
0 1 0 .000 29 41
0 1 0 .000 13 17
National Conference
East
PhiUdelphU 1 0 0 1.000 22 17
Dallas 0 0 0 .000 0 0
Washington 0 0 0 .000 0 0
N.Y.GUnU 0 1 0 .000 6 16
St.LouU 0 1 0 000 17 28
Ceatral
1 0 0 1.000 11 0
1 0 0 1.000 41 38
1 0 0 1.000 27 21
0 1 0 .000 17 20
Detroit Green Bay MinnesoU Chicago Tampa Bay
AtUnU LA. Rams New Orleans San Francisco
.000 0 11
0 1 0
West
1 0 0 1.000 20 17
0 1.000 16 6
0 1.000 28 17
000 17 22
1 0 1 0 0 1 0 Saturday's Games
Philadelphia 22, San Francisco 17 Sunday's Games New Orleans 28, St Louis 17 Green Bay 41, Houston 38, OT AtlanU JO, Chicago 17 Baltimore 29, New England 23, OT Denver 14, PitUburah 10 Detroit II, Tampa yO Los Angeles Raiders 20, Cincinnati 10 Los Angeles Rams 16, New York Giants
Miami 12, Buffalo 0 MinnesoU 27, Oeveland 21 New Ywii Jets 41, San Diego 29 Kansas City 17, Seattle 13 Monday's Game Dallasat Washing, (n) 'Ihunday,Sept.8 San Francisco at MinnesoU, (n)
Sunday, Sept. 11 Dallas at St. Louis Pittsburah at Green Bay Tampa Bay at Chicago Washington at Philadelphia Buffalo at Cincinnati Cleveland at Detroit New York Giants at AtlanU Seattle at New York Jets Houston at Loe Angeles Raiders New Orleans at Los Angeles Rams New Ei^and at Miami Denver at Baltimore
Monday, Sg>t. 12 San Diego at Kansas City, (n)
College Scores
By The AssocUted Press
easT
Boston College 45, Morgan St. 12 EdinboroSt. 41, West uboly 3 Glenville St. 7, Waynestiurg?, tie Mansfield St. 28, Dist. of CMumbia 14 Shepherd 37, Miilersville St. 14 Slippery Rock 18, Bloomsburg St. 7 W.Tirginia55,OWoU.3 SOUTH ilachUn St. 27, Wake Forest 25 json 44, W. Carolina 10 E. Kentucky 21, E. Tennessee St: 15 Florida 28, MUmi, FU. 3 Florida St. 47, E. (Urolina 46 Ge^al9,UCLA8 Grambling St. 28, Alcorn St. 0
....,..^w^St.23 S. Carolina St. 13, Furman 3 S. Mississippi 32, Richmood 3 TennesseeSt. 20, Hampton Inst. 14 Tn.6:3utUnoou 13, Jacksonville St. 6 TroySt.33,TiSkegee6 VirginU38,DukeW VirginU Union 14, J.C. Smith 0 Winston-Salem 17, VirrinU St. 16 MIDWEST Akron 13, Kent St . 6 BaU St. 42, Rhode UUnd 26 Bemidji St. 31, Sioux Falls 0 Chadron St. 7. S. DakoU Tech 0 E.IUinoU38,IUinoUSt.7 E. Michigan 7, MarshaU 3 Ft. Hay^. 14, UncMn 6 Hastings 10, Northern St.,S.D. 9 IndUna St. 10, NE Louisiana 9 Long Beach St. 28, Kansas St. 20 Loras 36, Upper Iowa 12 Minn.-Duluth 12, Wis.-Superior7 Minn.-Morris 23, Concordia, Moor. 1431,0. Southern 29, WichiU St. 21 Mo. Western 35, MiMouri-RoUa 28 Murray St. 25, SE Missouri 11 Nebraska-Omaha 12, NE Missouri 7 N. DakoU 55, Michigan Tech 7 N. DakoU St. 17, N. Michigan 14 N. IUinois3T Kansas 34 N.Iowa 34, Drake 10 NW Missouri St. 27, Morningside 25 Peru St. 10,Doane7 St. Ambrose 14, WiUUm Penn 0 S. Illinois 38, W. Illinois 6 Valparaiso 31, Alma 7 Wilfiam Jewell 30,^Evangel 16 sourawEOT Abilene ChristUn 23, Anglo St. 9 Arkansas St. 31, Tenn.-Martin 0 Bishop 30, Panhandle St. 0 CalifornU 19, Texas A4M17 Cent. Arkansas 21, Ark.-Pine Bluff 0 Cent. St., Okla. 28, NW Oklahoma 10 N. Texas St. 32, W. Texas St . 3 PitUbuig St. 17, Arkansas Tech 14 Southern Meth. 24, Louisville 6 Texas-El Paso 20, New Mexico St. 9 Tulsa34,SanDiraoSt.9 FAR WEST Air Force 34, Colorado St. 13 Arizona50,(JregonSt.6 Cent. Missouri 3L S Colorado 9 Fullerton St. 13, Boise St. 10 Nev.-Las Vegas 28, Nevada-Reno 18 NewMexicol7, UUh7 Pacific U. 21, Ciregon 15 Ricks 36, MonUna Tech 23 S. UUh 42, W. MonUna 10 Washington St. 27, MonUna St. 7 Weber St. 33, SW MinnesoU 21 Wyoming 34. S. DakoU 13
Golf Scores
ENDICOTT, N Y. (AP) - Final results and winnings in the $3W,800 B.C. Open golf tournament on the par-71, 6,966-yard En-Joie Golf CInb course;
Pat Lindsey 654,000 71646568-268
Dewitt Weaver 63,886 Bobby Wadkins 63.886 Tim Simpson 63,886 BiU Britton 63,886 Joey Rassett 62,130 Dan Halldorson 62,130 Mike Sullivan ^,130 Tom Jenkins ,130 Jim Simons 62,130 Ronnie Black 62,130 Grier Jones 61,657 Joey Sindelar 61,657 Nick Price 61,657 Jay Haas 61,657 KermitZarley 61,410 Mike Gove 61,410 BobE. Smith 61,410 Mike Donald 61,024 Ron Streck 61,024 MikeMorley6l,024 Dave Eichelbergr 61,024 Tommy Valentine 61,024 Graz Powers 61,024 JeftSluman61,024 WaUy Armstrong 61,024 Richard Zokol 61,024 Tom Purtzer 61,024 Brad Faxon 61,024 Rick Pearson 6756 Jeff MitcheU 6722 JohnMazza6^
Terry Diehl 6722 Gary Hallberg 6678 Ken Green 66%
Dan Forsman 6678 Mark Hayes 6678 Bruce Douglass 6678 Rafael Alarcon 6678 Bill Murchison 6678 Rex Caldwell 6642 Lee Trevino 6642 Eric Battlen6642 Gary Koch 6642 David ajrin 6642 Bobby (Sle 6615 Jim Nelford 6615 Tom Lehman 6615 Jim Booros 6615 David Peoples 6600 Tony Sills 6588 Bob Gilder 6588 Denis Watson 6588 Bruce Fleisher 6570 Ralph Landrum 6570 Gavin Levenson 6570 Thomas Gray 65^
C^ul Byrum 6549 Bob Eastwood 6549
70-7069-70-279 69-726969-279
68-72-72-67-279
71-72-7066-279
69-7168-72-280 7069-70-71-280 71-7168-70-280 69-746869-280 70726969-280
66-71-7568-280 726867-74-281
67-71-7073-281 7267-71-71-281 707269-70-281 73687071-282 69-7469-70-282 6071-7369-282 706968-76-283 ^7071-73-283 73-706872-283 73-706872-283 69-71-72-71-283 71-71-71-70-283 6071-73-70-283
7072-7269-283 71-71-7269-283
71-71-7368-283 66-73-7668-283
72-71-71-70-284 716071-74-285 7466-74-71-285 707168-76-285 676072-78-286
7073-71-72-286 7567-72-72-286 706075-72-286 746072-71-286 716876-71-286
7071-7570-286 71-7071-75-287
71-71-7075-287 66-7078-73-287 6074-73-71-287
68-74-74-71-287 68-74-7076-288 687074-76-288i
72-71-71-74-288' 71-7076-71-288 71-7075-73-289
7072-72-76- 290
71-71-72-76-290 6074-73-74-290 68-74-72-77-291
72-7074-75-291 7468-7873-291 72-71-74-75-292 746 074-76-293 71-707073-293
/^lachi
Clemsont
Gil Morgan $32,400 John Amims $17,400 Wayne Levi $17,400 Mike Reid $11,400 Don Pooley $11,400 Pat McGowan $10,050 Steven Uebler $8,400 Sammy Rachels ,400 Craig SUdler $8,400 Victor Regalado $8,400 Fred Coupes $6,300 Bobby Clampett $6,300 Mark Brooks $6,300 Mark O'Meara $4,950 Clarence Rose $4,950 Bob Tway $4,950 Allen Miller $4,950 Vance Heafner $3,386 Buddy Gardner $3,886 Mark Lve $3,886
70676867-272
6867-7068-273
69-787064-273
71676769-274
67687269-274
73-706567-275
70696869-276
69726768-276
72687165-276
67686972-276
68726869-277
67-71-7069-277
70687168-277
63-71-7871-278
70687268-278
78726967-278
71-71-7165-278
72-706572-279 70687871-279 67-71-7871-279
SPRINGFIELD, lU. (AP) - Scores after Sunday's second round of the $150,000 LPGA Rail Charity Classic at the 6,281-yard, par-72 Rail Country Club (a-denotes amateur):
Lauri Peterson Joyce Kazmierski Kathryn Young Kathy Postlewait Valerie Skinner Alice Miller AyakoOkamoto Jackie Bertsch Judy Ellis Silvia Bertolaccini Patti Rizzo Jo Ann Washam Janet Anderson Kelly Fuiks s Cathy Mant Betsy King Carolyn lull
68-70-138
7869-139
7869-139 7069-139 68-71-139 68-71-139 7169-140 7878-140
7870-140
7871-141 7871=-141 6972-141 67-74-141 7269-141 7269-141 7269-141 71-70-141
Cathy Hanlon Carole Charbonnier Beth Solomon Lori Huxhold Marlene Hagge Anne-MariePalli Alison Sheard Jane Lock Kellii Rinker Pam Gietzen Mindy Moore Barbra Mizrahie JoAnne earner Becky Pearson SueErtl Katherine Hite Bonnie Lauer Jane Blalock Sandra Spuzich a-CarolineGowan Rosie Jones Gail HiraU Allison Finney Denise Strebig Myra Van Hoose Chris Johnson Catherine Panton Alice Ritzman Cindy Pleger Betsy Barrett Mary Beth Zimmerman Barbara Bunkowsky Vicki Fergon Missie McGeorge Holly Hartley H B. Duntz Connie Chillemi Deedee Lasker Lynn Adams Julie Pyne Vivian Brownlee Patty Hayes Linda Goldsmith Amy Benz Vicki Tabor Stephanie Farwig Marga Stubblefield Pat Meyers DaleEggeling Susie McAllister Jane Crafter Cindy Lincoln JaneGeddes M J Smith Therese Hession Nancy Rubin Jeannette Kerr Linda Hunt Shelley Hamlin
Failed to Qualify Sydney Cunningham Catherine Duggan Joan Joyce Mary Dwyer Debbie Hall Sarah LeVeque Colleen Walker ynolds
Judy Ra Cindy Booker Julie Inkster Sharon Barrett Mary Bryan Charlotte Montgomery Cathy Morse Pia Nilsson Marianne Hunmg Mari McDougall Lvnn Stronev
71-70-141
72-70-142
72-70-142 71-71-142 7872-142 71-72-143
71-72-143
73-70-143
72-71-143 72-71-143 72-71-143
72-71-143
71-72-143 7568-143
73-70-143
74-70-144
73-71-144
72-72-144 71-73-144 71-73-144 71-73-144
7874-144 6975-144
7875-145 68-77-145 7669-145
74-71-145
73-72-145 73-72-145
71-74-145
73-73-146
72-74-146 72-74-146
72-74-146
74-72-146 74-72-146 74-72-146
73-73-146 73-73-146 73-73-146 73-73-146
71-75-146 7877-147
7877-147 7869-147 77-70-147 77-70-147 73-74-147 73-74-147
73-74-147
72-75-147 7872-148 7872-148 7573-148 7573-148
7573-148
74-74-148 74-74-148
73-75-148
7874-148
71-77-148 6979-148
77-72-149
7574-149
7875-149 73-76-149
72-77-149
78-72-150
7575-150
71-79-150
77-74-151 7875-151
72-79-151
78-74-152 77-75-152
77-75-152
7878-152 7878-152
78-75-153 77-76-153
73-80-153
Laura Hurlbut Julie Waldo Kim Eaton Heather Drew Marjorie Jones Deborah Petrizzi Mary Bea Porter a-KarenSchulthes a-Lisa Rottman-Bremer
LEXINGTO.N, Ky. ( AP) - The leading scores and monev winnings in the Citizens Union Senior Golf Classic on the par-72, 6,720-yard Griffin Gate golf course:
Don January $25,000 Bob Stone $15,000 Gay Brewer $12,000 Miller Barber $9,000 Charlie Sifford $9,000 Arnold Palmer $5,383 Dan Sikes, $5,383 Doug Sanders $5.383 Sam Snead. $4,400 Howie Johnson $3,850 Peter Thomson $3,850 Guy Wolstenhole $2,757 Bill Collins $2,757 Jack Fleck $2.757 Bob Goalby $2,757 Jim Cochran $2,757 Bill Bisdorf $2.757 Lionel Hebert $2,757 Charlie Owens $2,025 Rod Funseth $2,025
676765-70-269 68676968-272 6965-7870-274 696868-70-275 6967 7168-275 6871-7167-277 6865-72-72-277 746765-71-277
6971-7268-280 666973-73-281 67-72-7872-281 78697873-282
6972-7467-282 71-787269-282 71687669-282 71-736969-282 7568-7869-282 7268-71-71-282 78787469-283 716875-71-283
Transactions
By The Associated Press BASEBALL .American League DETROIT TIGERS-C^alled up Bill Nahorodny, catcher-infielder, from Evansville of the American Association NEW YORK YANKEES-Recalled Rudy May, pitcher, from Columbus of the International League.
National League ATLANTA BRAVES-Recalled Tony Brizzolara, pitcher, from Richmond of the International League.
NEW YORK METS-Signed Eric Stampfl, pitcher
BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKEE BUCKS-Reached con tract agreement with Bob Lanier, center FOOTBALL
National Football League
-.... DIEGO CHARGERS-Signed Dairell Patillo, defensive back Placed
Cliff 'Thrift, linebacker, on the injured reserve list due to a hamstring injury United States Football League OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS-Signed Charles Jefferson and Dave Sellars, quarterbacks, and Ken Blair and Mike Smith, receivers
Southern 500 Lineup
DARLINGTON. S.C. (AP) - The lineup for the Southern 500 Grand National stock car race, with type of car and qualify ingspeed in mph:
1. Neil Bonnett, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 157.187 (breaks Southern 500 ouali fying record of 155.739 set in 1982 by David Pearson I.
2 Terrv Labonte. Chevrolet Monte
Carlo SS, 156.636.
3 Lake Speed, CTievrolet Monte Carlo SS, 156.213
4 Benny Parsons, Chevrolet Monte
Carlo SS, 156 149
5 David Pearson. Chevrolet Monte
Carlo SS, 155 911
6 Tim Richmond. Pontiac LeMans.
155 729
7 Darrell Waltrip. (Chevrolet Monte
Carlo SS, 155 409
8 Rickv Rudd, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 155 29
9 Buddy Baker, Ford Thunderbird,
155 188
10 Joe Ruttman, Pontiac Grand Prix, 155 022
11 Geoff Bodine, Pontiac Grand Prix, 154 239
12 Bill Elliott, Ford Thunderbird.
15:1,882
13 Dick Brooks. Ford Thunderbird, 154.559.
14 Bobby Allison. Buick Regal, 154 491
15 Cale Yarborough, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS. 154 104
16 Jody Ridley. Chevrolet: Monte Carlo SS.154 022 '
17 Dale Earnhardt, Ford Thunderbird, 153 685
18 Ron Bouchard. Buick Regal, 153 598
19 Morgan Shepherd, Buick Regal, 153 368
20 Harry Gant. Buick Regal, 152 616
21 Richard Petty. Pontiac Grand Prix. 152 474
22 Kvle Petty, Pontiac Grand Prix.
152.111
23 Dave Marcis,. Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 151 488
24 Ronnie Hopkins, Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 149 977
25 Ken Ragan, Chevrolet Monte Carlo, 150 225.
26 Jimmy Means, Chevrolet Monte
Carlo SS, 149 931
27 Mark Martin, Oldsmobile Cutlass, 149 877
28 Tommy Gane. Ford Thunderbird, 149 240
29 Bobby Hillin Jr, Buick Regal.
149 208
30 Trevor Boys. Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS, 149149
31 LenniePond, Buick Regal, 148 928
32 Philip Duffie, Buick Regal, 148 703.
33 Sterling Marlin. Pontiac Grand
Prix, 148.685
34 Buddy Arrington, Dodge Magnum, 148 667
35 Dick May. Ford Thunderbird. 148 599
36. Ronnie Thomas, Pontiac LeMans, 148 362
37 Bobby Wawak, Chevrolet Monte
Carlo SS, 148 259 38. Mike Potter, Oldsmobile Chtlass. 148.161
39 Slick Johnson. Buick Regal, 148 156
40 J D. McDifie, Pontiac LeMans, 147 658
41 D1 I'vrich, Buick Regal, 144 665
N.C. Scoreboard
Baseball Carolina League Playoffs
Lynchburg 9, Winston Salem 8 Soccer
Wake Forest 4, W Carolina 0
Whitt, Jays Have To Wait For East Rac
By The Associated Press ^ Ernie Whitt and the Toronto Blue Jays are done beating the teams they need to beat. Now they have to keep winning and keep watching.
Whitt cracked a dramatic three-run homer in the bottom of the 10th inning, his second of the game, to give the Blue Mays a 6-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers Sunday.
The game marked the final time this season that the Blue Jays played a team from the American League East. Starting today, Toronto, in fifth place in the AL East, eight games behind Baltimore, will spend the remainder of the season playing AL West teams while all six other AL East teams play amongst themselves.
Whitts game-winnig homer, his 15th of the season, went 400 feet and hit the top of the center-field fence before bouncing over, to the delight of 43,158 fans.
I was watching it all the way, Whitt said of his drive off Aurelio Lopez, 9-8. I
honestly didnt expect it to go out. Ive never hit a ball out of center field before.
Tigers Manager Sparky Anderson contended the Whitts ball shouldnt have been a home run.
That was a pq) fly in any other ballpark in, America, Anderson said. This ballpark is just a joke, the ball just shoots out of here. It was just a routine fly to center.
Countered Whitt: Sparkys used to playing in Tiger Stadium where its 440 feet to center. If the game were played in Tiger Stadium, hes right. But were not there today.
In other AL games, Baltimore beat Minnesota 9-8; California downed Milwaukee
5-3; New York topped Seattle 4-3; Boston defeated Chicago
6-2; Cleveland tripped Oakland 9-2; and Texas nipped Kansas City 3-2.
Torontos Dave Stieb pitched all 10 innings. The right-hander, 14-11, struck out a career-high 11 and escaped a bases-loaded jam in the 10th
by striking out Enos Cabell and getting Chet Lemon on a fly ball.
Orioles 9. Twins 6 Baltimore continued to roll in Minnesota by combining some timely hitting with a lucky bounce.
J(^ Shelby singled home two runs with two outs in the eighth inning, capping a three-run burst that broke a 5-5 tie against Ron Davis, 3-7.
Earlier, Eddie Murray belted his 26th homer and Tito
Landrum got his first on a drive that center fielder Darrell Brown appeared to catch, but then lost when he hit the wall and his glove - with the ball still in it went over the fence.
Minnesota ended a string of 24 scoreless innings in the fifth on Browns two-run single off Storm Davis, 12-5.
Baltimore has won 11 of its last 12 games, outscoring opponents 91-31 during that stretch.
Australia II One Win From Finals
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Another victory will give the exotic-keel yacht Australia II the Americas Cup iShallenge finals and a crack at sailings biggest prize.
We look fiH^ard to matching up tomorrow against Victory 83 hopefully in 16 to 20 knots of breeze, skipper John Bertrand Sunday night after a victory gave him a 3-1 lead over tte rival British boat.
We called for a race tomorrow even thou^ we could have called for a lay day (no race), knowing that the breezes were going to be stronger.
Bertrand gave no indication of worry that his only loss in the flnals to Vict(N7 83 was in the same kind of weather -last Wednesday.
When we came to the United States, wed done a lot of work in medium and heavy air sail combinations, said the Aussie skipper. Thats why we were comident about that wind velocity...
I would think the homework weve done over the last 12 months in medium to fresh winds will put us in goodstel^.
Bertrand commented after defeating Victory 83 by two minutes, 20 seconds, in winds of eight knots that gradually rose to 15 over the 24.3-mile course in Rhode Island Sound.
Australia II, with a secret keel shape kept hidden when it is not racing, led throughout the race, holding a 1:10 dge at the first mark.
The British yacht, sailed by Ro^ Pattismi and Lawrie Smith, cut six seconds on the second leg and six mwe on the third. But then the Aussie boat got hot and steadily moved ahead. i
British sidesman Jim Alabaster said his crew is also looking for better luck today. I think it all goes to point to the fact that we do like a Ixeeze a little bit mme than eight knots, he said.
We like 12 knots and upwards - 17 to 18 knots
The two are racing to determine which gets a crack at the historic Cup in the cham-mon^p finals against skipper Dennis Conner and his new boat Liberty, named defendm-last Friday.
The finals begin Sept. 13.
NFL Roundup...
(Continued from page 9)
third penod on Gary Andersons 31-yard field goal.
Lions 11, Buccaneers 0 Ed Murrays three field goals and an aggressive Lions defense led by lineman William Gay propelled Detroit over the Bucs. Gay recorded 5Mi of the seven sacks that were inflicted on Tampa Bays Jerry Golsteyn and Jack Thompson.
Tackle Doug English sacked Golsteyn for a 7-yard loss and a safety mi^ay through the first quarter.
Raiders 20, Bengals 10 Marcus Allen rushed for two first-half touchdowns and Chris Bahr had fleld goals of 38 and 39 yards for the Raiders.
The Bengals Ken Anderson, who completed 26 of 35 passes for 226 yards, was sacked four times and fumbled once under pressure from the harassing LA defense.
Vikings 27, Browns 21 Ted Browns three touchdowns, including a 10-yard scoring pass from Tommy Kramer for a 24-14 third-quarter lead, ^rked the Vikes. Kramer, hitting 17 of 20 first-half passes, finished with 22 out of 33 for 198 yards.
Clevelands Brian Sipe fired two TD passes, an 18-yarder to Ricky Feacher in the second quarter and 23 yards to Willis Adams with 2:35 to play in the game.
Dolphins 12, Bills 0 Uwe von Schamann idcked field goals of 33, 23, 36 and 50 yards to account for all the DoljAins scoring. The Bills Fred Steinfort missed on three field-goal tries.
The Blackwood brothers, Glenn and Lyle, picked off two of Joe Fergusons passes that led to Miami scores.
Saints 28. Cardinals 17 George Rogers rambled fw 206 yards, including TD runs of 76 and 1 yards, to power the Saints to oidy their third season-opening victm7 in 15 years of the franchise.
Both teams finidied with reserve quarterbacks. New Orleans Ken Stabler suffered a bruise knee on his first passing attempt and was relieved by Dave Wilson. And the Canb Jim Hmrt to^ over for Neil Lomax at the half after Lomax suffered a bruised shoulder.
Wilson, cmnpleting seven of 11 passes for 121 yards, tossed a 35-yard TD pass to Kenny Duckett in the fourth quarter. The Saints alr scored on Wayne Wilsons 9-yard run in the first period.
The Cardinals scoring came on Lomax 11-yard pass to Dough Marsh in the first quarter, Neil ODonoughues 47-yard field goal in the second and Harts 16-yard strike to Pat Tilley inthefourth.
Eagles 22,49ers 17 Guy Benjamins apparent game-winning TD pass to Dwight Clark with 11 seconds left in the game was nullified because of a holding penalty on Randy Cross and the Eagles held on for the victory in the seasmi opener on Saturday.
Joe Pisarcik, replacing injured Ron JawiHW in the second period, guided Philadelphia to 16 points and a 22-10 lead in the period. One was a 17-yard TD pass to Hubert Oliver. ^
Angels 5, Brewers 3
Don Suttons bad luck continued when he faced former teammate Tommy John in California.
Doug DeCinces drilled a three-run homer, his 17th, to break open a scoreless game in the sixth. Sutton 7-12, has not won since July 14 and is 0-7 in nine starts since then.
John, 10-11, left with two outs in the ninth with the bases loaded and the Angels ahead 5-1.
Reliever Luis Sanchez walked Cecil Cooper to force home a run and another scored on a passed ball before Ted Simmons flied out to end the game.
Bestball Won In Playoff
Johnny Carrow and Lee Beacham won the Sunday Night Bestball Tournament at Putt-Putt Golf and Games.
The pair won a sudden-death playoff over Jake Loftin and Harold Modlin when Carrow aced the second hole. The two teams tied with combined scores 26-under-par 82 after three rounds of play.
The game marked the first time John and Sutton, who were together in the Los Angeles Dodgers pitching rotation for eight seasons, had opposed each other.
Yankees 4, Mariners 3
Ron Guidry had pitched nine consecutive complete games going into the matchup with the Mariners.
Guidry came within one out of getting another complete game, but still upped his record to 17-8.
The left-hander exited with two outs in the bottom of the ninth after Steve Hendersons second home run of the game, a two-run blast. Rich Gossage got the final out for his 17th save.
Hendersons eighth homer gave Seattle a 1-0 lead before New York tied it in the fourth on Don Baylors RBI-double off Bryan Clark, 6-7.
Ken Griffeys sacrifice fly sent the Yankees ahead in the fifth and Omar Moreno singled home two more runs in the sixth.
Red Sox 6, tHiiteSox2 Bruce Hurst fared a lot better than a lot of other left-handers do against Chicago.
Hurst, 11-10, tossed a four-hitter and struck out eight to lead host Boston. Going into the game, the White Sox were 29-16 against lefties this season.
Tony Armas drove in three Red Sox runs with a triple an^ a single. Chicago rookie Ro: Kittle hit his 30th home run.
Indians 9, As 2 Cleveland again used a big inning to rally past Oakland and nemesis Steve McCatty.
Pat Tablers two-run sin^e sparked a five-run fifth inning as the Indians wiped out a 2-0 deficit.
On Saturday, Cleveland scored 10 runs in the top got the win Sunday. McCatty, 5-7, had pitched 19 scoreless innings against Cleveland this season before the fifth-inning uprising.
Rangers 3, Royals 2 Dave Stewart came within 'n out of his first complete fedme in the majors, and then watched as Texas held on.
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INSIDE TODAY
E'%;
At idast a thfNy contest shapes up lor North Carolina Labor Commissioner with Sen. Dick Barnes, John Brooks and Donald Wiseman planning bids. (Page 7) ' "IK* FtST EASES
President Pinochet is letting prominent exiles come home to Chile, and allowing dissidents to march in streets; Many hailing signs of a thaw. (Page 16)
SPORTS TODAYECU ON WtBS
""Tollowlflulen Impressive showing at Floiida State, WTBS-TV has announced the game against N.C. State will be televised. (Page 9)THE DAILY REFLECTOR
102ND YEAR
NO. 194
GREENVILLE, N.C.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION
AAONDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 5, 1983
16 PAGES TODAY
PRICE 25 CENTSChallenger Lands In The Dark Of Night
,P'
BACK FROM SPACE - Astronauts of STS-8 egress from space shuttle Challenger at Edwards AFB, Calif., early this morning after returning
from a six-day mission. The shuttle made its first night landing under the glare of brilliant lights. (APLasersphoto)
Reagan Tonight Will Tell U.S. Response To Soviet
By JAMES GERSTENZANG Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) -President Reagan will unveil in a nationally broadcast speech toni^t steps, including restriction on aviation, against the Soviet Union in response to what he called the barbaric, uncivilized, cold-blooded Soviet destruction of a Korean passenger jet.
While speech writers were at work Sunday on Reagans 15-minute address to be delivered at 8 p.m. EDT, word filtered down from the administration that a U.S. reconnaissance aircraft had been operating in the area where me Soviets first began tracking the Korean airplane, which carried 269 people who perished.
An administration source who spoke on only condition that he not be named said the presence of the plane, an , RC-135 considerably smaller than the Korean jumbo jet, raised the possibility that the Soviets thought they were tracking the U.S. aircraft when they actually were pursuing the passenger jet.
A second Reagan administration official, who in-' sisted on anonymity, said Sunday that the Korean aircraft and the U.S. spy plane never came closer than
75 miles and when they crossed paths, they were 300 miles apart.
However, at the time of the attack, the U.S. spy plane was 1,000 miles away, the source said. The airplane was on a routine mission checking for violations of the U.S.-Soviet treaty governing strategic nuclear weapons, the source said.
U.S. officials emphasized that after the U.S. and Korean planes crossed, the Soviets had approximately two hours to realize they were on the trail of a Korean airliner.
One administration official said Sunday that it is possible the jetliner was shot down after leaving Soviet airspace. "It was very close. It may have actually been a mile outside of their airspace when they shot it down, he said.
In Moscow, the Soviet anti-aircraft defense chief offered his countrys fullest explanation yet of what happened last Thursday. Col. Gen. Semyon Romanov, however, did not admit to shooting anything more powerful man warning shots with tracer shells.
But a Soviet source confirmed that a heat-seeking air-to-air missile destroyed the Boeing 747 airliner. The
source, who refused to be identified, said President Yuri V. Andropov was not consulted by military officials who made the decision to shoot down the airliner.
While the Soviets officially declined responsibility for the planes disappearance, Romanov said it may have been mistaken for an RC-135 spy plane that seemed to be stalking under the cover of night above our territory.
And there are no doubts that this was a deliberate action designed as a rude provocation inspired by the United States, he said.
Allegations that the Korean plane was on an intelligence mission have emerged as Moscows principal defense against claims that the jetliner was the target of an unprovoked attack by Soviet fighters.
Meanwhile, a Japanese
newspaper reported Sunday that radar stations operated by U.S. and Japanese military authorities could not have warned the Korean airliner that it had intruded on Soviet air space.
Monitoring facilities do not always coordinate with each other and some only record their findings for later analysis, the mass circulation newspaper Asahi Shimbun said.
At the White House as late as Sunday evening there was debate over just what would be in the presidents speech tonight. Aides said it was undecided whether the president would play a tape re-cording of the radio transmissions from Soviet fighter pilots moments before the Boeing 747 was lost in restricted skies near Soviet military installations last Thursday.
REFLECTOR
ttOTLIfl
By ROBERT H. REID Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -The Lebanese armys success in routing gunmen from west Beirut last week indicates it is ready to face the Druse militias fighting Christians in the central Chouf Mountains, U.S. mili
tant officials say.
Col. Timothy J. Geraghty, commander of the 1,200-man
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YARD SALE DONATIONS ASKED ic lilt Pitt County Humane Society needs dona-tionf of good used items for ito yard sale to be held Saturday, Sept. 10, at Holy Trinity United Methodist amrch. t , ^ ,
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U.S. Marine contingent of the multinational peacekeeping force, says the Lebanese , forces are quite prepared to move into the mountains now that the Israelis have evacuated the area.
He described the armys battle in west Beirut against the Shiite Moslem Amal i proup, as well as Druse and eftist militias, as "one of the toughest military operations that any force can face, and thats combat in urban or built-up areas.
That is a very tough operation and considering all that and other factors, they were quite successful, I think, said Geraghty, whose Marines have been helping train the 33,000-man Lebanese army.
Military sources say the
Lebanese plan to use the same units which swept through west Beirut on Tuesday and Wednesday for the move into the mountains. These include units of the 4th, 5th, and 8th brigades along with a helicopter regiment.
All nave been trained by 111 U.S. Special Forces and Army Ranger advisers and are considered the elite of the Lebanese armed forces.
Ine uruse fear the army because its officers are Christians, who have been their enemies for centuries. Most lower ranking soldiers are Shiites.
Aboui 10,000 Lebanese troops will be facing an estimated 2,500 hard-core Druse fighters, plus possibly several thousand more irregulars from villages scattered through the 235-square-mile area vacated by the Israeli army.
The Israelis pulled southward to their new frontline on the Awali river on Sunday. It was not immediately known when the Lebanese army would move into the mountains-^in full force.
B> ROBERT LOCKE Associated Press Writer EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) - Challenger and its crew dropped eerily out of the darkness and settled safely on a brilliantly lit desert runway early today, ending six flawless days in orbit with the first night landing in the U.S. astronaut program.
Like an ancient ghost ship emerging from a fog bank, the 100-ton space plane appeared suddenly out of a star-filled sky just 80 to 90 feet above the runway, the blazing ground lights gleaming off the fuselage.
The crew, commanded by Richard Truly, included Americas first black astronaut, Guion Bluford; the oldest person ever to fly in space, Dr. William Thornton, 54; pilot Dan Brandenstein, and mission specialist Dale Gardner.
Truly set Challenger down at 12:40 a.m. PDT in the center of a dazzling array of lights that turned the landing strip into artificial day. That was 53 minutes after the ships braking rockets were triggered 137 miles above the Indian Ocean to start the astronauts on a fiery homeward dive.
Landing was smooth and right on the center line: Frosting on the cake for a mission that demonstrated the maturity of Americas space transportation system. A flight director termed the flight the best so far in the shuttle program.
Welcome back, great show, Mission Control radioed the astronauts as they rolled down the runway, kicking up a rooster tail of dust, transformed into a silvery veil by the -xenon lights.
Sure was fun ; lets go do it again, Truly remarked. Thirty-five minutes after touchdown, the space travelers, smiling and in good spirits, emerged from the craft and made a walkaround inspection, pleased that it looked to be in good shape. They then drove by van for a physical examination and a shower.
This was just a fabulous mission, the cleanest mission yet...just superb, saidLt. Gen. James A. Abrahamson, director of the shuttle program.
The return was in sharp contrast to earlier shuttle landings here. Six times in the past, the reusable ships have arrived in daylight, visible for several miles as they darted over the desert and then circled to zero in on the runway.
Challenger wasnt visible to observers here today until it was just above the runway, on its final approach. The craft has no exterior lights, and it seemed to come from out of nowhere, the blazing floodlamps creating a fog-like atmosphere. The only evidence it was in the area had been two sharp sonic booms that shattered the darkness as the craft sped into the desert airspace.
The after-dark landing came as shuttle was on its 98th orbit, six days after being launched for the first time at night
in a breathtaking departure from Cape Canaveral in Florida. The schedule was dictated by a requirement to deposit a satellite for India in the desired location.
Touchdown was on concrete runway 22, which has a long overrun into the hard desert sand. Six mighty spotlights, each throwing 800 million candlepower - equal to 6.50.000 floodlights - illuminated the area.
NASA barred the public from the landing site, for reasons of security and also because it knew there would be nothing to see until the ship was near the ground.
The astronauts were awakened at 8:03 p.m. EDT Sunday to make ready for re-entry. Wakeup music was a rousing John Philip Sousa march, Semper Fidelis," played by the Marine Corps Band.
Youve got everybody marching around up here, Truly-remarked.
During six days in orbit, the astronauts:
-Deployed a communications-weather satellite for India, the fifth commercial payload released for a paying customer.
-Ran hours of successful communications checks through a Tracking and Data Relay Satellite which is vital to future shuttle flights. TDRS is essential for the next mission, scheduled Oct, 28 when Challenger is to carry up the European Spacelab, a research facility.
-Lifted a heavy mass for the first time with the shuttle's 50-foot robot arm, demonstrating it is ready for Flight 13 next April when a 10-ton satellite will be released and the crew also will try to retrieve and repair another satellite that failed in orbit three years ago.
Successfully separated live pancreas cells for the first time in space weightlessness in a pharmaceutical processing test that could be a major step toward conquering diabetes.
Truly, who flew on the second flight of the shuttle Columbia in 1981, said this eighth mission demonstrated how much the transportion system has matured since then.
During a news conference from space on Saturday, the commander recalled that on his first flight, "we were worried about the safety of the vehicle, the thermal protection system, the engines, those kind of things. We have graduated in a little over a year and a half to a system thats routinely-deploying satellites, meeting our commitments to the customers.
I think in this short period of time, for a vehicle this complicated, thats amazing. Truly stated. We really have made great strides, and I think its a great future for America in space.
Flight director Jay Greene termed the flight the best so far in the shuttle program. Its a good vehicle. We re getting better and the machines getting better. Its definitely operational.
U.S. Marines Shoot Back After Additional Shelling By Militia
Lebanese Army 'Quite Prepared'
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -U.S. Marines shelled by militamen retaliated with mortar fire early today as civil warfare continued a day after the Israeli army completed its withdrawal from 235 square miles of Lebanese territory near Beirut.
Lebanese police said at least 51 people have been killed and 133 wounded in the sectarian fighting since Sunday, and Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan said four Marines have been injured. He said the soldiers suffered slight shrapnel wounds from mortar and rocket-grenade blasts, and returned to duty after being treated on the scene.
At dawn today, Jordan said, the American peacekeepers fired a five-minute barrage of high explosive shells from 81-mm mortars at positions that had fired into the Marine zone at Beiruts international airport.
Fierce fighting between Christian and Druse militias continued today in the embattled Aley and Chouf
mountains and in Christian neighborhoods of west Beirut, which were pounded by artillery from Syrian-controlled areas of the mountains.
The government ordered hospitals in Beirut and neighboring towns into a round-the-clock alert, cancelling leaves for surgical teams and emergency ward staff to cope with the influx of casualties, police said.
Jordan said the 1,200-man American contingent of the four-nation peacekeeping force in Lebanon has gone to condition one - the highest state of alert - three times since the new round Christian-Druse warfare erupted early Sunday, coinciding with the Israeli pullback. Last week, two Marines were killed and 14 injured by shelling.
After the daybreak mortar barrage, the Marines went to condition two, a status that allowed them out of foxholes and bunkers, Jordan said. But Associated Press photographer William Foley said mortar rounds and small arms fire continued to
stray into the area.
Foley reported the firing came from the jieighboring Khalde area, where the Lebanese army and Druse militiamen were fighting. Army communiques said the army had captured a key intersection at Khalde and was poised to press southward into the territory vacated by the Israelis.
Christian and Druse communiques reported fierce fighting elsewhere on the Beirut-Damascus highway at Bhamdoun and at Souk El-Gharb, a town that houses the Aley region command headquarters of the Christian militia.
Hundreds of rockets rained down on mountain villages, and fighting in the suburbs also caught British, French and Italian peacekeeping forces in the exchanges. An Italian soldier was wounded.
A car bomb exploded in the southern suburb of Haret Hreik, killing nine people and wounding 10 others, police said.
Military sources in Tel Aviv; speaking less than a day after the pullback began.
said Sunday it had been completed and all Israeli soldiers were positioned behind a new, more defensible line to the south at the Awali River.
Israel, which invaded Lebanon June 6,1982, to wipe out strongholds of the Palestine Liberation Organization, remains in control of almost one-quarter of Lebanon occupied by 725,000 people.
During the pullback, two Israeli jet fighters strafed two Syrian T-55 tanks that approached the vacated territory, an army communique said.
More Settlements
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - A government committee has authorized the establishment of two new Jewish settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan River, the World Zionist Organization says.
The Ministerial Committee on Settlements decided to establish Ganim B, north of the Palestinian town of Jenin, and Otniel south of Hebron, Zeev Ben Yosef, spokesman for the World Zionist Organization, said Sunday. The organization plans to finance construction of
the settlements.
He said the two were part of a five-year plan to establish 57 new settlements in the West Bank.
Ben Yosef said there are now 108 Jewish settlements in the West Bank with a total population of more than 30,000. The government hopes to raise that number to 70,000 by the end of the year when 7,000 recently completed housing units are to be occupied.
WEATHER
Fair tonight, lows in mid-70s. Mostly sunny Tuesday and continued hot with highs in 90s.
Looking Ahead
Partly sunny Wednesday through Friday with chance of afternoon or evening thunderstorms in the mountains Wednesday and statewide Thursday and Friday. Highs Wednesday and Thursday will be in 90s and mostly in 80s Friday. Low each night in 60s except near 70 in the east.
Inside Reading
Page 6Wrinkle cure PagesObituaries
' The Dailyfleflector. Greenville N C Monday. Septembers. 1983 7At Least A 3*Way Race For Labor CommTssioner
By MARY ANNE RHYNE Associated Pres* Writer
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -State Sen. Dick Barnes, D-Forsyth, has promised to enter the race for North Carolina labor commissioner today, setting up at least a three-way contest for the job in 1984.
Incumbent John Brooks said he plans to seek a third four-year term but has not scheduled a formal announcement. Former Labor Department employee Donald G. Wiseman of Cary already has announced he will run.
No Republican candidate has surfaced yet.
Both Barnes and Wiseman say Brooks has been unable to work with Gov. Jim Hunts administration. Brooks said he has cooperated with Hunt on most issues and the exceptions have been given too much attention.
One of those exceptions concerned the Job Network program announced early this year by Hunt. The program was designed to tell the unemployed about job and training (^)portunities.
Brooks denounced the program as "a publicity campaign without substance and maintains that he still knows of no one who has gotten a job through the program.
He also clashed with Department of Administration officials in 1982 about transferring building code inspectors and centralizing government computer operations.
Brooks challenged Barnes and Wisemen to document their claims about him and said, Ninety-nine and a half percent of the time I have voted with the administration. I consider that a strong record of support. When I have reasons to raise ques-
Baptists At Fort Worth
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - More than 10,000 delegates have arrived here for the 103rd annual meeting of the National Baptist Convention of America which begins today.
The 3.5 million-member denomination is the second-largest predominantly black Baptist group in the nation, behind the National Baptist Convention of America, U.S.A. Inc., a six million-member group that will meet in Los Angeles later this month.
The Rev. J.H. Jackson, a past president of the largest black Baptist group and pastor of the Olivet Baptist Church in Chicago, wil be the keynote sp^ker tonight at the conventions foreign mission boards fund-raising banquet.
On Tuesday, a 500-voice choir will trace the progress of the black church from its embryonic stages to the present, said the Rev. Albert Chew of Shiloh Baptist Church here, host pastor of the eight-day meeting.
The main convention begins Wednesday morning with an address by last years host pastor, the Rev. A.L. Johnson of Kansas City, Mo.
The convention president, the Rev. James Carl Sams of Jacksonville, Fla., will address Uie group Thursday morning! He has served as president since 1967 and is expected to be re-elected.
Conventioneers will discuss a change in convention structure, including adopting a new budget system.
Let Sheppard Memorial Libr^ help you with your information needs. Call 752-4177 for more information.
CORRECTION
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We regret this error and hope this causes no inconvenience.
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tkms I have a duty to do that.
We have an incumbent who p^le throughout North Carolina are displeased with, Barnes said in a telephone interview. The present commissioner has not wanted to participate with Hunt. I have been following this (rffice for five or six years and watching very closely. I have been dissatisfied as (have) others throughout the state.
Barnes said the commissioner should be a media
tor between the unemployed and industry. He says hes qualified because he was raised on^tarm^^served two terms in the Houselmd one in the Senate and now , as business develofanenP ficer for Citizens Nat Bank in Winston-Salem.
Wiseman, a 56-year-old business consultant, says Brooks has not been (^n to new ideas and promises that he would open the doors of the Labor Department to more input.
I feel John Brooks is
beatable, Wiseman said. It is very obvious if a state senator enters the race. I welcome that. It told me I was on the right track.
But Wiseman and Brooks have clashed themselves.
Wiseman became director of the states Division of Occupational Safety and Health Administration in July 1979 and resigned in October 1981 after he differed with Brooks over shifting responsibility for a job safety program from the state to the federal government.
The three candidates seem to agree on which issues are of major importance to North Carolina.
Barnes, who once considered' running for insurance commissioner, said the state must prepare workers whose jobs will become obsolete and that will require coordinating resources within the administration.
Wiseman, who announced his candidacy July 18, said another of his priorities is to retrain middle-age workers who will be turned out of jobs
as industry becomes more modern.
Brooks, who said he will run on his record, said he wants to improve the apprenticeship program as the most cost effective method of training workers. He said he also hopes to expand health consultation services offered to industry under OSHA and to cross-train department workers to speed up investigation of job accidents.
Barnes was to announce his candidacy at a noon news conference in Winston-Salem
and a 2 p.m. news conference in Raleigh. He rented a pavilion at the state fairgrounds for a $10 a ticket fundraiser.
Both Barnes and Wiseman acknowledged that any race against an incumbent will be difficult. They speculate it may take more than $250,000 toonduct a campaign.
Brooks. 46, was first elected as labor commissioner in 1976. During his tenure, he has opposed relaxation of cotton dust standards in textile mills and has
sought to Jmpose drinking and sanitation rules for farmworkers.
About 20 years ago, Wiseman worked on an auto factory assembly line, in construction and as an elevator mechanic. He was a member of the United Auto Workers and . International Union-of Elevator Constructors then.
He went on to become chief of the elevator inspection divisions in Michigan and Arizona and to lead the OSHA program in Arizona.
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